Because The Fees Provision In The Parties’ Settlement Agreement Did Not Address Fees Incurred Post-Settlement, Plaintiffs Were Entitled To Recovery Under Section 1194, But Only As To Fees Incurred In Conducting Discovery And Litigating To Trial, Not In Enforcing The Settlement Agreement.
In Lorta v. Bishop, Case No. G062166 (4th Dist., Div. 3 February 13, 2024) (unpublished), five employees, who had sued their employer for recovery of wages, filed a motion seeking attorney fees of $331,261.25 – based on a $265,009 lodestar and a 1.25 multiplier – after employer failed to comply with the parties’ stipulation for settlement. Plaintiffs incurred the fees post-settlement by conducting discovery and preparing for trial, and by enforcing the settlement agreement, and claimed entitlement to the fees under Labor Code sections 1194 and 226, and Code Civ. Proc. section 1021.5. Defendant argued that because there was no trial or determination by the trial court on the merits of Plaintiffs’ claims, Plaintiffs were not prevailing parties under sections 1194, 226, and 1021.5, and not entitled to statutory fees. Defendant further argued that Plaintiffs had prevailed only in enforcing the settlement agreement, which amounted to a breach of contract claim, and the settlement agreement provided that each party would bear its own fees and costs. The trial court agreed and denied Plaintiffs’ motion for fees.
Plaintiffs appealed and obtained a reversal and remand as to fee recovery under section 1194 – a one-way fee-shifting statute that allows employees to recover fees in a successful action for minimum wage or overtime.
In an opinion authored by Justice Sanchez, the 4/3 DCA found that the settlement agreement was silent as to any fees incurred after the settlement agreement – thereby entitling Plaintiffs to post-settlement attorney fees under section 1194 insofar as those fees were not incurred to enforce the settlement agreement. In reaching this conclusion, the panel determined that the settlement agreement had the same effect as a judgment as defined under Code Civ. Proc., § 577 and constituted a recovery in a civil action within the meaning of section 1194.
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