RICHMAN, J.—
Appellant Charles Steven Sanford was injured when his motorcycle was struck by a car owned by William Rasnick and driven by his daughter Jacy Leann Rasnick (when referred to collectively, the Rasnicks). Sanford sued both Rasnicks, who made a joint Code of Civil Procedure section 998 offer (section 998 offer) for $130,000.
Sanford appeals from both orders, contending the section 998 offer was not valid and the court erred in connection with its rulings on his cost items. We agree with Sanford on both accounts, and remand the matter with instructions to enter a new order denying the Rasnicks any costs, and hold a new hearing to analyze the Rasnicks' motion to tax certain of Sanford's cost items in accordance with the law.
On June 13, 2011, Sanford was injured when a car driven by 17-year-old Jacy ran a stop sign and struck his motorcycle. The car was owned by Jacy's father, William.
On February 20, 2013, Sanford filed suit against the Rasnicks. The complaint alleged two counts: (1) vehicular negligence against Jacy and (2) general negligence against both Rasnicks. The second count repeated the same factual basis of liability as in the first count — i.e., that Jacy had negligently run a stop sign and caused the accident and Sanford's injuries — and also alleged that William "owned the vehicle that [Jacy] was driving and negligently entrusted said vehicle to her."
As described in the Rasnicks' respondent's brief, Jacy and her father "were covered under the same policy of automobile insurance and were represented by attorney, Michael Welch. [Citation.] Mr. Welch filed a joint answer on behalf of both Respondents, Jacy Leann Rasnick and her father, William Rasnick which consisted of a general denial and several affirmative defenses. [Citation.]" As will be seen, the insurance aspect apparently factored into the strategy on behalf of the Rasnicks.
The trial court initially set the case for trial for December 1, 2014, the effect of which was that the discovery cutoff, including expert discovery, was calculated from that date. The parties disclosed experts in September 2014 and all discovery, including expert discovery, closed on November 1, 2014, by which date all expert depositions had been concluded. Meanwhile, the Rasnicks withdrew two of their experts, Carol Hyland and William Hoddick, neither of whom was ever deposed.
On December 24, 2014, after discovery had closed and after the last deposition had concluded, the Rasnicks served a section 998 offer. It provided in its entirety as follows:
Neither the offer itself nor any other communication from counsel for the Rasnicks purported to apportion the $130,000 offer amount between them. Nor did any communication from the Rasnicks' counsel ever disclose any of the terms that they planned to put into the "written settlement agreement" required as a condition to accepting their offer.
The offer lapsed, and the case proceeded to trial, which began on March 24, 2015. On March 30, Sanford moved to amend his complaint to conform to proof by adding a cause of action for limited joint and several liability under Vehicle Code sections 17150 and 17708.
Following entry of judgment, on May 8, Sanford filed a memorandum of costs (cost bill) seeking $7,881.25. On May 19, the Rasnicks filed their cost bill seeking $28,150.02. This included all of their post-offer costs and their expert witness fees as penalties under section 998, and also deposition costs for the expert deposition of Robert Cargill, taken on November 20, 2014, apparently under the theory that this was a recoverable post-offer cost because the court reporter delayed sending out the invoice for that deposition until after the section 998 offer.
On or about May 21, the Rasnicks filed their motion to tax, objecting to essentially every item on Sanford's cost bill.
On June 1, Sanford filed his motion to tax. Sanford objected to the validity of the section 998 offer and requested that the Rasnicks' cost bill be stricken in its entirety. Alternatively, Sanford objected to the Rasnicks' application to recover some of their pre-offer deposition costs, their private investigators' fees, and the fees they claimed they had paid to two withdrawn experts.
On June 11, both sides filed their oppositions to the motions to tax. Included within the Rasnicks' opposition were authenticated copies of the receipts and invoices supporting the claimed costs.
On June 23, the trial court issued its tentative rulings, both favorable to the Rasnicks. The tentative rulings were set forth in three, single-spaced pages, with no paragraphs.
Sanford contested both tentative rulings, and argument was held on June 24. The argument was quite lengthy, in the course of which Sanford's counsel went to great lengths to attempt to demonstrate where, and why, the tentative rulings were wrong. We will not detail all that here, but do note two items of interest.
First, Sanford's counsel pointed to the tentative ruling that taxed Sanford's costs in item 1 (in limine motions) and item 4 (deposition costs) because, quoting the tentative ruling, "Defendants correctly note that Plaintiff did not submit any evidence supporting his claim that he incurred these fees" and that "Plaintiff must provide the Court and Defendants with documentation to support his claim that such fees were incurred." Counsel for Sanford pointed
Second, another item in the tentative ruling taxed the mediator's fee, with this language: "Defendant's Motion to Tax Plaintiff's claimed costs incurred in participating in mediation and for delivering papers in connection with motions (Item 13), in the sum of $1,646.53, is GRANTED. The costs and expenses described in Item 13 of the memorandum of costs are not allowed. See CCP § 1033.5(a)." Addressing that as the final subject in his argument, Sanford's counsel concluded as follows: as to the mediator's fee, "I cited several cases in the briefing. That is within the Court's discretion. And, but the trend now, in all of the recent cases, without exception, that I'm aware of, is to allow the mediator's fee when the mediation has been ordered by the Court, and there is language that the public policy strongly supports the awarding of that fee. [¶] And the Court's intended ruling gave no basis for denying it, and I was curious whether the Court wanted to share with us the basis for denying the mediator's fee, and, if not, then I will sit down." The court's response: "Thank you."
On or about June 24, the trial court issued its order on the Rasnicks' motion to tax costs. As best we can tell, with the exception that there is an introduction and that it has paragraphs, the substance of the order is word for word the tentative ruling. It reads as follows:
Sanford timely appealed from both orders.
Citing numerous cases, we set forth the general principles in Ladas v. California State Auto. Assn. (1993) 19 Cal.App.4th 761, 773-774 (Ladas):
The Rasnicks' section 998 offer is set forth in full above. Sanford contends it does not meet the requirements of section 998 for two separate, and independent, reasons: (1) it does not apportion the offer between defendants and (2) it improperly contains a request for a "settlement agreement." We agree with Sanford on the second point, so need not address the first.
Since the issue presents no disputed facts, the interpretation of a section 998 offer and its application are reviewed de novo. (Rouland v. Pacific Specialty Ins. Co. (2013) 220 Cal.App.4th 280, 285, fn. 3 [162 Cal.Rptr.3d 887]; Whatley-Miller v. Cooper (2013) 212 Cal.App.4th 1103, 1113 [151 Cal.Rptr.3d 517].)
The case law does allow for releases. (See Linthicum v. Butterfield, supra, 175 Cal.App.4th at p. 270 [under § 998 offer, the "parties are to bear their own costs with a mutual release of all current claims ..."]; Goodstein v. Bank of San Pedro, supra, 27 Cal.App.4th at p. 905 [§ 998 offer included "`execution and transmittal of a General Release ..."].)
But a release is not a settlement agreement, and the Rasnicks have cited no case, and we have found none, holding that a valid section 998 offer can include a settlement agreement, let alone one undescribed and unexplained.
The Rasnicks apparently attempt to explain their offer as being standard in the automobile insurance defense context. In their words: "As commonly set forth in automobile, insurance defense cases, [the Rasnicks'] section 998 offer in this case, if accepted, required [Sanford] to sign a document entitled `Settlement Agreement and Release' and execute a Dismissal of the entire action with prejudice." Or, as the Rasnicks put it at another point, their section 998 offer "is a standard, insurance defense offer that requires that [Sanford] execute a document entitled `settlement agreement and release' along with a
As most experienced trial lawyers and judges appreciate, the terms of a settlement agreement can be the subject of much negotiation. And the terms can be problematical. For example, settlement agreements typically contain a waiver of all claims "known and unknown," a provision that has been held to invalidate a section 998 offer. (See McKenzie v. Ford Motor Co. (2015) 238 Cal.App.4th 695, 706 [189 Cal.Rptr.3d 560] [§ 998 offer conditioned upon release of all known and unknown claims and release of claims that had not yet accrued invalid]; Valentino v. Elliott Sav-On Gas, Inc. (1988) 201 Cal.App.3d 692, 697-698 [247 Cal.Rptr. 483] [condition that offeree waive claims not encompassed within the current lawsuit invalidated the offer].)
The terms of a settlement agreement can, and frequently do, implicate the protection of lienholders, which could be involved here, where there was a medical lien. Indeed, this subject is so important that attorneys risk personal liability if they "settle around" known liens. (See Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, Inc. v. Aguiluz (1996) 47 Cal.App.4th 302, 305 [54 Cal.Rptr.2d 665], disapproved on other grounds in Snukal v. Flightways Manufacturing, Inc. (2000) 23 Cal.4th 754, 775 [98 Cal.Rptr.2d 1, 3 P.3d 286].) And the State Bar may impose discipline upon an attorney who purposely disregards a valid lien. (See In the Matter of Respondent P. (Review Dept. 1993) 2 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 622; Kennedy v. State Bar (1989) 48 Cal.3d 610, 617-618 [257 Cal.Rptr. 324, 770 P.2d 736] [attorney disbarred for purposely failing to pay client's doctor bills from settlement proceeds].)
Finally, and as every lawyer who has settled a case will appreciate, the issue as to Civil Code section 1542 in a release can be the subject of much discussion.
Here, the required "settlement agreement" was not described or revealed, Sanford having no understanding what he would have to agree to. In the words of Sanford's brief, he was "left to guess at what terms [the Rasnicks] might insist upon, and he had to accept or reject the offer without knowing what those terms were. This omission made it essentially certain that, had [Sanford] accepted their offer, the parties would have wound up in a disagreement over what terms could be included in the settlement agreement."
Sanford sums up with this: "The consequences of what [the Rasnicks] are asking the Court to do here should not be overlooked. Were the State's appellate courts to start allowing section 998 offers to condition acceptance
Sanford's opening brief argued that the trial court erred in taxing his costs in several particulars. Following briefing, the parties resolved some of the issues, so Sanford's reply brief addresses the only two issues that remain: the rulings taxing some attorney service charges and his share of the fee in a court-ordered mediation.
To recap, the trial court ruled as follows: "Defendants' Motion to Tax Plaintiff's claimed costs incurred in participating in mediation and for delivering papers in connection with motions (Item 13), in the sum of $1,646.53, is GRANTED. The costs and expenses described in Item 13 of the memorandum of costs are not allowed. See CCP § 1033.5(a)." Sanford contends this was error. We agree.
Under section 1033.5, "An item not specifically allowable under subdivision (a) nor prohibited under subdivision (b) may nevertheless be recoverable in the discretion of the court if `reasonably necessary to the conduct of the litigation rather than merely convenient or beneficial to its preparation.'" (Ladas, supra, 19 Cal.App.4th at p. 774.)
Moreover, the trial court's statement that these two items of costs "are not allowed" is wrong, as many cases have held.
We ourselves have affirmed such awards, including in Ladas, supra, 19 Cal.App.4th at page 776, where we upheld a trial court's allowance of attorney service messenger and delivery charges, and in Gibson v. Bobroff (1996) 49 Cal.App.4th 1202, 1207-1209 [57 Cal.Rptr.2d 235], where we upheld a trial court's exercise of discretion to award mediation expenses as costs under section 1033.5, subdivision (c). (See also Foothill-De Anza Community College Dist. v. Emerich (2007) 158 Cal.App.4th 11, 30 [69 Cal.Rptr.3d 678] [same day messenger fees to file supplemental brief and peremptory challenge to assigned trial judge].)
Here, the trial court never exercised any discretion on either of those two cost items because it erroneously believed it had no discretion to award these costs. And it reached that conclusion because it could not find either item listed among the costs allowable under subdivision (a) of section 1033.5. That ruling was error.
The Rasnicks' response is that the "trial court properly exercised its discretion in denying" the costs. We read the record differently, that the trial court not only did not exercise its discretion, but that it ruled that these costs could not be recovered. This is simply wrong.
The orders are reversed, and the matter remanded to the trial court (1) to enter a new order granting Sanford's motion to tax the Rasnicks' costs and
Kline, P. J., and Miller, J., concurred.