DONALDSON, Judge.
This case stems from a dispute regarding an unpaid invoice of $14,055 sent by Diamond Concrete & Slabs, LLC ("Diamond"), seeking payment from Southern Structures Corporation ("Southern") and the Andalusia-Opp Airport Authority, which is now known as the South Alabama Regional Airport Authority ("the Airport Authority"). Diamond also sought, among other things, an award of attorney fees pursuant to § 8-29-1 et seq., Ala.Code 1975 ("the Prompt Pay Act," also referred to as "the Miller Act"). The Covington Circuit Court ("the trial court") ultimately entered a judgment in Diamond's favor, awarding it the amount of the unpaid invoice and $5,622 in attorney fees. The attorney fee award was computed as a percentage of the amount of the unpaid invoice instead of as a lump-sum amount of $247,275, as requested by Diamond, based on an hourly attorney-fee agreement between Diamond and its counsel. Diamond appeals as to the attorney-fee award, asserting that the amount awarded is inadequate. We hold that the amount of attorney fees awarded is inconsistent with and unsupported by the evidence in the record, and, accordingly, we reverse the judgment insofar as it awarded attorney fees and remand the cause to reconsider the attorney-fee award.
In May 2005, the Airport Authority hired Southern to construct a hangar, and Southern subcontracted with Diamond to construct a concrete floor for the hangar. The concrete floor was alleged to be defective. Southern hired another subcontractor to correct the alleged defects. Southern paid Diamond $35,161, Diamond's original bid amount, for the work it had
On February 27, 2007, Diamond filed a complaint in the Montgomery Circuit Court against Southern and the Airport Authority, stating a breach-of-contract claim against Southern only and a conversion claim and a claim pursuant to the Miller Act ("the prompt-pay claim") against both Southern and the Airport Authority. At the request of Southern and the Airport Authority, the Montgomery Circuit Court transferred the case to the trial court. Southern and the Airport Authority denied liability in their answer and asserted counterclaims against Diamond seeking damages arising from allegedly defective work.
Litigation proceeded over the next three years. The case proceeded to a jury trial. After a five-day trial, the jury returned a verdict on July 1, 2010, in favor of Diamond on the counterclaims and on Diamond's breach-of-contract claim, finding that Diamond was entitled to $14,055 and should have been paid on September 30, 2006.
On September 10, 2013, the trial court conducted a hearing and received documents and testimony from Diamond, Southern, and the Airport Authority. Diamond requested $247,275 in attorney fees based on an hourly fee agreement with its attorneys. In support of its claimed fees and expenses, Diamond offered several documents, including a detailed billing statement claiming 989.1 hours of legal services billed at a rate of $250 per hour, amounting to a total of $247,275; a detailed case-expense statement listing expenses totaling $11,780.72; and a copy of the fee agreement that Diamond signed with its counsel. Counsel for Diamond
The Airport Authority called one witness, attorney John Peek. Peek testified that he had extensive experience with collection cases but that he was not "intimately familiar with the case." Peek testified that "[t]here certainly could be a number of reasonable methods of assessing fees, but I think the most common method and the most generally accepted one would be the contingent fee basis." Peek stated that he thought the requested fees in this case were unreasonable, but he admitted: "I've looked at the front page and back page of this bill. I've not looked at the remainder of it." On cross-examination, Peek admitted that he had been asked to testify earlier on the morning of the hearing and that he did not "know and understand the complexities of the case." After Peek's testimony, the Airport Authority attempted to call a second witness, and Diamond attempted to call a rebuttal witness. However, the trial court did not allow either witness to testify and stated: "Stop making any comment on what anybody's bill was or was not. I just don't need to hear it anymore."
On March 7, 2014, the trial court entered an order denying Diamond's requested attorney fees as unreasonable, and it ruled that "a reasonable fee in this case [is] a 40% contingency fee which amounts to $5,622.00 plus expenses of $11,780.72 as claimed by [Diamond]." Diamond filed a timely notice of appeal to this court.
On appeal, Diamond argues that it supported its requested amount for attorney fees with substantial evidence and that the trial court's attorney-fee award is both unreasonable under our caselaw regarding attorney fees and inconsistent with § 8-29-6, Ala.Code 1975, a part of the Miller Act:
Diamond argues that the trial court's attorney-fee award undermines the purpose of the Miller Act by converting its contract with its counsel from an hourly fee agreement to a contingency-fee agreement payable as a percentage of the unpaid invoice. Diamond further requests that this court render a judgment awarding what it asserts is the proper amount of attorney fees in this case. The Airport Authority and Southern argue that the requested attorney-fee amount of $247,275 was unreasonable
Our supreme court has held:
Pharmacia Corp. v. McGowan, 915 So.2d 549, 552-53 (Ala.2004).
Peebles v. Miley, 439 So.2d 137, 141 (Ala. 1983).
The trial court's March 7, 2014, order stated that the trial court had "reviewed the file in this cause and, as stated above, all arguments and testimony as well as all applicable statutes and case law." The trial court further stated that it found that Diamond was "entitled to an attorney's fee which is reasonable for the type of case contemplated by the agreement
Although we make no holding regarding whether the amount of hours expended by Diamond's counsel and the hourly rate agreed to by Diamond are reasonable, the $5,622.00 amount awarded by the trial court bears no discernable relationship to time reasonably spent by counsel for Diamond during the protracted and complex litigation in this case. We do not hold that a reasonable fee cannot be equivalent to an amount that is equal to a percentage of the amount recovered, and we note that the trial court may consider the measure of success achieved and other factors, as illustrated in Peebles. In the context of this apparently lengthy and complex case, which was tried to a jury over five days and spanned several years, however, we cannot find support in the record for the award of attorney fees to the prevailing party based solely on the amount recovered and, thus, we hold that the attorney-fee award in this case is not reasonable.
Therefore, we reverse the judgment insofar as it awarded attorney fees in the amount of $5,622, and we remand this cause to the trial court to enter an order awarding attorney fees based on its consideration of applicable Peebles factors and articulating its reasons for that decision.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
THOMPSON, P.J., and PITTMAN, THOMAS, and MOORE, JJ., concur.