Nationstar Mortgage LLC v. Robert R. Stafsholt , 380 Wis. 2d 284 ( 2018 )


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    2018 WI 21
    SUPREME COURT              OF      WISCONSIN
    CASE NO.:                 2015AP1586
    COMPLETE TITLE:           Nationstar Mortgage LLC n/k/a Bank of America,
    NA, as successor by merger to BAC Home Loans,
    Plaintiff-Appellant-Cross-Respondent,
    v.
    Robert R. Stafsholt,
    Defendant-Respondent-Cross-Appellant-
    Petitioner,
    Colleen Stafsholt f/k/a Coleen McNamara, unknown
    spouse of Robert R. Stafsholt, unknown spouse of
    Colleen Stafsholt, f/k/a Colleen McNamara,
    Richmond Prairie Condominiums Phase I,
    Association and The First Bank of Baldwin,
    Defendants.
    REVIEW OF A DECISION OF THE COURT OF APPEALS
    Reported at 
    373 Wis. 2d 309
    , 
    895 N.W.2d 103
                                             (2017 – Unpublished)
    OPINION FILED:            March 23, 2018
    SUBMITTED ON BRIEFS:
    ORAL ARGUMENT:            October 23, 2017
    SOURCE OF APPEAL:
    COURT:                 Circuit
    COUNTY:                St. Croix
    JUDGE:                 Scott R. Needham
    JUSTICES:
    CONCURRED:
    DISSENTED:
    NOT PARTICIPATING:     ABRAHAMSON, J. did not participate.
    ATTORNEYS:
    For        the     defendant-respondent-cross-appellant-petitioner,
    there were briefs filed by              Nathan M. Brandenburg,       Steven J.
    Weintraut,          and   Siegel,   Brill,   P.A.,    Minneapolis,   Minnesota.
    There was an oral argument by Steven J. Weintraut.
    For the plaintiff-appellant-cross respondent, there was a
    brief filed by Amy M. Salberg and Salberg Law Firm, LLC, West
    Bend.        There was an oral argument by Amy M. Salberg.
    
    2018 WI 21
                                                                         NOTICE
    This opinion is subject to further
    editing and modification.   The final
    version will appear in the bound
    volume of the official reports.
    No.        2015AP1586
    (L.C. No.    2011CV224)
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                              :               IN SUPREME COURT
    Nationstar Mortgage LLC n/k/a Bank of America,
    NA, as successor by merger to BAC Home Loans,
    Plaintiff-Appellant-Cross-Respondent,
    v.
    Robert R. Stafsholt,
    FILED
    Defendant-Respondent-Cross-Appellant-
    Petitioner,                                                MAR 23, 2018
    Colleen Stafsholt f/k/a Coleen McNamara,                                Sheila T. Reiff
    Clerk of Supreme Court
    unknown spouse of Robert R. Stafsholt, unknown
    spouse of Colleen Stafsholt, f/k/a Colleen
    McNamara, Richmond Prairie Condominiums
    Phase I, Association and The First Bank of
    Baldwin,
    Defendants.
    REVIEW of a decision of the Court of Appeals.                     Reversed and
    cause remanded.
    ¶1     MICHAEL     J.   GABLEMAN,   J.    This      is    a     review      of    an
    unpublished,      per     curiam   decision     of     the      court      of    appeals
    reversing the St. Croix County Circuit Court's1 order awarding
    attorney fees and costs to Robert Stafsholt ("Stafsholt") and
    1
    The Honorable Scott R. Needham presided.
    No. 2015AP1586
    against Nationstar Mortgage LLC ("Nationstar") on the basis of
    equitable        estoppel.         Nationstar     Mort.   LLC   v.   Stafsholt,      No.
    2015AP1586, unpublished slip op. (Wis. Ct. App. Dec. 28, 2016)
    (per curiam).
    ¶2        Stafsholt raises two issues for our review.2                     First,
    whether         the   circuit   court    properly    awarded    attorney      fees    to
    Stafsholt.            Within this issue are two sub-issues:              (a) whether
    circuit         courts    acting    in   equity    possess   the     power   to   award
    attorney fees to prevailing parties in order to make them whole;
    and (b) if so, whether the circuit court properly exercised its
    discretion in            this case.       Second,    whether the circuit court
    erroneously exercised its discretion in allowing Nationstar to
    collect interest on the principal amount of the loan during the
    default period.
    ¶3        We reverse the decision of the court of appeals.                     As
    to the first issue, circuit courts may include attorney fees as
    part       of    an    equitable    remedy   "in    exceptional      cases   and     for
    2
    Stafsholt also asks this court to decide whether circuit
    courts possess the inherent authority to award attorney fees.
    Stafsholt argues that circuit courts have the authority to award
    attorney fees as sanctions for egregious conduct committed
    during litigation.   See State ex rel. Godfrey & Kahn, S.C. v.
    Circuit Court for Milwaukee Cty., 
    2012 WI App 120
    , ¶43, 
    344 Wis. 2d 610
    , 
    823 N.W.2d 816
    . Because we hold that attorney fees
    may be awarded as an equitable remedy, it is unnecessary to
    address the question of the circuit court's inherent authority.
    See Md. Arms Ltd. P'ship v. Connell, 
    2010 WI 64
    , ¶48, 
    326 Wis. 2d 300
    , 
    786 N.W.2d 15
    (citations omitted) ("[A]n appellate
    court should decide cases on the narrowest possible grounds.
    Issues that are not dispositive need not be addressed.").
    2
    No. 2015AP1586
    dominating reasons of justice."                       Sprague v. Ticonic Nat'l Bank,
    
    307 U.S. 161
    , 167 (1939).                 The circuit court properly exercised
    its discretion because it applied the proper standard of law to
    the facts of record when it concluded that Bank of America acted
    in bad faith and then awarded attorney fees to Stafsholt.
    ¶4       As to the second issue, we hold that Nationstar may
    collect    interest        accrued       during        litigation      because     Stafsholt
    would receive a windfall if he was both excused from paying
    interest and received his attorney fees.                           We remand the matter
    to   the   circuit         court     for    determination             of    the   reasonable
    attorney fees Stafsholt incurred before the court of appeals and
    this court, and to then calculate the balance of the loan.
    I.    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    ¶5       Stafsholt        and         his         ex-wife        Colleen      Stafsholt
    ("Colleen")      owned      property       in        New   Richmond,       Wisconsin.      In
    October 2002, Colleen executed a note in the amount of $208,000,
    which   was     secured      by     a    mortgage          on   the   property     owned    by
    Stafsholt and Colleen.              Though the mortgage changed hands many
    times, only four servicers are relevant to this appeal:                             Bank of
    America ("BOA") was the servicer while the events underlying
    this case took place; Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC ("Ocwen") and
    BAC Home Loans ("BAC") were both servicers while this case was
    pending    at   the       circuit       court;       and        Nationstar    Mortgage     LLC
    ("Nationstar") has serviced the loan from the time of post-trial
    motions through the present appeal.
    ¶6       One    of     the     terms        in     the      mortgage    requires      the
    Stafsholts to maintain insurance on their home.                              In July 2010,
    3
    No. 2015AP1586
    Colleen    received       two    letters     from      BOA    asking        for    proof    of
    insurance for the time period beginning                         June 2010, when the
    previous policy expired.             BOA informed Colleen it would purchase
    Lender    Placed       Insurance     ("LPI")      if     it   did     not    receive       the
    requested       proof    of     insurance.          If    BOA    received         proof     of
    insurance       that    demonstrated       no    lapse    in     coverage,         it    would
    cancel    any    LPI     purchased    at    no    charge.           In    September,       BOA
    purchased LPI and notified the Stafsholts of its purchase.3
    ¶7     After       receiving     the    notice      from     BOA      regarding       the
    purchase    of     the    LPI,     Stafsholt      called        BOA      because    he     was
    3
    The incident at issue in this case followed three similar
    situations involving LPI.    First, in early 2008, Countrywide
    Home Loans, then the loan's servicer, sent Colleen two notices
    informing her that it would purchase LPI and charge it to the
    loan account if Colleen did not submit satisfactory proof of
    insurance.    Countrywide purchased LPI on April 2, 2008, but
    received proof of insurance from Colleen on April 23, 2008; the
    LPI was canceled, at no cost to the Stafsholts, on April 25,
    2008.
    Next, in June of 2009, BOA, then servicing the loan, sent
    Colleen a notice that it would purchase LPI if it did not
    receive proof of insurance by August 12, 2009.      The requisite
    proof was provided, and no LPI charge was incurred.
    Finally, in September 2009, BOA again sent Colleen a notice
    that it would purchase LPI if it did not receive proof of
    insurance within 30 days.    This deadline was then extended to
    October 25, 2009.   BOA purchased LPI and charged it to the loan
    account on October 26, 2009.       The charge was reversed on
    December 24, 2009, after BOA received proof of coverage on
    December 21, 2009.
    For the incident at issue in this case, the record shows
    that Stafsholt's insurance agent faxed proof of coverage to BOA
    no later than April 26, 2011.
    4
    No. 2015AP1586
    "irritated"          that        BOA    continued           to    fail     to     recognize       the
    insurance he purchased.                     Stafsholt requested the LPI be taken
    off his account.                 The BOA representative with whom Stafsholt
    spoke      informed     him       she       could    not     do    anything       about     the   LPI
    charge, and he would need to speak with "the next elevated level
    of     customer       service"          to     have        the     charge        removed.          The
    representative told Stafsholt that the only way he could reach
    the    next    level        of    customer          service       was    to    skip    a    mortgage
    payment and become delinquent.4
    ¶8      Stafsholt followed the phone representative's advice
    and skipped his September and October payments in order to reach
    the    next    level    of        customer      service,          even    though       he   had    the
    financial       ability           to    pay     his      mortgage.              Stafsholt      never
    communicated         with        the    next        level    of     BOA       customer      service.
    Instead,       he     received          a     letter        dated       September       16,    2010,
    detailing BOA's intent to accelerate the mortgage.
    ¶9      BOA    charged          Stafsholt         for      LPI     from    December        2010
    through July 2012, as evidenced by various reinstatement quotes
    that       always    included          LPI.         Stafsholt       called       BOA   five    times
    between December 30, 2010, and January 27, 2011, in an effort to
    4
    BOA contested Stafsholt's version of events at trial, but
    the circuit court found Stafsholt more credible than the
    representative designated by BOA to testify about the company's
    usual policies and procedures. Nationstar does not dispute this
    factual finding to this court, and nothing in the record
    indicates the circuit court's credibility determination is
    clearly erroneous.   See E-Z Roll Off, LLC v. Cty. of Oneida,
    
    2011 WI 71
    , ¶17, 
    335 Wis. 2d 720
    , 
    800 N.W.2d 421
    ("a factual
    finding . . . may not be overturned unless clearly erroneous").
    5
    No. 2015AP1586
    get the LPI charges removed from his account to no avail.                            He
    then sent BOA an offer to reinstate the loan in May 2011.                           The
    offer was for $10,573.60, which represented nine monthly loan
    payments, without LPI or other fees, less $500 for expenses.
    Stafsholt continued to make similar offers before trial, but BOA
    never responded.
    ¶10   BAC,    then   servicing         the   loan,    filed    a    foreclosure
    action against the Stafsholts in February 2011 based on the
    default.     After    a    series       of   mergers      and   assignments,     Ocwen
    became the loan's servicer and was substituted as plaintiff in
    December 2013.
    ¶11   Stafsholt raised equitable estoppel as an affirmative
    defense.    He asserted that Ocwen was "estopped from foreclosing
    on the property" because its predecessors-in-interest "created
    the dispute" and "induced" the default.                   Stafsholt's answer also
    raised a number of counterclaims:                  (1) breach of contract; (2)
    breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing;
    (3) equitable estoppel; (4) a request for declaratory judgment;
    and   (5)   assignment     of    the     mortgage      pursuant     to    Wis.    Stat.
    § 846.02 (2013-14).5
    ¶12   Following      a    bench    trial,     the    circuit       court   issued
    findings of fact and conclusions of law in April 2015.                              The
    circuit court made four key conclusions of law for purposes of
    this appeal:       (1) BOA improperly charged the Stafsholts for LPI;
    5
    All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to
    the 2013-14 version unless otherwise indicated.
    6
    No. 2015AP1586
    (2)   the    Stafsholts         established          the    affirmative        defense        of
    equitable estoppel because BOA "caused the Stafsholts to default
    on the Mortgage and Note" through the "misrepresentations of the
    BOA agent"; (3) BOA and its successors improperly commenced and
    maintained the foreclosure proceeding from February 2011 to the
    date of the order (April 2015); and (4) BOA breached the implied
    covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
    ¶13    The circuit court concluded that due to BOA's improper
    actions,     Stafsholt      was     entitled          to    a     declaratory        judgment
    finding     that     BOA        breached       the     note        and   mortgage           and,
    furthermore, that Ocwen could not recover the costs and expenses
    incurred by Ocwen and its predecessors-in-interest.                                  Based on
    these conclusions, the circuit court dismissed the foreclosure
    action    and    reinstated       the    Stafsholts'             mortgage.       The    court
    permitted Ocwen to recover $172,108.17, which represented the
    principal balance of the loan.                 The court did not allow Ocwen to
    recover     interest      that    accrued      during       litigation,        nor     did   it
    allow Stafsholt to recover his attorney fees.
    ¶14    Stafsholt moved for reconsideration, claiming that the
    principal       balance    of    the    loan    due        was    actually      $10,167.38.
    Stafsholt argued that because of the attorney fees and other
    costs he incurred as a result of the litigation, he was "left in
    a worse financial position than he would have been had he just
    done what most homeowners do . . . :                         capitulate and pay the
    improper charges."          Stafsholt reached his balance through the
    following     calculations:            $172,108.17         of     principal     as     of    the
    7
    No. 2015AP1586
    default minus $71,940.79 for attorney fees and costs,6 and a
    $90,000 payment he made in April 2015.
    ¶15       The circuit court granted in part Stafsholt's motion
    for reconsideration.               It concluded that Stafsholt was entitled
    to recover a portion of his attorney fees and costs based on
    equitable estoppel.               The court reasoned that equitable estoppel
    allowed Stafsholt to receive an offset for his attorney fees
    because it "is used to 'prevent the assertion of what would
    otherwise      be    an      unequivocal         right.'"        That     is,      equitable
    estoppel      applies     to      preclude       Nationstar     from     recovering       the
    entire     balance      on     the    note,       which     would      otherwise     be    an
    unequivocal right.            The court concluded that the remedy in this
    case "should serve to make [Stafsholt] whole."
    ¶16       The   circuit        court   utilized       the   factors       outlined     in
    Standard      Theatres       v.    DOT,    
    118 Wis. 2d
       730,    
    349 N.W.2d 661
    (1984), to determine the reasonableness of the attorney fees
    sought   by    Stafsholt.            The   court     reduced     Stafsholt's         claimed
    attorney fees and costs of $71,940.79 by ten percent ($7,194.08)
    using    the     "lodestar          method,"       as     articulated         in    Standard
    6
    Stafsholt never separately itemizes his attorney fees and
    costs. Based on our review of the record, it appears Stafsholt
    reached this amount by adding $68,119.00 for attorney fees
    actually billed at the time of the motion for reconsideration,
    $1,600 expected to be billed for the motion for reconsideration,
    and $2,221.79 billed for costs at the time of the motion for
    reconsideration.
    8
    No. 2015AP1586
    Theatres,7 resulting in an award of $64,746.71 for attorney fees.
    The circuit court then deducted $40,239.82 from the attorney fee
    award,   representing    the   amount    of     interest       the    court      had
    previously   denied,    because   the   court      concluded    that       allowing
    Stafsholt to recover attorney fees and not pay interest accrued
    during litigation would be a windfall for Stafsholt.                      This left
    a net award of $24,506.89 in attorney fees and costs.
    7
    In Standard Theatres, we utilized the factors listed in
    SCR 20:12 to determine whether an award of attorney fees was
    proper.   Standard Theatres v. DOT, 
    118 Wis. 2d
    730, 749, 
    349 N.W.2d 661
    (1984). Those factors are:
    (a) The time and labor required, the novelty and
    difficulty of the questions involved and the skill
    requisite to perform the legal service properly.
    (b) The likelihood, if apparent to the client, that
    the acceptance of the particular employment will
    preclude other employment by the lawyer.
    (c) The fee customarily charged in the locality for
    similar legal services.
    (d) The amount involved and the results obtained.
    (e) The time limitations imposed by the client or by
    the circumstances.
    (f) The nature and length                 of    the    professional
    relationship with the client.
    (g) The experience, reputation and ability                       of    the
    lawyer or lawyers performing the services.
    (h) Whether the fee is fixed or contingent.
    
    Id. at 730
    n.9.
    9
    No. 2015AP1586
    ¶17   The     court   then    held      that    the   remaining       principal
    balance on the loan was $57,601.28.                  It reached this number by
    subtracting     the   allowed      attorney    fees    of    $24,506.89      and   the
    $90,000 payment made by Stafsholt from the principal balance of
    $172,108.17 ($24,506.89 + $90,000.00 = $114,506.89; $172,108.17
    - $114,506.89 = $57,601.28).             The court ordered Ocwen to assign
    the mortgage to Stafsholt pursuant to Wis. Stat. § 846.02(1) if
    Stafsholt paid the amount due by August 1, 2015.
    ¶18   Nationstar, which was substituted as plaintiff after
    acquiring     the     note,      appealed      the     order      dismissing       the
    foreclosure and the portion of the order granting Stafsholt's
    claims for attorney fees and costs.                  Stafsholt cross-appealed,
    arguing that the circuit court erred in reducing his requested
    attorney fees and costs.
    ¶19   The     court   of   appeals      affirmed      the   circuit    court's
    holding that BOA breached the implied covenant of good faith and
    fair dealing when it charged Stafsholt for LPI.                         Nationstar,
    unpublished slip op., ¶37.           The court of appeals concluded that
    the circuit court's finding that BOA committed wrongful actions
    in telling Stafsholt to default on his mortgage was supported by
    the   record;       therefore,      it     affirmed      the      circuit     court's
    determination that Stafsholt established equitable estoppel as
    an affirmative defense.          
    Id., ¶¶39, 55.
           The court also affirmed
    the circuit court's grant of declaratory judgment to Stafsholt
    on his breach of contract claim because Stafsholt did, in fact,
    have proof of insurance and did supply BOA with that proof.
    10
    No. 2015AP1586
    
    Id., ¶58. Consequently,
    Nationstar was not entitled to collect
    costs and fees for LPI or the foreclosure.                    
    Id., ¶70-71. ¶20
          However,     the    court    of   appeals   reversed     the    circuit
    court's award of attorney fees to Stafsholt.                         In doing so, it
    relied on the American Rule ("parties to litigation typically
    are responsible for their own attorney's fees") to conclude that
    the circuit court did not have the power to award attorney fees
    in this case.             
    Id., ¶¶61-62. It
    declined to address Stafsholt's
    argument that the circuit court possessed the inherent authority
    to award his attorney fees because the argument was not raised
    in    the    circuit       court     and,    furthermore,    was     first    raised   in
    Stafsholt's         reply     brief    to    the   cross-appeal,      which     deprived
    Nationstar of any opportunity to respond.                    
    Id., ¶67. ¶21
          Finally,     the    court    of   appeals   reversed     the    circuit
    court       as      to     Nationstar's       collection     of      interest     during
    litigation.              
    Id., ¶75. The
    court of appeals held that the
    circuit court's analysis was
    a fair and logical way to resolve the parties' dispute
    over Nationstar's recovery of interest. . . . However,
    in practice, applying this analysis in the instant
    case would result in accomplishing by indirect means
    what we have already determined cannot be done
    directly:     awarding Stafsholt a portion of his
    attorney fees and costs.
    
    Id. The court
    of appeals then remanded to the circuit court to
    determine "whether there are other grounds on which the circuit
    court       could    have     determined      it   was    appropriate    to     prohibit
    Nationstar from recovering interest."                    
    Id., ¶76. 11
                                                                                  No. 2015AP1586
    ¶22       Stafsholt filed a petition for review in this court,
    which we granted on April 10, 2017.                     Nationstar did not file a
    cross-petition for review.                  Consequently, we consider only the
    issues raised by Stafsholt.
    II.     STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶23       Whether      circuit    courts       possess      the    power     to   award
    attorney fees as part of an equitable remedy is a question of
    law   we    review      de    novo.      GMAC      Mortg.    Corp.       v.   Gisvold,     
    215 Wis. 2d 459
    , 480, 
    572 N.W.2d 466
    (1998).                           The circuit court's
    decision        to    grant     equitable       remedies         is     reviewed     for     an
    erroneous exercise of discretion.                     Prince Corp. v. Vandenberg,
    
    2016 WI 49
    , ¶16, 
    369 Wis. 2d 387
    , 
    882 N.W.2d 371
    .
    III.    ANALYSIS
    ¶24       We first consider whether circuit courts possess the
    power      to   award     attorney      fees    as    an    equitable         remedy    to     a
    prevailing party in order to make that party whole.                                  We hold
    that attorney fees may be awarded as an equitable remedy "in
    exceptional          cases    and     for    dominating          reasons      of   justice."
    
    Sprague, 307 U.S. at 167
    .                    We further hold that the circuit
    court properly exercised its discretion when it awarded attorney
    fees to Stafsholt.
    ¶25       We next consider whether the circuit court properly
    exercised its discretion when it awarded accrued interest to
    Nationstar.           We hold that Nationstar is entitled to recover
    interest        accrued      during    litigation,         and    thus     remand    to    the
    circuit court to calculate the balance of the loan.
    12
    No. 2015AP1586
    A. The Circuit Court Properly Exercised its Equitable
    Discretion when it Awarded Attorney Fees to Stafsholt.
    ¶26    We first consider whether circuit courts possess the
    power to award attorney fees to prevailing parties in equitable
    actions    such   as    this   foreclosure   proceeding.8      We   hold   that
    circuit courts sitting in equity do possess the power to award
    attorney fees "in exceptional cases and for dominating reasons
    of justice."        
    Sprague, 307 U.S. at 167
    .           Next, we consider
    whether the circuit court properly exercised its discretion when
    it awarded attorney fees to Stafsholt and hold that it did.
    1. Attorney Fees as a remedy in equitable actions
    ¶27    Under      the   American   Rule,   each   party   is   generally
    responsible for its own attorney fees.             Estate of Kriefall v.
    Sizzler USA Franchise, Inc., 
    2012 WI 70
    , ¶72, 
    342 Wis. 2d 29
    ,
    
    816 N.W.2d 853
    .        A limited number of exceptions to the American
    Rule allow a prevailing party to recover its attorney fees.                
    Id. See also
    3 Robert J. Kasieta et al., Law of Damages in Wisconsin
    § 37.7-37.18 (7th ed. 2017).9
    8
    "Foreclosure proceedings are equitable in nature, and the
    circuit court has the equitable authority to exercise discretion
    throughout the proceedings." GMAC Mortg. Corp. v. Gisvold, 
    215 Wis. 2d 459
    , 480, 
    572 N.W.2d 466
    (1998).
    9
    Other exceptions to the American Rule include insurer bad
    faith, third-party litigation, and the common-fund doctrine.   3
    Robert J. Kasieta et al., Law of Damages in Wisconsin § 37.10-
    37.18 (7th ed. 2017).
    13
    No. 2015AP1586
    ¶28      Because the primary purpose of equitable actions is to
    do justice between the parties, State v. Excel Mgmt. Servs.,
    Inc.,    
    111 Wis. 2d 479
    ,       491,    
    331 N.W.2d 312
         (1983),        equitable
    actions are sometimes considered an exception to the American
    Rule where attorney fees are "necessary to effect an adequate
    remedy."         Kasieta,      § 37.17.       We    have       never   decided      whether
    attorney        fees    may    be   awarded        as    an     equitable        remedy   in
    Wisconsin.        We find two decisions from our court of appeals
    helpful     to    our   consideration        of    the    question.         In    White    v.
    Ruditys, 
    117 Wis. 2d 130
    , 141, 
    343 N.W.2d 421
    (Ct. App. 1983),
    the     court     stated,      in   the     context       of    punitive     damages      in
    equitable proceedings, "[e]quitable remedies are distinguished
    by      their      flexibility,           their     unlimited          variety,       their
    adaptability       to    circumstances,           and    the    natural     rules     which
    govern their use.             There is in fact no limit to their variety
    and application . . . ."               The White court applied this broad
    rule regarding equitable remedies to attorney fees, holding that
    "a court of equity has a great deal of flexibility in fashioning
    its     remedy . . . [which]           includes         the    awarding     of     attorney
    fees."    
    Id. at 142.
    ¶29      Five years later, the court of appeals concluded that
    "something more is needed . . . before attorney's fees can be
    ordered . . . " as a remedy in an equitable action.                          Gundlach v.
    Estate of Pirsch (In re Estate of Pirsch), 
    148 Wis. 2d 425
    , 433,
    
    435 N.W.2d 317
           (Ct.    App.   1988).           That   "something        more"    was
    defined as "something shocking, something of bad faith, fraud or
    14
    No. 2015AP1586
    deliberate dishonesty."           
    Id. (quoting In
    re P.A.H., 
    115 Wis. 2d 670
    , 675, 
    340 N.W.2d 577
    (Ct. App. 1983)).
    ¶30     It    is   axiomatic     that      Wisconsin    courts       have    broad
    flexibility to "adapt[] their decrees to the actual condition of
    the parties . . . so as to meet the very form and pressure of
    each particular case, in all its complex habitudes" in equitable
    actions.    Hall v. Bank of Baldwin, 
    143 Wis. 303
    , 312, 
    127 N.W. 969
    (1910) (quoting Garner, Neville & Co. v. Leverett, 
    32 Ala. 410
    , 413-14 (1858)).        Remedies in equitable actions are without
    limit as to "their substance, their form, or their extent."
    Meyer v. Reif, 
    217 Wis. 11
    , 20, 
    258 N.W. 391
    (1935) (quoting 1
    Pomeroy,    Equity     Jurisprudence,          § 111).       The     elements          of
    "flexibility and expansiveness, so that new [remedies] may be
    invented,    or    old     ones     modified,      in     order     to    meet        the
    requirements of every case" are the hallmarks of equity.                        
    Id. ¶31 This
      broad    power    to    fashion      equitable    remedies         has
    been utilized to award attorney fees.                See, e.g., Sprague, 
    307 U.S. 161
    (1939) (common-fund case) (holding that the district
    court has the power "in equity suits to allow counsel fees and
    other expenses entailed by the litigation not included in the
    15
    No. 2015AP1586
    ordinary taxable costs");10 Weinhagen v. Hayes, 
    179 Wis. 62
    , 
    190 N.W. 1002
    (1922) (third-party litigation case) (quoting McGaw v.
    Acker, Merral & Conduit Co., 
    111 Md. 153
    (1901)) ("[W]here the
    wrongful acts of the defendant [have] involved the plaintiff in
    litigation with others, or placed him in such relation with
    others as to make it necessary to incur expense to protect his
    interest, such costs and expense should be treated as the legal
    consequences of the original wrongful act.").
    10
    There are factual distinctions between the case at bar
    and Sprague in that the latter concerns an award of attorney
    fees under the common fund doctrine, where ours, of course, does
    not. Sprague v. Ticonic Nat'l Bank, 
    307 U.S. 161
    (1939). We
    apply the reasoning of Sprague here, however, for the same
    reason so many other courts have within so many varied factual
    contexts. That is, the central holding of Sprague is based on
    the nature and extent of the equitable authority of courts to
    fashion remedies it views as fair in equitable actions, such as
    those concerning mortgage foreclosures, and not on the specific
    equitable considerations at issue. See, e.g., In re Air Crash
    Disaster at Fla. Everglades, 
    549 F.2d 1006
    , 1018 (5th Cir. 1977)
    ("Perhaps more significant than the decision [in Sprague] is the
    language explaining that the award of fees in a fund case is
    rooted in the inherent powers of equity."); Brisacher v. Tracy-
    Collins Trust Co., 
    277 F.2d 519
    , 524 (10th Cir. 1960) ("The
    allowance of counsel fees for an opposing party has been
    committed to the discretion of the trial court in certain equity
    actions, but that discretion must be exercised in accordance
    with the admonition of Sprague, [meaning] such allowances are
    appropriate only in exceptional cases and for dominating reasons
    of justice."); Cleveland v. Second Nat'l Bank & Trust Co., 
    149 F.2d 466
    , 469 (6th Cir. 1945) (holding that Sprague does not
    limit awarding attorney fees to common fund or class action
    cases; if "fair justice" permits, then awarding attorney fees in
    appropriate situations is "part of equity jurisdiction."); In re
    Appeal of Gadhue, 
    544 A.2d 1151
    , 1154 (Vt. 1987) (explaining the
    exceptions to the American Rule "are flexible [and] not
    absolute," concluding that "[t]o this end, we focus on the
    historic powers of equity courts to award attorney's fees as the
    needs of justice dictate.").
    16
    No. 2015AP1586
    ¶32      We     are     mindful,    however,        that      the    power     to       award
    attorney       fees     as    an    equitable      remedy      is    not       unlimited——nor
    should    it      be,       given   the   traditionally           narrow         character       of
    exceptions to the American Rule.                     
    See supra
    ¶27 n.9.                  Rather,
    "such allowances are appropriate only in exceptional cases and
    for dominating reasons of justice."                        
    Sprague, 307 U.S. at 167
    ;
    see 
    Pirsch, 148 Wis. 2d at 433
    ; accord Baldwin v. Burger Chef
    Sys., Inc., 
    507 F.2d 841
    , 842 (6th Cir. 1974) (per curiam) ("A
    court exercising its equitable powers may award attorney's fees
    in   certain        extraordinary         circumstances.").                "In     the    actual
    exercise of the power to award costs 'as between solicitor and
    client'     all     sorts      of   practical       distinctions           have    been       taken
    in[to account]."              
    Sprague, 307 U.S. at 167
    .               Traditionally, the
    power     to    award        attorney     fees      as    an     equitable        remedy        was
    considered       "wisely       exercised . . . to           prevent        the    use     of    the
    courts as machinery for extortion or chicanery."                                    Arthur L.
    Goodhart, Costs, 38 Yale L.J. 849, 862 (1929).                             Thus, this power
    is   reserved       for      situations      where       sanctions        pursuant       to    Wis.
    Stat. § 802.05 will not suffice.                     Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 
    501 U.S. 32
    , 46 (1991) (quoting Universal Oil Products Co. v. Root
    Refining       Co.,     
    328 U.S. 575
    ,    580    (1946)).             In   Chambers,        the
    United States Supreme Court upheld the district court's award of
    attorney       fees     as    an    equitable      remedy      because         imposition       of
    sanctions pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11, the
    federal analogue to § 802.05, was insufficient to remedy bad-
    faith conduct.          
    Id. at 50-51.
    17
    No. 2015AP1586
    ¶33    In light of the foregoing, we reverse the court of
    appeals' determination that the circuit court did not possess
    the power to award attorney fees in this equitable proceeding.
    We next consider whether the circuit court properly exercised
    its discretion by:           (a) finding that BOA acted in bad faith;
    and, (b) awarding attorney fees to Stafsholt.
    2.    The circuit court properly exercised its discretion when it
    awarded attorney fees to Stafsholt.
    ¶34    Having held that the circuit court possesses the power
    to    award   attorney      fees,    we    must    next       consider       whether     the
    circuit      court   properly      exercised      its    discretion          by    awarding
    attorney fees in this case.               We could address this one of two
    ways.     First, we could remand to the court of appeals to review
    the circuit court's exercise of discretion because the court of
    appeals did not do so in the first instance; rather, it held as
    a matter of law that "the circuit court lacked authority to
    award Stafsholt the attorney fees and costs he incurred in these
    foreclosure     proceedings."            Nationstar,      unpublished             slip   op.,
    ¶69.    Second, we could review the circuit court's exercise of
    discretion      ourselves.          We    conclude       that    the     interests        of
    efficiency     are   best    served       by    reviewing      the     circuit      court's
    discretion     ourselves,     as    we    are     just   as     able    to    review     the
    record as is the court of appeals.                  See Raz v. Brown, 
    2003 WI 29
    , ¶20, 
    260 Wis. 2d 614
    , 
    660 N.W.2d 647
    .
    ¶35    A circuit court properly exercises discretion when it
    applies a correct legal standard to the facts of record.                             Miller
    18
    No. 2015AP1586
    v.    Hanover   Ins.    Co.,     
    2010 WI 75
    ,   ¶29,    
    326 Wis. 2d 640
    ,     
    785 N.W.2d 493
    .         We hold the circuit court properly exercised its
    discretion in this case.                The       circuit    court      articulated its
    reasoning as to why Stafsholt was entitled to attorney fees:
       "BOA improperly charged the Stafsholts for the lender-
    placed    insurance.         This      entire    dispute      was   caused    by
    BOA's poor record-keeping and business practices.                            BOA
    caused this dispute by unnecessarily purchasing insurance
    for Stafsholt when he had always maintained insurance and
    provided proof of a Conforming Policy.                        BOA improperly
    demanded     that     Stafsholt         pay     for    the     cost    of    the
    unnecessary lender-placed insurance and other costs.                         BOA
    [b]reached the implied covenant of good faith and fair
    dealing."
       "BOA caused the Stafsholts to default on the Mortgage and
    Note in September 2011.                Stafsholt acted in good faith
    and reliance on the misrepresentations of the BOA agent."
       "[T]he Court agrees with Stafsholt . . . that the relief
    here should serve to make him whole."
       "The egregious nature of Ocwen's conduct in handling this
    particular    mortgage       and       subsequent      foreclosure      action
    necessitates . . . an equitable remedy . . . ."
    ¶36   These conclusions find ample support in the record.
    The    following      findings    of    fact       support       the    circuit   court's
    conclusions:
    19
    No. 2015AP1586
       "From     June    27,    2008       to   the   present,      Stafsholt     has
    maintained a Conforming Policy that covers the [h]ome in
    satisfaction . . . of the Mortgage."
       "[Stafsholt] called BOA because he was 'irritated' that
    BOA still failed to recognize that he had and had always
    maintained a 'Conforming Policy.'"
       "Stafsholt asked the BOA representative what he needed to
    do   to   get    the    hazard       insurance    premium      off   of    his
    mortgage    and    she       responded     that   he   had     to    pay   the
    insurance charge because BOA had already taken out the
    hazard     insurance         premium     and   that    she    couldn't      do
    anything about it.           The BOA representative also indicated
    that the next mortgage payment that Stafsholt made would
    be applied to accrued interest and then to the charge for
    the insurance, with none of the payment being applied to
    the principal."
       "Stafsholt asked the BOA representative who he needed to
    talk to in order to get the escrow removed from his
    account and she said that she didn't have that authority.
    Stafsholt asked the BOA representative who did have the
    authority and she said that the only person would be the
    next elevated level of customer service.                     She said that
    the only way that Stafsholt could get to that next level
    of customer service would be if he skipped a mortgage
    payment and became delinquent on the mortgage."
       "The    testimony       of    BOA    representative       Heather    Pollock
    contradicting Stafsholt on the topic [of what he was told
    20
    No. 2015AP1586
    over the phone] was not credible.                     Stafsholt was credible
    and   consistent       with       the    facts      of    the    case,     including
    BOA's policies [and] procedures . . . ."
       "Stafsholt did not make [the September and October 2010
    mortgage]       payments      because          he   detrimentally         relied    on
    what the BOA representative told him regarding how to get
    to the next level of customer service. . . . Stafsholt's
    intent    in    not    paying       the    mortgage        was       to   follow   the
    advice he received from the BOA representative; that if
    he skipped a mortgage payment, a higher ranking customer
    service        representative            could       be    reached         and     the
    insurance/escrow issue finally resolved."
       When Stafsholt did as he was told and defaulted on his
    loan,    "Stafsholt         did     not    receive        the    next      level    of
    customer service when he failed to make his next mortgage
    payment.        Instead, he received [a letter] of intent to
    accelerate the Mortgage on September 16, 2010."
       "On October 16, 2010, BOA sent Stafsholt another notice
    of intent to accelerate the mortgage."
       "On   December        14,   2010,        BOA    generated        a    reinstatement
    calculation, which stated that Stafsholt would have had
    to pay $8,528.16 by December 27, 2010 to cure the default
    and reinstate his loan.                 Included in that calculation was
    the   $2,822      cost      of    the     lender-placed          insurance         even
    though Stafsholt had a conforming policy.                            In addition to
    that cost, BOA also included fees for uncollected late
    charges    ($184.56),            property       inspection       fees      ($15.00),
    21
    No. 2015AP1586
    foreclosure         attorney/trustee                fees      ($360.00)             and
    foreclosure expenses ($225.00)."
        "On May 11, 2011, Stafsholt's attorney, James Krupa, sent
    a letter to BOA offering to reinstate the loan for a
    payment     of    $10,573.60,             which    included       nine     monthly
    payments, less $500 in expenses.                    BOA did not respond to
    that letter.        Stafsholt continued to attempt to reinstate
    the loan prior to trial."
    ¶37     Our     review     of       the    record        satisfies       us     that      a
    reasonable circuit court judge could reach the conclusions made
    in   this     case.      Miller,       
    326 Wis. 2d 640
    ,         ¶30.      This       is   an
    "exceptional" case in which an award of attorney fees is proper
    "for dominating reasons of justice," 
    Sprague, 307 U.S. at 167
    ,
    because      BOA     intentionally         caused       this    dispute       when    it    told
    Stafsholt      that     defaulting         on    the    loan    was    the    only    way       the
    erroneous LPI charges could be removed from his account, but
    then       proceeded    to    file     a    foreclosure         action       when    Stafsholt
    followed its directions.               BOA doubled down on its bad faith by
    refusing Stafsholt's offers to reinstate the loan, without the
    erroneous LPI charges, before trial.                         At its core, BOA's conduct
    was an attempt to use Wisconsin courts to extort the LPI charges
    from Stafsholt.          We will not allow Wisconsin courts to be used
    for this purpose.            See 
    Goodhart, supra
    ¶32, at 862.
    ¶38     Though    we     hold       that        the    circuit     court      properly
    exercised its discretion in awarding attorney fees after the
    motion for reconsideration, we remand for the circuit court to
    determine Stafsholt's reasonable attorney fees at the court of
    22
    No. 2015AP1586
    appeals and this court, and then add that amount to the attorney
    fees previously awarded by the circuit court.
    B.    We Remand to the Circuit Court to Calculate the Remaining
    Balance on the Loan.
    ¶39   In its original order, the circuit court did not allow
    Stafsholt     to    recover       his    attorney        fees,   and     also    prohibited
    Nationstar from collecting interest11 accrued during litigation.
    The    circuit     court    found        that      the   balance    of    the     loan    was
    $172,108.17, the principal balance on the date of default, and
    interest would accrue from April 15, 2015 (eight days after the
    order was signed).          The effect of the circuit court's action was
    to "pause" the loan during the foreclosure proceeding.
    ¶40   In     its     order        resolving         Stafsholt's          motion     for
    reconsideration, the circuit court allowed Stafsholt to recover
    his    attorney     fees,       but   deducted       the   interest       accrued       during
    litigation        from    the    amount       of    attorney      fees    Stafsholt        was
    entitled     to    recover.             The   court      held    that    Stafsholt       would
    receive a windfall if he recovered his attorney fees and was
    relieved of his obligation to pay accrued interest.
    ¶41   The court of appeals agreed that the circuit court
    could limit Nationstar's collection of interest as part of its
    equitable     powers.            Nationstar,         unpublished        slip     op.,     ¶75.
    11
    When we discuss "interest," we mean the standard interest
    Stafsholt was obligated to pay on the note, not additional
    interest charges triggered by Stafsholt's default.     See also
    infra note 13.
    23
    No. 2015AP1586
    However,       the    court     of    appeals        reversed     the     circuit         court's
    denial    of     interest         because       "applying      this      analysis         in   the
    instant case would result in accomplishing by indirect means
    what     we    have     already       determined         cannot     be       done       directly:
    awarding Stafsholt a portion of his attorney fees and costs."
    
    Id. The court
       then      remanded       to    determine       if    another       basis
    existed to prohibit Nationstar's collection of interest.                                       
    Id., ¶76. ¶42
        Circuit       courts      have    the    power     to    limit       a    lender's
    collection of interest accrued while litigation is pending as
    part of its equitable power to make the aggrieved party whole.
    Excel     Mgmt.       
    Servs., 111 Wis. 2d at 490
    ;      accord       
    Hall, 143 Wis. 2d at 412
    .        In    this     case,      the    circuit        court       properly
    exercised       this    discretion         by    allowing       Stafsholt           to    recover
    attorney       fees     or    be     excused         from    interest        payments       while
    24
    No. 2015AP1586
    litigation was pending, but not both.12            Allowing Stafsholt to
    avoid paying interest while litigation was pending and recover
    his attorney fees would put him in a better position than if the
    default      never   occurred   because   he   would   have   paid   interest
    during the time period litigation was pending if the default had
    not occurred.
    ¶43    The circuit court is to calculate the balance of the
    loan using the following calculation:            principal balance at the
    time    of   default   ($172,108.17),     plus   any   fees   Nationstar   is
    12
    Because of the court of appeals' seemingly contradictory
    holdings on the interest issue, we clarify our mandate.      The
    court of appeals first stated that the circuit court properly
    exercised its discretion on the interest issue, Nationstar Mort.
    LLC v. Stafsholt, No. 2015AP1586, unpublished slip op., ¶75
    (Wis.   Ct.    App.  Dec.   28,   2016)   (per   curiam)   ("The
    analysis . . . appears to be a fair and logical way to resolve
    the parties' dispute over Nationstar's recovery of interest."),
    but then concluded that the circuit court prohibited Nationstar
    from collecting interest as a proxy for awarding attorney fees.
    Based on its previous holding regarding attorney fees, the court
    of appeals concluded that the circuit court could not prohibit
    collection of interest as a proxy for awarding attorney fees.
    
    Id. ("However, in
    practice, applying this analysis . . . would
    result in accomplishing by indirect means what we have already
    determined cannot be done directly . . . .").      The court of
    appeals' ultimate holding is flawed because, as we stated above,
    the circuit court did have the power to award attorney fees in
    this case.     Thus, we reverse the decision of the court of
    appeals, though we agree with its initial statement that the
    circuit court properly exercised its discretion by allowing
    Nationstar to collect interest while awarding Stafsholt his
    attorney fees.
    25
    No. 2015AP1586
    rightfully entitled to collect13 (to be determined on remand),
    plus    contractual       interest   on     the     principal    balance    accrued
    during the default period that Nationstar is rightfully entitled
    to   collect14      (to   be   determined      on   remand),    minus   Stafsholt's
    reasonable attorney fees incurred in the original circuit court
    litigation ($64,746.71), minus Stafsholt's reasonable attorney
    fees incurred during the appeal process (to be determined on
    remand),15 minus Stafsholt's payments ($90,000).                    The result of
    this calculation is the total amount due on the loan.                      The loan
    is then reinstated at this amount, subject to all contractual
    terms       and   conditions,    including      interest   at    the    contractual
    13
    We agree with the court of appeals that "the circuit
    court   properly   exercised  its   discretion  by   prohibiting
    Nationstar from recovering any fees that were charged as a
    result of Stafsholt's default."    Nationstar, unpublished slip
    op., ¶71.   Therefore, Nationstar can recover only such fees as
    are unrelated to the default. We leave to the capable hands of
    the circuit court to decide which, if any, of those fees
    unrelated to the default that Nationstar is rightfully entitled
    to collect.
    14
    Stafsholt   indicated  in  briefing  that   he  tendered
    $57,601.28 to Nationstar on July 28, 2015, which represents the
    outstanding balance on the loan as established by the circuit
    court's June 16, 2015 order.   Nationstar rejected this tender.
    On remand, the circuit court should consider whether Nationstar
    is rightfully entitled to collect interest that accrued after
    July 28, 2015.
    15
    In lieu of subtracting Stafsholt's reasonable attorney
    fees from the balance of the loan, the circuit court may
    exercise its equitable discretion to order Nationstar to pay his
    attorney fees directly.
    26
    No. 2015AP1586
    rate, prospectively from the date of the circuit court's final
    order following remand.16
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    ¶44    We    reverse     the    decision     of    the   court     of    appeals.
    Circuit courts may include attorney fees as part of an equitable
    remedy    "in    exceptional    cases    and      for    dominating      reasons       of
    justice."       
    Sprague, 307 U.S. at 167
    .          The circuit court properly
    exercised its discretion because it applied the proper standard
    of law to the facts of record when it concluded that BOA acted
    in bad faith and thus awarded attorney fees to Stafsholt.
    ¶45    We further hold that Nationstar may collect interest
    accrued    during      litigation     because     Stafsholt     would        receive    a
    windfall    if    he    was   both    excused     from    paying      interest     and
    received his attorney fees.            We remand to the circuit court to
    determine the reasonable attorney fees Stafsholt incurred before
    the court of appeals and this court, and to then calculate the
    balance of the loan.
    By    the    Court.—The    decision     of    the    court    of    appeals       is
    reversed, and the cause is remanded to the circuit court for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    ¶46    SHIRLEY S. ABRAHAMSON, J., did not participate.
    16
    The final balance of the loan may be negative.       This
    would occur if Stafsholt's payments and reasonable attorney fees
    during the default period exceed both the amount due during the
    default period and the principal balance of the loan.     In the
    event that the total amount due on the loan is negative, the
    circuit court shall make all orders necessary to terminate the
    mortgage and may order Nationstar to refund Stafsholt.
    27
    No. 2015AP1586
    1