46th CIRCUIT TRIAL COURT v. CRAWFORD COUNTY, 261 Mich. App. 477 (2004)


682 N.W.2d 519

46TH CIRCUIT TRIAL COURT, Plaintiff/Counterdefendant/Third Party Defendant-Appellee, v. CRAWFORD COUNTY and CRAWFORD COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS, Defendants/Counterplaintiffs/Third Party Plaintiffs-Appellants, and KALKASKA COUNTY, Intervening Third Party Plaintiff/Counterdefendant-Appellant, and OTSEGO COUNTY, Third Party Defendant.

Nos. 246823, 248593, 251390.Michigan Court of Appeals.Submitted March 3, 2004 at Lansing.
April 1, 2004 at 9:15 a.m. Updated Copy June 18, 2004.

Appeal from Crawford Circuit Court, LC No. 02-005951-CZ.

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Howard L. Shifman, P.C. (by Howard L. Shifman), an Kienbaum Opperwall Hardy Pelton, P.L.C. (by Thomas G. Kienbaum and Noel D. Massie) (Patricia J. Boyle, of counsel), for the 46th Circuit Trial Court.

Cohl, Stoker, Toskey McGlinchey, P.C. (by Bonnie G. Toskey), for Crawford County, Crawford County Board of Commissioners, and Kalkaska County.

Johnson, Rosati, LaBarge, Aseltyne Field, P.C. (b Christopher J. Johnson), for Otsego County.

Amicus Curiae:

Cummings, McClorey, Davis Acho, P.L.C. (by Jana M. Berger), for Michigan Association of Counties.

Before: Sawyer, P.J., and Bandstra and Smolenski, JJ.

BANDSTRA, J.

In Docket No. 246823, defendants Kalkaska County, Crawford County, and the Crawford County Board of Commissioners appeal by leave

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granted the lower court’s February 4, 2003, order declaring that the three counties involved in this case are responsible for the legal expenses of the plaintiff in this matter, the 46th Circuit Trial Court. In Docket Nos. 248593 and 251390, defendants Kalkaska County, Crawford County, and the Crawford County Board of Commissioners appeal by leave granted the lower court’s May 21 and September 22, 2003, orders awarding plaintiff attorney fees and costs in the amount of $350,386 and $316,007, respectively. The appeals were consolidated. We reverse and remand

I. Basic Facts and Procedural History
This case arises out of a funding dispute between the 46th Circuit Trial Court and the three counties — Otsego, Kalkaska, and Crawford — served by that court.[1] The Trial Court is a court constituted by the circuit court, district courts, and probate courts in the three counties, “unified” pursuant to a Supreme Court order. See Administrative Order No. 1996-9. The funding disputes giving rise to this appeal largely arise out of the budgeting changes made as part of the unification process.

During the fall of 2000, as part of their responsibilities as the local funding units for the Trial Court, each of the counties approved funding for implementation of a proposed plan to increase retiree health and income benefits for employees of the Trial Court.[2] However,

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approximately one year after the January 2001 implementation of the plan, Kalkaska and Crawford counties formally rescinded their approval of the plan. Although Kalkaska County nonetheless continued to provide its share of the funding for the plan through 2002, Crawford County failed to completely fulfill its funding obligations under the plan and also refused to make the necessary appropriations to fully fund its share of the Trial Court’s proposed budget for fiscal years 2001, 2002, and 2003.

In October 2002, the Trial Court filed suit against Crawford County and its board of commissioners under Administrative Order No. 1998-5.[3] In count I of the complaint, the Trial Court alleged that Crawford County had breached an express agreement it had entered with the Trial Court regarding implementation and funding for the new retiree health care and pension benefits plan. Count II of the complaint alleged in the alternative that, even if no such agreement was expressly made, there was an implied contract and Crawford County was estopped from refusing to fund the plan, having already received the benefit of various concessions made by Trial Court employees in exchange for increased benefits under the plan. Counts III and IV of the complaint more generally alleged that Crawford County and its board of commissioners failed to provide sufficient funds to enable the Trial Court to operate during fiscal years 2001, 2002, and 2003.

In addition to answering these charges, Crawford County and the Crawford County Board of Commissioners

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filed a countercomplaint for declaratory relief, alleging that the Trial Court exceeded its authority in implementing the retiree health care and pension benefits plan. Crawford County further alleged that the Trial Court had fraudulently misrepresented the cost of the plan to the local funding units, and that such misrepresentation vitiated any agreement regarding the plan that might otherwise be enforceable. Kalkaska County was permitted to intervene in the suit by filing a third-party complaint containing allegations similar to those filed by the Crawford County defendants in their countersuit against the Trial Court. The Trial Court thereafter filed a countercomplaint against Kalkaska County, which mirrored the claims and allegations made by the Trial Court in its complaint against the Crawford County defendants.

In addition to the countersuit and third-party complaint filed against the Trial Court, Crawford and Kalkaska counties joined in filing a separate suit against Otsego County, in which it was alleged that, as the control unit for the local funding units, Otsego County violated the Uniform Budgeting and Accounting Act, MCL 141.421 et seq., by participating in the implementation of the new retiree health care and pension benefits plan.[4]
Following consolidation of the various actions and assignment of a visiting judge to preside over the matter, the parties began litigating the issue of responsibility for the Trial Court’s attorney fees and other expenses in relation to this matter.

On February 4, 2003, the lower court granted the Trial Court’s motion seeking payment of its attorney fees by the counties, but reserved the determination of the amount of those fees until the Trial Court had

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submitted detailed billing statements.[5]
In concluding that the counties were responsible for payment of the Trial Court’s attorney fees, the lower court relied, in part, on MCL 49.73, which requires that a county board of commissioners “employ an attorney to represent elected county officers” named “as a defendant” in certain civil matters. In finding the statute applicable here, the lower court reasoned that, because Crawford and Kalkaska counties had filed a countersuit and a third-party complaint against the Trial Court, the Trial Court was a “defendant” within the meaning of MCL 49.73. Alternatively, the lower court found that the Trial Court had inherent power to require the counties to pay attorney fees expended to assure an adequate judicial budget.

Pursuant to this order, the Trial Court submitted billing statements for all attorney fees and expenses incurred by it in relation to this matter before February 1, 2003. Following review of the statements, the lower court concluded that counsel for the Trial Court was entitled to be paid the full amount of the statements, “and not at a rate dictated by [the] . . . counties.” Accordingly, in an order dated April 29, 2003, but not entered until May 21, 2003, the lower court approved payment of $350,386 in attorney fees and costs, based on rates of between $230 and $300 an hour. It is not disputed that these rates are well over the rate of $130

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an hour received by counsel for the various counties. The order further provided that the three counties were each responsible for one-third of the attorney fees and expenses.

Defendants Crawford and Kalkaska counties and the Crawford County Board of Commissioners sought leave to appeal from the lower court’s February 4, 2003, and May 21, 2003, orders, arguing that the lower court erred in finding the counties responsible for the entirety of the Trial Court’s legal fees, that the fees charged by counsel for the Trial Court were unreasonable and unnecessary, and that paying such fees would put the counties in the position of having to suspend or severely cut back on essential public services. On May 23, 2003, this Court granted defendants’ application for leave to appeal, as well as a motion for a stay of the lower court’s May 21, 2003, order, which stay was to be continued until resolution of the appeal or further order of this Court.

Notwithstanding the stay issued by this Court,[6] the lower court entered, on September 22, 2003, a second order awarding the Trial Court an additional $316,007 for attorney fees and expenses incurred after those covered by the May 21, 2003, order. The lower court again ordered each of the three counties to pay one-third of the amount, and Crawford and Kalkaska counties and the Crawford County Board of Commissioners again sought leave to appeal, which this Court granted after consolidation of these matters. On appeal, defendants Crawford and Kalkaska counties and the Crawford County Board of Commissioners challenge the

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lower court’s award of attorney fees and costs on a number of grounds, each of which is addressed below.[7]

II. Analysis A. Attorney Fees under MCL 49.73
Defendants first argue on appeal that the lower court erred in concluding that MCL 49.73 applies under the facts of this case. Specifically, defendants assert that the statutory obligation of a county board of commissioners to employ counsel to represent its county officials in certain civil matters is limited to actions wherein the official is a named defendant, and does not extend to situations where, as here, judicial proceedings are initiated by a county official. We agree.

Although this Court typically reviews a trial court’s decision regarding attorney fees for an abuse of discretion, Schoensee v. Bennett, 228 Mich. App. 305, 314; 577 N.W.2d 915 (1998), the question presented here is one of statutory interpretation that we review de novo, Solution Source, Inc. v. LPR Assoc. Ltd. Partnership, 252 Mich. App. 368, 377; 652 N.W.2d 474 (2002). “The primary goal of judicial interpretation of statutes is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the Legislature,” and “[t]he first step in determining legislative intent is to review the language of the statute itself.” Id. at 372-373. “If the statute is unambiguous, the Legislature is presumed to have intended the meaning expressed and judicial construction is neither required nor permitted.” Id. at 373.

MCL 49.73 provides, in relevant part, as follows:

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The board of commissioners of a county shall employ an attorney to represent elected county officers, including the . . . judges of the county district, probate, and circuit courts in civil matters, as a defendant, when neither the prosecuting attorney or county corporation counsel is able to represent the particular officer. Legal advice, counsel, or court action shall be required under this section only in a case which involves an official act or duty of the office of the county officer. The attorney shall receive reasonable compensation as shall be determined by the board of commissioners.

We find no ambiguity in the language of the statute. As this Court has previously recognized, MCL 49.73 requires a county board of commissioners to employ attorneys to represent a county officer when the officer “is named as a defendant, but contains no language authorizing, let alone requiring, employment of attorneys to represent a county official who initiates an action.”[8] Wayne Co. Sheriff v. Wayne Co. Bd. of Comm’rs., 148 Mich. App. 702, 711-712; 385 N.W.2d 267 (1983) (emphasis in original); see also Seventeenth Dist. Probate Court v. Gladwin Co. Bd. of Comm’rs., 155 Mich. App. 433, 459; 401 N.W.2d 50 (1986) (a trial court, as the plaintiff in a court funding action, is not entitled to attorney fees under MCL 49.73).

In finding the statute applicable here, the lower court recognized this limitation but concluded that because the Crawford County defendants had initiated a

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countersuit against the Trial Court, and Kalkaska County had been permitted to intervene as a third-party plaintiff, the Trial Court was nonetheless a “defendant” within the meaning of MCL 49.73. However, as defendants note, the countersuit and third-party complaint at issue here sought only declaratory and injunctive relief in defense of the claims asserted in the suit initiated by the Trial Court, and in fact mirrored many of the original allegations and affirmative defenses found in the Crawford County defendants’ answer to the complaint initially filed. Consequently, we agree with defendants that the filing of the countersuit and third-party complaint at issue here did not render the Trial Court a “defendant” within the meaning of MCL 49.73.[9] Nonetheless, as explained below, we do not find the lower court’s decision to award the Trial Court attorney fees and expenses to be erroneous.

B. Attorney Fees under the Doctrine of Inherent Power
In addition to concluding that MCL 49.73 provided authority for the Trial Court to employ counsel at defendants’ expense, the lower court here also concluded that such authority arose out of the doctrine of separation of powers and the inherent power granted to courts flowing from it. We agree.

The principles the lower court relied on in this regard have been accepted in Michigan for at least the last thirty-five years. In Wayne Circuit Judges v. Wayne Co., 383 Mich. 10, 33; 172 N.W.2d 436 (1969) (Wayne I), Justice Black, with Justice Dethmers concurring, noted

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the “unanimous” authority that a court charged with the responsibility for judicial service “receives and accepts with that responsibility the inherent power and duty to take such action as is reasonably necessary to fulfil the constitutional obligation thus undertaken.” On rehearing two years later, the Supreme Court adopted the Black-Dethmers opinion as the opinion of the Court, noting that it had been “authenticated” by decisions handed down by the supreme courts of Missouri and Pennsylvania:

In view of the developing strength of the principle of inherent power and duty of the judiciary, called into play as it was by the opinion of Justices Dethmers and Black aforesaid, this Court is constrained on rehearing to adopt that opinion; adding only that the judiciary . . . must stand foursquare in support of the constitutional doctrines which, most recently in the [Commonwealth, ex rel Carroll v. Tate, 442 Pa. 45; 274 A.2d 193 (1971)] case, were declared. “Must” we have accented, just as the Tate Court stressed “must possess” in this terse and pointed summary of constitutional necessity . . .:
“Expressed in other words, the Judiciary must possess the inherent power to determine and compel payment of those sums of money which are reasonable and necessary to carry out its mandated responsibilities, and its powers and duties to administer Justice, if it is to be in reality a co-equal, independent Branch of our Government. This principle has long been recognized not only in this Commonwealth but also throughout our Nation.” [Wayne Circuit Judges v. Wayne Co., 386 Mich. 1, 8-9; 190 N.W.2d 228 (1971) (Wayne II), quoting Tate, supra at 52.]

A more recent and oft-cited discussion of the inherent power doctrine is found in Employees Judge of the Second Judicial Dist. Court v. Hillsdale Co., 423 Mich. 705; 378 N.W.2d 744 (1985). The opinion of the majority agreed with the dissenting justices that “an inherent power analysis is implicated when judicial functions are

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in jeopardy” and reiterated that the “Court has stood `foursquare’ in support of the constitutional doctrine of inherent power” while concluding that the doctrine was not implicated under the facts of the case at hand Id. at 724.

In a dissent concurred in by two other justices, Justice Riley noted that, “`irrespective of specific grant by constitution or legislation,'” the inherent power doctrine supplies “`authority to incur and order paid all such expenses as are reasonably necessary for the holding of court and the administration of the duties of courts of justice.'” Id. at 734 (Riley, J., dissenting), quoting 20 Am Jur 2d, Courts, § 78, p. 440, and 59 ALR3d, § 2, p. 574. Justice Riley explained that

[t]his inherent authority of the court is nonajudicatory. It does not deal with justiciable matters. It only relates to the administration of the business of the court.
One aspect of the administration of district and circuit courts is the determination of the operational needs of the court and the establishment of a budget to provide for these needs. [Hillsdale, supra at 734-735.]

It is clear from these and other precedents, see, e.g. Judicial Attorneys Ass’n. v. Michigan, 459 Mich. 291, 299-300; 586 N.W.2d 894 (1998); Livingston Co v. Livingston Circuit Judge, 393 Mich. 265, 273; 225 N.W.2d 352 (1975); Ottawa Co. Controller v. Ottawa Probate Judge, 156 Mich. App. 594, 602-603; 401 N.W.2d 869
(1986); Gladwin, supra at 451-452, that a court has inherent power to take whatever steps are reasonably necessary to fulfill the judicial function. Further, it is clear that this includes the authority to “employ outside counsel to litigate its interests.” Hillsdale, supra at 747 (Riley, J., dissenting). Beginning in 1985, see Hillsdale, supra at 725-727, our Supreme Court has in effect ratified that authority by issuing a series of administrative

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orders specifying the procedures to be used by courts with respect to this kind of litigation. See Administrative Order No. 1998-5, § III. Finally, because “a court will need to employ outside counsel” for such litigation, the inherent power doctrine authorizes a court to recover reasonable attorney fees arising out of such inherent power litigation Hillsdale, supra at 747 (Riley, J., dissenting).

Defendants do not argue that the Trial Court has no right to recover attorneys fees under the doctrine of inherent power. Instead, defendants argue that attorneys fees recoverable under the doctrine should be limited to those arising out of litigation over portions, but not all, of the Trial Court’s complaint. Specifically, defendants argue that the inherent power doctrine applies to count III of the complaint, where the Trial Court sought an increase in general funding allegedly reasonably necessary for court operations,[10] but not counts I and II, which claimed a contract (or implied contract) had been formed between the Trial Court and defendants for the payment of increased retiree health care and pension benefits.

Defendants argue that this limitation flows out of the inherent power doctrine discussed above, without citing any precedent that has imposed this kind of limitation. We acknowledge, see discussion below, that the inherent power precedents require caution to avoid any overstepping into the legislative spending prerogative. However, we conclude that, under the facts of this case, the limitation urged upon us here does not flow out of the inherent power analysis but, to the contrary, would undermine that power.

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We reach this conclusion because the alleged contract (or implied contract) regarding the enhanced retiree health care and pension benefits was part and parcel of the dispute regarding the Trial Court’s general operating budget. The record here shows that the Trial Court employees had voluntarily agreed to personnel reductions, job reassignments and combinations, wage and benefit structure changes, and other alterations necessary to implement the unification of the court required under Administrative Order No. 1996-9. The challenged retirement health care and pension benefits were proposed as an incentive for and in appreciation of that cooperation, and to assure positive employee morale. Thus, the increased benefits at issue under the contract theories in counts I and II had to be considered together with the more general operating expenditures at issue in count III, to determine whether the amounts in their entirety were “reasonably necessary” for the operation of the newly unified Trial Court. To hold that the right to recover attorney fees should be limited to those arising only out of certain of the counts alleged, in this context, would severely undermine the inherent power the Trial Court has to litigate its budgetary needs.[11]

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For the same reason, we reject defendants’ arguments that an award of attorney fees and expenses should be limited to those incurred after the complaint was filed and should not extend to those incurred with regard to any appeals arising out of the litigation. Attorney services are generally required before the filing of a complaint and often required when trial litigation results in appellate proceedings. The inherent power doctrine would be severely undermined if the ability to recover attorney fees and expenses did not extend to those necessary services.

Having determined that the lower court properly concluded that the Trial Court had the inherent power to seek payment by defendants for attorney fees incurred in litigating this entire matter, we next turn to defendants’ arguments that the fees that were assessed were not reasonable. As previously noted, we generally review reasonable attorney fee determinations under an abuse of discretion standard. Schoensee, supra. However, any questions of law that affect the determination are reviewed de novo. State Treasurer v. Abbott, 468 Mich. 143, 148; 660 N.W.2d 714
(2003).

Apart from Justice Riley’s opinion in Hillsdale, supra, further addressed below, there are no precedents from Michigan discussing how to determine the “reasonableness” of attorney fees in this kind of case. However, we find some general guidance in the precedents establishing the inherent power doctrine.

These precedents acknowledge that exercise of this power constitutes a usurpation of the Legislature’s appropriation prerogative. Under the Michigan Constitution, the “power of the purse” is ordinarily the domain of the Legislature. Se Hillsdale, supra at 739

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(Riley, J., dissenting). The inherent power doctrine is an exception to that rule because it allows a court to require that moneys be spent as reasonably necessary to fund the judicial branch. Id. at 739-740. Thus, that power should be used cautiously, to assure that the “intrusion by the judicial branch” is “slight” and therefore “does little to weaken the legislative branch.” Id. at 737 n. 5. “[C]ourts, while emphatically asserting the inherent power doctrine, [recognize] limits on this power . . . and [are] mindful of the need to exercise it responsibly.” Id. at 738. The power “must be cautiously exercised [and] should pass every test of that guarded control which self-restraint exacts. . . .” Wayne I, supra at 33.

Consistent with and in light of these considerations, our Supreme Court has issued a series of administrative orders designed “[t]o guard against all possibility of abuse . . . and to guard for that matter against even the appearance of any such abuse. . . .” Wayne II, supra at 9. The administrative order applicable to these proceedings specifies that chief judges of trial courts should work closely with local funding units to resolve funding disputes amicably and authorizes the State Court Administrator to help in resolving impasses. See Administrative Order No. 1998-5, §§ III and IV. Further, the administrative order requires that personnel management policies of the trial courts “must be consistent with the written employment policies of the local funding unit” if at all possible. Id. at §§ IV and VI.[12] The

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order’s goal is to “[structure] more positive relations between chief judges and their funding units in the interest of promoting greater understanding [and] cooperation. . . .” Judicial Attorneys, supra at 306.

We also find some guidance in MCL 49.73, which provides that, in cases where county commissions must pay fees associated with defending public officials, the determination of a “reasonable” fee is left to those commissions. For the reasons discussed above we have concluded that this statute is not applicable to provide the Trial Court a claim for attorney fees here. Further, the final determination of the reasonableness question is a matter to be resolved by the lower court, Hillsdale, supra at 747 n. 12, not defendants. Nonetheless, we must find appropriate limits to the inherent power doctrine, to assure no overstepping, through overspending, into the legislative area of appropriations. With that in mind, we conclude that the statute’s guidance on this limited question cannot be completely ignored.

Of similar import is Justice Riley’s discussion of the attorney fees issue in Hillsdale. Justice Riley reasoned that attorney fees are to be reviewed using the six-factor guideline set forth in Crawley v. Schick, 48 Mich. App. 728; 211 N.W.2d 217 (1973), and adopted by the Supreme Court in Wood v. DAIIE, 413 Mich. 573; 321 N.W.2d 653 (1982):

“[T]he facts to be taken into consideration in determining the reasonableness of a fee include, but are not limited to, the following: (1) the professional standing and experience of the attorney; (2) the skill, time and labor involved; (3) the amount in question and results achieved; (4) the difficulty of the case; (5) the expenses incurred; and (6) the nature and length of the professional relationship with the client.” [Hillsdale, supra at 750-751 (Riley, J., dissenting), quoting Crawley, supra at 737.]

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Justice Riley further noted that Wood adopted the suggestion in Crawley that this list was not exhaustive, and made specific reference to “`[t]he fee customarily charged in the locality for similar legal services'” as another factor that may be considered. Hillsdale, supra at 751 n. 15 (Riley, J., dissenting), quoting Disciplinary Rule 2-106 of the Code of Professional Responsibility.

On the basis of these authorities, we draw the following conclusions about the determination of a reasonable attorney fee in this context. First, in contrast to the usual “reasonableness” case, great caution must be used here to avoid determining fees at too high a level, the imposition of which would constitute an unwarranted intrusion into the power of the purse reserved to county commissions. Thus, due consideration should be given to the fees being charged by other attorneys in the locality for similar legal services. In this regard, the fees being paid by a defendant county commission should not be ignored because they provide a specific measure of the compensation reasonably to be paid in this type of litigation and in this locality. Approaching the attorney fees question in this fashion advances the goals of cooperation and coordination of benefits between courts and their funding units, as stated in Administrative Order No. 1998-5.

With those considerations in mind, we turn to a review of the lower court’s analysis regarding the question of reasonable attorney fees. The lower court addressed this issue in a series of opinions and orders.

Without actually deciding the issue, the lower court reasoned in an opinion issued January 30, 2003, that it would likely “rely upon what I deem to be the reasonable hourly rate for the services performed by lawyers in this community because this is where the litigation is pending. . . . [B]ecause the case is in this area it will be

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the fees for comparably experienced lawyers that I will use. And by `comparably experienced,’ I mean comparably experienced in this particular area.” Similarly, in a second opinion rendered on March 5, 2003, the lower court stated that “I must defer to the boards of commissioners unless I’m satisfied that the amount they have set [for attorney fees] is palpably unreasonable. And inasmuch as counsel was retained at a certain rate for the counties, it would appear to me that that’s probably a reasonable rate, and that I will be obligated to honor that particular rate.”

Notwithstanding those pronouncements, after the case had developed further, the lower court adopted a different viewpoint in an order issued on April 29, 2003:

The undersigned is also now satisfied, after a careful review of the matter, that the hourly rates charged by the Trial Court’s several attorneys are reasonable, even though higher than the rates typically commanded by similarly experienced lawyers in Crawford, Kalkaska and Otsego counties and higher than the hourly rates being paid by those counties to the attorneys representing them. First of all, it is unrealistic to expect that local attorneys would be willing to become involved in a major dispute between the court before which they often appear and the counties where they live and work and with which they likely have significant professional interaction. Second, even if local attorneys are willing to represent the Trial Court, it is more credible for outside attorneys to be representing the parties. Third, there were sound reasons for the Trial Court to conclude that representing it would overwhelm local counsel. Furthermore, this Court is satisfied that it is often necessary for counsel in the area served by the Trial Court to involve outside counsel to assist with matters and that it is common practice to pay the latter counsel their standard rates, not the lesser rates charged by local attorneys.

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The lower court, finally, provided further reasoning for this approach in an opinion issued September 17, 2003:

The fees charged by the Trial Court’s counsel are not rendered unreasonable by the counties’ counsel charging a lesser hourly rate. First, the Trial Court’s attorneys and their efforts are worth the rates being charged. That the counties’ attorneys are willing to accept a lesser rate does not lessen the quality of either the Trial Court’s counsel or their efforts. Second, lawyers who regularly represent municipalities tend to be willing to accept much lesser hourly rates because there are offsetting accommodations. Because county commissioners perceive that the public focuses on hourly rates, not on total billings, it is understood that, so long as rates are kept low, billings will not be scrutinized. As a result, government counsel tend to bill more time. Because their clients review and question time entries, other lawyers record time more selectively. That difference is the incentive for accepting lesser rates.

If this was the usual attorney fees case, we would not conclude that the lower court determination was an abuse of discretion in the sense that “the result is so palpably and grossly violative of fact and logic that it evidences perversity of will or the exercise of passion or bias. . . .” Schoensee, supra at 314-315. To the contrary, the lower court gave proper consideration to the factors discussed in Wood, supra, as being relevant and applied them to the facts here.[13]
Nonetheless, applying the inherent power authorities discussed above, we conclude that the lower court failed to give sufficient

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consideration to the attorney fees being charged by defense counsel. While initially indicating that defense attorney fees would serve as a guideline for determining the reasonableness of the Trial Court’s attorney fees, the lower court in its later rulings on the issue instead came up with reasons to almost completely ignore those defense attorney fees.

Nonetheless, the reasoning of the lower court on this difficult issue does provide us some guidance in two important respects. First, while we do not conclude that it justifies a complete disregard of defense attorney fees, the reasoning of the lower court amply demonstrates why it would be inappropriate to require a perfect match between defense fees and those available to a court forced into litigation to secure the budget reasonably necessary to fulfill its judicial function. Succinctly stated, there are simply many reasons why the attorney fees properly to be charged on each side might legitimately differ. Second, we agree with the lower court in its conclusion that a simple examination of the hourly rate being charged on each side is insufficient. Some consideration must also be given to the total costs for attorney fees on each side of the litigation because different billing practices might, in effect, partially equalize any difference there may be in hourly rates.

With these considerations in mind, we conclude that the following procedure should be used in determining the reasonable attorney fees question in the context of this kind of inherent powers litigation. First, as the lower court did here, a close examination of the hourly billings should be made to assure that time billed was properly spent in prosecuting the inherent power claim

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on behalf of the judiciary. Having determined the number of hours appropriately billed, the court should then determine whether the hourly fee charged was reasonable under the usua Wood factors. Again, this was properly analyzed by the lower court here.[14]

With reasonable attorney fees thus established, a limitation should be imposed based on defense counsel fees.[15]
Specifically, the court should compute the fees that would have been incurred if counsel for the plaintiff court had used an hourly rate that was 150 percent of that charged by counsel for defendants. In addition to this “hourly rate limitation,” the trial court should also consider evidence regarding the total fees incurred by defendants in the aggregate to defend against the claim and set a “total fees limitation” equal to 150 percent of that amount. Attorney fees awarded to the plaintiff court’s counsel must then be subject to the limitation that is less restrictive, i.e., that results in a larger award of attorney fees than does the other.[16]

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We are, of course, loath to impose this kind of limitation to a question as case-specific as the determination of appropriate attorney fees. Nonetheless, as we have discussed above, this is an extraordinary kind of case. It presents a dispute between two constitutionally separated branches of our government where one must invade the province of the other. That invasion concerns the power of the purse, probably the most closely guarded and coveted of all powers reserved to the legislative branch. Finally, the inherent power doctrine grants the courts the right to seek reimbursement from local funding units for attorney fees necessary to bring suit against those same funding units. We conclude that, to assure some semblance of cooperation and a positive relationship even in these difficult situations, some limitation on the amount of fees reimbursable must be imposed.

The record here does not establish whether the reasonable attorney fees determined by the lower court would be subject to these limitations. As noted earlier, it appears that plaintiff’s counsel’s hourly rate exceeded 150 percent of that charged by defense counsel. However, the trial court did not clearly make any finding regarding the total fees incurred by defendants in the aggregate. Accordingly, we reverse the award of attorney fees and remand for further consideration of the issue consistent with this opinion.

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C. Timing of Attorney Fees Decisions and Failure to Hold Evidentiary Hearing
Defendants also argue that the lower court abused its discretion or otherwise erred by refusing to defer an award of attorney fees until litigation was complete, and by failing to conduct an evidentiary hearing regarding the reasonableness and necessity of the attorney fees and expenses charged by counsel for the Trial Court. We disagree.

With respect to the timing of the lower court’s award of attorney fees, defendants argue that the automatic stay provisions found in MCR 2.614(A) reflect “the policy of the Michigan judiciary that no party be required to pay any part of a judgment until the opportunity for appellate review has become available.”[17] Thus, defendants argue, the lower court’s award of attorney fees before completion of litigation and an opportunity for review by this Court was “premature.” We find the provisions of MCR 2.614(A) regarding judgments inapposite to the attorney fees award at issue here. We agree with the lower court that counsel for plaintiff cannot be expected to wait for the conclusion of what might well be protracted litigation before receiving any payment for services or expenses. To the extent an award of fees might later be modified, a retroactive adjustment would suffice to address defendants’ concerns. In any event, however, this argument is moot. Litigation in this matter is now complete, and the issue of the reasonableness of the attorney fees awarded by the lower court is now properly before us.

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See City of Jackson v. Thompson-McCully Co., LLC, 239 Mich. App. 482, 493; 608 N.W.2d 531 (2000) (“[a]n issue is moot if an event has occurred that renders it impossible for the court, if it should decide in favor of the party, to grant relief”).

Moreover, we find no abuse of discretion in the lower court’s decision to award the Trial Court’s requested attorney fees without first conducting an evidentiary hearing on the matter. See Bielawski v. Bielawski, 137 Mich. App. 587, 592-593; 358 N.W.2d 383 (1984). Defendants are correct that, generally, a trial court should hold an evidentiary hearing when a party is challenging the reasonableness of the attorney fees claimed. Miller v. Meijer, Inc., 219 Mich. App. 476, 479; 556 N.W.2d 890 (1996). However, where the parties have created a sufficient record to review the issue, an evidentiary hearing is not required. Se Head v. Phillips Camper Sales Rental, Inc., 234 Mich. App. 94, 113; 593 N.W.2d 595 (1999); Giannetti Bros. Constr. Co. v. Pontiac, 175 Mich. App. 442, 450; 438 N.W.2d 313 (1989).

In their brief on appeal, defendants assert that they requested an evidentiary hearing below, but provide no record citation to verify that assertion. See MCR 7.212(C)(7). Our review of the record indicates that, although defendants filed numerous objections regarding the attorney fees requested by the Trial Court, they did not request an evidentiary hearing regarding fees encompassed by the lower court’s May 21, 2003, order, and merely made passing reference to the need for an evidentiary hearing regarding only a portion of the fees covered by the lower court’s September 22, 2003, order. A party’s failure to request an evidentiary hearing on the issue of attorney fees constitutes a forfeiture of the issue. See Kernen v. Homestead Dev. Co., 252 Mich. App. 689, 691-692; 653 N.W.2d 634 (2002). Moreover, even if

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defendants did request a hearing, the detailed billing statement and accompanying documentation, which included affidavits from the Trial Court’s various counsel and extensive briefing from both sides, provided the lower court with a reasonable evidentiary basis to evaluate and decide the attorney fees question. Head, supra. Accordingly, we do not conclude that the lower court abused its discretion by deciding the issue solely on the pleadings and supporting documentation submitted by the parties. Bielawski, supra; see also Jager v. Nationwide Truck Brokers, Inc., 252 Mich. App. 464, 488-489; 652 N.W.2d 503 (2002).

Of course, the lower court did not determine whether the limitations we have above concluded must be considered in this kind of case apply here. Accordingly, we are remanding this matter to the lower court for whatever further fact-finding may be necessary to make that determination. The record is insufficient to establish, and we draw no conclusion regarding, whether an evidentiary hearing will be required on this issue.

D. Assessment of Interest and Fees Incurred in Connection with Obtaining Payment
Defendants also argue that the lower court erred in awarding the Trial Court attorney fees incurred in connection with obtaining payment for its legal expenses, and by ordering that all such fees would accrue “interest at the judgment rate” from the date the orders awarding those fees were entered. However, because these issues were not raised before and decided by the trial court, they are not properly preserved for our review. Se Fast Air, Inc. v. Knight, 235 Mich. App. 541, 549; 599 N.W.2d 489
(1999). Further, they are without merit. Defendants rely exclusively on Yurgosky v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Admin. Office of Pennsylvania

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Courts, 554 Pa. 533; 722 A.2d 631 (1998), but that precedent is unpersuasive. Although that case also involved a court funding dispute in which the plaintiff court sought payment of legal expenses by its funding unit, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court offered no basis for its stark pronouncement that the award of attorney fees in that case may not include “interest assessed on outstanding bills for legal services [or] attorney’s fees generated to obtain payment of bills for legal services. . . .” Id. at 545. Additionally, we note that the Michigan Legislature has provided for the assessment of interest on attorney fees and costs. See, generally, MCL 600.6013(6). Finally, we have earlier determined that the inherent power doctrine requires payment of precomplaint and appellate attorney fees and expenses. That same logic applies to attorney fees and expenses incurred to secure payment of inherent power costs from reluctant funding units.

E. Conclusion
The limitations on attorney fees we have outlined must be considered in this inherent power doctrine case. Accordingly, we reverse the lower court orders awarding attorney fees and expenses. We remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion. We retain jurisdiction.

[1] For ease of reference, the 46th Circuit Trial Court will hereinafter be referred to simply as “the Trial Court.” References to “the lower court” are to the visiting judge assigned to preside over this matter.
[2] Since this appeal was filed, the lower court proceedings have proceeded through trial to a verdict in favor of the Trial Court. Although the trial findings may well be appealed, we rely on them to a limited extent for background on issues that do not appear to be in dispute.
[3] Administrative Order No. 1998-5, § III provides, in relevant part, that a court may file a civil action to compel funding “[i]f, after the local funding unit has made its appropriations, [the] court concludes that the funds provided for its operations by its local funding unit are insufficient to enable the court to properly perform its duties and that legal action is necessary. . . .”
[4] Each of the claims in that suit were ultimately either withdrawn by Crawford and Kalkaska counties or dismissed by the lower court.
[5] The February 4, 2003, order granting the Trial Court’s motion also provided that the first statement was to include all attorney fees incurred by the Trial Court in relation to this matter before February 1, 2003. Thereafter, billing statements were to be submitted monthly, after which the lower court would review the invoices and any objections, then enter an order determining the amount to be paid. Each of the counties, as the local funding units for the Trial Court, would then be responsible for an equal share of the fees, which was to be paid within thirty days of the entry of the order settling the amount of those fees.
[6] In light of the fact that we are reversing the September 22, 2003, order on other grounds, we need not consider defendants’ arguments that the trial court was without jurisdiction to enter that order.
[7] Defendants also raise a number of issues not directly related to the award of attorney fees. However, we do not address those matters because they exceed the scope of review permitted by our order granting leave to appeal, which limits the issues on appeal to those “raised in the application and supporting brief.”
[8] We recognize that the 46th Circuit Trial Court is arguably not itself a “county officer” within the plain meaning of MCL 49.73. However, because defendants do not challenge the Trial Court’s status in this regard, and considering that there is another basis on which to find the statute inapplicable to this matter, we do not address that matter further. For this same reason, we also decline to address defendants’ claim that the lower court erred in failing to determine whether the prosecuting attorney or county corporate counsel were able to represent the Trial Court in these proceedings.
[9] The lower court’s rationale might be sustained given a different set of facts, e.g., a countercomplaint raising a substantive cause of action seeking other than declaratory or injunctive relief in defense of the allegations in the original complaint.
[10] Although this argument would equally apply to count IV of the Trial Court’s complaint, defendants do not make that argument.
[11] Defendants also argue that the inherent power doctrine was inappropriately applied here, before a determination that the litigation was brought in good faith. The one case defendants cite in support of this proposition, City of Warren v. Dannis, 136 Mich. App. 651, 661-662; 357 N.W.2d 731 (1984), considered an issue totally different than that we face here (a dispute between a city and its treasurer, not involving the inherent power doctrine whatsoever), did so in dictum, and is not precedentially binding on us. MCR 7.215(J)(1). Even if a good-faith limitation on the inherent power doctrine applied, the record here shows nothing to indicate a lack of good faith. To the contrary, the Trial Court initiated these proceedings only after trying to work things out with defendants and otherwise complying with Administrative Order No. 1998-5. Further, following trial, the lower court found the Trial Court’s claims to be meritorious. While that result might be overturned on appeal, it certainly would still militate against the conclusion that the suit was so frivolous as to have been filed in bad faith.
[12] In addition, to assure an appropriately limited intrusion into the legislative appropriation function, precedents establish that “the court should . . . bear the burden of proving that its appropriation request is reasonable and necessary to the court’s operation,” Hillsdale, supra at 744 (Riley, J., dissenting), using a “clear and convincing evidence” standard, Gladwin, supra at 453. Defendants do not argue that the lower court misapplied this burden of proof here.
[13] This is not to say that we are convinced by the lower court’s analysis in all regards. For example, the lower court adduced reasons why local counsel might not be well-suited to represent the Trial Court in this matter. That analysis somewhat missed the mark because defendants themselves were represented by Lansing (not local) counsel and were complaining about the imposition of much higher billing rates from affluent suburban Detroit. Further, contrary to the lower court’s reasoning, it would seem that local counsel would not be adverse to representing their local judiciary, thereby probably ingratiating themselves with local judges and court personnel. Nonetheless, we do not conclude that the trial court’s reasoning or decision in this regard was an “abuse of discretion” as defined by precedent.
[14] The limitation we find necessary to impose here, see discussion below, is not based in any way on a conclusion that the fees billed by counsel for the Trial Court were excessive. The lower court’s conclusion that the fees requested by plaintiff’s counsel were reasonable in this complex case is amply supported by the record.
[15] The limitations discussed here apply to attorney fees, paralegal fees, and other fees associated with the legal representation of a plaintiff court. Other costs associated with prosecuting an inherent power claim should be considered separately to determine their reasonableness using the same criteria as in the ordinary case, without any limitations specific to this kind of case.
[16] As examples, limitations would operate as follows in a case where counsel for defendant funding unit(s) charge $100 an hour and work one hundred hours on the litigation for a total of $10,000 in attorney fees. If defense counsel reasonably charged $200 an hour for fifty hours, the reasonable attorney fees award of $10,000 would not be subject to any limitation. While the hourly rate limitation would result in a cap of $7,500 (fifty hours at a rate of 150 percent of $100), this would not apply because the total fees limitation would allow an award up to $15,000 (150 percent of $10,000). If plaintiff’s counsel reasonably charged $200 an hour for one hundred hours, the attorney fees award would be limited to $15,000, which is the limitation imposed by both the hourly rate limitation (one hundred hours at a rate of 150 percent of $100) and by the total fees limitation (150 percent of $10,000). If plaintiff court’s counsel reasonably charged $300 an hour for fifty hours, the entire $15,000 attorney fees would be awarded; that amount would be allowable because it equals the cap imposed by the total fees limitation (150 percent of $10,000) and the hourly rate limitation, being at the lower amount of $7,500 (fifty hours at a rate of 150 percent of $100), would not apply.
[17] MCR 2.614(A) grants an automatic stay of execution or other proceedings for the enforcement of a judgment until the expiration of twenty-one days after its entry. This twenty-one-day period coincides with the period in which an appeal to this Court, whether by right or by leave granted, must be taken. See MCR 7.204 and MCR 7.205.

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