In this appeal we are asked to decide whether attorney fees, authorized by statute in successful appeals from “welfare fair hearing” decisions, are to be awarded to publicly funded legal services organizations. We conclude that they are.
Appellant, Mrs. Tofte, is a recipient of State old-age assistance. Following the death of her husband, a disagreement arose between appellant and the respondent, Department of Social and Health Services, concerning her expenditures
In the event an appellant feels himself aggrieved by the decision rendered in the hearing provided for in RCW 74.08.070, he shall have the right to petition the superior court for judicial review in accordance with the provisions of chapter 34.04 RCW, as now or hereafter amended. Either party may appeal from the decision of the superior court to the supreme court or the court of appeals of the state: . , . In the event that the superior court, the court of appeals, or the supreme court renders a decision in favor of the appellant, said appellant shall be entitled to reasonable attorney’s fees and costs.
(Italics ours.)
The motion for the fee award was denied, and this appeal followed.
Respondent contends, and the trial court agreed, that because of the absence of the traditional contractual attorney-client relationship between appellant and SCLS and the absence of any actual fee expenditure or obligation on the part of appellant, a reasonable fee would be no fee at all, and an award under these circumstances would amount to a windfall to appellant and/or SCLS. This, respondent asserts, was not the intent of the legislature in enacting RCW 74.08.080.
At the outset, it is to be noted that the statutory provision relating to the award of fees is cast in mandatory language and draws no express distinction as between legal aid or privately retained counsel. Varying rationales are utilized to sustain awards of attorney fees to successful litigants with retained counsel when such awards are made pursuant to a court’s equitable powers or pursuant to statutory directive, e.g., the common fund theory, the private attorney general doctrine, the corrective or punitive effect upon wrongful conduct, the deterring effect upon careless or callous behavior, or to encourage just settlements. Note, Awards of Attorney’s Fees to Legal Aid Offices, 87 Harv. L. Rev. 411 (1973).
We thus confront the basic question of whether one or more of these rationales provides the basis for an award of fees to SCLS pursuant to the statutory mandate. SCLS assures us that there is no federal regulation or internal SCLS rule which prevents acceptance of such fees for the benefit of its operational fund.
In support of its contention that awards to legal aid organizations are inappropriate, respondent cites
Gaddis v. Wyman,
Appellant, on the other hand, is able to cite numerous cases in trial courts in which fees were awarded to legal aid
One California case appears to be directly in point. The State of California had terminated appellant’s AFDC benefits. The court reinstated those benefits on review of a welfare fair hearing decision, and awarded attorney fees and costs pursuant to a section of the California welfare code. The state argued that the petitioner should not be entitled to such an award because representation had been provided by a legal aid organization without direct costs to the petitioner, and petitioner should recover only for costs
We conclude that the fundamental underpinning of the fee award provision is a policy at once punitive and deterrent — a corrective policy which would discipline respondent for violations of Title 74 RCW or of its own regulations, by shifting to the respondent the costs of righting its mistakes. Appellant cites 14 cases brought by SCLS in superior courts in 1974, all appeals of respondent’s welfare decisions. In all but one, SCLS was successful in obtaining a court reversal of the decision of respondent, but seldom, it seems, was awarded the statutory attorney fees. At present, it is contended, the private bar shuns welfare cases, leaving them to SCLS; the respondent thus has rarely been assessed fees where incautious, careless, or wrongful actions by its employees have improperly denied benefits and required correction by an appellate court. Clearly an incentive to more careful scrutiny is not out of place. Respondent admits that “a decision for the appellant would give the Department added cause to evaluate each case with more scrutiny.”
Given the underlying purposes of the fee award provided for in RCW 74.08.080, we see no logical basis upon which to draw a distinction in applicability of the provision between privately retained counsel and SCLS. Accordingly, the denial of appellant’s motion for an award of fees is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a determination and an award of a reasonable attorney fee.
