The sole question presented on this appeal is whether the Superior Court erred in awarding attorney fees to an employer who successfully challenged a decision of the Commissioner of Employment Security, allowing benefits to an employee.
Pennsylvania Life Insurance Company sought review pursuant to the administrative procedure act of the commissioner's decision finding that one Dallas Thomas, an office manager of a branch office of the company, had been guilty of no misconduct and therefore was entitled to unemployment benefits. The Superior Court found that the commissioner had not attached proper significance to the circumstantial evidence of misconduct. It reversed the decision as "clearly erroneous". RCW 34.04.130(6)(e). The employee has not appealed.
Attorney fees were awarded the employer in the amount of $2,000 for legal services performed in the Superior Court, said sum to be paid out of the funds of the department. The commissioner has appealed that provision of the judgment.
Attorney fees may be recovered only when authorized by a private agreement of the parties, a statute, or a recognized ground of equity.
Crane Towing, Inc. v. Gorton,
It shall be unlawful for any attorney engaged in any appeal to the courts on behalf of an individual involving the individual's application for initial determination, or claim for waiting period credit, or claim for benefits to charge or receive any fee therein in excess of a reasonable fee to be fixed by the superior court in respect to theservices performed in connection with the appeal taken thereto and to be fixed by the supreme court or the court of appeals in the event of an appeal thereto, and if the decision of the commissioner shall be reversed or modified, such fee and the costs shall be payable i»ut of the unemployment compensation administration fund. In the allowance of fees the court shall give consideration to the provisions of this title in respect to fees pertaining to proceedings involving an individual's application for initial determination, claim for waiting period credit, or claim for benefits. In other respects the practice in civil cases shall apply.
(Italics ours.)
The respondent maintains that the last sentence of this provision authorizes the court to make an award of attorney fees to an employer under equitable doctrines, and specifically under the "common fund" doctrine.
This court has said that where the Legislature provides for the allowance of attorney fees, it creates a substantive right and not a procedural remedy, and it attaches only as provided in the statute.
Seattle Aerie 1 v.
Commissioner,
The evident intent of the last sentence of RCW 50.32.160
In
In re Jullin,
In
Ancheta v. Daly,
In In re Jullin, supra, it was recognized that the right to unemployment compensation is founded upon statute, not upon the common law, and that the act is similar in nature and purpose to the workers' compensation act, under which this court has repeatedly held that the rights and remedies are purely statutory.
The history of attorney fees under the workers' compensation act has been similar to that under the unemployment compensation act.
Boeing Aircraft Co. v. Department of Labor & Indus.,
Since we are unable to find statutory provision for the allowance of an attorney's fee to the successful litigant in a controversy between two employers whose respective employees were killed or injured simultaneously in one accident, we cannot arbitrarily make such an order.
Boeing Aircraft Co., at 59.
After
Boeing Aircraft Co.
was decided, the Legislature amended the workers' compensation act, and Rem. Rev. Stat. § 7697 (Supp. 1943) was superseded by RCW 51.52.130, which makes no provision for the fixing or awarding of attorney fees to employers, but protects only the employee and his beneficiaries.
Harbor Plywood Corp. v. Department of Labor & Indus.,
Harbor Plywood
was another case in which this court refused to order payment of attorney fees by the Depart
These authorities make it clear that in a statutory proceeding such as this, the court will allow only the attorney fees which are provided for in the statute. The respondent insists, however, that the court has equitable power to grant an employer attorney fees. 1 This is not an equitable proceeding. It is a proceeding to review an administrative determination, conducted under the provisions of the administrative procedure act (RCW 34.04), as required by RCW 50.32.120. Under RCW 34.04.130 the only authority of the court in granting relief is to affirm the decision of the agency, reverse it, or remand it for further proceedings. Unless a party can show that he is entitled to attorney fees under the law which gives the right of review (here, RCW 50.32), there is no authority in the court to award such fees pursuant to equitable or other doctrines.
Assuming there were such power, the respondent does not qualify for fees under any doctrine heretofore recognized. It has brought no fund before the court for its administration and distribution.
See Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Green,
Insofar as it awards attorney fees to the appellant, the judgment is reversed.
Brachtenbach, C.J., and Stafford, Utter, Dolliver, Williams, Dore, Dimmick, and Pearson, JJ., concur.
Notes
Cases in which this court has approved the award of attorney fees upon equitable grounds include:
Baker v. Seattle-Tacoma Power Co.,
Cases denying fees claimed on equitable grounds include
State ex rel. Macri v. Bremerton,
In none of the cases relied upon by the respondent, and in none that this court has found, has a court awarded attorney fees on an administrative appeal, where there is no statutory authority.
The briefs do not reveal the amount of benefits which would have been payable to the employee had her eligibility been sustained. However, there is a departmental affidavit in the record which shows that she was paid about $700 in the year 1978. If this is all that she would have been entitled to receive in any event, the allowance of $2,000 in attorney fees would cost the department more than twice the amount the appellant saved for it by challenging the allowance of benefits.
