Opinion
In In re Tobacco Cases I (2010)
The People also appeal the order, contending the court erred by denying them prevailing market rates on the ground the attorney fees provision in the Consent Decree provides for an award of fees “incurred” by the state, rather than for an award of reasonable fees. For the court’s convenience on remand, we address this issue. The court’s ruling was based on its erroneous finding that section 1717 is inapplicable. When section 1717 applies, the prevailing party is entitled to “reasonable” fees (§ 1717, subd. (a)), meaning the rates prevailing in the community for similar work.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In November 1998 Reynolds and several other tobacco manufacturers entered into the MSA with most states, including California, to resolve government claims pertaining to public health concerns about smoking and the marketing of tobacco products to minors. In December 1998 the People and Reynolds signed the Consent Decree, under which the San Diego County Superior Court approved the MSA and retained exclusive jurisdiction over its implementation and enforcement.
The Consent Decree permanently enjoins participating tobacco manufacturers from “using or causing to be used” any “cartoon” in the advertising, promoting, labeling or packaging of tobacco products. The Consent Decree incorporates the MSA’s definition of “cartoon,” which is “any drawing or other depiction of an object, person, animal, creature or any similar caricature that satisfies any of the following criteria: [f] (1) the use of comically exaggerated features; [f] (2) the attribution of human characteristics to animals, plants or other objects, or the similar use of anthropomorphic technique; or [][] (3) the attribution of unnatural or extrahuman abilities, such as imperviousness to pain or injury, X-ray vision, tunneling at very high speeds or transformation.”
In December 2007 the People moved for an order to enforce the MSA and the Consent Decree. In February 2008 the People filed an amended motion to enforce only the Consent Decree, which embodies the MSA. The People sought an order declaring Reynolds violated the cartoon ban “thousands of times in 2006 and 2007 as part of its Farm Rocks campaign advertisements of Camel cigarettes,” and sanctions based on the number of violations. The People’s theory was that Reynolds violated the cartoon ban in two ways: by including cartoons in its own advertising, and by having its gatefold advertisement in Rolling Stone magazine adjacent to the magazine’s editorial pages, which contained cartoons.
The court issued a declaration that “a relatively small portion” of the images in the Camel Farm or Farm Rocks campaign violated the cartoon prohibition. The objectionable images included “jet-powered tractors which fly,” “radios flying by means of attached helicopter rotors,” “televisions that grow on plant stems,” and tractors “with wheels made of film reels able to defy gravity.” The court rejected the People’s theory that Reynolds was responsible for the placement of its advertisement in Rolling Stone magazine near cartoons the magazine provided.
The court declined to issue further declaratory relief, or any injunctive relief, because the MSA and the Consent Decree already prohibited the use of cartoons in advertising, and Reynolds had terminated the Camel Farm campaign and taken steps to avoid the future adjacency of its advertising to cartoons provided by others. The court determined it had jurisdiction under the Consent Decree to assess sanctions against Reynolds, but it declined to do so because its violation of the cartoon ban was unintentional and “a relatively small part of the advertisements,” the People stipulated there was no proof of
We affirmed the court’s order. (In re Tobacco Cases I, supra,
In the meantime, the People pursued attorney fees from Reynolds under the following unilateral provision in the Consent Decree: “In any proceeding which results in a finding that a Participating Manufacturer violated this Consent Decree and Final Judgment, the Participating Manufacturer or Participating Manufacturers found to be in violation shall pay the State’s costs and attorneys’ fees incurred by the State of California in such a proceeding.”
The court designated the People as the prevailing parties entitled to attorney fees. The court rejected Reynolds’s argument the action was “on a contract” for purposes of section 1717. (§ 1717, subd. (a).) Alternatively, the court found that even if section 1717 applies, the People were the prevailing parties entitled to fees because they prevailed on the “significant issue” of whether Reynolds violated the cartoon ban in its own advertising. The court rejected the People’s argument they are entitled to attorney fees at prevailing market rates, on the ground the Consent Decree’s attorney fees clause “does not provide for reasonable attorney fees but instead requires the payment of attorney fees ‘incurred.’ ” The court denied Reynolds’s request to apportion fees based on the People’s limited success, on the ground they voluntarily reduced the number of attorney hours spent by 15 percent. On November 5, 2009, the court issued an order granting the People $707,882.50 in attorney fees and other costs of $32,673.
DISCUSSION
I
Prevailing Party Determination
A
Section 1717 Applies to the Consent Decree
Reynolds contends the court erred by finding the People’s action for enforcement of the Consent Decree is not an action “on a contract” for purposes of section 1717. (§ 1717, subd. (a).) We agree.
Section 1717 “was enacted to establish mutuality of remedy where contractual provision makes recovery of attorney’s fees available for only one party [citations], and to prevent oppressive use of one-sided attorney’s fees provisions.” (Reynolds Metals Co. v. Alperson (1979)
Reynolds cites Share v. Casiano Bel-Air Homeowners Assn. (1989)
In any event, even without considering Share, we conclude the attorney fees provision in the Consent Decree is subject to section 1717. “In a stipulated judgment, or consent decree, litigants voluntarily terminate a lawsuit by assenting to specified terms, which the court agrees to enforce as a judgment.” (California State Auto. Assn. Inter-Ins. Bureau v. Superior Court (1990)
To decide the issue in the People’s favor, we would have to interpret the term “on a contract” in section 1717 narrowly, which is impermissible under California law and antithetical to the Legislature’s intent of ensuring reciprocity of remedy. At the trial court, the People even conceded, “At issue here is the enforcement of a civil contract to settle litigation.”
The People cite no apposite authority to support their position. They contend this action is not “on a contract” for purposes of section 1717 because the trial court determined that rules pertaining to the enforcement of a judgment applied rather than the rules pertaining to an action for breach of contract. The People point out that the court ruled they could proceed by motion rather than having to file a complaint, and that no jury was required. The court’s ruling states: “Although [Reynolds] provided some authority stating that consent decrees can be characterized as contracts . . . , the Court notes that it denied [Reynolds’s] request for a jury trial based upon its finding that this action was equitable in nature.” Again, however, since section 1717 broadly applies to any dispute involving a written agreement, it applies to an
Additionally, the People contend legislative intent would not be served by applying section 1717 to this particular action because Reynolds is a sophisticated company represented by able attorneys, and the parties had equal bargaining power when they entered into the unilateral attorney fees provision in the Consent Decree. The People assert “Reynolds is not a disadvantaged party needing protection.” Whether section 1717 applies is a legal question, however, rather than a factual question dependent on the contracting parties’ individual circumstances. The “primary purpose of section 1717 is to ensure mutuality of remedy for attorney fee claims under contractual attorney fee provisions.” (Santisas v. Goodin (1998)
The People also claim that the application of section 1717 to a consent decree “would upend the practice and principles applied in civil rights litigation, securities litigation, and environmental practice, just to name a few areas.” They do not, however, offer any supporting legal citation. “[Pjarties are required to include argument and citation to authority in their briefs, and the absence of these necessary elements allows this court to treat appellant’s . . . issue as waived.” (Interinsurance Exchange v. Collins (1994)
B
“Greater Relief” Criterion
Reynolds also persuasively contends the court applied an incorrect legal standard in determining that if section 1717 applies, the People were nonetheless the prevailing parties. The court found the People prevailed because they won on a “significant issue,” whether Reynolds violated the Consent Decree by using banned cartoons in its own advertising. The court’s order cites Graciano v. Robinson Ford Sales, Inc. (2006)
Under section 1717, subdivision (b)(1), “the party prevailing on the contract shall be the party who recovered a greater relief in the action on the contract. The court may also determine that there is no party prevailing on the contract for purposes of this section.” (Italics added.) Section 1717 allows “those parties whose litigation success is not fairly disputable to claim attorney fees as a matter of right, while reserving for the trial court a measure of discretion to find no prevailing party when the results of the litigation are mixed.” (Hsu v. Abbara, supra, 9 Cal.4th at p. 876.) “ ‘[T]ypically, a determination of no prevailing party results when both parties seek relief, but neither prevails, or when the ostensibly prevailing party receives only a part of the relief sought.’ ” (Id. at p. 875.)
The results here were mixed. In Hsu v. Abbara, supra, 9 Cal.4th at page 876, the California Supreme Court held “that in deciding whether there is a ‘prevailing party on the contract,’ the trial court is to compare the relief awarded on the contract claim or claims with the parties’ demands on those same claims and their litigation objectives as disclosed by the pleadings, trial briefs, opening statements, and similar sources. The prevailing party determination is to be made only upon final resolution of the contract claims and only by ‘a comparison of the extent to which each party ha[s] succeeded and failed to succeed in its contentions.’ ” Additionally, “in determining litigation success, courts should respect substance rather than form, and to this extent should be guided by ‘equitable considerations.’ For example, a party who is denied direct relief on a claim may nonetheless be found to be a prevailing party if it is clear that the party has otherwise achieved its main litigation objective.” (Id. at p. 877, italics omitted.)
Reynolds claims the People did not recover greater relief because their main litigation objective was a declaration Reynolds violated the Consent Decree’s ban on cartoons through the placement of its Farm Rocks or Camel Farm advertisement in Rolling Stone magazine adjacent to the magazine’s editorial pages, and their successful claim that Reynolds’s own advertisement
II
Prevailing Market Rates
The court denied the People’s request for fees at prevailing market rates, rather than the substantially lower salaried rates of in-house counsel, on the ground the Consent Decree limits fees to those “incurred” by the state. The People contend this was error, and the Consent Decree should be interpreted to authorize an award of “reasonable fees” even though it does not expressly use that term. We are not required to reach the issue, however, because the court’s ruling was based on the supposed inapplicability of section 1717. Should the court on remand determine the People are the prevailing parties under the “greater relief’ standard, it is established that section 1717 authorizes an award to them of prevailing market rates.
“We review a determination of the legal basis for an award of attorney fees de novo as a question of law.” (Pueblo Radiology Medical Group, Inc. v. Gerlach (2008)
In PLCM Group, Inc. v. Drexler (2000)
In Lolley v. Campbell (2002)
Reynolds asserts that even if section 1717 governs fees, the People cannot obtain fees greater than those actually incurred. Reynolds cites Reynolds Metals Co. v. Alperson, supra,
The November 5, 2009 order awarding attorney fees is reversed. We direct the court on remand to reconsider the attorney fees issue in accordance with this opinion. The parties are to bear their own costs on appeal.
Huffman, J., and McIntyre, J., concurred.
Notes
Reynolds also cites Big Bear Mun. Water Dist. v. Bear Valley Mutual Water Co. (1989)
For example, courts have rejected the argument that consent decrees are contracts for purposes of determining whether they are modifiable without the parties’ agreement (Johnson Products Co. v. F.T.C., supra,
Given the reversal and remand, Reynolds’s contention that even if the People are entitled to fees the award was excessive is moot.
We deny the People’s July 27, 2010 request that we take judicial notice of Department of Justice administrative bulletins listing government attorney and paralegal billing rates.
