02/24/2012
On the flip side, there's H.B. 64. Under current Georgia law, contracting parties (e.g. lenders and borrowers) can agree that, in the event of a default, the non-defaulting party can recover up to 15% of the debt for legal fees. So, a lender who is owed $1 million can sue and collect from the borrower up to $150,000 in legal fees, even if its actual legal fees were only $1,000. Consider the situation where a bank sues to collect a loan, and the borrower never answers. If the legal fees actually incurred were minimal, this often results in a windfall for the bank.... assuming the bank ever collects anything (which is becoming rarer).
H.B. 64, currently before the legislature, would require that a court consider the reasonableness of any legal fee in excess of $10,000, so the bank does not get an automatic 15%. I support at least the theory behind the bill, but maybe not that specific result in all cases. Making the parties spend more time in front of a judge (or a jury), spending even more legal fees, oftentimes serves no one's best interests.
There is often no justification for an excessive attorneys fee award, particular in banking collection cases, vastly in excess of what the bank has actually paid for legal services. Current law holds that it is irrelevant what the bank actually pays its attorneys, if the contract with the borrower contains the standard attorneys fee clause. That's often unfair.
But, also unfair is the situation which arises when the debt is only $1,0000, and the bank is limited to a fee award of $150 (15%), when it actually had to spend thousands of dollars collecting from a particularly litigious borrower. It often takes a bank the same amount of legal fees to collect a little debt as a big one. Sometimes I have spent months or more trying to get a judgment for a client for a small debt, but only hours for some big ones.
There needs to be a common sense solution to these legal fee issues. A flat 15% regardless of what the bank actually spends, often does not make any sense, so long as the debt is actually recoverable. Likewise, too small of an authorized fee can place a considerable financial burden on honest lenders. Remember that these rules apply to just about all written contracts in Georgia (where one party owes another money), not just to mortgage transactions. One thing that might help is requiring mortgages, at least for home loans, to contain MUTUAL attorneys fees clauses as are required for leases in Georgia. If the contract states that EITHER party who defaults or loses has to pay the other party's legal fees, folks might be a bit more circumspect about the money they spend in litigation.