delivered the opinion of the Court.
The reasonableness of attorney’s fees is generally an issue for the trier of fact. In
Ragsdale v. Progressive Voters League,
however, we held that a court may award attorney’s fees as a matter of law when the testimony on fees “ ‘is not contradicted by any other witness, or attendant circumstances, and the same is clear, direct and positive, and free from contradiction, inaccuracies, and circumstances tending to cast suspicion thereon.’ ”
Ragsdale,
I
Factual and Procedural Background
The Patrick W.Y. Tam Trust owns a shopping center in Collin County. The Trust leased space to Independent Quality Wholesale, Inc. d/b/a Plano Pets & Grooming, with Lauri and Howard Smith as guarantors. When Plano Pets stopped making payments, the Trust sued Plano Pets 1 and the Smiths, seeking $215,391.50 in damages and $47,438.75 in attorney’s fees.
At trial, Scott Hayes, the Trust’s attorney, testified that a reasonable fee for the preparation and trial of the case would be $47,438.75, plus $15,000 for appeals, for a total of $62,438.75. To support his testimony, Hayes offered the legal bills of several other attorneys in his firm. The Smiths unsuccessfully objected that the bills were hearsay but did not otherwise challenge the Trust’s evidence.
The jury found the Smiths liable and awarded the Trust $65,000 in damages but no attorney’s fees. The Trust moved to enter judgment on the jury’s liability and damages answers and to disregard the jury’s refusal to award attorney’s fees. The trial court rendered judgment that the Trust receive the $65,000 the jury awarded, and rendered judgment notwithstand *547 ing the verdict on attorney’s fees: $7,500 for fees incurred through trial and up to $15,000 in attorney’s fees for success at various stages of appeal. Both sides appealed.
The court of appeals vacated the $7,500 attorney’s fee award and rendered judgment for $47,438.75 instead, holding that “[bjecause the Trust presented competent, uncontroverted evidence of its right to attorney’s fees and because the Smiths did not challenge the amount, nature, or necessity of these fees ... the trial judge abused his discretion in awarding $7,500.”
II
Discussion
“A person may recover reasonable attorney’s fees ... in addition to the amount of a valid claim and costs, if the claim is for ... an oral or written contract.” Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code § 38.001(8). If attorney’s fees are proper under section 38.001(8), the trial court has no discretion to deny them.
See Bocquet v. Herring,
The reasonableness of attorney’s fees is ordinarily left to the factfinder, and a reviewing court may not substitute its judgment for the jury’s.
Barker v. Eckman,
Relying on
Ragsdale,
the court of appeals in this ease rendered judgment as a matter of law, holding that the Trust’s attorney’s fee evidence was competent, un-controverted, and unchallenged.
[W]e do not mean to imply that in every case when uncontradicted testimony is offered it mandates an award of the amount claimed. For example, even though the evidence might be uncontra-dicted, if it is unreasonable, incredible, *548 or its belief is questionable, then such evidence would only raise a fact issue to be determined by the trier of fact.
Ragsdale,
Here, the Trust sought over $200,000 in damages, but the jury awarded only $65,000. The Trust asked for a maximum of $62,438.75 in attorney’s fees; the jury awarded nothing. The court of appeals held that fees were established as a matter of law.
See Ragsdale,
The Trust complains that the Smiths’ failure to request a jury instruction on the Arthur Andersen factors waives their right to complain about the fee award. But the jury’s fee award is not at issue here. The court of appeals awarded the full amount requested, despite the jury’s rejection of a substantial portion of the damages sought. Those fees, even though supported by un-contradicted testimony, may not be awarded by a court as a matter of law.
We have held that the
Arthur Andersen
factors apply to fee awards made by trial courts, not just juries.
Young v. Qualls,
The jury, however, awarded nothing. Although it could have rationally concluded that, in light of the amount involved and the results obtained, a reasonable fee award was less than the full amount sought, no evidence supported the jury’s refusal to award any attorney’s fees (as the court of appeals correctly noted).
On retrial, the evidence may support a similar fee award, but that is a matter within the jury’s purview.
See Young,
Notes
. The Trust nonsuited Plano Pets after the company filed bankruptcy.
