Opinion
Thе principal issue presented in this case is whether an intentional tortfeasor is entitled to a reduction or apportionment of noneconomic damages under Proposition 51 (otherwise known as the Fair Responsibility Act of 1986 and codified at Civil Code sections 1431 to 1431.5). We answer this question in the negative.
William Thomas and Woodrow C. Taylor (the plaintiffs) sued Duggins Construction Company, Inc. (Duggins), and certain of its employees for injuries they sustained when the scissor lift it sold to their employer collapsed on a construction jobsite. A jury found in the plaintiffs’ favor on their claims for breach of implied warranty, negligence and intentional misrepresentation; it awarded Taylor $1.2 million and Thomas $696,000 in damages and found thаt Duggins and the plaintiffs’ employer were each 40 percent responsible for the injuries, while two of Duggins’s employees each bore 10 percent responsibility. The jury also found that one of the Duggins’s employees made intentional misrepresentations about the scissor lift to plaintiffs’ employer in connection with the sale. Thereafter, the court rejected Duggins’s arguments that its liability for the plaintiffs’ noneconomic damages was subject to apportionment in accordance with Proposition 51 and entered a judgment against Duggins for the entirety of the plaintiffs’ damages.
Duggins appeals, contending that: (1) the trial court erred in refusing to apportion its liability for the plaintiffs’ noneconomic damages in accordance with Proposition 51; (2) the plaintiffs’ pretrial settlement offers to it pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 998 (section 998) were invalid because the offers did not address its liability for the plaintiffs’ claims against its employees who were named as defendants or for the claim in intervention filed by the worker’s compensation carrier that paid workers’ compensation benefits to the plaintiffs; and (3) the court erred in determining that the plaintiffs obtained a “more favorable judgment” than their settlement offers. The plaintiffs cross-appeal, arguing that the trial court should have granted their request for a finding that Duggins had specifically agreed the jury’s allocation of fаult related solely to their negligence claims and thus was precluded from challenging the court’s decision that Proposition 51 was inapplicable.
We conclude the trial court was correct in finding that Proposition 51 does not apply in favor of an intentional tortfeasor as against the plaintiffs or negligent tortfeasors and thus uphold its refusаl to apportion the plaintiffs’ noneconomic damages, a conclusion that renders Duggins’s third argument and the plaintiffs’ cross-appeal moot. Further, we hold that Duggins’s failure to raise any challenge to the validity of the section 998 settlement offers in the proceedings below waived the issue for purposes of appeal. Accordingly, wе affirm the judgment.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On February 21, 1999, electrical contractor Greg Bentley Electric (Bentley) purchased a used scissor lift for use in its
In June 1999, the plaintiffs filed this action against Duggins for products liability and general negligence. After Duggins answered, the plaintiffs amended their complaint to name as defendants Duggins employees or agents James Duggins, Russel Roben, Scott Dhalliwal and Doug Calhoun and to add claims for fraud, deceit, willful misconduct and punitive damages. Fremont Compensation Insurance Company (Fremont) filed a complaint in intervention to recover workers’ compensation benefits that it had paid to the plaintiffs and filed a notice of lien as to the $86,498.42 it paid to Thomas and $105,894.64 it paid to Taylor. Prior to trial, each of the plaintiffs served Duggins with an offer to settle his claims against it under section 998 (Taylor’s offer was for $999,949 and Thomas’s offer was for $550,000). Duggins did not accept either of the offers, which made no reference to the plaintiffs’ claims against Duggins’s employees or Fremont’s claim for reimbursement of workers’ compensation payments.
At trial, a jury returned a special verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, finding in part that: (1) In selling the lift to Bentley, Duggins made an express or implied warranty that the lift was suitable for Bentley’s intended purpose; (2) the lift was not suitable for Bentley’s intended purpose and this was a substantial factor in causing the plaintiffs’ injuries; (3) defendants Roben and Dhalliwal were employees and agents of Duggins acting within the scope of their employment or agency in selling the lift to Bentley; (4) these same defendants were negligent in maintaining or repairing the lift and in failing to inform Bentley of problems with it; (5) Dhalliwal intentionally made false representations or failed to disclose important facts about the lift to Bentley and Bentley relied on those representations or concealments; (6) the negligence, fraud or breach of warranty by the defendants caused the plaintiffs’ injuries; (7) plaintiff Taylor suffered economic damages of $700,000 and noneconomic damages of $500,000 and plaintiff Thomas suffered economic damages of $456,000 and noneconomic damages of $240,000; and (8) the defendants’ allocations of fault for the plaintiffs’ injuries were 40 perсent each to Duggins and Bentley and 10 percent each to Roben and Dhalliwal. The parties ultimately stipulated that Dhalliwal acted at all relevant times in the course and scope of his employment for Duggins and that the punitive damage claim against Dhalliwal would be dismissed. After trial but before judgment was entered, Fremont dismissed its complaint in intervention, indicating its intent to rely on its lien rather than participate further in the proceedings.
The parties thereafter briefed the issue of whether the plaintiffs’ damages were subject to apportionment under Proposition 51. After hearing oral argument, the court ruled that Proposition 51 was inapplicable to the plaintiffs’ fraud cause of action; based on its determination, the court declined the plaintiffs’ request for a finding that Duggins had stipulated to this point during trial. After the court entered judgment, Duggins moved, unsuccessfully, for a new trial based in part on the contention that Proposition 51 apportionment was required. The plaintiffs each filed a memorandum of costs, seeking to recover ordinary cоsts, as well as special costs, expert witness fees and prejudgment interest as provided in section 998. Duggins apparently moved to tax the cost bills (although
DISCUSSION
1. Failure to Allocate Economic and Noneconomic Damages Under Proposition 51
In 1986, the voters approved Proposition 51, a compromise measure that sought to balance the interests of injured parties who have sustained considerable damages caused by sеveral tortfeasors, one or more of which is insolvent, against unfairness of the existing rule, which might result in a minimally culpable tortfeasor being held liable for the entirety of the plaintiff’s damages.
(Evangelatos v. Superior Court
(1988)
In
Weidenfeller
v.
Star and Garter
(1991)
Noting that the plaintiff was “attempting to transfer the intentional actor’s responsibility to the negligent tortfeasor”
(Weidenfeller, supra,
Cal.App.4th at p. 7),
In
Heiner v. Kmart Corp.
(2000)
The same policy considerations of deterrence and punishment that bar a reduction of an intentional tortfeasor’s liability to reflect the plaintiff’s contributory negligence also support the conclusion that an intentional tortfeasor’s liability to the plaintiff is not subject to apportionment (i.e., reduction) where the negligence of one or more third party tortfeasors contributed to the injuries. (Code Civ. Proc., § 875, subd. (d);
PPG Industries, Inc. v. Transamerica Ins. Co.
(1999)
Here, the jury found that the only party whose liability for the plaintiffs’ injuriеs was based on intentional tort rather than negligence was Dhalliwal. By virtue of the jury’s finding and the parties’ stipulation that Dhalliwal was acting at all relevant times within the course and scope of his agency or employment for Duggins, Duggins was liable for that intentionally tortious conduct.
(Yamaguchi v. Harnsmut
(2003)
For the foregoing reasons, we concludе that the trial court correctly declined to apportion the plaintiffs’ noneconomic damages. In light of this conclusion, the plaintiffs’ cross-appeal is moot.
2. Award of Section 998 Costs and Fees
Section 998, subdivision (d) provides that if a plaintiff’s pretrial settlement offer “is not accepted and the defendant fails to obtain a more favorable judgment or award ... the сourt . . . may require the defendant to pay a reasonable sum to cover postoffer costs of the services of [the plaintiff’s] expert witnesses . . . , in addition to [the] plaintiff’s [ordinary] costs.” Additionally Civil Code section 3291 provides that “[i]f the plaintiff makes an offer pursuant to [section 998] which the defendant does not accept prior to trial . . . and the plaintiff obtains a more favorable judgment, the judgment shall bear interest at the legal rate of 10 percent per annum calculated from the date of the plaintiff’s first offer . . . which is exceeded by the judgment. . . .”
Where the validity of a section 998 offer is challenged, the offering party has the burden of demonstrating that its offer is valid and further such an offer is strictly сonstrued in favor of the party against whom it would operate.
(Barella
v.
Exchange Bank
(2000)
A. The Validity of the Section 998 Offers
Duggins contеnds that the plaintiffs’ section 998 offers were invalid because they did not address the plaintiffs’ claims against its employees or the claim asserted by Fremont, making the offers fatally uncertain. However, the plaintiffs point out, and Duggins admits, that it did not raise any challenge to the offers (or to the plaintiffs’ requests for expert witness fees and interest under sectiоn 998) on this basis in the proceedings below and thus would normally be deemed to have waived
B. Effect of Proposition 51 on the Determination of Whether the Plaintiffs Received a More Favorable Judgment
In its opening brief, Duggins also argues that, if the court apportioned its liability in accordance with Proposition 51, its proportionate liability for the judgment, as reduced by the amount of the workers’ compensation lien, would be less favorable to the plaintiffs than their section 998 offer and thus the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover their special costs as awarded by the court. However, in light of our determination that Proposition 51 apportionment principles do not apply to Duggins’s liability for the judgment in this case, this argument is now moot.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. The plaintiffs are to recover their costs on appeal.
Huffman, Acting P. J., and McDonald, J., concurred.
