LEACH, J.
¶ 1 In a damage action where the amount pleaded is $10,000 or less, a party seeking relief is considered to be the prevailing party when her recovery equals or exceeds the amount she offered in settlement. The party resisting relief prevails if the party seeking relief recovers nothing or less than the resisting party offered in settlement. Here, each party claims to have prevailed, entitling it to a fee award. We conclude that neither party has shown it prevailed.
¶ 2 Christa McKillop offered to accept $15,392 to settle her personal injury claim, segregated $2,400 to general damages, $2,600 to special damages, and $10,392 to attorney fees and costs. A jury awarded her $8,500. Because McKillop's total settlement offer exceeds the amount the jury awarded, the trial court erred in awarding her attorney fees.
¶ 3 The Estate of Robert E. Carpine (Estate) made a CR 68 offer of $10,000, more than McKillop's jury award. On appeal, it contends that it prevailed, entitling it to fees. Because the Estate made a CR 68 offer of judgment, its offer necessarily included McKillop's accrued costs. Because the Estate makes no claim that its offer exceeded the jury award plus costs accrued at the time of its offer, the Estate fails to show that it prevailed. Thus, its claim for fees fails.
¶ 4 Christa McKillop sued the Estate for injuries and damages sustained in a car accident. McKillop filed a statement of arbitrability. Before the arbitration hearing, McKillop served the Estate with a statement of damages, requesting a total of $10,000. McKillop then made a settlement offer under RCW 4.84.250, agreeing to accept a total of $15,392, segregated $2,400 to general damages, $2,600 to special damages, and $10,392 to attorney fees and costs.
¶ 5 Pursuant to CR 68, the Estate offered to settle for $10,000, "inclusive of all claims for damages and all costs and attorneys' fees incurred." The parties did not settle.
¶ 6 The arbitrator awarded McKillop $5,272.06, comprised of $2,772.06 in economic damages and $2,500.00 in noneconomic damages. The arbitrator denied both parties' requests for attorney fees.
¶ 7 Unsatisfied with her arbitration result, McKillop asked for a trial de novo under MAR 7.1.
¶ 8 A superior court jury returned a verdict of $8,500.00, awarding $2,772.06 for economic damages and $5,727.94 for noneconomic damages. McKillop then requested $94,624.85 in costs and attorney fees under RCW 4.84.250. She claimed to be the prevailing party because the jury verdict of
¶ 9 The Estate responded with its own motion for attorney fees and costs under RCW 4.84.290. The Estate claimed it prevailed because its $10,000 settlement offer exceeded the jury's verdict of $8,500.
¶ 10 The trial court entered judgment in favor of McKillop in the amount of $8,500.00 plus attorney fees and costs in the reduced amount of $65,000.00. The Estate has appealed the trial court's decision on fees and costs. McKillop has cross appealed the trial court's decision to reduce her requested attorney fees.
¶ 11 Usually, litigants must pay for their own legal expenses.
¶ 12 RCW 4.84.250 through .290 encourages out-of-court settlements, penalizes parties who unjustifiably bring or resist small claims, and enables parties to pursue meritorious small claims without seeing the award swallowed up by the expense of paying an attorney.
¶ 13 McKillop and the Estate each claim to be the prevailing party for the same reasons each asserted in the trial court.
¶ 14 McKillop also contends that the Estate cannot challenge her fee recovery on appeal because it failed to contest her motion for attorney fees below. But the Estate filed a motion claiming that it prevailed and should be awarded fees. In the context of this case, only one party could be the prevailing party as defined in the applicable statutes. By claiming to be the prevailing party, the Estate necessarily denied that McKillop was.
¶ 15 This court reviews de novo a trial court's decision that a statute authorizes an award of attorney fees.
¶ 16 Pursuant to RCW 4.84.250, McKillop offered to settle her claims for a total of $15,392.00. Her offer stated,
1. General Damages (pain, suffering, inconvenience) $2,400.00
2. Special Damages (medical expenses and loss of earnings) $2,600.00 3. Attorney's Fees and Costs (as of the date of this notice) $10,392.00 TOTAL SETTLEMENT OFFER $15,392.00
McKillop contends that we should decide if she was the prevailing party by comparing the amount her offer allocated to general and special damages, $5,000, with the amount the jury awarded for those claims, $8,500.
¶ 17 But our Supreme Court rejected a similar approach in analogous circumstances in Niccum v. Enquist.
¶ 18 Enquist rejected Niccum's offer to settle. The jury awarded Niccum $16,650.00 in damages.
¶ 19 Our Supreme Court reversed. It described the issue before it as whether a trial court should subtract costs from an offer of compromise that states it includes them before comparing that offer with a jury's award.
¶ 20 The Supreme Court noted that Niccum was not entitled to costs at the time of his offer, only upon entry of judgment.
¶ 21 Similarly, McKillop has not identified any statutory authority for segregating her settlement offer into separate amounts corresponding to damages and costs. She had no entitlement to costs at the time of her offer. As in Niccum, in the absence of this statutory authority and entitlement to costs, the trial court had "no basis for giving effect to the inclusion of costs in the offer."
¶ 22 The Estate made a CR 68 offer of judgment for $10,000, including attorney fees and costs. The Estate contends that it is entitled to attorney fees because McKillop recovered less than $10,000. McKillop responds that a CR 68 offer of judgment cannot be made in an offer of compromise to settle an arbitration case.
¶ 23 CR 68 provides in pertinent part:
(Emphasis added.) Thus, the Estate's CR 68 offer of judgment included costs accrued by McKillop at the time of the offer. Unlike RCW 4.84.250, the text of the rule provides a basis for a trial court to add accrued costs to a jury award for purposes of comparing the offer of judgment with the judgment finally obtained.
¶ 24 RCW 4.84.250 defines reasonable attorney fees recoverable under it as costs. The Estate makes no claim that its offer is more favorable than the sum of McKillop's jury award and costs, including reasonable attorney fees, accrued at the time of its offer. As a result, the Estate's claim for attorney fees and costs fails.
¶ 25 Because McKillop is not the prevailing party, her cross appeal requesting additional attorney fees necessarily fails. Both parties request attorney fees on appeal under RCW 4.84.250. Because neither party prevails, neither is entitled to attorney fees or costs on appeal.
¶ 26 Because the total amount of McKillop's segregated settlement offer exceeds the amount the jury awarded, the trial court erred in awarding her attorney fees. We reverse the trial court's award of attorney fees to McKillop. Because the Estate does not show that the value of its offer of judgment exceeded the sum of McKillop's jury award and accrued cost, we deny its claim for attorney fees.
WE CONCUR: DWYER and SCHINDLER, JJ.