Stender v. Archstone-Smith ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                        FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    PUBLISH                         Tenth Circuit
    May 4, 2020
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    Christopher M. Wolpert
    Clerk of Court
    FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT
    _________________________________
    STEVEN A. STENDER; INFINITY
    CLARK STREET OPERATING, LLC, on
    behalf of themselves and all others
    similarly situated,
    Plaintiffs - Appellants,
    and
    HAROLD SILVER,
    Plaintiff,                                     No. 18-1432
    v.
    ARCHSTONE-SMITH OPERATING
    TRUST; ARCHSTONE-SMITH TRUST;
    ERNEST A. GERARDI, JR.; RUTH ANN
    M. GILLIS; NED S. HOLMES; ROBERT
    P. KOGOD; JAMES H. POLK, III; JOHN
    C. SCHWEITZER; R. SCOT SELLERS;
    ROBERT H. SMITH; STEPHEN R.
    DEMERITT; CHARLES MUELLER, JR.;
    CAROLINE BROWER; MARK
    SCHUMACHER; ALFRED G. NEELY;
    LEHMAN BROTHERS HOLDINGS,
    INC.; TISHMAN SPEYER
    DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION;
    RIVER HOLDING, LP; RIVER TRUST
    ACQUISITION (MD), LLC; RIVER
    ACQUISITION (MD), LP; ARCHSTONE-
    SMITH MULTIFAMILY SERIES I
    TRUST; ARCHSTONE, INC.;
    AVALONBAY COMMUNITIES, INC.;
    ARCHSTONE ENTERPRISE, LP; ERP
    OPERATING LIMITED PARTNERSHIP;
    EQUITY RESIDENTIAL,
    Defendants - Appellees.
    _________________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Colorado
    (D.C. No. 1:07-CV-02503-WJM-MJW)
    _________________________________
    Daniel Townsend, Gupta Wessler PLLC, Washington, D.C. (Mathew W.H. Wessler,
    Gupta Wessler PLLC, Washington, D.C., and Kenneth A. Wexler and Kara A. Elgersma,
    Wexler Wallace LLP, Chicago, Illinois, and Lee Squitieri, Squitieri & Fearon, LLP, New
    York, New York, with him on the briefs), for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
    Adam B. Banks, Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP, New York, New York (Jonathan D.
    Polkes, Caroline Hickey Zalka, and Justin D. D’Aloia, Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP,
    New York, New York, and Frederick J. Baumann and Alex C. Myers, Lewis Roca
    Rothgerber Christie LLP, Denver, Colorado, with him on the brief) for Defendants-
    Appellees.
    _________________________________
    Before HARTZ, SEYMOUR, and MATHESON, Circuit Judges.
    _________________________________
    HARTZ, Circuit Judge.
    _________________________________
    This appeal presents the question whether a federal district court exercising
    diversity jurisdiction can award costs under a generally applicable state law when those
    costs are prohibited by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(d). The district court used a
    Colorado statute governing costs to award more than $230,000 in costs that would not be
    allowable under Rule 54(d). Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we vacate
    the costs award and remand for recomputation. The Supreme Court majority in Shady
    Grove Orthopedic Associates, P.A. v. Allstate Insurance Co., 
    559 U.S. 393
    , 399 (2010),
    2
    held that a valid Federal Rule of Civil Procedure governs over a state procedural rule if
    the two rules “answer the same question.” Because Rule 54(d) answers the same
    question as the Colorado statute, and Rule 54(d) is not “ultra vires” (that is, applying it
    does not exceed statutory authorization or Congress’s rulemaking power), there was no
    role left for the Colorado law.
    Id. I. BACKGROUND
    Disappointed with the outcome of a merger, minority-shareholder Plaintiffs
    brought a class action against Defendants for breach of contract and fiduciary duties. The
    parties litigated their dispute for over ten years across proceedings in arbitration and
    federal court. In the end the district court granted summary judgment in Defendants’
    favor, and this court affirmed. See Stender v. Archstone-Smith Operating Trust, 
    910 F.3d 1107
    , 1117 (10th Cir. 2018). Defendants then moved for costs under Rule 54(d). The
    district court awarded costs totaling $479,666.22, which included $230,250.01 in costs
    for electronic legal research and for attorney travel and lodging under a state cost-shifting
    statute.
    II.    DISCUSSION
    Our analysis begins with a description of federal and Colorado law on costs. Next,
    we review the law governing when a Federal Rule of Procedure prevails over state law in
    diversity cases, and apply it to the present dispute. Finally, we address preservation.
    3
    A.     Federal Law on Costs
    Rule 54(d) provides that “costs—other than attorney’s fees—should be allowed to
    the prevailing party.” 1 Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(d)(1). The language appears open-ended. But
    relying on the history behind the provision, the Supreme Court has placed strict limits on
    what can be awarded.
    In the Founding era congressional legislation permitted costs to prevailing parties
    provided by state law. See Taniguchi v. Kan Pac. Saipan, Ltd., 
    566 U.S. 560
    , 564 (2012).
    Although that statute expired in 1799, “the practice of referring to state rules for the
    taxation of costs persisted” for half a century.
    Id. at 565.
    But two problems led Congress
    in 1853 to “standardize the costs allowable in federal litigation”: (1) the “great diversity
    in practice among the courts,” and (2) the “exorbitant fees” that had been imposed on
    losing litigants. Alyeska Pipeline Serv. Co. v. Wilderness Soc’y, 
    421 U.S. 240
    , 251
    (1975). In relevant part, the 1853 statute said “[t]hat in lieu of the compensation now
    allowed by law to attorneys, solicitors, and witnesses in the several States, the following
    and no other compensation shall be taxed and allowed.” Crawford Fitting Co. v. J.T.
    Gibbons, Inc., 
    482 U.S. 437
    , 440 (1987) (emphasis added, ellipsis and internal quotation
    1
    Rule 54(d)(1) provides in full:
    Unless a federal statute, these rules, or a court order provides otherwise,
    costs—other than attorney’s fees—should be allowed to the prevailing
    party. But costs against the United States, its officers, and its agencies may
    be imposed only to the extent allowed by law. The clerk may tax costs on
    14 days’ notice. On motion served within the next 7 days, the court may
    review the clerk’s action.
    4
    marks omitted). The statute “specif[ied] in detail the nature and amount of the taxable
    items of cost in the federal courts,” Alyeska 
    Pipeline, 421 U.S. at 252
    , thereby
    “comprehensively regulat[ing] fees and the taxation of fees as costs in the federal courts,”
    Crawford 
    Fitting, 482 U.S. at 440
    . The “substance of this Act was transmitted” through
    various statutory recodifications and is now codified as 28 U.S.C. § 1920, “without any
    apparent intent to change the controlling rules.” 
    Taniguchi, 566 U.S. at 565
    (internal
    quotation marks omitted). Today, § 1920 enumerates six categories of costs that may be
    taxed: (1) clerk and marshal fees, (2) fees for “recorded transcripts necessarily obtained
    for use in the case,” (3) expenses for printing and witnesses, (4) expenses for
    exemplification and necessary copies, (5) docket fees, and (6) compensation of
    interpreters and court-appointed experts. 28 U.S.C. § 1920; see 
    Taniguchi, 566 U.S. at 573
    (“[T]axable costs are limited by statute and are modest in scope . . . .”).
    Most importantly, the Supreme Court has construed Rule 54(d) to be limited by
    § 1920. As it held in Crawford Fitting, “§ 1920 defines the term ‘costs’ as used in Rule
    
    54(d).” 482 U.S. at 441
    (emphasis added). The discretion provided by Rule 54(d) is
    “solely a power to decline to tax, as costs, the items enumerated in § 1920.”
    Id. at 442.
    The Court explained: “If Rule 54(d) grants courts discretion to tax whatever costs may
    seem appropriate, then § 1920, which enumerates the costs that may be taxed, serves no
    role whatsoever.” Id.; see 10 James Wm. Moore et al., Moore’s Federal Practice
    § 54.103 at 185–86 (3d. ed. 2011) (“The Crawford Fitting rule that only those costs
    expressly allowed by statute may be awarded under Rule 54(d)(1) implicitly rejected a
    line of authority recognizing other possible sources for an award of costs, including local
    5
    rules, the custom of the district, and the court’s general equitable powers.”). Crawford
    concluded: “Any argument that a federal court is empowered to exceed the limitations
    explicitly set out in [28 U.S.C.] §§ 1920 and 1821 [setting limits on witness fees] without
    plain evidence of congressional intent to supersede those sections ignores our
    longstanding practice of construing statutes in pari 
    materia.” 482 U.S. at 445
    . Thus, it
    held “that absent explicit statutory or contractual authorization for the taxation of the
    expenses of a litigant’s witness as costs, federal courts are bound by the limitations set
    out in 28 U.S.C. § 1821 and § 1920.”
    Id. Within the
    last decade the Supreme Court has
    reaffirmed its rejection of “the view that the discretion granted by Rule 54(d) is a separate
    source of power to tax as costs expenses not enumerated in § 1920.” 
    Taniguchi, 566 U.S. at 565
    (internal quotation marks omitted). These cases make it crystal clear that Rule
    54(d)(1) would not permit the award of costs for electronic legal research or for attorney
    travel and lodging.
    B.     Colorado Law on Costs
    Colorado law is much more generous in awarding costs, although the letter of the
    law does not appear to be that different from federal law. Colorado Revised Statutes
    §§ 13-16-104 and –105 allow recovery of costs by plaintiffs and defendants respectively. 2
    2
    Section 13-16-104, entitled “When plaintiff recovers costs,” states in full:
    If any person sues in any court of this state in any action, real, personal, or
    mixed, or upon any statute for any offense or wrong immediately personal
    to the plaintiff and recovers any debt or damages in such action, then the
    plaintiff or demandant shall have judgment to recover against the defendant
    6
    And Colorado Revised Statute § 13-16-122 provides a limited list of appropriate costs
    that a state court “may include.” See also Colo. R. Civ. P. 54(d) (“Except when express
    provision therefor is made either in a statute of this state or in these rules, reasonable
    costs shall be allowed as of course to the prevailing party considering any relevant factors
    which may include the needs and complexity of the case and the amount in
    controversy.”). But unlike the United States Supreme Court, the Colorado Supreme
    Court has treated the list of costs in its statute, § 13-16-122, as merely “illustrative rather
    than exclusive.” Cherry Creek Sch. Dist. No. 5 v. Voelker, 
    859 P.2d 805
    , 813 (Colo.
    1993). In Colorado, “absent a specific prohibition, the trial court has discretion over the
    awarding of costs.”
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted); accord Roget v. Grand
    Pontiac, Inc., 
    5 P.3d 341
    , 348 (Colo. App. 1999) (“Absent a specific prohibition in the
    statute, a trial court has the discretion to award any reasonable costs requested.”). The
    his costs to be taxed; and the same shall be recovered, together with the
    debt or damages, by execution, except in the cases mentioned in this article.
    Section 13-16-105, entitled “When defendant recovers costs,” states in full:
    If any person sues in any court of record in this state in any action
    wherein the plaintiff or demandant might have costs in case judgment
    is given for him and he is nonprossed, suffers a discontinuance, is
    nonsuited after appearance of the defendant, or a verdict is passed
    against him, then the defendant shall have judgment to recover his
    costs against the plaintiff, except against executors or administrators
    prosecuting in the right of their testator or intestate, or demandant, to
    be taxed; and the same shall be recovered of the plaintiff or
    demandant, by like process as the plaintiff or demandant might have
    had against the defendant, in case judgment has been given for the
    plaintiff or demandant.
    7
    district court relied on Colorado precedent to award costs for electronic legal research
    and attorney travel and lodging—none of which is listed in § 13-16-122. See Cherry
    
    Creek, 859 P.2d at 813
    –14 (expenses of taking discovery depositions); Valentine v.
    Mountain States Mut. Cas. Co., 
    252 P.3d 1182
    , 1193–94 (Colo. App. 2011) (travel for
    depositions and meetings with experts and clients); 
    Roget, 5 P.3d at 348
    –49
    (computerized legal research).
    C.      Does Rule 54(d) Govern? / Shady Grove
    Given that some costs permitted under Colorado law are not permitted under Rule
    54(d), we must ask whether they are nonetheless permissible in a diversity case. Much of
    the answer can be found in the opinion in Shady Grove.
    At issue in Shady Grove was the applicability of a New York law limiting class
    actions. A number of consumer-protection statutes provide a minimum penalty that can
    be awarded to a consumer who was the victim of a violation. In a class action against a
    violator, the total penalty could be immense. (A minimum penalty of $500 per consumer
    for a class of 10,000 would total $5 million.) To avoid this result, New York enacted a
    statute prohibiting class actions seeking statutory penalties. The effect of this statute in
    federal court came into question when Shady Grove Orthopedic Associates, P. A.,
    brought a putative class action against Allstate Insurance Co. in federal court under
    diversity jurisdiction for failure to pay statutory interest penalties under a state insurance
    law. 
    See 559 U.S. at 397
    . The district court and the circuit court applied the state class-
    action law and held that the suit could not proceed as a class action.
    Id. at 397–98.
    The
    8
    Supreme Court reversed, holding that Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23 permitted the
    class action despite the state law.
    There were three opinions. Four Justices dissented. Justice Scalia wrote an
    opinion joined in full by three Justices. Justice Stevens joined part of Justice Scalia’s
    opinion (making that part a majority opinion) and wrote a separate concurring opinion.
    The majority opinion set forth the framework for resolving the issue: a Federal Rule
    governs over state law (1) when it “answer[s] the same question” as the state law, and (2)
    it is not “ultra vires.”
    Id. at 399.
    The majority opinion addressed the first step of the framework in a straightforward
    fashion. “The question in dispute is whether Shady Grove’s suit may proceed as a class
    action. Rule 23 provides an answer.”
    Id. at 398
    . 
    It explained, “[The Rule] states that ‘a
    class action may be maintained’ if two conditions are met: The suit must satisfy the
    criteria set forth in subdivision (a) (i.e., numerosity, commonality, typicality, and
    adequacy of representation), and it also must fit into one of the three categories described
    in subdivision (b).”
    Id. at 398
    (brackets and citation omitted). Thus, the Rule was
    definitive: “By its terms this creates a categorical rule entitling a plaintiff whose suit
    meets the specified criteria to pursue his claim as a class action.”
    Id. The Court
    rejected the circuit court’s view that the state law and Rule 23 “do not
    conflict because they address different issues.”
    Id. at 399.
    The circuit court said that
    Rule 23 concerns the criteria for determining whether the class should be certified,
    whereas the state statute “addresses an antecedent question: whether the particular type of
    claim is eligible for class treatment in the first place.”
    Id. The Court
    provided an
    9
    explanation (which we need not repeat) of why it thought that “the line between
    eligibility and certifiability is entirely artificial.”
    Id. But its
    rejection of the circuit
    court’s analysis was more fundamental: “There is no reason, in any event, to read Rule
    23 as addressing only whether claims made eligible for class treatment by some other law
    should be certified as class actions.”
    Id. It continued:
    “Allstate asserts that Rule 23
    neither explicitly or implicitly empowers a federal court to certify a class in each and
    every case where the Rule’s criteria are met. But that is exactly what Rule 23 does.”
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    Allstate pointed out that the New York statute barring penalty class actions had
    another subsection establishing certification criteria similar to those in Rule 23, and it
    argued that this demonstrated that the provision at issue “concerns a separate subject”
    from certification criteria.
    Id. at 400.
    The Court was unpersuaded. “[T]he question
    before us,” it said, “is whether [the state statute] concerns a subject separate from the
    subject of Rule 23.”
    Id. (emphasis added).
    The answer was easy: “Rule 23 permits all
    class actions that meet its requirements, and a State cannot limit that permission by
    structuring one part of its statute to track Rule 23 and enacting another part that imposes
    additional requirements.”
    Id. at 401.
    The essential point was that “[b]oth of [the New
    York statute’s] subsections undeniably answer the same question as Rule 23: whether a
    class action may proceed for a given suit.”
    Id. (emphasis added).
    The majority opinion also rejected the dissent’s arguments that the state statute
    and Rule 23 could be reconciled by interpreting Rule 23 to avoid the conflict. See
    id. at 437
    (Ginsburg, J., dissenting);
    id. at 446–47
    (Rule 23 “does not command that a
    10
    particular remedy be available when a party sues in a representative capacity”; it “allows
    state law to control the size of a monetary award a class plaintiff may pursue”). The
    majority opinion responded, “We cannot contort [Rule 23’s] text, even to avert a collision
    with state law that might render it invalid.”
    Id. at 406
    (majority opinion). Conflict could
    not be avoided because “Rule 23 unambiguously authorizes any plaintiff, in any federal
    civil proceeding, to maintain a class action if the Rule’s prerequisites are met.”
    Id. Writing for
    a plurality of four Justices, Justice Scalia then proceeded to address
    whether Rule 23 was constitutional and within the authority granted by the Rules
    Enabling Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2072. On the constitutional issue he wrote that “Congress has
    undoubted power to supplant state law, and undoubted power to prescribe rules for the
    courts it has created, so long as those rules regulate matters rationally capable of
    classification as procedure.”
    Id. (plurality opinion
    of Scalia, J.) (internal quotation marks
    omitted). Under this power Congress enacted the Rules Enabling Act. The pertinent
    limitation on those rules is stated in subsection (b) of the Act: “Such rules shall not
    abridge, enlarge or modify any substantive right.” 28 U.S.C. § 2072(b). Noting that the
    Supreme Court had “rejected every statutory challenge to a Federal Rule that has come
    before us,” Justice Scalia said that the Court had “long held that this limitation means that
    the Rule must ‘really regulat[e] procedure,—the judicial process for enforcing rights and
    duties recognized by substantive law and for justly administering remedy and redress for
    disregard or infraction of them.’” Shady 
    Grove, 559 U.S. at 407
    (plurality opinion of
    Scalia, J.) (quoting Sibbach v. Wilson & Co., 
    312 U.S. 1
    , 14 (1941)). “The test is not
    whether the rule affects a litigant’s substantive rights; most procedural rules do. What
    11
    matters is what the rule itself regulates: If it governs only the manner and the means by
    which the litigants’ rights are enforced, it is valid; if it alters the rules of decision by
    which the court will adjudicate those rights, it is not.”
    Id. (citation, brackets,
    and internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    The dissent did not question or otherwise address the validity of Rule 23. But
    Justice Stevens’s concurrence departed from the plurality on this point, rejecting its
    approach to determining validity. He viewed the plurality’s approach of looking only to
    the Federal Rule itself as inconsistent with the text of the Rules Enabling Act. See
    id. at 424–25
    (Stevens, J., concurring). To give teeth to the requirement that Federal Rules not
    “abridge, enlarge or modify any substantive right,” 28 U.S.C. § 2072(b), Justice
    Stevens’s analysis would “turn[] on whether the state law actually is part of a State’s
    framework of substantive rights or remedies,” Shady 
    Grove, 559 U.S. at 419
    (Stevens, J.,
    concurring). He would decline to apply a Federal Rule to the extent that it “would
    displace a state law that is procedural in the ordinary use of the term but is so intertwined
    with a state right or remedy that it functions to define the scope of the state-created
    right.”
    Id. at 423.
    Justice Stevens nevertheless concluded that the New York law was not
    intertwined with state rights or remedies, as shown by the textual reading of the New
    York law; its applicability to all claims, regardless whether based on federal, New York,
    or other state law; and analysis of the potential purposes behind the law. See
    id. at 432–
    36.
    As indicated by the dissent of four Justices stating that the majority opinion had
    departed from Court precedent, see, e.g.,
    id. at 442–43
    (Ginsburg, J., dissenting), Shady
    12
    Grove was a turning point in the Supreme Court’s doctrine regarding the relationship
    between the Federal Rules and state law. At the least, it represented a clarification of
    prior opinions. Thus, this court has recognized that Shady Grove is a critical case on the
    choice-of-law analysis. See Racher v. Westlake Nursing Home Ltd. P’ship, 
    871 F.3d 1152
    , 1162 (10th Cir. 2017) (“We believe the Supreme Court’s subsequent decision in
    Shady Grove . . . informs the proper analysis of [whether state law or federal law governs
    whether a statutory damage cap is an affirmative defense or a pleading
    requirement] . . .”); Garman v. Campbell Cty. Sch. Dist. No. 1, 
    630 F.3d 977
    , 983 (10th
    Cir. 2010) (“The Supreme Court, in Shady Grove . . . recently clarified the analysis for
    determining whether a federal rule or state law governs.”). We now examine how Shady
    Grove applies to the case before us.
    D.     Application of Shady Grove
    The inescapable conclusion we draw from Shady Grove is that Colorado’s general
    laws for assessing costs do not apply in this case. Under step one of the Supreme Court
    majority’s analysis, the question is whether the state laws “answer the same question” as
    the Federal Rule. Shady 
    Grove, 559 U.S. at 399
    (majority opinion); see also
    id. at 400
    (“[T]he question before us is whether [the state laws] concern[] a subject separate from
    the subject of [the Federal Rule].”). They certainly do. Rule 54(d) and Colorado’s
    §§ 13-16-104 and -105 tell the courts what costs can be awarded to a prevailing party.
    The subjects of the Federal Rule and the state statutes are the same. We cannot
    artificially divide each Colorado statute and say that the statute (1) addresses the same
    subject matter as the Federal Rule when it allows those costs permitted by the Federal
    13
    Rule and (2) then addresses a different subject when it allows costs for other expenses
    incurred by litigants that are impermissible under the Rule. Both of these “components”
    of the Colorado statute would still answer the same question as Rule 54(d). See
    id. at 401
    (“Rule 23 permits all class actions that meet its requirements, and a State cannot limit that
    permission by structuring one part of [its class-action] statute to track Rule 23 and
    enacting another part that imposes additional requirements. Both of [the New York
    statute’s] subsections undeniably answer the same question as Rule 23: whether a class
    action may proceed for a given suit.”).
    And the answers to the costs question given by the Federal Rule and the Colorado
    statutes cannot be reconciled. If, say, Rule 54(d) or 28 U.S.C. § 1920 had stated that the
    district court should ordinarily award certain types of costs but made clear that other,
    unspecified types could also be awarded in the court’s discretion (which is how the
    Colorado courts read § 13-16-122), we see no reason why the district court could not look
    to state law to guide its discretion. But that is not the Federal Rule. Crawford Fitting and
    Taniguchi have held that the only costs that can be awarded under Rule 54(d) are those
    specified in § 1920, and neither attorney travel nor computerized legal research is so
    specified. Allowing for a discretionary award of costs unavailable under Rule 54(d)
    would run contrary to the Supreme Court’s interpretation of that Rule.
    The second part of the Shady Grove analysis is determining whether application of
    Rule 54(d) to override the Colorado costs statutes is valid under the Rules Enabling Act
    and constitutional, or instead is ultra vires. Under the approach of the Shady Grove
    plurality, that application clearly passes muster. The relevant restriction in the Act is that
    14
    a Rule “not abridge, enlarge or modify any substantive right.” 28 U.S.C. § 2072(b).
    Following Sibbach, the plurality stated that the restriction means only that the Rule “must
    really regulate procedure,— the judicial process for enforcing rights and duties
    recognized by substantive law and for justly administering remedy and redress for
    disregard or infraction of them.” Shady 
    Grove 559 U.S. at 407
    (plurality opinion of
    Scalia, J.). (brackets and internal quotation marks omitted). As noted by the plurality,
    the Supreme Court has thus far “rejected every statutory challenge to a Federal Rule that
    has come before [it].”
    Id. Turning to
    this case, we need not belabor whether Rule 54(d)
    is a procedural rule. We are aware of no authority suggesting that it is not. Awarding
    costs has for centuries been part of “the judicial process for enforcing rights and duties
    recognized by substantive law.” 
    Sibbach, 312 U.S. at 14
    ; see 10 Moore, supra
    § 54.103[2] at 184 (“The issue of what costs may be awarded incident to the judgment is
    a procedural issue . . . .”). And because Rule 54(d) is a procedural rule, it unquestionably
    is within Congress’s constitutional powers. See Hanna v. Plumer, 
    380 U.S. 460
    , 472
    (1965) (the Constitution conveys “a power to regulate matters which, though falling
    within the uncertain area between substance and procedure, are rationally capable of
    classification as either”).) Under the approach of the plurality in Shady Grove, Rule
    54(d) undoubtedly prevails.
    Justice Stevens chose a different tack, although his approach led to the same result
    in Shady Grove and leads to the same result here. In his view, whether application of a
    Federal Rule violates the Rules Enabling Act requirement that “rules shall not abridge,
    enlarge or modify any substantive right,” 28 U.S.C. § 2072(b), can depend on the state
    15
    law that the Rule would otherwise displace. He wrote that the Rules Enabling Act
    forbids preemption of a state law that “is procedural in the ordinary use of the term but is
    so intertwined with a state right or remedy that it functions to define the scope of the
    state-created 
    right.” 559 U.S. at 423
    (Stevens, J., concurring). In Shady Grove he
    decided that the state class-action provision regarding claims for penalties was not such a
    law. He noted that it was not tied to a state right or remedy because it applied to “claims
    based on federal law or the law of any other State.”
    Id. at 432.
    He said that “[i]t is
    therefore hard to see how [the New York statute] could be understood as a rule that,
    though procedural in form, serves the function of defining New York’s rights or
    remedies.”
    Id. That identical
    reasoning applies here. Nothing about the Colorado statutes
    indicates a judgment about the scope of state-created rights or remedies. Sections 13-16-
    104 and -105 are general cost-shifting statutes that apply in every case, even to “claims
    based on federal law or the law of any other State.” Id.; see Archer v. Farmer Bros. Co.,
    
    90 P.3d 228
    , 229, 232 (Colo. 2004) (affirming award of costs under C.R.C.P. 54(d) and
    § 13-16-105 to defendants who prevailed on claims under federal Age Discrimination in
    Employment Act and Americans with Disabilities Act as well as state-law claims).
    Again, “[i]t is therefore hard to see how [the Colorado statutes] could be understood as
    . . . rule[s] that, though procedural in form, serve[] the function of defining [Colorado’s]
    rights or remedies.”
    Id. Justice Stevens’s
    analysis might well reach a different
    conclusion if the Colorado statute were restricted to costs in specific areas, such as in
    16
    civil-rights or employment-discrimination claims. Then it could be viewed as part of the
    state remedy. But that is not our case.
    This court has held that Justice Stevens’s concurrence states Supreme Court law
    under the rule stated in Marks v. United States, 
    430 U.S. 188
    , 193 (1977) (“When a
    fragmented Court decides a case and no single rationale explaining the result enjoys the
    assent of five Justices, the holding of the Court may be viewed as that position taken by
    those Members who concurred in the judgments on the narrowest grounds.” (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted)). See Los Lobos Renewable Power, LLC v.
    Americulture, Inc., 
    885 F.3d 659
    , 668 n.3 (10th Cir. 2018); James River Ins. Co. v. Rapid
    Funding, LLC, 
    658 F.3d 1207
    , 1217–18 (10th Cir. 2011); 
    Garman, 630 F.3d at 983
    n.6.
    Others, including then-Judge Kavanaugh, think that the view of the plurality opinion
    governs on step two of the analysis because it merely restates law settled by Sibbach and
    no other Justice (including the dissenters) expressed agreement with the concurrence.
    See Abbas v. Foreign Policy Group, LLC, 
    783 F.3d 1328
    , 1336–37 (D.C. Cir. 2015). But
    we need not confront this disagreement. Simply put, a challenge in this case under the
    Rules Enabling Act fails under any available Supreme Court doctrine. Because Rule
    54(d) falls well within the statutory authorization of the Rules Enabling Act and its
    displacement of Colorado state law would not impair any state substantive right, we hold
    that a federal court exercising diversity jurisdiction has no power to award costs under
    §§ 13-16-104 or -105.
    17
    E.      Preservation of Issue
    Despite our conclusion that the award of costs under Colorado law was error, we
    may still need to affirm the award. In rejecting Plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration of
    the costs award, the district court ruled that they had not previously argued adequately
    that federal law precluded a costs award under state law. If the issue was not properly
    preserved in district court, we can reverse only if the requirements of the plain-error
    doctrine are satisfied. See Singh v. Cordle, 
    936 F.3d 1022
    , 1041 (10th Cir. 2019). “To
    obtain relief under that standard, the party must show (1) error, (2) that is plain, which (3)
    affects substantial rights, and which (4) seriously affects the fairness, integrity, or public
    reputation of judicial proceedings.”
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    The issue is a close one, but we respectfully disagree with the district court and
    believe that Plaintiffs adequately preserved their challenge to the award of costs under
    Colorado law. In their motion to stay, deny, or reduce the cost calculation pending the
    merits appeal, Plaintiffs argued that the court should award only those costs enumerated
    in 28 U.S.C. § 1920, citing the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Crawford
    Fitting. They argued that § 1920 does not authorize costs for electronic research or
    attorney travel and lodging. Then, in a letter to the court clerk regarding the calculation
    of costs, Plaintiffs asserted, citing Chaparral Resources v. Monsanto, 
    849 F.2d 1286
    ,
    1292 (10th Cir. 1988), that “a federal court has no discretion to award costs that are not
    statutorily permitted under federal law unless such costs are statutorily mandated.”
    Id. at 1903–04.
    The letter specifically challenged the award of costs for electronic research.
    Finally, in their motion for review of the clerk’s costs award, Plaintiffs again stated that
    18
    the Court had “no discretion to award items as costs that are not set forth in § 1920 . . .
    unless they are authorized by . . . state statute or agreement of the parties.
    Id. at 1828–29
    (citing Crawford Fitting and Garcia v. Walmart Stores, Inc., 
    209 F.3d 1170
    , 1177 (10th
    Cir. 2000).).
    We recognize that Plaintiffs’ argument did not track the analysis we have applied.
    They did not even cite Shady Grove. And they conceded, contrary to what we now
    decide to be the applicable law, that costs can be awarded under state law if the specific
    costs are “statutorily mandated” or “authorized” by the state law. Nevertheless, we think
    that Plaintiffs did preserve (although barely) an argument that the challenged costs were
    not permissible under this court’s decisions in Chaparral and Garcia. In Chaparral we
    held that the district court had erred in awarding expert-witness fees beyond what was
    allowed under federal law. In dictum we suggested, however, that a court could award
    costs under state law if the award was under “an express statutory 
    mandate.” 849 F.2d at 1292
    . As for Garcia, the state law in question was not a costs statute generally
    applicable to prevailing parties but a Colorado statutory provision permitting an award of
    actual costs to a plaintiff when the defendant rejected a pretrial settlement offer lower
    than the eventual judgment. 
    See 209 F.3d at 1173
    . We leave for another day a
    determination of whether the state law would survive the asks-the-same-question test of
    Shady Grove, which was decided a decade after Garcia. Relevant here, Garcia followed
    Chaparral’s dictum in applying the state law. At one point it spoke in terms of whether
    state law “authorizes” the costs award.
    Id. at 1177.
    But it later explained that the
    19
    Colorado provision had been interpreted by the Colorado courts as “non-discretionary.”
    Id. at 1178.
    Thus, we could have seen our task on this appeal as evaluating whether the
    challenged costs award was permissible under Chaparral and Garcia: that is, whether the
    award would have been mandatory under Colorado law and therefore permissible or
    whether it was discretionary and impermissible. Under that approach, Plaintiffs may very
    well have prevailed. But the pertinent language of Chaparral and Garcia has been
    superseded by later Supreme Court opinions. And we do not believe we would be
    performing our duty to provide guidance to the lower courts if we resolved this appeal
    under superseded doctrine. When, as here, a party argues that the district court’s ruling is
    contrary to general law and does not satisfy a previously recognized exception to the
    general law, we think it appropriate to point out that the previously recognized exception
    is clearly no longer good law and then decide that the party is correct that the court’s
    ruling was contrary to the general law. In short, Plaintiffs did just enough to preserve the
    winning argument.
    III.    CONCLUSION
    We VACATE the district court’s award of costs and REMAND for entry of a
    revised costs award consistent with this opinion.
    20