Defendant in a condemnation action appeals from an order striking from its cost bill the item of $300 for attorney fees incurred in connection with a success *312 ful appeal from a prior order of the court striking its cost bill for attorney’s and appraiser’s fees, upon the abandonment by plaintiff of the eminent domain proceedings pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 1255a. 1 The question presented is whether the provisions of section 1255a, 2 providing for an allowance of attorney’s fees upon an abandonment of an eminent domain proceeding, include attorney fees incurred upon an appeal from an order retaxing such costs.
The ease comes to us upon the following agreed statement of facts: On April 1, 1960, plaintiff filed an action in eminent domain seeking to condemn for public school purposes certain real property owned by defendant. On October 31, 1960, and within 40 days of the date set for pretrial conference, plaintiff filed a written notice of the abandonment of said action. Pursuant to stipulation of the parties a judgment of dismissal was entered on December 1, 1960. Thereafter, defendant filed a timely cost bill wherein it claimed $500 for an appraiser’s fee and $1,500 for attorney fees. On December 5, 1960, plaintiff filed a motion to retax costs seeking to strike said items. 3 The motion was granted and both items were stricken by the trial court from the cost bill. Defendant filed a notice of appeal from said order. After the filing of defendant’s opening brief and plaintiff’s reply brief, a stipulation was entered into between the parties providing for a reversal of the order appealed from insofar as it related to the items of costs claimed by defendant. 4 Following the issuance of the *313 remittitur, defendant filed with the trial court a memorandum of costs and disbursements on appeal which included additional attorney fees claimed under section 1255a in the amount of $300 for services rendered subsequent to the hearing on the aforesaid motion to retax costs and including services on the appeal from the order retaxing costs. Thereafter, plaintiff moved to retax said sum of $300 and to strike it from the cost bill on appeal. A hearing was thereupon had, on April 4, 1962, upon the original motion to retax costs and upon the motion to retax the costs on appeal. 5 Pursuant to said hearing the trial court taxed the attorney’s fees on the original cost bill at $1,250, and granted the motion to retax the costs on appeal by striking said item of claimed attorney fees in the sum of $300. No appeal was taken from the order taxing the attorney’s fees at $1,250. The instant appeal is solely from the order striking the item of $300 from the cost bill on appeal.
It is well settled that section 1255a permits attorney’s fees to be allowed for services rendered in connection with the proposed taking, whether those services are rendered before or after the filing of the action, and whether the eminent domain proceeding is abandoned prior or subsequent to trial.
(La Mesa-Spring Valley School Dist.
v.
Otsuka,
In Inglewood the trial court refused to tax as costs the outlay of the appellants for counsel fees in prosecuting a proceeding in the District Court of Appeal to review and annul the action of the superior court in making its orders for the immediate possession of the property to be condemned. The reviewing court rejected the contention of the respondent that the proceeding for the writ of review was “ ‘entirely independent of and collateral to’ ” the condemnation proceeding and therefore the expense of such phase of the litigation cannot be recovered under section 1255a. (P. 591.) The appellate court held that the respondent’s demand for immediate possession was “part and parcel of the condemnation action” and “an integral part of the proceeding.” (P. 591.)
In
Oak Grove School Dist.
v.
City Title Ins. Co.,
We are satisfied that the statute contemplates that a defendant be reimbursed for reasonable attorney fees incurred not only in the preparation for the trial and his services during trial, but also for services necessarily incident to the accomplishment of the statutory objectives. In our opinion, the letter and spirit of section 1255a is to make the
*315
defendant whole for the reasonable attorney fees incurred by him in connection with the defense of an eminent domain action which the condemner has voluntarily abandoned. (See
County of Los Angeles
v.
Hale,
We are fortified in the conclusion reached by us by the holding in several cases dealing with costs on appeal from condemnation proceedings. It is a basic rule in eminent domain proceedings that the party seeking condemnation should not only be required to pay his own costs, but all proper costs of the owner of the land incurred in good faith.
(Heimann
v.
City of Los Angeles,
We do not wish to be understood as holding that the rule that a landowner is entitled to his attorney fees on an appeal from an order denying the same or retaxing such fees in proceedings pursuant to section 1255a is an ironclad rule to which there can be no possible exception. It is conceivable that there can be cases wherein such an appeal might be unjustified so as to warrant the denial of attorney fees incurred on appeal. Moreover, while we would not depart from the philosophy that a landowner ought to be made whole where eminent domain proceedings are abandoned pursuant to section 1255a, we do not subscribe to the concept that he necessarily should be made whole according to his notions thereof or to the extent claimed by him.
The reasonableness of the sum of $300 for attorney fees in the instant case is not attacked by plaintiff. It does not appear from the record, moreover, that the reasonableness of such item was contested in the court below. Although the burden of proof is upon the defendant to establish the costs which are objected to on a motion to retax
(Oak Grove School Dist.
v.
City Title Ins. Co., supra,
at p. 698;
City of Los Angeles
v.
Abbott,
Plaintiff makes the contention in his brief on appeal that defendant’s attorneys were employed on a contingent fee contract, and that therefore it was proper to strike the item of attorney fees from defendant’s cost bill because since there is no award defendant is not liable for such fees. Respondent cites
City of Long Beach
v.
O’Donnell,
*318 The order is reversed with directions to the trial court to charge said sum of $300 to plaintiff and to tax the subject cost bill in such amount.
Bray, P. J., and Sullivan, J., concurred.
Notes
An order taxing costs made after entry of judgment is a special order made after judgment from which an, appeal will lie. (Code Civ. Proc., § 963;
Lacey
v.
Bertone,
All statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise indicated.
At the time said motion was filed and heard § 1255a, in pertinent part, read as follows: “Upon such abandonment, ... a judgment shall be entered dismissing the proceeding and awarding the defendants their costs and disbursements, which shall include all necessary expenses incurred in preparing for trial and reasonable attorney fees. These costs and disbursements, including expenses and attorney fees, may be claimed in and by a cost bill, to be prepared, served, filed and taxed as in civil actions; provided, however, ... that said costs and disbursements shall not include expenses incurred in preparing for trial where the said action is dismissed forty days prior to the time set for the trial of the said action.”
Said stipulation reads as follows: “ ‘Pursuant to the stipulation of the parties hereto, the order of the trial court in the above entitled *313 cause granting plaintiff’s motion to retax costs is hereby reversed insofar as it relates to the items of costs claimed by appellants, and is remanded to the trial court for a decision not inconsistent with the opinion of the Supreme Court of the State of California in the case of LaMesa-Spring Valley School District v. Nobuo Otsuka, designated LA 26634. The remittitur is to issue forthwith. ’ ”
Pending the appeal in the instant ease from the order taxing costs, § 1255a was amended, effective September 15, 1961, to provide insofar as pertinent to these proceedings as follows: ” (e) ... a judgment shall be entered dismissing the proceeding and awarding the defendants their costs and disbursements, which shall include all necessary expenses incurred in preparing for trial and during trial and reasonable attorney fees. These costs and disbursements, including expenses and attorney fees, may be claimed in and by a cost bill, to be prepared, served, filed and taxed as in civil actions; provided, however, . .. that said costs and disbursements shall not include expenses incurred in preparing for trial where the action is dismissed 40 days or more prior to the time set for the pretrial conference in the action or, if no pretrial conference is set, the time set for the trial of the action.” (Underscoring indicates the additions made by the amendment.)
In La Mesa and Inglewood the action was abandoned prior to trial; in Thompson and Glay, subsequent to trial.
In La Mesa the Supreme Court recognized the distinction in section 1255a between “attorney fees” and “expenses incurred in preparing for trial,” and noted that the former were not subject to the limitation that “expenses incurred in preparing for trial” cannot be recovered where the action is abandoned more than 40 days before the time set for either a pretrial conference or trial. (Pp. 313-314.)
§ 1255a provides that the items of costs and disbursements, including expenses and attorney fees, “may be claimed in and by a cost bill, to be prepared, served, filed and taxed as in civil actions,” i.e., pursuant to § 1033 which has to do with cost bills, generally, in civil actions after judgment. (See Oak Grove School Dist. v. City Title Ins. Co., supra, at p. 696.
