Opinion
Fassberg Construction Company (Fassberg) appeals a judgment, after a jury trial, denying it relief on its complaint and awarding the Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles (Housing Authority) $3,960,500, exclusive of costs, on its cross-complaint. The action arises from a construction contract between the Housing Authority as owner and Fassberg as general contractor. The jury found that Fassberg breached the contract, that Fassberg knowingly submitted 2,983 “false claims” to the Housing Authority, and that the Housing Authority suffered $1,104,000 in damages resulting from the breach of contract and $455,000 in damages resulting from the false claims. The court trebled the latter figure and awarded a civil penalty of $500 per false claim pursuant to the California False Claims Act (Gov. Code, § 12650 et seq.). The jury also found Fassberg liable for intentional misrepresentation and awarded the Housing Authority $1,559,000 in compensatory damages and $1.2 million in punitive damages.
The court concluded that the punitive damages award duplicated the treble damages award and civil penalty, and required an election of remedies. The Housing Authority elected to recover damages for breach of contract, treble damages for false claims, and the civil penalty. The
Fassberg challenges the civil penalty and treble damages award for false claims, contending the evidence does not support the findings that it submitted 2,983 false claims and that the Housing Authority suffered $455,000 in damages as a result. Fassberg also challenges the amount of damages awarded for breach of contract, the awards of compensatory and punitive damages for misrepresentation, and the denial of a setoff for the retention proceeds. The Housing Authority challenges the required election of remedies, contending it is entitled to recover punitive damages in addition to the amounts awarded in the judgment. The Housing Authority also challenges the denial of its motion for expert witness fees based on a statutory offer to compromise.
We conclude that the California False Claims Act authorizes an award of treble damages for knowingly presenting either “a false claim” or “a false record or statement” for payment or approval of a false claim, but authorizes a civil penalty only for each false claim. Weekly payroll reports submitted in support of requests for payment on a construction contract and change order proposals requesting adjustments in the contract price may be false records or statements presented for payment or approval of a claim, but are not “claims” under the act and alone cannot support a civil penalty. Moreover, the measure of damages for false claims is the amount of injury proximately caused by the false claims. That amount does not include a shortfall in the payment of prevailing wages to workers if the underpayment did not increase the cost or result in any loss to the public agency.
Our principal holdings are that (1) the evidence does not support the finding of 2,983 false claims and does not establish a sufficient basis for the civil penalty; (2) the evidence does not support the finding that the Housing Authority suffered $455,000 in damages for false claims and does not support the treble damages award; (3) the damages awarded for breach of contract are excessive; (4) the award of compensatory damages for misrepresentation is not supported by substantial evidence; and (5) the court properly required an election of remedies by the Housing Authority. We also hold that Fassberg failed to demonstrate error with respect to the trial court’s ruling on its claim for damages due to delay; Fassberg is entitled to recover the retention proceeds; and the denial of the Housing Authority’s motion for expert witness fees based on the statutory offer to compromise was error. We will therefore reverse the judgment in part with directions. We also will affirm the judgment as to the denial of relief to Fassberg on its complaint and affirm the denial of Fassberg’s motion for partial judgment notwithstanding the verdict with respect to the award of damages for false claims.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
1. Construction Contract
The Housing Authority is a public agency that provides affordable housing to low-income persons. Fassberg is a general contractor. The Housing Authority and Fassberg entered into a contract dated April 5, 2000, providing for Fassberg to build 25 residential buildings, comprising 156 dwelling units, and a maintenance building. The total contract price was $12,863,690. The construction was to be completed within 270 days after a notice to proceed. The contract provided for liquidated
The contract provided for periodic progress payments based on Fassberg’s estimates of the value of work performed under the contract, subject to approval by the Housing Authority. Fassberg agreed to submit with each request for progress payment a certification that the amounts requested were for performance in accordance with the contract specifications, that payments to subcontractors and suppliers had been made from previous progress payments received, and that timely payments would be made from the requested progress payment. The contract provided for the Housing Authority to “retain ten (10) percent of the amount of progress payments until completion and acceptance of all work under the contract.” The Housing Authority agreed to make the final payment due to Fassberg under the contract after (1) the completion and final acceptance of all work under the contract, and (2) the receipt of a release of all claims against the Housing Authority arising by virtue of the contract, with the exception of any claims clearly specified by Fassberg in amount and nature, as to which claims Fassberg could not request final payment.
Fassberg agreed to pay prevailing wages and benefits at rates determined by the United States Secretary of Labor. Fassberg also agreed to submit weekly payroll reports stating the classification of and hourly wages paid to each worker and other information, together with a certification signed by Fassberg or the subcontractor responsible for paying the worker confirming that the information provided was correct and complete and that each worker was paid not less than the applicable wage rate and benefits. The contract stated that the falsification of any certification could subject Fassberg to civil or criminal prosecution.
The contract stated that the Housing Authority could issue a change order at any time altering the scope of work. If a change order caused an increase or decrease in either the cost of construction or the time to perform the contract, the Housing Authority was required to “make an equitable adjustment and modify the contract in writing.” The contract also provided that if any written or oral order by the Housing Authority resulted in a change in the scope or duration of work, Fassberg could make a “written proposal for equitable adjustment” with an itemized breakdown of increases and decreases in its direct costs, indirect costs, and profit. The Housing Authority agreed to “act on proposals within 30 days after their receipt, or notify the Contractor of the date when such action will be taken.” The parties refer to proposals for equitable adjustment as change order proposals or C.O.P.’s. The contract also stated that if the Housing Authority caused a delay in the work for an unreasonable period of time resulting in an increase in the cost to perform the work, Fassberg was entitled to additional compensation.
2. Contract Performance
The Housing Authority issued a notice to proceed with construction beginning May 15, 2000. The Housing Authority hired a construction management company, Dugan & Associates Construction Management (Dugan), a few weeks later. The construction project experienced delays due to changes made by the Housing Authority in the plans and specifications, faulty construction by Fassberg and its subcontractors, understaffing by Fassberg and its subcontractors, and other reasons. The first change order, issued on April 23, 2001, extended the contract performance
Fassberg submitted approximately 224 change order proposals to modify the contract price due to changes in the work or to extend the time for contract performance, including both proposed price increases due to additional work and proposed price decreases due to deleted work.
The Housing Authority sometimes orally approved changes in the scope of work and asked Fassberg to submit a change order proposal later. After Fassberg submitted a change order proposal, the Housing Authority could determine whether the proposed increase in the contract price was reasonable and either agree to the proposal or agree to pay a lower price. Both parties understood that a change order proposal must be approved and the Housing Authority must issue a written change order before Fassberg could request payment for work encompassed in a change order proposal. The Housing Authority sometimes approved change order proposals but delayed issuing written change orders until after the funds to pay for the additional work were available to the Housing Authority, at which time it would issue a change order encompassing several change order proposals. There were approximately 70 change order proposals for which the Housing Authority determined that Fassberg was entitled to a total of $402,717.95, but for which the Housing Authority never issued a written change order and never paid Fassberg.
The work was substantially completed on July 19, 2002, after 795 days. Fassberg submitted a total of 49 requests for progress payment during the course of construction, and the Housing Authority paid Fassberg a total of $11,790,328.26 for work on the project. After the completion of work and the Housing Authority’s final acceptance of the work, the Housing Authority refused to release any part of the retention proceeds totaling $1,310,036.47. The Housing Authority determined that it was entitled to a credit in the amount of $677,932.77 for changes in the scope of work, and so informed Fassberg in a letter dated April 4, 2003.
3. Complaint, Cross-complaint and Offer to Compromise
Fassberg filed a complaint against the Housing Authority in February 2003. The
The Housing Authority filed a cross-complaint against Fassberg. The first amended cross-complaint alleges that Fassberg breached its obligations under the contract to timely complete the work and to comply with the applicable wage and labor standards, among other alleged breaches. The Housing Authority also alleges that Fassberg violated the California False Claims Act by knowingly presenting false claims for payment, including change order proposals, requests for partial payment, and certified payroll records. The cross-complaint also seeks declaratory relief to establish a right to withhold from the final contract payment the entire retention amount. The cross-complaint alleges counts for breach of contract, violation of the California False Claims Act, intentional and negligent misrepresentation, fraudulent inducement, and declaratory relief. In its answer to the cross-complaint, Fassberg alleges that any liability to the Housing Authority should be reduced by the amounts that the Housing Authority owes Fassberg.
The Housing Authority served an offer to compromise (Code Civ. Proc., § 998) in October 2004 offering to pay Fassberg $1.1 million in exchange for a mutual release of claims and mutual dismissals with prejudice of this litigation. Fassberg did not accept the offer.
4. Trial, Verdict and Judgment
The case proceeded to a jury trial. Michael Hostettler, an expert witness for the Housing Authority, testified that his review of the certified payroll records, change order proposals, and requests for progress payments submitted by Fassberg to the Housing Authority revealed 2,964 incidents of underpayment of wages reflected in payroll records, 948 incidents of “questionable charges” stated in change order proposals, and 47 incidents of overstatement of the percentage of work completed stated in requests for progress payments. He stated that the sum of those figures, 3,959, was the total number of “incidences of irregularities and otherwise nondocumented claims by the contractor.” The Housing Authority’s counsel stated in closing argument that each of those incidents was a “false claim” under the California False Claims Act.
The jury returned a special verdict in favor of the Housing Authority on all counts submitted to the jury except the Housing Authority’s count for fraudulent inducement. The jury found that the Housing Authority did not breach the contract or the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and that the Housing
The court imposed a civil penalty of $500 per false claim (Gov. Code, § 12651, subd. (a)), totaling $1,491,500, and trebled the award of damages for false claims (ibid.), resulting in a treble damages award of $1,365,000. The court required the Housing Authority to elect to recover either the compensatory damages awarded by the jury for intentional and negligent misrepresentation ($1,559,000) plus punitive damages ($1.2 million) or compensatory damages for breach of contract ($1,104,000) plus treble damages for false claims ($1,365,000) plus the civil penalty ($1,491,500).
5. Posttrial Motions and Corrected Judgment
The Housing Authority moved for an award of attorney fees under Public Contract Code section 7107 and moved to recover its expert witness fees under Code of Civil Procedure section 998. The court found that the Housing Authority was the prevailing party on Fassberg’s count for violation of Public Contract Code section 7107 and awarded the Housing Authority $886,500 in attorney fees under subdivision (f) of that statute.
Fassberg moved to vacate the judgment (Code Civ. Proc., § 663) requesting an equitable setoff and a declaration of the parties’ rights and duties with respect to the retention proceeds. Fassberg also moved for a partial judgment notwithstanding the verdict arguing that the finding that the Housing Authority suffered $455,000 in damages resulting from false claims was not supported by the evidence and was contrary to a jury instruction, and that the judgment should be reduced by the amount of the retention. In addition, Fassberg moved for a new trial arguing the same points, and also argued that the finding that the Housing Authority did not
The court granted Fassberg’s motion to vacate in part and denied it in part, finding that Fassberg was not entitled to a setoff but was entitled to a declaration of rights and duties with respect to the retention proceeds. The court concluded that the Housing Authority was entitled to withhold the retention proceeds more than 60 days after the date of completion because there was a dispute between the parties at that time, pursuant to Public Contract Code section 7107, subdivision (c) (see.fn. 3, ante). The court distinguished that question from the question whether Fassberg was entitled to a reduction of the judgment by the amount of the retention proceeds, and concluded that Fassberg had failed to assert the right to such a setoff either at trial or in an appropriate posttrial motion. The court denied Fassberg’s motion for partial judgment notwithstanding the verdict based in part on the same reason, and stated that the determination of a setoff would require an evidentiary trial that, “if appropriate at all,” should be conducted in a separate action for an equitable setoff. The court also denied Fassberg’s new trial motion.
The court entered a corrected judgment in March 2005 stating that Fassberg “is not, in this action, entitled to an offset against the Housing Authority’s recovery,” and awarding the Housing Authority $886,500 in attorney fees. The corrected judgment otherwise is substantially the same as the original judgment.
6. Appeals
Fassberg filed a notice of appeal from the corrected judgment, the partial denial of its motion to vacate the judgment, the denial of its motion for partial judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and the attorney fee order. The Housing Authority filed a notice of appeal from the corrected judgment.
CONTENTIONS
Fassberg contends (1) neither the weekly payroll reports nor the change order proposals were “claims” within the meaning of the California False Claims Act for purposes of a civil penalty; (2) the evidence does not support the implied finding that Fassberg prepared, certified, or submitted the payroll reports; (3) the Housing Authority’s expert and the jury improperly counted each alleged misstatement in a payroll report or change order proposal as a false claim; (4) the evidence does not support the finding that the purported claims were false; (5) the evidence does not support the finding that Fassberg knowingly presented the purported false claims; (6) the evidence does not support the award of $455,000 in damages for false claims, and the award is contrary to a jury instruction; (7) the Housing Authority breached the contract by refusing to issue a change order for and pay $402,717.95 that it admittedly owed, and the award of damages for breach of contract is excessive in that amount; (8) the Housing Authority breached the contract by failing to compensate Fassberg for 116 days of delay caused solely by the Housing Authority; (9) Fassberg is entitled to a setoff in the amount of the retention proceeds; and (10) the judgment cannot be affirmed in part based on misrepresentation as an alternative theory of recovery because the evidence
The Housing Authority disputes those contentions and contends (1) it is entitled to recover punitive damages in addition to the amounts awarded in the judgment; and (2) the denial of its motion for expert witness fees based on its statutory offer to compromise was error.
DISCUSSION
1. California False Claims Act
The California False Claims Act provides that any person who commits certain acts against the state or a political subdivision is liable to the state or political subdivision for treble damages.
A “claim” is defined to “include[] any request or demand for money, property, or services made to any employee, officer, or agent of the state or of any political subdivision.”
The term “includes” in a statutory definition does not necessarily exclude things not specified. (People v. Western Airlines, Inc. (1954)
2. The Evidence Fails to Establish a Sufficient Basis for the Civil Penalty
a. The California False Claims Act Authorizes a Civil Penalty for “a False Claim” but Not for “a False Record or Statement”
The California False Claims Act distinguishes a “claim” from a “record or “statement.” The term “claim” is defined in Government Code section 12650, subdivision (b)(1), quoted ante, without reference to the terms “record” or “statement.” The terms “record” and “statement” are not defined in the act. Section 12651, subdivision (a) describes eight prohibited acts for which treble damages may be awarded, four of which refer to either “a false claim” or “a false record or statement.” The statute imposes treble damages on a person who “(1) Knowingly presents or causes to be presented to an officer or employee of the state or of any political subdivision thereof, a false claim for payment or approval. [][] (2) Knowingly makes, uses, or causes to be made or used a false record or statement to get a false claim paid or approved by the state or by any political subdivision. [][]... [][] (7) Knowingly makes, uses, or causes to be made or used a false record or statement to conceal, avoid, or decrease an obligation to pay or transmit money or property to the state of to any political subdivision, [or] [][] (8) Is a beneficiary of an inadvertent submission of a false claim to the state or a political subdivision, subsequently discovers the falsity of the claim, and fails to disclose the false claim to the state or the political subdivision within a reasonable time after discovery of the false claim.” (Ibid., italics added.)
Government Code section 12651, subdivision (a) states that a person who commits any of the “acts” listed in subdivision (a) is liable for treble damages. Those “acts” include knowingly presenting “a false claim” and knowingly presenting “a false record or statement to get a false claim paid or approved,” as stated ante. The statute states, however, that a civil penalty may be imposed not for each “act,” but for “each false claim.”
The Housing Authority argues that Government Code section 12651, subdivision (a) is ambiguous and should be construed to mean that “false claims” includes not only requests or demands for money, property, or services, but also any other act prohibited by the California False Claims Act. This argument ignores the statutory definition of “claim” (Gov. Code, § 12650, subd. (b)(1)) and the careful, not haphazard, use of “false claims” in some places and “false records or statements” in others in section 12651, subdivision (a). Those terms are not interchangeable. As we have explained, the Legislature carefully distinguished the remedies available for different acts.
The Housing Authority cites LeVine v. Weis (2001)
LeVine v. Weis, supra,
b. The Weekly Payroll Reports Were Not “Claims” Under the Act and Alone Cannot Support a Civil Penalty
Fassberg submitted weekly payroll reports to the Housing Authority as required by the contract. Fassberg also submitted requests for progress payment under the contract approximately every two weeks. Both the payroll reports and the requests for progress payment were accompanied by certifications as to their accuracy and compliance with the contract. The payroll reports and requests for progress payment were separate documents with different functions. The payroll reports, on a standard United States Department of Labor form, provided specific information as to employees’ hours worked, work classification, wages and fringe benefits paid, and deductions. The payroll reports did not include a request for payment. The requests for progress payment, in contrast, stated an estimate of the percentage of work completed and the value of that work based on a preapproved schedule of values, and expressly requested payment for the value of work completed, less a 10 percent retention. Fassberg submitted 49 requests for progress payment on the project.
We conclude that each request for progress payment was a “claim” under the California False Claims Act because each request was a “request or demand for money” (Gov. Code, § 12650, subd. (b)(1)) made to the Housing Authority. The weekly payroll reports, in contrast, were not “claims” because they were not “requests] or demand[s] for money” {ibid..). Rather, the payroll reports were records required to be submitted under the contract and were records or statements made or used in support of Fassberg’s requests for progress payment (see id., § 12651, subd. (a)(2)). The payroll reports were neither “claims” nor “false claims” as a matter of law and alone cannot support a civil penalty under the act. A false payroll report can support a civil penalty only in conjunction with a “false claim,” and in those circumstances the civil penalty is for “each false claim” {id., § 12651, subd. (a)) rather than for each “false record or statement to get a false claim paid or approved” {id., subd. (a)(2)).
The Housing Authority maintained that Fassberg presented a total of 3,959 false claims, including 2,964 false claims arising from statements in weekly payroll records. The jury found that Fassberg submitted 2,983 false claims. That number necessarily included purported false claims arising from statements in payroll records, although we cannot discern how many. The Housing Authority is not entitled to a civil penalty either for each false payroll record or for each misstatement in the payroll records, as a matter of law. We conclude that the judgment must be reversed as to the civil penalty for false claims for a new trial on the cross-complaint to determine the number of false claims, if any, and the appropriate civil penalty, consistent with the views expressed in this opinion.
c. The Change Order Proposals Were Not “Claims” under the Act and Alone Cannot Support a Civil Penalty
Section 29(d) of the contract stated that if any order or direction by the Housing Authority caused a change in the work resulting in an increase or decrease in Fassberg’s cost or time to complete the work, the Housing Authority “shall make an equitable adjustment and modify the contract in writing.” Section 29(e) stated that Fassberg must request an equitable adjustment in writing, ordinarily within 30 days after receipt of a written notice of the change in the work, “by submitting a written statement describing the general nature and the amount of the proposal.” Section 29(f) stated that a “written proposal for equitable adjustment shall be submitted in the form of a lump sum proposal supported with an itemized breakdown of all increases and decreases in the contract,” with specified details. The contract stated further that the Housing Authority “shall act on proposals within 30 days after their receipt, or notify the Contractor of the date when such action will be taken,” and that “[fjailure to reach an agreement on any proposal shall be a dispute under the clause entitled Disputes herein.”
Fassberg submitted change order proposals on a form provided by the Housing Authority. The form was entitled change order proposal and stated, “Following is an itemized quotation regarding proposed modifications to the contract documents.” It called for a description of the work, an itemization of the subcontractor’s cost, general contractor’s cost, 10 percent overhead and profit, and 1 percent bond cost, and a statement as to how many days the “proposed change” would delay the project completion. Both parties understood that a change order proposal must be approved by the Housing Authority and that the Housing Authority must issue a written change order before Fassberg could request payment for work encompassed in a change order proposal.
The Housing Authority argues that Fassberg submitted change order proposals requesting price increases for work that was already included in the contract price, work necessitated by delays caused by Fassberg and its subcontractors, and work for which Fassberg otherwise was not entitled to additional compensation. The Housing Authority also argues that the requested price increases were excessive. Hostettler testified on behalf of the Housing Authority that the change order proposals stated excessive wage rates and greater costs for “general conditions,” insurance, and bonds for which Fassberg failed to submit sufficient supporting documentation. Hostettler expressly declined to characterize the change order proposals as “wrong or false.” Rather, he testified that the change order proposals contained “questionable charges” and “undocumented and unevidenced claims for money.” He testified that the change order proposals contained “948 incidences of claims” or “questionable change order incidences in which a change order was presented to the Housing Authority for payment and in which it included undocumented and unevidenced claims for money.”
On the other hand, James Evans, a field superintendent for the Housing Authority who was partly responsible for reviewing change order proposals, testified that a change order proposal was not a request for payment: “It would not be a request for payment as far as I was concerned because they submitted on a monthly basis a billing for payment. It was—it was something that we owed them at some point in time, but there would not be a request for payment. They had a separate request for payment that they submitted monthly, and they could not include approved change order proposals on that—for payment for that until such time as they received the change order.”
The question whether the change order proposals were “claims” for purposes of the California False Claims Act is a question of law involving the application of a statute to undisputed facts. (Daun v. USAA Casualty Ins. Co. (2005)
A change order proposal differs from a request for progress payment in that the former is a request to modify the contract to allow for future payment, while the latter is a request for immediate payment. A change order proposal, if approved, would be followed by a written change order and then a request for progress payment. Federal courts have held that if a contractor obtained a contract through collusive or fraudulent bidding, each request for payment under the contract is a false claim under the federal False Claims Act, regardless of the objective truth of the request for payment standing alone. {U. S. ex rel. Marcus v. Hess (1943)
We find these authorities persuasive and conclude that the same rule should apply to a false change order proposal: If a contractor knowingly presents a false change order proposal and a change order is issued in reliance thereon, each request for progress payment of amounts payable under the change order is a false claim under the California False Claims Act. We distinguish a request for progress payment based on a false change order proposal from the prior change order proposal itself, however. In our view, a change order proposal is not a “request or demand for money, property, or services” (Gov. Code, § 12650, subd. (b)(1)) within the plain meaning of the statutory language, but rather is a “record or statement” made or used “to get a false claim paid or approved” (id., § 12651, subd. (a)(2)). We therefore conclude that the change order proposals were neither “claims” nor “false claims” under the act as a matter of law and alone cannot support a civil penalty under the act. A false change order proposal can support a civil penalty only in conjunction with a “false claim,” and in those circumstances the civil penalty is for
The Housing Authority cites Stacy & Witbeck, Inc. v. City and County of San Francisco (1996)
d. We Need Not Decide Fassberg’s Other Contentions
Concerning the Sufficiency of the Evidence to Support the Civil Penalty
Our conclusion that the Housing Authority is not entitled to a civil penalty for each payroll record or change order proposal, or each false statement in those documents, compels the conclusion that the evidence does not support the finding of 2,983 false claims and that the judgment must be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial to determine the number of false claims, if any, and the appropriate civil penalty. Accordingly, we need not address Fassberg’s other contentions
3. The Evidence Fails to Establish a Sufficient Basis for the Award of Damages Resulting from False Claims
a. Trial Court Proceedings
Hostettler testified that the certified payroll records revealed 2,964 instances of underpayment of wages totaling “approximately $455,000.” He stated that if a subcontractor failed to pay prevailing wages, the contractor (Fassberg) was liable to the Department of Labor and the Housing Authority for the shortfall. He prepared a 29-page exhibit entitled certified payroll analysis (exhibit 9047) that lists individual workers, the amounts actually paid to each worker, the amounts that should have been paid, and the shortfall for each worker per week, but does not state the aggregate shortfall for all workers. That is, the figure of approximately $455,000 does not appear in exhibit 9047.
The Housing Authority argued to the court that it was entitled to recover unpaid prevailing wages on the project as an element of damages for breach of contract, although there was no evidence that the Housing Authority had paid or had been sued for the shortfall. The court disagreed and instructed the jury: “There is no damage claim being made in this case by the Housing Authority for any alleged underpayment of wages to employees on the project. However, you may consider evidence of any alleged underpayment of wages insofar as it may be relevant of the issue of whether or not the retention should be withheld.”
Counsel for the Housing Authority stated in closing argument that the total amount of damages suffered by the Housing Authority on all counts was $1,159,014.60. She listed the individual items of damages as liquidated damages for 256 days of delay at the rate of $1,500 per day ($384,000), damages for the Housing Authority’s deductive change order proposals that should have reduced the contract price paid ($677,932.77), damages for an additional credit due for the deletion of work relating to handicap parking spaces ($43,099.82), and damages for overcharges for labor in change orders paid by the Housing Authority ($45,882).
The jury requested a list of exhibits during its deliberations. The court provided separate lists of exhibits offered by each party. The jury later inquired; “Can you provide us with documents listing [the Housing Authority’s] damages with regards to the following: (1) labor, (2) NARBI, (3) labor and trust, (4) deductive C.O.R’s, (5) handicap parking, (6) prevailing wages.” In response, the court reminded the jury: “There is no damage claim being made in this case by the Housing Authority for any alleged underpayment of wages to employees on the project. However, you may consider evidence of any alleged underpayment of wages insofar as it may be relevant to the issue of whether or not the retention should be withheld.” The court stated further, “The reason that’s important is as I go through and list these documents, some of them can only be considered for the issue of whether or not the retention should be withheld, not for damages, even though they are within the fist of documents you asked us to identify. So I’m going to identify them, but I just want you to understand—and I’ll distinguish between them for you—some of them can only be considered on the issue of retention and whether it should have been withheld or not. It cannot be included in any calculation of damages that you might be making.”
The court identified exhibits and stated that as to the first three enumerated items in the jury’s request, the exhibits could be considered “only on the issue of whether or not the retention should have been withheld, not on the issue of damages.” The court stated that the exhibits as to items 4 and 5 could be considered with respect to both the retention and damages. The court stated with respect to item 6: “And then with respect to the category that you list of prevailing wages, there are two exhibits. The first is exhibit 9044. 9044. That is a chart of the C.O.P.’s. That exhibit may be considered on the issue of damages. 9044, may be considered on the issue of damages. The second exhibit that’s relevant to your inquiry as phrased is exhibit 9047, which is a chart of . . . the certified payroll. That is an exhibit that can only be considered on the issue of whether the retention should have been withheld. It cannot be considered in terms of calculating whatever damages that you believe have been proved.”
The court stated further: “We believe that’s responsive to your inquiry. Does anybody need me to read them again? Raise your hand if you need me to read them again.” The jury foreperson stated, “The last one.” The court responded: “Last one. Prevailing wages, 9044, which can be considered on the issue of damages.
The jury found that Fassberg knowingly submitted 2,983 false claims resulting in $455,000 in damages. The jury also found that the Housing Authority suffered $1,104,000 in damages resulting from Fassberg’s breach of contract and that the Housing Authority suffered $1,559,000 (the sum of $1,104,000 and $455,000) in damages resulting from misrepresentations. The court trebled the award of damages for false claims pursuant to Government Code section 12651, subdivision (a) and awarded the Housing Authority $1,365,000 in treble damages for false claims, $1,104,000 in damages for breach of contract, and a civil penalty of $1,491,500 ($500 per claim). Fassberg challenged the finding of $455,000 in damages for false claims by moving for a partial judgment notwithstanding the verdict, arguing that the finding was not supported by the evidence and was contrary to the jury instruction. Fassberg also moved for a new trail on the same ground. The court denied both motions.
b. Standards of Review
We review the jury’s finding that the Housing Authority suffered $455,000 in damages resulting from false claims under the substantial evidence standard. Substantial evidence is evidence that a rational trier of fact could find to be reasonable, credible, and of solid value. We view the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict and accept as true all evidence tending to support the verdict, including all facts that reasonably can be deduced from the evidence. We must affirm the award of damages based on the verdict if an examination of the entire record viewed in this light discloses substantial evidence to support the verdict. (Crawford v. Southern Pacific Co. (1935)
A party is entitled to a judgment notwithstanding the verdict only if there is no substantial evidence to support the verdict and the evidence compels a judgment for the moving party as a matter of law. (Code Civ. Proc., § 629; Clemmer v. Hartford Insurance Co. (1978)
c. The Jury Improperly Awarded the Housing Authority the Amount of Underpaid Prevailing Wages as Damages for False Claims
The evidence presented at trial, argument of counsel, and questions by the
Despite the court’s instruction that the Housing Authority was not seeking to recover damages for underpayment of wages, the jury requested “documents listing [the Housing Authority’s] damages with regards to . . . prevailing wages.” The jury apparently sought documentary evidence of the Housing Authority’s damages with regard to the underpayment of wages for the purpose of awarding those damages. The court reinstructed the jury that the Housing Authority did not seek to recover damages for underpayment of wages and identified two exhibits pertaining to prevailing wages.
The two exhibits were exhibits 9044 (final labor submission analysis) and 9047 (certified payroll analysis). The court stated that the former, could be considered on the issue of damages while the latter could be considered only on the issue of the retention.
The court instructed the jury to consider exhibit 9047 only with respect to the retention issue and not for the purpose of damages. Exhibit 9047 purportedly stated the amount underpaid for each worker on the project for each week, but did not state the total amount of approximately $455,000 that was cited by Hostettler in his testimony and by counsel for the Housing Authority in closing argument. That figure could be calculated only by adding numbers from each of the hundreds of entries on the 29-page exhibit. The jury apparently, and understandably, did not associate
The jury found that the Housing Authority suffered $1,104,000 in damages resulting from Fassberg’s breach of contract. That figure is the sum of each amount of damages listed in the Housing Authority’s closing argument except $45,882, rounded down to the nearest múltiple of $1,000 (i.e., $384,000 + $677,000 + $43,000 = $1,104,000). The jury also found that the Housing Authority suffered an additional $455,000 in damages resulting from false claims. Thus, we can conclude with reasonable certainty that rather than exclude the $455,000 figure from its calculation of damages, the jury excluded the $45,882 figure from its calculation of damages.
The fact that the jury awarded $455,000 in damages resulting from false claims, the precise amount stated by the Housing Authority’s expert witness at trial as the amount of underpaid wages, is a strong indication that the jury accepted Hostettler’s testimony on that point and awarded damages for underpaid wages. (Seffert v. Los Angeles Transit Lines (1961)
The Housing Authority argues on appeal that it is entitled to recover the amounts paid to Fassberg under the contract in reliance on the purported false certifications of weekly payroll reports. It argues that the measure of damages for false claims is the difference between the total amount paid to Fassberg and the amount it would have paid if the payroll certifications had been truthful. The Housing Authority refers to Hostettler’s testimony that approximately $455,000 of wages due to workers on the project was not paid to the workers, but does not expressly argue that it was damaged in that amount or that it is entitled to recover damages measured by the amount of underpaid wages. The Housing Authority’s argument on this point is perfunctory and poorly explained.
The ordinary measure of damages under California law for breach of an obligation not arising from a contract is the amount that will compensate for all of the loss or harm proximately caused by the breach. (Civ. Code, §§ 3333, 3282.)
U.S. v. Mackby (9th Cir. 2003)
We conclude that the award of $455,000 in damages for false claims, trebled by the trial court to $1,365,000, was based on underpaid wages and that the Housing Authority is not entitled to recover that amount as damages under the California
4. Fassberg Is Entitled to $402,717.95 Credit for Work Performed Pursuant to Change Order Proposals
The Housing Authority verbally authorized Fassberg to proceed with the additional work in some change order proposals but did not agree to the requested price. Fassberg completed the work. The Housing Authority accepted the work but refused to issue written change orders or pay the amounts requested, or any amount, for the additional work because it determined that it was entitled to a credit in the amount of $677,932.77 for work deleted from the contract, which exceeded the amount due to Fassberg for the additional work. The Housing Authority determined that Fassberg was entitled to payment in the amount of $402,717.95 for the additional work described in the change order proposals. Mark Strauss, who worked for Dugan as a project manager, testified on direct examination by counsel for the Housing Authority that $402,717.95 was the amount due to Fassberg for “unpaid C.O.P.’s”: “Yes it is. That’s the amount owed to Fassberg.” The Housing Authority’s exhibit 9232 listed “Non Change Ordered COPs” and showed that Fassberg claimed that it was entitled to a total of $1,630,783.82 for work described in change order proposals and that the Housing Authority had determined that only $402,717.95 was due to Fassberg.
Counsel for the Housing Authority acknowledged in closing argument that Fassberg was entitled to approximately $400,000 for “not-paid change order proposals.” She stated, “The analysis done by Dugan and the Housing Authority actually shows that [Fassberg is] owed closer to $400,000 for not-paid change order proposals.” Referring to the Housing Authority’s deductive change order proposals totaling $677,932.77, counsel argued that the net amount due to the Housing Authority for change order proposals was “about $275,000.” But in summarizing the Housing Authority’s claims for damages, counsel requested an amount that included the full $677,932.77 figure for deductive change order proposals. (See pt. 3.a., ante.) The jury apparently awarded the Housing Authority each of the amounts requested in its closing argument, rounded down to the nearest multiple of $1,000, except $45,882 purportedly “overpaid on C.O.P. labor.” (See pt. 3.C., ante.) Thus, the jury did not credit Fassberg for $402,717.95 that the Housing Authority admitted was due and owing to Fassberg. Moreover, the jury found that the Housing Authority did not breach the contract or the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing and awarded no damages to Fassberg.
Fassberg moved for a new trial arguing, inter alia, that the evidence was insufficient to support the finding that the Housing Authority did not breach the contract
Code of Civil Procedure section 657 states: “A new trial shall not be granted upon the ground of insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict or other decision, nor upon the ground of excessive or inadequate damages, unless after weighing the evidence the court is convinced from the entire record, including reasonable inferences therefrom, that the court or jury clearly should have reached a different verdict or decision.” A trial court has broad discretion in ruling on a new trial motion, and the court’s exercise of discretion is accorded great deference on appeal. (City of Los Angeles v. Decker (1977)
We conclude that Fassberg is entitled to $402,717.95 in credit for work performed pursuant to change order proposals for which the Housing Authority issued no written change order. There is no substantial conflict in the evidence in this regard. Strauss testified that Fassberg was entitled to payment in that amount, and the Housing Authority acknowledged the same both in exhibit 9232 and in closing argument. Moreover, an oral statement by counsel in the same action is a binding judicial admission if the statement was an unambiguous concession of a matter then at issue and was not made improvidently or unguardedly. (People v. Jackson (2005)
We can conclude with reasonable certainty that the award of $1,104,000 in damages for breach of contract includes $677,000 for the Housing Authority’s deductive change order proposals and does not include a $402,717.95 credit for work performed pursuant to Fassberg’s change order proposals, as we have stated. We conclude that the evidence and the Housing Authority’s judicial admission compel the conclusion that Fassberg is entitled to a $402,717.95 credit. Accordingly, we need not decide whether the Housing Authority’s failure to pay that amount was a breach of contract. Moreover, a new trial on damages for breach of contract is unnecessary because we can finally determine the parties’ rights on this issue based on the unchallenged amounts awarded by the jury together with our conclusion that
5. Fassberg Has Shown No Error with Respect to Damages for Delay Caused by the Housing Authority
The contract provided for liquidated damages payable to the Housing Authority in the amount of $1,500 per day if Fassberg failed to timely complete the work. The contract also provided that if the Housing Authority caused a delay in the work for an unreasonable period of time resulting in an increase in the cost of performance, the Housing Authority would adjust the contract price
James Howard, an expert witness for Fassberg, testified that the Housing Authority caused 779 days of compensable delay for which Fassberg was not compensated. Karl Schulze, another expert witness for Fassberg, testified that Fassberg’s extended home office overhead costs and extended field office overhead
Counsel for the Housing Authority acknowledged in closing argument that the Housing Authority was solely responsible for 116 days of delay, rather than the higher figure claimed by Fassberg. She challenged Fassberg’s damages calculations as inflated and based on inaccurate estimates of the number of days of delay. She urged the jury to find that Fassberg had failed to prove its damages. She argued in the alternative that the jury should find that the Housing Authority was responsible for 116 days of delay and either reduce Fassberg’s requested damages proportionally or award $1,500 per day or less for the delay.
The jury found that the Housing Authority did not breach the contract or the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Fassberg moved for a new trial arguing, inter alia, that the evidence was insufficient to support the finding that the Housing Authority did not breach the contract by failing to compensate Fassberg for the delay, and that the award of damages to the Housing Authority was excessive because it did not include a credit for the delay caused by the Housing Authority. The court denied the motion.
Fassberg argues on appeal that it is undisputed that the Housing Authority was solely responsible for 116 days of delay. Fassberg argues that the Housing Authority “was required to compensate [Fassberg] for its increased costs.” On the issue of increased costs, Fassberg cites only Evans’s testimony that Fassberg “probably should have been paid maybe a thousand dollars a day, if that, for overheads” and that the Housing Authority, “as far as I know, felt that they owed Fassberg some compensation” for delay. Fassberg argues that the finding that the Housing Authority did not breach the contract is contrary to the evidence and that the judgment should be reversed for a new trial and a determination of the amount of damages payable to Fassberg.
Section 30(b) of the contract stated that the Housing Authority was required to make an adjustment in the contract price “for any increase in the cost of performance necessarily caused” by an unreasonable delay. The Housing Authority breached its obligation under section 30(b) only if a delay caused by the Housing Authority was “for an unreasonable period of time” and “necessarily caused” an “increase in the cost of performance.” Moreover, damages suffered as a result of the breach is an essential element of a cause of action for breach of contract (St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. American Dynasty Surplus Lines Ins. Co. (2002)
6. The Evidence Fails to Establish a Sufficient Basis for the Award of Compensatory Damages for Misrepresentation
The judgment awards the Housing Authority damages for breach of contract, treble damages for false claims, and a civil penalty, in lieu of compensatory damages for misrepresentation and punitive damages. In light of our conclusion that the damages awarded for breach of contract are excessive and that the evidence fails to support either the damages for false claims or the civil penalty, the question arises whether the Housing Authority’s election of remedies precludes it from recovering the alternative remedies that it did not elect. We conclude that there is no substantial evidence to support the award of compensatory damages for misrepresentation and therefore no basis for punitive damages, as we shall explain. Therefore, we need not decide whether the election of remedies was binding for purposes of this appeal.
The court instructed the jury that the Housing Authority’s count for intentional misrepresentation was based on “false representations in certain change order proposals, in certain certifications for payroll and certain certifications for progress payments.” Counsel for the Housing Authority stated in closing argument that the count was “based on change order proposals, certified payrolls and progress payments. And this isn’t too different from the false claims. They actually misrepresented the percentage of completions. They misrepresented, intentionally, the subcontractor and their certified payroll; and they misrepresented that the change order proposals were actually reasonable, that they were accurate, that they had—that they were not double and triple billing.”
Counsel for the Housing Authority described the categories of damages sought on its cross-complaint as a whole as liquidated damages for delay caused by Fassberg ($384,000), damages for changes in the scope of work reflected in the Housing Authority’s deductive change order proposals ($677,932.77), damages for work deleted with respect to handicap parking in particular ($43,099.82), and damages for
The jury found that Fassberg knowingly made one or more misrepresentations of material fact to the Housing Authority, that Fassberg intended to induce reliance, that the Housing Authority reasonably relied on the false representations, and that the Housing Authority suffered $1,559,000 in damages as a result. That amount is the sum of $1,104,000 and $455,000, the damages that the jury found resulted from Fassberg’s breach of contract and false claims, respectively. The jury also found that the Housing Authority’s “total recoverable damages . . . [e]liminat[ing] any double recovery for the same damages on more than one cause of action” was $1,559,000. The trial court concluded that the damages awarded for misrepresentation included the same damages awarded for breach of contract and false claims and was simply the sum of those two figures. We agree that there is no room for reasonable doubt that this is true. Thus, we conclude that the compensatory damages award for misrepresentation includes liquidated damages for delay caused by Fassberg ($384,000), damages for changes in the scope of work reflected in the Housing Authority’s deductive change order proposals ($677,932.77, rounded down to $677,000), damages for work deleted with respect to handicap parking ($43,099.82, rounded down to $43,000), and damages for underpaid wages to workers on the project ($455,000).
A plaintiff seeking to recover damages for economic loss caused by fraud must show that the plaintiff actually relied on the defendant’s misrepresentation or nondisclosure, that the reliance was reasonable, and that the plaintiff suffered damages as a result. (City of Atascadero v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. (1998)
The evidence also fails to establish a basis to recover the amount of the Housing Authority’s deductive change order proposals as damages for misrepresentation. The contract stated that the Housing Authority could issue a change order at any time altering the scope of work. If a change order caused an increase or decrease in either the cost of construction or the time to perform the contract, the Housing Authority was required to “make
The Housing Authority also reduced the scope of work by deleting a requirement to construct handicap parking structures. The Housing Authority notified Fassberg of the change in January 2002, but did not reduce the contract price by $43,099.82 until October 2002. The Housing Authority in its closing argument identified no connection between any misrepresentation by Fassberg and the $43,099.82 reduction, and the record reveals no connection and no basis to recover that amount as damages for misrepresentation.
Finally, the $455,000 in wages due to workers does not reflect an actual loss or harm to the Housing Authority and therefore is not recoverable as damages, as explained in part 3.c., ante. Accordingly, we conclude that the evidence fails to establish a basis to recover any of the damages awarded by the jury for misrepresentation. Our conclusion also compels the conclusion that the punitive damages award must be reversed because punitive damages cannot be awarded without actual damages. (Mother Cobb’s Chicken T., Inc. v. Fox (1937)
7. The Trial Court on Remand Must Determine Whether the Housing Authority Is Precluded from Pursuing Damages for Misrepresentation
The effect of our reversal of the judgment in part is to place the parties in the position they were in before the case was tried with respect to those issues on which we reverse the judgment. (Weisenburg v. Cragholm (1971)
Whether the facts establish an equitable estoppel is a question for the trial court to decide in the first instance, unless the facts can support only one reasonable conclusion. (Platt Pacific, Inc. v. Andelson (1993)
8. The Court Properly Required an Election of Remedies with Respect to Punitive Damages
The Housing Authority in its appeal challenges the required election of remedies. The Housing Authority contends it is entitled to recover the compensatory damages for breach of contract, treble damages for false claims, civil penalty, and punitive damages. We conclude that the trial court correctly required an election of remedies.
California courts have held that if a defendant is liable for a statutory penalty or multiple damages under a statute, the award is punitive in nature, and the award penalizes essentially the same conduct as an award of punitive damages. The plaintiff cannot recover punitive damages in addition to that recovery but must elect its remedy. (Troensegaard v. Silvercrest Industries, Inc. (1985)
The Housing Authority contends the civil penalties and treble damages awarded under the California False Claims Act are compensatory in nature and therefore do not implicate these concerns. It cites Cook County v. United States ex rel. Chandler (2003)
Cook County, supra,
Cook County, supra,
We need not decide categorically whether the recovery of treble damages and a civil penalty under the California False Claims Act precludes the recovery of punitive damages on a common law cause of action arising from the same conduct in all cases. Instead, we focus on the nature of the awards in this case (see Cook County, supra,
9. Fassberg Is Entitled to Recover the Retention Proceeds
The right to a setoff is “founded on the equitable principle that ‘either party to a transaction involving mutual debts and credits can strike a balance, holding himself owing or entitled only to
Whether a setoff is appropriate in equity is a question within the trial court’s discretion. We review the court’s decision under the abuse of discretion standard. (Wm. R. Clarke Corp. v. Safeco Ins. Co. of America (2000) 78 Cal.App.4th 355, 359 [
The Housing Authority agreed under the terms of the contract to release the retention proceeds after its final acceptance of the work upon receipt of a release of all claims against the Housing Authority arising by virtue of the contract.
The trial court denied a setoff and stated that Fassberg must commence “a separate equitable action” to recover the retention proceeds. The court decided that the issue raised by the pleadings was limited to the question submitted to the jury as to whether the Housing Authority was entitled to withhold the retention proceeds more than 60 days after the date of completion, in light of the parties’ dispute (Pub. Contract Code, § 7107, subd. (c)). The court stated that to the extent Fassberg was seeking to reduce the judgment by the amount of the retention proceeds, Fassberg failed to properly raise the issue either at trial or in a posttrial motion. The court concluded that Fassberg’s motion to vacate the judgment, motion for partial judgment notwithstanding the verdict,
In our view, there is no particular procedure required to invoke the equitable power of the court to effect a setoff, when appropriate. Fassberg in its posttrial motions clearly stated that it sought to reduce the judgment against it by the amount of the retention proceeds that the Housing Authority continued to withhold. The evidence at trial established that the Housing Authority continued to withhold $1,310,036.47 in retention proceeds. The Housing Authority does not dispute that it continues to withhold that amount. Contrary to the decision of the trial court, we hold that no additional evidence or further proceedings are necessary to determine how much of that amount the Housing Authority must return to Fassberg. The Housing Authority has no right to continue to withhold any part of the retention proceeds after this action is fully resolved and must return all of the retention proceeds to Fassberg in the amount of $1,310,036.47. Therefore, the denial of a setoff was error. Fassberg is entitled to recover the full amount of the retention proceeds in the judgment to be entered after further proceedings on remand. In light of our conclusion, the trial court on remand must reconsider its determination that the Housing Authority is the prevailing party for purposes of an attorney fee award under Public Contract Code section 7107, subdivision (f).
10. The Denial of the Housing Authority’s Motion for Expert Witness Fees Based on the Statutory Offer to Compromise Was Error
Code of Civil Procedure section 998 establishes a procedure to shift costs if a party fails to accept a reasonable settlement offer before trial. The purpose of the statute is to encourage pretrial settlements. (T. M. Cobb Co. v. Superior Court (1984)
An offer to compromise under Code of Civil Procedure section 998 must be sufficiently specific to allow the recipient to evaluate the worth of the offer and make a reasoned decision whether to accept the offer. (Berg v. Darden (2004)
The Housing Authority offered in writing to pay Fassberg $1.1 million in exchange for the entry of mutual requests for dismissal with prejudice of the entire action and the execution of a proposed settlement agreement and mutual release. The proposed agreement included a release by Fassberg stating: “Fassberg, for itself and on behalf of its antecedents, successors, assigns, . . . does hereby fully release, discharge, relinquish, acquit and covenant not to sue HACLA and their successors, assigns, . . . from all claims, disputes and liabilities arising from, relating or in any way pertaining to the subject matter of the Action including any actual or alleged breach of contract, any actual or potential claim and all disputes arising from or relating to (a) the Action, (b) any and all demands, executions, setoffs, debts, expenses, legal costs, attorneys’ fees, interest, sums of money and/or losses of any kind whatsoever, and (c) any and all damages (including without limitation compensatory, punitive, exemplary or statutory) or any other legal or equitable relief, right or obligation existing between the Parties, now, forever and for all time . . . .” At the first ellipsis in the quoted passage were four lines of text listing various persons and entities related to Fassberg, and at the second ellipsis was a similar list of persons and entities related to the Housing Authority. The agreement also included a waiver of the provisions of Civil Code section 1542.
The trial court concluded that the proposed release was overbroad because it (1) required Fassberg to release not only its own claims but also those of “a long list of other possible, ill-defined third parties”; (2) encompassed not only claims against the Housing Authority but also claims against “a long list of other possible, ill-defined third parties”; and (3) encompassed all possible claims pertaining to those third parties that could have been alleged in this case. The court stated, “it is impossible for the court to evaluate the offer to compromise without having to consider a range of possible parties and claims extrinsic to the parties and claims that were actually present in the instant case.” The court therefore denied the motion for expert witness fees, citing Valentino, supra,
Valentino, supra,
The Court of Appeal concluded that the offer must be evaluated in light of all of its terms and conditions, including the release. (Valentino, supra,
We agree in principle that a defendant’s settlement offer may include terms or conditions, apart from the termination of the pending action in exchange for monetary consideration, that make it exceedingly difficult or impossible to determine the value of the offer to the plaintiff. In those circumstances, a court should not undertake extraordinary efforts to attempt to determine whether the judgment is more favorable to the plaintiff. Instead, the court should conclude that the offer is not sufficiently specific or certain to determine its value and deny cost shifting under Code of Civil Procedure section 998. (Berg v. Darden, supra,
The proposed settlement and mutual release agreement identifies only two parties to the proposed agreement: the Housing Authority and Fassberg. It describes the “subject matter” of the dispute as “[a]ny and all claims, causes of action, matters alleged or which could have been alleged in [this action], including the cross-complaint by the Housing Authority,” excluding only any claim by the Housing Authority based on a latent defect. We construe this language as an attempt to define the subject matter of the settlement and release to encompass die whole of the action, with only the stated exception. The release provision, quoted ante, states that Fassberg fully releases the Housing Authority from all claims arising from or relating to the subject matter of this action, including certain specified claims. We view the statement that Fassberg releases
Fassberg urges us to affirm the denial of the motion for expert witness fees under Code of Civil Procedure section 998, arguing that the settlement offer was not made in good faith because the Housing Authority had no reasonable expectation that Fassberg would accept the offer. Many courts have concluded that a good faith requirement is implicit in section 998 and that an unreasonably low settlement offer by a defendant cannot justify cost shifting under the statute. (E.g., Jones v. Dumrichob (1998)
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed as to the denial of relief to Fassberg on the complaint. The judgment is reversed as to the cross-complaint by the Housing Authority with directions to the superior court to (1) conduct a new trial on the cross-complaint limited to determining the number of false claims, if any, the amount of damages resulting from false claims and from any false records or statements in connection with false claims, and the appropriate civil penalty; (2) determine whether the election of remedies doctrine precludes the Housing Authority from seeking to recover in the new trial compensatory and punitive damages for misrepresentation and, if the Housing Authority is not precluded, conduct a new trial on those issues; (3) include in the judgment on the cross-complaint to be entered at the conclusion of the proceedings on remand a reduced award of damages to the Housing Authority for breach of contract in the amount of $701,282.05 ($1,104,000 - $402,717.95 = $701,282.05), and an award to Fassberg of $1,310,036.47 as the full amount of the retention proceeds; (4) reconsider its determination that the Housing Authority is the prevailing party for purposes of an attorney fee award under Public Contract Code section 7107, subdivision (f); and (5) reconsider the issue of the Housing Authority’s right to recover expert witness fees under Code of Civil Procedure, section 998, subdivision (c)(1). The order denying Fassberg’s motion for partial judgment notwithstanding the verdict is affirmed. Each party shall bear its own costs on appeal.
Klein, P. J., and Aldrich, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied June 21, 2007, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. The petition of appellant Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles for review by the Supreme Court was denied August 15, 2007, S154114.
Notes
Fassberg submitted change order proposals numbered 1 through 224 in addition to revisions of several of the change order proposals.
Fassberg submitted change order proposals for which the Housing Authority never issued a written change order requesting a total of $1,630,783.82. The Housing Authority determined that only $402,717.95 was due for those change order proposals. The $402,717.95 figure does not reflect a credit of $677,932.77 claimed by the Housing Authority for other changes in the scope of work, that is, deductive change order proposals by the Housing Authority.
Public Contract Code section 7107, subdivision (c) states in relevant part, “Within 60 days after the date of completion of the work of improvement, the retention withheld by the public entity shall be released. In the event of a dispute between the public entity and the original contractor, the public entity may withhold from the final payment an amount not to exceed 150 percent of the disputed amount.”
The court concluded that the $1,559,000 awarded for intentional arid negligent misrepresentation included both $1,104,000 awarded for breach of contact and $455,000 awarded for false claims.
“In the event that retention payments are not made within the time periods required by this section, the public entity or original contractor withholding the unpaid amounts shall be subject to a charge of 2 percent per month on the improperly withheld amount, in lieu of any interest otherwise due. Additionally, in any action for the collection of funds wrongfully withheld, the prevailing party shall be entitled to attorney’s fees and costs.” (Pub. Contract Code, § 7107, subd. (f).)
A court has the discretion to award less than treble damages (but not less than double damages) in some circumstances. (Gov. Code, § 12651, subd. (b).)
“Any person who commits any of the following acts shall be liable to the state or to the political subdivision for three times the amount of damages which the state or the political subdivision sustains because of the act of that person. A person who commits any of the following acts shall also be liable to the state or to the political subdivision for the costs of a civil action brought to recover any of those penalties or damages, and may be liable to the state or political subdivision for a civil penalty of up to ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each false claim: [|] (1) Knowingly presents or causes to be presented to an officer or employee of the state or of any political subdivision thereof, a false claim for payment or approval. ® (2) Knowingly makes, uses, or causes to be made or used a false record or statement to get a false claim paid or approved by the state or by any political subdivision.” (Gov. Code, § 12651, subd. (a).)
Government Code section 12650, subdivision (b)(1) states that, for purposes of the California False Claims Act: “ ‘Claim’ includes any request or demand for money, property, or services made to any employee, officer, or agent of the state or of any political subdivision, or to any contractor, grantee, or other recipient, whether under contract or not, if any portion of the money, property, or services requested or demanded issued from, or was provided by, the state (hereinafter ‘state funds’) or by any political subdivision thereof (hereinafter ‘political subdivision funds’).”
“Any person who commits any of the following acts shall be liable to the state or to the political subdivision for three times the amount of damages which the state or the political subdivision sustains because of the act of that person. A person who commits any of the following acts shall also be liable to the state or to the political subdivision for the costs of a civil action brought to recover any of those penalties or damages, and may be liable to the state or political subdivision for a civil penalty of up to ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each false claim.” (Gov. Code, § 12651, subd. (a), italics added.)
The federal False Claims Act describes seven prohibited “acts,” including knowingly presenting or causing to be presented “a false or fraudulent claim for payment or approval,” and knowingly making or using or causing to be made or used “a false record or statement to get a false or fraudulent claim paid or approved.” (31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1), (2).) The federal act also authorizes a civil penalty and treble damages, but does not expressly state that a civil penalty may be imposed only “for each false claim.” Section 3729(a) states, “Any person who [commits any of the seven enumerated acts] is liable to the United States Government for a civil penalty of not less than $5,000 and not more than $10,000, plus 3 times the amount of damages which the Government sustains because of the act . . . .” In light of the different statutory language, federal authorities are not particularly helpful with respect to the proper construction of the California statute.
LeVine v. Weis, supra,
Any person who “[kjnowingly makes, uses, or causes to be made or used a false record or statement to get a false claim paid or approved” (Gov. Code, § 12651, subd. (a)(2)) is liable to the state or political subdivision for treble damages and may be liable for a civil penalty “for each false claim” {id., § 12651, subd. (a)).
The jury found that the Housing Authority suffered $455,000 in damages resulting from 2,983 false claims. Our conclusion that the number of false claims was inflated does not necessarily compel the conclusion that the damages award was excessive, however, because Government Code section 12651, subdivision (a) provides for treble damages not only for each “false claim” but also for each “false record or statement to get a false claim paid or approved” {ibid.). We discuss the award of damages for false claims in part 3., post.
The United States Supreme Court in Marcus stated, “This fraud did not spend itself with the execution of the contract. Its taint entered into every swollen estimate which was the basic cause for payment of every dollar paid by the [federal public agency] into the joint fund for the benefit of respondents.” (U. S. ex rel. Marcus v. Hess, supra,
We reject the Housing Authority’s argument that Fassberg invited any error with respect to the number of false claims by failing to object to a jury instruction that permitted the jury to conclude that acts other than requests or demands for money, property, or services constituted false claims. The Housing Authority acknowledges that Fassberg did not request the instruction, but argues that Fassberg had numerous opportunities to object to the instruction, yet failed to object at any time before the verdict. An error is invited only if the appellant induced the commission of error through its own conduct. (Norgart v. Upjohn Co. (1999)
The actual sum of these figures is $1,150,914.59 rather than $1,159,014.60. Counsel cited in closing argument only the figures for liquidated damages and labor overcharges. The other figures either appeared in exhibits admitted in evidence or were stated in trial testimony.
Exhibit 9044, a seven-page document entitled final labor submission analysis, listed change order proposals and itemized the amounts of “questionable charges,” including wages. The exhibit included 11 columns of figures calculated in various combinations and headed, inter alia, “questionable labor charges,” “questionable labor less equipment and mise, charges,” “revised questionable labor,” and “revised total questionable charges.” At the end of each column was a total dollar amount. None of those totals was $45,882. Although Hostettler testified that the amount “overpaid on C.O.P. labor” was $45,882, that figure did not appear in exhibit 9044.
The special verdict form asked, “Did Housing Authority wrongfully withhold all or part of Fassberg’s contract retention?” The Housing Authority maintained that it was entitled to withhold the retention proceeds because of disputes as to certain potential liabilities (see Pub. Contract Code, § 7107).
Even Hostettler apparently confused the two exhibits. He initially stated that the $45,882 figure was based on the analysis in exhibit 9044, but on cross-examination appeared to state that the figure was based on exhibit 9047. Fassberg’s counsel asked with respect to the $45,882 figure, “And that’s based again on your review that we looked at, 9047?” Hostettler responded, “I can’t remember. Yeah, the labor analysis.”
The Housing Authority also appears to argue in similar perfunctory fashion that it is entitled to recover as damages for false claims some portion of the amounts stated in change order proposals, which it characterizes as “948 undocumented and unevidenced claims for money” totaling $3,915,834. Apart from our conclusion that the change order proposals were not claims under the California False Claims Act, discussed ante, the Housing Authority has not shown how much of the amounts stated in the change order proposals it actually approved and paid, let alone how much it approved and paid in reliance on false statements.
The Housing Authority argues in its respondent’s brief, “Fassberg’s false certifications were the key to the receipt of hundreds of thousands of dollars,” and “The jury award of only $455,000 is only a fraction of the amounts that Fassberg received in reliance on false certifications.”
“For the breach of an obligation not arising from contract, the measure of damages, except where otherwise expressly provided by this Code, is the amount which will compensate for all the detriment proximately caused thereby, whether it could have been anticipated or not.” (Civ. Code, § 3333.) “Detriment is a loss or harm suffered in person or property.” {Id.., § 3282.)
“Where an appellate court vacates a judgment for plaintiff with directions to enter a new judgment in a greater amount, the defendant may move for a new trial after entry of the new judgment. [Citations.] Where the appellate court directs entry of judgment in an amount less than the original judgment, the same rule obviously applies. The plaintiff should be given an opportunity to move for a new trial after entry of the new judgment. In both situations, a party who may have been satisfied with the original judgment may in reliance upon it refrain from seeking a new trial or appealing or may have had his motion for new trial denied on the ground that the original judgment was sufficiently favorable to him. The judgment directed by the appellate court is less favorable to him, and he should be permitted to determine whether to seek a new trial and to have a motion for new trial considered in the light of the new judgment.” (Woodcock v. Fontana Scaffolding & Equip. Co., supra, 69 Cal.2d at pp. 459-460.)
Section 30(b) of the contract stated: “If the performance of all or any part of the work is, for an unreasonable period of time, suspended, delayed, or interrupted (1) by an act of the Contracting Officer in the administration of the contractor, or (2) by the Contracting Officer’s failure to act within the time specified (or within a reasonable time if not specified) in this contract an adjustment shall be made for any increase in the cost of performance of the contract (excluding profit) necessarily caused by such unreasonable suspension, delay, or interruption and the contract modified in writing accordingly. However, no adjustment shall be made under this clause for any suspension, delay, or interruption to the extent that performance would have been so suspended, delayed, or interrupted by any other cause, including the fault or negligence of the Contractor or for which any equitable adjustment is provided for or excluded under any other provision of this contract.”
Schulze’s analysis apparently was based on 560 days of compensable delay, rather than 779 days.
Perhaps this is because Dugan inspected the property frequently for the purpose of ensuring the quality of construction and compliance with the contract.
Separate and apart from the required election of remedies, the Housing Authority is not entitled to recover the punitive damages awarded by the jury because it failed to prove actual damages for misrepresentation, as discussed in part 6., ante. We discuss the election of remedies requirement nonetheless because the issue is likely to arise again on remand. (Civ. Code, § 43.)
The United States Supreme Court in Vermont Agency of Natural Resources v. United States ex rel. Stevens, supra,
The Ninth Circuit in U.S. v. Mackby, supra,
“Where cross-demands for money have existed between persons at any point in time when neither demand was barred by the statute of limitations, and an action is thereafter commenced by one such person, the other person may assert in the answer the defense of payment in that the two demands are compensated so far as they equal each other .. . .” (Code Civ. Proc., § 431.70.)
Section 27 (i) of the contract stated: “The [public agency] shall make the final payment due the Contractor under the contract after (1) completion and final acceptance of all work, and (2) presentation of release of all claims against the [public agency] arising by virtue of this contract, other than claims, in stated amounts, that the Contractor has specifically excepted from the operation of the release. Each such exception shall embrace no more than one claim, the basis and scope of which shall be clearly defined. The amounts for such excepted claims shall not be included in the request for final payment.”
The trial court may address this ground when it rules on the motion for expert witness fees on remand, and nothing stated in this opinion is intended to influence the court’s exercise of discretion in that regard.
