Opinion
A lender successfully defends an action to set aside a foreclosure sale. Here we hold the antideficiency provisions of Code of Civil Procedure section 580d do not prohibit an award of attorney fees. In addition, Civil Code sections 2924c and 2924d do not limit the amount of fees the court may award. We affirm.
FACTS
In June of 1988, Peppertree Corporate Business Park and three other entities borrowed $8,700,000 from the predecessor of Union Bank of California (hereafter Bank). The loan was personally guaranteed by Jerve M. and Alice Jones and Gilbert and Evelyn Dreyfuss. (Borrowers and guarantors are hereafter collectively Borrowers.) The loan was secured by a trust deed on a 35-acre parcel in the City of Simi Valley, known as the Peppertree parcel. The parcel was later subdivided into eight lots.
In December of 1992, the note was in default. The Bank agreed to extend the due date for repayment, but demanded additional collateral. The parties agreed the note would be secured by a lot in Maryland, known as the “Clinton” parcel, and a lot in Flintridge, known as “Lot 66,” in addition to the Peppertree parcel.
In June of 1995, the note was again in default. The parties signed a forbearance agreement that extended the due date.
In January of 1996, First American Title Insurance Company (hereafter First American) as trustee conduced a nonjudicial foreclosure of the Peppertree property. The Bank acquired title with a credit bid of $2,150,000. The $3,860,228 balance of the debt was satisfied through foreclosures on the Clinton parcel and Lot 66. In January of 1996, the Bank conveyed its interest in the Peppertree property to Heritage Oak Partners (hereafter Heritage).
In December of 1996, Gilbert Dreyfuss and other borrowers brought an action against the Bank in Los Angeles Superior Court (hereafter Los Angeles action). The Borrowers alleged that the nonjudicial foreclosure of the Peppertree property precluded foreclosure of the Clinton parcel and Lot 66.
The trial court decided the Los Angeles action in favor of the Bank. The Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court affirmed.
(Dreyfuss
v.
Union Bank of California
(2000)
While the Los Angeles action was pending, the Borrowers discovered that First American was not the trustee at the time it purported to foreclose on the Peppertree property. Instead, a substitution had been recorded replacing First American with a different trustee. The Borrowers commenced the instant action in Ventura County Superior Court to vacate the sale and quiet title (hereafter Ventura action). The Borrowers named Heritage and First American as well as the Bank. The Bank cross-complained seeking reformation, among other relief. The trial court found in favor of the Borrowers. The Bank, Heritage and First American appealed.
Prior to the resolution of the appeal, Borrowers moved for an award of attorney fees as the prevailing party in the Ventura action. Borrowers requested $642,705.53 through trial. The trial court awarded $450,000.
Borrowers also entered into agreements with Heritage and the Bank prior to the resolution of the appeal. Heritage agreed to dismiss its appeal in the Ventura action, quitclaim its interest in the Peppertree property to the Borrowers and to pay $1,400,000 for two parcels of the Peppertree property. The Bank was not a party to the agreement.
The Borrowers and the Bank entered into an escrow agreement concerning the Clinton property. They agreed that the property would be sold and the money deposited into escrow. The Bank would receive the proceeds from the escrow if it ultimately prevailed in the Ventura action.
In March of 2003, we issued an opinion reversing the judgment in the Ventura action.
(Jones
v.
First American Title Ins. Co.
(2003)
On remand, the trial court reformed the documents and declared the foreclosure sale was valid. The court also declared that the Bank acquired title at the foreclosure sale and that its transfer to Heritage was valid.
The Bank made a motion for attorney fees. Because the judge who presided at trial had retired, the motion was heard by a different judge. The trial court awarded Bank $1 million in fees.
DISCUSSION
Borrowers’ Appeal
I
Borrowers contend the award of fees is precluded by antideficiency legislation.
Code of Civil Procedure section 580d prohibits a deficiency judgment in any case in which the property has been sold under a power of sale in a deed of trust or mortgage. 1 Borrowers argue the award of attorney fees constitutes a deficiency judgment.
Passanisi
v.
Merit-McBride Realtors, Inc.
(1987)
A distinction between
Passanisi
and this case is that in
Passanisi
the borrowers sought to enjoin the foreclosure sale, whereas here Borrowers sought to set aside the sale. If anything, this case presents an even more compelling reason to
The Borrowers’ rebanee on
Dreyfuss v. Union Bank of California, supra,
Inskeep v. Bear Creek Company of California
(1942)
Borrowers argue that if an award of fees is not barred by antideficiency legislation, the award is strictly limited by Civil Code sections 2924c and 2924d. Specifically, Borrowers claim Civil Code section 2924d, subdivision (b), limits fees in this case to no more than $38,600.
Civil Code sections 2924c and 2924d provide for maximum sums that may be claimed as expenses of foreclosing on the property. These maximum amounts do not include other costs, including legal fees, which may be incurred by a creditor in protecting the security. (See
Caruso v. Great Western Savings
(1991)
II
Borrowers contend our prior opinion precludes an award of attorney fees to Bank.
In the Los Angeles action, Borrowers unsuccessfully challenged the Bank’s right to foreclose on the Clinton property and Lot 66 after a nonjudicial foreclosure on the Peppertree property.
(Dreyfuss
v.
Union Bank of California, supra,
Borrowers focus on our statement that the Ventura action is not on the contract. The statement is clearly dicta.
m
Borrowers contend the trial court abused its discretion in determining that Bank is the prevailing party.
There is no question that the judgment ultimately entered was unequivocally in favor of Bank. Borrowers, however, urge that we look beyond the judgment to its settlements with Heritage and Bank. (Citing
Sears
v.
Baccaglio
(1998)
But Bank was not a party to the settlement between Borrowers and Heritage. Whatever the settlement might say as to who prevailed between Borrowers and Heritage, it says nothing about who prevailed between Borrowers and Bank.
What Borrowers characterize as a settlement with Bank was simply an escrow agreement. Funds from the sale of the Clinton property were placed into escrow. The funds would be distributed to Bank if it prevailed in the Ventura action. Given the ultimate resolution of the Ventura action, the agreement cannot reasonably be viewed as a victory for Borrowers.
The trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining that the Bank is the prevailing party.
IV
Borrowers contend the trial court abused its discretion in awarding $1,000,000 in fees.
We must affirm an award of attorney fees absent a showing that the trial court clearly abused its discretion.
(Track Mortg. Group, Inc. v. Crusader Ins. Co.
(2002)
Here Bank’s attorneys declared Bank incurred a total of $670,221 in attorney fees for trial and posttrial proceedings through September of 1999. Borrowers do not attack any particular billing as unnecessary or unreasonable. Instead, they point out that four years earlier Bank requested $559,831 in attorney fees through the end of trial in March of 1999. But there is no inconsistency. The original request for fees covers only through trial. The most recent request for fees
Borrowers also argue that an award of $400,000 for the appeal shocks the conscience. "Borrowers concede the trial court did not apportion the award of fees between trial court work and appellate work. Borrowers obtain the $400,000 figure by assuming the trial court did not award the entire $670,221 requested for work prior to the appeal. But we must assume the judgment or order is correct except where contradicted by the record. (9 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (4th ed. 1997) Appeal, § 349, p. 394.) In the absence of an apportionment by the trial court, we must assume the court awarded $329,779 for the appeal.
In attacking the amount awarded for the appeal, Borrowers again do not point to any specific billing as unnecessary or unreasonable. Instead, they suggest that we determine the award to be unreasonable by applying our experience as an appellate court.
The appeal had a voluminous record, complicated facts and presented fairly complex legal issues. Applying the appropriate standard of review, we conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining attorney fees.
Bank’s Appeal
V
Bank contends the trial court erred in taxing the portion of its costs not expressly allowed under section 1033.5.
Section 1033.5, subdivision (a), specifies items allowed as costs and subdivision (b) specifies items not allowed. The court awarded only those costs allowed by section 1033.5. Bank argues, however, that the forbearance and extension agreements expressly provide that the award of costs to the prevailing party shall not be limited to taxable costs.
Bank cites section 1032, subdivision (c). That subdivision provides; “Nothing in this section shall prohibit parties from stipulating to alternative procedures for awarding costs in the litigation pursuant to rules adopted under Section 1034.” Section 1034 requires the Judicial Council to adopt rules for claiming and contesting allowable prejudgment costs and costs on appeal, as well as rules establishing allowable costs on appeal.
On its face, section 1032, subdivision (c), allows the parties to agree to “procedures” for awarding costs. It does not expressly authorize the parties to expand by agreement the items allowable as costs.
Bank relies on
Arntz Contracting Co.
v.
St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.
(1996)
Because costs other than those allowed under section 1033.5 are not based on statute, they must be specifically pleaded and proved at trial rather than included in a memorandum of costs. (See
Ripley v. Pappadopoulos
(1994)
The judgment is affirmed. Costs are awarded to Bank.
Bank’s motion for attorney fees incurred in this case shall be decided by the trial court. (See
MacKinder v. OSCA Development Co.
(1984)
Yeagan, J., and Coffee, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 11, 2005, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. The petition of plaintiffs and appellants for review by the Supreme Court was denied June 8, 2005.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise stated.
