MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON OBJECTION TO CLAIM OF BILLIE MILAM WEISMAN
J. Mercedes Gorina, chapter 13 debtor in the above-captioned case (“Debtor” or “Gorina”), objects to Claim #4 filed by Billie Milam Weisman (“Weisman”) in the amount of $476,953.33. Gorina asserts that Weisman fails to give proper credit for monies received from settling co-defendants and that attorneys’ fees, if any, which may be allowed against Gorina should be limited to a proportionate share, allocated in accordance with her participation in or importance to the case.
Weisman filed an opposition to Gorina’s objection. The matter came on for hearing and was submitted for decision.
BACKGROUND FACTS
Pre-bankrwptcy Activity
Weisman’s claim against Gorina arises out of an action in the California Superior Court entitled Weisman v. Cohen, Case no. SC 040816 (the “State Court Action”) concerning the purchase of a residence in Holmby Hills. The State Court Action sought damages based on construction defects, breach of contract and breach of warranty. Gorina was one of eleven co-defendants.
After four years of litigation, the case was tried in November and December 1999. During the trial, Weisman settled with the general contractors and one of the sellers for $2.1 million. Trial proceeded against the remaining defendants. Weisman obtained a jury verdict of $1,812,065 in compensatory damages against three sellers, Gloria Shulman, Carmen Gomez, and the debtor Gorina, jointly and severally, on a single cause of action, breach of warranty. Gorina successfully defended against six other causes of action for fraudulent misrepresentation (non suit), fraudulent concealment (non suit), breach of purchase and sale contract (jury verdict), negligence based on breach of duty of design and construction (jury deadlock), breach of duty based on violation of the requirements of the building code (jury deadlock) and breach of statutory duties of disclosure (jury deadlock).
The trial court ruled that the settlement proceeds offset the award of compensatory damages, leaving no net recovery thereon
Weisman appealed. On March 29, 2001, the Second Appellate District affirmed the trial court’s order taxing costs and reversed its order denying attorneys fees. The appellate court found that the contractual language on which the request for attorneys’ fees was based was sufficiently broad to encompass relief granted on the breach of warranty claim, regardless of whether that claim sounded in contract or tort. The appellate court also found that application of the settlement proceeds to offset the entirety of the compensatory damages did not negate the fact that Weisman prevailed at trial on liability and damage issues. The case was remanded to the trial court to “calculate a reasonable fee award under the purchase agreement’s attorney fee clause, based on plaintiffs status as the prevailing party.” (See Court of Appeal Opinion (unpublished), filed March 29, 2001.)
On June 26, 2001, Gorina filed bankruptcy in this court.
Post-bankruptcy Activities
On August 3, 2001, after the filing of this bankruptcy case, Weisman filed a motion in the State Court Action against Shulman, Gorina, and Gomez seeking an award of attorneys’ fees of $400,000 out of $450,000 for trial, $35,000 for post-trial motions and proceedings, $15,000 for attorneys fees incurred on the appeal, and $1,615.66 for costs incurred in the appeal, for a total of $451,615.66. This court is informed that the trial court in the State Court Action granted Weisman’s motion.
The Proof of Claim
Weisman’s proof of claim, filed in the bankruptcy case on November 13, 2001, asserts a claim in the amount of $476,953.33 based on “Judgment for breach of warranty in sale of real property, order for attorneys fees... .Judgment 2/22/01; order 8/3/01.” More specifically, the elements of Weisman’s $476,953.33 claim are:
(1) $24,520.33 in costs awarded in the State Court Action and upheld on appeal, plus interest in the amount of $817.34, calculated at 10% for 4 months from February 22, 2001, to the date of bankruptcy on June 22, 2001, for a total of $25,337.67;
(2) $415,615.66 in fees and costs sought (and awarded post-petition) in the State Court Action, consisting of:
(A) $400,000 in attorneys fees through trial;
(B) $35,000 for post-trial motions and proceedings;
(C) $15,000 for attorneys fees on appeal; and
(D) $1,615.66 as costs incurred on appeal.
DISCUSSION
Resolution of the Debtor’s objection to Weisman’s proof of claim requires this court to apply both state and federal law. The status and effect of Weisman’s claim is determined in accordance with federal bankruptcy law. The validity and extent of the claim is determined according to California law.
Vanston Bondholders Protective Committee v. Green,
The Debtor objects to the entirety of Weisman’s claim on various grounds, including a late-asserted contention in Gorina’s second supplement that this court may exercise its discretion to find that there is no prevailing party or that Gorina is the prevailing party. Such is not the case. Certain issues decided prior to the commencement of this case bind the parties in the bankruptcy court. The designation of a prevailing party has been litigated in the state court, decided in the state courts, and is no longer subject to appeal. The California Appellate Court’s prepetition decision that Weisman is the prevailing party binds this court. Similarly, the California Appellate Court’s decision affirming the award of costs through February 2001 against Gorina in the amount of $24,520.33 binds both Weisman and Gorina. Neither the amount nor the designation as costs is open for reconsideration here.
Post-bankruptcy Rulings by the State Court Are Void as to Debtor
Weisman suggests that this court ought to adopt the trial court’s post-bankruptcy findings against Shulman and allow an additional $451,615.66 in fees and costs on the grounds that the trial court is in the best position to make such findings. Weisman acknowledges that the automatic stay which arose on the filing of Gorina’s bankruptcy prevented the State Court from proceeding against Gorina, Weisman also argues that this court can grant relief from stay to allow those findings to set the amount of the claim.
This court disagrees. First, Ninth Circuit authority makes it clear that actions taken in violation of the automatic stay are void, not voidable.
Lopez v. Specialty Restaurants Corp., (In re Lopez),
The fact that Gorina is jointly and severally liable with Schulman on the judgment for compensatory damages does not change this analysis. Weisman apparently elected early in the case to rely on the proof of claim process for determining Gorina’s debt, without seeking to go to the state court forum in which it received its award for fees against Schulman. In the absence of collateral estoppel, res judicata, or consent, each forum must make its own determinations of fact and law. The potential for inconsistent results is inevitable.
Violation of the Co-Debtor Stay Is Not An Issue
Although Gorina alleges that Weisman’s post-bankruptcy motion to the State Court violated the co-debtor stay of 11 U.S.C. § 1301, that does not appear to be the case. The co-debtor stay protects an individual that is liable with the debtor on a consumer debt. The State Court judgment in this case does not arise out of a consumer debt.
Debtor Is Not Entitled to Offset Costs or Attorneys Fees Under California Code of Civil Procedure § 877.
Gorina asserts, among other things, that $293,935 is available for offset against
Attorneys’ Fees Are An Element of Costs
California Code of Civil Procedure (“CCP”) § 877 provides, in pertinent part, that a release that is given in good faith before a judgment or verdict “shall not discharge any other party from liability unless its terms so provide, but it shall reduce the claims against the others in the amount stipulated by the release... or in the amount of the consideration paid for it, whichever is greater.”
Nothing in the statutory language directly states that the reduction in the claims against co-defendants precludes a credit or offset for fees and costs incurred by and awarded to a plaintiff. However, in
Reed v. Wilson (“Reed”),
The facts in Reed are similar to the facts in the instant case. In Reed, the plaintiff sued several defendants for negligence, fraud and breach of contract in connection with a sale of real property. Before trial, the plaintiff settled with certain defendants for $37,500. Plaintiff then went to trial against the non-settling defendants and was awarded a judgment for $20,250. The trial court ruled that the judgment of $20,500 was offset by the $37,500 settlement, thereby reducing the judgment to zero. Nonetheless, the trial court found plaintiff to be the prevailing party and awarded plaintiff $7,635.60 in costs. The trial court further found that the nonsettling defendants were not entitled to offset the cost award against the excess portion of the settlement proceeds. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
Although the Reed opinion does not make any reference to attorneys’ fees as an element of the costs awarded in that case, California Civil Code (“CC”) § 1717, which governs attorneys’ fees and costs in an action on a contract that specifically provides for recovery of such fees and costs, also states that “Reasonable attorney fees shall be fixed by the court, and shall be an element of the costs of suit.”
Reed
acknowledges an exception to the “no offset of costs” rule, citing
Regan Roofing Co. v. Superior Court (“Regan Roofing”),
Weisman’s Settlement Did Not Cover the Costs, Including Any Fees, of the Action Against Gorina
On the issue of costs, Weisman’s settlement agreement with defendants A1 Homer and A1 Homer, Incorporated (“Homer”) provides, at page 2, ¶ 8, that “[e]ach
Gorina asserts that an award against Gorina by Weisman for attorneys’ fees incurred in pursuit of claims against the settling defendants would give Weisman a double recovery and overcompensate her for her fees. Instead, the Debtor urges the court to find that the cost/fee provisions of the settlement agreements set forth above should be construed as an allocation of settlement consideration to costs (fees and expenses) within the purview of the rule set out in Regan Roofing. This would entitle Gorina to have the benefit of an offset for fees attributable to claims against the Homer and Warn defendants. This court disagrees.
On the one hand, as the
Regan Roofing
court notes, “a party’s forbearance from seeking an award of litigation costs may constitute legal consideration for settlement,” citing
Armstrong World Industries, Inc. v. Superior Court,
In this case, the language of the settlements expresses a clear intention, as between the settling parties, to cover all fees and costs based on the claims between the settling parties. However, there is nothing in the agreements or in the records of this proceeding to indicate what, if any, value was allocated to this element by the parties or whether, in effect, the mutual releases resulted in no net value attributable to either plaintiff or settling defendants. The instant case is very different from the one presented in
Regan Roofing. Regan Roofing
involved a complex settlement agreement between homeowners and a developer which contained a detailed allocation of value to various items of consideration, including costs. In addition, the settling parties in
Regan Roofing
conceded that the nonsettling defendants would be entitled to receive an offset for the costs as allocated.
Regan Roofing,
In addition to the foregoing, each settlement agreement also states an affirmative intention to resolve only those claims and disputes between the settling parties. There is no basis for this court to conclude that the settlements at issue included a forbearance of fees and costs that would cover the fees and costs “of pursing the action against the remaining defendant.”
Reed,
Weisman Is Entitled to Reasonable Attorneys Fees
The question of whether Weisman is entitled to an award of attorneys fees in the State Court Action against Gorina is not subject to dispute or review by this
Standards for Calculating a Reasonable Fee
The trial court has broad authority to determine the amount of a reasonable attorney fee award.
PLCM Group, Inc. v. Drexler,
In California, the fee setting inquiry usually begins with the “lodestar,” i.e., the number of hours reasonably expended multiplied by the reasonable hourly rate.
Id.,
California courts have consistently held that a computation of the time spent on a case and the reasonable value of that time is fundamental to determining an appropriate attorney fee award.
PLCM Group, Inc.
In determining what constitutes a reasonable attorney’s fee when a contract or statute provides for such an award, courts should consider the nature of the litigation, its difficulty, the amount involved, the skill required in its handling,
Analysis of Reasonableness Factors
Weisman submitted evidence to support her request for attorneys’ fees. The documents provided include Weisman’s state court motion for fees, the declaration of John R. Fuchs in support of that fee motion, billing statements, the state court memorandum of costs, the motion and declaration after trial and after appeal, and the memorandum of costs after appeal.
Nature of the Litigation
The State Court Action concerned the purchase of a residence in Holmby Hills. Weisman sought damages based on at least seven causes of action: fraudulent concealment, breach of purchase and sale contract, negligence based on breach of duty of design and construction, breach of duty based on violation of the requirements of the building code, breach of statutory duties of disclosure, and breach of warranty. Gorina was one of eleven co-defendants.
Difficulty
At least four factors reflect the difficult nature of this litigation: the number of causes of action, the nature of the causes of action, the number of defendants, and the time required to reach a resolution. The State Court Action involved years of litigation. The case was tried for nearly six weeks, followed by a month of jury deliberations. Following the trial, there were months of further proceedings on post-trial issues, including an appeal to the California Court of Appeals.
Amount Involved
Attorneys’ fees were incurred from August 1995 through early 2000. In addition to costs in the amount of $26,135.99, Weisman claims $450,000 in attorneys’ fees.
Skill Required and Employed
The action apparently involved advanced litigation skills and specialized knowledge of construction means and methods. Creditor’s lead counsel had over 21 years of experience in practice.
Attention Given
As noted above, the State Court Action involved approximately four years of pretrial litigation, a six week jury trial, and over a year of post-trial proceedings to the date of bankruptcy. Among other things, according to the declarations of counsel, Weisman provided more than 1,500 written discovery responses, took depositions of five experts designated by the defendants, and paid over $4,000 in fees to Weisman’s own experts.
Success
Weisman succeeded on one out of seven causes of action against Gorina. Weisman obtained a jury verdict of $1,812,065 in compensatory damages against Shulman, Gomez, and Gorina, jointly and severally, on a single cause of action, breach of warranty. Gorina successfully defended against six other causes of action for fraudulent misrepresentation (non suit), fraudulent concealment (non suit), breach of purchase and sale contract (jury verdict), negligence based on breach of duty of design and construction (jury deadlock), breach of duty based on violation of the requirements of the building code (jury deadlock) and breach of statutory duties of disclosure (jury deadlock).
Other Circumstances
The evidence indicates that Gorina’s attorney spent 962 hours defending her through trial, incurring $168,350.00 in fees and $1,353.00 in costs. Gorina’s counsel substituted out of the case on June 28, 2000.
Debtor argues that she should not be held responsible for the entirety of the attorneys’ fees incurred by Weisman in the State Court Action because (1) Weisman prevailed on only one out of seven causes of action against Gorina and (2) Gorina was only a small player in the suit and a small factor in the incurrence of fees. This court agrees that apportionment is appropriate in this case.
Apportionment
The Court has the discretion to apportion fees.
Abdallah v. United Savings Bank,
In some cases, apportionment may be unworkable. Where the issues are so interrelated that it is impossible to separate them into claims for which fees are and are not awardable, no apportionment need be made.
Akins v. Enterprise Rent-A-Car Co.,
Calculation
Weisman’s evidence indicates that her counsel spent more than 2000 hours over the course of this litigation, billing the services of three attorneys at hourly rates of $250, $160, and $150. Weisman seeks an award for fees of $450,000 from Gorina for attorneys’ fees incurred in pursuit of all of the defendants and all causes of action.
Counsel’s hourly rates are reasonable and the total amount of hours spent and fees incurred are not unreasonable in the case as a whole. However, notwithstanding that Weisman has been designated the prevailing party for purposes of costs and fees, saddling Gorina with all of the fees incurred against all of the parties on all of the causes of action is fundamentally unfair and, therefore, not reasonable.
Heppler,
Based on this court’s review of the billings offered in support of Weisman’s request for fees and the stage of litigation at which such fees were incurred and on consideration of the nature of the causes of action on which Weisman did not prevail against Gorina as well as the one cause of action on which Weisman did prevail, it is the finding of this court that the following award is a fair allocation and award of attorneys’ fees and costs to Weisman:
(1) pretrial and trial: $ 90,000.00
(2) costs award confirmed by appellate court 25,337.67
(3) post trial motions and proceedings 35,000.00
(4) appeal (including costs) 16,615.00
$166,952.67
CONCLUSION
Debtor’s objection to the claim of Weisman is SUSTAINED IN PART and OVERRULED IN PART as set forth in this court’s memorandum. Weisman’s claim is allowed in the amount of $166,952.67.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The State Court Action arose from the sale of real property. The purchase agreement provides: "Should suit be commenced by any party to this contract arising out of a dispute regarding this contract, then the prevailing party shall be entitled to reasonable attorneys’s fees and costs from the non-prevailing party.” Purchase Agreement ¶ 26.
. See Court of Appeals Opinion (unpublished), filed March 29, 2001.
. California Civil Code § 1717(a) provides, in pertinent part: "In any action on a contract, where the contract specifically provides that attorneys’ fees and costs, which are incurred to enforce that contract, shall be awarded either to one of the parties or to the prevailing party, then the party who is determined to be the party prevailing on the contract, whether he or she is the party specified in the contract or not, shall be entitled to reasonable attorney’s fees in addition to other costs... Reasonable attorneys' fees shall be fixed by the court, and shall be an element of the costs of suit.”
.
. There are some entries prior to judgment in the State Court Action which reference a "Douglas appeal” and appear to be wholly unrelated to this case.
