In his second appeal following the foreclosure of a promissory note and mortgage, Appellant Francis B. Ahearn appeals the award of attorney fees for an appeal.
We affirm.
ISSUES
Ahearn presents these issues for our review:
I. In a mortgage foreclosure action, may the Trial Court award as attorneys fees amounts contracted (although unearned and unpaid) for the defense of an appeal from the Judgment of Foreclosure?
A. Does a District Court award of appellate attorneys fees invade the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court?
B. Does entry of a judgment extinguish the underlying note and mortgage through merger and therefore extinguish the contractual right to claim attorneys fees?
C. Do the terms of the note and mortgage in this ease authorize the award of attorneys fees for a post foreclosure appeal?
D. May the Court award attorneys fees for work not yet performed?
E. May the Court award attorneys fees which are unpaid and not yet due under the attorneys employment agreement?
Tri-County presents a single issue for our review:
The issue in this case is whether the District Court abused its discretion when (as a part of its Order Confirming Sale and Approving Attorney Fees) it approved a lump sum attorney fee agreement for work to be performed after the foreclosure sale.
FACTS
In
Ahearn v. Tri-County Federal Savings Bank,
Tri-County was the only bidder, and it purchased the property and received a certificate of sale. Tri-County bid $53,257.28, the amount set forth in its Certificate of Judgment Amount which was filed prior to the sale. Of the total amount, $38,664.81 was for the mortgage, $12,963.58 was asserted as a claim for attorney fees and was in addition to the fees and costs of $2,651.20 awarded in the original judgment. Ahearn sought to have the sale held invalid and to have Tri-County held in contempt. The district court denied this request. Ahearn then filed a motion in this Court for an expedited hearing and decision or in the alternative for an order suspending the redemption period, which was denied by this Court. Tri-County filed a motion for an order confirming sale and approving attorney fees accompanied by an affidavit from Douglas W. Weaver, an attorney, testifying that Tri-County’s requested attorney fees, including the attorney fee agreement, were fair and reasonable. A hearing was conducted on this motion on April 4, 1997, and Weaver testified and was cross-examined by counsel for Ahearn. Ahearn did not present any evidence or witnesses at the hearing. The district court issued a decision letter granting Tri-County’s motion to confirm the sale and found that the attorney fees were reasonable with the exception of a charge to draft the fee agreement.
The district court’s decision letter said:
Both the promissory note and the mortgage obligate Ahearn (the mortgagors) to pay the costs of collection, including attorney’s fees, and because of the appeal, there is no way to calculate these fees to the penney [sic] at the time of the sale. If the judgment and sale are confirmed on appeal, and the Plaintiff is not allowed to collect its attorney’s fees for that process, it loses part of the benefit of its bargain.
Neither party presented the Court with any law supporting their respective positions. In the absence of controlling precedent, the Court finds no good policy reason for the disallowance of appellate fees in such situation.... A mortgagee should not have to incur the additional expense and risk of postponing the foreclosure sale to a point in time after the appeal in order to determine the exact hourly charge for additional attorney’s fees. If the mortgagee’s attorney will enter into a reasonableset fee agreement, it should be enforceable.
A junior lienholder redeemed Tri-County’s purchase without objection to the attorney fees. The parties agree that Ahearn is insolvent.
DISCUSSION
It is settled law in Wyoming that attorney’s fees cannot be recovered unless expressly provided for by statute or contract.
DeWitt v. Balben,
Ahearn’s second theory has been the basis for denying attorneys’ fees on appeal in a number of cases. H.H. Henry, Annotation,
Contractual provision for attorneys’ fees as including allowance for services rendered upon appellate review,
[a] contract for a reasonable attorney’s fee in enforcing its provisions embraces an allowance for legal services rendered upon appeal as well as during the trial.
Shoup v. Mayerson,
As for Ahearn’s other point, Tri-County agrees that attorney fees for appeals are generally determined by the appellate court; however, it contends that the district court properly approved the attorney fee agreement because it was part of the process to approve and confirm the sale and attorney fees. As Ahearn indicates, the practical effect of the district court’s action of including the attorney fees as part of the judgment was to enable Tri-County to recoup them when the junior lienholder redeemed rather than having to pursue a separate action against an insolvent Ahearn to collect the attorney fees. The practical effect on Ah-earn was to reduce the amount of money available to him to satisfy the judgment against him by junior lienholders, one of which is the Internal Revenue Service. The issue, however, is whether attorney fees for future services can be ordered by the district court.
Ordinarily, future attorney fees are not recoverable because there is insufficient evidence to find they are reasonable.
See Greenough,
this had been a hard-fought contest, with little, if anything, conceded by Ahearn along the way. The amount of work is commensurate with the case and its issues, and the amount charged is commensurate with the attorney’s experience, and amounts charged by other attorneys in the state.
The order of the district court is affirmed.
