The Appellate Win Did Not Allow For Prevailing Party Fees, Because The Ultimate Litigation Outcome Result Was Dispositive—No One Prevailed.
The next case, Waterwood Enterprises, LLC v. City of Long Beach, Case No. B316269 (2d Dist., Div. 1 Apr. 26, 2023) (unpublished) had a topsy-turvy procedural history, but it at long last has seemed to have reached its end.
Waterwood won a $45,000 compensatory verdict, after requesting damages of around $235,000, against City of Long Beach. However, when it came time to consider attorney’s fees, the lower court denied fees to Waterwood and awarded $230,000 in contractual fees to City after considering some settlement offers and other matters which the appellate court in a prior appeal determined to be in error, determining that a remand was in order to see if Waterwood prevailed or if no one prevailed.
On remand, Waterwood requested fees of over $348,000 for trial court efforts as well as $81,461 in fees for prevailing on the prior appeal. The lower court determined that the case was a mixed positive result for Waterwood, denying both lower court and appellate fees. Those determinations were affirmed on appeal, because the trial judge had considerably discretion to determine no one prevailed under Hsu v. Abbara (Our Leading Case No. 2). With respect to denial of appellate fees, one cannot segregate appellate wins but has to examine who prevails in the overall matter, with the lower court determining that did not happen. (Wood v. Santa Monica Escrow Co., 176 Cal.App.4th 802, 804, 806, 808 (2009).)
However, Waterwood was entitled to appellate routine costs as the prevailing party, with the lower court clerk erring by failing to enter judgment on that issue after the filing of a timely costs memorandum. However, no interest was due before entry of judgment because Waterwood never raised the issue before the lower court to get to a judgment before this appeal was decided.