Decision Looks Like It Recognizes That The Modern Costs Of ESI Discovery Expenses May Be Compensable In The Lower Court’s Discretion.
In Russo v. Andrews, Case No. A155999 et al. (1st Dist., Div. 5 Sept. 28, 2022) (unpublished), defendants beat plaintiff in a contentious LLC operating agreement dispute, with defendants awarded damages and equitable relief on their cross-complaint except for one cause of action. The fees order and one aspect of a cost award were at issue on appeal.
The trial judge awarded defendants $2.15 million as prevailing parties. The appellate court agreed, because the defendants/cross-complainants achieved their primary litigation objectives on capital contributions, dilution, and management ouster issues.
That took the Court of Appeal to the trial judge’s denial of $205,480.77 in non-court-ordered electronic document hosting charges which were requested by the defense, an issue which had to be remanded. That cost was neither allowed nor prohibited under the CCP § 1033.5 regime such that the lower court had discretion on the issue. However, the record showed that the trial judge believed it did not have discretion, so the matter went back. However, the panel made it clear that electronic hosting charges, even those just voluntarily done without a court order, may be fair game for a costs award.
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