Lynn Wirtz v. Adams County Board of Supervisors ( 2019 )


Menu:
  •          IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2018-CP-00031-COA
    LYNN WIRTZ                                                                     APPELLANT
    v.
    ADAMS COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS                                               APPELLEES
    AND H.W. BARNETT
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                            09/14/2017
    TRIAL JUDGE:                                 HON. LILLIE BLACKMON SANDERS
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                   ADAMS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                      LYNN WIRTZ (PRO SE)
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES:                     SCOTT FLETCHER SLOVER
    BRUCE M. KUEHNLE JR.
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                          CIVIL - OTHER
    DISPOSITION:                                 AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART,
    AND REMANDED: 04/16/2019
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    EN BANC.
    TINDELL, J., FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    At the July 5, 2017 meeting of the Adams County Board of Supervisors (the Board),
    Lynn Wirtz asked the Board to take certain action against his neighbor, Dr. H.W. Barnett.
    Specifically, Wirtz asked that the Board request for Dr. Barnett to explain his removal,
    beginning in 2008, of timber and soil from a right of way on Dr. Barnett’s property.
    Following the Board’s refusal to send Dr. Barnett a letter, Wirtz, acting pro se, filed a bill of
    exceptions in the Adams County Circuit Court on July 14, 2017. Wirtz named both the
    Board and Dr. Barnett as defendants in the proceeding. The Board and Dr. Barnett filed
    separate motions to dismiss. After a hearing on the parties’ various motions and filings, the
    circuit court dismissed Dr. Barnett from the proceedings for lack of personal and subject-
    matter jurisdiction. The circuit court further dismissed Wirtz’s appeal against the Board for
    lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.
    ¶2.    On appeal to this Court, Wirtz raises various assignments of error, which we restate
    as follows: (1) the circuit court erred by dismissing Dr. Barnett from the proceedings; (2) the
    circuit court erred by awarding Dr. Barnett attorney’s fees and by holding Wirtz in contempt
    for failing to pay the fees; and (3) the circuit court erred by dismissing Wirtz’s appeal against
    the Board.
    ¶3.    Upon review, we affirm the circuit court’s dismissal of Dr. Barnett from the
    proceedings for lack of personal and subject-matter jurisdiction. We also affirm the
    dismissal of Wirtz’s appeal against the Board, though we do so on the ground that Wirtz’s
    refusal to include the Board’s meeting minutes in his bill of exceptions provided an
    insufficient record upon which the circuit court could not intelligently act. See Stroud v.
    Progressive Gulf Ins., 
    239 So. 3d 516
    , 526 (¶31) (Miss. Ct. App. 2017) (“This Court may
    affirm a circuit court if the correct result is reached, even if the circuit court reached the
    correct result for the wrong reasons.” (internal quotation mark omitted)). We do, however,
    vacate the circuit court’s award of attorney’s fees to Dr. Barnett and remand for further
    consideration consistent with this opinion. As a related matter, we find our disposition on
    the issue of attorney’s fees now renders Wirtz’s argument moot regarding the circuit court’s
    order of contempt.
    2
    FACTS
    ¶4.    According to Wirtz’s bill of exceptions, Dr. Barnett began in 2008 to remove timber
    and soil from a right of way located on Dr. Barnett’s property. Taking issue with Dr.
    Barnett’s actions, Wirtz stated in his bill of exceptions that he first presented the matter to
    the Board at the Board’s June 13, 2008 meeting. Wirtz further stated, however, that the
    Board failed to take action and thereafter refused his requests to reconsider its decision or to
    meet to discuss the matter.
    ¶5.    Almost nine years later, at the Board’s July 5, 2017 meeting, Wirtz asked the Board
    to send Dr. Barnett a letter that requested an explanation for Dr. Barnett’s removal of the soil
    and timber. After the Board failed to grant his request, Wirtz filed his bill of exceptions,
    signed by the Board’s president, and sought judicial review of the Board’s decision. The
    Board submitted proposed corrections to the bill of exceptions and requested that Wirtz
    amend it to include certain additional facts and documents, including a copy of the minutes
    from the Board’s July 5, 2017 meeting. Following Wirtz’s refusal to amend his bill of
    exceptions, the Board sought to dismiss Wirtz’s appeal for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.
    According to the Board, Wirtz’s omission of pertinent facts and documents created a fatally
    defective record upon which the circuit court could not intelligently act. The Board argued
    dismissal under Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) and Mississippi Code
    Annotated section 11-51-75 (Rev. 2012) was therefore proper.
    ¶6.    Several days later, Dr. Barnett filed his own motion to dismiss. Although Wirtz
    sought judicial review of the Board’s decision, he had named Dr. Barnett as one of the
    3
    defendants on appeal. Dr. Barnett contended, however, that though his actions were the
    subject of Wirtz’s complaint before the Board, he was never actually a party to those
    proceedings. As a result, Dr. Barnett argued Wirtz improperly added him as a party to the
    appeal of the Board’s decision. Dr. Barnett asked the circuit court to dismiss him for lack
    of personal and subject-matter jurisdiction.          Based on the Mississippi Litigation
    Accountability Act, he also requested attorney’s fees for the costs he incurred in defending
    himself against Wirtz’s bill of exceptions.
    ¶7.    On September 14, 2017, the circuit court held a hearing on the parties’ various
    motions. The circuit court issued a bench ruling in which it dismissed Dr. Barnett from the
    proceedings and awarded him $1,000 in attorney’s fees. Turning next to the Board’s
    motions, the circuit court granted both the Board’s motion to dismiss and its motion to strike
    certain allegations Wirtz made in his bill of exceptions.
    ¶8.    On the same day as the hearing, the circuit court entered its final judgment on Dr.
    Barnett’s motion to dismiss. In the final judgment, the circuit court reiterated its bench ruling
    and found it possessed neither personal nor subject-matter jurisdiction over Dr. Barnett. As
    a result, the circuit court dismissed Dr. Barnett from the proceedings. In addition, the circuit
    court ordered Wirtz to pay Dr. Barnett $1,000 for the attorney’s fees Dr. Barnett incurred in
    defending against the proceedings related to Wirtz’s bill of exceptions. The circuit court
    stated that its decision to dismiss Dr. Barnett from the appeal disposed of all claims and
    issues between Wirtz and Dr. Barnett and that the decision was therefore a final judgment
    from which Wirtz could appeal.
    4
    ¶9.     On September 22, 2017, Wirtz filed a “Request for Findings of Fact and Law”
    pursuant to Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 52 and a “Motion for Rehearing” pursuant
    to Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 59 (Rule 52 and Rule 59 motions). Wirtz challenged
    the circuit court’s September 14, 2017 bench rulings to dismiss Dr. Barnett from the
    proceedings and to dismiss Wirtz’s appeal against the Board. Pursuant to Rule 52, Wirtz
    asked the circuit court to “issue written findings of fact and law for its rulings made in open
    court on September 14, 2017 . . . .” Further, pursuant to Rule 59, Wirtz asked the circuit
    court to “vacate its rulings made in open [c]ourt on 9/14/17” and “amend its judgment in
    conformity with the law and evidence . . . .”
    ¶10.    On October 31, 2017, the circuit court entered its order granting the Board’s motion
    to dismiss. As in its prior bench ruling, the circuit court found the minutes from the Board’s
    July 5, 2017 meeting, which Wirtz had refused to include in an amended bill of exceptions,
    were necessary to reach an intelligent decision on the matter. Based on this finding, the
    circuit court dismissed Wirtz’s appeal against the Board for lack of subject-matter
    jurisdiction.
    ¶11.    On November 6, 2017, Dr. Barnett filed a motion for citation of contempt against
    Wirtz. According to the motion, Wirtz had failed to comply with the circuit court’s prior
    order to pay Dr. Barnett $1,000 for attorney’s fees. Wirtz responded to Dr. Barnett’s motion
    on November 13, 2017. The circuit court held a hearing on the matter on December 18,
    2017.
    ¶12.    On December 28, 2017, Wirtz filed his notice of appeal from the circuit court’s
    5
    September 14, 2017 final judgment dismissing Dr. Barnett from the proceedings. Although
    the circuit court had not yet issued an order on Wirtz’s Rule 52 and Rule 59 motions, Wirtz
    further stated that he wished to incorporate “all the errors and issues” set forth in those filings
    into his appeal.
    ¶13.   On January 5, 2018, the circuit court entered an order on Dr. Barnett’s contempt
    motion and Wirtz’s Rule 52 and Rule 59 motions. The circuit court noted Wirtz’s contention
    that his Rule 52 and Rule 59 motions tolled the period for appealing the September 14, 2017
    final judgment. The circuit court found, however, that because it exercised appellate
    jurisdiction over Wirtz’s bill of exceptions, the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure failed
    to apply. As a result, the circuit court found that Wirtz’s motions pursuant to the Mississippi
    Rules of Civil Procedure failed to toll the time for appealing the court’s final judgment.
    Alternatively, the circuit court denied Wirtz’s Rule 52 and Rule 59 motions for lack of merit.
    After holding Wirtz in contempt for failing to comply with the September 14, 2017 final
    judgment, the circuit court gave him thirty days to pay Dr. Barnett $1,000 for the attorney’s
    fees Dr. Barnett incurred in defending himself against Wirtz’s bill of exceptions.
    DISCUSSION
    I.      Timeliness of Appeal
    ¶14.   Before the Mississippi Supreme Court assigned Wirtz’s appeal to this Court, the
    Board filed a motion to dismiss in which it challenged Wirtz’s appeal as untimely. The
    supreme court ordered that the Board’s motion be passed for consideration along with the
    merits of Wirtz’s appeal. In its appellate brief, the Board reiterates its argument. Dr. Barnett
    6
    also raises the same argument in his appellate brief as to the untimeliness of Wirtz’s appeal.
    Both the Board and Dr. Barnett acknowledge that, when a circuit court exercises original
    jurisdiction over a matter, timely motions made under Rule 52 or Rule 59 can toll the time
    to perfect an appeal. However, because the circuit court exercised appellate jurisdiction over
    Wirtz’s appeal of the Board’s decision, the Board and Dr. Barnett assert that Wirtz’s motions
    made pursuant to the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure were inapplicable. As a result,
    they contend Wirtz’s Rule 52 and Rule 59 motions failed to toll the time for appeal, and they
    ask this Court to dismiss his appeal as untimely.
    ¶15.   Recently, in DeSoto County v. Standard Construction Co., 2018-CC-00027-COA
    (¶17) (Miss. Ct. App. Jan. 22, 2019), this Court recognized that the Mississippi Rules of Civil
    Procedure apply to toll the appeal period when a party files certain specified motions, such
    as a timely filed Rule 52 or Rule 59 motion. As we explained in Standard Construction Co.:
    Mississippi Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(d) mandates that if any party files
    a timely motion of a type specified immediately below, the time for appeal for
    all parties runs from the entry of the order disposing of the last such motion
    outstanding. This provision applies to the following motions:
    timely motions under the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure
    (1) for judgment under Rule 50(b); (2) under Rule 52(b) to
    amend or make additional findings of facts, whether or not
    granting the motion would alter the judgment; (3) under Rule 59
    to alter or amend the judgment; (4) under Rule 59 for a new
    trial; or (5) for relief under Rule 60 if the motion is filed no later
    than 10 days after the entry of judgment.
    Standard Constr. Co., 2018-CC-00027-COA, at (¶17) (emphasis added and internal
    quotation mark omitted). See also Gulfport Partners V L.P. v. Harrison Cty. Bd. of
    Supervisors, 
    231 So. 3d 234
    , 238 (¶10) (Miss. Ct. App. 2017) (recognizing that, although the
    7
    Mississippi Rules of Appellate Procedure govern proceedings when a circuit court sits as an
    appellate court over an appeal from a county court, a “case deal[ing] with an appeal from a
    board of supervisors to the circuit court . . . is governed by a specific statute[,]” and because
    “[o]ur caselaw does not address the Mississippi Rules of Appellate Procedure in this
    instance, . . . we decline to extend the established law”).
    ¶16.   As discussed, the circuit court held a September 14, 2017 hearing on the parties’
    various motions. During the hearing, the circuit court issued bench rulings (1) to dismiss Dr.
    Barnett from the proceedings and award him attorney’s fees and (2) to dismiss Wirtz’s appeal
    against the Board. That same day, the circuit court entered its final judgment granting Dr.
    Barnett’s motion to dismiss and for attorney’s fees. Eight days later, on September 22, 2017,
    Wirtz filed his Rule 52 and Rule 59 motions challenging all of the circuit court’s September
    14, 2017 bench rulings (including the bench ruling to dismiss his appeal against the Board).
    The following month, on October 31, 2017, the circuit court actually entered its order
    granting the Board’s motion to dismiss.
    ¶17.   As the record thus reflects, Wirtz timely filed his Rule 52 and Rule 59 motions. Under
    both rules, if a party files his motion within ten days after the entry of judgment, the timely
    filed motion “tolls the thirty-day time period to file a notice of appeal until the disposition
    of the motion.” Woods v. Victory Mktg. LLC, 
    111 So. 3d 1234
    , 1236 (¶7) (Miss. Ct. App.
    2013). See also M.R.A.P. 4(d). With regard to Rule 59, our supreme court has also
    recognized that “a notice of appeal only becomes effective when the Rule 59 motion is
    disposed of. Until disposal of the Rule 59 motion, there is no final appealable judgment.”
    8
    Darnell v. Darnell, 
    199 So. 3d 695
    , 696 (¶4) (Miss. 2016) (citation and internal quotation
    mark omitted). As a result:
    [F]iling [an appeal] prior to disposition of a Rule 59 motion is no longer a
    nullity. Instead, the appeal becomes effective when the Rule 59 motion is
    disposed of, and, under our rule, the single premature notice is also effective
    to bring forth issues raised and disposed of in the Rule 59 motion.
    Mallery v. Taylor, 
    792 So. 2d 226
    , 228 (¶7) (Miss. 2001).
    ¶18.   In the present case, the circuit court finally disposed of all matters between the parties
    (including Wirtz’s Rule 52 and Rule 59 motions), in its January 5, 2018 order. Although
    Wirtz had previously filed his notice of appeal on December 28, 2017, as our caselaw
    explains, the premature filing did not nullify his appeal. See Mallery, 792 So. 2d at 228 (¶7).
    As a result, we find Wirtz’s appeal was not untimely filed. Accordingly, we deny the
    Board’s motion to dismiss Wirtz’s appeal on that basis.
    II.    Subject-Matter Jurisdiction
    ¶19.   In its appellate brief, the Board contends Wirtz’s appeal lacks subject-matter
    jurisdiction because he improperly filed his bill of exceptions with the circuit court rather
    than with the Adams County Chancery Court Clerk, who is also the Board’s clerk. Although
    the Board raises this particular argument for the first time on appeal, we acknowledge that
    “the question of subject-matter jurisdiction may be raised at any time.” City of Jackson v.
    Allen, 
    242 So. 3d 8
    , 14 (¶21) (Miss. 2018). We review jurisdictional issues de novo. Id. at
    13 (¶17).
    ¶20.   The Board relies on the Mississippi Supreme Court’s ruling in Allen, which overruled
    prior caselaw and clarified the procedure for utilizing a bill of exceptions to seek judicial
    9
    review of a board’s decision. Id. at 22 (¶55). As the Allen court explained:
    As was the practice when bills of exception were more commonly used,
    nothing is filed with the circuit court until the clerk of the board fulfills the
    duty of submitting the signed bill of exceptions to the circuit court. Although
    in our later cases, such as Lowndes County v. McClanahan, 
    161 So. 3d 1052
    ,
    1055 (¶13) (Miss. 2015), we wrote in passing that a bill of exceptions is filed
    in the circuit court, we have been unable to find a case in which we considered
    the issue and overruled the established practice of filing the bill with the clerk
    of the board first, leaving the clerk to follow the statutory directive of filing the
    bill with the circuit court.
    Id. at 23 (¶56).
    ¶21.   Based on Allen, the Board argues Wirtz should have filed his bill of exceptions with
    the chancery court clerk, who also serves as the Board’s clerk, rather than with the circuit
    court. The Board further contends that Wirtz’s failure to do so deprived the circuit court of
    subject-matter jurisdiction over the bill of exceptions. The supreme court decided Allen
    shortly after Wirtz filed his appeal.1 “Generally, all judicial decisions apply retroactively
    unless the Court has specifically stated the ruling is prospective. Further, newly enunciated
    rules of law are applied retroactively to cases that are pending trial or that are on appeal, and
    not final at the time of the enunciation.” Mid-S. Retina LLC v. Conner, 
    72 So. 3d 1048
    , 1052
    (¶13) (Miss. 2011) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶22.   Like Wirtz, the petitioner in Allen filed his bill of exceptions with the circuit court
    rather than with the clerk of the board. Allen, 242 So. 3d at 11 (¶5). Even so, the supreme
    court found the circuit court properly exercised jurisdiction over the matter. Id. at 30 (¶85).
    1
    We also consider an issue for the first time on appeal where a change in the law
    occurs during the pendency of an appeal. Collins ex rel. Irby v. Madakasira, 
    252 So. 3d 614
    , 618 n.2 (Miss. Ct. App. 2018).
    10
    The Allen court stated that, “to restore fairness and sensibility to the bill[-]of[-]exceptions
    process, . . . going forward, the ten-day deadline contained in . . . [section 11-51-75] applies
    to the filing of the bill of exceptions with the clerk of the county or municipal board.” Allen,
    242 So. 3d at 22 (¶56). Based on this language, we find the supreme court intended its
    holding in Allen to apply prospectively rather than retroactively. Accordingly, since Wirtz’s
    appeal before this Court was pending when the supreme court decided Allen, we find no
    merit to the Board’s contention that Wirtz’s filing of the bill of exceptions in the circuit court
    deprived that court of subject-matter jurisdiction.
    III.    Dr. Barnett’s Dismissal
    ¶23.   Wirtz argues on appeal that the circuit court erroneously dismissed Dr. Barnett for
    lack of personal and subject-matter jurisdiction. As discussed, we review jurisdictional
    issues de novo. Allen, 242 So. 3d at 13 (¶17).
    ¶24.   Upon review, we find the circuit court lacked personal jurisdiction over Dr. Barnett
    to grant Wirtz’s requested relief against him as well as subject-matter jurisdiction over the
    claims Wirtz asserted against Dr. Barnett. Section 11-51-75 provides a mechanism by which
    only an aggrieved party may appeal the judgment or decision of a county board of
    supervisors.2 Nowhere does the statute grant authority for the aggrieved person to add a new
    party and to assert new claims to his appeal of the board’s decision. See Miss. Code Ann.
    2
    See also City of Jackson v. United Water Servs. Inc., 
    47 So. 3d 1160
    , 1162-65 (¶¶5,
    14) (Miss. 2010) (finding that, where a winning contract bidder moved to intervene in an
    appeal under section 11-51-75, the circuit court correctly denied the motion since the
    prevailing bidder, though interested, was unaggrieved and was “not a necessary or
    indispensable party, nor a proper party under the statute”).
    11
    § 11-51-75. Here, though, Wirtz did exactly that when he sought judicial review of the
    Board’s decision and added Dr. Barnett as an additional defendant to the proceedings. The
    record clearly reflects that Dr. Barnett was not aggrieved by the Board’s decision. Further,
    though his actions comprised the subject of Wirtz’s complaint to the Board, Dr. Barnett never
    participated in the matter before the Board. In addition, Dr. Barnett was neither a Board
    member nor a person with any type of authority over the Board’s decision. Because Wirtz
    improperly added Dr. Barnett as a party to his appeal, we affirm the circuit court’s dismissal
    of Dr. Barnett for lack of personal and subject-matter jurisdiction.
    IV.     Bill of Exceptions’ Dismissal
    ¶25.   We next consider Wirtz’s contention that the circuit court erroneously dismissed his
    bill of exceptions against the Board. After Wirtz refused to amend his bill of exceptions to
    include the Board’s July 5, 2017 meeting minutes, the circuit court found the minutes were
    necessary for a sufficient record upon which it could intelligently act. Rather than dismiss
    due to an insufficient record, however, the circuit court found it lacked subject-matter
    jurisdiction and dismissed the appeal on that basis.
    ¶26.   Recently, our supreme court clarified in Allen that, although an aggrieved party’s
    failure to provide an adequate record through a bill of exceptions may ultimately prove fatal
    to the attempted appeal, the failure does not deprive a circuit court of its authority to hear the
    case. Allen, 242 So. 3d at 20-21 (¶¶45, 49). Thus, we find the circuit court here possessed
    jurisdiction to consider Wirtz’s appeal. However, because we agree that Wirtz’s bill of
    exceptions was fatally defective for failing to provide a sufficient record, we still affirm the
    12
    circuit court’s dismissal of Wirtz’s appeal. See Stroud, 239 So. 3d at 526 (¶31) (recognizing
    that appellate courts may affirm a lower court’s decision upon a different ground).
    ¶27.   “It is well settled that the bill of exceptions constitutes the record on appeal from a . . .
    [board’s] decision, and the circuit court must not consider matters that are not a part of that
    record.” Brinsmade v. City of Biloxi, 
    70 So. 3d 1159
    , 1165 (¶23) (Miss. Ct. App. 2011). The
    aggrieved party bears “the responsibility to ensure that all relevant material was included in
    the bill of exceptions.” 
    Id.
     “If the bill of exceptions is not complete and is fatally defective
    in that pertinent and important facts and documents are omitted therefrom, then the circuit
    court does not have a record upon which it can intelligently act.” Pruitt v. Zoning Bd. of City
    of Laurel, 
    5 So. 3d 464
    , 469 (¶14) (Miss. Ct. App. 2008).
    ¶28.   The supreme court has repeatedly held that public boards speak and act solely through
    their meeting minutes. Wellness Inc. v. Pearl River Cty. Hosp., 
    178 So. 3d 1287
    , 1290 (¶9)
    (Miss. 2015); Ladner v. Harrison Cty. Bd. of Supervisors, 
    793 So. 2d 637
    , 639 (¶9) (Miss.
    2001); Martin v. Newell, 
    198 Miss. 809
    , 815, 
    23 So. 2d 796
    , 797 (1945). We therefore agree
    with the circuit court that the Board’s meeting minutes constituted relevant material
    necessary for a sufficient record on appeal. We further agree that Wirtz’s refusal to amend
    the bill of exceptions to include the minutes proved fatal to his attempted appeal. For this
    reason, we affirm the circuit court’s dismissal of Wirtz’s bill of exceptions.
    V.     Attorney’s Fees and Contempt
    ¶29.   Wirtz challenges not only the circuit court’s award of attorney’s fees to Dr. Barnett
    but also the court’s later ruling that Wirtz was in contempt for his failure to pay the fees.
    13
    Because we find these two issues to be related, we address them together.
    ¶30.   In his motion for dismissal, Dr. Barnett requested attorney’s fees under the Mississippi
    Litigation Accountability Act. After granting Dr. Barnett’s motion to dismiss, the circuit
    court also granted his request for attorney’s fees. In so doing, the court simply stated: “And
    the [c]ourt is going to grant attorney’s fees in the amount of $1,000 . . . against Mr. Wirtz to
    Dr. Barnett because [Dr. Barnett] shouldn’t have been here.”
    ¶31.   We review the award of attorney’s fees for abuse of discretion. Tunica Cty. v. Town
    of Tunica, 
    227 So. 3d 1007
    , 1015 (¶11) (Miss. 2017).              The Mississippi Litigation
    Accountability Act allows a court to award attorney’s fees in a civil action if it finds a pro
    se party “clearly knew or reasonably should have known that such party’s action, claim[,] or
    defense or any part of it was without substantial justification.” 
    Miss. Code Ann. § 11-55
    -
    5(4). However, the Mississippi Litigation Accountability Act also “requires that, ‘when
    granting an award of costs and attorney’s fees, the court shall specifically set forth the
    reasons for such award and shall consider’ a set of eleven statutory factors, ‘among others,
    in determining whether to assess attorney’s fees and costs and the amount to be assessed.’”
    Tunica Cty., 227 So. 3d at 1028 (¶52) (quoting 
    Miss. Code Ann. § 11-55-7
     (Rev. 2012)).
    ¶32.   Because the circuit court here failed to make any of section 11-55-7’s required
    findings as to the appropriateness of the award of attorney’s fees, we cannot affirm the award
    on that basis and must conclude the circuit court abused its discretion. See id. at 1028-29
    (¶52). We therefore vacate the circuit court’s award of attorney’s fees and remand this case
    for a determination of whether a legal basis exists for an award of attorney’s fees. In so
    14
    doing, we now find moot Wirtz’s argument that the circuit court erred by holding him in
    contempt for failing to pay the attorney’s fees.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶33.   We affirm the circuit court’s dismissal of Dr. Barnett for lack of personal and subject-
    matter jurisdiction. Because Wirtz failed to present the circuit court with a sufficient record
    upon which the court could intelligently act, we also affirm the circuit court’s dismissal of
    Wirtz’s bill of exceptions against the Board. We do, however, vacate the award of attorney’s
    fees to Dr. Barnett and remand this case so the circuit court may determine whether a legal
    basis exists for an award of such fees. As a related matter, we now find moot Wirtz’s
    argument that the circuit court erred by holding him in contempt for his failure to pay the
    attorney’s fees.
    ¶34.   AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
    CARLTON, P.J., GREENLEE, WESTBROOKS, LAWRENCE, McCARTY
    AND C. WILSON, JJ., CONCUR. BARNES, C.J., CONCURS IN PART AND IN THE
    RESULT WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION. J. WILSON, P.J.,
    CONCURS IN RESULT ONLY WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION.
    McDONALD, J., NOT PARTICIPATING.
    15