Hill v. Affirmed Housing Group ( 2014 )


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  • /Filed 6/9/14
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    JAMES C. HILL et al.,                               H038874
    (Santa Clara County
    Plaintiffs and Appellants,                 Super. Ct. No. 1-07-CV087095)
    v.
    DIDIER DEGERY et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    Plaintiffs James C. Hill and Dawn L. Hill as trustees under a revocable trust dated
    February 17, 1977 (the Hills) appeal from a postjudgment order awarding contractual
    attorney fees to Affirmed Housing Group (Affirmed) under Civil Code section 1717.
    We find no abuse of discretion and affirm.
    I.       FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In the underlying suit, the Hills sued San Jose Family Housing Partners, LLC
    (LLC) and Affirmed, a managing member of LLC, for alleged violations of a written
    easement agreement.1 LLC and Affirmed (collectively defendants) were jointly
    represented by the law firm of Incorvaia & Associates at a bench trial on the Hills’
    claims. In their joint trial brief, defendants argued that, under Corporations Code section
    17101, Affirmed could not be liable for LLC’s actions solely because of its status as a
    member of LLC. Defendants also jointly argued that the easement could not lawfully be
    enforced and, in any event, they had not violated the easement.
    1
    The Hills also sued a third defendant, Didier DeGery, who was dismissed before
    trial and is not a party to this appeal.
    The trial court ruled that Affirmed was immune from suit under Corporations
    Code section 17101, noting that the Hills had presented no evidence to show that
    Affirmed engaged in any conduct outside of its capacity as a member of LLC. As to
    LLC, the court rejected the illegality defense and concluded LCC had violated the
    easement agreement. Following entry of judgment in its favor, Affirmed moved to
    recover attorney fees and costs pursuant to Civil Code section 1717. The trial court
    denied that motion on two independent grounds: (1) Affirmed was not a prevailing party
    on the underlying contract; and (2) Affirmed was barred from recovery based on the
    principle of unity of interest.
    On appeal, we reversed the order denying Affirmed’s motion for attorney fees,
    reasoning that (1) Affirmed was the prevailing party vis-à-vis the Hills; (2) the unity of
    interest principle does not apply to Civil Code section 1717; and (3) even if the unity of
    interest principle were applicable, it would not bar Affirmed’s claim for attorney fees
    because “Affirmed prevailed at trial on an entirely separate defense from those raised by
    LLC”--its statutory immunity. (Hill v. Affirmed Housing Group (Mar. 12, 2012,
    H035541) [nonpub. opn.].) In a footnote, we noted: “the record does not disclose
    whether or not Affirmed moved for summary judgment on its affirmative defense of
    statutory immunity. Since the Hills presented no evidence at trial to overcome that
    defense, we presume Affirmed would have prevailed on such a motion, thus avoiding the
    (likely substantial) attorney fees generated both in preparing for trial and in the course of
    the trial itself.” (Ibid.) We remanded the matter to the trial court “for a determination of
    the amount of reasonable attorney fees to be awarded to Affirmed.” (Ibid.) We also
    ruled that “Affirmed shall recover its costs on appeal.” (Ibid.)
    On remand, Affirmed filed a renewed motion for an award of attorney fees and
    costs. It sought $299,401.61 in contractual attorney fees and costs incurred in the trial
    court and $27,665.12 in attorney fees and costs incurred on the initial appeal. The trial
    2
    court awarded Affirmed the full amount of fees it requested, finding the hours billed and
    billing rates to be reasonable. The Hills timely appealed.
    II.    DISCUSSION
    A.     Governing Legal Principles and Standard of Review
    Civil Code section 1717, subdivision (a) provides that where attorney fees are
    authorized by contract, “the prevailing party . . . shall be entitled to reasonable attorney’s
    fees,” which “shall be fixed by the court.” “The trial court has broad discretion to
    determine the amount of a reasonable fee, and the award of such fees is governed by
    equitable principles.” (EnPalm, LCC v. Teitler (2008) 
    162 Cal.App.4th 770
    , 774
    (EnPalm).) In fixing a reasonable fee, the court first computes “the lodestar figure--a
    calculation based on the number of hours reasonably expended multiplied by the lawyer’s
    hourly rate.” (Ibid.) Second, the court may adjust the lodestar to ensure that the fee
    awarded is reasonable in view of various factors, including “the nature and difficulty of
    the litigation, the amount of money involved, the skill required and employed to handle
    the case, the attention given, the success or failure, . . . ‘necessity for and the nature of the
    litigation,’ ” as well as other circumstances of the case. (Ibid.)
    “We will reverse a fee award only if there has been a manifest abuse of
    discretion.” (EnPalm, supra, 162 Cal.App.4th at p. 774.) The Hills bear the burden of
    affirmatively establishing that the trial court abused its discretion. (Ritter & Ritter, Inc.
    Pension & Profit Plan v. The Churchill Condominium Assn. (2008) 
    166 Cal.App.4th 103
    ,
    128.) On matters as to which the record is silent, we indulge all intendments and
    presumptions to support the trial court’s order. (Ibid.)
    B.      Contentions on Appeal
    With respect to the lodestar figure the trial court employed in awarding attorney
    fees to Affirmed, the Hills argue that the number of hours should have been reduced to
    eliminate hours the joint counsel billed on behalf of LLC. In other words, the Hills
    contend that the trial court erred by not apportioning between fees incurred by Affirmed
    3
    and those incurred by LLC. The Hills further contend that the trial court erred by not
    reducing the lodestar figure, which they contend was unreasonably high because (1)
    Affirmed rode LLC’s “coattails” in defending the case, (2) any award of attorney fees
    will result in a windfall to LLC because Affirmed is a managing member of LLC, and (3)
    Affirmed failed to mitigate its attorney fees. The Hills also argue that the trial court
    abused its discretion by granting Affirmed attorney fees in connection with its first
    successful appeal.
    C.     The Trial Court Did Not Err By Failing to Apportion the Fees
    The Hills contend that the trial court erred by awarding Affirmed all of the fees
    incurred by both defendants in their joint defense. The court’s failure to apportion
    between fees incurred by Affirmed and those incurred by LLC was an abuse of
    discretion, the Hills maintain. Affirmed responds that apportionment was not possible,
    let alone required, because all of LLC’s defenses applied to, and were raised jointly by,
    Affirmed. Accordingly, urges Affirmed, all of the time spent defending LLC necessarily
    also was spent defending Affirmed.
    A prevailing defendant “may recover only reasonable attorney fees incurred in
    [its] defense of the action by [the plaintiff].” (Zintel Holdings, LLC v. McLean (2012)
    
    209 Cal.App.4th 431
    , 443.) “To the extent [a prevailing defendant’s] shared counsel
    engaged in litigation activity on behalf of [a codefendant] for which fees are not
    recoverable, the [trial] court has broad discretion to apportion fees.” (Ibid.) “ ‘A court
    may apportion fees even where the issues are connected, related or intertwined.’ ” (Ibid.)
    And, “ ‘although time-keeping and billing procedures may make a requested segregation
    difficult, they do not, without more, make it impossible.’ ” (Heppler v. J.M. Peters Co.
    (1999) 
    73 Cal.App.4th 1265
    , 1297.) “Allocation of fees incurred in representing multiple
    parties is not required,” however, when the claims at issue are “ ‘ “ ‘inextricably
    intertwined,’ ” ’ ” such that it is not possible to differentiate between compensable and
    noncompensable time. (Cruz v. Ayromloo (2007) 
    155 Cal.App.4th 1270
    , 1277 (Cruz).)
    4
    The Hills do not dispute that Affirmed is entitled to recover fees for the time
    counsel billed in connection with Affirmed’s successful statutory immunity defense.
    Their complaint relates to the time spent asserting the defendants’ two joint defenses.
    The Hills maintain that all of the fees related to the joint defenses should be allocated to
    LLC because those defenses were raised by LLC, and Affirmed did not incur “separate
    and distinct attorney’s fees” in connection with those defenses. But that contention
    simply proves that apportionment was not required because the defenses asserted by LLC
    and Affirmed were “so interrelated that it would have been impossible to separate them
    into [time units billed on behalf of Affirmed] for which attorney fees are properly
    awarded and [time units billed on behalf of LLC] for which they are not.” (Akins v.
    Enterprise Rent-A-Car Co. (2000) 
    79 Cal.App.4th 1127
    , 1133.)
    We agree with Affirmed that this case is analogous to Cruz, supra, 
    155 Cal.App.4th 1270
    , in which the court held that apportionment of fees incurred by the
    jointly-represented plaintiffs was impracticable because their claims were inextricably
    intertwined. In Cruz, “[a]ll [the plaintiffs] asserted the same causes of action. The[ir]
    attorneys conducted legal research pertaining to the overarching legal issues common to
    all [plaintiffs] . . . [and] had to do the same legal research and analysis in preparing their
    case on behalf of [plaintiffs], irrespective of the number of potential [plaintiffs]
    benefiting from the legal work performed.” (Id. at p. 1278.) Likewise, here, both LLC
    and Affirmed asserted the joint defenses, and their counsel would have been required to
    do the same legal research and analysis in preparing those defenses regardless of whether
    they applied to both defendants or to Affirmed only. “[T]he fact [that LLC] incidentally
    benefited from the legal work performed on behalf of [Affirmed] does not diminish
    [Affirmed’s] contractual right to recover attorney fees litigating issues common to” both
    defendants. (Ibid.)
    5
    D.     The Trial Court Did Not Abuse its Discretion by Refusing to Decrease the
    Lodestar Amount
    In support of their contention that the trial court should have reduced the lodestar
    amount (or denied Affirmed attorney fees entirely), the Hills advance three arguments:
    (1) the “coattails” argument, (2) the “windfall” argument, and (3) the mitigation
    argument. None has merit.
    As we understand it, the coattails argument is that an award of fees to Affirmed
    will unfairly compensate it for work done primarily on behalf of LLC. That same
    concern underlies the apportionment issue and is addressed adequately, in that context,
    above. The coattails argument also appears to be premised on the contention that
    Affirmed--despite being a prevailing party on the Hills’ contract claim against it--is not
    entitled to attorney fees because its codefendant, LLC, was not also a prevailing party.
    We addressed and rejected that theory in our prior opinion in connection with the Hills’
    unity of interest argument.
    Like the coattails argument, the Hills’ windfall argument essentially rehashes the
    unity of interest argument (i.e., because LLC lost Affirmed should not get fees), and fails
    for that reason. Moreover, the Hills merely speculate that an award of fees to Affirmed
    will end up in LLC’s pockets. The trial court’s apparent refusal to credit that hypothesis
    does not constitute an abuse of discretion.
    The Hills’ claim that Affirmed should have mitigated their attorney fees by
    moving for summary judgment on statutory immunity grounds is based entirely on a
    footnote in our earlier, unpublished decision. The Hills fail to cite a single case reducing
    an award of attorney fees for failure to mitigate. Accordingly, we consider the argument
    to have been abandoned. (Berger v. Godden (1985) 
    163 Cal.App.3d 1113
    , 1117 [“the
    failure of appellant to advance any pertinent or intelligible legal argument . . .
    constitute[s] an abandonment of the appeal”].)
    6
    Even if we were to consider the abandoned mitigation argument, it would not
    carry the day. We recognize that “a trial court has discretion to reduce a prevailing
    party’s contractual attorney fees to the extent they were unnecessary.” (EnPalm, supra,
    162 Cal.App.4th at p. 775.) While we previously suggested that Affirmed might have
    avoided trial-related fees by moving for summary judgment, Affirmed notes that it did
    move for nonsuit on statutory immunity grounds after the close of the Hills’ evidence at
    trial, and that the trial court denied that motion. As Affirmed maintains, its unsuccessful
    motion for nonsuit suggests that a summary judgment motion may have been denied. In
    any event, the trial judge “ ‘is the best judge of the value of professional services
    rendered in’ ” this case. (Serrano v. Priest (1977) 
    20 Cal.3d 25
    , 49.) In view of the trial
    court’s refusal to reduce the fee award, we presume the court concluded the trial-related
    fees Affirmed incurred were reasonably necessary. We cannot say that conclusion “was
    clearly wrong,” and accordingly do not disturb the fee award. (11382 Beach Partnership
    v. Libaw (1999) 
    70 Cal.App.4th 212
    , 220.)
    E.     The Trial Court Did Not Abuse its Discretion by Awarding Affirmed
    Attorney Fees on Appeal
    Finally, the Hills urge that the trial court’s award to Affirmed of attorney fees
    incurred in its first successful appeal constituted an abuse of discretion. The Hills fail to
    establish any error.
    As both parties acknowledge, our prior opinion neither included an award of
    attorney fees on appeal, nor precluded Affirmed from seeking them under rule 3.1702 of
    the California Rules of Court, as it did on remand. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule
    8.278(d)(2) [“Unless the court orders otherwise, an award of costs neither includes
    attorney’s fees on appeal nor precludes a party from seeking them under rule 3.1702.”].)
    And a party is entitled to seek attorney fees on appeal pursuant to a contract. (See People
    ex rel. Dept. of Corporations v. SpeeDee Oil Change Systems, Inc. (2007) 
    147 Cal.App.4th 424
    , 429; Cal. Rules of Court, rule 3.1702(c)(1).) Therefore, Affirmed was
    7
    permitted to seek, and the trial court to award, reasonable attorney fees related to the
    appeal.
    But, say the Hills, the fees awarded were not reasonable. First, they claim that the
    fee award was unreasonably high because Affirmed could have mitigated the fees it
    incurred on appeal by filing a motion for summary judgment prior to trial. It is not
    apparent to us how such a motion would have impacted the fees incurred in connection
    with the prior appeal. At issue in the first appeal was the threshold question whether
    Affirmed was entitled to fees under Civil Code section 1717. Presumably, that issue
    would have arisen on appeal regardless of when the trial court entered judgment in
    Affirmed’s favor.
    Second, the Hills assert, without explanation, that the award “was excessive and
    that the declaration of counsel submitted in support thereof was insufficient to
    substantiate the fees and costs as claimed.” Because the Hills provide no factual or legal
    support for those assertions, we deem them abandoned. (Berger v. Godden, supra, 163
    Cal.App.3d at p. 1117; see also Gunn v. Mariners Church, Inc. (2008) 
    167 Cal.App.4th 206
    , 218 [argument on appeal deemed forfeited by failure to present relevant factual
    analysis and legal authority].)
    III.   DISPOSITION
    The order awarding attorney fees is affirmed. Affirmed Housing Group shall
    recover its costs on appeal.
    Premo, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    Rushing, P.J.
    Elia, J.
    8
    Trial Court:                          Santa Clara County Superior Court
    Superior Court No. 1-07-CV087095
    Trial Judge:                          Hon. James P. Kleinberg
    Counsel for Plaintiffs/Appellants:    Paul J. Derania
    James C. Hill and Dawn L. Hills,      Scott S. Furstman
    Ad-Way Signs, Inc.
    Counsel for Defendants/Respondents:   Incorvaia & Associates
    Affirmed Housing Group                Joel L. Incorvaia
    G. Ehrich Lenz
    Hill et al. v. Degery et al.
    H038874
    

Document Info

Docket Number: H038874

Judges: Premo

Filed Date: 6/9/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/3/2024