Filed 2/26/15 Ramos-Lovato v. Community Bank CA4/2
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
JOSE RAMOS-LOVATO,
Plaintiff and Appellant, E055920
v. (Super.Ct.No. SCVSS131901)
COMMUNITY BANK, OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. Frank Gafkowski,
Jr., Judge. Affirmed.
Walker, Wright, Tyler & Ward and Richard W. Eckardt for Plaintiff and
Appellant.
Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, Barry W. Lee, Craig S. Bloomgarden, Benjamin G.
Shatz, and Diana I. Iorlano for Defendant and Appellant.
1
I. INTRODUCTION
This case involves two appeals. Defendant and appellant Community Bank (the
Bank) appeals the judgment awarding its landlord, plaintiff and appellant Jose Ramos-
Lovato (plaintiff), $1,047,250 in attorney fees and costs as the prevailing party on his
contractual claims against the Bank for breaching a lease on a building. (Civ. Code,
§ 1717.) Plaintiff defends the award and appeals from the judgment dismissing his tort
cause of action against the Bank for conversion. The court granted the Bank’s motion in
limine for judgment on the pleadings and dismissed the conversion claim on the ground it
was not independent of plaintiff’s breach of lease claims.
After the building was destroyed by fire in January 2004, plaintiff sued the Bank
for breaching the lease in several respects, including failing to pay rent and property taxes
through the end of the lease term, failing to carry all risk insurance on the building,
failing to use insurance proceeds the Bank received to rebuild and restore the building,
and failing to rebuild and restore the building. Plaintiff also sued the Bank for negligence
in causing the fire and for converting insurance proceeds to its own use and benefit rather
than using them to rebuild and restore the building as the lease required. Plaintiff sued
four other defendants to recover the replacement cost of the building.
On its appeal, the Bank claims the court used an improper legal standard in
determining the fee award, the court erroneously failed to deduct or apportion fees and
costs attributable to plaintiff’s nonlease or nonfee claims, and the award should have been
limited to fees and costs plaintiff incurred in pursuing his claim for unpaid rent and
2
property taxes. Had the award been properly limited, the Bank argues, it should not have
exceeded $235,110. For his part, plaintiff claims his conversion claim alleged tortious
conduct by the Bank independent of the Bank’s breaches of the lease, and must be
reinstated. We reject each party’s claims and affirm the judgment in its entirety.
II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. Factual Background
In September 2003, plaintiff purchased a building in San Bernardino that the Bank
had been leasing since 1985, and plaintiff succeeded to the prior owner’s interest in the
lease. The “triple net” lease was to expire on December 31, 2004, but the building was
destroyed by fire on January 26, 2004. The lease required the Bank to carry “all risk”
insurance on the building and its interior improvements, name plaintiff as “loss-payee,”
use the insurance proceeds to rebuild and restore the building, and continue paying rent,
real property taxes, and other charges through the end of the lease term. The Bank had
no right to terminate the lease or stop paying rent and other charges, even though the
building was completely destroyed.
The Bank did not have all risk insurance when plaintiff purchased the property in
2003 or when the building was destroyed by fire in January 2004. During his escrow for
the purchase of the property, plaintiff’s lender required him to obtain “lessor’s risk” or
“forced place” insurance so the loan would be paid if the building was damaged or
destroyed. After the escrow closed, plaintiff demanded that the Bank obtain all risk
3
insurance and reimburse him for the $1,629 premium he paid for the forced place policy
he purchased from AMCO Insurance Company (AMCO).
In September 2003, the Bank purchased insurance for the interior improvements
and furnishings from Federal Insurance Company (Federal), but still did not obtain all
risk insurance covering the building, and the Bank’s policy with Federal did not name
plaintiff as the “loss payee.” Because the Bank’s insurance policy with Federal did not
comply with the terms of the lease, plaintiff again demanded that the Bank purchase all
risk insurance in a January 22, 2004, letter. The fire occurred only days later, on January
26, 2004.
In May 2004, the Bank notified plaintiff it was terminating the lease and stopped
paying rent and real property taxes effective June 1, 2004. In late June 2004, after it
purported to terminate the lease, the Bank received $716,074 in insurance proceeds from
Federal but did not use any of the proceeds to rebuild the building, and did not pay any of
the proceeds to plaintiff. The Bank and Federal agreed that $253,360 of the $716,074
amount was the value of the interior improvements lost in the fire (e.g., ceiling tile,
carpet, and cabinets), and $462,714 was the value of the personal property the Bank lost
in the fire (e.g., artwork, desks, and computers).
Shortly after the Bank terminated the lease in May 2004, plaintiff received a “short
changed claims payment” of $212,000 from AMCO which covered his outstanding loan
4
balance. In July 2005, plaintiff sold the property, including the burned-out building, for
$950,000.1
B. Plaintiff’s Lawsuit Against the Bank and Other Defendants
In December 2004, plaintiff filed suit against three defendants, including the Bank.
In November 2006, plaintiff filed his operative second amended complaint alleging 14
causes of action against five defendants. Against the Bank, plaintiff alleged causes of
action for breach of contract (the lease), conversion, and negligence.
Plaintiff’s breach of lease claims were based on the Bank’s failure to (1) pay rent
and property taxes through December 2004, (2) obtain all risk insurance coverage, (3)
pay, hold in trust for plaintiff, or use the insurance proceeds the Bank received from
Federal to rebuild and restore the building, and (4) rebuild and restore the building.
Plaintiff’s conversion claim alleged the Bank converted part of the insurance proceeds it
received from Federal to its own use, rather than use the proceeds to rebuild and restore
the building as the lease required. Plaintiff’s negligence claim alleged the Bank was
partly responsible for causing the fire.
The second amended complaint alleged additional causes of action against (1)
plaintiff’s insurer, AMCO, for breach of insurance contract and bad faith, (2) the Bank’s
1 Plaintiff has requested that this court take judicial notice of a public record, San
Bernardino County Assessor Taxable Value List, purportedly showing the tax assessed
value of the bank building and land on June 21, 2003. The Bank opposes the request on
several grounds, and we deny it because neither the tax-assessed nor the fair market value
of the property, at any time, is relevant to the issues on appeal. (See, e.g., Jay v.
Mahaffey (2013) 218 Cal.App.4th 1522, 1529-1530, fn. 7.)
5
insurer, Federal, for reformation of insurance contract and bad faith, (3) the Bank’s
insurance broker, Financial Guaranty Insurance Brokers, Inc. (FGIB), for professional
errors and omissions, and (4) the building’s janitorial service, Diversified Maintenance
Services (DMS), for negligence in causing the fire, along with the Bank.
C. The Bifurcated Trial and Settlements
In September 2009, plaintiff moved to sever his negligence claims against the
Bank and DMS from the rest of the case. The motion was granted and the court ordered
trial to proceed in two phases: Phase I, on plaintiff’s negligence claims against the Bank
and DMS, and Phase II, on plaintiff’s breach of lease and conversion claims against the
Bank, and plaintiff’s additional claims against AMCO, Federal, and FGIB.
A jury trial on plaintiff’s negligence claims against the Bank and DMS was held
over 15 days in October and November 2009. The jury returned a verdict finding the
Bank 75 percent and DMS 25 percent negligent in causing the fire, and liable to plaintiff
in the same proportions for the $725,000 cost of rebuilding the building, plus
prejudgment interest, for a total jury award of $1,016,812.50.
In February 2010, over the Bank’s opposition, Federal settled plaintiff’s Phase I
jury verdict against the Bank and plaintiff’s Phase II claims against Federal by paying
plaintiff $800,000 to release his negligence claims against the Bank and $175,000 to
release his Phase II claims against Federal. The agreement released the Bank and Federal
from any and all liability for plaintiff’s claims arising from the fire, but did not release
the Bank from plaintiff’s conversion or breach of lease claims. The other defendants,
6
DMS, AMCO, and FGIB, separately settled plaintiff’s Phase II claims against them. By
mid-2010, plaintiff’s only unsettled claims were his conversion and breach of lease
claims against the Bank, to be tried in Phase II.
D. Plaintiff’s Phase II Claims Against the Bank for Conversion and Breach of the Lease
In February 2011, the Bank stipulated with plaintiff that it breached the lease by
failing to pay rent and real property taxes through December 2004. The Bank paid
plaintiff $108,427.60, including prejudgment interest, for the unpaid rent and real
property taxes, but continued to deny it breached the lease in any other respect.
On the eve of Phase II of the trial in June 2011, the Bank filed a motion in limine
for judgment on the pleadings on plaintiff’s conversion cause of action. The Bank argued
the conversion claim was not independent of the Bank’s alleged breach of the lease in
failing to apply the $253,360 of the insurance proceeds the Bank received from Federal
for the interior improvements, because plaintiff was alleging the lease required the Bank
to apply these proceeds toward rebuilding and restoring the building. The trial court
agreed the conversion claim did not allege a tort independent of the Bank’s lease
obligation, and granted the motion.
Following the dismissal of plaintiff’s conversion claim against the Bank, plaintiff
and the Bank agreed, and the court later found, that the dismissal of the conversion claim
“effectively terminat[ed] the Plaintiff’s action against [the Bank].”2 Thus, following the
2 Ostensibly, through his settlement agreements with Federal and the other
defendants, plaintiff recovered substantially all of the replacement cost damages he
incurred as a result of the Bank’s failure to have all risk insurance and rebuild and restore
[footnote continued on next page]
7
dismissal of his conversion claim, plaintiff did not proceed on his remaining breach of
lease claims against the Bank, but filed a motion to recover his attorney fees and costs
from the Bank pursuant to the attorney fee clause in the lease.
E. Plaintiff’s Motion for Attorney Fees and Costs
The lease required the Bank, as lessee, to pay the lessor “reasonable attorney’s
fees which shall be fixed by the court” in the event the lessor filed suit for breach. (Civ.
Code, § 1717.) Plaintiff’s original motion for attorney fees sought $2,051,555.67 in
attorney fees and costs from the Bank. The Bank opposed the motion and filed a motion
to tax costs. Plaintiff opposed the motion to tax costs and submitted supplemental
declarations.
In October 2011, the court issued its first of two tentative decisions on plaintiff’s
supplemented motion for attorney fees and costs and the Bank’s motion to tax costs.
Following an October hearing, the court requested additional briefing; plaintiff submitted
additional documentation; and the Bank filed a response. In his supplemental
submissions, plaintiff reduced his total request to $1,069,322.96.
In January 2012, the court issued a 26-page revised tentative decision indicating
its intent to award plaintiff $1,047,250.49 in attorney fees and costs, around $1 million
less than he originally sought and $22,072.47 less than he requested in his supplemental
[footnote continued from previous page]
the building. As noted, the jury in Phase I found $725,000 was the cost of rebuilding and
restoring the building, and plaintiff received more than this amount through his
settlement with Federal.
8
briefing. The Bank objected on the ground the proposed award was not limited to the
fees and costs plaintiff incurred in pursuing his breach of lease claim for unpaid rent and
property taxes, and improperly included fees and costs plaintiff incurred in pursuing his
negligence, conversion, and “unadjudicated” breach of lease claims against the Bank and
his claims against the other defendants. The Bank argued its only breach of the lease was
its failure to pay rent and real property taxes through December 2004, and it settled that
claim in February 2011.
Following a January 20, 2012, hearing, the court adopted its revised tentative as its
order and statement of decision, and entered judgment for plaintiff and against the Bank
in the amount of $1,047,250.49, comprising $994,795.10 in fees and $52,455.39 in costs.
On March 7, 2012, the court corrected the judgment nunc pro tunc to include judgment in
favor of the Bank on plaintiff’s cause of action for conversion.
In its statement of decision, the court found plaintiff was the prevailing party on
all of his breach of lease claims against the Bank, and found the Bank breached the lease
by failing to carry “all risk” insurance on the building; name plaintiff as loss-payee; pay
rent and other charges after the building was destroyed by fire; use all available insurance
proceeds to rebuild and restore the building; and rebuild and restore the building. The
court found plaintiff “clearly prevailed on every cause of action in his Second Amended
Complaint” “but for [his] sole cause of action for conversion of insurance proceeds”
against the Bank.
9
The judgment states the court awarded the fees and costs to plaintiff because “all
of the actions against [the] other defendants arose from the breaches of the lease on the
part of [the] Bank [and] those [other] actions . . . would not have been necessary, but for
the Bank’s failure to honor its obligations under the . . . lease . . . .” (Italics added.) The
statement of decision elaborates: “All the facts and legal services in this case are
intertwined to the Lease and the Bank’s conduct. While Plaintiff had [negligence] causes
of action against [the] Bank and DMS for the cause of the fire, insurance breach of
contract and [a] bad faith cause of action against Federal and AMCO as well as [his]
claims against [FGIB], these causes of action only arose out of the failure of the Bank to
have the required insurance for the benefit of its landlord [plaintiff] as required by the
Lease.” (Italics added.) The court found plaintiff “was forced to litigate this case to
obtain the replacement cost damages which he would have been entitled to receive had
[the] Bank provided full replacement cost insurance coverage as required by the Lease,
and/or repaired and restored the building as required by the Lease”; and the “[l]itigation
against [the other defendants] would not have been required . . . if [the] Bank had in fact
[complied with the lease].”
Still, the court excluded from the award numerous items of fees and costs plaintiff
incurred in the action. To cite a single but significant example, the court excluded all the
fees of plaintiff’s trial counsel, Messrs. Echeverria and Eckardt, charged for their “Phase
I trial time,” including all of the fees they charged following the 50-day pretrial cut-off
date for designating experts (Code Civ. Proc., § 2034.230) prior to the Phase I trial, and
10
all of the fees they charged for conducting the Phase I trial in which plaintiff prevailed on
his negligence claim against the Bank and DMS. The court also excluded virtually all of
the travel time plaintiff’s attorneys charged during the seven-year-long litigation. In sum,
the statement of decision shows the court painstakingly reviewed plaintiff’s requested
fees and costs, and excluded from the award—to the extent practical—all items of fees
and costs unrelated to plaintiff’s breach of lease claims.
III. ANALYSIS/THE FEE AND COST AWARD
The Bank claims the award of $1,047,250.49 in attorney fees and costs to plaintiff
was excessive because (1) the court applied an incorrect legal standard in concluding it
was not required to apportion any of the requested fees and costs to plaintiff’s nonlease
claims against the Bank for negligence and conversion, or his claims against the other
defendants; (2) the award should have been limited to the fees and costs plaintiff incurred
in pursuing his claim against the Bank for unpaid rent and real property taxes; and (3)
certain fees and costs should have been excluded from the award. We find no legal error
or abuse of discretion in the court’s analysis of the issues or in the award.
A. Applicable Legal Principles and Standard of Review
Civil Code section 1717 provides: “(a) 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 to be the party prevailing on the contract . . . shall be entitled
11
to reasonable attorney’s fees in addition to other costs. [¶] . . . [¶] Reasonable
attorney’s fees shall be fixed by the court, and shall be an element of the costs of suit.”
Attorney fees are not recoverable under Civil Code section 1717 if they are
incurred in connection with claims unrelated to the contract: “Where a cause of action
based on the contract providing for attorney’s fees is joined with other causes of action
beyond the contract, the prevailing party may recover attorney’s fees under [Civil Code]
section 1717 only as they relate to the contract action. [Citations.] . . . A litigant may not
increase his recovery of attorney’s fees by joining a cause of action in which attorney’s
fees are not recoverable to one in which an award is proper.” (Reynolds Metals Co. v.
Alperson (1979) 25 Cal.3d 124, 129.)
Nonetheless, the joinder of contractual claims with other claims in an action does
not “dilute” the prevailing party’s right to recover fees related to the enforcement of the
contract, pursuant to Civil Code section 1717. (Reynolds Metals Co. v. Alperson, supra,
25 Cal.3d at p. 129.) As Reynolds explained: “Attorney’s fees need not be apportioned
when incurred for representation on an issue common to both a cause of action in which
fees are proper and one in which they are not allowed.” (Id. at pp. 129-130.) In this
event, “‘[a]ll expenses incurred with respect to the [issues common to all cause of action]
qualify for award.’” (Amtower v. Photon Dynamics, Inc. (2008) 158 Cal.App.4th 1582,
1604, quoting Reynolds Metals Co. v. Alperson, supra, at p. 130.)
Thus, allocation or apportionment of fees among contractual and other claims “is
not required when the issues are ‘so interrelated that it would have been impossible to
12
separate them into claims for which attorney fees are properly awarded and claims for
which they are not.’” (Amtower v. Photon Dynamics, Inc., supra, 158 Cal.App.4th at p.
1604, quoting Akins v. Enterprise Rent-A-Car Co. (2000) 79 Cal.App.4th 1127, 1133.)
“‘“Attorney’s fees need not be apportioned between distinct causes of action where [the]
plaintiff’s various claims involve a common core of facts or are based on related legal
theories.” [Citation.] Apportionment is not required when the issues in the fee and
nonfee claims are so inextricably intertwined that it would be impractical or impossible to
separate the attorney’s time into compensable and noncompensable units.’ [Citation.]”
(Harman v. City and County of San Francisco (2007) 158 Cal.App.4th 407, 417, fn.
omitted (Harman).)
The trial court has considerable discretion to determine whether fees should be
apportioned among fee and nonfee claims: “Where fees are authorized for some causes
of action in a complaint but not for others, allocation is a matter within the trial court’s
discretion. [Citation.] A trial court’s exercise of discretion is abused only when its ruling
‘“‘“exceeds the bounds of reason, all of the circumstances before it being considered.”’”’
[Citations.]” (Amtower v. Photon Dynamics, Inc., supra, 158 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1602-
1605 [trial court reasonably declined to apportion fees to noncontract claims when factual
allegations overlapped and there was “no clear line of demarcation” between the claims];
Thompson Pacific Construction, Inc. v. City of Sunnyvale (2007) 155 Cal.App.4th 525,
555-556 [trial court reasonably concluded additional allocation of fees to noncontract
13
claims was not required because the issues were intertwined and “there was no precise
methodology” the court could use to further apportion the fee request].)
Additionally, Civil Code section 1717 provides for payment of a “reasonable” fee,
and the court has discretion to determine what constitutes a reasonable fee in the case.
(PLCM Group, Inc. v. Drexler (2000) 22 Cal.4th 1084, 1095-1096.) In determining what
constitutes a reasonable fee, the court considers “‘a number of factors, including the
nature of the litigation, its difficulty, the amount involved, the skill required in its
handling, the skill employed, the attention given, the success or failure, and other
circumstances in the case.’ [Citation.]” (Id. at p. 1096.)
On appeal, “‘“[w]e review the entire record, attentive to the trial court’s stated
reasons in denying [or granting] the fees and to whether it applied the proper standards of
law in reaching its decision. . . .” [Citation.]’ [Citation.] ‘If it did, we then determine
whether the application of that standard to the facts was within the scope of its discretion
. . . .’ [Citations.] We defer to the trial court’s discretion ‘because of its “superior
understanding of the litigation and the desirability of avoiding frequent appellate review
of what essentially are factual matters.” [Citation.]’ [Citation.]” (Harman, supra, 158
Cal.App.4th at p. 418.) “The ‘experienced trial judge is the best judge of the value of
professional services rendered in his court, and while his judgment is of course subject to
review, it will not be disturbed unless the appellate court is convinced that it is clearly
wrong.’ [Citations.]” (Serrano v. Priest (1977) 20 Cal.3d 25, 49.)
14
B. Analysis
The Bank first argues the court applied an incorrect legal standard in determining
the award, and the de novo standard applies in reviewing this legal error. (In re Charlisse
C. (2008) 45 Cal.4th 145, 159 [de novo standard applies in reviewing trial court’s
conclusions of law].) Rather than determine whether plaintiff’s lease-related claims were
inextricably intertwined with his other claims against the Bank and the other defendants,
the Bank argues the court applied an erroneous “but for” or “arising from” standard. The
Bank argues this “but for” test was “far broader” than the inextricably intertwined
standard required by law, and resulted in an award “many hundreds of thousands of
dollars too high.”
We disagree with the Bank’s characterization of the court’s analysis. Though the
judgment states that “all of the actions against [the] other defendants arose from the
breaches of the lease on the part of [the] Bank [and] those [other] actions . . . would not
have been necessary, but for the Bank’s failure to honor its obligations under the . . .
lease” (italics added), and the statement of decision similarly states that plaintiff’s claims
against the other defendants “only arose out of the failure of the Bank to have the
required insurance for the benefit of its landlord [plaintiff] as required by the [l]ease”
(italics added), the court’s use of the “but for” and “arose out of” phrases was just another
way of saying the claims were inextricably intertwined, and no apportionment of fees
among the plaintiff’s breach of lease and other claims was necessary or practical. Indeed,
in its statement of decision, the court both clearly stated and properly applied the correct,
15
inextricably intertwined legal standard in concluding it was not required to apportion fees
to plaintiff’s nonfee claims.
As the court explained in its statement of decision, and as the record shows,
plaintiff “was forced to litigate this matter against multiple parties on multiple different
theories for years to obtain what he was entitled to receive under the lease. Each cause of
action which [plaintiff] pursued was related to and intertwined with [the] Bank’s multiple
breaches of the lease. A determination of the cause and origin of the fire as between
[the] Bank and DMS would have been unnecessary for [plaintiff] to be made whole had
he been fully compensated by insurance or [the] Bank for the full replacement value of
the building as required by the lease. Additionally, the determination of the full
replacement value of the bank building in Phase I of the trial was interrelated and
relevant to a determination of the amount of insurance for the full replacement value of
the bank building or [the] Bank’s obligation to rebuild which was required under the
lease. [¶] Litigation against Federal or FGIB and AMCO would not have been required
by [plaintiff] if [the] Bank had in fact provided [plaintiff] with the full replacement value
insurance, or rebuilt or restored the building as required by the lease. The reason
litigation with the insurance defendants was required was because [the] Bank failed to
deliver all risk full replacement value insurance coverage as required by the lease. [¶]
The breach of the lease by [the] Bank permeated the entire litigation. . . .” (Italics added.)
Thus, contrary to the Bank’s argument, the court did not decline to apportion fees
to plaintiff’s nonfee claims simply because the nonfee claims would not have arisen but
16
for the Bank’s several breaches of the lease. Instead, the court properly concluded it was
not required to apportion fees to nonfee claims because the nonfee claims were
inextricably intertwined with plaintiff’s fee claims against the Bank for its breaches of the
lease, including its failure to purchase all risk insurance and rebuild and restore the
building.
Further, the court’s determination that the fee and nonfee claims were inextricably
intertwined, “‘making it “impracticable, if not impossible, to separate the multitude of
conjoined activities into compensable or noncompensable time units”’” (Harman, supra,
158 Cal.App.4th at p. 424) is amply supported by the evidence in the record. As the
court explained, the case was “vigorously litigated” by all defendants; “[p]laintiff was
subjected to motions for summary judgment and had to contend with extensive law and
motion matters, and then proceed to Phase I [of the trial].” Plaintiff’s attorneys “were
required during the duration of the entire litigation to attend to legal machinations by
other players in order to protect [plaintiff’s] own contract and tort pursuits against [the]
Bank,” and “[p]laintiff’s attorneys themselves have eliminated alleged ‘side-track’ [or
‘collateral’] attorney fee claims.” The court thus reasonably concluded that no
apportionment of fees to nonfee claims was required, or had already been made.
The Bank argues the fee and nonfee claims shared no common issues of fact
because, for example, the nonfee claims against the insurance defendants were “based
solely on their alleged separate and independently wrongful conduct.” The Bank argues
plaintiff’s claim against his “forced place” insurer, AMCO, “rested on [AMCO’s]
17
independent breach of its insurance policy and bad faith refusal to pay benefits for the
full replacement cost of the building,” while the lease between plaintiff and the Bank
“was factually and legally irrelevant to any aspect of [p]laintiff’s claims against AMCO.”
The Bank also points to other fees it claims should have been excluded from the award,
including fees plaintiff incurred for communications “throughout the lawsuit” between
his counsel and counsel for the other defendants, reviewing motions and preparing
oppositions “related to other defendants,” and deposing and reviewing deposition
transcripts “for witnesses related to other defendants.”
The Bank’s arguments ignore the many common issues of fact underlying the fee
and nonfee claims, and the impracticality of apportioning or segregating the fees and
costs plaintiff incurred in pursuing the Bank for its breaches of the lease, from the fees
and costs plaintiff incurred in pursuing his other claims. As the court found, “[n]ot only
[did the Bank] expressly admit[] in open court to breach of the [l]ease as to the issue of
past due rents and taxes[,] but the entire case is inextricably intertwined with the multiple
breaches of the [l]ease for failure to provide full replacement cost insurance, apply
insurance proceeds to [plaintiff], and rebuild and restore the building by [the] Bank.
[Plaintiff’s] entire lawsuit was necessitated to recover what was rightfully owed to
[plaintiff] by the Bank under the [l]ease.” As the court also pointed out, “the
determination of the full replacement value of the bank building in Phase I of the trial
was interrelated and relevant to a determination of the amount of insurance for the full
18
replacement value of the bank building or [the] Bank’s obligation to rebuild which was
required under the lease.”
The Bank relies on Harman, supra, 158 Cal.App.4th 407 for the proposition that
apportionment is necessary unless the prevailing party’s contractual and other claims
“share a ‘common core of facts and legal theories’. . . .” (Italics added.) This
misrepresents Harman. Harman pointed out that “although ‘“there is no certain method
of determining when claims are ‘related’ or ‘unrelated,’”’ the essential inquiry is
‘whether the “different claims for relief . . . are based on different facts and legal
theories.” [Citation.] If so, they qualify as unrelated claims. Conversely, related claims
“will involve a common core of facts or will be based on related legal theories.”
[Citation.]’” (Id. at p. 423, italics added.) Harman thus recognized that claims may be
related, and no apportionment is required, if the claims share common issues of fact or
are based on related legal theories. (See also Maxim Crane Works, L.P. v. Tilbury
Constructors (2012) 208 Cal.App.4th 286, 296-300 [fees incurred in pursing contractual
indemnity claim inextricably intertwined with fees incurred in investigating personal
injury suit for which indemnity was sought].)
The Bank also relies on McKenzie v. Kaiser-Aetna (1976) 55 Cal.App.3d 84, 88
and 89 for the proposition that plaintiff’s claims were not all “inextricably intertwined”
because they were “not the same cause of action under different guises.” But as the trial
court pointed out in its statement of decision, the Bank “greatly overstates the ruling in
McKenzie.” In McKenzie, a jury returned a general verdict awarding the plaintiff a net
19
monetary recovery against the defendant and cross-complainant Kaiser-Aetna, but the
verdict did not specify which of the plaintiff’s various theories of recovery it was based
on: breach of contract, breach of negligent misrepresentation, or breach of implied
warranty. (Id. at pp. 86-88.) The trial court denied McKenzie’s request for attorney fees
because he did not meet his burden of showing the verdict was based on his breach of
contract claim. (Id. at pp. 87-88.)
In affirming the judgment, the McKenzie court reasoned: “The net verdict and
judgment were in [McKenzie’s] favor, but there is no way to ascertain, in the absence of
special jury findings, on which of the theories of recovery (breach of contract, negligent
misrepresentation, or breach of implied warranty) the jury mainly based its award to
[McKenzie]. Those theories do not all call for identical determinations of fact . . . . The
three theories of recovery were thus not merely the same cause of action under different
guises. It is thus necessary to determine whether all those causes of action were
‘action[s] on [the] contract,’ as that phrase is used in Civil Code section1717.”
(McKenzie v. Kaiser-Aetna, supra, 55 Cal.App.3d at pp. 88-89, italics added.) In sum,
because the entire verdict could have been based on McKenzie’s negligence, claim,
McKenzie could not recover his attorney fees under Civil Code section 1717. (McKenzie
v. Kaiser-Aetna, supra, at p. 89.)
As the trial court observed in its statement of decision, McKenzie does not support
the Bank’s argument that various theories of recovery must be “the same cause of action
under different guises” in order to be inextricably intertwined. Rather, in using the
20
quoted phrase, the court was only pointing out that McKenzie did not meet his burden of
showing he prevailed on his breach of contract claim. Indeed, McKenzie did not address
whether the plaintiff’s breach of contract claims were “inextricably intertwined” with his
nonfee claims. (McKenzie v. Kaiser-Aetna, supra, 55 Cal.App.3d at pp. 88-89.)
The present case is also unlike Heppler v. J.M. Peters Co. (1999) 73 Cal.App.4th
1265, which involved attorney fees that were readily and fairly allocable among several
defendants. The plaintiffs in Heppler sued a developer for construction defects, and the
developer cross-complained against several subcontractors for indemnity. (Id. at p.
1273.) After the developer assigned its indemnity rights to the plaintiffs as part of a
settlement, the plaintiffs proceeded to a seven-week trial against four of the
subcontractors. (Id. at pp. 1273-1274, 1297.) The jury found in favor of all but one of
the subcontractors, Martin, and the trial court ordered Martin to pay the plaintiffs’
attorney fees for the entire seven-week trial, pursuant to Civil Code section 1717.
(Heppler v. J.M. Peters Co., supra, at pp. 1274, 1293, 1296.) On appeal, the court
reversed the fee award and remanded the matter to determine the amount of fees that
“should [have been] properly allocated against Martin.” (Id. at pp. 1297-1298, fn.
omitted.)
The Heppler court explained that it reversed the fee award because Martin bore
limited responsibility for the plaintiffs’ damages and trial time: “Martin’s part of the case
could have been tried in considerably less time than seven weeks had the trial not taken
up issues that involved the other nonsettlling subcontractors. It strikes us as eminently
21
unfair to tag Martin with all of plaintiffs’ attorney fees for the entire seven-week trial. [¶]
. . . [¶] Not all the issues involving Martin’s case were integrally associated with the
other issues in the case; at the very least, some of them could have been severed and
isolated for purposes of the attorney fees award. Certainly, there were multiple days of
trial that were devoted exclusively to soil issues.” (Heppler v. J.M. Peters Co., supra, 73
Cal.App.4th at p. 1297.)
In contrast to Heppler, the court here reasonably concluded that the fees it
awarded plaintiff were not readily severable among his claims against the Bank and the
other defendants. As the court explained: “Because the Bank initially failed to have the
required insurance, this factor brought others into the fray and made the ensuing
discovery and law and motion practice between the parties most complex. . . .” Counsel
for each party appeared in “dozens of court appearances,” and there were “dozens of
depositions,” until “the dust finally settled.” “[N]o party was free from the clutches of
others until just after the trial of Phase I and the [s]ettlement of [February 2010 between
plaintiff and Federal].” “[U]p to the time of bifurcation of contract related matters from
the negligence matters . . . there was no talk or pleadings by anyone suggesting how the
complex matters would be conducted as a trial.”
The Bank argues the award should have been limited to the fees and costs plaintiff
incurred in pursuing the Bank for the unpaid rent and property taxes, because plaintiff’s
claim that the Bank breached the lease by failing to obtain all risk insurance and rebuild
22
the building were “unadjudicated,” and plaintiff “abandoned” these claims by failing to
proceed on them in Phase II of the trial. Not so.
As the court explained, plaintiff had to pursue the insurance defendants through
years of litigation to obtain the benefit of the bargain he had under the lease with the
Bank, including the replacement cost of the building. Moreover, the replacement cost of
the building was determined during the Phase I trial against the Bank and DMS, in 2009,
and once the Bank finally stipulated, in February 2011, that it had breached the lease by
failing to pay rent and property taxes through December 2004, there were no further
issues to be determined between plaintiff and the Bank in the Phase II trial.
The Bank further argues plaintiff’s nonfee claims against the insurance defendants
were “based solely on their alleged separate and independently wrongful conduct.” For
example, the Bank argues plaintiff’s claims against his insurer, AMCO, “rested on”
AMCO’s “independent breach of its insurance policy and bad faith refusal to pay benefits
for the full replacement cost of the building.” The Bank claims the award erroneously
includes $64,770.24 for fees plaintiff incurred in successfully opposing AMCO’s motion
for summary judgment against him, because the motion had “nothing to do” with the
Bank. We disagree.
The award, including the $64,770.24 portion awarded for defending against the
AMCO motion, is presumed correct on appeal (Oliveira v. Kiesler (2012) 206
Cal.App.4th 1349, 1362.) As the party challenging the award, the Bank had a duty to
designate an adequate record on appeal to overcome this presumption and support its
23
claim that the $64,770.24 portion of the award was unauthorized because the AMCO
motion involved issues unrelated to plaintiff’s fee claims against the Bank. (Maria P. v.
Riles (1987) 43 Cal.3d 1281, 1295 [“It is the burden of the party challenging the fee
award on appeal to provide an adequate record to assess error.”].) The record does not
include any of the AMCO motion papers, nor does it indicate the basis of the motion.
This is fatal to the Bank’s claim of error regarding the $64,770.24 portion of the award.3
The Bank also claims the award erroneously includes fees and costs incurred in
connection with the Phase I “negligence” trial against the Bank and DMS, including fees
and costs for depositions, other discovery, and other services performed by plaintiff’s
attorneys before the 50-day pretrial cut-off date for designating experts (Code Civ. Proc.,
§ 2034.230) in the Phase I trial. Again, we disagree.
On this record, we cannot say that some of plaintiff’s so-called negligence-related
fees and costs were not attributable to the Bank’s destruction of improvements to the
property and, hence, to plaintiff’s breach of lease claims against the Bank. Further, the
case was not bifurcated until September 2009, and before that time it was apparently
impractical for plaintiff to separate negligence-related fees and costs from any fees and
costs he incurred solely in connection with his breach of lease claims against the Bank.
3 In its statement of decision, the court found that plaintiff’s defense of the
AMCO motion was “necessary” and recalled it issued a “complicated” tentative decision
denying the motion, but the court did not discuss the basis of the motion. Addressing the
reasonableness of the $64,770.24 request, the court noted that the attorney who defended
against the motion, Ronald D. Kent, was a business litigation and insurance specialist
whose rates were “notably higher” but reasonable for such specialists. The court noted
that Mr. Kent also attended “a full day’s mediation.”
24
On this record, there was no practical distinction to be drawn between the two. As noted,
apportionment of fees and costs among contractual and other claims “is not required
when the issues are ‘so interrelated that it would have been impossible to separate them
into claims for which attorney fees are properly awarded and claims for which they are
not.’” (Amtower v. Photon Dynamics Inc., supra, 158 Cal.App.4th at p. 1604.)
Finally, the statement of decision shows the court painstakingly reviewed the
billings and costs of each of plaintiff’s attorneys, and excluded many of plaintiff’s fees
and costs from the final award. The court noted the Bank made “much ado of the fact
that there was substantial attorney time involved with some of plaintiff’s matters which
they call collateral,” but plaintiff’s attorneys had “themselves” “eliminated alleged ‘side-
track’ attorney fee claims.” In sum, we find no error of law or abuse of discretion in the
court’s inclusion of any of the so-called collateral items in the final award.
IV. ANALYSIS/PLAINTIFF’S CONVERSION CLAIM
On his appeal, plaintiff claims the trial court erroneously granted the Bank’s
motion in limine for judgment on the pleadings on plaintiff’s second cause of action
against the Bank for conversion. In his complaint, plaintiff alleged the Bank converted,
to its own use and benefit, insurance proceeds it received to replace interior
improvements to the building, rather than pay the proceeds to plaintiff or use them to
rebuild and restore the building, as the lease required. Plaintiff sought compensatory and
punitive damages for the Bank’s alleged tortious conduct in converting the insurance
proceeds.
25
We conclude the motion was properly granted. Contrary to plaintiff’s argument,
his cause of action for conversion alleged no tortious conduct by the Bank independent of
its breaches of the lease. As such, it did not state a cause of action in tort, and was
properly dismissed in light of plaintiff’s overlapping breach of lease claim.
A. Standard of Review
“A motion for judgment on the pleadings is analogous to a general demurrer, but
is made after the time to file a demurrer has expired.” (International Assn. of
Firefighters, Local 230 v. City of San Jose (2011) 195 Cal.App.4th 1179, 1196; Code
Civ. Proc., § 438, subd. (f)(2).) We review judgments on the pleadings de novo. (Miller
v. Campbell, Warburton, Fitzsimmons, Smith, Mendel & Pastore (2008) 162 Cal.App.4th
1331, 1337.) We assume the truth of all well pleaded allegations of the complaint, along
with matters subject to judicial notice, and determine whether the facts alleged state a
cause of action. (Alliance Mortgage Co. v. Rothwell (1995) 10 Cal.4th 1226, 1232.)4
4 Plaintiff argues the standard of review is the same as for a nonsuit. The case he
cites for this proposition, Miller v. Campbell, Warburton, Fitzsimmons, Smith, Mendel &
Pastore, supra, 162 Cal.App.4th 1331, did not so hold, but properly applied the de novo
standard in reviewing a motion in limine for judgment on the pleadings. (Id. at pp. 1337-
1338.) Plaintiff also points out that motions in limine are a disfavored means of bringing
case-dispositive statutory motions, including a motion for judgment on the pleadings (id.
at pp. 1337-1338; Pellegrini v. Weiss (2008) 165 Cal.App.4th 515, 530), but here there
was no prejudice. The motion was properly decided based on the allegations of
plaintiff’s operative complaint. Additionally, the trial court had inherent authority to
consider the motion, even though it could have been brought earlier. (Coshow v. City of
Escondido (2005) 132 Cal.App.4th 687, 701-702 [court properly exercised its inherent
powers over the proceedings in construing motion in limine to exclude evidence as
motion for judgment on the pleadings].)
26
B. Analysis
Conversion is a strict liability tort, committed by “‘the wrongful exercise of
dominion over the property of another. The elements of a conversion claim are: (1) the
plaintiff’s ownership or right to possession of the property; (2) the defendant’s
conversion by a wrongful act or disposition of property rights; and (3) damages.’” (Los
Angeles Federal Credit Union v. Madatyan (2012) 209 Cal.App.4th 1383, 1387.) No
showing of knowledge, intent, negligence, or bad faith on the part of the defendant is
required. Rather, conversion “‘rests upon the unwarranted interference by defendant with
the dominion over the property of the plaintiff from which injury to the latter results.’”
(Burlesci v. Petersen (1998) 68 Cal.App.4th 1062, 1066.)
“Contract and tort are different branches of law. Contract law exists to enforce
legally binding agreements between parties; tort law is designed to vindicate social
policy. [Citation.] . . . [¶] Conduct amounting to a breach of contract becomes tortious
only when it also violates an independent duty arising from principles of tort law. . . .
‘“[A]n omission to perform a contract obligation is never a tort, unless that omission is
also an omission of a legal duty.”’ [Citation.]” (Applied Equipment Corp. v. Litton Saudi
Arabia Ltd. (1994) 7 Cal.4th 503, 514-515; Robinson Helicopter Co., Inc. v. Dana Corp.
(2004) 34 Cal.4th 979, 991 [the plaintiff’s fraud and intentional misrepresentation claims
were independent of its contract claims in part because the defendant’s fraudulent
conduct exposed the plaintiff to third party claims].)
27
Here, and as a matter of law, the Bank had no legal duty to pay plaintiff any part
of the insurance proceeds it received from Federal, hold the proceeds in trust for plaintiff,
or use them to rebuild and restore the building—independent of the Bank’s duties under
the lease. Plaintiff points to no authority, outside the terms of the lease, imposing any
such legal duty on the Bank. Thus, the motion for judgment on the pleadings was
properly granted and the conversion claim was properly dismissed.5
Plaintiff argues the Bank’s conduct in converting the insurance proceeds for its
own benefit was tortious, independent of its breach of the lease, because plaintiff alleged
the Bank lied to him and caused him collateral damages, beyond its breach of the lease.
Specifically, plaintiff alleged the Bank lied to him after the fire when it represented it
would rebuild the building, but then terminated the lease, stopped paying rent and other
charges, and delayed its receipt of the insurance proceeds from Federal until after the
lease was terminated so Federal would not issue a check payable to the Bank and
plaintiff. Plaintiff alleged he suffered emotional distress, had to borrow money at “hard
5 Plaintiff points out he prevailed against the Bank’s 2008 motion for summary
adjudication of the conversion claim, but this is not dispositive. Though the court
previously found there were triable issues on the conversion claim, the issue on the
motion in limine for judgment on the pleadings was whether the claim stated a cause of
action independent of plaintiff’s breach of lease claim, and it did not. There is no
inconsistency in the court’s rulings, and even if there were, the motion for judgment on
the pleadings was properly granted. (Coshow v. City of Escondido, supra, 132
Cal.App.4th at p. 701 [motion for judgment on pleadings properly granted even though
court previously overruled moving parties’ demurrers and denied their motions for
summary adjudication of claims and summary judgment].)
28
money rates,” and was forced to sell the building at a loss due to the Bank’s wrongful
conduct justifying an award of punitive damages.
None of these allegations state a cause of action for conversion against the Bank,
independent of its breach of the lease. As explained, the Bank had no duty to plaintiff to
use insurance proceeds for plaintiff’s benefit, independent of its duties under the lease.
Lastly, plaintiff argues Madatyan favors reversal of the judgment dismissing his
conversion claim. We disagree. In that case, sufficient evidence supported the trial
court’s ruling that an auto body shop and its owners were liable to a credit union for
converting insurance proceeds in which the credit union had an equitable lien,
unbeknownst to the shop or its owners. The credit union financed the purchase of a
Bentley by a customer of the shop and had a lien on the Bentley. The customer
purchased insurance on the Bentley, but did not name the credit union as the loss payee,
contrary to the terms of the loan. (Los Angeles Federal Credit Union v. Madatyan,
supra, 209 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1385-1387.)
After the Bentley was damaged, the customer received an insurance check payable
to himself and the shop, and asked one of the shop owners to endorse the check to him.
The shop owner endorsed the check, and the customer abandoned the Bentley in the shop
without having it repaired. The credit union prevailed on its conversion claim against the
shop and its owners, even though none of the defendants knew the credit union had an
interest in the car or an equitable lien in the insurance proceeds. (Los Angeles Federal
29
Credit Union v. Madatyan, supra, 209 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1387-1388, citing Burlesci v.
Petersen, supra, 68 Cal.App.4th at p. 1066.)
Madatyan is distinguishable and does not assist plaintiff’s argument because there
was no privity of contract between the defendants, who converted the insurance proceeds
to the customer’s benefit, and the plaintiff credit union which had an equitable lien in the
insurance proceeds. Thus, the plaintiff credit union’s only recourse or means of
recovering its equitable interest in the insurance proceeds against the shop and shop
owner defendants was a suit in tort for conversion. Here, in contrast, plaintiff had a
contractual claim against the Bank for its alleged conversion of the insurance proceeds
based on the lease, and the lease afforded plaintiff adequate recourse against the Bank for
its alleged conversion of the insurance proceeds.
V. DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. The parties shall bear their respective costs on appeal.
(Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278.)
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
KING
J.
We concur:
McKINSTER
Acting P. J.
CODRINGTON
J.
30