Aerotek v. Johnson Group Staffing Co. ( 2020 )


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  • Filed 9/15/20
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    (Sacramento)
    ----
    AEROTEK, INC.,                                                   C078435
    Plaintiff,                                     (Super. Ct. No.
    34200700540602CUBTGDS)
    v.
    JOHNSON GROUP STAFFING COMPANY, INC.,
    Defendant and Appellant;
    PORTER SCOTT, P.C.,
    Real Party in Interest and Respondent.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Sacramento County, Alan G.
    Perkins, Judge. Affirmed.
    Cassinat Law Corporation, John E. Cassinat and Ronald L. Carello for Defendant
    and Appellant.
    Porter Scott, Carl J. Calnero, Thomas L. Riordan and David E. Boyd; David E.
    Boyd Law Offices and David E. Boyd for Real Party in Interest and Respondent.
    1
    California’s Uniform Trade Secrets Act allows courts to award reasonable attorney
    fees and costs to the “prevailing party” in certain cases involving bad faith claims. (Civ.
    Code, § 3426.4.)1 The issue here concerns the ownership of fees awarded under this
    statute. Is the prevailing litigant (here, The Johnson Group Staffing Company, Inc.) or
    the prevailing litigant’s attorney (here, Porter Scott, P.C.) entitled to the fees awarded to
    the “prevailing party”? We conclude that, absent an enforceable agreement to the
    contrary, these fees belong to the attorney to the extent they exceed the fees the litigant
    already paid. We further conclude that, although the parties here entered into a fee
    agreement, that agreement did not alter the default disposition of fees in favor of the
    attorney. Because the trial court found likewise, we affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    I
    Porter Scott’s Representation of TJG
    Porter Scott, P.C. (hereafter, “Porter Scott”) defended The Johnson Group Staffing
    Company, Inc. (hereafter, “TJG” or “Johnson Group”) through two rounds of litigation
    with its chief competitor, Aerotek, Inc. (hereafter, “Aerotek”). Aerotek first sued TJG
    after TJG’s founder, Chris Johnson, left Aerotek to form TJG. In the lawsuit, Aerotek
    alleged that TJG and Johnson, among other things, misappropriated trade secrets by
    soliciting Aerotek’s customers. TJG and Johnson settled with Aerotek a little over a year
    later.
    Shortly after the settlement, Aerotek sued again—this time related to TJG’s hiring
    of one of Aerotek’s employees, Michael Ponce. Raising claims similar to those in its first
    complaint, Aerotek alleged that TJG and Ponce, among other things, misappropriated
    trade secrets by soliciting Aerotek’s customers.
    1        Undesignated statutory references are to the Civil Code.
    2
    Unlike the first suit, Aerotek’s second suit dragged on for a number of years, at
    great cost to TJG. Two years into the litigation, TJG was nearly bankrupt. Its income
    fell as some clients left for fear of becoming entangled in the litigation, and its costs rose
    as it incurred tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees.
    As TJG’s finances deteriorated, Porter Scott moved to withdraw as counsel
    following the nonpayment of over $90,000 in legal fees. The trial court later granted the
    request. But only days after the court granted the motion to withdraw, Porter Scott
    agreed to represent TJG “on a modified Pro Bono basis” going forward—which meant
    TJG would pay Porter Scott’s costs (e.g., filing fees and postage) but would not need to
    pay attorney fees. The agreement added as relevant here:
    4.   That the parties to the Retainer Agreement acknowledge that Chris
    Johnson and The Johnson Group through approximately November
    30, 2009 were indebted to the Porter Scott firm in the approximate
    sum of $92,845.86.1
    [Footnote] 1: Should the Johnson Group or Chris Johnson be
    awarded fees in the future based on Porter Scott’s underlying
    representation, all fees shall be reimburseable [sic] at that point
    and this waiver shall not apply.
    5.   That in order to re-engage as counsel of record, the Porter Scott firm
    has agreed to accept $25,000.00, due and payable immediately, receipt
    of which is hereby acknowledged, and further agrees to handle the
    remaining portions of the litigation on a modified Pro Bono basis.
    The remaining balance due and owing as of November 30, 2009 will
    be waived. The Johnson Group and Chris Johnson will remain
    responsible for all future costs of litigation and will execute a further
    legal services agreement detailing those matters.
    6.   That Chris Johnson and The Johnson Group hereby release and
    discharge the Porter Scott firm from any and all claims or liabilities,
    damages or for any claim whatsoever relating to the Porter Scott
    firm’s handling of the Aerotek v. The Johnson Group, et al. Case No.
    34-2007-00540602-CU-BT-GDS prior to November 23, 2009.
    The parties’ agreement also included an integration clause, stating: “This
    Agreement contains the entire agreement of the parties. No other agreement, statement,
    3
    or promise made on or before the effective date of this Agreement will be binding on the
    parties.”2
    Under the new agreement, Porter Scott defended TJG through two jury trials. In
    the first, a jury found in part in favor of Aerotek and awarded it $40,000 in damages. But
    the trial court later set aside the verdict after granting Aerotek’s motion for a new trial. In
    the second trial, the jury rejected all Aerotek’s claims. The court afterward entered
    judgment on the verdict, which Aerotek later appealed.
    While the appeal was pending, Porter Scott moved for attorney fees pursuant to
    section 3426.4. The court agreed fees were warranted and awarded $735,781.27 in
    attorney fees to TJG. Aerotek later appealed that decision too.
    II
    Porter Scott’s and TJG’s Dispute Over Awarded Fees
    Shortly after the court’s fee award, Porter Scott and TJG parted ways following a
    dispute over who was entitled to the awarded fees. Believing it was entitled to most of
    the award, Porter Scott asked the court to modify the award—which initially only noted
    TJG’s entitlement to the award—to note TJG and Porter Scott’s joint entitlement to the
    award. The court granted the request and then scheduled a jury trial to determine who
    was entitled to the fee award. But on the scheduled date for trial, the parties decided to
    postpone the matter until Aerotek’s two appeals were resolved.
    Two years later, after Aerotek lost its two appeals, Aerotek wired the full fee
    award to TJG. The trial court afterward, following the parties’ stipulation, directed TJG
    to place the funds in a blocked account. The court then, departing from the earlier plans
    2      Porter Scott contends the parties’ agreement was based “on a form suggested by
    the [California] State Bar.” It then asks, in a footnote, that we take judicial notice of the
    California State Bar’s sample fee agreement. We deny the request. The appropriate
    procedure for requesting judicial notice is through a motion, not a footnote. (Cal. Rules
    of Court, rule 8.252(a).)
    4
    for a jury trial, decided to hear the parties’ dispute over the award as a law and motion
    matter.
    TJG and Porter Scott afterward submitted briefs in support of their respective
    positions. Porter Scott contended, based on case law discussing other statutorily awarded
    fees, that attorney fees awarded under section 3426.4 are presumptively vested in the
    litigant’s attorney, not the litigant. It also asserted that the parties’ agreement further
    supported the conclusion that it, and not TJG, was entitled to the fee award.
    TJG disagreed. To begin, for two alternative reasons, it argued the court should
    not even rule on the merits of the parties’ dispute. First, it contended a jury, not the court,
    should decide the matter. But if the court disagreed, it suggested it would elect to
    arbitrate the dispute under California’s Mandatory Fee Arbitration Act (Bus. & Prof.
    Code, § 6200 et seq.)—an act that, in general, allows clients to demand arbitration in fee
    disputes. Turning next to the merits, TJG offered a competing view of the parties’
    agreement. According to TJG, Porter Scott agreed to provide its services without pay or
    any right to attorney fees in order to avoid being sued for malpractice. TJG’s argument
    tied back to the advice that Porter Scott offered around the time TJG hired Ponce. In
    TJG’s view, Porter Scott might have committed malpractice in failing to advise TJG
    about Business and Professions Code section 16607 at the time of Ponce’s hiring. That
    section provides that an employment company’s customer list “constitute[s] a trade secret
    and confidential information of . . . the employment agency,” but adds that a former
    employee’s use of its prior employer’s customer list is not unlawful if over a year has
    passed since the employment relationship ended. TJG contended that, had it known of
    this provision, it would not have hired Ponce directly from Aerotek. TJG then reasoned
    that Porter Scott, fearing a potential malpractice suit for its ill advice, agreed to enter into
    the pro bono agreement to avoid that issue.
    After hearing from the parties, the court ruled in Porter Scott’s favor. It first
    rejected TJG’s arguments concerning its alleged right to a jury trial and, alternatively,
    5
    mandatory arbitration. It then found Porter Scott had the better argument on the merits.
    The court awarded the full amount of the fees to Porter Scott—which, with interest over
    the years, had increased to $917,811.48—“minus the amounts subject to TJG’s right to be
    reimbursed for amounts already paid by TJG to Porter Scott.” The court later calculated
    that TJG was entitled to $89,873.31 “plus 10% of any accrued interest earned in” the
    account holding the fee award, and that Porter Scott was entitled to $827,938.17, “plus
    90% of any accrued interest earned in” the account. TJG timely appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    Section 3426.4 is part of California’s Uniform Trade Secrets Act. Relevant here,
    it provides: “If a claim of misappropriation is made in bad faith, . . . the court may award
    reasonable attorney’s fees and costs to the prevailing party.” The question here concerns
    not the propriety of an award of fees under this statute, but the ownership of the statutory
    award: Should the prevailing litigant (here, TJG) or the prevailing litigant’s attorney
    (here, Porter Scott) receive the awarded fees?
    To answer that question, we take an approach similar to the one employed by the
    California Supreme Court in Flannery v. Prentice (2001) 
    26 Cal. 4th 572
    (Flannery). The
    court there considered a question similar to our own: “[T]o whom, as between attorney
    and client, [do] attorney fees awarded under Government Code section 12965 . . . belong
    when no contractual agreement provides for their disposition.” (Id. at p. 575.) At the
    time, and as relevant to the case, Government Code section 12965 provided: “ ‘In actions
    brought under this section, the court, in its discretion, may award to the prevailing party
    reasonable attorney’s fees and costs, including expert witness fees, except where the
    action is filed by a public agency or a public official, acting in an official capacity.’ ”
    (Flannery, at p. 575, fn. 1.) After considering this statutory text, the legislative intent
    behind the statute, and several policy considerations, the court “conclude[d] that attorney
    fees awarded pursuant to [Government Code] section 12965 (exceeding fees already
    6
    paid) belong, absent an enforceable agreement to the contrary, to the attorneys who
    labored to earn them.” (Id. at p. 590.)
    Although we find this to be a closer case, we interpret section 3426.4 similarly.
    We thus conclude that attorney fees awarded under section 3426.4 (exceeding fees the
    client already paid) belong to the attorneys who labored to earn them, absent an
    enforceable agreement to the contrary. And although the parties here entered into a fee
    agreement, we find their agreement did not alter section 3426.4’s default disposition of
    awarded fees in favor of the attorney.
    I
    Disposition of Fee Awards Under Section 3426.4
    A. Statutory Language
    “We begin our inquiry by examining section [3426.4’s] words, giving them a plain
    and commonsense meaning.” (
    Flannery, supra
    , 26 Cal.4th at p. 577.)
    Our textual reading, following the Flannery court’s approach, turns largely on the
    words “attorney’s fees.” Reading section 3426.4 to vest awarded “attorney’s fees” in
    counsel would be consistent with the ordinary view that attorney fees compensate
    attorneys, not litigants. (See 
    Flannery, supra
    , 26 Cal.4th at p. 578.) Reading the statute
    to vest fee awards in litigants, on the other hand, would at times stray from that ordinary
    understanding of attorney fees. After all, “[a]n award that does not compensate the
    litigant for payments made to, owed to, or forgiven by an attorney or attorneys is, in one
    sense, not an ‘attorney’s fee’ at all.” (Id. at pp. 578-579, fn. omitted.) Considering the
    statutory text alone, then, we lean in favor of the view that “attorney’s fees” awarded
    under section 3426.4 (exceeding fees already paid) are for attorneys, not litigants.
    In support of its contrary reading, TJG makes much of the fact that section 3426.4
    authorizes awards of attorney fees to the “prevailing party,” which TJG presumes means
    the litigant. TJG bases its argument on several cases that awarded fees under section
    3426.4 to a named party. But each of TJG’s cited cases concerned only whether attorney
    7
    fees should be awarded at all, not whether the litigant or the litigant’s attorney should
    receive that award. (See SASCO v. Rosendin Electric, Inc. (2012) 
    207 Cal. App. 4th 837
    ,
    840; FLIR Systems, Inc. v. Parrish (2009) 
    174 Cal. App. 4th 1270
    , 1273; Gemini
    Aluminum Corp. v. California Custom Shapes, Inc. (2002) 
    95 Cal. App. 4th 1249
    , 1253.)
    These cases thus offer no support to TJG’s position. (See 
    Flannery, supra
    , 26 Cal.4th at
    p. 581 [“ ‘ “an opinion is not authority for a proposition not therein considered” ’ ”].)
    More relevant to our inquiry are cases dealing with the actual type of issue before us—
    whether the litigant or the litigant’s attorney should receive awarded fees. And these
    cases have rejected the view that the “prevailing party” necessarily means the litigant. As
    the Flannery court explained, a statutory award to the “prevailing party” does not
    “unambiguously favor” the litigant over the litigant’s attorney. (Id. at p. 578.) “ ‘In the
    countless procedural statutes in which the term “party” is used, it is commonly
    understood to refer to either the actual litigant or the litigant’s attorney of record.
    [Citations.] Since that is the ordinary import of the term, that is the meaning we must
    ascribe to it when used in [a statute], unless the Legislature has clearly indicated a
    contrary intent . . . .’ [Citations.]” (Ibid.)
    But although we conclude that section 3426.4’s text tends to favor Porter Scott, we
    find the statute “ ‘sufficiently ambiguous to warrant our consideration of evidence of the
    Legislature’s intent beyond the words of the statute.’ [Citation.]” (
    Flannery, supra
    , 26
    Cal.4th at p. 579.) We thus turn next to “extrinsic information, including the statute’s
    legislative history and underlying purposes.” (Ibid.)
    B. Legislative Intent
    At this stage of our review, as we look to extrinsic information, Porter Scott’s
    claim to the fees becomes somewhat weaker than the attorney’s claim in Flannery.
    The court in Flannery, after considering the text of Government Code section
    12965, reviewed the broader statutory scheme to which the statute was a part—the
    California Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA). (
    Flannery, supra
    , 26 Cal.4th at
    8
    pp. 579-584.) And based on its review of this statutory scheme, the court found that
    interpreting Government Code section 12965 in favor of the litigant’s attorney would
    further the Legislature’s intent in enacting FEHA. That was in large part because that
    statute, if interpreted in the attorney’s favor, would incentivize attorneys to take on more
    cases challenging employment discrimination—which would further an express purpose
    of FEHA to eliminate employment discrimination. (Flannery, at pp. 582-584.) But
    interpreting section 3426.4 in favor of Porter Scott (or TJG, for that matter) does not
    further a similar express purpose of the Uniform Trade Secrets Act. We cannot say, for
    example, that incentivizing attorneys to defend misappropriation claims made in bad faith
    would further an express purpose of the act. We thus find this review does little to
    advance our resolution of the parties’ dispute.
    We also find review of the legislative history to section 3426.4 of limited help. As
    this history shows, the Legislature enacted section 3426.4 as part of its effort to adopt the
    uniform trade secrets law recommended by the National Conference of Commissioners
    (Commissioners). (Assem. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of Assem. Bill No. 501 (1983-
    1984 Reg. Sess.) as amended April 21, 1983, p. 2.) In 1979, these Commissioners
    recommended that states adopt, as relevant here, a statute providing: “If (i) a claim of
    misappropriation is made in bad faith, . . . the court may award reasonable attorney’s fees
    to the prevailing party.” (14 West’s U. Laws Ann. (2005) Trade Secrets Act, § 4, p. 642.)
    The California Legislature afterward adopted that language verbatim, apart from the
    “(i),” in section 3426.4 in 1984. (Stats. 1984, ch. 1724, § 1.) But the Legislature said
    little of its intent in doing so, other than the general intent to adopt the recommended
    uniform law. (Assem. Com. on Judiciary, supra, p. 2.)
    The Commissioners, on the other hand, did offer a specific reason for this type of
    statute: it would serve “ ‘as a deterrent to specious claims of misappropriation . . . .’
    [Citation.]” (Stilwell Development, Inc. v. Chen (C.D.Cal. Apr. 25, 1989, No. CV86-
    4487-GHK) 
    1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5971
    , p. *9, italics omitted.) And that stated
    9
    purpose, on the logic of the Flannery court, offers at least some support for Porter Scott’s
    reading of section 3426.4. The statute considered in Flannery, again, authorized the
    award of attorney fees to “prevailing parties” in certain FEHA actions. Although the
    court there generally focused on fee awards to prevailing plaintiffs under that statute, it
    also discussed the ability of prevailing defendants to obtain fee awards when “forced to
    defend frivolous suits.” (
    Flannery, supra
    , 26 Cal.4th at p. 585.) And in that discussion,
    the court found, construing the statute to vest awarded fees in defense counsel, rather than
    defense counsel’s client, would “further the important public policy of discouraging
    frivolous suits.” (Ibid.) On that same logic, construing section 3426.4 to vest fees in
    defense counsel, rather than defense counsel’s client, would similarly “further the
    important public policy of discouraging [specious claims of misappropriation]”—and
    would thus further the Commissioners’ stated intent in recommending this type of statute.
    And because construing section 3426.4 in a manner consistent with the Commissioners’
    intent is favored, all things being equal, we find this consideration tips in favor of Porter
    Scott. (See Cadence Design Systems, Inc. v. Avant! Corp. (2002) 
    29 Cal. 4th 215
    , 222
    [courts should “accord substantial weight to the commissioners’ comment on the
    construction of what is now” the Uniform Trade Secrets Act].)
    C. Public Policy
    Moving beyond the legislative history, we consider next those “important public
    policies” discussed in Flannery. (
    Flannery, supra
    , 26 Cal.4th at p. 584.) And here we
    find some of the strongest support for finding that attorneys, absent some agreement, are
    entitled to attorney fees awarded under section 3426.4.
    The Flannery court discussed five “important public policies” it found were
    advanced by “[c]onstruing [Government Code] section 12965 as vesting ownership of
    unassigned attorney fees awarded thereunder in counsel rather than the litigant (to the
    extent fees are not otherwise paid).” (
    Flannery, supra
    , 26 Cal.4th at p. 584.)
    10
    First, the court found this reading would “[e]ncourage representation of legitimate
    FEHA claimants and discourage nonmeritorious suits.” (
    Flannery, supra
    , 26 Cal.4th at
    p. 584.) According to the court, “construing [Government Code] section 12965 to vest
    ownership of fees awarded thereunder in counsel when, for whatever reason, no contract
    exists disposing of them, thus diminishing the risk of noncompensation or
    undercompensation, will enhance the likelihood that attorneys who undertake FEHA
    cases will be fully compensated, and to that extent will enhance the fee provision’s
    effectiveness in encouraging counsel to undertake FEHA litigation.” (Id. at pp. 584-585.)
    And, the court added, because defendants too can obtain fees when “forced to defend
    frivolous suits,” “construing [Government Code] section 12965’s attorney fee provision
    to assure compensation of attorneys who successfully represent FEHA litigants will
    further the important public policy of discouraging frivolous suits as well.” (Id. at p.
    585.) This latter point is particularly noteworthy here. If construing Government Code
    section 12965 to vest ownership of fee awards in defense counsel rather than defense
    counsel’s client would “further the important public policy of discouraging frivolous
    suits,” we see no reason why the same should not also be true here.
    Second, the Flannery court found construing the statute in favor of the attorney
    would avoid unjust enrichment. (
    Flannery, supra
    , 26 Cal.4th at p. 585.) “Without
    concluding that such reasoning would hold in every context,” the court found it “evident
    that, in general, where attorney compensation has neither been paid nor forgiven and
    there is no contract assuring it, allowing a victorious litigant to retain the proceeds of a
    fee award (in addition to a substantial damages judgment) would confer an unjustified
    windfall.” (Id. at p. 586.) This consideration too, we find, tips in favor of Porter Scott.
    Awarding the fees to Porter Scott would compensate them for services rendered. But
    awarding the fees instead to TJG would result in a large windfall—a result courts tend to
    disfavor. (See MacIsaac v. Waste Management Collection & Recycling, Inc. (2005) 
    134 Cal. App. 4th 1076
    , 1091 [“California courts are justifiably reluctant to construe statutes to
    11
    confer a windfall.”].) We thus find this consideration favors construing section 3426.4 in
    support of Porter Scott’s position. And we find that to be the case even though Porter
    Scott agreed to provide most of its services pro bono—something that TJG deems
    significant. As the Flannery court recognized, even attorneys who perform services pro
    bono may obtain “reasonable” attorney fees under a fee-shifting statute. (Flannery, at p.
    585.)
    Third, the Flannery court found construing the statute there to favor the attorney
    would ensure fairness. (
    Flannery, supra
    , 26 Cal.4th at p. 586.) “Vesting ownership of
    unassigned [Government Code] section 12965 fees in counsel rather than the prevailing
    litigant (to the extent fees are not otherwise paid) is fairer than the alternative to the
    litigants who must pay such fees.” (Ibid.) That is so, the court reasoned, because a
    litigant forced to pay these fees to the opposing party’s counsel would only be paying
    litigation costs. But if instead this litigant were forced to pay these fees to the opposing
    party, who had incurred no costs, the fees “would, from the perspective of those paying
    them, transform . . ., without legislative authorization, into a kind of punitive damages.”
    (Ibid.) Because that same logic is equally applicable here, we find it lends further
    support to Porter Scott’s reading of section 3426.4.
    Fourth, the court found its construction of Government Code section 12965 would
    address ethical concerns. (
    Flannery, supra
    , 26 Cal.4th at p. 586.) With exceptions not
    relevant here, California attorneys cannot “share legal fees directly or indirectly with a
    nonlawyer.” (Rules Prof. Conduct, rule 5.4(a).) Based on an earlier version of this rule,
    the court found construing Government Code section 12965 in the plaintiff’s favor
    “would implicate in some measure the policy our fee-splitting prohibition is designed to
    advance”—though the court did not resolve whether this construction would in fact
    conflict with the fee-splitting prohibition. (Flannery, at p. 587.) We, similarly, need not
    resolve whether TJG’s favored construction of section 3426.4 would in fact conflict with
    the prohibition against fee-splitting. But we note, like the Flannery court, that TJG’s
    12
    position at least “implicate[s] in some measure the policy our fee-splitting prohibition is
    designed to advance.” (Flannery, at p. 587.) And, following the Flannery court’s
    approach, we find consideration of ethical issues thus favors construing section 3426.4 in
    favor of attorneys.
    TJG, reading Flannery differently on this point, contends “the express holding in
    Flannery” was that attorneys could split awarded fees with their clients without violating
    the ethical rules on fee-splitting. TJG bases this contention on a footnote in which the
    Flannery court said: “In general, ‘allowing lawyers to contract with their clients for an
    assignment of the right to fees should enhance the public’s access to competent counsel.’
    [Citation.]” (
    Flannery, supra
    , 26 Cal.4th at p. 588, fn. 16.) We agree this comment
    suggests attorneys can contract with their clients to split awarded fees. But that said, the
    court never resolved whether attorneys who do so would violate the ethical rules on fee-
    splitting. Instead, it only noted that construing Government Code section 12965 in the
    plaintiff’s favor “would implicate in some measure the policy our fee-splitting
    prohibition is designed to advance.” (Flannery, at p. 587.) And on that basis, the court
    found construing Government Code section 12965 to vest fees in counsel would
    “[a]ddress ethical concerns.” (Flannery, at pp. 586, 584.) We see no reason to find
    differently here.
    Fifth and finally, the court found that construing Government Code section 12965
    to award fees to litigants rather than their counsel, absent an agreement to the contrary,
    would wrongly punish attorneys who fail to secure written fee agreements. (
    Flannery, supra
    , 26 Cal.4th at pp. 588-589.) According to the court, ordering fee awards under this
    statute to “be paid directly to plaintiffs whenever there exists no contrary agreement
    between plaintiffs and their counsel (such that plaintiffs realize a windfall at counsel’s
    expense) could make sense only if the law treated attorneys who fail to secure fee
    agreements as deserving of such punishment.” (Id. at p. 589.) But because the court
    found no evidence of this type of punitive intent, it declined to interpret Government
    13
    Code section 12965 in this fashion. (Flannery, at pp. 589-590.) We find that reasoning
    fitting here as well. To find otherwise, the Flannery court’s reasoning, “could make
    sense only if the law treated attorneys who fail to secure fee agreements as deserving of
    such punishment.” (Id. at p. 589.) But we find no such intent to punish in section
    3426.4.
    Taking these various considerations together, we conclude that attorney fees
    awarded pursuant to section 3426.4 (exceeding fees already paid) belong, absent an
    enforceable agreement to the contrary, to the attorneys who labored to earn them.
    (See 
    Flannery, supra
    , 26 Cal.4th at p. 590; see also Henry M. Lee Law Corp. v. Superior
    Court (2012) 
    204 Cal. App. 4th 1375
    , 1388 [finding, “in accordance with Flannery,” the
    same for attorney fees awarded under Lab. Code, §§ 1194, subd. (a), 226, subd. (e)];
    Lindelli v. Town of San Anselmo (2006) 
    139 Cal. App. 4th 1499
    , 1502 [finding, based on
    “the reasoning of the Flannery decision,” the same for attorney fees awarded under Code
    Civ. Proc., § 1021.5].)
    II
    The Parties’ Fee Agreement
    We turn next to the parties’ agreement to determine whether it altered this default
    disposition of attorney fee awards under section 3426.4.
    The parties entered into two fee agreements over the course of this litigation. The
    one relevant here governed from November 30, 2009, onward. Under that agreement,
    Porter Scott agreed to provide legal services to TJG pro bono. It also agreed to waive the
    majority of the $92,845.86 in legal fees incurred before the agreement, requiring only the
    payment of $25,000. The agreement added in a footnote, however, that “[s]hould the
    Johnson Group or Chris Johnson be awarded fees in the future based on Porter Scott’s
    underlying representation, all fees shall be reimburseable [sic] at that point and this
    waiver shall not apply.”
    14
    Both parties construe this language as favoring their position. But before turning
    to their arguments about the contract’s language, we consider first TJG’s failed effort to
    introduce extrinsic evidence to support its reading of the agreement.
    A. Trial Court’s Exclusion of Extrinsic Evidence
    TJG contends the trial court wrongly failed to consider its offered extrinsic
    evidence. In particular, it faults the court for failing to consider a portion of a transcript
    from the deposition of one of Porter Scott’s attorneys. In that deposition, the deposed
    attorney mentioned that the one footnote in the parties’ agreement should have been
    placed in a slightly different location. Again, that footnote provided: “Should the
    Johnson Group or Chris Johnson be awarded fees in the future based on Porter Scott’s
    underlying representation, all fees shall be reimburseable [sic] at that point and this
    waiver shall not apply.” This footnote was placed after a paragraph that noted the
    outstanding legal fees owed to Porter Scott as of November 30, 2009. But according to
    the deposed attorney, the footnote should instead have been placed after the next
    paragraph in the agreement, which concerned the waiver of some of these outstanding
    fees. She reasoned that the footnote about waiver plainly should have followed the
    paragraph about waiver. In TJG’s view, the trial court committed reversible error in
    failing to admit this evidence.
    We disagree. Courts, to be sure, must admit a party’s offered extrinsic evidence if
    it is relevant to prove a contract is “reasonably susceptible” to the meaning the party
    alleges. (Pacific Gas & E. Co. v. G. W. Thomas Drayage etc. Co. (1968) 
    69 Cal. 2d 33
    ,
    37 [“The test of admissibility of extrinsic evidence to explain the meaning of a written
    instrument is . . . whether the offered evidence is relevant to prove a meaning to which
    the language of the instrument is reasonably susceptible.”].) But TJG’s offered extrinsic
    evidence fails to meet this standard. TJG understands the parties’ agreement to entitle it,
    not Porter Scott, to any awarded attorney fees. But we find nothing in the deposition
    testimony about the misplaced footnote that is relevant to prove the agreement was
    15
    “reasonably susceptible” to this reading. And TJG, for its part, offers no explanation as
    to why we should find otherwise, other than its conclusion that “a different interpretation
    of the Pro Bono Agreement follows from its proper interpretation in light of the extrinsic
    evidence.” Because that conclusion is not at all obvious in our view, we reject TJG’s
    largely unexplained claim.
    B. Trial Court’s Interpretation of the Agreement
    TJG next offers several arguments on why the trial court misinterpreted the
    parties’ agreement.
    First, because Porter Scott agreed to provide legal services pro bono, TJG
    contends the firm “gave up” its right to receive any fee award. We disagree. Again, as
    the Flannery court recognized, even attorneys who perform services pro bono may obtain
    “reasonable” attorney fees under a fee-shifting statute. (
    Flannery, supra
    , 26 Cal.4th at p.
    585.)
    Second, TJG asserts that, to the extent the contract is ambiguous on this point, the
    ambiguity must be construed in its favor as “everyone understood and believed that any
    future fee award would go to TJG.” (See § 1649 [“If the terms of a promise are in any
    respect ambiguous or uncertain, it must be interpreted in the sense in which the promisor
    believed, at the time of making it, that the promisee understood it.”].)
    In support of this argument, TJG cites portions of Johnson’s deposition testimony,
    Johnson’s father’s declaration, and two Porter Scott attorneys’ deposition testimony. All
    four of these individuals spoke of their understanding of the footnote in the parties’
    agreement. Johnson testified that he asked one of Porter Scott’s attorneys about the
    footnote, and the attorney responded that “what this footnote means is that, in the event
    that you are awarded attorneys’ fees, that you would have to pay back Porter Scott the
    $92,000. And that was it.” Johnson’s father, who was also present when the footnote
    was discussed, said something similar in a declaration: Porter Scott’s attorney said that
    “if there was such an award then the law firm would be entitled to the fees that they were
    16
    writing off. She was specifically discussing the $92,000.00 . . . . She did not say that the
    law firm would keep anything above the $92,000.00 if the amount was higher.”
    Two Porter Scott attorneys also testified about the footnote, though in different
    terms. One attorney, who did not speak with Johnson about the fee agreement’s footnote,
    said he understood the footnote as preserving Porter Scott’s right, in the event the trial
    court awarded fees, to recover the waived fees of $67,845.86—the difference between the
    $92,845.86 TJG owed as of November 30, 2009, and the $25,000 it ultimately paid. In
    his words, “we wanted to reserve the right to be able to get that later.” Another attorney,
    the one who spoke with Johnson about the footnote, said something similar: Porter Scott
    wanted to reserve its right “to seek that balance of [$]67,000 whatever, 845.86.” She
    then added that the footnote was concerned more with Aerotek than TJG, explaining that
    “we didn’t want . . . to empower Aerotek to claim that Porter Scott was not entitled to
    reimbursement for those fees simply because they had been waived as to Chris Johnson’s
    requirement of paying them.” The attorney further said she told Johnson that “should we
    win a fee motion in the future, he would be paid back the amount that he had already paid
    in fees to Porter Scott on this case.” She said she also told Johnson something “to the
    effect” that he “could not recover anything more on an attorneys’ fee award other than
    what [TJG] had already paid Porter Scott in attorneys’ fees”—though she acknowledged
    she did not say those precise words.
    Based on this testimony, TJG maintains that “everyone understood and believed
    that any future fee award would go to TJG.” We disagree. To begin, TJG’s argument
    here is premised on extrinsic evidence that the trial court refused to admit. Although TJG
    appealed the court’s refusal to consider some of its extrinsic evidence, as discussed
    above, it did not appeal the court’s refusal to consider the evidence it describes here. In
    any event, considering the offered testimony, we are not persuaded that everyone
    understood and believed that any future fee award would go to TJG. Everyone
    apparently understood that Porter Scott added the footnote to protect its right to obtain the
    17
    balance of the charged $92,845.86 in the event fees were awarded. We agree with that
    much. But according to TJG, everyone also understood that Porter Scott added the
    footnote intending, not only to reserve its right to these fees, but also to forfeit its right to
    all fees beyond the $92,845.86. In other words, in TJG’s apparent view, Porter Scott
    unilaterally added the footnote in part to limit its potential fee recovery to $92,845.86.
    That view, however, finds no support in the attorney deposition testimony that TJG cites.
    Again, the two deposed Porter Scott attorneys both discussed the purpose of the footnote,
    and that purpose was to protect, not limit, Porter Scott’s right to attorney fees. We thus
    reject TJG’s characterization of what “everyone understood.”3
    Finally, in a one-sentence argument based on section 1654, TJG contends that “the
    language of a contract must be interpreted most strongly against [Porter Scott] as ‘the
    party who caused the uncertainty to exist.’ ” We agree that, “[i]n cases of uncertainty not
    removed by [other rules of statutory interpretation], the language of a contract should be
    interpreted most strongly against the party who caused the uncertainty to exist.” (§
    1654.) But TJG never identifies in its opening brief the language in the parties’
    agreement that it believes is uncertain and thus should be interpreted against Porter Scott.
    TJG instead waits until its reply brief to explain its position, clarifying there that its claim
    concerns Porter Scott’s agreement to represent it pro bono. But because we find this
    argument was never adequately raised until TJG’s reply brief, we find it forfeited. (See
    Neighbours v. Buzz Oates Enterprises (1990) 
    217 Cal. App. 3d 325
    , 335, fn. 8 [claims
    raised for the first time in a reply brief, without good cause, are forfeited].)
    Even if the argument were not forfeited, moreover, we would still reject the claim
    on the merits. A contract provision is ambiguous (or uncertain) when it is capable of two
    or more constructions, both of which are reasonable. (Bay Cities Paving & Grading, Inc.
    3      Moreover, footnote 1, which refers to “this waiver” obviously belongs as a
    footnote to the waiver provisions of paragraph 5 of the agreement. There is no waiver in
    paragraph 4, to which footnote 1 is formally attached.
    18
    v. Lawyers’ Mutual Ins. Co. (1993) 
    5 Cal. 4th 854
    , 867.) But we find no relevant
    ambiguity in Porter Scott’s agreeing to charge TJG $0 for its services. And even
    supposing this language was ambiguous in some way, we would not find TJG’s preferred
    reading a reasonable construction of this language. That the parties entered into an
    agreement about the amount Porter Scott could charge TJG for its services cannot
    reasonably be construed as an agreement that TJG would be entitled to all statutorily
    awarded fees. It had nothing to do with that topic. We thus reject TJG’s claim under
    section 1654. (See Katz v. Haskell (1961) 
    196 Cal. App. 2d 144
    , 158 [“The purpose of [§
    1654] is to explain [uncertain terms] and not add or subtract terms.”].)
    Porter Scott, for its part, asserts that it is “presumptively the owner” of the
    awarded fees based on Flannery and similar cases, and then contends that the parties’
    agreement is consistent with that presumption. But “whether or not” the parties’
    agreement lends further support to Porter Scott’s position, we find dispositive that
    “attorney fees awarded pursuant to [section 3426.4] (exceeding fees already paid) belong,
    absent an enforceable agreement to the contrary, to the attorneys who labored to earn
    them” (
    Flannery, supra
    , 26 Cal.4th at p. 590), and that TJG has failed to show the
    parties’ agreement altered that default disposition.
    III
    TJG’s Procedural Arguments
    TJG’s remaining contentions focus on two alleged procedural flaws in the
    proceedings below.
    First, TJG asserts that, per California’s Mandatory Fee Arbitration Act (MFAA;
    Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6200 et seq.), Porter Scott needed to provide them with written
    notice of its right to arbitrate the fee dispute. And because Porter Scott did not, TJG
    contends we must reverse. We disagree.
    “Under the [MFAA], when there is a fee dispute between an attorney and a client,
    the client may choose to submit the matter to arbitration by a local bar association.”
    19
    (Schatz v. Allen Matkins Leck Gamble & Mallory LLP (2009) 
    45 Cal. 4th 557
    , 561, fn.
    omitted.) This requirement applies to “disputes concerning fees, costs, or both, charged
    for professional services by licensees of the State Bar or by members of the bar of other
    jurisdictions.” (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6200, subd. (a).) But it is subject to certain
    exceptions, including one involving “[d]isputes where the fee or cost to be paid by the
    client or on his or her behalf has been determined pursuant to statute or court order.” (Id.,
    subd. (b)(3).)
    To the extent the dispute here concerns “fees . . . charged” to TJG by Porter Scott
    (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6200, subd. (a)), we find it concerns fees “determined pursuant to
    statute” and thus is exempted from the MFAA’s requirements. Again, as discussed
    above, we find the award of fees to Porter Scott, rather than TJG, follows from section
    3426.4’s default disposition of fees in favor of the attorney. And because the fee to be
    paid has thus “been determined pursuant to statute,” the MFAA’s arbitration requirement
    is expressly inapplicable. (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6200, subd. (b)(3).)
    TJG next contends the trial court denied it its constitutional right to a jury trial.
    We disagree here too.
    Article I, section 16 of the California Constitution broadly provides that “[t]rial by
    jury is an inviolate right and shall be secured to all” in both criminal and civil actions.
    But the right is not as absolute as this text suggests. “[P]ast California cases make clear
    ‘that the state constitutional right to a jury trial “is [limited to] the right as it existed at
    common law in 1850, when the [California] Constitution was first adopted.”
    [Citations.]’ ” (Shaw v. Superior Court (2017) 
    2 Cal. 5th 983
    , 994-995 (Shaw); see also
    Nationwide Biweekly Administration, Inc. v. Superior Court (2020) 
    9 Cal. 5th 279
    , 315.)
    And so if a proceeding “did not entail a right to jury trial under the common law of 1850”
    or was “unknown to the common law of 1850,” then that proceeding would not entail a
    constitutional right to a jury trial today. (Crouchman v. Superior Court (1988) 
    45 Cal. 3d 1167
    , 1174 (Crouchman).)
    20
    To determine whether a proceeding entailed the right to a jury trial in 1850, courts
    often “rel[y] on the traditional distinction between courts at law, in which a jury sat, and
    courts of equity, in which there was no jury.” (Crouchman v. Superior 
    Court, supra
    , 45
    Cal.3d at p. 1175.) “ ‘As a general proposition, “[t]he jury trial is a matter of right in a
    civil action at law, but not in equity.” ’ ” (
    Shaw, supra
    , 2 Cal.5th at p. 995.) To
    determine whether a given action is one in law or equity, courts consider “ ‘ “ ‘the nature
    of the rights involved and the facts of the particular case—the gist of the action. A jury
    trial must be granted where the gist of the action is legal, where the action is in reality
    cognizable at law.’ ” [Citation.] On the other hand, if the action is essentially one in
    equity and the relief sought “depends upon the application of equitable doctrines,” the
    parties are not entitled to a jury trial. [Citations.]’ ” (Ibid.)
    That background in mind, we consider whether the gist of the claim here is one in
    law or equity. We find it to be one in equity.
    TJG, in effect, seeks a declaration that it—and not Porter Scott—is entitled to the
    awarded attorney fees. Actions seeking declaratory relief of this sort are at times legal in
    nature and at other times equitable in nature. If a party, for example, has been deprived
    of ownership of some property and then files an action to be declared the rightful owner,
    the action is triable in a court of law. (See Thomson v. Thomson (1936) 
    7 Cal. 2d 671
    ,
    681 (Thomson).) That is because an action to recover property is one long recognized in
    the common law. (See Berry v. Bank of Bakersfield (1918) 
    177 Cal. 206
    , 209 [an action
    “for the recovery of specific personal property” is “the code equivalent of the common-
    law writ of replevin”].)
    But if a party seeks to establish ownership of property “when the possession of the
    property is not involved,” then the action is an equitable one. 
    (Thomson, supra
    , 7 Cal.2d
    at p. 681; see also Caira v. Offner (2005) 
    126 Cal. App. 4th 12
    , 23-29 (Caira) [“actions to
    quiet title, like true declaratory relief actions, are generally equitable in nature”]; Aguayo
    v. Amaro (2013) 
    213 Cal. App. 4th 1102
    , 1109 [“A quiet title action is equitable in nature
    21
    except when it takes on the character of an ejectment proceeding to recover possession of
    real property.”].) And because that is the type of claim that TJG raises here—a claim
    seeking to establish ownership of a fee award when possession is not yet involved—TJG
    is not entitled to a jury trial. (Thomson, at p. 681; see also Caira, at pp. 26-29 [no jury
    required in a dispute involving who was entitled to certain stocks under an agreement];
    Campbell v. Rustigian (1943) 
    60 Cal. App. 2d 500
    , 501-503 [no jury trial required in a
    dispute over ownership of real property when neither of the parties yet held possession of
    the property].)4
    In arguing otherwise, TJG mistakenly characterizes its claim as one for damages
    arising out of a breach of contract, and then contends that “any action for damages arising
    out of that contract by either party is an action at law” that warrants a jury trial. But TJG
    is not seeking damages at all. (See 
    Flannery, supra
    , 26 Cal.4th at p. 586 [“Statutory
    attorney fees are not of course intended to compensate the ‘prevailing party’ for damages
    suffered.”].) Nor is it alleging any breach of contract. The parties, to be sure, are in
    dispute over how their agreement should be interpreted; but TJG has not alleged that
    Porter Scott has done anything in violation of the parties’ agreement. TJG’s claim, rather
    than being one for damages following a breach of contract, is better characterized as one
    4       Porter Scott offers a separate reason for finding a jury trial inappropriate here:
    There was no conflict in the offered extrinsic evidence. We agree, as Porter Scott notes,
    that “[i]t is solely a judicial function to interpret a written contract unless the
    interpretation turns upon the credibility of extrinsic evidence.” (Garcia v. Truck Ins.
    Exchange (1984) 
    36 Cal. 3d 426
    , 439.) But we need not address whether the
    interpretation of the agreement here turns on the credibility of extrinsic evidence. Either
    way, because the gist of the claim here was an equitable one, TJG was not entitled to a
    jury trial. (See 
    Shaw, supra
    , 2 Cal.5th at p. 995; see also Benach v. County of Los
    Angeles (2007) 
    149 Cal. App. 4th 836
    , 845-848 [plaintiff not entitled to jury trial on
    equitable contract claims, even though these claims turned in part on the credibility of
    conflicting extrinsic evidence].)
    22
    seeking specific performance—and that is a type of claim that courts have repeatedly
    found to be an “ ‘equitable one.’ ” 
    (Caira, supra
    , 126 Cal.App.4th at p. 27.)
    Finally, TJG contends it is entitled to a jury trial “because there are significant
    questions of fact that must be heard by a jury.” In support, it asserts there are “factual
    questions related to [Porter Scott’s] original legal advice that gave rise to Aerotek[’s suit
    against TJG and Ponce],” “factual questions about whether [Porter Scott] had a conflict
    of interest and breached its fiduciary duty by representing TJG in the very case that arose
    out of the advice given by [Porter Scott]” and “by negotiating the Pro Bono Agreement,”
    and “factual questions about whether [Porter Scott] made false and misleading
    representations to Johnson and his father on November 30, 2009 that either negligently or
    fraudulently induced Johnson to sign the Pro Bono Agreement under false pretenses.”
    Only the first of these alleged factual issues, however, was raised in any meaningful way
    at the trial level. TJG never discussed the alleged conflict of interest at all before the trial
    court. And although it noted in its trial briefing that “this is a case that involves . . . fraud
    in the inducement and breach of fiduciary duty,” it never followed up to explain the
    point. As a result, we find TJG’s claim related to these alleged factual questions largely
    forfeited. (Nellie Gail Ranch Owners Assn. v. McMullin (2016) 
    4 Cal. App. 5th 982
    , 997
    [“ ‘[a]s a general rule, theories not raised in the trial court cannot be asserted for the first
    time on appeal’ ”]; see also In re A.C. (2017) 
    13 Cal. App. 5th 661
    , 672 [when an
    appellant asserts a point “ ‘but fails to support it with reasoned argument and citations to
    authority, we treat the point as waived’ ”].)
    To the extent TJG’s claim that a jury trial is required “because there are significant
    questions of fact” is not forfeited, it does not alter our conclusion. Even in cases
    involving questions of fact, a jury trial is still unwarranted if the gist of the action is
    equitable in nature. Again, if an “ ‘action is essentially one in equity and the relief sought
    “depends upon the application of equitable doctrines,” the parties are not entitled to a jury
    trial’ ”—and that is true even if the action raises questions of fact. (
    Shaw, supra
    , 2
    23
    Cal.5th at p. 995; see also Benach v. County of Los 
    Angeles, supra
    , 149 Cal.App.4th at
    pp. 845-848 [finding no jury trial required to resolve an equitable contract claim, even
    though that claim turned in part on the credibility of conflicting extrinsic evidence].)
    And because we find that description fits here, we reject TJG’s contention that it was
    entitled to a jury trial.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Porter Scott is entitled to recover its costs on appeal.
    (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a)(1).)
    /s/
    BLEASE, Acting P. J.
    We concur:
    /s/
    MAURO, J.
    /s/
    BUTZ, J.
     Retired Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal, Third Appellate District, assigned by
    the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    24