No. Under the US system of jurisprudence, the standard is that each side pays for their own attorneys fees, whether they win or lose. In order to make another party pay for your attorneys fees you will generally need 1) a specific law that states the prevailing party will be entitled to their attorneys fees, or 2) a contract provision in the agreement between the parties that states the prevailing party will pay for the other parties attorneys fees.
Many health/labor/consumer protection based laws will allow for a party who brings a case under those statutes to collect their attorney fees, but most do not have a corresponding clause that says the business that successfully defends against such a suit will get their fees from the consumer/plaintiff bringing the claim. While many states to have laws that say if a claim is brought and is deemed legally frivolous and without basis, that a court could award the party that defended against it there fees, but that is an extremely high burden to prove.