PUBLISHED
OPINION
COURT OF
APPEALS
DECISION
DATED AND FILED
June 27,
2000
Cornelia G. Clark
Clerk, Court of Appeals
of
Wisconsin
NOTICE
This opinion is subject to further editing. If
published, the official version will
appear in the bound volume of the Official
Reports.
A party may file
with
the Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the
Court of Appeals.
See
Wis. Stat.
§808.10
and Rule 809.62.
No. 99-2827
STATE OF
WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS
DISTRICT
III
Steven M. Lucareli
and
Candice J. Lucareli,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Vilas County and
Jack
Smith, individually and
as an employee of
the
State of Wisconsin,
Department of
Natural
Resources,
Defendants-Respondents.
APPEAL from a judgment of the circuit court for Vilas County:
DOUGLAS T. FOX,
Judge. Affirmed.
Before Cane, C.J., Hoover, P.J., and Peterson, J.
¶1. PETERSON,J.Steven and Candice Lucareli appeal a
judgment determining
the amount of reasonable attorney fees attributed to their
previous appeal. We had found that
appeal frivolous and remanded to the circuit court for it to
determine the amount of fees.
The Lucarelis appeal that determination, essentially raising two
arguments: (1) the circuit
court did not have subject matter jurisdiction to determine the
amount of attorney fees
associated with their frivolous appeal; and (2) the circuit court
erred in denying them an
evidentiary hearing. We reject both arguments and affirm the
judgment.
Background
¶2. In their previous appeal, Lucareli v. Vilas
County, No.
98-0740, unpublished slip op. (Wis. Ct. App. Mar. 9, 1999), the
Lucarelis challenged the
circuit court's decision that found frivolous their action
against a Department of Natural
Resources employee named Jack Smith. We affirmed and determined
that the Lucarelis had
also processed a frivolous appeal. We awarded Smith the costs
and reasonable attorney fees
associated with the frivolous appeal and remanded to the circuit
court for it to determine the
amount of the award.
¶3. On remand, the circuit court determined the amount
of attorney fees based
on the sworn affidavit of the assistant attorney general who had
defended Smith on appeal.
The Lucarelis objected to the affidavit and contended that they
were entitled to an evidentiary
hearing. The circuit court denied their request after concluding
that the Lucarelis only raised
legal issues. The court noted that defense counsel's affidavit
"contain[ed] an itemized
and detailed summary of the professional services which [counsel]
rendered in connection
with the appeal, the exact time spent on each aspect of the
appeal, the method ... by which
the value of those services [we]re computed, and complete copies
of the end work
product." In conclusion, the court explained that an
evidentiary hearing was not
necessary because the Lucarelis were not "able to advance
any articulable
or arguable basis for suspecting that [counsel] had falsely sworn
to any aspect of the affidavit
...."
Analysis
¶4. The Lucarelis raise various issues on appeal.
Pursuant to this court's order
dated January 13, 2000, however, we will only consider the
Lucarelis' arguments concerning
the trial court's award of reasonable attorney fees associated
with their frivolous
appeal.1
A.Subject Matter Jurisdiction
¶5. Initially we address the Lucarelis' argument that
the circuit court did not
have subject matter jurisdiction to determine the amount of
reasonable attorney fees
associated with their frivolous appeal. The Lucarelis cite art.
VII, §8 of the Wisconsin
Constitution, which states: "Except as otherwise provided
by law, the circuit court
shall have original jurisdiction in all matters civil and
criminal within this state and such
appellate jurisdiction in the circuit as the legislature may
prescribe by law."
¶6. They then argue that no statute expressly grants
circuit courts subject
matter jurisdiction to determine attorney fees associated with a
frivolous appeal. We reject
their argument.
¶7. WisconsinStat.Rule809.25(3)2 states, in relevant part:
(3) Frivolous Appeals. (a) If an appeal
or cross-appeal
is found to be frivolous by the court,3 the court shall award to the
successful party
costs, fees and reasonable attorney fees under this section.
¶8. The fundamental flaw in the Lucarelis'
argument is
that this court, not the circuit court, awarded sanctions for the
Lucarelis' frivolous appeal
pursuant to Wis.Stat.Rule809.25(3). According to our
long-standing procedure, we simply
remanded to the circuit court to determine the amount of
reasonable attorney
fees.4
¶9. There is nothing peculiar to determining an amount
of appellate attorney
fees that requires appellate jurisdiction. We did not create a
new or separate action when we
found the Lucarelis' appeal frivolous. While only an appellate
court can find an appeal
frivolous under Wis.Stat.Rule809.25(3), there is no reason the
circuit court would not
continue to have subject matter jurisdiction on remand. See
generally State v.
Webster, 196 Wis. 2d 308, 316, 538 N.W.2d 810 (Ct. App.
1995) (Once a
circuit court has subject matter jurisdiction over a case it
continues until final disposition.).
That the remand arose out of a frivolous appeal is not relevant
to whether the circuit court
had subject matter jurisdiction to determine reasonable attorney
fees.5
B.Evidentiary Hearing on Attorney Fees
¶10. The Lucarelis argue that they were entitled to
"pre-hearing
discovery" and an evidentiary hearing so that they could
adequately test the validity of
counsel's affidavit of billed services.6
Without those procedural safeguards, they argue that due process
of law cannot be satisfied.
¶11. When deprivation of property is at issue, as it is
in this case, minimal due
process requires the court to afford a litigant a meaningful
opportunity to present a defense.
See Boddie v. Connecticut, 401 U.S. 371, 377-78
(1971). The circuit
court gave the Lucarelis a meaningful opportunity to submit
counter-affidavits and/or
arguments that could have created a material issue of fact
involving defense counsel's
affidavit. As the circuit court noted, however, the Lucarelis
chose to do neither. Instead of
addressing the substantive reasonableness of the proposed
attorney fees, the Lucarelis used
their opportunities to raise procedural and legal issues that
were irrelevant or that this court
or the circuit court had already decided.
¶12. Absent material issues of fact, the circuit court
did not need to hold an
evidentiary hearing. A circuit court generally "has the
expertise to evaluate the
reasonableness of the fees with regard to the services
rendered." Tesch v.
Tesch, 63 Wis. 2d 320, 335, 217 N.W.2d 647 (1974). And
"[i]t is not
really the type of issue or question of fact where an adversary
presentation is necessary to
the presentation of evidence necessary to a determination."
Id.
Further, an itemized bill submitted by affidavit may be
sufficient evidence to establish
attorney fees. See id. at 334.
¶13. With regard to the circuit court's determination
of the amount of attorney
fees, this is a finding of fact that we will sustain unless the
court erroneously exercised its
discretion. See Milwaukee Rescue Mission v. Milwaukee Redev.
Auth.,
161 Wis. 2d 472, 494, 468 N.W.2d 663 (1991). The Lucarelis
implicitly acknowledge that
they have no basis for their claim that the proposed attorney
fees were unreasonable. In
their brief to this court, they plainly state that had they
"been able to depose Smith's
lawyer, they might have discovered evidence casting doubt
on his fee request and
supporting their request for an evidentiary hearing."
(Emphasis added.)The Lucarelis'
request for an evidentiary hearing was in the nature of a fishing
expedition, which the trial
court was not required to grant.
By the Court.-Judgment affirmed.
Recommended for publication in the official
reports.
1 We will not address the Lucarelis' other arguments because, as
the circuit court
adequately explained in its written decision, they have either
been decided or were waived
when the Lucarelis failed to raise them in their original action
and appeal.
2 All statutory references are to the 1997-98 version.
3 For our purposes "court" refers to the court of
appeals. See
Wis.Stat.Rule 809.01(4).
4 From a utilitarian perspective, circuit courts are much better
suited for determining the
amount of an award since they have the ability to hold
evidentiary hearings when necessary.
The Lucarelis acknowledged an understanding of this point in a
letter response to the circuit
court in which they stated, "it hardly needs saying that the
Court of Appeals is not a
fact finding court, and that is why the issue of reasonable
attorney's fees was remanded to
this court."
5 We also note that this is consistent with federal practice
under Rule 38 of the Federal
Rules of Appellate Procedure, which allows "a court of
appeals" to impose
"just damages and single or double costs" in a
frivolous appeal. In Conner
v. Travis County, 209 F.3d 794, 801 n.5 (5th
Cir. 2000),
the Fifth Circuit stated that although a district court did not
have authority to sanction based
on its determination that an appeal was frivolous under Rule 38,
"[a] district court can
still calculate sanctions if [the court of appeals] determine[s]
that an appeal is frivolous and
remand[s] to the district court to award justifiable damages,
costs, or fees."
6 As explained in footnote 1, one of the issues that we will not
address is the Lucarelis'
related argument that the circuit court improperly determined the
attorney's hourly rate by
using the average cost for providing legal services incurred by
the State of Wisconsin
Department of Justice. The Lucarelis raised the identical
argument when objecting to the
determination of trial counsel's fees, who was the same attorney
that defended the Lucarelis'
appeal. The Lucarelis eventually abandoned that argument and it
is now the law of the case.
See Univest Corp. v. General Split Corp., 148 Wis. 2d
29, 38, 435
N.W.2d 234 (1989). The Lucarelis argue that their previous
abandonment of this issue
should not affect their argument regarding appellate attorney
fees. But the legal issue was
the same: whether counsel's attorney fees could be calculated by
general statistics.