TIMOTHY E. GIBSON, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. ANDREW BOBROFF et al., Defendants and Appellants.
No. A069563
First Dist., Div. Two
Oct. 2, 1996
49 Cal.App.4th 1202
[Opinion certified for partial publication.*]
COUNSEL
Hoskins & Williams and Elizabeth Williams for Defendants and Appellants.
McGuinn, Hillsman & Palefsky, John A. McGuinn and Kerry J. McLean for Plaintiff and Respondent.
OPINION
PHELAN, J.*—Defendants Andrew and Alexander Bobroff appeal the trial court‘s order denying their motion to tax the costs of the prevailing plaintiff‘s expert witness fees and the costs of the court-ordered mediation. We are presented with an issue of first impression as to the latter item—that is, may a trial court in its discretion award successful litigants their share of the cost of unsuccessful court-ordered, but privately conducted, mediation? In the published portion of this opinion we answer this question in the affirmative. In the unpublished portion we reject appellants’ claim that the award of expert witness fees was an abuse of discretion and deny respondent‘s request for sanctions.
FACTS
Plaintiff Timothy E. Gibson was injured when defendants’ truck rear-ended him as he was stopped at a red light on December 19, 1992. He filed a complaint for personal injuries including damages for lost wages and future income. Liability was conceded and the only issue was the amount of damages sustained by plaintiff. On July 8, 1994, the parties attended court-ordered judicial arbitration (
On that same day, October 5, 1994, the parties each filed statutory offers to compromise (
Plaintiff filed a verified memorandum of costs (
Defendants filed their motion to strike or tax these costs as being excessive and not properly recoverable. (
The trial court denied the motion to tax on the following grounds: (1) it found the $100 expert witness fee to Dr. Rodich was recoverable; and (2) the
Plaintiff later filed Dr. Thomas’ declaration stating that his standard fee of $195 per hour was for all work, except deposition and trial testimony, and for those activities he charged $275 per hour, with a two-hour minimum. The declaration also indicated that this fee scale had been effective since January 1, 1993, and that these fees were actually charged and recovered in numerous depositions and trials conducted since that date. Two exhibits listed in the declaration appeared to have been unintentionally omitted.
Defendants objected to this evidence, contending it was insufficient since it did not itemize how much time was spent in answering questions at trial. Plaintiff then filed an amended memorandum with the missing exhibits attached, which were two invoices. The invoice dated October 21, 1994, showed Dr. Thomas worked 7.75 hours $195/hour for a fee of $1,511.25, plus travel expenses of $29.80, for a total fee of $1,541.05. The invoice dated December 16, 1994, reflected fees for 19.25 hours $195/hour totaling $3,753.75; trial testimony of four hours $275/hour totaling $1,100; $320 for a research associate; plus $309.68 in travel and exhibit expenses for a total fee of $5,483.43.
At the resumed hearing on the motion to tax costs, defense counsel objected that the unitemized statement was insufficient to sustain plaintiff‘s burden to demonstrate that the expert witness fees were reasonably and necessarily incurred. At the end of that hearing, the trial court granted the motion to tax the costs of $1,541.05 contained in the October 21 invoice, finding that it could not determine if this sum was double-billed in the December 16 invoice. The court denied the motion as to the remainder of the fees claimed.
DISCUSSION
I. Expert Witness Fees*
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II. Mediation Expenses
Defendants contend the court exceeded its discretionary powers in awarding costs for mediation because these costs are not statutorily authorized and were not reasonably necessary to the conduct of the litigation.6
Based on the parties’ arguments, it appears the trial court awarded these fees under its discretionary authority. (
An award of costs for mediation expenses is not statutorily proscribed. (
Mediation, like arbitration, was created as a trial alternative to dispose of relatively small civil claims, in a “fair, timely, appropriate, and cost-effective manner . . . .” (
The same philosophy should apply to the analogous trial avoidance goal of court-ordered mediation. We note that section
We recognize there are fundamental differences between arbitration and mediation. The former involves an adversarial hearing before a neutral decision maker governed by special evidentiary rules. (See
Whether a cost is “reasonably necessary to the conduct of the litigation” is a question of fact for the trial court, whose decision will be reviewed for abuse of discretion. (Applegate v. St. Francis Lutheran Church, supra, 23 Cal.App.4th at pp. 363-364; Lubetzky v. Friedman (1991) 228 Cal.App.3d 35, 39 [278 Cal.Rptr. 706].) Defendants take a distorted, myopic view of the mediation statute in arguing that since the purpose of mediation is to avoid trial, the expenses incurred in mediation cannot be construed to be reasonably necessary to the conduct of litigation. The same could be argued about contractual or judicial arbitration which, as we have seen, may result in an award of the arbitrator‘s fees as costs. Indeed, the fees of a special master appointed by a trial court to “control discovery and to conduct settlement conferences” have been awarded as costs. (Winston Square Homeowner‘s Assn. v. Centex West, Inc. (1989) 213 Cal.App.3d 282, 292-293 [261 Cal.Rptr. 605].) Encouraging the parties to resolve lawsuits at the earliest time and before a costly and time-consuming trial, is a necessary part of litigation as conducted in this state. The award of mediation fees is no less reasonably necessary to the conduct of litigation, than the award of arbitrator‘s fees affirmed in the Boyd decision (ante, p. 1208), which costs are also statutorily authorized by section
III. Sanctions*
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DISPOSITION
We conclude that the trial court acted within its discretion in awarding plaintiff costs for expert witness fees and mediation expenses. The order denying defendants’ motion to tax costs is affirmed.
Lambden, J., concurred.
KLINE, P. J., Concurring.—As noted by Justice Phelan,
I concur in the judgment of this court pertaining to mediation expenses primarily because by failing to object to the court-ordered mediation I believe defendants impliedly conceded mediation was “reasonably necessary to the conduct of the litigation” and thereby waived the claim that mediation
