Opinion
The City of Berkeley and Affordable Housing Associates (AHA; AHA and the City of Berkeley are hereafter referred to collectively and severally as the City) appeal from postjudgment orders awarding Marie Bowman (Bowman) et al. (the Neighbors) a portion of their attorney fees and costs in this mandamus action. The fees and costs in question were incurred in setting aside the City’s approval of а housing project on due process grounds. We hold that it was not an abuse of discretion to award the fees and costs, even though the project was ultimately re-approved over the Neighbors’ objection, and they were otherwise unsuccessful in their suit. We therefore affirm the orders.
I. BACKGROUND
The panel is familiar with the background of this matter from the prior appeal in the case. The Neighbors’ mandate petition sought, among other things, to overturn the City’s approval of a housing project for senior citizens. As recounted in our prior opinion, the petition was successful in vacating the original approval of the project.
(Bowman
v.
City of Berkeley
(2004)
After the court filed its order denying the petition following return of the writ, the Neighbors moved for attorney fees under the private attorney general statute (Code Civ. Proc., § 1021.5 [hereafter section 1021.5].) The motion was supported by invoices showing that the Neighbors had been billed $96,592, and had paid $89,696.50, for legal services in the case. The Neighbors also submitted a memorandum of costs in the amount of $5,761.37. The City opposed the motion for fees and moved to tax costs. The court determined that the Neighbors were entitled to fees and costs incurred in connection with the due process issue litigated at the outset of the case, and awarded them $17,314.35 in fees and $979.00 in costs.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Issues and Scope of Review
Attorney fees are recoverable undеr section 1021.5 (1) by a successful party, (2) in an action that has resulted in the enforcement of an important right affecting the public interest, (3) if a significant benefit has been conferred on the general public or a large class of persons, and (4) the necessity and financial burden of private enforcement are such as to make the award appropriate. The statute’s purpose is to encourage public interest litigation that might otherwise be too costly to pursue.
(Families Unafraid to Uphold Rural El Dorado County
v.
Board of Supervisors
(2000)
The City does not dispute that this case involved enforcement of an important right affecting the public interest. (See
San Bernardino Valley Audubon Society, Inc. v. County of San Bernardino
(1984)
“The trial court is to assess the litigation realistically and determine from a practical perspective whether [the statutory] criteria have been met.”
*177
(Families Unafraid to Uphold Rural El Dorado County
v.
Board of Supervisors, supra,
B. Successful Parties
The City contends that the Neighbors cannot be deemed to be “successful parties” because they did not achieve their primary litigation aims. There is no question that the Neighbors’ case was largely unsuccessful. They prevailed on only one of the six causes of action in their mandate petition: the one that alleged that they did not receive a “fair trial” at the May 28, 2002 city council meeting where the project was originally approved. They lost on the other five causes of action, which alleged that an environmental impact report (EIR) was required for the project, that the City’s general plan was invalid, that the project was inconsistent with the general plan, that the project violated city planning and zoning ordinances, and that the city did not follow the procedure specified in those ordinances when it approved the project. The City asserts that “the only rеlief [the Neighbors] did obtain — new hearing — as not even requested in their prayer” of the petition. But while it is true that the Neighbors’ prayer did not specifically mention a new hearing, it did expressly request that the May 28, 2002 project approval be set aside. That approval was rescinded pursuant to the court order that returned the matter to the City for a new hearing. Thus, it is incorrect to say that the Neighbors obtained none of the relief they sought.
The City is also incorrect to claim that the court could not award attorney fees for that partial success. It is well settled that partially successful plaintiffs may recover attorney fees under section 1021.5. (See 1 Manaster & Selmi, Cal. Environmental Law & Land Use Practice (2005) § 13.10(3)(b), pp. 13-18 and cases cited; Pearl, Cal. Attorney Fee Awards (Cont.Ed.Bar 2d ed. 2004) § 2.19, pp. 49-50 and cаses cited.) “ ‘[A] party need not prevail on every claim presented in an action in order to be considered a successful party within the meaning of the section. [Citations.]’
(Wallace v. Consumers Cooperative of Berkeley, Inc.
(1985)
The City’s argument that the Neighbors cannot be considered successful parties because they did not accomplish their “primary” litigation aims is based on language in “catalyst” cases, where the issue is whether a party who has not obtained any judicial relief is nevertheless entitled to fees. (See generally
Graham v. DaimlerChrysler Corp., supra,
The “successful party” concept is not as narrow as the City suggests. In order to effectuate the purpose of section 1021.5, courts “have taken a broad, pragmatic view of what constitutes a ‘successful party.’ ”
(Graham v. DaimlerChrysler Corp., supra,
In support of a contrary conclusion, the City cites language in
Miller v. California Com. on Status of Women
(1985)
The situation here is analogous to the one in
National Parks & Conservation Assn.
v.
County of Riverside
(2000)
C. Significant Benefit
Section 1021.5 requires that the litigation confer a significant benefit on the general public or a large class of persons. The City argues that no one other than the Neighbors benefited from the new hearing the City was required to conduct on the project, and that the Neighbors received no benefit other than telephonic notice of the city council meeting following the remand. To understand this argument, it is necessary to briefly review how the project was originally approved.
When the project first came before the city council, the council referred the matter to mediation between the Neighbors and AHA. The matter was continued, while the mediation was ongoing, to the city council meeting on *180 May 28, 2002. At 3:05 p.m. on May 28, the mediator e-mailed the city council reporting on the status of the mediation. The e-mail described changes to the project that had been discussed, and advised that the parties had agreed to “submit any modified plan that may result from such discussions by 6/3/02.” A city staff member left a phone message for Bowman that afternoon asking her to call him. Bowman called back twice and left messages stating that the mediator had given her the impression that she did not need to attend the city council meeting that night, but that she would attend if the council was going to go forward on the project. There was no evidence that these calls were returned, and none of the Neighbors appeared at the meeting.
A city council member expressed misgivings at the meeting about proceeding on the project in the Neighbors absence, and worried that “we can get ourselves into really serious trouble if . . . they were misled, feeling that nothing was going to happen tonight.” However, staff advised that it had made “energetic efforts” to notify Bowman that the council might act on the project, and had “left a number of messages to let folks know” about the meeting. The council went on to approve the project without the Neighbors present.
In its order returning the matter to the City, the court found that, by approving the project at the May 28 meeting, the City improperly short-circuited the mediation before it had concluded. The court speculated that there could have been “some sort of miscommunication among City staff” that led to “an honest but mistaken belief’ that adequаte efforts had been made to contact the Neighbors about the meeting, but found that, contrary to what staff said at the meeting, those efforts “could not have been less energetic.” To preclude any other such misunderstandings, the City evidently gave the Neighbors telephonic notice of the city council meeting following the remand, in addition to the notice otherwise required by law.
The City’s cоntention that additional notice to the Neighbors was the only benefit that resulted from the due process litigation is belied by the record of what occurred after the matter was returned to the City. The remand resulted in a great deal of additional public input on the project, including substantial new written submissions, and oral statements to the city council, from city staff as well as proponents and оpponents of the project. As the court noted in its attorney fee ruling, “both parties used the opportunity to supplement the administrative record to provide additional evidence intended to sway findings made by the council members.”
The court thus reasonably rejected the City’s “narrow characterization” of the impact of the remand. A significant benefit was likewise found in
Schwartz v. Rosemead
(1984)
D. Private Burden
Under the private burden prong of section 1021.5, fees are recoverable “ ‘when the cost of the claimant’s legal victory transcends his personal interest, that is, when the necessity for pursuing the lawsuit placed a burden on the plaintiff “out of proportion to his individual stake in the matter.” ’ ”
(Woodland Hills Residents Assn., Inc.
v.
City Council
(1979)
The City contends that the Neighbors’ case cannot be distinguished from
Williams v. San Francisco Bd. of Permit Appeals
(1999)
The petition herein was filed by seven рeople as individuals, two of whom live “directly adjacent” to the challenged project, five of whom live in “close proximity” to the project, and on behalf of the “Neighbors for Sensible Development for 2517 Sacramento Street,” an unincorporated association of approximately 250 people residing “in proximity” to the project. Bowman’s declaration in support of the fee motion indicated that approximately 40 “Berkeley citizens associated with Neighbors for Sensible Development” had contributed funds for the suit. It thus appears that only two of those who incurred liability for fees in the case may live next door to the project, and that the majority of those who contributed do not live in “close” proximity. Accordingly, while the Neighbors’ pеrsonal interests in the project were similar to those of the plaintiff in Williams, they were as a whole far more attenuated.
Moreover, the thrust of the City’s argument on the private burden test— that the Neighbors’ “real concerns” were their personal interests in the project, rather than any matter of principle — is entirely unpersuasive in the context of the due process cause of action for which fees were awarded. The Neighbоrs have insisted that they were concerned as much with the process by which the City approved the project as with the project itself, 1 and the court could choose to credit their professed intentions if their credibility were at issue. But we do not think that a city that has deprived its residents of due process can avoid paying the fees they incurred to vindicate that right on the theory thаt they were really more interested in the underlying merits.
*183 E. Costs
The City’s contention with respect to costs is the same as the one it advances on the “successful party” test for the recovery of fees, namely that the Neighbors cannot be regarded as prevailing parties, even on the due process issue. We reject that argument for the reasons previously stated.
in. DISPOSITION
The orders for fees and costs are affirmed.
Reardon, J., and Rivera, J., concurred.
Notes
Bowman averred in hеr declaration that “Petitioners were highly motivated on the heels of the May 28th travesty of justice to vindicate their right to due process. Petitioners were also motivated by the desire and determination to resist, for the benefit of the public, what we maintain is the City’s blatant and repeated violation of state and local laws. H] Through this litigation Petitioners not only seek to prevent the Project from being built in its present design, we also seek to invoke change for the public’s benefit. Specifically, Petitioners through this lawsuit seek to force the City of Berkeley to be more accountable and responsive to the legitimate inquiries and concerns of its citizens, and even more fundamentally, simply to abide by and enforce state and local laws that bear upon their decisions regarding development projects.”
