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How to secure attorney’s fees on a contractor’s bond

ConstructioWorkerWhenever you find yourself dealing with a contractor, you will also find yourself dealing with that contractor’s bond almost without exception.  Under Washington statute Title 18, general contractors and subcontractors alike are required to file evidence of a surety bond with the Department of Labor and Industries of Washington State.  RCW 18.27.040 (general contractor bond must be in the amount of $12,000 and a subcontractor or “specialty” contractor bond must be in the amount of $6,000).  The statute’s purpose is “to afford protection to the public including all persons, firms and corporations furnishing labor, materials, or equipment to a contractor from unreliable, fraudulent, financially irresponsible, or incompetent contractors.”  RCW 18.27.140.  It is a misdemeanor for a contractor to work without first being registered pursuant to the statute.  RCW 18.27.020(2)(a).

The mandatory contractor’s bond requirement is important to potential litigants because any person who may file a claim against the contractor is also permitted to specifically name the surety bond as a party to the suit.  Of course, naming the bond involves particular pleading requirements in order to comply with the statute.  When done right this statute can secure you an increasingly rare award as part of the recovery: YOUR ATTORNEYS’ FEES!!  See RCW 18.27.040(6).  Such statutes are quite in the opposite of the general rule that each party in a civil action is responsible for paying its own attorneys’ fees and costs.  In re Impoundment of Chevrolet Truck, 148 Wn.2d 145, 160, 60 P.3d 53 (2002) (commonly referred to as the “American rule”).  In an effort to put some teeth in the statute, Washington legislators expressly included that attorneys’ fees were a possible award to bona fide litigants.

However, the statute has been subject to some scrutiny in recent caselaw from several levels of the State’s judiciary in recent months.  The contractor’s registration statute was thoroughly examined in Cosmopolitan Engin. Group, Inc. v. Ondeo Degremont, Inc., 159 Wn.2d 292, 149 P.3d 666 (2006).  In that case, one litigant claimed that the contractor’s bond statute allowed the prevailing party to recover its attorneys’ fees from both the contractor and the surety bond itself.  Id. at 298.  In undertaking its statutory interpretation of RCW 18.27.040, the Court deduced that the placement of the attorneys’ fee provision, when considering the statutory scheme in its entirety, refers “only to action for recovery against the contractor’s bond.  Id. at 299.  Hence, the Court limited recovery of attorneys’ fees under this section to the amount of the contractor’s bond due to its precise placement in the contractor’s bond statute.  In apparent dicta, the Court further rationalized its decision based on the legislatures’ failure to expressly identify that attorneys’ fees were available in suit “against the contractor or against the contractor’s bond” independently of one another.  Id. at 301.  The court’s reasoning makes sense due to the fact that a litigant could not sue a contractor’s bond under the statute without first initiating a claim against the contractor for breach of contract.  The Cosmopolitan decision and its authority for limiting an attorney fee award specifically to the amount of the bond was reaffirmed as recently as last December in an appellate decision from Division Three.  See Brotherton v. Kralman Steel Structures, Inc., 2011 WL 6822261, *5-9 (Div. 3 2011).  Thus, the prospect of pursuing fees from the contractor party seems to be quite settled without much room to argue the alternative.

Cosmopolitan also explained that RCW 18.27.040 is a one-way statute.  Id. at 302, n.3.  What is meant by “one-way” is that a subcontractor can sue up the chain and recover against the upper tier contractor’s bond, but not vice versa. Id.  Such a dynamic allows suppliers to recover against bond rather than resorting to placing a lien on the consumer’s property for a dispute that does not necessarily involve the homeowner at all.  Id. (citing Int’l Comm. Collectors, Inc. v. Carver, 99 Wn.2d 302, 308, 661 P.2d 976 (1983); Stewart Carpet Serv., Inc. v. Contractors Bonding & Ins. Co., 105 Wn. 2d 353, 365-66, 715 P.2d 115 (1986)).

Photo Credit: scottchan

Does the RCW mandate attorney’s fees awards in timber trespass cases? Appeals court in Bassani Farms v. Maddox says “no.”

One of Washington State’s greatest natural resources is its trees and forests. Given the abundance of this natural resource, Washington has enacted several statutes which govern accidental or intentional damage to and/or removal of timber on someone else’s property (without permission of course). These laws are set forth in RCW 4.24.630 and RCW 64.12.030.
Although both RCW 4.24.630 and RCW 64.12.030 deal with damage to and removal of trees, there has always been a conflict between these statutes. Namely, how does the court award damages to a prevailing party in an action when the trespasser damaged and/or removed trees, but did not injured the property? (Both RCW 4.24.630 and 64.12.030 discuss damages for timber trespass, yet 4.24.630 includes a provision for attorney’s fees).

MischwaldRCW 4.24.630 says that if a person goes onto another’s property without permission and removes or damages timber, that person is liable for treble damages and attorney fees. RCW 64.12.030, however, says that if a person goes onto another’s property without permission and removes or damages any tree, timber, or shrub, that person is liable only for treble damages—no attorney fees may be awarded.

Recently, in Bassani Farms, LLC v. Maddox, the Washington Appellate Court (Division III) offered some guidance on this conflict. For one, the Bassani Court asserted that RCW 64.12.030 requires no mental state and applies equally to intentional and negligent takings and damages to trees and shrubs. Second, the Bassani Court reiterated that RCW 4.24.630(2) expressly exempts any claims that fall under RCW 64.12.030’s language from being applied to RCW 4.24.630. The result is therefore, that prevailing claims pertaining ONLY to damage and/or removal of trees from a landowner’s property can only be awarded treble damages—no attorney fees can be awarded.

Ultimately, Bassani’s outcome may negatively impact on landowners whose trees have been damaged and/or removed and seek redress in court. In such cases, attorney fees may be substantial. Consequently, the possibility of recovering attorney fees may be equally, if not more, important to a landowner as is recovering treble damages. If courts are finding that a landowner’s claims apply under RCW 64.12.030 (which does not allow attorney fees), not RCW 4.24.630, landowners may be less likely to sue because they will not be awarded attorney fees and any other litigation-related costs.