Opinion
I. Introduction
This appeal by Manuel Glenn Abascal challenges an allocation of attorney fees upon settlement of class action litigation arising from the assessment of various checking account fees by Wells Fargo Bank, N. A., and Crocker National Bank. We previously affirmed a judgment approving the settlement in
Rebney
v.
Wells Fargo Bank
(1990)
II. Background
Under the terms of the settlement, $3.4 million was to be divided among numerous attorneys, including counsel for the class representatives (class counsel) and Abascal, who represented a group of objectors to the settlement. The court appointed a referee to determine the fees. Class counsel sought fees and costs in the sum of $3,100,489, while Abascal requested $763,960. The referee denied Abascal’s request for an evidentiary hearing on the fee question and for discovery of the following: contemporaneous time records for the present case, time records for any other checking account fee actions, documents used to prepare time records, and certain fee agreements between counsel. The referee subsequently awarded $2,277,800 to class counsel, $170,000 to Abascal, and the remainder to the other attorneys.
Abascal moved for judicial review of the referee’s order. After reviewing the record and conducting a hearing, the trial court issued a “statement of decision and order,” in which the court reduced class counsel’s award to $2,197,000, increased Abascal’s award to $188,000, and adjusted several of the awards to other counsel.
The statement of decision explained that attorney fees were awarded according to the “lodestar” or “touchstone” approach, in which the court calculates base amounts from a compilation of time spent and reasonable hourly compensation of each attorney and then may adjust the base amounts in light of various factors. (See
Maria P.
v.
Riles
(1987)
The court also approved the referee’s denial of further discovery and an evidentiary hearing, concluding that those measures were unnecessary. The statement of decision explained: “Over 4000 pages of memoranda, *1348 pleading[s], and documents, including 700 pages of time records and other evidence have been reviewed by the referee and the court, and the findings have been based on relevant facts and legal principles. There has been extensive discovery on the merits of the case and all counsel are fully informed and fully conversant with the progress of the case, actions taken in the case and work performed. All counsel have had full and fair opportunity to critique and comment on each other’s work.”
Abascal filed a timely notice of appeal from the order allocating attorney fees. His opening brief states that the appeal is by three objectors to the settlement—Dorothy DeOliveira, Dee Filichia and David Bobiak. The notice of appeal, however, was filed by counsel for Abascal, solely in Abascal’s name. Thus, Abascal is the true appellant.
Half the fee award was paid in February 1988. The other half has remained unpaid during the pendency of the appeal, and no interest is accruing.
III. Discussion
A. The Statement of Decision
Abascal contends the court’s statement of decision was inadequate because it did not address disputed legal and factual issues. Specifically, he argues the court should have explained which of counsel’s hours were disallowed, and how or whether any hours were apportioned among several ongoing checking account fee cases. He relies on Code of Civil Procedure section 632, which requires that “upon the trial of a question of fact by the court,” and on party request, the court “shall issue a statement of decision explaining the factual and legal basis for its decision as to each of the principal controverted issues at trial . . . .”
Abascal cites
Mandel
v.
Lackner, supra,
The California Supreme Court addressed this issue in
Maria P.
v.
Riles, supra,
By focusing on the need to determine whether the trial court based its award on the lodestar method, and by noting the absence of law requiring a statement of decision on a motion for attorney fees, the
Maria P.
opinion indicates that the minimal record showing required by
Mandel
is all that is necessary here. Thus, the applicable rule is prescribed not by Code of Civil Procedure section 632, but by
Mandel
and
Maria P,
and is much less stringent. The trial court here may have issued a document with the generic title “statement of decision,” but the mere use of that label did not invoke the requirements of section 632. (Cf.
In re Marriage of Loya
(1987)
The court’s statement of decision satisfied this minimal requirement, as it expressly stated that the court had awarded fees based on lodestar amounts, with further consideration of counsel’s contributions to the litigation. Nothing more was necessary. The court was not required to explain which of counsel’s hours were disallowed, or how or whether any hours were apportioned. On appeal, we must infer all findings on these points in favor of the prevailing parties.
(In re Marriage of Arceneaux
(1990)
Thus, for Abascal to mount a successful challenge to the substantial reduction of his hours, he must demonstrate that there was no factual or legal basis for the reduction. He has not even attempted to do so.
Even if Code of Civil Procedure section 632 did apply, Abascal waived any error by failing to bring the claimed defects to the attention of
*1350
the trial court after issuance of the statement of decision.
(In re Marriage of Arceneaux, supra,
Some two months after briefing had been completed and class counsel had asserted Abascal’s waiver, we permitted a group of objectors represented by Gary Near to file a late, two-sentence brief which simply adopted Abascal’s briefs. Shortly thereafter, Abascal informed us he would rely on Near’s tardy filing as a basis for avoiding a waiver under Arceneaux, since Near, unlike Abascal, had asked the trial judge for clarification of the statement of decision. But Near had only asked for clarification on the ground the statement of decision did not explain the reduction of his own hours by half. He has not asserted this point on appeal, but has simply joined in Abascal’s briefs, which focus on the court’s determination of class counsel’s hours and do not complain about Near’s hours. The issue of the sufficiency of the statement of decision as to apportionment of class counsel’s hours was never presented to the trial judge by Near or Abascal, and was therefore waived.
*1351 Abascal also contends the referee’s order lacked sufficient explanation to satisfy Code of Civil Procedure section 632, which he implies is encompassed by the requirement of Code of Civil Procedure section 643 that a referee provide a “statement of decision in writing to the court.” But nothing in the Code of Civil Procedure suggests that a referee’s “statement of decision” under section 643 must meet the explanatory requirements of section 632. Even if section 632 were generally applicable to a referee’s report, the statute would not apply here because it does not apply to an order on a motion for attorney fees. In any event, the asserted insufficiency in the referee’s order is inconsequential, since the order was supplanted by the trial court’s statement of decision.
B„ C *
IV. Disposition
The order allocating attorney fees is affirmed. Peterson, J., and Anderson, J., concurred.
Notes
We cannot condone such reliance in a reply brief upon a case so unequivocally disapproved by our Supreme Court more than three months before the brief was filed. (See
In re Marriage of Arceneaux, supra,
See footnote, ante, page 1344.
