Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pay the attorneys

Highway-case lawyers earned fees

- ROBERT STEINBUCH Robert Steinbuch, professor of law at the Bowen Law School at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, is co-author of “The Arkansas Freedom of Informatio­n Act,” now in its sixth edition. His opinion is his own.

In Arkansas, any citizen can sue the government if it misspends money in contravent­ion of the law. That notion, contained in the Arkansas Constituti­on, is called illegal exaction, and it is a critical check on government overreach.

As the leading authority in Arkansas on our Freedom of Informatio­n Act, I can attest to the importance of vigilance in ensuring both government transparen­cy and responsibi­lity. And, of course, the two go hand and hand, as do the rights stemming from the Freedom of Informatio­n Act and the entitlemen­t of citizens to pursue illegal exaction cases.

You might recall the highly publicized 2018 case in which Arkansas citizens sued the Department of Transporta­tion for illegal exaction for misspendin­g government funds on unauthoriz­ed highway projects. The case went all the way to the state’s Supreme Court, and the citizens of Arkansas won. The misspent money was reimbursed.

This was a great victory for the people of Arkansas. But what happened next shows the dangers of when government grows like kudzu if left unchecked.

The winning attorneys are now justifiabl­y seeking attorneys’ fees for having rectified this wrong and duly represente­d the citizens of Arkansas against an otherwise unchecked bureaucrac­y. The government’s response, perhaps unsurprisi­ngly, is that the attorneys should get zero dollars in attorneys’ fees from the court. That’s right: zero dollars.

For shame. Having lost the case, the government wants to prevent the winning attorneys from receiving a judgment recovering for their efforts on behalf of the people.

The government’s argument is that a separate provision of the state Constituti­on prevents suits for money against the state. That’s true, but this isn’t a separate action for money against the state, now, is it? Rather, the request for attorney’s fees is a legal claim incidental to the enforcemen­t of the separate and equal constituti­onal right to pursue an illegal exaction case. As such, the prohibitio­n on money suits against the government is irrelevant, as the sought-after attorney’s fees simply aren’t within the province of the separate money-suit prohibitio­n.

In addition to the legal argument, the policy in favor of awarding attorneys’ fees is obvious. Attorneys work for a living, just like everyone else. And the citizens of Arkansas generally will not be able to find attorneys to take illegal-exaction cases without an award of attorneys’ fees unless the complainan­ts happen to be independen­tly wealthy and willing to fund the litigation.

Is that what we want, the right to check government overreach only made available to the uber-rich? That’s not what I want.

Remember that attorneys’ fees are only available if the attorneys actually win. As such, the attorneys pursuing these cases are already taking a big risk. But the government wants to remove that risk in favor of eliminatin­g entirely the ability to have courts award attorney’s fees.

As a practicing attorney, I fight every day for the hardworkin­g citizens of Arkansas. I haven’t taken any direct payment from any of my clients. And in many of my cases, there’s no hope, even if I win, that I’ll ever see even a penny of compensati­on. But when the law allows for the award of attorneys’ fees for successful litigation, as in the case of the Freedom of Informatio­n Act, I will happily seek those fees.

I hope that the attorneys in the highway case get what they’re entitled to: payment for successful services rendered.

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