GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS v. COUCH
S13G1555
SUPREME COURT OF GEORGIA
JUNE 16, 2014
RECONSIDERATION DENIED JULY 11, 2014
759 SE2d 804
NAHMIAS, Justice.
- Did the Court of Appeals err when it held that the sovereign immunity of the Department was waived by the Georgia Tort Claims Act as to Couch‘s attorney fees?
- If the sovereign immunity of the Department was waived as to Couch‘s attorney fees, did the Court of Appeals err by failing to prorate the 40% contingency fee to reflect that some of the fees were incurred before the settlement offer was rejected?
For the reasons discussed below, we hold that the sovereign immunity of the Department was waived as to the attorney fees award under
1. (a) The Court of Appeals summarized the basic facts of this case as follows:
[In July 2004,] Couch was part of a team of Walker State Prison inmates who were painting the warden‘s house. While he was working, a dry-rotted joist gave way, causing him to fall and land with his legs straddling a joist. As a result of the fall, Couch suffered a severed urethra. Couch filed a premises liability action against the Department for damages for physical injuries he sustained, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of Couch in the amount of $105,417.
Before the trial, Couch made a written offer of settlement in the amount of $24,000, which the Department rejected. After the verdict, which was greater than 125 percent of the offer of settlement, Couch moved for attorney fees and expenses pursuant to
OCGA § 9-11-68 , the offer of settlement statute, in the amount of $104,158.79, based on an hourly rate, despite a contingency fee arrangement for 40 percent of the final recovery. The Department subsequently moved to dismiss Couch‘s claim for attorney fees based on lack of subject matter jurisdiction. It maintained that the Georgia Constitution only permits recovery of damages against a state entity resulting from a tort as provided in the [Georgia Tort Claims Act], and that there is no express waiver contained in the GTCA authorizing the award of attorney fees.
322 Ga. App. at 235 (citations and footnote omitted).1 After holding an evidentiary hearing, the trial court issued an order denying the Department‘s motion to dismiss, ruling that the State had waived sovereign immunity with regard to attorney fees awarded under
(b)
The statute applies to a written offer to settle a tort claim made more than 30 days after the service of the summons or complaint but not less than 30 days before trial (or 20 days for a counteroffer). See
(1) If a defendant makes an offer of settlement which is rejected by the plaintiff, the defendant shall be entitled to recover reasonable attorney‘s fees and expenses of litigation incurred by the defendant or on the defendant‘s behalf from the date of the rejection of the offer of settlement through the entry of judgment if the final judgment is one of no liability or the final judgment obtained by the plaintiff is less than 75 percent of such offer of settlement.
(2) If a plaintiff makes an offer of settlement which is rejected by the defendant and the plaintiff recovers a final judgment in an amount greater than 125 percent of such offer of settlement, the plaintiff shall be entitled to recover reasonable attorney‘s fees and expenses of litigation incurred by the plaintiff or on the plaintiff‘s behalf from the date of the rejection of the offer of settlement through the entry of judgment.
There is no question that the preconditions for an award of attorney fees and litigation expenses under
2. Under Georgia law today, sovereign immunity has constitutional status, and that immunity may be waived only by an act of the General Assembly or by the Constitution itself. See Ga. Dept. of Natural Resources v. Center for a Sustainable Coast, Inc., 294 Ga. 593, 597-598 (755 SE2d 184) (2014) (reviewing the history of sovereign immunity in Georgia). As amended in 1991, the Georgia Constitution says:
(a) The General Assembly may waive the state‘s sovereign immunity from suit by enacting a State Tort Claims Act, in which the General Assembly may provide by law for procedures for the making, handling, and disposition of actions or claims against the state and its departments, agencies, officers, and employees, upon such terms and subject to such conditions and limitations as the General Assembly may provide....
(e) Except as specifically provided in this Paragraph, sovereign immunity extends to the state and all of its departments and agencies. The sovereign immunity of the state and its departments and agencies can only be waived
by an Act of the General Assembly which specifically provides that sovereign immunity is thereby waived and the extent of such waiver.
To accompany the 1991 constitutional amendment, the General Assembly enacted the Georgia Tort Claims Act (GTCA),
(a) The state waives its sovereign immunity for the torts of state officers and employees while acting within the scope of their official duties or employment and shall be liable for such torts in the same manner as a private individual or entity would be liable under like circumstances; provided, however, that the state‘s sovereign immunity is waived subject to all exceptions and limitations set forth in [the GTCA]. The state shall have no liability for losses resulting from conduct on the part of state officers or employees which was not within the scope of their official duties or employment.
(b) The state waives its sovereign immunity only to the extent and in the manner provided in [the GTCA] and only with respect to actions brought in the courts of the State of Georgia. The state does not waive any immunity with respect to actions brought in the courts of the United States.
The Department does not dispute that the GTCA‘s waiver of sovereign immunity allowed Couch to bring this tort lawsuit against the Department and to recover damages for the personal injury he suffered.3 The Department contends, however, that an award of attorney fees under
(a) In response to the Department‘s contention, Couch posits that the statutory authority for an award of attorney fees against the state under
personal injury; disease; death; damage to tangible property, including lost wages and economic loss to the person who suffered the injury, disease, or death; pain and suffering; mental anguish; and any other element of actual damages recoverable in actions for negligence.
Couch contends that
OCGA § 13-6-11 does not create an independent cause of action. That statute merely establishes the circumstances in which a plaintiff may recover the expenses of litigation as an additional element of his damages. The damages allowed under this Code section are compensatory, not punitive or vindictive. The constitutional waiver of sovereign immunity
Fru-Con, 206 Ga. App. at 826 (citations and punctuation omitted; emphasis in original). See also Forsyth County v. Martin, 279 Ga. 215, 219 (610 SE2d 512) (2005) (concluding that counties may be subject to an award of attorney fees under
Most telling, however, is that unlike
We therefore agree with the Department that Fru-Con and similar cases decided under
(b) While payments of attorney fees and litigation expenses under
The GTCA‘s waiver of sovereign immunity from tort actions indicates that such cases proceed under the usual rules of practice and procedure applicable to such tort suits, subject to the various exceptions and limitations specified in the GTCA. Thus, the core waiver provision in the GTCA says:
The state waives its sovereign immunity for the torts of state officers and employees while acting within the scope of their official duties or employment and shall be liable for such torts in the same manner as a private individual or entity would be liable under like circumstances; provided, however, that the state‘s sovereign immunity is waived subject to all exceptions and limitations set forth in this article....
In other words, the GTCA did not enact a whole new scheme for civil practice in the tort lawsuits it authorizes. Instead, the General
The Georgia Tort Claims Act is not a civil procedure statute. It touches on procedural matters only incidentally. It makes no provision for the form of pleadings and motions, pretrial discovery, trial practice, or the entry of judgments and summary judgments. Thus, if Georgia Tort Claims Act cases are ever to be litigated, the courts will have to look elsewhere for answers to procedural questions. The place to find these answers is the Civil Practice Act.
Ga. Pines Community Svc. Bd. v. Summerlin, 282 Ga. 339, 341 (647 SE2d 566) (2007). See also Camp v. Coweta County, 280 Ga. 199, 203 (625 SE2d 759) (2006) (“In the absence of specific limitations [in the GTCA], this general rule [of civil procedure], rather than an unwritten general prohibition, should apply.“).8
Nothing in the GTCA suggests that the General Assembly meant to exclude the state, where it has waived sovereign immunity and allowed a tort action to proceed against it, to avoid the consequences under the CPA that other civil litigants face for improper litigation conduct - including an award of attorney fees and litigation expenses under
The Department points out that the GTCA includes a provision expressly providing for an award of attorney fees for improper litigation conduct, see
We also note that, just a few years before the GTCA was enacted, our Court of Appeals decided, in a whole-court opinion, that sovereign immunity did not preclude a taxpayer from recovering both prejudgment interest and attorney fees against a county due to the county‘s unnecessary litigiousness during a tax refund action, based on the statutes generally authorizing those recoveries in such litigation (including
Finally, we recognize that an award of attorney fees under
Many of the rules that the CPA provides for the conduct of civil litigation, especially those governing pretrial discovery, require the parties to spend considerable amounts of money - direct expenditures as well as payment for the services and expenses of the party‘s
We cannot say that the General Assembly, which waived sovereign immunity for tort actions against the state in the GTCA, meant for state defendants and their lawyers to then be free to violate the rules set forth for the proper conduct of such civil litigation and thus to sabotage the “just, speedy, and inexpensive determination” of such actions,
(c) For these reasons, we hold that sovereign immunity did not bar an award of attorney fees and litigation expenses against the Department under
3. Because we have concluded that sovereign immunity did not protect the Department from an award under
(a) The trial court concluded that the amount of attorney fees to be awarded under
“It is well-settled that an award of attorney fees is to be determined upon evidence of the reasonable value of the professional services which underlie the claim for attorney fees.” Southern Cellular Telecom v. Banks, 209 Ga. App. 401, 403 (433 SE2d 606) (1993). As the Court of Appeals has explained:
A court may consider a contingent fee agreement and the amount it would have generated as evidence of usual and customary fees in determining both the reasonableness and the amount of an award of attorney fees. When a party seeks fees based on a contingent fee agreement, [however,] the party must show that the contingency fee percentage was a usual or customary fee for such case and that the contingency fee was a valid indicator of the value of the professional services rendered. In addition, the party seeking fees must also introduce evidence of hours, rates, or some other indication of the value of the professional services actually rendered.
Brock Built, LLC v. Blake, 316 Ga. App. 710, 714-715 (730 SE2d 180) (2012) (citation omitted). Accordingly,
[e]vidence of the existence of a contingent fee contract, without more, is not sufficient to support the award of attorney fees. An attorney cannot recover for professional services without proof of the value of those services. A naked
assertion that the fees are “reasonable,” without any evidence of hours, rates, or other indication of the value of the professional services actually rendered is inadequate.
Brandenburg v. All-Fleet Refinishing, Inc., 252 Ga. App. 40, 43 (555 SE2d 508) (2001) (citation omitted).
A contingency fee agreement is a contract between the lawyer and the client regarding what the client agrees to pay, and what the lawyer agrees to be paid, for the work that the lawyer will do in the matter. Entering such a contract is a gamble for both the lawyer and the client, because the value of the professional services actually rendered by the lawyer may be considerably higher or lower than the agreed-upon amount, depending on how the litigation proceeds. While certainly a guidepost to the reasonable value of the services the lawyer performed, the contingency fee agreement is not conclusive, and it cannot bind the court in determining that reasonable value, nor should it bind the opposing party required to pay the attorney fees, who had no role in negotiating the agreement. See Southern Cellular Telecom, 209 Ga. App. at 402 (“[The trial] court‘s conclusion that it was not bound, and could not as a matter of law be bound, by the [contingency fee] contract... was legally sound and reaffirms a principle long accepted by the courts of this state.“).
Moreover, and particularly relevant to the situation here, by entering a contingency fee agreement, the lawyer and client assume many risks and uncertainties inherent in civil litigation, but they are not required to predict that the opposing party will be unnecessarily litigious or otherwise will fail to follow the law governing civil litigation in a sanctionable way, requiring the lawyer to provide additional services to protect the client from that improper conduct. Indeed, the basic purpose of statutes and rules that authorize attorney fees as a sanction for litigation abuse “would be thwarted if a party could escape the sanction whenever opposing counsel‘s compensation [owed by his client] is unaffected by the abuse, as when the fee arrangement is a contingency fee or... a flat rate” or if counsel is working pro bono. Centennial Archaeology, Inc. v. Aecom, Inc., 688 F.3d 673, 680 (10th Cir. 2012).
Thus, while the trial court was entitled to consider Couch‘s contingency fee agreement with his attorneys and the amount it would have generated as evidence of their usual and customary fees, the court erred in calculating what amount of attorney fees was reasonable based solely, as far as the record reflects, on that agreement rather than on evidence of hours, rates, or other indications regarding the value of the attorneys’ professional services actually rendered. See Brock Built, LLC, 316 Ga. App. at 714-715.
Greer and Ellerin involved disputes between plaintiffs and their attorneys based on a contingency fee contract. The issue in this case is not when and to what extent Couch‘s attorneys were entitled to recover for their services from Couch according to their contract, but rather when and to what extent they performed services so that fees were incurred on Couch‘s behalf that he could recover from the Department according to
Ironically, the analysis that Couch endorses actually would result in no attorney fees being awarded under
(c) For these reasons, we reverse the portion of the Court of Appeals’ judgment affirming the trial court‘s calculation of the attorney fees award to Couch, and remand with direction that the case be remanded to the trial court for recalculation, in accordance with the principles discussed above, of the reasonable value of the professional services that Couch‘s attorneys actually provided during the period “from the date of the rejection of the offer of settlement through the entry of judgment.”
DECIDED JUNE 16, 2014 - RECONSIDERATION DENIED JULY 11, 2014.
Samuel S. Olens, Attorney General, Kathleen M. Pacious, Deputy Attorney General, Loretta L. Pinkston, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Robert L. Bunner, Assistant Attorney General, for appellant.
Thomas G. Tidwell, Kevin M. Elwell, for appellee.
Boone & Stone, William S. Stone, Laura M. Shamp, Holland & Knight, Laurie W. Daniel, Leland H. Kynes, amici curiae.
