Tenala, Ltd. v. Fowler

993 P.2d 447, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 169, 1999 WL 1244288
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1999
DocketS-8625
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 993 P.2d 447 (Tenala, Ltd. v. Fowler) 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
Tenala, Ltd. v. Fowler, 993 P.2d 447, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 169, 1999 WL 1244288 (Ala. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Audrey Fowler brought a quiet title action against Tenala, Ltd. Fowler prevailed and was awarded enhanced attorney’s fees. We agree that enhanced attorney’s fees were proper. However, we remand so that the superior court can make specific findings on whether some of the fees claimed by Fowler were actually related to this litigation.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In 1991 Fowler, the representative of Sally Mayo’s estate, brought a quiet title action against Tenala, Ltd., involving two lots in Fairbanks. 1 After a three-day bench trial, *449 the superior court held that Mayo had adversely possessed various portions of the lots. 2

The superior court concluded that Fowler was the prevailing party. Fowler’s attorney submitted an affidavit and supporting billing documents showing actual attorney’s fees of $27,459.00. With regard to attorney’s fees, the court stated:

After a review of the attorneys fees incurred as set forth in plaintiff’s supporting documents, the court concludes they are reasonable and necessarily incurred in this litigation.
Due to the complexity of this litigation, both as to the facts and law the court concludes a greater than 30% of actual attorneys fees should be awarded. This case involved complex issues of quiet title dealing with factual issues dating to the 1920’s. There were numerous documents in the “chain of title” as well as historical factual issues to be resolved. Both the legal and factual issues were hotly contested by defendant. Fifty percent (50%) of actual attorneys fees is reasonable under the facts of this case.
Therefore, plaintiff is awarded attorneys fees in the sum of $13,730.00.

Tenala appealed the superior court’s decision to this court. 3 We partially reversed the superior court’s decision by holding that Mayo was entitled to a prescriptive easement rather than a fee simple interest on a portion of one lot, 4 and that the south boundary line of one lot had been determined erroneously. 5

With regai’d to the award of attorney’s fees, we noted that Tenala “makes no supporting arguments on appeal and merely refers us to its trial memoranda on the issue. Therefore, Tenala has effectively abandoned these issues.” 6 But we went on to conclude that “[n]onetheless, because we have found that Fowler, as representative of her mother’s estate, acquired a prescriptive easement and not fee title for most of the disputed portion of Lot 6, we vacate the attorney’s fees and costs awards. On remand, the trial court will have to decide who is the prevailing party.” 7

Upon remand, Fowler filed a motion requesting that the superior court 'reaffirm its previous order awarding $13,730.00. Tenala opposed and listed over fifty specific items in Fowler’s request that Tenala argued were not properly included as fees. The superior court held that Fowler “remains the prevailing party for purposes of award of attorney’s fees and costs and this court’s prior orders regarding same ... are hereby reaffirmed.”

On this appeal, Tenala does not question the court’s ruling that Fowler was the prevailing party, but it does challenge the enhanced award of attorney’s fees.

III. DISCUSSION

A. Standard, of Review

“The trial court has broad discretion in awarding attorney’s fees; we will not find an abuse of that discretion absent a showing that the award was arbitrary, capricious, manifestly unreasonable, or ... stemfmed] from an improper motive.” 8

B. Tenala’s Previous Waiver Does Not Bar It from Objecting to the Amount of the Attorney Fee Award.

Fowler argues that Tenala is barred from raising an objection to the attorney’s fees award because Tenala abandoned that issue in its earlier appeal in Tenala I. While it is true that in Tenala I we observed that *450 “Tenala has effectively abandoned” its arguments concerning attorney’s fees because it referred only to trial court memoranda on the issue, 9 the overall effect of the Tenala I decision was to “vacate the attorney’s fees and costs awards.” 10 The superior court was directed to “re-evaluat[e]” the attorney’s fees claims on remand. 11 The fact that Tena-la previously waived its attorney’s fees argument, therefore, relates to an award that was vacated. Tenala was free, on remand, to challenge any new attorney’s fees award. Because Tenala opposed the new award in the superior court and has properly presented its arguments on appeal, they are now properly before us.

C. The Superior Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Awarding Attorney’s Fees Relating to Count II of Fowler’s First Amended Complaint.

In her first amended complaint, Fowler added a Count II to her action, which described a 1927 quitclaim deed from Ed Ross to Lee Mayo (Sally Mayo’s husband). Count II goes on to list parties who potentially might claim an interest in Mayo’s real property. Fowler asserts that the listed defendants were grantors or grantees who were out of the chain of title to either lot. Tenala argues that any attorney’s fees in preparing and pursuing Count II should not be charged against Tenala because Fowler abandoned Count II in the present action and because “Count II was never pursued against any of the other defendants named in [the] amended complaint.”

Count II relied upon a 1927 deed that added a color of title basis to Sally Mayo’s claims to one of the lots. This was the basis for the superior court’s holding that Lee and Sally Mayo acquired title to portions of one lot in 1934 through adverse possession pursuant to the color of title statute, 12 rather than under the general adverse possession statute 13 which requires a ten-year period of possession. Thus, contrary to Tenala’s assertions, Count II of Fowler’s amended complaint was an important component of her quiet title action on behalf of Sally Mayo’s estate.

Tenala’s assertion that “Count II was never pursued against any of the other [non-Tenala] defendants” is also without merit. Fowler was granted a default judgment against the parties named in Count II.

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Bluebook (online)
993 P.2d 447, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 169, 1999 WL 1244288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tenala-ltd-v-fowler-alaska-1999.