Limited Success/Allocation Fee Challenges Rejected On Appeal; Expert Witness Fees Can Be Sought Through A Costs Memorandum.
In Abarca v. Citizens of Humanity, LLC, Case No. B290090 (2d Dist., Div. 3 June 18, 2020) (unpublished), a FEHA plaintiff won a jury verdict on disability discrimination/retaliation claims, although losing two other claims, to the tune of compensatory and punitive damages totaling $650,000 ($550,00 of which were punitive damages). Plaintiff’s attorneys, under a liberal FEHA fee-shifting statute, moved to recover a fee lodestar of $1,652,255 plus a 2.0 positive multiplier (total fee request of $3,304,510) as well as costs of $142,299.92 (a lot of which were for depositions, expert witness fees, models/blowups, etc.). In the end, the trial judge awarded $1,084,160 in fees after reducing hourly rates and denying the multiplier request and also awarded costs of around $116,000.
The appellate court affirmed everything, except to modify routine costs down to about $107,000 based on some transparent math errors.
The defense attacked reliance on reconstructed time, but this was a credibility determination for the lower court below. As far as limited success or apportioning fees on unsuccessful claims, the appellate court found that (1) the $650,000 verdict was not limited success given that the defense only offered to initially settle the case for $149,999.99; and (2) the intertwined unsuccessful claims were not a reason to reduce the fee under the particular circumstances of the case. With respect to routine costs, a lot of the defense opposition centered on whether expert fees needed to be claimed by noticed motion versus a cost memorandum, with plaintiff claiming through a cost memorandum. As we see it, the appellate court seemed to endorse the view, based on an analogous CCP § 998 situation, that these fees could be claimed through a cost memorandum (Jonkey v. Carignan Construction Co., 139 Cal.App.4th 20, 27 (2006), especially given no procedural specification under the FEHA cost-shifting statute to the contrary. However, there was no need to really confront the issue, because no prejudice was shown—the defense did oppose the costs through a motion to tax with full briefing by everyone. As far as models, blowups, and exhibit photocopies, courtroom technology has become more commonplace and less expensive such that earlier cases where the costs were exorbitant were not persuasive. (Bender v. County of Los Angeles, 217 Cal.App.4th 968, 991 (2013).) Everything affirmed, except for the appellate court to correct some minor arithmetic errors.
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