Dickerson v. Perry & Papenhausen, Inc. CA4/1 ( 2021 )


Menu:
  • Filed 4/28/21 Dickerson v. Perry & Papenhausen, Inc. CA4/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    WILLIAM DICKERSON et al.,                                            D076080, D076471
    Plaintiffs and Appellants,
    v.                                                          (Super. Ct. No. 37-2009-00088289-
    CU-CD-CTL)
    PERRY & PAPENHAUSEN, INC.
    et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    WILLIAM DICKERSON,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    v.
    PERRY & PAPENHAUSEN, INC.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEALS from a judgment and order of the Superior Court of San
    Diego County, Ronald L. Styn, Judge. Affirmed.
    Procopio, Cory, Hargreaves & Savitch and Kendra J. Hall for Plaintiffs
    William Dickerson and Paradiso in Terra, LLC.
    Schwerdtfeger Law Group, Sean D. Schwerdtfeger, Catherine L.
    Coughlin and Sarah K. Richards for Defendants Perry & Papenhausen, Inc.,
    James Papenhausen, James Papenhausen, II, Papenhausen Construction,
    and Frederick Perry, Jr.
    This is the second round of appeals arising from the allegedly defective
    construction of William Dickerson’s home by general contractor Perry &
    Papenhausen, Inc. (P&P), and the decidedly complicated litigation that
    followed. Dickerson and Paradiso in Terra LLC (Plaintiffs) sued P&P and
    others (Defendants),1 as well as their subcontractors; Dickerson alleged
    breach of contract and both Plaintiffs asserted negligence, among other
    claims. Plaintiffs settled with the subcontractors. Defendants filed a cross-
    complaint, claiming Dickerson breached the home construction contract by
    failing to pay certain amounts. A jury found Dickerson and P&P liable for
    breach of contract, and P&P liable for negligence, and awarded damages to
    both sides. The contract award to Dickerson was for delays and
    overcharging. Although the special verdict form submitted to the jury
    allowed for defect damages to be awarded in contract, the jury awarded them
    only on the joint negligence claim. P&P successfully moved to offset the
    negligence award by the subcontractor settlements to zero. Dickerson moved
    to correct this offset and to elect to receive the defect damages in contract.
    The trial court granted the remedy election, deemed the correction motion
    moot, and entered judgment, which still stated the negligence award was
    offset to zero.
    1    The other defendants are P&P principals Frederick Perry, Jr., James
    Papenhausen, and James Papenhausen II, and Papenhausen Construction.
    Dickerson’s wife, Heidi Dickerson, was also a party, but successfully
    demurred to a breach of contract claim and dismissed her own claims.
    2
    In the first appeal, we reversed the remedy election because the jury’s
    special verdict did not support it, and remanded for further proceedings as
    the trial court determined were necessary and proper for judgment. We
    affirmed the judgment in all other respects. On remand, Plaintiffs moved to
    correct the settlement offset, for a new trial, and for judgment
    notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV). The court concluded our remittitur
    deprived it of jurisdiction for the motions and denied them. P&P moved for
    prevailing party status under Civil Code section 1717, which the court denied
    after finding there was no prevailing party. Plaintiffs appeal from the
    judgment after remittitur, and the parties separately appeal from the order
    on prevailing party status.2
    We conclude the trial court properly determined our remittitur did not
    provide jurisdiction to address Plaintiffs’ motions. We further conclude the
    court did not abuse its discretion by determining there was no prevailing
    party. The judgment and order are affirmed.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND3
    I. Litigation Through Trial
    Dickerson entered into a contract with P&P to build the home in 2005,
    formed Paradiso in Terra LLC (Paradiso) in 2008, and at some point
    transferred ownership of the home to Paradiso. Plaintiffs filed suit against
    Defendants in 2009, and later added the subcontractors. The operative
    2     On our own motion, we consolidate the appeals for purposes of decision.
    (See Hong Sang Market, Inc. v. Peng (2018) 
    20 Cal.App.5th 474
    , 481, fn. 1.)
    3     We provide additional background in our discussion of the prevailing
    party determination, post. We also grant the parties’ requests to incorporate
    the record in the prior appeal by reference.
    3
    complaint included claims by Dickerson against P&P for breach of contract
    and breach of implied warranty, and a joint claim by Plaintiffs for negligence
    against Defendants and the subcontractors. There were also claims for fraud
    and negligent misrepresentation. Defendants filed a cross-complaint, which
    included a breach of contract claim against Dickerson for failure to pay
    certain amounts owed under the terms of the construction contract.
    The matter proceeded to trial in 2014. The trial court first held a bench
    trial to address Plaintiffs’ claim that P&P did not comply with certain
    licensing requirements, which would preclude their failure-to-pay claim. The
    court found P&P substantially complied.
    The case was then tried to a jury. At the outset, Plaintiffs’ counsel
    indicated they had settled with the remaining subcontractors; identified
    additional settlement amounts totaling $500,000; and raised the issue of
    whether Defendants would object to the good faith settlements. Defendants’
    counsel indicated he could not make the decision at that time, noting in part
    that claim assignments needed valuation. On the allocations, counsel said,
    “So if what I’m hearing, $500,000, and . . . $300,000 is allocated over the
    concrete issues, $180,000 is allocated over the waterproofing issues, and
    $20,000 is allocated over to the tile issues.” Additional discussion ensued,
    during which the court confirmed the total subcontractor settlements were
    over $900,000. The court also addressed the claims, and encouraged the
    parties to address issues concerning ownership of the home; it appears no
    steps were taken, and no evidence was introduced to the jury as to when title
    transferred to Paradiso.
    After the close of evidence, the parties agreed Paradiso would only be a
    party on the joint negligence claim. The special verdict form provided to the
    jury listed substantially similar, but not identical, defects under Dickerson’s
    4
    contract claim and the Plaintiffs’ joint negligence claim. The jury was
    instructed “each item of damages may be awarded only once,” and Dickerson
    argued in closing that the amounts would be “offset and . . . figured out.”
    The jury returned its special verdict. It found Dickerson established a
    breach of contract and awarded damages of $160,000 for delays and
    overcharging, but indicated “0” for each defect category. It found Dickerson
    and Paradiso established negligence and awarded $675,428.02 for defect
    damages. The jury also found Dickerson liable to P&P for breach of contract
    and awarded damages of $535,000.
    II. Posttrial Proceedings
    In 2015, Defendants moved to set off the negligence award under Code
    of Civil Procedure section 877 by the subcontractor settlements, which
    exceeded $972,000.4 The trial court granted the motion, reducing the
    negligence award to zero based on the settlements, and also offset the
    contract awards. During the hearing, the court and counsel discussed the
    settlements at length. Defendants’ counsel argued the plaintiff has the
    burden to explain allocations and there were none, stating: “We found three
    total allocations. And [they] really are rather meaningless . . . because, for
    the most part, all those issues went forward . . . .” The court appeared to
    agree with this burden analysis:
    “My understanding of the law is, if you don’t have a specific
    allocation, the full amount is credited to the nonsettling party,
    period. It’s—it may not be fair in every case. It may not be a
    good idea. But that’s what the cases say. And that’s the way it
    works.”
    4     The parties identify differing total subcontractor settlement amounts,
    but the specific number is not material to our analysis. There is no dispute
    settlement amounts exceeded $972,000.
    5
    The court subsequently stated to Plaintiffs’ counsel:
    “[I]f there was an allocation, you can—let’s go forward
    assuming there wasn’t, for purposes now. I’m not going to sign
    any judgment today. [¶] So if something was said on the
    record, that there was an allocation for this and that, and then
    there was a stipulation that was in good faith, then I would
    revisit this. But I don’t remember.
    [¶] . . . [¶]
    “[Y]ou need to go back, then. And if—if there was an
    allocation, that would change the numbers.”
    After Plaintiffs obtained new counsel, they applied ex parte for
    correction of setoffs and to elect to receive defect damages in contract. The
    trial court granted the remedy election request, and deemed the correction
    request moot.
    The trial court then entered judgment. The court set forth the jury’s
    special verdict findings, indicated it granted Dickerson’s remedy election, and
    stated the judgment was as follows, in pertinent part:
    “In favor of [Dickerson] and against [P&P] on [his] breach of
    contract claim in the amount of $704,849.00. By operation of
    Code of Civil Procedure section 666, [his] recovery on his
    contractual award is reduced to $169,849.00, by virtue of the
    jury’s finding that [P&P] is entitled to $535,000.00 on its
    Cross-Complaint for breach of contract.
    “In favor of [Dickerson and Paradiso] and against [Defendants]
    on their negligence claim. The jury’s award of $675,428.02 is
    reduced to zero ($0.00) by operation of Code of Civil Procedure
    sections 877 and 877.6. Additionally, by virtue of [Dickerson’s]
    election of remedy, recovery of the damages awarded pursuant
    to the jury’s negligence findings in special verdict questions
    5(a)(b), 6(a)(b), 7(a)(b), 8(a)(b), and 9(a)(b) is waived.
    “In favor of [P&P] and against [Dickerson] on [P&P’s] breach of
    contract claim. As stated above, the jury’s award of
    $535,000.00 to [P&P] is setoff against [Dickerson’s]
    $704,849.00 contractual award by operation of Code of Civil
    6
    Procedure section 666, leaving [P&P] with an award of zero
    ($0.00).”
    The court also entered judgment for P&P on the implied warranty, fraud, and
    negligent misrepresentation claims. Both parties appealed.
    III. First Appeal
    Defendants argued the trial court erred by granting Dickerson’s
    remedy election. Plaintiffs filed a cross-appeal, contending the court erred by
    ruling P&P substantially complied with licensing requirements. They also
    argued the jury findings on fraud and negligent representation were
    irreconcilable, stating this issue was “raised protectively” in case we reversed
    the judgment.
    In our opinion, we concluded the jury findings did not support the
    remedy election, explaining:
    “Defect damages were available in contract, but the jury did
    not award them and thus did not find Dickerson alone was
    entitled to such damages based on a contract theory. The jury
    did award defect damages in negligence, but to Dickerson and
    Paradiso together—again, making no finding that Dickerson
    alone was entitled to them. . . . We conclude his election, and
    the related portions of the judgment, were not supported by the
    jury findings.”
    7
    We addressed and rejected both of Plaintiffs’ cross-appeal arguments.
    In the respondents’ section of their combined brief, Plaintiffs had also stated
    that “[i]f the judgment were reversed because the trial court did not
    appropriately reconcile the jury’s findings, then a new trial on [Plaintiffs’]
    damages would be required” and they “would be entitled to a ruling on their
    motion for correction of settlement allocations . . . and entitled to seek any
    other appropriate relief from a new judgment.” At the end of the opinion, we
    addressed the parties’ disposition requests, including these:
    “Plaintiffs contend that ‘[i]f the judgment were reversed
    because the trial court did not appropriately reconcile the
    jury’s findings, then a new trial on Bill [Dickerson] and
    Paradiso’s damages would be required,’ and likewise seek
    posttrial proceedings. We are reversing because the findings
    do not support Dickerson’s remedy election, not because the
    trial court erred in reconciling them, and we reject the request
    for a new trial. Further posttrial proceedings may be
    warranted, but the trial court is in the best position to
    determine those which are necessary and appropriate.”
    The disposition stated:
    “The judgment is reversed, in part, and the trial court is
    directed to deny Dickerson’s request for election of remedy and
    to conduct further posttrial proceedings as the court
    determines is necessary and appropriate for entry of judgment.
    In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed. In the interests
    of justice, the parties are to bear their own costs on appeal.”
    8
    Plaintiffs filed a petition for rehearing, which we denied. The
    remittitur issued in 2018.5
    IV. Proceedings On Remand
    On remand, Plaintiffs filed a motion to correct the negligence setoffs.
    Defendants argued the trial court lacked jurisdiction to revisit the setoffs and
    in any event Plaintiffs never satisfied the requirement for allocating
    settlement proceeds. The trial court denied the motion. At the hearing, the
    court noted the judgment language about “operation of [Code of Civil
    Procedure sections] 877 and 877.6 [¶] . . . [¶] ha[d] nothing to do with the
    election of remedies.” An attorney for Plaintiffs responded, “But there’s no
    ruling on which that’s based,” the court asked, “[w]hy would you put it in
    there?” and the attorney said it was “jointly drafted” and he did not “have a
    better answer . . . .” The court stated, “I don’t disagree with your history.
    But it says, in the judgment, that that’s what happened. . . . I have no
    recollection of what happened.”
    In its order, the trial court first found the motion to correct the
    negligence setoffs was not a motion for reconsideration, because “while the
    court issued rulings regarding the setoff issue . . . the setoff issue was not
    conclusively decided” as of the remedy election. The court nonetheless
    concluded it lacked jurisdiction to address Plaintiffs’ motion. After quoting
    our disposition and the judgment language regarding the negligence award,
    the court explained:
    5     The parties continued litigating various matters after entry of
    judgment, including P&P’s costs. The trial court granted those costs,
    Paradiso appealed, and we dismissed the appeal as moot due to our partial
    reversal of the judgment (May 1, 2018, D071034). We also denied Paradiso’s
    subsequent petition for rehearing.
    9
    “Because the Judgment specifically includes an award of $0.00
    on the negligence cause of action ‘by operation of’ CCP §§ 877
    and 877.6, and because the disposition specifically affirms the
    Judgment in all respects other than the election of remedy, the
    court finds Plaintiffs’ request to correct the CCP §§ 877 and
    877.6 offsets is precluded under the principles governing the
    trial court’s jurisdiction on remand as set forth in Ayyad v.
    Sprint Spectrum, L.P. (2012) 
    210 Cal.App.4th 851
    , 859-860
    [Ayyad]. Similar to the circumstances in Ayyad, based on the
    language of the Judgment and disposition, this court is without
    jurisdiction to entertain Plaintiffs’ motion to correct the CCP
    §§ 877 and 877.6 offsets. Ayyad explains ‘the portion of the
    judgment pertaining to the unaffected issues remains in place
    and becomes final once the time for appeal passes.’ Ayyad, 210
    Cal.App.4th at 861 . . . .”
    The court acknowledged Plaintiffs had a pending motion to correct
    setoffs that was deemed moot when the court granted the remedy election,
    but found the judgment was dispositive:
    “If the setoff issue had been left unresolved in such a manner,
    the court would be persuaded that it is ‘necessary and
    appropriate’ to resolve the setoff issue for entry of judgment.
    However, because the Judgment specifically includes an award
    of $0.00 on the negligence cause of action ‘by operation of’ CCP
    §§ 877 and 877.6, and because the disposition specifically
    affirms this part of the Judgment, the court cannot find that a
    determination of the CCP §§ 877 and 877.6 setoff is ‘necessary
    and appropriate.’ ”
    The court entered the judgment after remittitur in early 2019.
    Plaintiffs moved for new trial and JNOV, raising arguments regarding
    Dickerson’s contract claim for defect damages, Dickerson’s implied warranty
    claim, and P&P’s contract claim. Defendants opposed both motions based on
    lack of jurisdiction, and the trial court denied them. Focusing on Dickerson’s
    contract claim, the court found the judgment “identifies the damages as to
    each alleged construction defect . . . as ‘0’ ” [¶]; the “ ‘all other respects’ ”
    disposition language “necessarily includes” the judgment as to this damage
    10
    award; and the award is “an ‘unaffected issue’ ” under Ayyad. The court also
    rejected Plaintiffs’ reliance on the “further posttrial proceedings” language in
    the prior opinion:
    “[T]his language does not expand the issues on remand to
    issues of contractual damages for construction defects, but
    must be read in the context of the disposition which specifically
    affirms the Judgment in ‘all other respects.’ This limitation is
    evident in the rejection of Plaintiffs’ request for a new trial by
    the Court of Appeal.”6
    Plaintiffs appealed from the judgment after remittitur.
    DISCUSSION
    I. Appeal from Judgment After Remittitur
    Plaintiffs contend the trial court erred by finding it lacked jurisdiction
    for their motions on remand, the motions have merit, and we should modify
    the judgment for Dickerson. We conclude the trial court was right, do not
    reach the merits, and will not change the judgment.
    A. Applicable Law
    “The order of the reviewing court is contained in its remittitur, which
    defines the scope of the jurisdiction of the court to which the matter is
    returned. ‘The order of the appellate court as stated in the remittitur, “is
    decisive of the character of the judgment to which the appellant is entitled.
    The lower court cannot reopen the case on the facts, allow the filing of
    amended or supplemental pleadings, nor retry the case, and if it should do so,
    the judgment rendered thereon would be void.” ’ ” (Griset v. Fair Political
    6     Plaintiffs state the trial court “incorrectly believed Dickerson was still
    receiving $169,000 awarded pursuant to the original judgment,” citing the
    hearing transcript. The transcript reflects the court understood his final
    contract recovery was a $160,000 credit against P&P’s recovery,
    notwithstanding its transposition of certain numbers.
    11
    Practices Com. (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 688
    , 701 (Griset); Hampton v. Superior
    Court of Los Angeles County (1952) 
    38 Cal.2d 652
    , 655 [trial court is
    “empowered to act only in accordance with the directions of the reviewing
    court”].)
    “[R]emittitur directions are contained in the dispositional language.”
    (Frankel v. Four Star International, Inc. (1980) 
    104 Cal.App.3d 897
    , 902.)
    However, “[t]he appellate court need not expressly comment on every matter
    intended to be covered by the disposition . . . . ‘It is unnecessary and
    inappropriate for an appellate court to attempt to envision and to set forth in
    detail the entire universe of matters prohibited by its directions on remand.’ ”
    (Ducoing Management, Inc. v. Superior Court (2015) 
    234 Cal.App.4th 306
    ,
    313 (Ducoing).)
    “Whether the trial court correctly interpreted our opinion is an issue of
    law subject to de novo review.” (Ayyad, supra, 210 Cal.App.4th at p. 859.)
    “We look to the wording of our directions to determine whether the trial
    court’s order comports with them. [Citation.] When . . . the reviewing court
    remands the matter for further proceedings, its directions must be read in
    conjunction with the opinion as a whole.” (Ibid.)7
    Ayyad, a consumer class action, illustrates these principles. (Ayyad,
    supra, 210 Cal.App.4th at p. 854.) In an earlier decision, the disposition
    stated the “judgment . . . is affirmed,” but remanded for “retrial on the issue
    of [defendant’s] damages, and the calculation of any offset to which
    [defendant] may be entitled.” (Id. at p. 857.) On remand, the trial court
    7     In reviewing the trial court’s interpretation of our remittitur, and its
    order on prevailing party status post, we have considered all points properly
    raised in the parties’ briefs and addressed those pertinent to our analysis.
    12
    denied defendant’s motion to compel arbitration, finding it lacked jurisdiction
    to retry other issues. (Id. at p. 858.) The Court of Appeal affirmed,
    explaining that because the judgment was affirmed, “it became final as to the
    issues unaffected by the new trial order” and “[t]he trial court’s jurisdiction
    did not extend to issues outside the scope of our directions.” (Id. at pp. 861-
    862; id. at pp. 859-860 [if trial court is not directed “to take a particular
    action or make a particular determination,” it cannot do so].)
    13
    B. Analysis
    1. The Trial Court Properly Interpreted the Remittitur
    Relying on the judgment language and our disposition, the trial court
    concluded its jurisdiction did not extend to Plaintiffs’ motions for setoff, new
    trial, and JNOV. This interpretation was correct.
    The judgment set forth the jury’s special verdict findings; Dickerson
    and P&P’s contract awards, in light of the remedy election and the contract
    setoffs; and Plaintiffs’ negligence award, including the setoff that reduced it
    to zero. Our disposition reversed in part, directed the trial court to deny the
    remedy election, and otherwise affirmed. Our direction to permit “posttrial
    proceedings . . . necessary and appropriate for entry of judgment” must be
    read in conjunction with the narrow basis for our partial reversal: denial of
    the remedy election. (See Ayyad, supra, 210 Cal.App.4th at p. 859.)
    The remedy election denial only had one necessary impact on the
    judgment: it modified the amounts being recovered, by shifting defect
    damages back to negligence. As a result:
    • Dickerson now recovered $160,000 on his breach of contract claim,
    reduced by P&P’s contract recovery of $535,000 to zero.
    • P&P now recovered $535,000 on their breach of contract claim,
    reduced by Dickerson’s contract recovery of $160,000 to $375,000.
    • A sentence at the end of the negligence award paragraph, stating
    that “[a]dditionally” Dickerson waived the jury’s negligence findings
    “by virtue of his remedy election” became moot. However, the
    preceding, operative text still stated the award was “reduced to zero
    ($0.00) by operation of . . . sections 877 and 877.6,” meaning the
    waiver had already applied to zero dollars of damages.
    • There was no change to the judgment on the implied warranty,
    fraud, or misrepresentation claims.
    14
    The language allowing appropriate proceedings was likewise tethered to the
    remedy election denial and, viewed in context, only encompassed matters
    potentially impacted by the modified award amounts—like P&P’s prevailing
    party motion.
    Accordingly, the trial court properly concluded its limited jurisdiction
    on remand did not extend to Plaintiffs’ motions. (See Griset, 
    supra,
     25
    Cal.4th at p. 701; Ayyad, supra, 210 Cal.App.4th at pp. 861-862; see, e.g.,
    MHC Financing Limited Partnership Two v. City of Santee (2010) 
    182 Cal.App.4th 1169
    , 1175, fn. 4 [affirming trial court’s rejection of additional
    challenges to rent control ordinances, following remand and reversal to
    address remedies]; Bell v. Farmers Ins. Exchange (2006) 
    135 Cal.App.4th 1138
    , 1142, 1144 (Bell) [upholding trial court’s ruling that it had no
    jurisdiction to modify prejudgment interest rate in employment class action,
    where judgment was reversed for payment of unpaid compensation and
    modification of distribution plan]; Bach v. County of Butte (1989) 
    215 Cal.App.3d 294
    , 303-304 [trial court properly declined to hold evidentiary
    hearing, on remand to vacate one injunction and enter another].)
    2. Plaintiffs’ Arguments Lack Merit
    Plaintiffs offer a series of arguments for why, in essence, they get to
    “try again.” They begin by contending the trial court misinterpreted the
    remittitur. They then assert California law provides them with a right to file
    posttrial motions after a change in judgment. Next, they claim law of the
    case did not prevent their motions on remand. Finally, they argue inclusion
    of the setoff in the judgment was a clerical error the trial court could fix. We
    address these points in turn, and conclude each lacks merit.
    15
    a. Plaintiffs Do Not Establish the Trial Court Misinterpreted
    the Remittitur
    Plaintiffs argue the trial court erred in its interpretation by relying on
    Ayyad, because unlike the disposition in that case, our remand directions
    were broad. This argument mischaracterizes our disposition and we reject it.
    With respect to Ayyad, Plaintiffs contend the prior appellate decision
    there affirmed the lower court judgment in all respects except that the
    disposition provided a “specific directive” for a damages trial and offset
    calculation on remand. They contend that here, in contrast, a “specific
    directive was not provided” in the disposition and that we gave the trial court
    “leeway to conduct further proceedings as deemed ‘necessary and
    appropriate.’ ” This is not accurate. As in Ayyad, we reversed and remanded
    for a limited reason—reversal of the remedy election, and necessary and
    appropriate proceedings related thereto—and affirmed “in all other respects.”
    We meant what we said, and we never stated we were granting general
    “leeway” for further trial proceedings. The trial court’s reliance on Ayyad was
    sound.
    Plaintiffs also argue our “broad directions were consistent with the
    limited basis for this Court’s reversal,” which did not address the “evidentiary
    record or the legal implications of the jury’s findings given the parties’
    contract.” Our reversal was limited, and our directions were intentionally
    narrow, not broad. To the extent we did not address other issues, further
    proceedings on them were foreclosed, not permitted. (Ayyad, supra, 210
    Cal.App.4th at p. 863 [trial court “may not expand the issues on
    remand . . . merely because the reviewing court has not expressly forbidden
    the trial court from doing so”]; Ducoing, supra, 234 Cal.App.4th at p. 313
    [unnecessary to address every detail].) For similar reasons, we reject
    Plaintiffs’ assertions that we “reversed the portions of the judgment” that
    16
    were “impacted” or “affected” by “the election of remedy order” and that the
    trial court was “specifically not limited by this Court’s directions in
    conducting further proceedings.”
    b. Plaintiffs Do Not Establish They Could File New Motions
    Plaintiffs contend they had a right to file posttrial motions following a
    change in judgment. As an initial matter, they do not show the relevant
    portions of the judgment changed. We disagree we “did not affirm the
    awards on either [sides’] contract claims” and that the “special verdict
    findings were not ‘affirmed,’ ” as they claim. Instead, to be clear, we affirmed
    both the existence of the contract awards and the special verdict findings
    when we affirmed the judgment “in all other respects.”
    Further, the cases Plaintiffs rely upon do not involve remittitur
    interpretation, and do not aid them. Bond v. United Railroads of San
    Francisco (1915) 
    169 Cal. 273
     (Bond) and Woodcock v. Fontana Scaffolding &
    Equip. Co. (1968) 
    69 Cal.2d 452
     (Woodcock) held in pertinent part that when
    a judgment is vacated and a new judgment is thereafter entered, the time to
    file for a new trial runs from the latter. (Bond, at pp. 274-276 [wrongful
    death action; in second appeal, reversing order striking notice of motion for
    new trial from larger judgment on remand]; Woodcock, at pp. 459-460
    [workplace injury case; reversing with directions to enter judgment with
    offset, without prejudice to renewal of new trial motion for inadequate
    damages].) Fassberg Construction Co. v. Housing Authority of City of Los
    Angeles (2007) 
    152 Cal.App.4th 720
     (Fassberg) applied Woodcock in crafting
    its disposition. (Id. at p. 753 [construction contract dispute involving reversal
    in part, including for application of an offset; explaining it was reversing with
    directions to reduce the award, to allow for a new trial on inadequate
    damages].)
    17
    Here, the issue is not the availability of a new trial on remand, in
    general, but whether the trial court’s ability to resolve motions on remand
    was foreclosed by the scope of a particular, prior appellate disposition and
    remittitur—an issue these cases did not address. (California Building
    Industry Assn. v. State Water Resources Control Bd. (2018) 
    4 Cal.5th 1032
    ,
    1043 [“cases are not authority for propositions that are not considered”].)8
    We also reject Plaintiffs’ related suggestion that they were unfairly
    denied the chance to address the issues they tried to raise on remand. We do
    not see how. Plaintiffs state they were preparing new trial and JNOV
    motions, but the remedy election rendered them “unnecessary” and their
    setoff correction motion was deemed moot. Even if the grant of the remedy
    election foreclosed further posttrial proceedings, it is unclear why Plaintiffs
    did not make their arguments protectively in the first appeal. Defendants’
    appeal from the judgment challenged only the remedy election, raising the
    possibility that we would reverse the election and otherwise affirm—as we
    did. Plaintiffs filed a cross-appeal, but addressed only P&P’s licensing
    compliance and one protective issue regarding the alleged inconsistency of
    the fraud and misrepresentation verdicts. They could have raised others.
    We recognize Plaintiffs made what they call a “contingent request for
    new trial” in the respondents’ portion of their combined brief. They sought
    further proceedings, if we reversed because the trial court failed to
    8      The earlier opinion in Bond addressed new trial proceedings in its
    disposition, but the later opinion did not discuss this language or focus on
    trial court jurisdiction. (See Bond v. United Railroads of San Francisco
    (1911) 
    159 Cal. 270
    , 287 [disposition was “without prejudice to any pending
    motion of the defendant for a new trial, or to the right of the defendant, if any
    it has, to move thereafter for a new trial”]; Bond, supra, 169 Cal. at pp. 274-
    277.) Woodcock and Fassberg did not involve prior appeals.
    18
    appropriately reconcile the contract and negligence verdicts, and said
    elsewhere in that part of their brief that these verdicts were not consistent.
    But Defendants’ position was that the contract and negligence verdicts were
    consistent, and it was the remedy election that was the problem—thus we did
    not need to address the consistency or reconciliation of these verdicts, and did
    not do so. Moreover, given established appellate burdens, Plaintiffs’ passing
    request for a new trial was insufficient to obtain affirmative relief. (Preserve
    Poway v. City of Poway (2016) 
    245 Cal.App.4th 560
    , 587 [absent cross-appeal,
    respondent cannot challenge different portions of judgment]; Cahill v. San
    Diego Gas & Electric Co. (2011) 
    194 Cal.App.4th 939
    , 956 [if party “ ‘ “fails to
    raise a point, or asserts it but fails to support it with reasoned argument and
    citations to authority, we treat the point as waived” ’ ”].) The fact that we
    confirmed we were reversing because of the remedy election, in rejecting the
    request, also did not mean it remained open for discussion on remand.
    c. Law of the Case Is Not at Issue
    Plaintiffs contend the trial court “incorrectly believed” our rejection of
    their contingent new trial request was law of the case. The court denied their
    motions because of the law governing remittitur, not law of the case, and they
    identify nothing in the record to suggest otherwise.
    Nor would the absence of law of the case entitle them to anything on
    remand. The law of the case doctrine provides that where a reviewing court
    “ ‘ “states in its opinion a principle or rule of law necessary to the decision,
    that principle or rule becomes the law of the case and must be adhered to
    throughout its subsequent progress. . . .” ’ ” (People v. Stanley (1995) 
    10 Cal.4th 764
    , 786.) But the “terms of the remittitur define the trial court’s
    jurisdiction, not law of the case. The force of the remittitur does not depend
    on, nor is it limited by the law of the case.” (People v. Dutra (2006) 145
    
    19 Cal.App.4th 1359
    , 1367.) Further, law of the case is meant to discourage, not
    facilitate, piecemeal litigation. (See Fogel v. Chestnutt (2d Cir. 1981) 
    668 F.2d 100
    , 109 [“It would be absurd that a party who has chosen not to argue a
    point on a first appeal should stand better as regards the law of the case than
    one who had argued and lost”]; cf. Yu v. Signet Bank/Virginia (2002) 
    103 Cal.App.4th 298
    , 312, disapproved on other grounds in Newport Harbor
    Ventures, LLC v. Morris Cerullo World Evangelism (2018) 
    4 Cal.5th 637
    [“Litigants are not free to continually reinvent their position on legal issues
    that have been resolved against them by an appellate court”].)
    d. Plaintiffs Do Not Establish the Setoff Was Clerical Error
    Plaintiffs contend the portion of the judgment addressing the
    negligence setoffs was a clerical error, which the trial court could correct.
    Not so.
    “ ‘The test which distinguishes clerical error from possible judicial
    error is simply whether the challenged portion of the judgment was entered
    inadvertently (which is clerical error) versus advertently (which might be
    judicial error, but is not clerical error). [Citation.] Unless the challenged
    portion of the judgment was entered inadvertently, it cannot be changed post
    judgment under the guise of correction of clerical error.’ ” (Bell, supra, 135
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1144.)
    According to Plaintiffs, the judgment “inadvertently” indicated the trial
    court issued an order on the setoffs, even though no order was entered and
    the court ruled without prejudice. But the trial court did rule on the setoffs,
    it entered a judgment including that ruling, and Plaintiffs do not establish
    this inclusion was a mistake. (See Bell, supra, 135 Cal.App.4th at p. 1144
    [disagreeing trial court had “power to amend the prejudgment interest rate
    provided in the judgment as a clerical error” on remand, where record
    20
    disclosed no “inadvertent error,” among other reasons].) As for the court’s
    willingness to revisit the setoffs, the court acknowledged the numbers could
    change if Plaintiffs established allocations. But the court also stated, “[l]et’s
    go forward assuming there wasn’t [any allocation],” and then entered the
    judgment with the existing setoff—implying the ruling was sufficiently final
    in the court’s view to do so.
    2. We Do Not Address Plaintiffs’ Motions or Judgment Requests
    Having concluded the trial court properly interpreted our disposition in
    declining to rule on Plaintiffs’ motions, we do not reach the merits of those
    motions. We also have rejected Plaintiffs’ attempt to characterize the
    negligence setoff as a clerical error. Accordingly, we reject Plaintiffs’ requests
    to modify the judgment for Dickerson or remand for a new trial, and we will
    affirm.
    II. Appeals from the Prevailing Party Determination
    P&P argues the trial court abused its discretion by denying them
    prevailing party status under Civil Code section 1717, while Dickerson
    argues the court erred by denying his evidentiary objections.9 We conclude
    neither argument has merit, and affirm the trial court’s order.
    A. Additional Facts
    During the home construction, Dickerson came to believe P&P was
    overcharging, requested additional documentation, and stopped making
    payments in late 2008. P&P consulted with attorney Leo Beus. He
    responded to Dickerson in or around February 2009, and notified him that he
    owed additional amounts. Dickerson filed suit in April 2009, and P&P’s
    cross-complaint followed. The operative cross-complaint alleged Dickerson
    9     Further statutory references are to the Civil Code, unless noted.
    21
    breached the contract by failing to pay “costs,” “fees,” and “cost escalations,
    extended overhead, and delay damages,” and sought damages exceeding
    $1 million with interest.
    P&P’s prevailing party motion sought $4,928,699.75 in attorney fees.
    P&P argued, in substance, that their primary objective was to limit
    Dickerson’s contract claim as reflected in his $4,264,000 trial demand, while
    their contract claim of $1,354,258.81 was a secondary objective, and they
    achieved their goals. Dickerson opposed the motion, contending, in part, that
    he made settlement offers to P&P for lower amounts. He provided evidence
    of section 998 offers of $30,000 on the cross-complaint in early 2011 and
    $980,000 on all claims later in 2011, as well as an informal offer of $840,000
    (or up to policy limits) for the entire case in 2013. He also filed objections to
    declarations filed by P&P, which we discuss post.
    The trial court heard P&P’s motion in July 2019 and ruled there was no
    prevailing party under section 1717. In its order, the court quoted the
    portions of the judgment after remittitur that reflected the parties’ contract
    recoveries, including Dickerson’s $160,000 credit. The court stated Hsu v.
    Abbara (1995) 
    9 Cal.4th 863
     (Hsu) set forth the applicable analysis, and
    explained:
    “[B]oth [Dickerson] and P&P recovered on their respective
    contract claims, but the amount of their respective recoveries
    was reduced based on the other’s recovery. Given this ‘mixed’
    result, under Hsu, the court considers the arguments and
    evidence at trial and compares ‘the extent to which each party
    ha[s] succeeded and failed to succeed in its contentions’ and
    finds that neither party obtained its primary litigation
    objective on the contract claims—P&P did not completely
    defeat [Dickerson’s] breach of contract claim and recovered
    only $375,000 of the $1,354.258.81 sought on its cross-
    complaint breach of contract claim. [Dickerson] recovered on
    his breach of contract claim (thereby reducing [his] liability on
    22
    P&P’s breach of contract claim) but [he] recovered significantly
    less than the $4,264,000 initially sought.”
    The court then described Dickerson’s settlement offers, and stated: “The
    court compares Plaintiff’s recovery of $0 on a $980,000.00[ ] claim . . . with
    P&P’s recovery of $375,000.00 on a $1,354,258.81 claim . . . . Based on this
    comparison, both sides’ recoveries were approximately $980,000.00 less than
    what was sought.”
    The trial court further stated that, “[a]lthough not dispositive,” it
    considered the jury verdict for Dickerson’s contract claim of “$707,849.00,
    offset/reduced by P&P’s recovery of $535,000.00 on its cross-complaint
    contract claim for a total award of $169,849.00”—seemingly referencing his
    contract recovery after the remedy election, but prior to the first appeal. The
    court also distinguished P&P’s authorities, and overruled Dickerson’s
    evidentiary objections. Both parties appealed.
    B. Applicable Law
    Under section 1717, the prevailing party in an action to enforce a
    contract is entitled to reasonable attorney fees when the contract provides for
    such award. (§ 1717, subd. (a).) It is the role of the trial court to “determine
    who is the party prevailing on the contract for purposes of this section . . . .”
    (§ 1717, subd (b)(1).) A party who obtains a “ ‘simple, unqualified win’ ” on
    the contract is entitled to recover attorney fees. (Hsu, 
    supra,
     
    9 Cal.4th 863
    ,
    877.) But “[i]f neither party achieves a complete victory on all the contract
    claims, it is within the discretion of the trial court to determine . . . neither
    party prevailed sufficiently to justify an award of attorney fees.” (Scott Co. of
    California v. Blount, Inc. (1999) 
    20 Cal.4th 1103
    , 1109.)
    “[I]n deciding whether there is a ‘party prevailing on the contract,’ the
    trial court is to compare the relief awarded on the contract claim or claims
    with the parties’ demands on those same claims and their litigation objectives
    23
    as disclosed by the pleadings, trial briefs, opening statements, and similar
    sources. The prevailing party determination is to be made only upon final
    resolution of the contract claims and only by ‘a comparison of the extent to
    which each party ha[s] succeeded and failed to succeed in its contentions.’ ”
    (Hsu, 
    supra,
     9 Cal.4th at p. 876.) “[I]n determining litigation success, courts
    should respect substance rather than form, and to this extent should be
    guided by ‘equitable considerations.’ ” (Id. at p. 877, italics omitted.)
    We apply abuse of discretion review. “The trial court exercises a
    particularly ‘wide discretion’ in determining who, if anyone, is the prevailing
    party for purposes of section 1717 . . . . To overturn that determination on
    appeal, the objecting party must demonstrate ‘a clear abuse of discretion.’ ”
    (Blickman Turkus, LP v. MF Downtown Sunnyvale, LLC (2008) 
    162 Cal.App.4th 858
    , 894.) The ruling “ ‘will not be overturned in the absence of
    a manifest abuse of discretion, a prejudicial error of law, or necessary
    findings not supported by substantial evidence.’ ” (Ibid.)
    C. Analysis
    1. The Prevailing Party Ruling Was Not an Abuse of Discretion
    The trial court determined there was no prevailing party, because the
    results were mixed and neither side achieved their primary objective. P&P
    contends this ruling was an abuse of its discretion. We disagree.
    The flawed premise of P&P’s position is that one must carry out the
    prevailing party analysis based on “arithmetical reality,” which in their view
    meant Dickerson sought the amount of his trial demand; P&P’s litigation
    objective was defeating that demand, as their claim was smaller; and P&P
    clearly achieved greater relief. As we will explain, this mechanical approach
    is misguided, and P&P’s related suggestion that the trial court erred by not
    using it lacks force. We then address why the court reasonably found
    24
    Dickerson’s objective was lower than his trial demand, and P&P’s objective
    included prevailing on their breach of contract claim. Finally, we conclude
    the record reflects the results were indeed mixed, and the court did not abuse
    its discretion by denying prevailing party status.
    a. The Prevailing Party Analysis Is Not Mechanical
    P&P urges us to focus on certain numbers, including amounts sought
    and percentage recoveries, and suggests the trial court erred in applying Hsu
    and another case, de la Cuesta v. Benham (2011) 
    193 Cal.App.4th 1287
     (de la
    Cuesta).
    But, “there is more to section 1717 than a merely mechanical
    determination.” (Sears v. Baccaglio (1998) 
    60 Cal.App.4th 1136
    , 1154
    (Sears).) The prevailing party determination turns on which party achieves
    “greater relief,” which implicates equitable considerations, not just monetary
    recovery. (§ 1717, subd. (b); Hsu, 
    supra,
     9 Cal.4th at p. 876; Sears, at p. 1151
    [term “greater relief” includes “ ‘[s]uperior in quality’ ”]; cf. Goodman v.
    Lozano (2010) 
    47 Cal.4th 1327
    , 1335, fn. 3 (Goodman) [declining to construe
    Code Civ. Proc., § 1032, which turns on “net monetary recovery” in light of
    § 1717, because the latter involves “greater relief”].) And, further, these
    considerations are left to the trial court’s “broad discretion.” (Jackson v.
    Homeowners Assn. Monte Vista Estates-East (2001) 
    93 Cal.App.4th 773
    , 788
    (Jackson).) The trial court here, which has presided over the case for more
    than a decade, was “in the best position to determine the degree to which
    either party succeeded at trial.” (See Olive v. General Nutrition Centers, Inc.
    (2018) 
    30 Cal.App.5th 804
    , 829, fn. 15 (Olive).)
    In turn, the trial court properly applied the standards articulated in
    Hsu and utilized in de la Cuesta when it determined there was no prevailing
    party. The cases themselves are distinguishable. Hsu involved a “simple,
    25
    unqualified win,” not mixed results. (Hsu, 
    supra,
     9 Cal.4th at pp. 876-877
    [reversing denial of fees in residential real estate dispute; defendants
    “successfully defended the only contract claim in their litigation”].) de la
    Cuesta was a mixed results case, but with results “so lopsided” that the trial
    court abused its discretion by denying prevailing party status. (de la Cuesta,
    supra, 193 Cal.App.4th at p. 1290; id. at p. 1299 [landlord “clearly” achieved “
    ‘greater’ part of its two litigation objectives,” repossession and about 70% of
    back rent sought, whereas tenant had claimed she owed nothing and
    vacated].) Yet, despite reversing the trial court, the Court of Appeal in de la
    Cuesta still declined to adopt “a one-size-fits-all rule.” (Id. at p. 1296
    [discretion clause was in § 1717 “to allow trial courts to take into account the
    unique facts and circumstances of each case”].) The trial court here properly
    applied the law to the record, as we will now explain.
    b. The Trial Court’s Determination of Dickerson’s Objective
    Was Reasonable
    P&P contends the trial court erroneously characterized Dickerson’s
    objective as an amount below his trial demand. The record supports the trial
    court’s determination of his objective.
    Dickerson was pursuing multiple grounds for damages, through
    multiple, overlapping causes of action. Some damages sought at trial were
    not available in contract, including $478,947.75 for the seawall and amounts
    for work by James Papenhausen II doing business as Papenhausen
    Construction. Further, as the trial court recognized, Dickerson’s demand
    could also reflect his “wildest dreams” or his counsel’s strategy. (See Sukut-
    Coulson, Inc. v. Allied Canon Co. (1978) 
    85 Cal.App.3d 648
    , 656 [affirming
    fees for plaintiff, even though it did not recover amount stated in complaint;
    defendants were not prevailing parties under § 1717 “merely because the
    plaintiff’s recovery did not correspond to its wildest dreams”]; de la Cuesta,
    26
    supra, 193 Cal.App.4th at p. 1296 [prevailing landlord sought $103,000 “at
    his most exuberant,” and received $70,000]; id. at fn. 5 [noting “complete
    victory” is not dispositive, and describing counsel’s dilemma: “Risk a
    malpractice suit by not asserting maximal claims, or risk a malpractice suit
    by forfeiting ‘prevailing party’ status . . . by asserting maximal claims”].)
    We therefore disagree with P&P that “nothing substantive” in the
    record reflects Dickerson’s litigation objective was lower than his trial
    demand. We note P&P’s failure to set forth all material evidence on the
    issue, such as the unavailability of certain amounts in contract, would be
    fatal to their argument regardless. (Cf. Foreman & Clark Corp. v. Fallon
    (1971) 
    3 Cal.3d 875
    , 881 [substantial evidence challenge must “set
    forth . . . all the material evidence” or “the error is deemed to be waived”].)
    Their reliance on facts they view as helpful to them—the trial length,
    Dickerson’s use of numerous experts, and his closing arguments—is
    unavailing.
    P&P also does not establish reversible error based on the trial court’s
    consideration of Dickerson’s settlement offers. (See Marina Pacifica
    Homeowners Assn. v. Southern California Financial Corp. (2018) 
    20 Cal.App.5th 191
    , 204 [declining to consider settlement communications,
    stating they are not comparable to the “ ‘pleadings, trial briefs, [and] opening
    statements’ ” cited in Hsu].) We “do not review the trial court’s reasoning,
    but rather its ruling.” (J.B. Aguerre, Inc. v. American Guarantee & Liability
    Ins. Co. (1997) 
    59 Cal.App.4th 6
    , 15; cf. Day v. Alta Bates Medical Ctr. (2002)
    
    98 Cal.App.4th 243
    , 252, fn. 1 [reviewing court may affirm “ ‘on any basis
    presented by the record’ ”].) We need not and do not decide whether the court
    erred in considering the settlement offers, because its conclusion that
    27
    Dickerson’s litigation objective was less than his trial demand was supported
    by the record, regardless of the offers.10
    c. The Trial Court’s Determination of P&P’s Objective Was
    Reasonable
    P&P argues the court failed to appreciate that defense of Dickerson’s
    claim was their central litigation objective. They reason that in a high-stakes
    case, defense is “superior” to a counterclaim of lower value, and because their
    claim was less than Dickerson’s, defense was their main goal. The trial court
    reasonably could find P&P’s objective included prevailing on their cross-
    complaint, and reject their arguments to the contrary.
    P&P sought $1,354,258.81 based on Dickerson’s alleged failure to pay
    certain amounts in costs and fees, not just offsets to Dickerson’s claimed
    damages. (See Cussler v. Crusader Entertainment, LLC (2012) 
    212 Cal.App.4th 356
    , 368-369 [rejecting producer’s argument that it prevailed in
    dispute with author because its cross-complaint was “ ‘defensive’ ”; producer
    “did not simply argue that [author’s] alleged damages should be set off,” but
    rather “sought millions of dollars”]; Zintel Holdings, LLC v. McLean (2012)
    
    209 Cal.App.4th 431
    , 440 [affirming denial of prevailing party status to
    defendant who claimed cross-complaint was “essentially defensive,” where it
    “sought monetary damages unrelated to the complaint, expanded discovery
    10     Given our conclusion, we do not address P&P’s further point that, even
    if the trial court could consider Dickerson’s settlement offers as evidence of
    his litigation objective, it applied a “false equivalence” by using P&P’s trial
    demand for their goal, rather than Dickerson’s offer on the cross-complaint.
    We note P&P cites no authority that an opponent’s view of a litigant’s goal is
    relevant. Additionally, P&P elsewhere asserts another error; namely, that
    the trial court improperly considered Dickerson’s post-remedy election
    recovery. As we will explain, the record supports the court’s findings on the
    parties’ results too, and we do not reach that purported error, either.
    28
    and led to substantial briefing”].) Further, the record reflects P&P’s counsel
    began claiming Dickerson owed more money under the home construction
    contract as early as February 2009—before he filed suit in April 2009.
    (Cussler, at p. 368 [prior to author suing, producer “hired litigation counsel
    and accused [author] of breaching the contract”].) The trial court was not
    required to accept P&P’s claim that their objective had been primarily
    defensive. (See Hsu, 
    supra,
     9 Cal.4th at p. 875, fn. 10 [where there are cross-
    actions and no recovery, “if” the court finds defendant’s action is essentially
    defensive, it “may” find defendant prevailed].)
    P&P contends Goodman, 
    supra,
     
    47 Cal.4th 1327
    , and Silver Creek, LLC
    v. BlackRock Realty Advisors, Inc. (2009) 
    173 Cal.App.4th 1533
     illustrate
    their primary litigation objective must have been defensive. But neither
    turned on disputed litigation objectives, and they are otherwise
    distinguishable. Goodman affirmed a Code of Civil Procedure section 1032
    prevailing party ruling for construction defect defendants who achieved their
    undisputed goal of keeping damages below plaintiffs’ prior settlements; this
    result, the Court held, meant plaintiffs did not have a net monetary recovery
    under section 1032. (Goodman, at pp. 1330, 1339.) Here, the defendant’s
    goal for purposes of section 1717 is at issue, and section 1032 is not. In Silver
    Creek, the Court of Appeal reversed the denial of section 1717 prevailing
    party status for a plaintiff who secured a declaration that it validly
    terminated large real estate contracts, while the defendant’s cross-complaint
    resulted only in return of its deposit. (Silver Creek, at p. 1537.) The trial
    court erred because, although it recognized the plaintiff’s claim was “most
    important” to both sides, it oversimplified the analysis by “counting the
    number of contract claims . . . and essentially declaring a tie.” (Id. at
    29
    p. 1540.) In contrast, the trial court here reasonably found the parties’
    objectives included prevailing on their respective claims, and properly
    compared their results.
    d. The Trial Court Reasonably Determined Neither Party
    Achieved Their Objective
    Finally, P&P maintains they achieved their objective by defeating
    Dickerson’s claim and partially recovering on their own, while he recovered a
    “mere 3.7%” and thus failed to achieve his objective. This argument turns on
    P&P’s mechanical approach, and our rejection of that approach disposes of
    the argument.
    Focusing on substance over form, as we must, the record reflects the
    results here were indeed mixed. (See Hsu, 
    supra,
     9 Cal.4th at p. 877.) The
    jury awarded Dickerson $160,000 for delays and overcharges on his contract
    claim (which he received as a credit against P&P’s contract recovery), and
    awarded P&P $535,000 on their contract claim (which was reduced by the
    $160,000 to $375,000). Each party thus established contract liability by the
    other, but recovered only some of the damages sought, and neither fully
    defeated the other’s claim. Further, a large portion of Dickerson’s damages
    were for construction defects, which he and Paradiso pursued, and proved, in
    their negligence claim. Although the prevailing party determination does not
    involve noncontract claims, it is guided by equitable considerations. (Hsu, at
    pp. 873-874, 877.) And equity does not permit what P&P appears to urge:
    viewing the defects as part of Dickerson’s trial demand, to magnify his
    supposed failure, while ignoring his success in proving P&P was liable for the
    defects. Ultimately, these results were not so lopsided that there was a clear
    winner. (Cf. de la Cuesta, supra, 193 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1290, 1299.)
    30
    On this record, we conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion
    in finding there was no prevailing party. This outcome is consistent with
    other mixed results cases. (See Marina Pacifica, supra, 20 Cal.App.5th at
    pp. 206-207 [trial court did not abuse its discretion by declining to find
    defendant assignee was the prevailing party in a dispute with a condominium
    association, where it received 40 percent of its claimed damages]; cf. Olive,
    supra, 30 Cal.App.5th at pp. 827-828 [applying Hsu to fees under Civ. Code,
    § 3344, and affirming there was no prevailing party; model won over $1.1
    million in suit against advertiser, but sought much more, and advertiser had
    tried to limit damages to the thousands]; Jackson, supra, 93 Cal.App.4th at
    pp. 788-789 [affirming prevailing party status for homeowners who secured
    removal of rental ban they contested and a $2,500 settlement, even though
    homeowners’ association avoided injunctive relief and the payment was
    nominal, noting the “substantial arguments” for each side and trial court’s
    “broad discretion”].)11
    2. The Trial Court’s Evidentiary Rulings Were Not an Abuse
    of Discretion
    11      We briefly dispense with two remaining issues. P&P argues the trial
    court “labored to, and did, inappropriately engineer a no prevailing party
    outcome.” But P&P does not show the court was biased, and we presume it
    properly carried out its duties. (Evid. Code, § 664; Acree v. General Motors
    Acceptance Corp. (2001) 
    92 Cal.App.4th 385
    , 400.) The parties also blame
    each other for questionable tactics and motives. Such accusations have no
    place in the analysis. (Hsu, 
    supra,
     9 Cal.4th at p. 877 [courts generally “may
    not invoke equitable considerations unrelated to litigation success, such
    as . . . behavior during settlement negotiations”]; Silver Creek, supra, 173
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1540 [Hsu “cautioned against examining . . . litigation
    tactics”].) The trial court properly focused on the parties’ objectives and
    results, and so do we.
    31
    Dickerson brings a protective cross-appeal in the event we reverse the
    prevailing party order, contending the trial court erred by overruling his
    evidentiary objections. Although we affirm the order, we address this
    argument in the interest of finality and reject it.
    P&P filed attorney declarations with their prevailing party motion,
    including from litigation counsel Sean Schwerdtfeger and insurance counsel
    Vik Nagpal. According to P&P, the declarations “detail[ed] the amount of the
    [fee] award sought” and explained “how and why” the fees were incurred.
    Dickerson objected to statements by Schwerdtfeger, including that Plaintiffs
    pursued their claims with “extreme vigor” and put defendants at risk of
    nondischargeable liability for fraud. He also objected to Nagpal’s statement
    that there was no “meaningful effort to resolve the claims” against P&P, as
    Dickerson’s pretrial demand was for claims under the policy and left
    uncovered claims like punitive damages for trial. The trial court summarily
    denied the objections.
    We review evidentiary rulings for prejudicial abuse of discretion. (See,
    Evid. Code, § 353; Christ v. Schwartz (2016) 
    2 Cal.App.5th 440
    , 446-447.)
    Dickerson establishes neither error, nor prejudice. He contends fraud and
    punitive damages did not involve relief on the contract, and the statements
    were thus irrelevant to the prevailing party analysis. But the trial court
    impliedly could find the statements potentially relevant to the amount of the
    fee request. (See Bell v. Vista Unified School Dist. (2000) 
    82 Cal.App.4th 672
    ,
    687; In re Marriage of Drake (1997) 
    53 Cal.App.4th 1139
    , 1167.) Further,
    Dickerson appears to acknowledge the ruling did not prejudice him, and on
    this record we do not see how it could. Whatever purpose the court
    envisioned for the statements at issue, there is no indication it relied upon
    them in making its prevailing party determination.
    32
    We conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion by determining
    there was no prevailing party or by overruling Dickerson’s evidentiary
    objections.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment after remittitur and order on prevailing party
    determination are affirmed. The parties are to bear their own costs on
    appeal.
    IRION, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    O’ROURKE, Acting P. J.
    GUERRERO, J.
    33