Strong Enterprises, Inc. v. Seaward

980 P.2d 456, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 62, 1999 WL 318855
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1999
DocketS-8420, 5118
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 980 P.2d 456 (Strong Enterprises, Inc. v. Seaward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strong Enterprises, Inc. v. Seaward, 980 P.2d 456, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 62, 1999 WL 318855 (Ala. 1999).

Opinions

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The superior court entered final judgment for Thomas Seaward against his former business partners. It also awarded him attorney’s fees under Alaska Civil Rule 82(b)(2) and costs to reimburse his accountancy fees. Because we conclude that the superior court correctly treated the final judgment as a non-money judgment, we affirm the award of attorney’s fees under Civil Rule 82(b)(2) and reject appellants’ claim that attorney’s fees should have been awarded under Civil Rule 82(b)(1). Because the accountancy fee award cannot be sustained under Alaska Civil Rule 79(b) or Alaska Administrative Rule 7(c), we vacate that award.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Thomas L. Seaward was a partner in Bottom Feeder Properties (BFP), a partnership formed to buy, repair, and sell repossessed single family residences. Seaward’s partners in BFP were Strong Enterprises, Inc. (SEI), Gregory E. Strong, and Double Horseshoe Investments .(itself a partnership owned by SEI and Horseshoe Investments). Seaward’s partners in BFP are collectively referred to as “Strong.” ■ Seaward also had a half interest in Gregory E. Strong’s interest in Montana Alaska Investments (MAI), a partnership formed to buy, repair, and sell repossessed condominiums.

Disputes arose, and BFP and Strong sued Seaward; he counterclaimed and sued MAI and others.

Following a bench trial, the superior court resolved' most issues in Seaward’s favor. The final judgment granted Seaward ac-countings for his interests in the BFP and MAI partnerships, and ordered his partners to pay for his interests contemporaneously with those accountings, but did not specify the amounts he was to be paid for those interests. The judgment also stated that “[t]he money owed to [Seaward] pursuant to this judgment, including monies due after the required accounting, will bear post-judgment interest ... from the date of entry until the judgment is satisfied.”

The final judgment awarded Seaward attorney’s fees of $49,863, thirty percent of Seaward’s claimed actual fees, under Alaska Civil Rule 82(b)(2). Upon motion the superi- or court also awarded Seaward costs of $5,146.11 to reimburse accountancy fees he incurred before entry of judgment.

Strong appeals the attorney’s fees and costs awards.

III.DISCUSSION

A. Attorney’s Fees

The superior court, applying Alaska Civil Rule 82(b)(2),1 awarded Seaward attorney’s fees of thirty percent of the attorney’s fees he claimed'he actually incurred. Strong ar[458]*458gues that the superior court instead should have applied Rule 82(b)(1),2 and should have based Seaward’s attorney’s fees award on the amount of Seaward’s recovery. Crucial to Strong’s argument is his theory that Seaward received a money judgment.

We will reverse an attorney’s fees award for an abuse of discretion only if the award is arbitrary, capricious, manifestly unreasonable, or the result of an improper motive.3 Absent any fact dispute, we consider de novo the legal question whether the superior court should have applied Rule 82(b)(1), rather than Rule 82(b)(2).4

Rule 82(b)(1) applies only if a party recovers “a money judgment.”5 We have defined a money judgment as one that requires money to “change hands.”6 Strong argues that the judgment here, requiring Strong to pay Seaward for Seaward’s share of partnership profits and interests, meets this definition and therefore that Rule 82(b)(1) applied.

We disagree. Several circumstances persuade us that Seaward did not recover a money judgment. The final judgment required Seaward’s former partners to perform accountings and required Strong to pay Seaward for his interests in two partnerships. It did not specify the amounts payable, nor did it specify how the parties should calculate those amounts. It simply specified the general procedure by which Seaward’s total recovery could be determined. Nor was it merely preliminary to entry of a more specific judgment. Rather, it was self-executing and did not require the parties to return to court for approval of the accountings or the amounts to be paid as determined by the accountings. Assuming no further disputes, complying with the judgment would have required no further judicial intervention and no entry of a specific damages award.

We also note that Strong did not oppose entry of a final judgment. He did not argue that the judgment was not final or that the court had to comply with Alaska Civil Rule 54(b) to make it final. Had the superior court chosen to apply Rule 82(b)(1), fees could not have been calculated and awarded until after each accounting was complete. Had the court followed that course, the final judgment no longer would have been self-executing.

For these reasons, the superior court did not err by applying Rule 82(b)(2).

B. Accountancy Fees

We will overturn an award of costs only if the superior court clearly abused its discretion,7 such that the award of costs was manifestly unreasonable.8

Seaward filed a cost bill after entry of final judgment. Under the category “Experts retained as consultants,” he sought an award of $5,146.11 to pay fees he owed Sramek-Hightower, an accounting firm he had retained. His preliminary witness list had listed Robert Sramek, a CPA, as an expert witness. The court clerk denied this cost item.

[459]*459Invoking Alaska Civil Rule 79(b), Seaward asked the superior court to review the clerk’s denial. In support, Seaward cited the court-appointed discovery master’s report, issued during pretrial discovery when Seaward sought production of the partnerships’ books and records; the report recommended that Strong reimburse Seaward “for any reasonable costs and fees [he had] to incur to develop the full accounting information of the two partnerships.” The superior court had adopted the discovery masters recommendations before trial. Seaward’s counsel also affirmed that Sramek’s services “were necessary to reconstruct accountings for some of the real estate transactions involved in this dispute.”

Over Strong’s opposition, the superior court awarded Seaward the $5,146.11 he claimed for Sramek’s services.

Strong attacks the cost award on three grounds: (1) the superior court impermissi-bly departed from Alaska Administrative Rule 7(c); (2) the superior court improperly allowed Seaward to present materials that had not been before the clerk; and (3) there was no basis for the award under Alaska Civil Rule 79(b).

Seaward does not directly address Strong’s Administrative Rule 7(c) argument. Rather, he argues that the catch-all provision of the former version of Civil Rule 79(b), which applied at the time of the cost award, permits him to recover the cost of Sramek’s services.9 Former Civil Rule 79(b) provided that, “a party shall be allowed any other expenses necessarily incurred in order to enable a party to secure some right accorded the party in the action or proceeding.”

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Strong Enterprises, Inc. v. Seaward
980 P.2d 456 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1999)

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Bluebook (online)
980 P.2d 456, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 62, 1999 WL 318855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strong-enterprises-inc-v-seaward-alaska-1999.