¶ 1. This appeal stems from a written agreement between the City of Rutland and the Vermont Swim Association (VSA) granting VSA the right to host its annual swim meet at a facility in a city park. VSA appeals the trial court’s award of attorney’s fees to the City. Because the plain language of the parties’ contract does not require VSA to pay attorney’s fees incurred by the City in pursuing either indemnity from VSA or other third-party actions, we reverse and remand.
¶ 2. VSA is a not-for-profit organization that hosts an annual summer swim meet. On August 4, 2005, the City and VSA executed an agreement granting VSA the use of a city park and pool facility for their meet (Agreement). While attending the meet, a child was injured when she fell from a piece of playground equipment in the park. Her parents, the Southwicks, filed a negligence suit against the City (the Southwick action) seeking damages for their daughter’s injury. The City sought defense and indemnification from VSA, which was denied. The City then brought a third-party complaint against VSA, alleging that VSA was obligated to defend and indemnify the City pursuant to the Agreement. The City also claimed that VSA breached its obligation under the Agreement to procure insurance naming the City as an additional insured. The City filed third-party actions against Nautilus Insurance Company for failure to defend and indemnify, and against Paige & Campbell, Inc. (P&C) for failing to procure the correct insurance for VSA and the City per the Agreement. Prior to trial, the City settled the Southwicks’ claims, reserving the right to pursue reimbursement from VSA for the settlement, plus costs of defense and attorney’s fees. The trial court entered *326 judgment for the City against VSA in the amount of $700,000 based on the Agreement’s indemnity clause which reads:
6. Indemnification and Hold Harmless: [VSA] hereby agrees to defend, indemnify and hold harmless Rutland, ... its officers, trustees, agents and employees from all claims for bodily injury or property damage arising from or out of the presence of [VSA], including its employees, agents, representatives, guests and others present because of the event or [VSA’s] activities in or about Whites Park, including the entrances, lobbies and exits thereof, the sidewalks, streets and approaches adjoining the campus or any portion of the campus used by [VSA] or any of the above stated. [VSA] shall be responsible for all costs of defense, including reasonable attorney’s fees, and shall pay all fines or recoveries against Rutland.
On appeal, VSA argued that the indemnity clause did not apply to claims based on the City’s own negligence. We upheld the trial court’s award.
Southwick v. City of Rutland,
¶ 3. On March 9, 2010, the City filed a motion for attorney’s fees covering all legal expenses associated with its defense in the Southwick action, as well as expenses incurred through the litigation of the third-party actions. The trial court entered judgment in favor of the City, awarding the entirety of its requested attorney’s fees and expenses totaling over $166,000. The court based the award on its finding that “the [Southwicks’] claims and those of the City [for indemnity] are based on a common core of facts,” and that “the indemnification provision in the [Agreement] is all-encompassing.” VSA appeals.
¶ 4. VSA argues that the trial court erroneously granted the City’s motion for attorney’s fees and expenses because: (1) the Agreement does not require VSA to pay attorney’s fees for indemnity and third-party claims, and (2) the evidence offered by the City is insufficient to support its claim for attorney’s fees and expenses.
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We review a trial court’s ruling on the amount of
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attorney’s fees awarded for abuse of discretion.
Elec. Man, Inc. v. Charos,
¶ 5. When addressing a question of attorney’s fees, Vermont adheres to what is called the American Rule: parties must “bear their own attorneys’ [sic] fees absent a statutory or contractual exception.”
DJ Painting, Inc. v. Baraw Enters., Inc.,
¶ 6. The plain language of the Agreement makes VSA responsible “for all costs of defense, including reasonable attorney’s fees” incurred by the City in defending a suit arising out of VSA’s use of the park. When a contract provides for payment of attorney’s fees, a court may depart from the American Rule only to the extent that the contract provides.
Mt. Everest Ski Shops, Inc. v. Nordica USA, Inc.,
¶ 7. The trial court based its award of attorney’s fees on its finding that all of the claims were “based on a common core of facts,” and that “[t]he indemnification provision in the [Agreement] is all-encompassing.” As explained above, the indemnification provision does not encompass third-party actions. Nor do we agree that all claims were based on “a common core of facts.” In
L’Esperance v. Benware,
we affirmed a trial court’s conclusion that the plaintiffs’ lawsuit was not one “which can be viewed as a series of discrete claims so that the hours expended can be divided on a claim-by-claim basis.”
¶ 8. While the Southwicks’ action and the City’s third-party claims might have been set in motion by the same event, they are not based on a common core of facts. The Southwicks’ claim was for negligence, the adjudication of which required facts regarding the design, construction, and maintenance of the playground equipment. The third-party claims hinged on the language of the Agreement itself and its reasonable interpretation. The Southwick action and the third-party action filed by the City are distinct, and the hours expended on each should be easily divisible.
¶ 9. The City correctly asserts that courts may use their equitable powers to award attorney’s fees “in exceptional cases and for dominating reasons of justice.”
Sprague v. Ticonic Nat’l Bank,
¶ 10. VSA argues that the evidence presented by the City to support its claim for attorney’s fees is insufficient. Specifically,
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VSA argues that there is inadequate description in the City’s billing records to distinguish attorney’s fees and expenses related to its defense against the Southwick action from those related to its indemnity and third-party actions. In defending the sufficiency of its records, the City cites
Perez v. Travelers Insurance ex rel. Ames Department Stores, Inc.,
in which we stated that “time entries must be accurate and allow the court to assess whether the work performed was related to the litigation at issue, but they need not reach the level of detail and justification required in federal bankruptcy proceedings.”
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
VSA also argues, based on its appeal in
Southwick v. City of
Rutland, that because the Agreement did not provide for indemnity for injuries and property damage caused by the City’s negligence, it cannot provide for attorney’s fees
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arising out of such negligence.
