Opinion
This is an appeal from a money judgment in favor of plaintiffs and against defendants Constantine Pappadopoulos and Metron Enterprises, Inc., awarded in an action for breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, misappropriation of partnership property and unjust enrichment. 1 Following a court trial, a judgment for $315,958 was entered against defendants. By subsequent order the court awarded attorney fees and costs to the plaintiffs. Defendants filed separate notices of appeal from the judgment and from the award of attorney fees and costs. We consolidated the appeals for decision.
In the published portion of this opinion we decline to follow the holding of
Bussey
v.
Affleck
(1990)
In the unpublished portion we hold that the judgment must be modified with respect to the recovery for a finder’s fee but otherwise reject defendants’ remaining contentions. Accordingly, we shall modify the judgment with respect to the costs and finder’s fee and then affirm the judgment as modified.
Factual and Procedural Background
This dispute arose out of the development and sale of the Chesapeake Commons apartments in Rancho Cordova. Defendant Pappadopoulos planned to acquire property and construct 600 apartment units and for this purpose desired to form a limited partnership. The plan was that each of the *1620 partners would contribute some capital and the majority of the funds needed for the project would be borrowed. The lender, Brookside Savings and Loan, was precluded, apparently by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, from making a loan of the required amount to a single limited partnership. In order to obtain financing the project was split into two segments with two limited partnerships formed among the same partners.
The two limited partnerships, Zinfandel I and Zinfandel II, were identical in all respects but two: (1) Zinfandel I was formed to develop a 304-unit segment of the project and Zinfandel II was formed to develop a 296-unit segment of the project; and (2) Pappadopoulos was the named general partner in Zinfandel I while John Evrigenis, M.D., was the named general partner in Zinfandel II. At trial Pappadopoulos explained that Dr. Evrigenis was named as general partner in Zinfandel II solely for purposes of qualifying for a loan. He was not intended to, and did not, exercise any control over the project which remained under Pappadopoulos’s management and control. 2
The written limited partnership agreements provided, among other things: “The General Partner shall exercise ordinary business judgment in managing the affairs of the Partnership. Unless fraud, deceit, or a wrongful taking is involved, the General Partner shall not be liable or obligated to the Limited Partners for any mistake of fact or judgment made by the General Partner in operating the business of the Partnership that results in any loss to the Partnership or its Partners. . . .” This provision was subsequently amended to add gross negligence to the list of behaviors that could result in liability to the general partner.
The written limited partnership agreements also included a list of prohibited transactions. Among other things, the general and limited partners agreed that they would not “[djisclose to any nonpartner any of the Partnership business practices, trade secrets, or any other information not generally known to the business community.” The agreements further provided: “The General Partner shall not use, and hereby specifically promises not to use, *1621 directly or indirectly, the assets of this Partnership for any purpose other than conducting the business of the Partnership, for the full and exclusive benefit of all its Partners.” The subsequent amendment to the agreements added: “Notwithstanding any other provision in the Agreement, the General Partner shall not purchase, acquire, or invest any of the assets of the partnership in any other project without unanimous written consent of the Limited Partners.”
The Zinfandel partnership agreements also included the following provision: “If any action at law or in equity, including an action for declaratory or injunctive relief, is brought to enforce or interpret the provisions of this Agreement, the prevailing party shall be entitled to reasonable attorney’s fees and costs.”
Metron Enterprises, Inc., (Metron) is Pappadopoulos’s wholly owned corporation. At trial Pappadopoulos testified that he and Metron are really the same entity. The limited partnership agreements contemplated that Metron would serve as project manager in the construction of the apartment complex. For its services Metron was to be paid a fee equal to 5 percent of the total construction costs of the project, as defined in separate agreements between the partnerships and Metron. These agreements provided: “It is acknowledged by all Partners that Metron Enterprises, Inc., is an affiliate of Constantine Pappadopoulos and all Partners hereby waive any and all conflicts of interest.” With respect to compensation of the general partner, the written limited partnership agreements provided: “Other than his share of profits and losses, the General Partner shall not be entitled to any additional compensation for services rendered as General Partner.” The Metron construction agreements did not include a provision for attorney fees and costs.
In due course the contemplated apartment complex was completed and sold to an investment group. Following sale of the complex the plaintiffs, who are some of the limited partners in Zinfandel I and Zinfandel II, brought this action to recover sums they allege were improperly received by Pappadopoulos and/or Metron. After trial the court entered a judgment in favor of plaintiffs that included damages for: (1) a portion of a finder’s fee paid to Metron on behalf of Pappadopoulos by the buyers of the complex; (2) interest on loans Pappadopoulos made to himself or entities he controlled; (3) the value of lumber the court found to have been misappropriated by Pappadopoulos; (4) sums received by Metron under its construction contract that were based upon expenses that were not properly claimed as construction costs; and (5) the purchase of a forklift that Pappadopoulos purchased with Zinfandel funds and used for his own benefit. In a subsequent proceeding the court determined that plaintiffs are the prevailing parties and *1622 awarded them attorney fees pursuant to the limited partnership agreements. We will note the facts relevant to each of these damage items in connection with our discussion of defendants’ challenges to those specific items.
Discussion
I.-VII *
VIII. Costs
The cost award approved by the court included charges for expert witness fees ($25,891.86), charges for copying documents during discovery ($951.55), Federal Express charges ($368), United States postage expenses ($35.05), telecopy/fax charges ($9.52), and the rental expense for an overhead projector used at trial ($53.25). The court determined that these expenses were properly awarded under the cost and attorney fee clause of the limited partnership agreements, citing the decision in
Bussey
v.
Affleck, supra,
225 Cal.App.3d at pages 1166 and 1167. (See also
Beasley
v.
Wells Fargo Bank
(1991)
As a general rule the parties to civil litigation are required to finance their own participation in the litigation. This general rule is subject to numerous exceptions, including those found in Code of Civil Procedure section 1032, subdivision (b), which provides that unless otherwise statutorily prohibited, the prevailing party is entitled to recover “costs.” The primary statutory provision with respect to the types of expenses that may or may not be included in a cost award under Code of Civil Procedure section 1032 is found in section 1033.5 of that code.
Subdivision (a) of Code of Civil Procedure section 1033.5 provides a list of expense items which are allowable as costs under section 1032. This list includes ordinary witness fees and the fees of expert witnesses ordered by the court. (§ 1033.5, subd. (a)(7) & (8).) 14 The list of allowable costs also includes attorney fees when authorized by statute or contract. (§ 10335, subd. (a)(10).)
*1623 Subdivision (b) of Code of Civil Procedure section 1033.5 provides a list of items which are not allowable as costs except when expressly authorized by law. Among other things, this latter list includes the fees of experts not ordered by the court, investigation expenses in preparing the case for trial, and postage expenses, telephone charges', and photocopying charges except for exhibits. (§ 1033.5, subd. (b)(1), (2) & (3).)
Subdivision (c) of Code of Civil Procedure section 1033.5 provides general conditions to which costs are subject, including the requirement that the expenses be incurred whether or not paid, that they be reasonably necessary rather than merely convenient or beneficial, and that they be reasonable in amount. (§ 1033.5, subd. (c)(1), (2), & (3).) Subdivision (c)(4) provides that items not otherwise listed in section 1033.5 and items assessed upon application may be allowed or denied in the court’s discretion.
Before advancing further in our discussion, we will eliminate one cost item from further consideration. Defendants complain of the cost of an overhead projector. The projector was used at trial by the questioned document examiner in order to demonstrate for the court the factors which supported the conclusion that some of the documents presented by Pappadopoulos were falsified, paste-up documents. The cost of the projector reasonably fits within Code of Civil Procedure section 1033.5, subdivision (a)(12), which allows recovery for the cost of models and blowups and photocopies of exhibits which were reasonably helpful to the trier of fact. In any event, the cost of the projector is not an item specifically excluded from a cost award in subdivision (b) of section 1033.5, and thus may properly be awarded in the court’s discretion under subdivision (c)(4) of that section.
The remaining costs to which defendants object are items which are not allowable as costs under subdivision (b) of Code of Civil Procedure section 1033.5. In
Bussey
v.
Affleck, supra,
For the reasons which follow, we are compelled to disagree with the court in Bussey. We begin with the major component of the costs to which defendants object, the expert witness fees. As we have noted, Code of Civil Procedure section 1033,5, subdivision (b)(1), provides that the fees of experts not ordered by the court are not allowable as costs unless expressly authorized by law. The statutory provisions dealing with the compensation of experts in general do not provide for the recovery of such expenses in a cost award. The compensation of an expert is, in the first instance, the responsibility of the party who hires the expert. If during discovery proceedings a party designates an expert, then any other party may depose the expert and may require the expert to give testimony before a court, tribunal or arbiter. In that event the party desiring to depose the expert or requiring the expert to testify must pay the expert’s fees for the time required for the deposition and/or testimony. (Code Civ. Proc., § 2034, subd. (i); Gov. Code, § 68092.5.) In other respects the compensation of the expert remains the responsibility of the party who hired the expert. (Ibid.) Neither Code of Civil Procedure section 2034 nor Government Code section 68092.5 provides for the recovery of expert witness expenses in a cost award.
In numerous specific types of cases the Legislature has seen fit to require the losing party to reimburse the prevailing party for the payment of expert witness fees. 15 And in any case in which the court appoints an expert and apportions the expense to the parties, the prevailing party may recover his or *1625 her share of the expense as a cost of litigation. (Evid. Code, § 731; Code Civ. Proc., § 1033.5, subd. (a)(8).) When the numerous statutory provisions in which expert witness fees are expressly declared recoverable are considered together with the express prohibition against the inclusion of such fees in a cost award otherwise, the Legislature’s intent becomes clear. The Legislature has reserved to itself the power to determine selectively the types of actions and circumstances in which expert witness fees should be recoverable as costs and such fees may not otherwise be recovered in a cost award.
In this respect we find the reasoning of the United States Supreme Court in
West Va. Univ. Hospitals
v.
Casey
(1991)
In
Bussey
the court attempted to avoid the statutory prohibition against the inclusion of expert witness fees in a cost award by equating expert witness fees and other nonallowable costs of litigation with attorney fees and by concluding that such costs may be included in an award of
*1626
contractual attorney fees. We cannot adhere to that approach. In the absence of some specific provision of law otherwise, attorney fees and the expenses of litigation, whether termed costs, disbursements, outlays, or something else, are mutually exclusive, that is, attorney fees do not include such costs and costs do not include attorney fees. (See
Estate of Olmstead
(1898)
The
Bussey
court sought to justify its conclusion with the observation that “[a]n agreement for attorney’s fees and costs would be less than effectual if
*1627
it could not cover the actual costs of litigation, including disbursements of counsel, and a contrary conclusion would mean that the party prevailing on the contract could never be made whole.” (
We find this reasoning unpersuasive for two reasons. First, this is a policy consideration and as such is a matter addressed to the Legislature. In the absence of constitutional compulsion, and none appears here, we may not reject the Legislature’s view of appropriate policy by ignoring clear statutory language. Second, we are here concerned with the items of expense which may be included in a cost award after judgment and are not concerned with contractual remedies. Special contract damages are subject to pleading and proof in the main action and cannot be recovered by mere inclusion in a memorandum of costs.
(Genis
v.
Krasne,
supra,
Our conclusion with respect to the expenses of copying documents, Federal Express and postage charges, and telecopy/fax charges must be the same. Although such expenses are more rarely shifted to the losing party by express statutory provision, they, like expert witness fees, are expressly disallowed as costs unless expressly permitted by law. (Code Civ. Proc., *1628 § 1033.5, subd. (b)(1), (2) & (3).) We perceive no more reason to ignore this statutory provision with respect to these expenses than we do with respect to expert witness fees.
Conclusion
The judgment is modified to exclude plaintiff Karsant from recovery of the portion of the damages relating to the finder’s fee and to reduce the amount of the damages for recovery of the finder’s fee to $31,150. The award of costs is modified to delete expert witness fees ($25,891.86), document copying charges ($951.55), Federal Express charges ($368), United States postage expenses ($35.05), and telecopy/fax charges ($9.52). As modified and in all other respects the judgment is affirmed. All parties shall bear their own costs on appeal.
Davis, J., and Scotland, J., concurred.
Notes
The plaintiffs are Dana K. Ripley, H. Robert Ripley, Lester Finkel, Eppaminondas G. Johnson, John Karsant, George Koufasimis, Zinfandel I, Limited (Zinfandel I), and Zinfandel II, Limited (Zinfandel II), limited California partnerships.
According to Pappadopoulos, Brookside Savings and Loan was prohibited from lending more than $12 million to any one qualified individual while the entire project required $18.75 million in borrowed funding. Accordingly, in order to secure sufficient financing it was necessary to split the project into two segments to be constructed by two limited partnerships with different general partners. Dr. Evrigenis was chosen from among the limited partners to be the named general partner in Zinfandel II because his financial standing best qualified for the loan. According to Pappadopoulos, the limited partners knew Dr. Evrigenis would not be involved in the management and control of the project and they agreed to that arrangement. Dr. Evrigenis was a defendant at trial but he prevailed and no issue is presented on appeal with respect to him.
See footnote, ante, page 1616.
An ordinary witness who is legally required to attend a civil action or proceeding is entitled to a fee of $35 per day and mileage actually traveled both ways at the rate of $0.20 *1623 per mile. (Gov. Code, § 68093.) The manner of compensation of expert witnesses designated by the parties is set forth in Government Code section 68092.5, which we will refer to in more detail, post. Under Evidence Code section 730, a trial court has the discretion to appoint an expert when it appears that expert evidence is or may be required by the court or by a party. In such a circumstances the expert’s compensation in the first instance is apportioned by the court to the parties, and thereafter may be taxed and allowed as costs to the prevailing party. (Evid. Code, § 731, subd. (c); Code Civ. Proc., § 1033.5, subd. (a)(8).)
See for example Business and Professions Code section 8768.5 (mandate action by a licensed land surveyor or a registered civil engineer to compel the filing of a record of survey); Corporations Code section 1305, subdivision (e) (under certain circumstances expert witness fees may be shifted to merging corporations in an action to compel the purchase of dissenting shareholders’ interests); Government Code section 8670.56.5, subdivision (e) (under the Lempert-Keene-Seastrand Oil Spill and Response Act a prevailing plaintiff may be awarded the costs of any necessary expert; a prevailing defendant is not allowed expert witness fees but may recover attorney fees if the action was brought in bad faith or solely to harass the defendant); Harbors and Navigation Code section 294, subdivision (e) (same under the Miller Anti-Pollution Act of 1971); Civil Code sections 987, subdivision (e)(4), and 989, subdivision (f)(1) (action to preserve or restore art work); Civil Code section 1745, subdivision (d) (action against dealer in art objects produced in more than one copy); Civil Code former section 7011 (Uniform Parentage Act), now Family Code section 7553; Code of Civil Procedure section 1036 (inverse condemnation action); and Code of Civil Procedure section *1625 1038 (action under the California Tort Claims Act which was not brought in good faith and with reasonable cause).
In
Beasley
v.
Wells Fargo Bank, supra,
235 Cal.App.3d at pages 1421 and 1422, the court extended its
Bussey
reasoning to an award of attorney fees under Code of Civil Procedure section 1021.5, our statutory “private attorney general” attorney fee rule. In doing so the court rejected the
Casey
reasoning in favor of reliance upon earlier, and no longer valid, decisions of federal trial and intermediate appellate courts. (
The rules with respect to advancing the expenses of litigation have evolved over time. It was formerly considered unethical for an attorney to agree to advance the costs of litigation if reimbursement was made contingent upon the outcome. (See Note, Loans to Clients For Living Expenses (1967) 55 Cal.L.Rev. 1419, 1440-1441.) Rule 4-210 of the California Rules of Professional Conduct now permits an attorney to advance the costs of prosecuting or defending a claim and also permits repayment to be made contingent on the outcome of the matter. Full discussion of the evolution of this standard is beyond the scope of the issue here. We cite this matter only as illustrative of the distinction our law has always made between attorney fees and the expenses of litigation.
In
Bussey
the parties’ contract included a provision of greater breadth than a general “costs and attorney fees” provision. Specifically, the
Bussey
promissory note required the defendants “ ‘to pay all costs and expenses of collection including reasonable attorneys’ fees.’ ” (
