Tеrri M. SANDERS, Plaintiff-Respondent-Cross Appellant, v. BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE MOUNTAIN HOME SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 193, Defendant-Appellant-Cross Respondent.
No. 40013.
Supreme Court of Idaho, Boise, February 2014 Term.
April 7, 2014.
322 P.3d 1002 | 269
Herzfeld & Piotrowski, Boise, & Paul J. Stark, Idaho Education Association, Boise, for respondent. James Piotrowski argued.
BURDICK, Chief Justice.
The Board of Trustees of the Mountain Home School District No. 193 (“Board“) appeals the district court‘s denial of the Board‘s request for attorney fees. This case arose when School District employee Terri Sanders claimed that the Board breached its contract with her by hiring a candidate less qualified than her for a teaching position that Sanders had also applied for. After a jury found the Board did not breach its contract, the district court held the Board was not entitled to attorney fees under
The Board argues that
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Terri Sanders taught in the Mountain Home School District (“District“) for about twenty-three years when, in May 2008, a consulting teacher position opened in the District. Sanders applied. Thе District interviewed four candidates, scoring them based on seniority and the results of a panel interview. The District awarded the position to another candidate.
Sanders filed multiple grievances over the District‘s failure to award her the position. Sanders had an individual teaching contract with the District, which incorporated all relevant terms from a Master Contrаct between the Mountain Home Education Association and the District. The Master Contract provided a grievance procedure to resolve disputes between teachers and the District. Each grievance that Sanders filed was denied. The final level of grievance under the Master Contract was non-binding arbitration. The arbitrator ruled for Sanders, holding a contractual breach occurred when the person appointed as consulting teacher did not have the minimum qualifications stated in the job announcement. The Board rejected the arbitrator‘s report and sent Sanders a letter explaining that it would not follow that report.
Sanders then sued the Board for breach of contract. She claimed thаt the breach occurred when the District hired a less qualified candidate for the consulting teacher position. After trial, a jury concluded that the Board did not breach Sanders‘s contract. The Board then petitioned for attorney fees and costs under
The district court granted partial costs, but did not award attorney fees. The court determined that fees were only available to the Board under
II. ISSUES ON APPEAL
- Whether
I.C. § 12-117 is the exclusive means for awarding attorney fees when the prevailing party also requests fees underI.C. § 12-120(3) . - Whether the district court properly awarded arbitration costs.
- Whether either party is entitled to attorney fees on appeal.
III. ANALYSIS
A. Idaho Code section 12-117 is not the exclusive source of attorney fees when a prevailing party also requests fees under I.C. § 12-120(3) .
The Board requested attorney fees in the district court under
Both parties’ arguments focus on whether
Whether a party can recover fees under
The Board argues that
After the district court made its decision in this case and the parties submitted their briefing on appeal, we decided in Syringa that
This Court then described how we interpreted
Sanders argues that we should apply Syringa‘s holding prospectively, and not to cases filed and fees accrued before Syringa was issued. She argues that Syringa should not apply to the parties in this action because during her litigation she relied on the most recent precedent at the time, which held that
Here, Sanders alleged a breach of her employment contract, so there was a commercial transaction and
B. The district court erred when it awarded the Board arbitration costs as a discretionary cost becаuse the arbitration costs were specifically provided for under a contract.
The district court awarded $2,304.50 in arbitration costs to the Board as a discretionary cost under
A trial court has discretion to “award a prevailing party certain costs where there has been ‘a showing that the costs are necessary and exceptional, reasonably incurred, and should in the interests of justice be assessed against the adverse party.‘” Hayden Lake Fire Prot. Dist., 141 Idaho at 314, 109 P.3d at 168 (quoting
Both parties stipulated at oral argument that the district court made a factual error when it concluded the Board paid for the entire arbitration and sought to recover one-half of its costs. The Board explained that this error was due to a “misplaced modifier” in its trial briefing. The record shows the Board paid half of the arbitrator‘s bill, which totaled $2,304.50, while Sanders was billed for the other half, which also totaled $2,304.50. Thus, the Board sought reimbursement for only the Board‘s half of the total bill. However, the district court stated that “[t]he affidavit of costs reveals that the School District paid total arbitration costs of $4,609 so the court will award half of that amount, or $2,304.50 as discretionary costs.”
The Board argues that its share of the arbitration fees are recoverable because the arbitration and grievance process led to a lawsuit, which means the arbitration costs are connected to a civil trial.
Here, the Board cannot recover arbitration costs for two reasons. First, the arbitration costs were allocated by the Master Contract. While the contract provided that the arbitrаtor‘s decision was advisory, it also provides that “[t]he cost of the arbitrator shall be divided between the Board and the grievant(s).” Thus, in this contract the language in question refers only to arbitration and “costs,” which applies to the pre-litigation costs. These are distinct from the contractual costs in Zenner, which provided for costs during litigation. Therefore, the contraсt allocating costs precludes the district court from re-allocating those costs. To recover arbitration costs prior to litigation, contracts should address the allocation of any arbitration costs that occur prior to litigation in event of litigation.
Second, in this case the arbitration was not part of a civil trial or proceeding beсause it occurred before Sanders filed her complaint. Arbitration occurred in 2008. Sanders filed her complaint in March 2009. The Board argues that despite this timeline, arbitration was a precursor to the suit because Sanders attempted to inject deficiencies of the grievance procedure into the lawsuit. Sanders did argue on summary judgment that the Board failed to follow the grievance process. However, the arbitration was non-binding and thus could not have any effect on the case itself, despite Sanders‘s arguments. Because arbitration was non-binding, prior to the civil suit, and costs of arbitration were limited to pre-litigation under the contract, the district court improperly granted arbitration costs under
C. Neither party is entitled to attorney fees on appeal.
The Board requests attorney fees on appeal under
IV. CONCLUSION
This Court has already held that attorney fees under
Justices EISMANN, J. JONES, W. JONES and HORTON concur.
Notes
(1) Unless otherwise provided by statute, in any proceeding involving as adverse parties a state agenсy or a political subdivision and a person, the state agency, political subdivision or the court hearing the proceeding, including on appeal, shall award the prevailing party reasonable attorney‘s fees, witness fees and other reasonable expenses, if it finds that the nonprevailing party acted without a reasonable basis in fact or lаw....
(5) For purposes of this section:
(b) “Political subdivision” means a city, a county, any taxing district or a health district;
In any civil action to recover on an open account, account stated, note, bill, negotiable instrument, guaranty, or contract relating to the purchase or sale of goods, wares, merchandise, or services and in any commercial transaction unless otherwise provided by law, the prevailing party shall be allowed a reasonable attorney‘s fee to be set by the court, to be taxed and collected as costs.
The term “commercial transaction” is defined to mean all transactions except transactions for personal or household purposes. The term “party” is defined to mean any person, partnership, corporation, association, private organization, the state of Idaho or political subdivision thereof.
