OPINION
Joshua Cordova appeals from the trial court’s award of attorney’s fees in favor of Southwestern Bell Yellow Pages (SWBYP) in connection with its suit to collect an unpaid advertising debt. We reform the judgment due to a mathematical error and affirm the judgment as reformed.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY
Upon Cordova’s failure to pay his advertising bill of $7,092.18, SWBYP sued on a sworn account and alleged breach of contract and quantum meruit. Cordova then filed an answer in which he pled the affirmative defenses of failure of consideration, breach of contract, misrepresentation, and fraud. He also filed a counterclaim requesting that the contract be rescinded or cancelled due to material misrepresentations — that his advertisement would be the largest in his advertising category and at the top of the page — fraud in the inducement, breach of contract, and violations of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act.
After a bench trial, the trial court awarded judgment in favor of SWBYP for $7,092.18 plus $20,885 in attorney’s fees. Cordova appeals only the fee award in ten issues for review. He does not complain of the contingent appellate fees.
THE EVIDENCE AT TRIAL
The evidence pertaining to attorney’s fees came from three sources: (1) testimony of SWBYP’s attorney Stuart Schwartz, (2) testimony from Tony Conde, Cordova’s counsel, and (3) billing statements admitted into evidence as Plaintiffs Exhibit 10. Schwartz testified that he received the file on June 21, 2001 and prepared a demand letter and petition. When Cordova did not respond to the demand letter, suit was filed. He had difficulty locating Cordova and in August, he prepared a judgment of certificate of his last known address. Before the certificate was filed, Cordova answered and filed his counterclaim, which in addition to seeking rescission, also sought economic and exemplary damages. Schwartz not only had to prepare the collection suit, he had to defend Cordova’s claims of fraud and deceptive trade practices. He did not learn until the day of trial that Cordova admittedly had no evidence to support his claims.
*445 Schwartz testified that he believed the billing statements contained in Plaintiffs Exhibit 10 totaled $17,590. 1 This figure did not include the 23.25 hours he spent in preparation for trial. What would have been a simple case had become substantially more difficult due to Cordova’s counterclaims. Schwartz believed the respective claims of the parties were interrelated and that he needed to defend the counterclaims in order for SWBYP to recover. He testified that the fees were reasonable and necessary for El Paso County and that he was the only board certified attorney in creditors’ rights law in town. On cross-examination, Schwartz acknowledged that the case was originally taken on a contingency basis but that when the counterclaim arose, he reverted to an hourly fee of $150. His normal hourly rate was between $200 and $225.
Tony Conde, Cordova’s attorney, testified that he had been licensed in Texas since 1981 and had practiced in El Paso since 1983, primarily in civil litigation. When Conde agreed to represent Cordova, he indicated that the case was straightforward and that a large amount of attorney’s fees would not be incurred. Conde believed that even with Cordova’s counterclaim, fees would be limited to $1,500 or $2,000. He believed a fee of $20,000 was not reasonable, necessary, or customary. Conde admitted that written discovery was conducted, including interrogatories, requests for disclosure and responses, and requests for production. Cordova was deposed twice and his half-brother was deposed once. Discovery disputes arose, motions to compel were filed, and hearings were held. Conde admitted that he realized that Cordova did not have any lost profits the year before trial.
TRIAL COURT’S CALCULATION
This appeal proceeds without the benefit of formal findings of fact and conclusions of law. However, the trial court detailed her calculations in her ruling:
The attorney’s fees. The 17,595 2 previously requested will be awarded, minus the 1.5 hours which are the items set out in the April 7th bill. 3 ... And then the April bill totaling $3,485 4 is awarded.... The judgment provides for attorney’s fees of $20,885. 5
ATTORNEY’S FEES
A determination of reasonable attorney’s fees is a question for the trier of fact.
Stewart Title Guaranty Co. v. Sterling,
Entitlement to Fees
A party may recover reasonable attorney’s fees if it prevails and recovers damages on a cause of action for which attorney’s fees are recoverable.
See
Tex. Civ.Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 38.001 (Vernon 1997);
Green Int’l, Inc. v. Solis,
Necessary Fees
In Point of Error No. Two, Cordova contends that the fees were unnecessary. Some statutes authorize recovery of attorney’s fees only if the fees are both “reasonable” and “necessary.” Such is the case with the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act.
See Murrco Agency, Inc. v. Ryan,
Inequitable and Unjust
In Point of Error No. Three, Cor-dova complains that the fees were inequitable while in Point of Error No. Four, he maintains that the fees were unjust. He directs us to
Abraxas Petroleum Corp. v. Homburg,
Segregation of Fees
In Point of Error No. Nine, Cor-dova claims that some of the fees sought related to the defense of his counterclaim, which was separate from the simple suit on a sworn account. He argues that SWBYP’s counsel billed 68 hours at a rate of $150 per hour for services related to the counterclaim, resulting in $10,245 which should not be charged against him because the claims were not interrelated. SWBYP counters that while Cordova sought no affirmative relief by the time of trial, he used his counterclaims to obtain an offset for the amount he owed. Since the essence of Cordova’s counterclaim was that a misrepresentation was made to induce the contract, SWBYP argues that it had to defeat Cordova’s counterclaim in order to collect its debt and concludes that the claims were interrelated.
A party may recover attorney fees rendered in connection with all claims if they arise out of the same transaction and are “so interrelated that their prosecution or defense entails proof or denial of essentially the same facts.”
Flint & Assocs. v. Intercontinental Pipe & Steel, Inc.,
During his opening statement, Cordova’s counsel stated that Cordova could not demonstrate any actual damage to his business as a result of the alleged misrepresentations. He admitted that the counterclaim was “more in the nature of a defensive pleading where he [wa]s requesting ... some type of credit or offset that although the ad did come out, it did not come out in the form or fashion that was represented to him.” Cordova also stipulated he had suffered no damages with regard to his DTPA claim. When Cordo-va’s counsel was asked whether this stipulation also applied to Cordova’s fraud claim, counsel admitted that the fraud claim was a defense, not a claim for affirmative relief.
Because Cordova pled his counterclaim as an affirmative defense, SWBYP had to overcome his claims of misrepresentation in order to prevail on its debt collection.
See RepublicBank,
Reasonableness Factors
In his remaining issues for review, Cor-dova argues that the fee award was unreasonable. Point of Error No. One is a global challenge to the reasonableness of the fee. In Point of Error No. Five he claims that the fees injured him while in Point of Error No. Six he argues that the fees prejudiced him. In Point of Error No. Seven, he argues that the fee did not bear a reasonable relationship to the amount in controversy. Point of Error No. Eight alleges that SWBYP’s counsel overprepared the case. Point of Error No. Ten complains of the sufficiency of the evidence to support a finding that the fees were reasonable.
In determining whether the award is excessive, we are entitled to look at the entire record and to view the matter in the light of the testimony, the amount in controversy, the nature of the case, and our own common knowledge and experience as lawyers and judges.
McFadden v. Bresler Malls, Inc.,
Relationship to Amount in Controversy
Attorney’s fees must bear some reasonable relationship to the amount in controversy.
Republic Nat. Life Ins. Co. v. Heyward,
Overpreparation of Case
Cordova asserts that SWBYP’s counsel overprepared the case. He maintains that 28.25 hours spent in trial preparation was unnecessary for a case involving only two witnesses and a five-minute conversation in which the alleged misrepresentations were made.
If the prevailing party has ov-erprepared the case, then the party hable for attorney’s fees should not be held responsible for time spent in overpreparation.
Giles v. Cardenas,
Sufficiency of the Evidence
Finally, we turn to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the award. Cordova argues that the invoices submitted by SWBYP actually total $13,389 rather than the $17,590 as testified to at trial. In our own examination of the billing statements, we calculate a total of $14,747.19. SWBYP has conceded the mistake. We sustain Point of Error No. Ten and reform the judgment to reflect a fee award of $18,007 ($14,747-$225 + $3485). See Tex.R.App.P. 43.3. The judgment is affirmed as reformed.
Notes
. Schwartz actually testified that he had not totaled the statements, but Conde had represented the total at $17,590 in his controverting affidavit.
. As we have explained, the actual testimony established the amount at $17,590.
. Schwartz testified that he recorded 1.5 hours at the rate of $150 on three dates in February and March. These were not billed until the day before trial. The trial court concluded &e time sheets should have been produced when reduced to writing. Because they had not been produced in discovery, they were excluded.
. Schwartz testified that he had billed 23.25 hours in trial preparation, which at a rate of $150 per hour would total $3,487.50.
. The sums announced by the court actually total $20,855.
