delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Mark Chase, Dave Burton and Barbara Herman (collectively, “Chase”) filed an action against a homeowner’s association and its board of directors-Bearpaw Ranch Association, Gene Aubrey, Ron Fraze, David Grimland, James Dickey and Mike Preyer (collectively, “Bearpaw”)-seeking a declaratory judgment that the governance of the association violates Montana law and requesting injunctive relief. The District Court granted summary judgment in favor of Bearpaw. Bearpaw then moved the court to award attorney fees. The District Court awarded Bearpaw $79,107.50 in attorney fees. Chase now appeals.
¶2 We reframe the issues on appeal as follows:
¶3 (1) whether the District Court erred in awarding attorney fees to Bearpaw; and
¶4 (2) whether the District Court abused its discretion in calculating the amount of attorney fees.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶5 This dispute has endured in the courts of Montana for nearly half a decade and has reached this Court once before. Thankfully, we need not rehash its entire sordid past to resolve the issues on appeal. Instead, we begin in medias res, when the District Court granted summary judgment in favor of Bearpaw, by order dated September 4, 2003. The District Court did not file this order, however, until October 16, 2003. Meanwhile, on October 2, 2003, Chase filed a notice of appeal. Neither Chase nor Bearpaw filed a notice of entry of judgment on the court’s grant of summary judgment.
¶6 After both parties had filed appellate briefs in this Court, Chase eventually moved this Court to dismiss its appeal. We dismissed the case and remanded for a determination of costs, pursuant to Rule 36, M.RApp.P.
¶7 On June 23, 2004, Bearpaw filed a motion requesting that the District Court award attorney fees. On August 13, 2004, the District Court signed an order granting Bearpaw’s request for attorney fees and scheduling a subsequent hearing to determine the proper amount *424 of attorney fees. This ruling was filed on August 23, 2004.
¶8 The District Court initially provided three potential bases for its decision to award attorney fees: a contractual fee-shifting provision, rendered reciprocal by § 28-3-704, MCA; the Declaratory Judgment Act, § 27-8-313, MCA; and the equitable
Foy
exception to the American Rule,
see, e.g., National Cas. Co. v. American Bankers,
¶9 The District Court granted Chase’s motion to vacate the scheduled hearing on the proper amount of attorney fees so that the court could also address the question of whether it lacked jurisdiction to award attorney fees. Chase argued that, pursuant to Rule 59(g), M.R.Civ.P., the District Court’s failure to hold a hearing and award attorney fees within sixty days of Bearpaw’s initial request for attorney fees divested the court of jurisdiction to make such an award.
¶10 Chase’s counsel failed to show up for the beginning of the consolidated hearing on the issues of whether the District Court retained the authority to award attorney fees and determination of the appropriate amount of attorney fees. At the hearing, Bearpaw presented the testimony of its counsel, Leonard Smith, who indicated that Bearpaw would be billed $8,352 for legal services rendered in August and September of 2004. Bearpaw also presented an expert witness, Robert E. Lee (Lee), who commented on the “work-enhancing characteristics” of the case-including the need to communicate with multiple individual defendants, the “onerous” burden to review voluminous documents, and the contentious zeal that characterized Chase’s prosecution of the case (“a scorched earth approach on the part of the plaintiffs and their counsel”). Lee testified that each of the seven factors considered in determining the reasonableness of attorney fees,
see Forrester & MacGinnis v. B. & M. Co.
(1914),
¶11 Several weeks later, the court held a second hearing at which time Chase offered the expert testimony of Bruce Fain (Fain). Fain testified that in his opinion, charges totaling $10,763 for client conferences are excessive for a case that is resolved on summary judgment. He also testified that, in comparison to similar cases he has litigated, $12,122 is an unreasonable charge for briefing and preparing a motion for summary judgment. Fain opined that Chase’s opposition to Bearpaw’s fee claim is reasonable, and therefore Bearpaw should not recover fees incurred in attempting to recover attorney fees, nor should Bearpaw recover appellate fees, since the Supreme Court declined to award them when afforded the opportunity. Finally, although he acknowledged that Bearpaw’s counsel needed to review roughly 8,000 documents, Fain suggested that the seven factors utilized in assessing a claim for attorney fees would support an award of only $15,200, which roughly coincides with the fees incurred by Chase before the court granted summary judgment.
¶12 Chase also sought to present the testimony of the three named plaintiffs. The District Court, however, sustained Bearpaw’s objection to their testimony. Chase made an offer of proof which indicated that the plaintiffs anticipated that the litigation would be quickly resolved, that they made eleven separate offers to settle or submit to arbitration, and that they would suffer hardship if saddled with nearly $80,000 in fees. The corut denied the offers, reasoning that the three lay witnesses lacked competence to testify as to the propriety of attorney fees claimed by Bearpaw and that their testimony would not prove relevant to that issue.
¶13 The District Court subsequently ordered Chase to reimburse Bearpaw $79,107.50 (plus interest) for the attorney fees incurred in defending the suit and seeking attorney fees. The court specified that Bearpaw is entitled to recover attorney fees incurred in defending the action in the District Court pursuant to a contractual fee-shifting provision, rendered reciprocal by § 28-3-704, MCA. The court determined that Bearpaw is entitled to recover attorney fees incurred in preparing its appeal of the summary judgment ruling pursuant to the
Foy
equitable exception to the American Rule. Finally, the court held that Bearpaw is entitled to recover attorney fees incurred in
*426
seeking attorney fees (“fees-for-fees”) pursuant to
State ex rel. DOT v. Slack,
STANDARDS OF REVIEW
¶14 “We review a district court’s conclusions of law to determine whether the district court’s interpretation of the law is correct.”
Chamberlin v. Puckett Construction (1996),
¶15 We review a district court’s award of reasonable attorney fees for an abuse of discretion.
Chamberlin,
DISCUSSION
Issue 1: Whether the District Court erred in awarding attorney fees to Bearpaw.
¶16 Chase argues that the District Court erred in awarding attorney fees to Bearpaw because, pursuant to Rule 59, M.R.Civ.P., the District Court lost authority to award attorney fees when it failed to hold a hearing to determine the appropriate amount of attorney fees within sixty days of Bearpaw’s motion requesting attorney fees. Chase notes that Rule 59(g), M.R.Civ.P., requires a court to rule on a motion to alter or amend a judgment within sixty days or else that motion is deemed denied. Further, Chase maintains that a petition for attorney fees cannot be adjudicated absent an evidentiary hearing; therefore, Chase suggests, a court cannot legally rule on a post-judgment motion for attorney fees without first holding an evidentiary hearing to determine the proper amount of fees. Accordingly, Chase concludes that the court’s failure to hold an evidentiary hearing within sixty days *427 of Bearpaw’s motion divested the court of jurisdiction to amend its judgment by awarding fees to Bearpaw.
¶17 Bearpaw argues that the District Court retained the authority to award attorney fees because the court never entered judgment when it awarded summary judgment in favor of Chase, and therefore, the request for attorney fees was not a post-judgment motion to amend the judgment. Alternatively, Bearpaw maintains that Rule 59, M.R.Civ.P., requires only that the District Court rule within sixty days whether it will award attorney fees, but allows the court to later hold a hearing to determine the proper amount of fees to award. We agree with Bearpaw’s interpretation of Rule 59.
A. The District Court’s Authority to Award Fees:
¶18 “A motion for attorneys’ fees filed after entry of a judgment is treated as a motion to alter or amend a judgment.”
Associated Press v. Croft,
¶19 Although Bearpaw contends that judgment was not entered on the court’s grant of summary judgment until December 21, 2004, this argument lacks merit. The District Court granted summary judgment in favor of Bearpaw on September 4,2003. Chase then filed a notice of appeal on October 2,2003, two weeks before the clerk of court filed the order granting summary judgment. By filing the judgment, the clerk effectively entered judgment against Chase.
See Firefighters, Local No. 8 v. District Court,
¶20 Given that Rule 59 applies, we must consider whether the court was divested of its authority to award attorney fees when it failed to hold an evidentiary hearing and award a specific figure within sixty days of Bearpaw’s motion requesting fees. By its terms, Rule 59 mandates the court to “determine” a motion to alter or amend a judgment within sixty days, “and if the court shall fail to rule on the motion within the 60 day period, the motion shall be deemed deified.” Rule 59(g), M.R.Civ.P. (emphasis added). The Rule does not require a district court to hold all required hearings within sixty days of the motion, nor does it require that the court determine specifically how to amend the judgment within sixty days. It simply requires the court to rule, within sixty days, whether it will amend the judgment.
¶21 Chase argues that Croft requires a district court to hold a hearing and award a specific figure within sixty days. Chase misreads Croft. In *428 Croft, the court held an evidentiary hearing within sixty days of the motion requesting attorney fees. ¶ 34. The court, however, did not rule that it would award fees within sixty days of the motion requesting fees. ¶ 37. We reversed the award of attorney fees because the court failed to “render a decision [within sixty days] regarding” the motion for fees. ¶ 37. Croft does not require a district court to hold a hearing and award a specific figure for attorney fees within sixty days of a motion. It simply requires the court to render a decision whether or not to award attorney fees within sixty days of a post-judgment request for fees.
¶22 Existing precedent confirms that a distinction exists between a court’s decision to award attorney fees and a court’s determination of the proper measure of fees. In Plath we held that a district court abused its discretion when it awarded $10,000 in attorney fees without first holding an evidentiary hearing. We noted that the $10,000 figure:
is not supported by competent evidence established as the result of an evidentiary hearing. Accordingly, although we affirm the District Court’s discretionary decision to grant attorney fees[,] ... we reverse the District Court’s order of attorney fees in the amount of $10,000 and remand the cause for an evidentiary hearing....
Plath,
¶ 41 (emphasis added). Likewise, in
Rossi v. Pawiroredjo,
¶23 In light of the foregoing analysis, we conclude that on August 13, 2004-fifty-one days after Bearpaw filed its motion-the District Court had authority to grant Bearpaw’s motion requesting attorney fees.
B. Whether the District Court Properly Awarded Fees:
¶24 Having established that the District Court retained authority to rule on Bearpaw’s motion for attorney fees, we now turn to whether the District Court properly awarded fees to Bearpaw. Chase correctly observes that the District Court order of August 13, 2004, awarding attorney fees fails to specify the basis for the award. Nevertheless, in its later order on the proper amount of attorney fees, the court clarified
*429
the various bases for its award. The court indicated that § 6.02 of the Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions, rendered reciprocal by § 28-3-704, MCA, enabled Bearpaw to recover attorney fees incurred during the initial phase of litigation in the District Court, which culminated in the court’s granting summary judgment in favor of Bearpaw. The court found that Chase had pursued a frivolous appeal, entitling Bearpaw to recover fees incurred on appeal pursuant to the
Foy
exception to the American Rule as articulated in
Tanner v. Dream Island, Inc.
(1996),
1. Fees Incurred in the District Court and on Appeal:
¶25 The Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions (“Declaration”) provides that “Bearpaw Ranch... shall be subject to the following easements, covenants, conditions, and restrictions and will bind the grantees, heirs, successors, and assigns of the owners and any future owners.” (Emphasis added.) Section 6.02 of the Declaration provides that:
[i]n any action of any kind for the enforcement of the Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions, if the relief prayed for is granted in whole or in part, the applicant for relief shall be entitled to recover necessary court Costs [sic] for the action, including reasonable attorney’s fees.
Chase argues that this provision does not entitle Bearpaw to recover attorney fees because Bearpaw was not the “applicant for relief.” Chase overlooks § 27-3-704, MCA, however, which renders such contractual fee-shifting provisions reciprocal:
Whenever, by virtue of the provisions of any contract or obligation in the nature of a contract[,] ... one party to such a contract or obligation has an express right to recover attorney fees from any other party to the contract or obligation in the event the party having the right shall bring an action upon the contract or obligation, then in any action on such contract or obligation all parties to the contract or obligation shall be deemed to have the same right to recover attorney fees and the prevailing party in such action ... shall be entitled to recover his reasonable attorney fees from the losing party or parties.
Under the Declaration, Chase could have recovered reasonable
*430
attorney fees if he had prevailed on his claims.
1
Due to the statutorily imposed reciprocity of fee-shifting, the Declaration entitles Bearpaw-the prevailing party against whom Chase brought a claim-to recover reasonable attorney fees. Because the Declaration does not explicitly exclude attorney fees incurred on appeal, such fees may also be recovered pursuant to the fee-shifting provision of the contract, as they are “necessary” costs incurred in ultimately prevailing on the claim.
See, e.g., Chamberlin,
2. Fees Incurred in Litigating the Withdrawal of Chase’s Attorney:
¶26 Chase suggests that the District Court improperly awarded Bearpaw fees that it incurred in securing the withdrawal of Chase’s initial counsel (Towe) due to a conflict of interest. While securing the withdrawal of Towe may have benefited Bearpaw, we cannot say that this was a “necessary’ expense incurred in “enforcing] the Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions” contained in the Declaration. Rather, Bearpaw chose to litigate this wholly collateral issue, which had nothing to do with enforcement of the Declaration. Had Chase prevailed, he could not have recovered the costs he incurred in connection with Towe’s withdrawal. Nor may Bearpaw recover the attorney fees incurred in lititgating this issue. According to Fain, Bearpaw was awarded $5,777 in fees related to the withdrawal issue.
3. Fees Incurred in Recovering Fees (Fees-for-Fees):
¶27 Finally, we turn to the question of whether the District Court properly awarded fees-for-fees to Bearpaw. Chase argues that the District Court erroneously awarded fees-for-fees. As a matter of law, the District Court erred in applying the “unreasonable objection” standard articulated in
Slack
and
State By Dep’t of Highways v.
*431
McGuckin
(1990),
¶28 In
Amazi v. Atlantic Richfield Co.
(1991),
¶29 Our holding
in. Amazi
is consistent with the American Rule, which posits that a party generally pays its own attorney fees.
Finke v. State ex rel. McGrath,
¶30 The fee-shifting provision in the Declaration is strikingly similar to the fee-shifting provision at issue in
Krumme v. Westpoint Stevens Inc.
(S.D.N.Y. 1999),
¶31 Here, the Declaration itself provides for recovery of attorney fees “in any action of any kind for the enforcement of the Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions^]” (Emphasis added.) The fee-shifting provision is one such “Condition” of the Declaration. Litigation over the entitlement to fees under the contract is properly construed as an action for the enforcement of a condition contained in the Declaration. Consequently, pursuant to the express terms of the contract, Bearpaw is entitled to recover attorney fees incurred in establishing its entitlement to fees under the contract.
*433 ¶32 Fees incurred in establishing the amount of “reasonable attorney's fees,” however, are not compensable under the contract. A dispute over the reasonableness of the fees incurred by Bearpaw is not properly construed as an action for enforcement of a “Condition” included in the Declaration. Instead, it is a dispute over the interpretation of a generic term of the Declaration and a factual dispute over the necessity of particular fee claims. 3 As such, the contract itself does not provide for recovery of fees incurred in establishing the amount of attorney fees reasonably incurred by Bearpaw.
¶33 We hold that the District Court properly awarded attorney fees to Bearpaw for most expenses incurred in proceedings preceding its grant of summary judgment to Bearpaw as well as for all costs subsequently incurred on appeal. Additionally, the court properly awarded fees-for-fees only to the extent that such fees were incurred in establishing Bearpaw’s entitlement to fees under the terms of the Declaration. The District Court erred, however, in awarding fees-for-fees to compensate Bearpaw for expenditures incurred to establish the reasonable amount of attorney fees. The District Court also erred in awarding fees to compensate Bearpaw for expenses incurred in procuring the withdrawal of Towe.
Issue 2: Whether the District Court abused its discretion in determining the amount of attorney fees.
¶34 Chase argues that the District Court awarded an excessive amount of fees to Bearpaw. Chase maintains that during each phase of litigation it expended considerably less in attorney fees than the fees that Bearpaw claimed; therefore, Bearpaw’s claimed fees are unreasonable. Additionally, Chase notes that the amount recovered by Bearpaw vastly exceeds fee awards that this Court has affirmed in cases disposed of on summary judgment. Chase contends that the fee award erroneously included fees-for-fees and fees incurred in procuring the withdrawal of Towe. Chase avers that Bearpaw improperly recovered billings for general association matters and fees incurred in holding conferences with clients. Finally, Chase suggests that the District Court abused its discretion when it denied plaintiffs the opportunity to testify during the hearing on the proper measure of damages.
¶35 Bearpaw observes that both parties presented expert testimony
*434
concerning the reasonableness of its fee claims and stresses that the District Court properly exercised its broad discretion in according greater weight and credibility to the testimony of Bearpaw’s expert. Bearpaw denigrates Chase’s attempts to compare the fee award it received to other awards this Court has affirmed because the reasonableness of fees depends on the unique facts of each case. In sum, Bearpaw contends that Chase has not established that the District Court abused its discretion in determining the amount of fees. ¶36 “[T]he reasonableness of attorney’s fees must be ascertained under the unique facts of each case.”
Chamberlin,
¶37 Also without merit is Chase’s argument that the District Court abused its discretion when it declined to allow the three named plaintiffs to testify at the hearing on the proper measure of damages. None of the three plaintiffs is an attorney, nor did any of them profess expertise in assessing the veracity or reasonableness of attorneys’ billings. The District Court properly determined that they lacked competence to testify as to the reasonableness of the fees claimed by Bearpaw. The offer of proof made by Chase’s counsel confirms that these witnesses’ testimony-that several other members of the association were interested in resolving the issues raised by plaintiffs, that the plaintiffs offered to submit to arbitration or mediation, and that the plaintiffs would incur great hardship if made to pay Bearpaw’s fees-would not have been relevant in determining the reasonableness of Bearpaw’s claimed fees. Nor would it have been relevant to the issue of whether the court retained authority to award fees in the first place. As such, the testimony was properly excluded. See Rule 402, M.R.Evid.
¶38 The following factors should be considered as guidelines in determining the reasonableness of attorney fees:
(1) the amount and character of the services rendered; (2) the labor, time and trouble involved; (3) the character and importance of the litigation in which the services were rendered; (4) the amount of money or the value of the property to be affected; (5) the professional skill and experience called for; (6) the attorneys’ character and standing in their profession; and (7) the results secured by the services of the attorneys.
Plath,
¶ 36 (citing
Swenson v. Janke
(1995),
¶39 Bearpaw offered Lee’s expert testimony during the hearing on the proper amount of attorney fees. Lee testified that certain characteristics of the case increased the amount of labor, time and trouble involved and he detailed how each of the seven factors supported the reasonableness of fees of $79,523.50. Chase offered the expert testimony of Fain, who opined that in comparison to similar cases that he has litigated, Bearpaw’s claimed fees are not reasonable. Fain’s report specifically identifies charges for conferences with clients and billings for general association matters as improperly submitted fees. Fain briefly touched on the seven factors and suggested that they would support awarding fees of only $15,200. Fain did, however, acknowledge that Bearpaw’s counsel had to review roughly 8,000 documents to ascertain their relevance. Towe (Chase’s initial counsel) testified that he may have reviewed these documents but that in any event he did so “quickly,” because his clients had already flagged the important documents.
¶40 Faced with irreconcilably conflicting expert testimony, the District Court had to decide which expert provided a more persuasive opinion concerning the reasonableness of Bearpaw’s claimed fees. The District Court found Lee’s testimony more credible than Fain’s testimony and it awarded an amount slightly lower than that which Lee deemed reasonable-$79,107.50. “[Wjitness credibility and the weight accorded testimony are within the province of the District Court.”
Chamberlin,
*436 ¶41 Nevertheless, the District Court did err in awarding fees-for-fees-totaling $15,494 4 -without determining whether those fees were incurred in establishing the entitlement to fees or in establishing the reasonable amount of fees. The District Court could not, pursuant to the terms of the Declaration, order Chase to compensate Bearpaw for fees incurred in establishing the proper amount of fees. Consequently, it abused its discretion in awarding Bearpaw all of the legal costs it had incurred in litigating the issue of attorney fees without making any effort to ascertain the specific source of those costs. Likewise, the District Court abused its discretion in awarding Bearpaw $5,777 for expenses it incurred in litigating the issue of Towe’s withdrawal. We reverse and remand for a proper determination of the amount of fees, particularly fees-for-fees, that Bearpaw may recover.
CONCLUSION
¶42 The District Court had authority to rule on Bearpaw’s motion for attorney fees on August 13, 2004. The District Court properly awarded fees incurred by Bearpaw in defending its first appeal before this Court and in its initial proceedings in the District Court (excepting those expenses related to the withdrawal of Towe). The District Court properly awarded attorney fees incurred by Bearpaw in establishing its entitlement to fees. The District Court erred, as a matter of law, in awarding Bearpaw the fees that it incurred in establishing the compensable amount of attorney fees. The District Court also erred, as a matter of law, in awarding Bearpaw fees that it incurred in litigating the issue of Towe’s withdrawal as Chase’s attorney.
¶43 We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings concerning the amount of attorney fees that Bearpaw may recover consistent with this opinion.
Notes
In his Amended Compliant, Chase specifically requested attorney fees pursuant to § 6.02 of the Declaration. Thus, Chase has conceded that he is a party to the Declaration and is bound by its terms.
These statutes, §§ 70-30-305 and -306, MCA, codified the constitutional right to attorney fees incurred in defending against condemnation proceedings. See Art. II. Sec. 29, Mont. Const.
We note that “reasonable ” commonly qualified “attorney fees ” in statutory fee-shifting provisions as well as contractual fee-shifting provisions.
Lee testified that Bearpaw incurred $7,142 in post-appeal expenses through July 26, 2004. Leonard Smith testified that Bearpaw incurred an additional $8,352 in fees during August and September. Because the sole issue litigated on remand was the question of attorney fees, we assume that Bearpaw incurred these fees either in establishing its entitlement to fees, or in establishing a reasonable amount of fees.
