ASHMANN-GERST, J. —
The question presented is whether defendants who obtained dismissal of a case in California pursuant to a Florida forum-selection clause are entitled to contractual attorney fees. We conclude the answer is no, because there has been no final resolution of the contract claims.
Plaintiff and respondent DisputeSuite.com, LLC (plaintiff), filed a lawsuit in the Los Angeles Superior Court against defendants and appellants Scoreinc.com and its principals Joel S. Pate and Joshua Carmona (collectively defendants) on July 26, 2012. The complaint contained 21 causes of action, including causes of action for breach of contract, fraud, misappropriation of trade secrets, and interference with contract. Plaintiff sought compensatory and punitive damages as well as preliminary and permanent injunctive relief.
The complaint alleges that plaintiff is a leading provider of credit repair software and services that it markets to credit repair organizations (CROs) to help them service their customers in need of credit repair. Defendants, on the other hand, work directly for CROs handling daily administrative tasks. According to the complaint, plaintiff agreed to provide defendants with its confidential list of CROs and other proprietary information, including its "secret method by which it sells its software and other products to its customers."
While the parties dispute the existence and enforcement of certain contracts, including end-user agreements, it is undisputed that in September 2010, they entered into a master reseller agreement that enabled defendants to act as a licensed reseller of plaintiff's software. At defendants' insistence, the master reseller agreement contains a forum-selection clause by which "any disputes, actions, claims or causes of action arising out of or in connection with this Agreement or the Service shall be subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the state and federal courts located in Hillsb[o]rough, Florida."
The same day plaintiff filed the complaint, plaintiff applied ex parte for an order to show cause regarding a preliminary injunction and temporary restraining order. The trial court denied the application without prejudice. Plaintiff later renewed its ex parte application. This time the trial court granted a temporary restraining order as to two of the five requested actions: barring defendants from transferring any customers referred to them by plaintiff to any entity that did not use plaintiff's software and barring defendants from making commercial use of plaintiff's software. The trial court subsequently granted preliminary injunctive relief on the same two bases.
Meanwhile, defendants filed a motion to quash service of summons and complaint (which the trial court and parties subsequently referred to as the "motion to dismiss") based on the Florida forum-selection clauses in the master reseller agreement and cross-marking agreement. Plaintiff opposed the motion, arguing that a California forum-selection clause in the end-user agreements applied. The trial court granted the motion to dismiss, stayed the case for 60 days, and extended the effective date of the preliminary injunction so that plaintiff could file suit in Florida and seek injunctive relief in that forum. After plaintiff refiled the case in Florida, the trial court dismissed the case in California and dissolved the preliminary injunction.
Defendants then filed a motion in the trial court for an award of attorney fees in the amount of $84,640, on the ground that they were the prevailing parties in connection with the motion to dismiss. The trial court denied the motion. Defendants filed this appeal from the trial court's order denying attorney fees.
Civil Code section 1717, subdivision (a) provides: "In any action on a contract, where the contract specifically provides that attorney's fees and costs, which are incurred to enforce that contract, shall be awarded either to one of the parties or to the prevailing party, then the party who is determined
In addition to Hsu, the trial court and the parties focused primarily on three other cases in connection with the motion to dismiss. In Estate of Drummond (2007) 149 Cal.App.4th 46 [56 Cal.Rptr.3d 691] (Drummond), an opinion by the Sixth District, a lawyer filed a petition in probate court for contractual attorney fees against his former clients, who had filed a separate civil action against him. His petition was granted, but the appellate court reversed on the ground urged by the clients that the petition violated the compulsory cross-complaint rule. (Id. at p. 49.) On remand, the lawyer filed a cross-action seeking his fees and the clients also sought their fees for having litigated the petition. The trial court denied the clients' motion for attorney fees. The clients appealed, and the Drummond court affirmed.
Relying on Hsu, the Drummond court found there had been no "`final resolution of the contract claims.'" (Drummond, supra, 149 Cal.App.4th at
The Drummond court concluded that the clients had obtained only an "interim victory" based on the lawyer's having attempted to pursue his claims in the wrong forum. (Drummond, supra, 149 Cal.App.4th at p. 51.) The court stated that the clients had "at no time won a victory `on the contract.' They have only succeeded at moving a determination on the merits from one forum to another." (Id. at p. 53.) While the Drummond court could "conceive of cases where a party obtaining a dismissal of contract claims on purely procedural grounds might be found to have prevailed on the contract, even though the dismissal was without prejudice, because the plaintiff had no other means to obtain relief under the contract," it found that in the case before it "[t]he dismissal of [the lawyer's] petition in the probate matter did not defeat his contract claims; it merely deflected or forestalled them." (Ibid.) The Drummond court stated: "We think the interim nature of appellants' success provided a sound basis for a discretionary finding that neither party prevailed on the contract." (Id. at p. 54.)
More recently, two cases out of the Fourth District reached the opposite result. In Profit Concepts Management, Inc. v. Griffith (2008) 162 Cal.App.4th 950 [76 Cal.Rptr.3d 396] (Profit Concepts), a California company sued a former employee for breach of contract. The employee, a resident of Oklahoma, brought a motion to quash service of summons for lack of personal jurisdiction. The company filed a notice of nonopposition, and the trial court granted the motion. The employee then filed a motion for attorney fees as the prevailing party, which the trial court granted, and the appellate court affirmed. (Id. at p. 952.) The Profit Concepts court stated: "The only claims before the trial court were contained in Profit Concepts's complaint, which sought compensatory and punitive damages in an amount to be determined, as well as preliminary and permanent injunctive relief. The case in California has been finally resolved. What was awarded on Profit Concepts's complaint? Zero. Thus, the contract claim was finally resolved within the meaning of Hsu v. Abbara, and that case does not use the term `merits.' [¶] The determination of which party is the prevailing party must be made without consideration of whether the plaintiff may refile the action after a motion to quash service is granted. The issue of final resolution should not depend on
In PNEC Corp. v. Meyer (2010) 190 Cal.App.4th 66 [118 Cal.Rptr.3d 730] (PNEC), the trial court dismissed a contract action against a defendant based upon forum non conveniens, and entered a judgment of dismissal without prejudice. (Id. at p. 68.) The defendant then sought and obtained an award of attorney fees pursuant to the contract, which the PNEC court affirmed. The court essentially rejected Drummond and followed Profit Concepts in finding that the trial court "did not abuse its discretion in making an award for the work done while the case was under its jurisdiction." (PNEC, supra, at p. 73.)
Not surprisingly, defendants here rely on Profit Concepts and PNEC in arguing that the trial court erred in denying their motion for an award of attorney fees. They go one step further and argue that their position is even stronger than that of the defendants in those cases because, unlike those defendants who obtained dismissal of the contract actions on procedural grounds, defendants here obtained dismissal by successfully enforcing the contractual forum-selection clause. Thus, they claim they prevailed on the only contract claim at issue here. According to defendants, they "conclusively ended the litigation in California and thereby achieved a final resolution of the dispute so far as the Golden State is concerned."
In denying the motion to dismiss, the trial court found that Drummond more closely followed the Hsu court's dictate that "[t]he prevailing party determination is to be made only upon final resolution of the contract claims ...." (Hsu, supra, 9 Cal.4th at p. 876, italics added.) The trial court agreed that defendants had prevailed in the sense that they obtained dismissal of the case in California, but because the contract claims were still in dispute and being litigated in Florida, there had been no final resolution of those claims, and therefore no prevailing party on the contract.
We agree with the trial court's reasoning. As stated in Drummond, defendants' argument "could be reconciled with Hsu only by qualifying `final' to mean, `final for purposes of a particular lawsuit.' But this view is inconsistent
If it were not the case that there can only be one prevailing party on a contract, then a party could be considered a prevailing party by succeeding on one contract issue or claim while later losing on others. Surely, the Legislature did not intend this result. Nor do we believe the Legislature intended for courts to make piecemeal attorney fee awards for each resolution of a contract clause. Like here, resolution of one contract clause does not always equate to a resolution of all contract claims.
The order denying defendants' motion for attorney fees is affirmed. Plaintiff is entitled to recover its costs on appeal.
Boren, P. J., and Chavez, J., concurred.