Lead Opinion
OPINION
The question presented by this case is whether the Minnesota Constitution provides the right to a jury trial for a claim to recover attorney fees based on a contract.
I.
Leland and llene Haugen owned two parcels of land in Cottonwood County, Minnesota, on which they farmed and operated a feed mill business. In 2002, the Haugens began to experience financial difficulties that affected their ability to make timely payments on their loans. UPB agreed to refinance the Haugens’ debt and the parties devised a plan that involved transferring the Haugens’ assets to an unrelated third party, Mark Sahli, and then forming a new entity, HNE, to purchase the assets from Sahli under a contract for deed.
The Haugens and HNE borrowed a total of $323,484.82 from UPB to complete the various transactions. UPB secured the loans with a mortgage on the two parcels of land in Cottonwood County, commercial security agreements, and personal guarantees executed by the Hau-gens. The promissory notes accompanying each of the new loans obligated the Hau-gens and HNE to “pay all costs of collection, replevin ... or any other or similar type of cost.” The notes further stated: “[I]f you hire an attorney to collect this note, I will pay attorney’s fees plus court costs (except where prohibited by law).” The mortgage required HNE to pay “attorneys’ fees, court costs, and other legal expenses” that were “incurred by [UPB] in enforcing or protecting [UPB] ’s rights and remedies under this Mortgage.” The commercial security agreements provided that, in the event UPB repossessed the secured property or took action to enforce the obligations of HNE, UPB could apply any proceeds recovered to the “expenses of enforcement, which includes reasonable attorneys’ fees and legal expenses.” Finally, in the personal guarantees, the Haugens agreed to pay “all costs and expenses (including reasonable attorneys’ fees and legal expenses) incurred by [UPB] in connection with the protection, defense or enforcement of [these guarantees] in any litigation or bankruptcy or insolvency proceedings.”
In December 2003, Meadowland Farmers Coop, which held a judgment against Leland Haugen and another company owned by the Haugens, brought an action against, among others, the Haugens, HNE, Sahli, and UPB challenging the transactions between those parties as fraudulent transfers. UPB incurred $117,110.24 in legal fees defending the action before the defendants settled with Meadowland.
On November 17, 2004, UPB notified HNE that it was in default on one of the promissory notes, which resulted in HNE’s default under each of the notes. Neither HNE nor the Haugens responded to
The district court denied appellants’ request for a jury determination regarding the amount of attorney fees sought by UPB. Following a 2-day trial, the court entered judgment against appellants and awarded UPB $403,821.82 in attorney fees. The court awarded $286,711.58 to UPB for its attorney fees incurred in this case
II.
The question in this case is whether the Minnesota Constitution provides a right to a jury trial for a claim to recover attorney fees based on a contract. The interpretation and application of the Minnesota Constitution is a legal question that is reviewed de novo. Olson v. Synergistic Techs. Bus. Sys., Inc.,
Article I, Section 4 of the Minnesota Constitution states that “[t]he right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate, and shall extend to all cases at law without regard to the amount in controversy.” Minn. Const. art. I, § 4 (emphasis added). “This provision is intended to continue, unimpaired and inviolate, the right to trial by jury as it existed in the Territory of Minnesota when [the Minnesota Constitution] was adopted in 1857.” Abraham v. Cnty. of Hennepin,
However, Article I, Section 4 does not freeze the right to a jury trial to only those causes of action that existed in 1857. See Abraham,
Two cases are illustrative of our approach in determining the nature and character of a cause of action. In Olson, we considered whether a constitutional right to a jury trial existed for a claim of promissory estoppel.
Abraham, decided less than a year after Olson, further described how to determine the “nature and character of the controversy” for purposes of Article I, Section 4 of the Minnesota Constitution.
Under Olson and Abraham, the right to a jury trial depends on the “nature and character of the controversy as determined from all the pleadings.” Abraham,
A.
We first assess the substantive nature of UPB’s claim for attorney fees based on the pleadings and the underlying elements of the cause of action. UPB alleged in its amended complaint that the Haugens and HNE breached their contracts, and as a result, UPB was entitled
Although we have not identified any cases from the territorial period involving claims for attorney fees arising under a contract, our early cases reveal that parties have used contractual provisions like those at issue here since at least 1858. See Griswold v. Taylor, 8 Minn. 342 (
Like the mortgage in Griswold, the Loan Documents in this case obligate appellants to hold UPB harmless from the costs of enforcing appellants’ obligation to repay the loans, as well as the costs of protecting the security underlying those loans. In this case, UPB has brought an action to recover those costs, including its reasonable attorney fees. As we implied in Griswold, the substantive nature of this type of claim is one for contractual indemnity. See also 1 Dan B. Dobbs, Law of Remedies § 3.10(3), at 402 (2d ed.1993) (stating that “[contracting parties often provide that one of the parties will protect the other from litigation costs” and identifying such agreements as contractual indemnification provisions). Although Gris-wold did not address whether a jury trial is required for claims of contractual indemnity, we have concluded in other cases that an action for contractual indemnity is an action at law that gives rise to a jury trial right. For instance, in New Amsterdam Casualty Co. v. Lundquist, we stated: “[a]n action based on an indemnity agreement is for the recovery of money based upon the promise to pay and is therefore triable by a jury. If fact issues exist with respect to the indemnity agreement, they are for the jury.”
Similarly, in Raymond Farmers Elevator Co. v. American Surety Co. of New York, we differentiated between an action by an employer against a former employee who embezzled funds and converted flour and grain and an action by the employer against a surety that agreed to reimburse the employer under a surety bond for losses from the fraudulent or dishonest actions of the employee.
Like the claims at issue in Raymond and New Amsterdam, the substantive nature of UPB’s claim for the recovery of attorney fees is an action for contractual indemnity, which we have traditionally classified as an action at law.
B.
The second consideration in determining whether a jury trial is required under Article I, Section 4 of the Minnesota Constitution is the nature of the remedy sought. See Abraham,
Similar to Landgraf, UPB’s complaint seeks the recovery of money based on a contractual obligation to pay. Even though the plaintiff in Landgraf sought the recovery of monetary commissions for sales rather than the recovery of attorney fees, we do not believe such a distinction is significant, particularly when the contractual indemnification claim eligible for a jury trial in New Amsterdam also included attorney fees. Accordingly, we conclude that a claim for a monetary payment under a contractual indemnity provision is a legal claim with an attendant right to a jury trial under Article I, Section 4 of the Minnesota Constitution.
In reaching a contrary decision, the court of appeals articulated three reasons for its conclusion that UPB’s claim for the recovery of attorney fees was equitable. First, the court stated that the claim is “more like a claim for restitution than for compensation.” UPB,
First, the court of appeals analogized UPB’s claim for the recovery of attorney fees to a restitutionary claim for reimbursement. Id. Although we agree that UPB seeks reimbursement for its attorney fees, there are two problems with the court of appeals’ analogy.
The most fundamental problem is that restitution is not the basis for the reimbursement sought by UPB in this case. Restitution prevents the unjust enrichment of the defendant at the plaintiffs expense. See Dobbs, supra, § 4.1(1), at 551-52 (“[Restitution claims are bound by a major unifying thread. Their purpose is to prevent the defendant’s unjust enrichment by recapturing the gains the defendant secured in a transaction.” (footnote omitted)); see also Randall v. Constans,
Another problem with identifying the remedy sought here as restitution, and therefore equitable, is that restitution was not exclusively an equitable remedy. “In the days of the divided bench, restitution was available in certain cases at law, and in certain others in equity.” Great-West Life & Annuity Ins. Co. v. Knudson,
Second, we disagree with the court of appeals’ conclusion that UPB’s claim is similar “to a request for specific performance of a contract, for which a jury trial is not required.” UPB,
Third, in distinguishing a case relied on by appellants, Simplot v. Chevron Pipeline Co.,
We also briefly address the court of appeals’ conclusion that practical considerations — such as a court’s expertise in deciding issues relating to attorney fees and the possible delay and inefficiencies of submitting the question of attorney fees to a jury — favor resolution of an attorney fees request by the court. UPB,
E.
The dissent does not adopt any of the grounds relied upon by the court of appeals. Nor does the dissent call into doubt our application of the two factors for assessing jury trial requests under Abraham and Olson. The dissent concedes that UPB bases its request for attorney fees on the breach of several contracts. The dissent also does not dispute that we have traditionally treated claims based on breach of contract as legal in nature and character.
The dissent would conclude otherwise based on its view that “the recovery of attorney fees implicates traditional equitable principles.” The dissent’s argument, however, does not find support in our case law. We have stated that, in awarding attorney fees, courts should “arriv[e] at a fair and reasonable fee,” Agri Credit Corp. v. Liedman,
The dissent instead largely abandons our traditional framework under Abraham, and argues that a contractual claim for attorney fees is a “sui generis” matter for the court to decide, “akin to” a request for costs or disbursements. As a threshold matter, the dissent’s reasoning is inconsistent with the plain language of Article I, Section 4 of the Minnesota Constitution, which does not contain an exception for “sui generis” matters. Rather, the language of Article I, Section 4 is categorical: “[t]he right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate, and shall extend to all cases at law without regard to the amount in controversy.” Minn. Const, art. I, § 4 (emphasis added). It is thus not surprising that, of the two cases the dissent relies upon for treating attorney fees as sui gen-eris, neither case presented the question of a litigant’s constitutional right to a jury trial. Nor did either case express a preference for having the court, rather than a jury, decide the question of attorney fees.
Moreover, in treating attorney fees as “akin to” costs and disbursements, the dissent’s approach treats all requests for attorney fees identically, ignoring important distinctions between fee requests based on a statute and those based on a contract.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that UPB’s claim for the recovery of attorney fees is legal rather than equitable because it is an action seeking a monetary payment for contractual indemnity. Because the nature of the claim is contractual and the remedy sought is legal, we hold that appellants are entitled to a jury trial on attorney fees under Article I, Section 4 of the Minnesota Constitution.
Reversed in part and remanded.
Notes
. UPB's complaint in this case also alleged that the contract for deed between Sahli and HNE on the two Cottonwood parcels constituted an equitable mortgage. The district court did not award UPB attorney fees for litigating the equitable mortgage issue because the court could not identify a contractual basis for doing so.
. Indemnity can be equitable when the obligation of one party to indemnify the other arises from principles of equity and fairness, rather than a contractual obligation. See City of Willmar v. Short-Elliott-Hendrickson, Inc.,
In the context of the Minnesota No-Fault Automobile Insurance Act, for example, we have held that a statute permitting the recovery of economic loss benefits from insurers of commercial vehicles in certain circumstances was a type of equitable indemnification. See Nat’l Indem. Co. v. Mut. Serv. Cas. Co.,
. The remedy of equitable accounting is available primarily in two circumstances not applicable here: when a fiduciary owes an equitable duty to account and when the accounts at issue are exceedingly complicated. See Dobbs, supra, § 2.6(3), at 158. No fiduciary relationship exists in the typical contractual attorney fees claim, and the issues concerning an award of attorney fees are not so complicated " 'that only a court of equity can satisfactorily unravel them.’ " Landgraf,
Several of the cases cited by the dissent conclude that awards of attorney fees are equivalent to an equitable accounting, but fail to explain or support such a conclusion. See McGuire v. Russell Miller, Inc.,
. Among the rare cases in which a court of equity would decree specific performance to transfer funds were those in which the court was trying to prevent future losses that were incalculable or would be greater than the sum awarded. See Great-West Life,
. The dissent nonetheless asserts that, "[w]hile traditionally indemnity has been viewed as a right arising out of contract, we have clarified that the award of indemnity should follow traditional concepts of equity.” To be sure, indemnity can be equitable if the obligation to indemnify arises from principles of equity and fairness. Hendrickson, 258 Minn, at 370-71,
. The dissent is correct that we have denied a jury trial in two cases seeking the recovery of money related to a contract; one requesting an equitable accounting, see Swanson v. Alworth,
. First State Bank of Grand Rapids v. Utman involved the question of whether a dispute about the value of attorney fees sought by the plaintiff under the terms of two promissory notes created a material dispute as to the validity of the defendant’s underlying obligation to pay the notes.
. The dissent’s conclusion that contractual attorney fees are equivalent to "costs and disbursements” is undermined by our decision in Schwickert, Inc. v. Winnebago Seniors, Ltd.,
. In reaching the conclusion that a jury trial is required for UPB's claim for the recovery of attorney fees, we do not distinguish between the predicate determination of appellants' liability for attorney fees and the amount of the fees awarded as damages. As with any other legal claim subject to a jury trial, a jury determines both the liability for a breach of contract and the amount of damages to award for the breach, if any, assuming genuine issues of material fact exist with respect to both questions that warrant submission to a jury.
We express no opinion, however, about the specific procedural or timing requirements for submission of a contractual attorney fees claim to a jury. In this case, the parties have asked us to decide only whether the Minnesota Constitution provides a jury trial right for a claim involving a contractual right to attorney fees. We therefore decline to speculate about issues beyond those presented for our review.
. Because we remand for redetermination of UPB's claim for the recovery of attorney fees, we need not address any of the other arguments raised by appellants with respect to the reasonableness of the initial award of attorney fees by the district court. However, we note that the court of appeals’ resolution of issues unrelated to UPB's claim for the recovery of attorney fees, such as the dismissal of appellants' counterclaims and the affirmance of the award of funds deposited with the district court to UPB, are not affected by this remand because they were not raised in appellants’ petition for review. See State v. Koppi,
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I respectfully dissent. I disagree with the court’s conclusion that Haugen Nutrition & Equipment, LLC and Leland and llene Haugen (collectively, HNE) are constitutionally entitled to a jury trial on the attorney fees claim of United Prairie Bank. The majority’s decision represents a dramatic sea change for Minnesota courts and casts Minnesota as an outlier among jurisdictions that have considered this issue. Relying on our prior treatment of attorney fees, I conclude that the bank’s claim for attorney fees is most closely analogous to a claim for costs or disburse
I.
The Minnesota Constitution provides that the right to a jury trial “shall extend to all cases at law.” Minn. Const. art. I, § 4. This provision preserves the right to a jury trial “as it existed in the Territory of Minnesota when our constitution was adopted in 1857.” Abraham v. Cnty. of Hennepin,
The complaint here alleges that as a result of HNE’s breaches of the loan agreements, the bank is entitled to recover reasonable attorney fees. The majority concludes that HNE is entitled to a jury trial because the bank is seeking the recovery of money based on a contractual obligation, analogizing the attorney fees claim to contractual indemnity.
Although we have viewed many types of contract claims as legal claims, the contractual nature of the obligation to pay attorney fees is not determinative as to the right to a jury trial. Rather, we look at “the nature of the relief sought.” Abraham,
II.
Therefore, the court must examine the specific nature of the relief sought in determining whether the claim for attorney fees in this case gives rise to a constitutional right to a jury trial. The bank’s right to recover attorney fees arises from specific provisions in the loan documents, which allow the bank to recover fees and costs associated with collecting amounts owed under the agreements. Among other relief, the complaint seeks recovery of the total indebtedness, “plus all additional accrued interest, charges and reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs.” After careful consideration of our. relevant case law, I conclude that the bank’s claim for attorney fees is akin to a claim for costs or disbursements, which does not implicate the right to a jury trial under the Minnesota Constitution.
The issue here is a matter of first impression. There is no case law directly on point, even though attorney fees provisions have been present in Minnesota contracts
In our previous cases, we have treated a request for attorney fees due under a contract like a request for costs or disburse-merits, directing district courts to include the attorney fees “in the judgment, the same as any other disbursement.” Campbell, 58 Minn, at 565,
Analogizing a contractual attorney fees claim to a request for costs or disbursements is consistent with our treatment of statutory attorney fees. We have recognized that “a number of statutes ... specifically allow prevailing parties attorney fees as part of ‘costs and disbursements.’ ” Collins v. Minn. Sch. of Bus., Inc.,
Based on our past treatment of attorney fees claims, I conclude that a claim for attorney fees arising under a contract is in the nature of a request for costs or disbursements. In fact, this is precisely how the loan agreements in this case describe the attorney fees. The various loan documents describe the attorney fees as “costs and expenses,” “legal expenses,” and “expenses of enforcement.” See Woolsey v. O’Brien,
HNE is not entitled to a jury trial on the attorney fees claim if that same type of claim did not entitle a party to a jury trial at the time the Minnesota Constitution was adopted. See Olson v. Synergistic Techs. Bus. Sys., Inc.,
Moreover, the recovery of attorney fees implicates traditional equitable principles. The recovery of attorney fees is not like “other damages available for breach of contract,” as the majority contends. In a breach of contract case, the general measure of damages is the amount that will place the nonbreaching party in the same position as if the contract had been fully performed. E.g., Paine v. Sherwood, 21 Minn. 225, 232 (1875). But when courts resolve attorney fees claims, they follow rules of equity. For example, in a case involving attorney fees arising from the costs of collection of a note, we directed the district court to arrive at an amount “as it shall deem reasonable and just.” Campbell, 58 Minn, at 564-65,
Finally, the majority’s rigid, wooden approach — treating attorney fees claims like claims for contractual indemnity without considering the unique nature of attorney fees claims — would extend the constitutional jury trial right to any claim for costs or expenses that springs from a contractual obligation. For example, the loan documents here allow for the recovery of all costs of collection and other legal expenses. Under the majority’s rationale, because the bank is seeking “the recovery of money based on a contractual obligation to pay,” HNE would have a constitutional right to have a jury decide expert witness fees, deposition costs, and even photocopying expenses.
The majority’s decision represents a historic change in practice for Minnesota courts, which have decided attorney fees claims for the last century and a half. I cannot subscribe to this new rule. Rather, consistent with our prior treatment of attorney fees claims and the equitable nature of such claims, I conclude that when a party seeks attorney fees as legal expenses or costs of collection under an agreement, there is no right under the Minnesota Constitution to have a jury determine the amount of attorney fees.
III.
The majority’s decision in this case also casts Minnesota as an outlier among jurisdictions that have considered the issue. Our court is the only court in the country that recognizes a constitutional right to a jury trial under these circumstances.
Essentially, the Minnesota Constitution protects the same jury trial rights as those protected under the United States Constitution. Onvoy, Inc. v. ALLETE, Inc.,
In addition, no other state court has concluded that a party has a constitutional right to a jury trial on a contractual attorney fees claim of this kind. Although state courts have relied on different rationales, they all have reached the same conclusion — there is no constitutional right to a jury trial on a claim for attorney fees based on a contract. See, e.g., Cheek v. McGowan Elec. Supply Co.,
IV.
For these reasons, I conclude that the bank’s claim for the recovery of attorney fees in this case did not give rise to the right to a jury trial under the Minnesota Constitution. I would affirm the decision of the court of appeals on this issue.
. Our decision in Schwickert, Inc. v. Winnebago Seniors, Ltd.,
. The majority concludes that the substantive nature of an attorney fees claim is "an action for contractual indemnity,” which the majority classifies as a traditional legal claim. "While traditionally indemnity has been viewed as a right arising out of contract,” we have clarified that "the award of indemnity should follow traditional concepts of equity." Hill v. Okay Constr. Co.,
. I would limit the reach of my holding to the circumstances presented by this case — where the attorney fees sought are in the nature of costs of collection or expenses of enforcement in connection with a breach of contract claim in the same action, in contrast to cases where the claim for attorney fees arises from an attorney-client relationship. See Simler v. Conner,
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I join in the dissent of Justice Dietzen.
