In
Gale Industries, Inc. v. Trytek,
Where a lienor obtains a judgment against a property owner in an action to enforce a construction lien brought pursuant to section 718.29, Florida Statutes (2005), are trial courts required to apply the “significant issues” test articulated in Prosperi v. Code, Inc.,626 So.2d 1360 (Fla.1993), in determining which party, if any, is the “prevailing party” for the purpose of awarding attorneys’ fees?
We answer the rephrased certified question in the affirmative and hold that trial courts are required to apply the “significant issues” test of
Prosperi
to evaluate entitlement to prevailing party attorneys’ fees under section 713.29, even when the lienor obtains a judgment on the lien.
1
We conclude that this Court has consistently approached the award of attorneys’ fees in lien actions as being “tempered by equitable principles.”
Prosperi,
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In this case, the petitioners, Frank J. Trytek and his wife, Cathy L. Trytek, (hereinafter referred to as either “Trytek” or “homeowner”), were building a new residence. As part of the project, they contracted with Gale Industries, an insulation contractor, to install insulation throughout the structure (hereinafter referred to as either “Gale,” “contractor,” or “lienor”). It is undisputed that “[wjhile installing the insulation, Gale’s employees inadvertently caused some staples to be driven through some previously installed electrical wires. The parties agreed that Try-Cor Electric Company, a corporation owned by Frank Trytek that was involved in electrical contracting, would make the necessary repairs.”
Gale Indus.,
This case eventually proceeded to trial. As set forth in the Fifth District’s opinion:
Early in the proceedings the parties stipulated that the Gale Industries claim of lien complied procedurally with the construction lien law, Chapter 713, Florida Statutes (2001), and that all notice requirements had been met. In addition, the parties agreed that the lien accurately stated the value of the labor, services and materials provided by Gale, subject only to the Trytek counterclaim. An agreed order was rendered that established that Gale’s lien was procedurally sufficient; that no evidence would be necessary at trial on that issue; and that Gale Industries was entitled to recover the amount stated in the lien, less any damages proved by Mr. and Mrs. Trytek; and that the only issue to be resolved at trial was the value of the damages alleged in the counterclaim.
Following a nonjury trial, the trial court entered an order determining that the Tryteks were entitled to repair costs of $11,200. After setting off that figure against the agreed lien amount of $12,725, the net result was a judgment for $1,525 in favor of Gale Industries.
Thereafter, each party concluded that it was the “prevailing party” and filed cross-motions to tax attorneys’ fees and costs pursuant to section 713.29, Florida Statutes (2005). After a hearing on the motions the trial court, while expressing some concern over this court’s position on the definition of prevailing party in the construction lien context, determined that it was required to apply the “significant issues” test set forth in
Prosperi v.Code, Inc.,
Id.
In determining that Trytek was the prevailing party, the trial court reasoned:
There was never an issue about Gale performing the insulation work at the Tryteks residence nor was there ever an issue about whether Gale was entitled to payment for its work. Early in the case, there was an agreed order on Plaintiffs Motion for Partial Summary Judgment which recognized the validity and amount of Gales’ [sic] lien. The real issue in the case was how much money should be setoff from the lien amount as compensation to the Tryteks for repairing the damage done by Gale during its installation of the insulation. The Try-teks prevailed on their counterclaim to the extent of almost extinguishing the Gale lien. It was this aspect of the case that required expert testimony, document production, document analysis and trial time. The Tryteks recovered $11,200 on their counterclaim. Gale only offered a discount of from $320 to $3200. Therefore, this Court finds that the Tryteks prevailed on the “significant issue” of this case and are the prevailing parties entitled to recover attorneys’ fees and costs pursuant to § 713.29, F.S.
Gale Indus., Inc. v. Trytek, No. 48-2004-CA-7549, order at 4 (Fla. Orange County Cir. Ct. Dec. 13, 2005).
The parties stipulated to the amount of attorneys’ fees and costs and thus the trial court entered an order awarding attorneys’ fees of $55,982.00 and costs of
ANALYSIS
The contractor claims that because it obtained a judgment on its lien, the contractor is entitled to receive all of its attorneys’ fees connected with the litigation. The homeowner contends that by prevailing on the only issue tried before the trial court — the counterclaim based on the contractor’s damage to the electrical wiring— the trial court’s determination of prevailing party should be affirmed. Both parties assert that one or the other must be the prevailing party.
The main issue in this case is what factors enter into a determination of “prevailing party” pursuant to section 713.29. The specific issue raised by this case is whether the trial court is vested with discretion, or is even required to consider, which party prevailed on the significant issues; or whether the trial court is bound by an inflexible bright-line rule that a prevailing party must be determined and that the contractor must be considered the prevailing party if it obtains a judgment on its lien in any amount in excess of an asserted set-off or counterclaim.
It is well-settled that attorneys’ fees can derive only from either a statutory basis or an agreement between the parties.
State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Palma,
In any action brought to enforce a lien or to enforce a claim against a bond under this part, the prevailing party is entitled to recover a reasonable fee for the services of her or his attorney for trial and appeal or for arbitration, in an amount to be determined by the court, which fee must be taxed as pari of the prevailing party’s costs, as allowed in equitable actions.
(Emphases added.) Although the Legislature expressly defined several terms within the Construction Lien Law in a section
With regard to any principles of statutory construction that might be applicable, although we have generally held that attorneys’ fees statutes should be “strictly construed” because there was no common law right to attorneys’ fees, 3 in this case, that principle does not assist the Court in construing the term. Further, in 1977, the Legislature enacted section 713.37, which states that “[the Construction Lien Law] shall not be subject to a rule of liberal construction in favor of any person to whom it applies.” Therefore, jurisprudence that has relied on the principle that the lien laws favor the contractor or laborer has no direct application when determining which party is entitled to prevailing party attorneys’ fees. 4
Because our rephrased certified question asks whether the “significant issues” test of Prosperi applies where a lienor has obtained a judgment on his or her lien claim, we turn to this Court’s precedent regarding lien actions and also jurisprudence regarding “prevailing party” attorneys’ fees. First, with regard to the purpose of the construction lien statute, we have stated:
[W]e note that mechanic’s lien law selves at least two purposes. First, mechanic’s liens protect suppliers who furnish labor or materials to the property by assuring them of full payment. Prosperi v.Code, Inc.,626 So.2d 1360 , 1362 (Fla.1993) (citing Emery v. International Glass & Mfg., Inc.,249 So.2d 496 , 500 (Fla. 2d DCA 1971)). Mechanic’s lien law also protects owners by requiring subcontractors to provide notice of possible liens, thereby allowing owners to prevent double payment to both a contractor and subcontractor, material supplier, or laborer, for provision of the same services or materials when the contractor and subcontractor are not in privity. Aetna [Cas. and Sur. Co. v. Buck], 594 So.2d [280] at 281 [(Fla. 1992) ].
Stunkel v. Gazebo Landscaping Design, Inc.,
The notion that equitable principles should apply in determining “prevailing party” attorneys’ fees has been utilized in this Court’s opinions deciding attorneys’ fees in the context of section 713.29. For
The award of attorney’s fees and costs to the prevailing party in a mechanic’s lien action serves to encourage settlement of disputes before resorting to litigation. Forcing the loser to bear the costs and fees of producing the opponent’s victory engenders a more realistic appraisal of the merits of the claim and discourages dilatory or obstructive tactics. If the statute were to apply as the Third District construes it, however, the burden of fair dealing and good-faith negotiation would lie only upon the defendant. To award attorneys fees and costs when any judgment is won, without reference to earlier, bona-fide good faith offers to settle the claim, allows the plaintiff a free throw of the dice in an attempt to squeeze the last penny out of the claim.
id at 1178-79 (emphasis added). Our decision in C.U. Associates explicitly stands for the proposition that the underlying policy of section 713.29 is to “encourage settlement of disputes before resorting to litigation.” However, the case also implicitly espouses equitable principles by preventing a plaintiff who has recovered a judgment from unjustly being awarded attorneys’ fees after rejecting a good faith offer from the defendant that exceeded the amount of the judgment.
Subsequently, this Court decided
Prospen,
which is also based on basic principles of fairness and an interest in discouraging needless litigation. The rule of
Prospen
is that in determining “prevailing party” under section 713.29, the trial court should look to which party prevailed on the “significant issues,” as recognized in our case of
Moritz
that had been decided the previous year.
Prospen,
In
Prospen,
the contractor brought an action to foreclose a lien claim, among other claims.
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The trial court denied relief
In concluding that the “significant issues” test adopted in
Moritz
was applicable to claims under section 713.29, this Court discussed what appellate courts had termed the “net judgment rule,” which in essence precluded an owner from recovering attorneys’ fees under section 713.29 where a claimant fails to foreclose a mechanic’s lien but obtains a judgment on other non-lien claims that exceeds any claim of the owner.
Prosperi,
As we see it, the net judgment rule itself was originated as a device to do equity. [8] For example, under most circumstances it would be unfair to require a contractor who recovers the bulk of its claim to pay attorney’s fees for failure to meet the technical requirements of the mechanic’s lien law. In some of the later cases, however, the net judgment rule appears to have been applied mechanically without regard to the equities. We believe that Moritz now requires a more flexible application. The fact that the claimant obtains a net judgment is a significant factor but it need not always control the determination of who should be considered the prevailing party. We hold that in considering whether to apply the net judgment rule, the trial judge must have the discretion to consider the equities and determine which party has in fact prevailed on the significant issues.
In the instant case, the findings of the trial judge make it clear that he believed that the owner was the innocent party but felt constrained not to award him attorney’s fees under a strict application of the net judgment rule. Under the net judgment rule as tempered by equitable principles according to the rationale of our opinion, it is equally clearthat the trial judge would have found the owner to be the prevailing party. Therefore, we quash the decision below and remand with directions that attorney’s fees be awarded to the owner. We quash the order awarding the contractor appellate attorney’s fees and direct that appellate attorney’s fees also be awarded to the owner.
Id.
While
Prosperi
dealt with a contractor that did not prevail on its lien action, we do not read
Prosperi
and our precedent so narrowly. The reasoning supporting the decision in
Prosperi
to replace the “net judgment rule” with the “significant issues” test conveys this Court’s preference for a flexible rule that will achieve an equitable result with respect to the determination of the “prevailing party,” irrespective of which party recovers a judgment on the lien claim. Although the fact that a contractor has obtained a “net judgment” on its lien is certainly a factor to be considered, it is not determinative of whether that party is the “prevailing party” for purposes of entitlement to attorneys’ fees.
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The application of an inflexible bright-line rule that a judgment in any amount on the lien claim mandates “prevailing party” attorneys’ fees disregards the fact that a claim of lien under section 713.08, Florida Statutes (2005), requires that the “contract price” or the “value” of the “labor, services or materials furnished,” and the “amount unpaid” be part of the “claim of lien.” §§ 713.08(l)(c),(g), 713.08(3), Fla. Stat. (2005). This also comports with the well-established principle that a “judgment on a construction lien requires a determination of substantial performance, not strict performance.”
Kenmark Constr., Inc. v. Cronin,
We conclude that the equitable analysis of Prosperi is equally applicable in this case and consistent with our jurisprudential approach favoring a flexible rule in determining which party is the prevailing party. That approach also encompasses the view that entitlement to attorneys’ fees should be consistent with encouraging settlement of disputes. We thus determine that the “significant issues” test used in Prosperi is also applicable in cases where the contractor has foreclosed on its lien against the owner.
THIS CASE
The trial court correctly utilized
Prosperi
in determining that the contractor was not the prevailing party. In finding that Trytek was the prevailing party, the trial court emphasized that the focus of the litigation was on the amount of damage caused by the contractor’s actions, which was the subject of the homeowner’s counterclaim.
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The trial court also noted that
In this case, because both parties stipulated to the amount of fees after Trytek was determined to be the prevailing party, the trial court entered an attorneys’ fees judgment of $55,982.00 in favor of Trytek. Presumably, if the Fifth District opinion is upheld, Gale would receive an attorneys’ fee judgment of approximately $41,-882.50 — the amount it asserted in its affidavit of attorneys’ fees and time, even though it lost on the only issue litigated and received a judgment on its recorded lien of $12,725 in the amount of only $1,525. We are concerned that fees may
have driven the litigation and prevented the parties from resolving the case.
The overall purpose of section 713.29 and attorneys’ fee statutes in general is to discourage rather than encourage needless litigation. Consistent with this purpose, we conclude that a trial court has the discretion to make a determination that neither party has prevailed on the significant issues in litigation after a thorough examination of all the factors, including the issues litigated, the amount of the claim of lien versus the amount recovered on the lien, the existence of setoffs and counterclaims by the homeowner, and the amounts offered by either party to resolve the issues prior to the litigation, assuming that those negotiations were not otherwise confidential either by agreement or statute. See, e.g., § 44.405(1), Fla. Stat. (2008) (“Except as provided in this section, all mediation communications shall be confidential. A mediation participant shall not disclose a mediation communication to a person other than another mediation participant or a participant’s counsel.”).
Our conclusion is consistent with our precedent and section 713.29. Certainly the possibility that neither party is a “prevailing party” is consistent with an application of the “significant issues” test of
Moritz
and
Prosperi.
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Moreover, this
CONCLUSION
We answer the rephrased certified question in the affirmative and conclude that the “significant issues” test of Prosperi applies to determine the issue of “prevailing party.” We thus quash the decision of the Fifth District and direct that this case be remanded to the trial court to reconsider the issue of attorneys’ fees consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. The question that was certified by the Fifth District states:
When a lienor obtains a judgment against a property owner in an action to enforce a construction lien brought pursuant to section 713.29, Florida Statutes (2005), does the trial court have the discretion to apply the "significant issues” test articulated in Prosperi v. Code, Inc.,626 So.2d 1360 (Fla. 1993), instead of the net judgment rule in determining which party is the "prevailing party” for the purpose of awarding attorney's fees?
Gale Indus.,
. The net final judgment entered in favor of the Tryteks was $57,728.39, representing $55,982.00 in attorneys’ fees and $4,016.67 in costs totaling $59,998.67 offset by $2,270.28, which represented the principal amount awarded to Gale on its lien plus statutory interest.
. At common law, each party was required to pay its own attorneys' fees in all actions and therefore we have generally adhered to the principle that statutes awarding attorneys’ fees should be strictly construed.
See Willis Shaw Express, Inc. v. Hilyer Sod, Inc.,
. Before section 713.37 was enacted, our case law emphasized the Construction Lien Law’s purpose of protecting the laborer.
See United States v. Griffin-Moore Lumber Co.,
.
Moritz,
a breach of contract action, adopted the "significant issues” test from the United States Supreme Court's decision
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
. The contractor filed a four-count complaint seeking (1) foreclosure of a mechanic's lien; (2) damages for breach of contract; (3) quantum meruit; and (4) account stated.
. The district court also certified the following question:
Is an owner who prevails on a complaint by a contractor or sub-contractor to enforce a mechanic's lien under Part I, Chapter 713, Florida Statutes (1989), entitled to attorney's fees under 713.29, even though, in the same suit, the contractor prevailed against the owner on a claim for money damages for breach of the contract, both claims arising out of the same transaction?
Prosperi,
8. We are aware of the inherent confusion in the use of "net judgment,” which the appellate courts have used to describe a situation where a homeowner defeats a lien but the contractor obtains a judgment under other causes of action such as contract or equity. In other contexts, the use of the term "net judgment" may be synonymous with "affirmative judgment,” referring to any party who obtains a judgment in its favor.
. We acknowledge that our prior decisions have stated that " '[pjrevailing party' has previously been construed to mean the ‘one in whose favor an affirmative judgment is rendered.' "
See Mainlands Constr. Co. v. Wen-Dic Constr. Co.,
. Trytek's breach of contract counterclaim is a compulsory counterclaim because both the lien claim and the breach of contract counterclaim arose from the same transaction or occurrence.
See
Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.170(a). Thus, although section 713.29 applies only to lien claims, Trytek’s judgment on its counterclaim could be considered in the trial court’s determination of the prevailing party because the counterclaim is considered as part of the
. The details of any other ongoing negotiations do not appear in the record, nor does the offer of judgment filed by Gale, which was not accepted. See Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.442(f) ("Evidence of a proposal or acceptance thereof is admissible only in proceedings to enforce an accepted proposal or to determine the imposition of sanctions.”). Although neither party objects to making the offer of judgment part of the record, as in all cases, we do not supplement the record with facts not in either the trial or appellate record.
. Appellate courts have upheld decisions where the trial court found no prevailing party under the “significant issues” test in breach of contract litigation.
See Brevard County Fair Ass’n v. Cocoa Expo, Inc.,
. We do not construe any of the appellate cases concerning prevailing party attorneys’ fees to mandate that there be a prevailing party, only that where a "prevailing party” is determined, the entitlement to attorneys’ fees is mandatory.
See Pennington & Assocs., Inc. v. Evans,
