Opinion
Defendant, appellant and cross-respondent American Bonding Company (hereafter, ABC) appeals from a judgment of the superior court, in which, after a court trial, the court found in favor of plaintiff, respondent and cross-appellant, Contractors Labor Pool, Inc. (CLP) in CLP’s action against ABC and codefendants Westway Contractors, Inc., and its president. CLP’s complaint sought recovery of damages for breach of contract and common counts as well as recovery on a payment bond which had been furnished by ABC pursuant to Civil Code section 3248. CLP cross-appeals from a postjudgment order awarding it attorney fees under Civil Code section 3250. 1 CLP contends the award was so grossly inadequate as to constitute an abuse of discretion.
In the judgment, the court found Westway and its president liable to CLP for damages and also found CLP entitled to recover against ABC on the *156 bond. On a cross-complaint by ABC, the court found ABC entitled to indemnification from Westway. 2 In its postjudgment order awarding attorney fees and costs, the court awarded CLP a total of $12,543.17, including $7,965.49 in attorney fees. CLP had filed a motion for $43,151 in attorney fees for attorneys’ services prior to judgment and had later requested an additional $8,064 for its successful resistance of ABC’s motion for a new trial.
The trial court correctly found CLP to be a claimant entitled to recover against the payment bond. However, the court did not correctly assess the extent of its discretion to award attorney fees under section 3250. We therefore affirm the judgment and remand the matter for a redetermination of the amount of the attorney fee award.
Factual and Procedural Background
CLP is a California corporation in the business of furnishing skilled and unskilled temporary workers to licensed construction contractors. Defendant Westway is a contractor to whom CLP furnished workers for a public works project in which Westway was involved as a subcontractor. The general contractor was R.A. Francis, Inc. (Francis). ABC provided a $567,464 payment bond for the project.
In late 1991, the California Department of Transportation (Cal-Trans) awarded Francis a contract to construct the Vermont Street Station, a passenger station on the Green Line electric railway in Los Angeles County, California. Francis subcontracted with Westway for Westway to do structural concrete work on the station. Westway contracted with CLP for CLP to supply workers for the project. The contract between CLP and Westway was a printed form contract drafted by CLP and entitled “Contractors Labor Pool Labor Agreement.” It provided, among other things, that: (1) Westway would pay CLP an hourly rate for each hour a CLP employee (Special Employee) performed services for Westway; (2) CLP would be responsible for the Special Employees’ payroll taxes, workers’ compensation and other insurance premiums, federal and state withholding, and fringe benefits; (3) Westway would control the activities of the Special Employees while on the job; (4) Westway would indemnify CLP for damages to persons or property arising out of work performed or not performed by the Special Employees *157 and/or Westway in connection with the labor agreement; (5) Westway would provide CLP with all information needed to maintain CLP’s mechanic’s lien rights and would cooperate with CLP as reasonably requested in connection with filing such liens.
After the labor agreement was executed by CLP and Westway, Westway placed orders for workers, such as carpenters, laborers and superintendents, by calling CLP and making a verbal request. If a particular worker was not satisfactory to Westway, Westway had the right to send that worker back, and Westway directed, controlled and supervised the workers’ activities on the jobsite. CLP paid the workers’ wages and employment benefits, provided workers’ compensation insurance, and was responsible for the workers’ tax withholding. CLP invoiced Westway weekly, based on the actual hours worked by the Special Employees.
Westway eventually fell behind in paying CLP’s invoices, and by April of 1993, Westway owed CLP $170,495.47. When this amount remained unpaid, CLP ceased to provide workers to Westway and, in addition, filed the within action to recover the amounts owing. After a trial, the court found (1) Westway liable to CLP in the amount of $170,495.47, plus service charges, (2) Westway’s president liable to CLP in the amount of $50,000 plus interest, and (3) CLP entitled to recover $170,495.47, plus service charges against the payment bond furnished by ABC. A motion by ABC for a new trial was denied. This timely appeal followed.
Contentions
ABC contends that (1) CLP has no right to recover against the payment bond because it is not a claimant protected by section 3110; (2) alternatively, pursuant to Business and Professions Code section 7031, CLP has no right to any recovery under its contract with Westway, because if CLP is indeed a claimant protected by section 3110, then it necessarily was acting in the capacity of a contractor when its employees performed services on the work of improvement, and CLP had no contractor’s license when these services were performed. CLP disputes each of the above contentions and further argues that the court’s postjudgment order awarding attorney fees was so inadequate as to constitute an abuse of discretion.
Discussion
1. CLP, as a Furnisher of Labor, Was Entitled to Recover on the Payment Bond.
ABC contends CLP is not entitled to recover against the bond, because it is not entitled to a mechanic’s lien under section 3110. ABC cites
*158
Primo Team, Inc.
v.
Blake Construction Co.
(1992)
We disagree. As a furnisher of labor contributing to the public work of improvement, CLP was a claimant protected by the mechanic’s lien law and was therefore entitled to recover against the payment bond.
(Myers
v.
Alta Construction Co.
(1951)
a. Those Who Furnish Laborers for a Public Work of Improvement, as Well as Those Who Perform Labor Themselves, Are Entitled to Recover Against a Payment Bond.
Section 3248 provides that a payment bond on a construction contract awarded by a public entity must “[bjy its terms inure to the benefit of any of the persons named in Section 3181 so as to give a right of action to such persons or their assigns in any suit brought upon the bond.” Section 3181 provides that: “Except for an original contractor, any person mentioned in Section 3110, 3111 or 3112, or in Section 4107.7 of the Public Contract Code, or furnishing provisions, provender, or other supplies” may serve a stop notice for a public work. Section 3110 mentions the following persons and entitles such persons to a mechanic’s lien for the value of labor done or materials furnished to any work of improvement: “[mechanics, material-men, contractors, subcontractors, lessors of equipment, artisans, architects, registered engineers, licensed land surveyors, machinists, builders, teamsters, and draymen, and all persons and laborers of every class performing labor upon or bestowing skill or other necessary services on, or furnishing materials or leasing equipment to be used or consumed in or furnishing
*159
appliances, teams, or power contributing to a work of improvement. . . .” Included among “persons and laborers . . . performing labor upon or bestowing skill or other necessary services on” a work of improvement are persons and entities like CLP, which furnish laborers to the worksite, as well as persons who physically perform labor themselves.
(Myers
v.
Alta Construction Co., supra,
In
Primo Team, supra,
On appeal, Primo did not claim it had been the actual employer of the workers, but nevertheless contended it was entitled to recover against the payment bond as a furnisher of labor. Primo argued that there is no requirement that a furnisher of labor actually employ the laborers (3 Cal.App.4h at pp. 806-808), and claimed it was entitled to protection as a furnisher of labor, because it performed all of the functions performed by such an entity, such as assembling the work force, administering the payroll, and performing other necessary administrative functions. (Id. at p. 806.) Only the lack of the legal status of “employer” distinguished Primo from entities which had been found eligible to recover against a payment bond. (Id. at p. 808.)
*160
The
Primo Team
court rejected Prime’s argument, citing
Sweet
v.
Fresno Hotel Co., supra,
b. The Employer of Workers Who Contribute to a Work of Improvement Is a “Furnisher” of the Employees’ Labor.
ABC’s argument in this case is the logical inverse of Primo’s argument in
Primo Team, supra,
This argument fails for reasons stated in the venerable
Sweet
case. The defendant in
Sweet
contended that the June 1 contract, like that of April 1,
*161
did not give rise to lien rights, because it provided for Sweet to perform functions essentially identical to those he performed under the April 1 contract.
(Sweet
v.
Fresno Hotel Co., supra,
The import of the foregoing is that
the legal status of an employer
of laborers furnished to a work of improvement is the crucial factor which distinguishes a person who “furnishes” such laborers to the project, and is thus entitled to lien rights, from a person who merely organizes the work force, performs administrative functions, advances wages, or does all three
in behalf of another,
and is consequently not entitled to lien rights. ABC argues, however, that Sweet’s responsibility of supervising the work under the June 1 contract was crucial in the Supreme Court’s determination that he was entitled to a mechanic’s lien in respect to that contract. In support of this argument, ABC cites the high court’s observation that Sweet “actually did select and hire the men
and superintend them in the work
under the contract of June 1st.” (
The designation of a person as the “employer” of another is not a mere label, as ABC contends. Rather, such designation signifies a legal relationship in which the employer has legal responsibilities to the employee and to third parties, which are absent where a person merely supervises another’s employees or disburses to such employees wages which are due
from the
*162
other person
to the employees, as was the case under the April 1, 1911, contract in
Sweet.
Essentially,
Sweet, Myers
v.
Alta Construction Co., supra,
c. Substantial Evidence Supports the Trial Court’s Conclusion That CLP Was the Employer of the Workers It Sent to Westways, and Was Consequently a “Furnisher” of Their Labor.
Finally, ABC argues that, under the labor agreement between CLP and Westway, CLP did not bear certain responsibilities that are generally borne by an employer. In particular, the contract provided that CLP would not be responsible for damages caused by the Special Employee’s performance or nonperformance of work, and that Westway agreed to indemnify CLP for “all claims for damages to persons or property arising out of work performed by the Special Employees. ...” Under the doctrine of respondeat superior, an employer is liable for torts of its employees. ABC thus argues that the contract provision relieving CLP of such liability is evidence that CLP was not the employer of the workers furnished to Westway.
The foregoing argument is logically flawed. In truth, if the agreement between CLP and Westway contemplated that Westway would be the workers’ employer, and CLP would merely function as Westway’s personnel administrator, there would be no need for a contractual provision for West-way to be responsible for the workers’ torts, for Westway would have that responsibility as a matter of course under the respondeat superior doctrine. The express provision assigning responsibility for the employees’ torts to Westway raises an inference that, absent the provision, the responsibility would belong to CLP, and this, in turn, raises the inference that CLP was indeed the workers’ employer. This latter inference is strengthened by the provision that Westway agreed to “indemnify” CLP for the workers’ torts. If Westway were the workers’ employer, it would have primary responsibility for torts committed in the course of their employment. Inasmuch as the contract provided for Westway to indemnify CLP for such torts, it follows that it was CLP which had primary responsibility for them—a responsibility which flowed from CLP’s status as the workers’ employer.
*163
Ultimately, the nature of the relationships among CLP, Westway and the Special Employees is a question of fact, on which we defer to the trial court.
(Rodoni
v.
Harbor Engineers
(1961)
ABC has not disputed any of the above findings; substantial evidence supports the findings; and the findings support the conclusion that CLP was indeed the workers’ employer. The trial court therefore correctly determined that CLP was a “furnisher” of labor to the work of public improvement and was consequently entitled to recover against the payment bond.
2. CLP Did Not Act in the Capacity of a Contractor and Thus Was Not Required to Have a Contractor’s License.
ABC contends, in the alternative, that CLP is not entitled to any recovery on its contract with Westway, because it acted in the capacity of a contractor when its employees performed services on the project. ABC contends that, by CLP’s very act of characterizing itself as the employer of workers who performed services on the project, CLP has placed itself squarely within the definition of a “contractor” under the Contractors’ State License Law. Therefore, ABC contends, CLP was required to have a contractor’s license. CLP did not have a contractor’s license at the time its employees performed services. Therefore, ABC contends that, pursuant to *164 Business and Professions Code section 7031, subdivision (a), CLP may not recover a judgment for such services. 4
CLP contends ABC waived the issue of whether a contractor’s license was required, because it did not rely upon such an argument in the trial court. We believe the issue was sufficiently litigated to avoid a finding of waiver. However, we disagree with ABC’s substantive claim that every furnisher of labor who is entitled to protection under sections 3110, 3181 and 3248 is necessarily a “contractor” who is required to have a license under Business and Professions section 7031.
Section 7031 of the Business and Professions Code precludes a person “engaged in the business or acting in the capacity of a contractor” from bringing an action in law or equity to collect for compensation for services requiring a license, unless the person pleads and proves that he or she was duly licensed when the services were performed. Business and Professions Code section 7026 defines a “contractor” as “any person, who undertakes to or offers to undertake or purports to have the capacity to undertake to or submits a bid to, or does himself or by or through others, construct, alter, repair, add to, subtract from, improve, move, wreck or demolish any building, highway, road, parking facility, railroad, excavation or other structure, project, development or improvement, or to do any part thereof, including the erection of scaffolding or other structures or works in connection therewith, or the cleaning of grounds or structures in connection therewith, and whether or not the performance of work herein described involves the addition to or fabrication into any structure, project, development or improvement herein described of any material or article of merchandise. The term contractor includes subcontractor and specialty contractor.”
ABC contends that CLP acted in the capacity of a contractor because “[tjhrough its employees, CLP constructed a portion of the Transit Station.” However, ABC misconstrues the meaning of language in Business and Professions Code section 7026 which provides that a contractor includes one who “does himself[,]
or by or through others,
construct, alter, repair,” or otherwise improve property. Acting “by or through others” to improve property for purposes of the Contractors’ State License Law entails directing
*165
or supervising the work performed, although “employing” others, for purposes of the mechanic’s lien law does not. The purpose of the licensing law is to protect the public from incompetence and dishonesty in those who provide building and construction services. The licensing requirements provide minimal assurance that all persons offering such services have the requisite skill and character, understand applicable local laws and codes, and know the rudiments of administering a contracting business.
(Hydrotech Systems, Ltd.
v.
Oasis Waterpark
(1991)
In support of its claim that CLP acted in the capacity of a contractor when it furnished laborers to Westway, ABC cites
Vallejo Development Co.
v.
Beck Development Co.
(1994)
In each of these cases, the plaintiff was unlicensed, was found to have acted in the capacity of a contractor, and was consequently denied recovery
*166
for the unlicensed services rendered.
(Vallejo Development Co.
v.
Beck Development Co., supra,
Here, it is undisputed that CLP only furnished laborers to Westway, and that the full supervision and control of the workers furnished by CLP was the responsibility of Westway, the subcontractor who actually performed the construction services on the public work.
5
The case is therefore governed by the rule that a person or company in the business of supplying equipment or hiring out laborers to be supervised by others does not act in the capacity of a contractor and is not required to have a license.
(Contractors Dump Truck Service, Inc.
v.
Gregg Constr. Co, supra,
Finally, ABC contends that Contractors Dump Truck Service, Inc., and Rodini do not apply to this case, because Business and Professions Code section 7053 has been amended since those cases were decided. Business and Professions Code section 7053 provides that the Contractors’ State License Law does not apply to a person who “engages in the activities herein regulated as an employee who receives wages as his or her sole compensation, does not customarily engage in an independently established business, and does not have the right to control or discretion as to the manner of performance so as to determine the final results of the work performed.” 6 ABC contends that CLP is customarily engaged in an independently established business and, for that reason, as well as others, CLP is not excepted by Business and Professions Code section 7053 from the licensure requirement. However, as we have already observed, CLP has no need to be excepted from the licensure requirement for purposes of this action, because it did not act in the capacity of a contractor as defined in Business and Professions Code section 7026 when it furnished laborers to Westway. *167 Stated otherwise, Business and Professions Code section 7053 excepts from the Contractors’ State License Law a person who “engages in the activities [therein] regulated,” if the person functions only as a wage-earning employee. However, CLP did not engage in activities regulated by the Contractors’ State License Law. It is thus immaterial that CLP does not match Business and Professions Code section 7053’s description of a wage-earning employee who is excepted from the law.
In sum, CLP did not act in the capacity of a contractor in furnishing labor to the work of improvement. It was therefore not required to have a contractor’s license to furnish laborers for the public work, and it is entitled to judicial enforcement of its rights under its contract with Westway.
3. The Matter Must Be Remanded for a Redetermination of the Appropriate Attorney Fee Award.
The prevailing party in an action to recover on a bond is entitled to recover its attorney fees. (§ 3250;
Leatherby Ins. Co.
v.
City of Tustin
(1977)
CLP contends the trial court erred by basing its award of attorney fees upon the schedule in Los Angeles County Superior Court rule 3.2 and not awarding “reasonable” fees, as required by section 3250. (See fn. 1, ante.) We agree.
*168
In determining what constitutes a reasonable attorney fee when a contract or statute provides for such an award, courts should consider the nature of the litigation, its difficulty, the amount involved, and the skill required and success of the attorney’s efforts, his or her learning, age and experience in the particular type of work demanded, the intricacies and importance of the litigation, the labor and necessity for skilled legal training and ability in trying the cause, and the time consumed.
(Church of Scientology
v.
Wollersheim
(1996)
Here, the trial court indicated by its remarks from the bench that it did not take due consideration of the factors listed in
Church of Scientology
v.
Wollersheim, supra,
The court did not, indeed, entirely fail to exercise discretion as to the amount of attorney fees. The trial judge’s remarks from the bench indicate he exercised some independent evaluation of CLP’s fees claim, for he stated he did not believe there had been a showing that the amounts over and above $7,965.49 were “reasonable.” However, the judge also stated that he believed the formulas in Los Angeles County Superior Court rule 3.2 imposed “presumptive limitations,” suggesting he declined to award CLP its meticulously documented attorney fees because he believed himself subject to such limitations. The limitations which the trial judge referred to evidently were those in subdivision (d) of rule 3.2, which authorize an award over the amounts provided by the formulas in subdivisions (a) through (c) only where “extraordinary” services were performed. It thus appears that the trial court believed it could not award fees greater than those provided by the formulas unless it determined that the services were “extraordinary.” This was error.
Los Angeles County Superior Court rule 3.2, which limits attorney fee awards to amounts calculated under the rule’s formulas, except when the
*169
attorney’s services were “extraordinary,” conflicts with section 3250, which provides that in an action on a payment bond, “the court shall award to the prevailing party a
reasonable
attorney’s fee . . .” The conflict exists because the local rule purports to limit a court’s discretion in setting a fee award, but the statute contains no such limitations. To the extent a local rule conflicts with a state statute, the rule is invalid.
(Kalivas
v.
Barry Controls Corp.
(1996)
Here, the court below erroneously believed itself restricted by Los Angeles County Superior Court rule 3.2 in determining the amount of attorney fees to be award to CLP. Thus, the fee award was not an exercise of discretion as contemplated by section 3250, but the consequence of an erroneous view of the court’s power. The case must therefore be remanded for a redetermination of the award, taking due consideration of the nature, difficulty, intricacy and importance of the litigation, the amount involved, the skill required and success of the attorney’s efforts, his or her learning, age and experience, and the time consumed.
(Church of Scientology
v.
Wollersheim, supra,
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed. However, the matter is remanded for a redetermination of the amount of costs and attorney fees to be awarded to CLP in accordance with the views expressed herein. Costs on appeal are awarded to CLP.
Klein, P. J., and Kitching, J., concurred.
The petition of appellant American Bonding Co. for review by the Supreme Court was denied June 11, 1997.
Notes
Unless otherwise noted, further statutory references are to the Civil Code.
Section 3248 provides in pertinent part as follows: “To be approved the payment bond shall satisfy all of the following requirements: HD ... HD (b)Provide that if the original contractor or a subcontractor fails to pay any of the persons named in Section 3181 [persons entitled to *156 file stop notice]. . . that the sureties will pay for the same, and also, in case suit is brought upon the bond, as reasonable attorney’s fee, to be fixed by the court. . . .” Section 3250 provides that: “. . . In any action [on a payment bond], the court shall award to the prevailing party a reasonable attorney’s fee, to be taxed as costs.”
ABC’s codefendants have not appealed.
Former Code of Civil Procedure section 1183 (Stats. 1929, ch. 869, § 1, pp. 1924-1927), which was repealed in 1951 (Stats. 1951, ch. 1159, § 4, p. 2958), set forth a list of eligible mechanic’s lien claimants that was substantially identical to the list now found in section 3110. There have been some deletions from and additions to the list since 1951, but the language which impacts our decision in this case—“all persons and laborers of every class performing labor upon or bestowing skill or other necessary services [on a work of improvement]”—remains identical in all substantive respects to the language construed in
Myers
v.
Alta Construction. Co., supra
Business and Professions Code section 7031, subdivision (a) provides in pertinent part that, with certain exceptions which to not apply in this case, “. . . no person engaged in the business or acting in the capacity of a contractor, may bring or maintain any action, or recover in law or equity in any action, in any court of this state for the collection of compensation for the performance of any act or contract for which a license is required by this chapter without alleging that he or she was a duly licensed contractor at all times during the performance of that act or contract. . . .”
Indeed, ABC primarily relies upon this fact to support its alternative argument that CLP was not the workers’ employer in any real sense.
As originally enacted, and as it read when Contractors Dump Truck Service, Inc. and Rodini were decided, Business and Professions Code section 7053 only provided that the Contractors’ State License Law did not apply “to any person who engage[d] in the activities [therein] regulated, as an employee with wages as his sole compensation.”
Rule 3.2 of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County Rules provides in pertinent part as follows: “Attorney’s Fees [<]Q (a) Contract Provision or Note. When a promissory note or contract provides for the recovery of (or a statute authorized the clerk to enter) a reasonable attorney fee, the following schedule shall (unless otherwise determined by the court) be applied to the amount of the new judgment exclusive of costs: [H . . . fiD Contested case (unless otherwise determined by the court): [<1... [SO Over $100,000, $5,270 plus 2% of the excess over $100,000. [*30 . . . RD (d) Itemization as to Extraordinary Services. Any application for a fee in addition to a foregoing schedule because of extraordinary services shall be accompanied by an itemized statement of the services rendered or to be rendered.”
Our remand on this issue should not be construed as expressing any opinion on our part regarding the proper attorney fee to be awarded by the trial court. This is a matter entirely within its properly exercised discretion.
