George R. Jewell and Charles Duck, trustee of the bankruptcy estates of George M. Jewell and Laura E. Jewell, 1 (collectively, the Jewells), appeal from an order which, inter alia, denied their motion to tax costs for appeal bonds posted by respondent Bank of America National Trust and Savings Association (the Bank). We determine that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in allowing the appeal bond premiums as costs to the Bank, and affirm the order denying the Jewells’ motion to tax those premiums.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
The record before us contains only documents relating to the motion to tax costs. A complete description of the underlying litigation is set forth in
Kruse
v.
Bank of America
(1988)
Irene O’Connell Kruse and the Jewells each owned family businesses in the Sonoma County apple industry. In 1980, Kruse filed a fraud action against the Bank and George M. and Laura E. Jewell, arising in part out of the Bank’s role in the pledge of stock in her family business to George M. Jewell. George M. Jewell and Laura E. Jewell filed a cross-complaint against the Bank, joined as to some causes of action by their son, George R. Jewell, seeking entirely separate relief for tortious acts allegedly committed by the Bank. In 1985, Kruse and the Jewells obtained a judgment against the Bank on a jury verdict for many millions of dollars. Although the record before us does not disclose the precise amount of the original judgment, the record does indicate that, at the time the abstracts of judgment relevant to this proceeding were recorded, the amount of the judgment had been reduced to $22 million.
The complaint and the cross-complaint were tried together in the
Kruse
action. Both Kruse and the Jewells obtained multimillion dollar judgments against the Bank, which successfully appealed. On May 18, 1988, Division One of this court reversed the judgments in their entirety.
(Kruse
v.
Bank of America, supra,
II. Discussion
Code of Civil Procedure 4 section 995.250, subdivision (b), provides that recoverable costs shall include “The premium on a bond reasonably paid by the party in connection with the action or proceeding, unless the court determines that the bond was unnecessary.” (Italics added.) Similarly, rule 26(c) of the California Rules of Court provides in pertinent part: “The party to whom costs are awarded may recover only the following, when actually incurred: ... (5) the premium on any surety bond procured by the party recovering costs, unless the court to which the remittitur is transmitted determines that the bond was unnecessary.” (Italics added.)
The Jewells contend that it was unnecessary for the Bank to post appeal bonds because it was entitled to a stay of execution without the requirement of a bond by virtue of 12 United States Code section 91 (hereafter section 91), which provides in pertinent part: “[N]o attachment, injunction, or execution, shall be issued against [a national banking] association or its property before final judgment in any suit, action, or proceeding, in any State, county, or municipal court.”
In opposition to the motion to tax costs, the Bank filed the declaration of George M. Duff III, who had been senior counsel to the Bank in 1985. This declaration may be summarized as follows: In September of 1985, in connection with the pending sale of the Bank’s headquarters building in San
In 1987, approximately two years after the Bank posted the appeal bonds in this case, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit held that section 91 precludes any execution against a national banking association until entry of “a judgment on the merits which is no longer subject to examination on appeal, either because of disposition on appeal and conclusion of the appellate process, or because of the passage, without action, of the time for seeking appellate review.”
(U.S.
v.
Lemaire
(5th Cir. 1987)
The Bank contends on appeal that prior to the decision in
Lemaire
the term “final judgment” in section 91 had not been construed by the courts, and might have been interpreted to mean the judgment of a trial court even
The decision in Lemaire, a four-page opinion, is not a complicated or surprising one; and its result was arguably predictable. 8 The record before us shows the Bank elected to post the appeal bonds as a matter of expediency and business judgment. It has made no specific showing on this appeal that, before it posted such bonds, it considered or sought application of section 91 or the federal authorities predating the bond posting and cited by Lemaire (see fn. 8, ante).
The Jewells’ position is that, had the Bank analyzed the federal decisions on which
Lemaire
relied (fn. 8,
ante)
and/or considered the legislative purpose of section 91, it would have concluded the statute proscribed recordation of abstracts of judgment against a national bank until conclusion of the appellate process; and that consequently no purchase of a bond to stay judgment during appeal was necessary because the lower court, on petition therefor, would order such prematurely recorded abstracts to be withdrawn on such analysis.
9
This reasoning erroneously implies that, if a judgment debtor fails to pursue an available or arguably available
alternative
method of staying enforcement of a judgment before filing a bond on appeal, he cannot recover as costs the premium expended for the bond. We cannot
In
Acoustics, Inc.
v.
Trepte Constr. Co.
(1971)
In examining the
necessity
of the bond premium payment in view of the available
alternative procedure
for accomplishing the same result of releasing funds from the effect of the stop notice, the court concluded: “We do not believe that the
alternative
procedure for the release of funds held pursuant to a stop notice claim provided by [former] section 1190.1 . . . , that is, by means of affidavits, counteraffidavits and a court proceeding,
made it obligatory
... to adopt such procedure in releasing the funds. Payroll, or accounts payable obligations, or both, could well
make it inexpedient for a contractor to adopt such alternative procedure. Furthermore, such procedure, of necessity, contemplates delay in the release of the funds and the employment of counsel in connection therewith,
[¶]
The allowance by the trial court of the bond premiums constitutes an implied finding that the bond was necessary.
We are not constrained here to reverse this finding.” (
The facts of the case at bench compel affirmance more strongly than those of
Acoustics, Inc.
Here, the alternative method of removing the lien of the judgment abstracts under section 91 was an undecided and legally
The trial court’s exercise of discretion in granting or denying a motion to tax costs will not be disturbed if substantial evidence supports its decision.
(Care Constr., Inc.
v.
Century Convalescent Centers, Inc.
(1976)
We hold that, in considering the motion to tax costs claimed for posting an appeal bond, the trial court was not required to grant that motion solely because an alternative procedure to stay enforcement of the judgment was, or would be, available under section 91. In exercising its discretion in determining whether the appeal bond premiums were “unnecessary” under section 995.250, subdivision (b), the court could also consider: the expediency or inexpediency to the Bank, as judgment debtor, of the alternative procedure to stay enforcement of judgment; the delay, if any, in obtaining relief from the lien of the judgment, which use of the alternative procedure was reasonably likely to engender; the risk and danger of reasonably foreseeable monetary loss, if any, to the Bank by reason of the use, or attempted use, of the alternative procedure, pending which the recorded abstracts of judgment would continue to interfere with the Bank’s ongoing lending operations and remain a cloud on the title to its real property; and other additional expense and interference with its business operations, if any, the Bank would incur by utilization of the alternative procedure.
Measured by these standards, we cannot find an abuse of discretion by the lower court in allowing the appeal bond premiums as costs. That decision impliedly found the bonds were necessary, a finding supported by substantial evidence.
The Jewells’ final contention is that, in order to claim the appeal bond premiums as costs, the Bank was required to ask them voluntarily to release the abstracts of judgment before posting the bonds. We know of, and have been cited to, no authorities which hold or hint that a condition precedent to recovery of costs of the premium for an appeal bond is a request by the judgment debtor that a recorded abstract of judgment against him be voluntarily withdrawn by his judgment creditor.
III. Disposition
The order granting in part and denying in part the motion to tax costs is affirmed insofar as it relates to the appeal bond costs.
Kline, P. J., and Smith, J., concurred.
Notes
The record before us does not reflect the substitution of a successor trustee in this litigation. Therefore, we refer to Duck as the trustee for purposes of this opinion.
Although the record does not indicate when this occurred, Duck, as trustee of their bankruptcy estates, was apparently substituted as a party in place of George M. and Laura E. Jewell.
Other issues were raised with respect to additional items of costs but are not involved in this appeal.
Unless otherwise indicated, all subsequent statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
Section 697.310, subdivision (a) provides, with an exception not relevant here, that “a judgment lien on real property is created ... by recording an abstract of a money judgment with the county recorder.”
We are aware that a United States District Court in Colorado has reached the opposite conclusion, holding that section 91 does not preclude the recording of a judgment lien against a national bank’s property prior to final judgment.
(U.S.
v.
Theos
(D.Colo. 1989)
After the decision in Lemaire was rendered, the Bank successfully argued for a stay of execution under section 91 in a case pending before the Court of Appeal for the Third Appellate District. (Stanghellini Ranches, Inc. v. Bank of America National Savings and Trust Association, No. C003244.)
The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals there reasoned, inter alia, that the Supreme Court in 1883, in considering 28 United States Code section 2006 regarding execution of judgments against a revenue officer, interpreted the term “final judgment” in an analogous context as meaning a judgment after affirmance on appeal, citing
Schell
v.
Cochran
(1883)
The Jewells are in the strange position of denigrating their posttrial action in recording the abstracts of judgment, i.e., they seem to now contend that the liens they recorded were ineffective because they violated section 91.
The stop notice was filed pursuant to former section 1192.1.
Now recodified in section 995.250.
Even had the Bank successfully pursued this alternative in the trial court, the Jewells could have commenced a time-consuming appeal on an issue then of first impression.
