Frederick P. ANDREWS and Edith W. Andrews, Appellants, v. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, Appellee.
No. 81-78.
District of Columbia Court of Appeals.
Argued Nov. 18, 1981. Decided April 1, 1982.
443 A.2d 566
Accordingly, we conclude that there was no error in admitting the letter into evidence.
Affirmed.
Robert J. Harlan, Jr., Asst. Corp. Counsel, with whom Judith W. Rogers, Corp. Counsel, Charles L. Reischel and James E. Lemert, Deputy Corp. Counsel, and Richard L. Aguglia, Asst. Corp. Counsel, Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for appellee.
Before KELLY, NEBEKER and BELSON, Associate Judges.
KELLY, Associate Judge:
At issue in this appeal is the validity of the trial court‘s denial of attorney‘s fees to appellants because of the alleged bad faith conduct of appellee. Finding no abuse of discretion in the court‘s ruling1 and no merit in the other issues on appeal, we affirm.
I
When this distressing saga began, appellants resided in the District of Columbia on McKinley Street, N.W. Mrs. Andrews was employed as a labor economist with the U.S. Department of Labor. Appellants sold their home in the District and, on November 15, 1969, moved to Geneva, Switzerland, where Mrs. Andrews worked as a U.S. Civil Service employee on loan to the International Labor Organization (ILO). When the ILO suffered financial reverses, they extended Mrs. Andrews’ employment contract for six months to June 1971, but she refused to accept their offer of monthly extensions thereafter.
Before returning to the United States, appellants searched in Europe for a retirement home. They ultimately purchased land in Cyprus, with the intention of retiring there as soon as finances permitted. On July 6, 1971, appellants returned to Washington, D. C., where Mrs. Andrews resumed employment with the U. S. Department of Labor. They lived in a hotel in the District for a month while seeking a house in the suburbs, and on August 13, 1971, moved to a home in Bethesda, Maryland.
II
The District of Columbia government collected $1,813 in income taxes from appellants for the period from November 15, 1969 to August 13, 1971, pursuant to
On December 1, 1976, after three years of silence, appellants moved to expedite decision. Pursuant to this motion, Judge Fred Ugast explained to counsel that the trial judge had retired without deciding the case and that the court file, including the trial exhibits, had been misplaced. When counsel could not settle the case, they filed a joint request for decision based on the trial transcript and the trial briefs. On January 3, 1977, Judge Ugast declared a mistrial,
Undaunted, appellants filed a motion for substitution of documents as duplicates in lieu of lost exhibits one through five (appellants’ exhibits only). Appellee failed to reply in writing to this motion, but opposed it at oral argument, counsel noting that he was trying to settle the case. Judge William Pryor granted the motion on July 11, 1979, the date of the oral argument. On the trial date, October 30, 1979, Judge John Fauntleroy (differing with Judge Ugast) decided a trial was unnecessary and that he would decide the case on the record, after submission of exhibits and a legal memorandum by appellee with an opportunity for appellants to respond. Appellee, characteristically, failed to file the requested documents within the allotted 30 days, so on December 12, 1979, appellants filed yet another motion for decision. In its reply to this latest motion, filed January 11, 1980, appellee, in apparent surrender, withdrew its opposition to granting a refund to appellants, together with the allowable statutory interest, insisting however that its action in no way waived any of its rights, defenses, determinations or authority previously asserted in the case for purposes of this case or any future case. Appellants opposed appellee‘s equivocal proposed withdrawal and filed a brief on the merits on February 19, 1980. At a hearing on May 28, 1980, Judge Fauntleroy stated that he was prepared finally to decide the merits and dispose of the case, but wanted to tie all pending matters into one order. Because appellants wanted a decision on an award of attorney‘s fees and an award of interest on the refund above the statutory rate to be included in the order, the court continued the case until July 16, 1980, for oral argument on those issues. On July 9, 1980, appellants filed a motion to determine reasonable attorney‘s fees and interest and a request for further findings. Appellee filed its reply on July 16, 1980, the date of the hearing. Judge Fauntleroy found that “the record fails to disclose that the District of Columbia acted in bad faith,” and accordingly denied appellants’ request for attorney‘s fees. He also ruled that he was bound to follow the interest rate fixed by statute. Accordingly, he awarded interest on the refund at the statutory rate of 4%, and requested appellee to file a proposed order. Appellants filed a motion to expedite entry of final judgment on July 31, 1980. Appellee filed proposed findings of fact, conclusions of law and order on August 8, 1980; and appellants filed comments thereon on August 13, 1980. The court entered its findings of fact, conclusions of law and an order on January 6, 1981. Notice of appeal was timely filed on January 16, 1981.
III
The general, or American rule, is that in the absence of statutory authority the prevailing party may not recover attorney‘s fees. Alyeska Pipeline Co. v. Wilderness Society, 421 U.S. 240, 245, 95 S.Ct. 1612, 44 L.Ed.2d 141 (1975); American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, AFL-CIO v. Ball, D.C.App., 439 A.2d 514 (1981) (AFSCME v. Ball); Trilon Plaza Co. v. Allstate Leasing Corp., D.C. App., 399 A.2d 34, 37 (1979). This rule is based on notions that “no person should be penalized for merely defending or prosecuting a lawsuit” and that “the threat of having to pay an opponent‘s costs might un-
In the instant case, appellants contend (with understandable impatience) that because the law was clearly on their side, appellee‘s defense of this lawsuit for eight years before acceding to a tax refund constituted bad faith conduct justifying an award of attorney‘s fees. This argument is appealing but, ultimately, is not dispositive. In the District of Columbia, an income tax is levied on all domiciliaries of the District on the tax day. Alexander v. District of Columbia, D.C.App., 370 A.2d 1327 (1977);
A trial court could reasonably have concluded from the evidence adduced at trial that appellants’ domicile was in the District of Columbia. Mrs. Andrews testified that she wrote to one Mrs. McGuire of the U. S. Civil Service Retirement in December 1970, stating that when her contract expired on June 30, 1971, she would return to Washington to seek employment. Mr. Andrews testified that his sole purpose in leaving the United States to go to Switzerland was so that his wife could fulfill her one year contract with the ILO. He also testified that he filed an application for permit to reenter the United States under no compulsion, but because he intended to return to the United States. In October 1970, he stated on an application for extension of a permit to reenter the United States that the reason for the requested extension was that his wife‘s contract was up for an extension. Since appellee could have reasonably expected to prevail based on this testimony, the trial court could conclude that appellee did not act in bad faith in continuing defending the suit, a position which is bolstered by the fact that at least one trial judge considered the question of domicile in this case to be close.
Furthermore, the excessive delays in the resolution of this case were caused largely by appellants and the court system, not by appellee. In the almost 8½ years from April 1973, when the trial was held, until January 16, 1981 when the notice of appeal was filed, only two periods of delay can be attributed to appellee. The first, from December 7, 1977 to July 11, 1979, occurred when appellee objected to having duplicates of former trial exhibits entered at a new trial. This was a valid and reasonable position for appellee to take and cannot be deemed to have been undertaken in bad faith, solely for the sake of delay. The other period of delay arguably attributable to appellee was a one month, eleven-day period between November 30, 1979 and January 11, 1980, when appellee was supposed to file its exhibits and a legal memoranda, but instead filed a reply cancelling its objections to the refund. Such a short period of delay does not rise to the level of bad faith conduct justifying an award of attorney‘s fees.
Despite its obduracy, appellee‘s conduct does not approach that of the parties in the cases cited above. Its argument that appellants were in fact domiciliaries of the District and were legally subject to income taxation in the District remained unchanged throughout the lawsuit. Its conduct did not force appellants to seek judicial aid for a right that was clear, defined and established; in fact, the merits of the case have never been adjudicated. Appellee supposedly dropped its opposition to the tax refund because continuance of defending its claim became cost ineffective. The merits were not adjudicated largely because of delays induced by appellants. Accordingly, we hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying counsel fees to appellants.
IV
Appellants contend that an award of 4% interest on the tax refund authorized by
V
Finally, appellants contend that appellee is practicing unjustifiable discrimination in violation of the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment because it allegedly differentiates between taxpayers who leave the District to live elsewhere in the United States and those who leave the District to live abroad. Having failed to raise this issue in the trial court, appellants cannot properly raise it here. See Miller v. Avirom, 127 U.S.App.D.C. 367, 369-70, 384 F.2d 319, 321-22 (1967).
Affirmed.
NEBEKER, Associate Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part:
Appellants have been treated most shabbily in this case, and mainly so by the Superior Court. We cannot wash our hands of this by viewing the case through a prism which divides the state into judicial and litigating arms and then say to appellants the District‘s counsel was not at fault, take your hollow victory and do not feel too ill of the judicial process for this inexplicable treatment. We compound the insensitivity by ritualistic recitation of rules on burden of proof, domicile, chilling access to the courts, and abuse of discretion. By whatever rubric—equity, abuse of discretion, or our own authority under
