Plaintiff Winning Some Money Entitled To Routine Costs, But Defense Entitled To Prevailing Party Fees And Some Other Routine Costs Relating To Fee And Expert Witness Work, Some Other CCP § 998.
Mike Murphy’s Enterprises, Inc. v. Fineline Industries, Inc., Case No. F080503 (5th Dist. Apr. 13, 2022) (unpublished) is a good opinion to show the logical analysis of determining routine costs and fees awards where there is a mixed result and a CCP § 998 offer is involved. Here is what the appellate court developed as the analytical framework: (1) a court determines the prevailing party for a purpose of routine costs under CCP § 1032, with the prevailing party for 1032 purposes obtaining at least its preoffer costs; (2) if a party qualifies as a prevailing party under § 1032, the court turns to whether the prevailing party’s net monetary recovery exceeds any qualifying but rejected § 998 offer (which entails taking the amount awarded and adding preoffer interest and any properly requested costs), with costs including attorney’s fees if allowed by statute or contract); (3) in conjunction with the 998 analysis, the court must determine if the plaintiff is the prevailing party under section 1717 such that those preoffer fees may be included in the 998 net recovery analysis; (4) the court then considers the contractual provisions, the effect of section 1717 on the fees provisions, and finally the effect of the rejected 998 settlement offer such that if the net recovery is greater, the plaintiff is the prevailing party for the whole case or if the net recovery is lower, defendant will be treated as the prevailing party at all times after the settlement was made.
In the actual case, plaintiff lost many of his contractual theories to defendant, but did win about $63,000 on his contractual claim. Earlier in the case, defendant sent a 998 offer for $85,000 which was not accepted. Eventually, the lower court determined defendant was the prevailing party for both fees and costs, especially under 998, awarding it about $564,300 in fees, costs, and expert witness fees—when offset against the $63,000 award to plaintiff, defendant had a favorable judgment of $501,284.95. Plaintiff appealed.
The Fifth District affirmed most of the trial judge’s awards, except for a routine costs award denial to plaintiff and except for taxing some of defendant’s routine costs a little. Plaintiff was the prevailing 1032 party because it did receive positive money, such that it was entitled to its preoffer costs. However, the trial judge was correct in determining that plaintiff properly excluded preoffer fees because he did determine that defendant was the prevailing party on the contract under section 1717, not plaintiff, in a mixed-results case—meaning that plaintiff did not have the net recovery for purposes of preoffer fees or postoffer costs. Then, because defendant was entitled to fees and costs as prevailing party under both sections 1717 and CCP § 998, the appellate court only disagreed with the trial judge in minor respects, finding these costs were not recoverable: (1) past discovery sanctions; (2) filing costs in a separate federal action (which cannot be deemed costs awarded to a prevailing state court party); and (3) some County of Tulare production fees. It did find that items such as CourtCall expenses and pro hac vice costs were proper. In the end, it remanded to award plaintiff preoffer costs and to strike some defense costs items, but otherwise enter judgment pretty close to what occurred before the trial judge.
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