In Lehman v. Bradbury,
No statute or contract authorizes an award of attorney fees to plaintiffs under the facts of this case. Instead of such authority, plaintiffs rely on this court’s inherent power, as a court of equity, to award attorney fees on appeal in appropriate cases.
See Deras v. Myers,
We note at the outset that plaintiffs’ petition for attorney fees comports with the requirements of Oregon Rule of Appellate Procedure 13.10(5), in that plaintiffs have stated the total amount of attorney fees claimed and the pertinent authority on which they rely for making the claim.
See
ORAP 13.10(5)(a) (stating that requirement). In such cases, we generally limit our inquiry to the objections, if any, filed by the opposing party.
See Kahn v. Canfield,
In this case, defendant has not filed objections. Rule 13.10(9) provides, with respect to such cases:
“In the absence of timely filed objections to a petition under this rule, the Supreme Court * * * will allow attorney fees in the amount sought in the petition, except in cases in which:
“(a) the entity from whom fees are sought was not a party to the proceeding; or
“(b) when the Supreme Court * * * is without authority to award fees.”
The lack of objection by defendant places this court in the position of being asked to exercise its equitable powers without the benefit of advocacy from both sides respecting whether to do so. It is arguable that, given the lack of objections, Rule 13.10(9) commits this court to award the requested fees against defendant without further consideration. However, because of the extraordinary nature of the power that we exercise in Deras-type cases, we believe that
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we should examine plaintiffs’ petition for fees sufficiently to satisfy ourselves that there is at least a
prima facie
justification for exercising our equitable power before we exercise our “authority” as that term is used in Rule 13.10(9). We have done so and conclude that plaintiffs have made that showing: The proceeding was one in equity; the parties who request attorney fees prevailed; those prevailing parties vindicated an important constitutional right applying to all citizens, and at least two of them did not gain something peculiar to themselves.
See Armatta,
The remaining question is whether the court should make a joint and several award of attorney fees against intervenors. As noted, plaintiffs argue that it would be “equitable” to award attorney fees against intervenors and not just against defendant. Plaintiffs’ theory is that, if they are entitled to an award of attorney fees against any party, then that award should run against all opposing parties whose arguments caused plaintiffs’ counsel to expend time and effort. Intervenors respond that a court of equity never should exercise its power to award attorney fees against an intervening private party, because that would discourage the public from intervening in public litigation and, thus, would be contrary to the rationale for such awards that the court stated in Deras and Armatta.
To determine whether we should award attorney fees against an intervening party in a particular case, this court first considers the source of its authority to award attorney fees against any party. If the authority to award attorney fees flows from a statute, then the court must determine the scope of the legislature’s intent respecting such awards and carry out that intent. That is the exercise in which this court engaged in
Holm
when it interpreted ORS 107.105(5), a statute governing attorney fees in appeals from orders in actions for dissolution of marriage. The court concluded that the legislature did not intend to exclude intervening parties from among those parties against whom the court could award
*584
attorney fees.
Holm,
In
Deras,
this court awarded attorney fees to a plaintiff who successfully challenged, on constitutional grounds, two statutes limiting the amounts that could be spent on certain campaigns. The plaintiff, at the time he filed his suit, was a candidate for state representative; the defendant was the Secretary of State. Plaintiff had lost his election bid by the time that his case reached this court. In discussing its decision to award attorney fees to the plaintiff, this court noted, first, that courts of equity have the power to award attorney fees.
The court then turned to its own case law and observed that it had exercised such a power to award attorney fees to the plaintiffs in
Gilbert v. Hoisting & Port. Engrs.,
“ ‘[t]he preservation of the democratic process in the functioning of unions is a matter of primary concern, not only to union members but to the public as well. Those members of the union who in good faith seek to preserve the internal democracy of their union should not have to bear the expense of the successful suit.’ ”
Deras,
“It is beyond dispute that the interest of the public in preservation of the individual liberties guaranteed against *585 governmental infringement of the constitution is even stronger in the present case than that present in Gilbert. Correspondingly, plaintiff in this case, at least as much as the plaintiffs in Gilbert, should not be required to bear the entire cost of this litigationi,] the benefits of which flow equally to all members of the public.”
Deras,
Because the dispute in
Deras
involved only two parties, the court’s decision to award attorney fees to the plaintiff did not require the court to discuss its reasons for awarding those attorney fees against a
particular
defendant (or an intervenor). Indeed, this is the first case in which this court has been called on to decide who pays, rather than who receives, attorney fees under a
Deras
rationale. Nevertheless, the emphasized passage from
Deras
shows that the court’s focus was on who had
benefitted
from the plaintiffs efforts. That is, the court’s decision to award attorney fees against the Secretary of State was a means of shifting the cost of the litigation from the plaintiff alone to the public generally, because the public generally had benefitted from the plaintiffs successful efforts to vindicate constitutional principles.
3
See also Armatta,
We think that a fair summary of our case law is that, when this court chooses to exercise its inherent power to award attorney fees, it does so against the group that ultimately benefits from the prevailing plaintiffs’ efforts — usually, as in this case, the people of Oregon. And, that summary illustrates why intervenors should not be required to pay: They are not a separate group that benefits from plaintiffs’ *586 success. There being no benefit to them, apart from the benefit that they receive equally with all Oregonians — a benefit they would prefer to have done without, it would not be equitable to require them to pay attorney fees. We therefore sustain their objection to plaintiffs’ petition.
Plaintiffs-respondents’ petition for an award of attorney fees on appeal of $35,532 is allowed against defendant-appellant and denied against intervenors-appellants.
Notes
In Armatta, this court affirmed the trial court’s award of attorney fees to the plaintiffs who successfully challenged Ballot Measure 40 (1996), a “crimes victims’ rights” initiative, on constitutional grounds.
By their interventions, intervenors-appellants became a party.
This court’s decision in Gilbert used a similar approach. The plaintiff union members successfully sought to make their union’s election procedures fair and democratic. By awarding fees against the union of which the plaintiffs were members, this court shifted the cost of the litigation from the plaintiffs alone to the entire group of persons — the union — that directly would benefit from the plaintiffs’ efforts.
