Filed 12/13/22 Smalley v. Subaru of American CA4/3
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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 THREE
MICHAEL SMALLEY,
Plaintiff and Appellant, G059904 (consol. w/ G060441)
v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2017-00901612)
SUBARU OF AMERICA, INC., OPI NION
Defendant and Respondent.
Appeal from postjudgment orders of the Superior Court of Orange County,
Charles Margines, Judge. Appeal No. G059904 affirmed. Appeal No. G060441
dismissed.
Rosner, Barry & Babbitt, Hallen D. Rosner, Arlyn L. Escalante; Strategic
Legal Practices, Payam Shahian; California Consumer Attorneys and Michael H.
Rosenstein for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Dykema Gossett, James S. Azadian, Derek S. Whitefield, Cory L. Webster
and Nina Moreno for Defendant and Respondent.
Michael Smalley sued Subaru of America, Inc. (Subaru) under California’s
lemon law. Pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 998 (section 998), Subaru made
a settlement offer to Smalley (the section 998 offer). Smalley did not accept the section
998 offer and the matter went to trial. At trial, Smalley prevailed, but recovered less than
the section 998 offer. In accordance with the fee shifting rules of section 998, the trial
court awarded Smalley his preoffer costs, but awarded Subaru its postoffer costs.
Smalley appealed.
We conclude the section 998 offer was valid, reasonable, and made in good
faith. Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s costs awards.
Because of the pendency of the appeal on the costs award s, the trial court
deferred a ruling on Smalley’s motion for attorney fees. Smalley also appealed from the
order delaying ruling on the attorney fees motion. We conclude that order is not
appealable, and no grounds exist to construe it as an extraordinary writ. That appeal shall
be dismissed.
STATEMENT OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In 2013, Smalley bought a 2014 Subaru Forester. While under warranty,
the vehicle suffered defects Subaru could not fix. Smalley’s request to Subaru to
repurchase the vehicle was denied.
In July 2016, Smalley filed a complaint against Subaru alleging violations
of the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act (Civ. Code, § 1790 et seq.) (Song-Beverly
Act) and the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act (15 U.S.C. § 2301 et seq.). In May 2017,
Subaru served a section 998 offer on Smalley, through his attorneys. The section 998
offer reads in full as follows:
“To Plaintiff and Plaintiff’s attorneys of record:
“Pursuant to California Code of Civil Procedure section 998, in full
settlement of the claims made by plaintiff Michael Smalley (‘Plaintiff’) against defendant
2
Subaru of America, Inc. (‘SOA’), SOA offers to pay Plaintiff the sum of Thirty Five
Thousand and One Dollars ($35,001.00) plus either one of the following at Plaintiff’s
election: (1) Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000.00) for Plaintiff’s costs, including
attorney’s fees, or (2) Plaintiff’s costs, including reasonably incurred attorney’s fees, to
be determined by the Court. In exchange, Plaintiff shall do each of the following:
(1) file a Request for Dismissal of Plaintiff’s action against SOA with prejudice; and
(2) return the subject 2014 Subaru Forester to SOA, by delivering possession and
transferring free and clear title to SOA after receiving payment from SOA of the sum of
Thirty Five Thousand and One Dollars ($35,001.00) described above.
“If Plaintiff accepts this offer, the attorney of record for Plaintiff shall,
“1. Sign here: ;
“2. Elect one of the following by checking a box:
“ □ Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000.00) for Plaintiff’s costs, including
attorney’s fees, or
“ □ Plaintiff’s costs, including reasonably incurred attorney’s fees, to
date to be determined by the Court; and
“3. Return the executed offer to attorneys of record for SOA.
“If this offer is not accepted within the time prescribed by section 998 of
the California Code of Civil Procedure, it shall be deemed withdrawn and cannot be
brought in as evidence by Plaintiff at trial.” (Some capitalization omitted.)
Smalley objected to the section 998 offer in writing as “not reasonable.”
The case continued to trial, and a jury awarded Smalley damages of
$20,555.74 and a civil penalty of $7,000, for a total recovery of $27,555.74. Judgment
was entered in July 2020.
Smalley and Subaru each filed a memorandum of costs, and each filed a
motion to strike or tax the other’s costs. The trial court found the section 998 offer was
valid and exceeded the amount awarded to Smalley by the jury. The court awarded
3
Smalley $1,351.17 in preoffer costs, and awarded Subaru $16,684.92 in postoffer costs.
Smalley filed a notice of appeal from that postjudgment order (appeal No. G059904).
Smalley also filed a motion for attorney fees. The trial court stayed ruling
on the attorney fees motion because that motion would depend on the validity of the
section 998 offer, which was the same issue already on appeal. Smalley filed a notice of
appeal from the trial court’s postjudgment order staying the motion for attorney fees
(appeal No. G060441). This court granted Smalley’s unopposed motion to consolidate
the two appeals.
DISCUSSION
Our review of the section 998 offer is subject to two different standards of
review: Whether the section 998 offer was valid is a question of statutory interpretation
we review de novo, and whether the offer was reasonable and made in good faith is
reviewed for abuse of discretion. (Covert v. FCA USA, LLC (2022) 73 Cal.App.5th 821,
832, 834 (Covert).)
I
THE SECTION 998 OFFER WAS VALID
As the offering party, Subaru had the burden of demonstrating the
settlement offer was valid under section 998. (Covert, supra, 73 Cal.App.5th at p. 832.)
The validity of a section 998 offer is determined as of the date it is served. (Covert,
supra, at p. 833.)
The section 998 offer met the basic requirements of section 998,
subdivision (b): It was in writing, contained the terms and conditions of the settlement,
and included a provision allowing Smalley to indicate his acceptance of the offer.
“To be valid, an offer under section 998 may include nonmonetary terms
and conditions, but it must be unconditional. [Citation.] ‘[F]rom the perspective of the
offeree, the offer must be sufficiently specific to permit the recipient meaningfully to
4
evaluate it and make a reasoned decision whether to accept it, or reject it and bear the risk
he may have to shoulder his opponent’s litigation costs and expenses. [Citation.] Thus,
the offeree must be able to clearly evaluate the worth of the extended offer.’ [Citation.]”
(MacQuiddy v. Mercedes-Benz USA, LLC (2015) 233 Cal.App.4th 1036, 1050
(MacQuiddy).) The section 998 offer was for $35,001, plus fees and costs of either
$10,000 or the reasonable amount of fees and costs incurred to that date, to be determined
by the court, in exchange for dismissal of the action with prejudice and transfer of title to
and possession of the vehicle. Smalley could clearly evaluate the offer’s worth.
Smalley argues the section 998 offer was invalid because it did not specify
whether he would be deemed the prevailing party for purposes of a motion for attorney
fees. Section 998 does not require an offer to include language regarding the prevailing
party, and the court “may not impose any additional requirements or limitations that do
not appear on the face of the statute. [Citation.]” (Rouland v. Pacific Specialty Ins. Co.
(2013) 220 Cal.App.4th 280, 288.) Given that the section 998 offer provided that
Smalley would receive his costs and attorney fees, either in the set amount of $10,000 or
in an amount to be determined by the court, his argument the section 998 offer was
invalid because it did not include a statement that he was the prevailing party borders on
specious.
Smalley relies on In re Volkswagen “Clean Diesel” Mktg., Sales Practices,
& Prods. Liab. Litig. (N.D.Cal. Sept. 8, 2020) 2020 U.S. Dist. Lexis 163603
(Volkswagen), which we find to be inapplicable here. In Volkswagen, the plaintiffs opted
out of settlements with Volkswagen over claims Volkswagen’s “‘clean diesel’” engines
had been rigged to evade emissions test procedures. (Id. at pp. *189-*191.) Claims
under the Song-Beverly Act and the Consumer Legal Remedies Act (Civ. Code, § 1750
et seq.) (CLRA) were decided at a trial against other “Bellwether plaintiffs” and in favor
of Volkswagen. (Id. at p. *192.) Volkswagen then made new settlement offers to each of
the plaintiffs under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, rule 68, of “‘an amount for
5
Plaintiff’s costs (including reasonable attorneys’ fees, if any) incurred in connection with
this action through the date on which this offer is made, in an amount to be determined by
the Court.’ [Citation.]” (Volkswagen, supra, at p. *193.) The plaintiffs accepted the rule
68 offers, and thereafter requested almost $1.5 million in attorney fees and over $120,000
in costs. (Volkswagen, supra, at pp. *192-*193.)
Volkswagen took the position the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover any
attorney fees, arguing that because the fee-shifting claims under the Song-Beverly Act
and the CLRA had been determined in the trial of the Bellwether plaintiffs’ cases to be
not viable, the amount of reasonable attorney fees for the settling plaintiffs was zero.
(Volkswagen, supra, at p. *194.) The federal district court rejected this argument and
awarded attorney fees to the plaintiffs. (Volkswagen, supra, at pp. *194-*200.)
Importantly, Volkswagen’s argument the plaintiffs were not entitled to attorney fees was
not based on the lack of a “prevailing party” term in the rule 68 offers but rather on the
merits of the decisions on the same claims in the Bellwether plaintiffs’ trial. Smalley’s
fear Subaru would make the same losing argument as Volkswagen because there was no
prevailing party designation in the section 998 offer lacks merit.
Smalley also relies on MacQuiddy, supra, 233 Cal.App.4th at page 1048, to
support his contention that without being deemed the prevailing party in the section 998
offer, he might not be entitled to fees, costs, and expenses. In MacQuiddy, the defendant
car manufacturer admitted liability for failing to repurchase or replace a car (MacQuiddy,
supra, at pp. 1040-1041), and the parties stipulated to a restitution award (id. at p. 1042).
A trial was held solely on whether to impose a civil penalty against the defendant; the
jury found the defendant had not willfully failed to repurchase or replace the car, and did
not impose a penalty. (Id. at p. 1043.) A section 998 offer by the defendant was invalid
because it offered to repurchase the car “‘in an undamaged condition, save normal wear
and tear’”; the terms undamaged condition and normal wear and tear were undefined.
The lack of a prevailing party designation was not mentioned by the court. (MacQuiddy,
6
supra, at p. 1050.) The appellate court concluded that while the plaintiff was not a
prevailing party under Civil Code section 1794, subdivision (d), he was the prevailing
party under Code of Civil Procedure section 1032. (MacQuiddy, supra, at p. 1051.)
Despite Smalley’s argument to the contrary, MacQuiddy does not bear on whether “it is
essential for a Song-Beverly plaintiff to be deemed the prevailing party when he accepts a
998 or settlement offer.”
Smalley also contends the section 998 offer was invalid because Subaru did
not offer to pay Smalley’s expenses. In a claim under the Song-Beverly Act, a prevailing
plaintiff is entitled to recover costs and expenses (Civ. Code, § 1794, subd. (d)); for
purposes of that statute, expenses encompasses out-of-pocket expenses beyond the costs
identified in Code of Civil Procedure section 1033.5 (Jensen v. BMW of North America,
Inc. (1995) 35 Cal.App.4th 112, 137-138). In this case, the trial court awarded Smalley
his preoffer costs and expenses, specifically noting that under the Song-Beverly Act he
was entitled to recover for more than the items listed in Code of Civil Procedure section
1033.5.
Although the section 998 offer did not address expenses as distinguished
from costs, it was nevertheless valid. “Where a section 998 offer is silent on costs and
fees, the prevailing party is entitled to costs and, if authorized by statute or contract, fees.
[Citations.]” (Engle v. Copenbarger & Copenbarger, LLP (2007) 157 Cal.App.4th 165,
168.) Therefore, even if the section 998 offer could be construed as failing to include
expenses, Smalley would have been entitled to recover his expenses if he had accepted
the offer, and the failure to include the word expenses in the section 998 offer did not
make it invalid.
II
THE SECTION 998 OFFER WAS REASONABLE AND MADE IN GOOD FAITH
Because the offer was valid, the burden shifts to Smalley as the offeree to
demonstrate the offer was unreasonable or was not made in good faith. (Id. at p. 833.) If
7
the actual judgment is more favorable to the offeror than was the offer, it is prima facie
evidence of the offer’s reasonableness. (Covert, supra, 73 Cal.App.5th at pp. 833-834.)
The amount of the section 998 offer was more than the total jury award
(damages plus penalties), and therefore the section 998 offer is presumptively reasonable.
(Covert, supra, 73 Cal.App.5th at pp. 833-834.) Subaru offered to pay Smalley $35,001;
the jury awarded Smalley $27,555,74 in damages and penalties. Smalley claims he
recovered more after trial than the section 998 offer based on a convoluted analysis of the
attorney fees incurred to the date of the section 998 offer and those incurred after that
date. The statute itself makes clear that postoffer costs are not to be considered in
determining whether Smalley obtained a more favorable judgment than the section 998
offer. (§ 998, subd. (c)(2)(A).) If preoffer attorney fees and costs are considered, the
result is the same. Smalley contends he had incurred $11,508.17 in fees and costs before
the section 998 offer, which is more than the flat $10,000 fees and costs portion of the
section 998 offer. But if the actual fees and costs are added to the actual award after the
jury trial, the total of $39,063.81 is still far less than the section 998 offer of $45,001 or
$35,001 plus reasonable fees and costs awarded by the court.
The offer was reasonable on its face because the amount to be paid to
Smalley was greater than the amount he recovered in damages and penalties, and the set
costs and attorney fees amount of $10,000 was close to the $11,508.17 he had actually
incurred to that date.
In Varney Entertainment Group, Inc. v. Avon Plastics, Inc. (2021) 61
Cal.App.5th 222, 235 (Varney), another panel of this court concluded a settlement offer
extinguished an earlier section 998 offer because the terms of the two offers were
materially inconsistent as to which claims would be resolved, the designation of the
prevailing party, and the time period for which attorney fees and costs could be claimed.
The issue before the court had nothing to do with the validity or reasonableness of a
section 998 offer; the only issue was whether the later offer to enter into a stipulated
8
judgment on a single cause of action extinguished the earlier section 998 offer to settle all
causes of action, which had never been accepted or rejected. (Varney, supra, at p. 234.)
Despite Smalley’s argument to the contrary, Varney does not lead to a conclusion that
Smalley recovered more after trial than the section 998 offer provided.
Smalley argues the section 998 offer was not reasonable because it was
premature. “[The policy behind section 998] is to encourage settlement by providing a
strong financial disincentive to a party—whether it be a plaintiff or a defendant—who
fails to achieve a better result than that party could have achieved by accepting his or her
opponent’s settlement offer. (This is the stick. The carrot is that by awarding costs to the
putative settler the statute provides a financial incentive to make reasonable settlement
offers.)” (Bank of San Pedro (1992) 3 Cal.4th 797, 804; see Duale v. Mercedes-Benz
USA, LLC (2007) 148 Cal.App.4th 718, 725 (Duale).) Subaru produced discovery
responses in response to a motion to compel after the section 998 offer had expired.
Smalley fails to make any showing that these discovery responses made the value of the
case clearer, or that he was not able to determine the reasonable value of the case at the
time the offer was made because he did not have the responses at that time.
Whether an offer is made in good faith is based on whether, at the time it
was made, it carried a reasonable prospect of acceptance by the offeree. (Covert, supra,
73 Cal.App.5th at p. 834.) “‘First, was the 998 offer within the “range of reasonably
possible results” at trial, considering all of the information the offeror knew or reasonably
should have known? [Citation.] Second, did the offeror know that the offeree had
sufficient information, based on what the offeree knew or reasonably should have known,
to assess whether the “offer [was] a reasonable one,” such that the offeree had a “fair
opportunity to intelligently evaluate the offer”?’ [Citations.]” (Ibid.)
Smalley contends the section 998 offer was designed to subvert the Song-
Beverly Act’s consumer protections. Reck v. FCA US LLC (2021) 64 Cal.App.5th 682
(Reck), on which Smalley relies, actually supports the opposite position. In that case, the
9
plaintiff rejected a section 998 offer. (Reck, supra, at p. 688.) Two months later, at a
mandatory settlement conference after trial had commenced, the parties settled the case
for more than what had been offered in the section 998 offer. (Reck, supra, at p. 689.)
Pursuant to Civil Code section 1794, the trial court awarded the plaintiff attorney fees
incurred through the date of the section 998 offer, but denied attorney fees after that date,
finding the case was not complex and the fees were neither reasonable nor necessary.
(Reck, supra, at p. 690.) The appellate court concluded the trial court had erred by
denying attorney fees because the plaintiff had obtained a better result at the settlement
conference than had been offered in the section 998 offer. “Allowing the trial court to
categorically deny attorney fees simply because the plaintiff turned down a Code of Civil
Procedure section 998 offer that is inferior to their ultimate recovery places too large a
settlement club in the court’s hands. In making the decision to reject a section 998 offer,
the plaintiff takes on the risk that he or she will not obtain a better result and will be
deprived of postoffer attorney fees and be made to pay the other side’s fees or costs.
Plaintiffs must be free to take these kinds of calculated risks without fear that the trial
court may deny reasonably incurred postoffer attorney fees even after successfully
litigating their matter to a more favorable resolution. To endorse a different rule would
create inordinate pressure on plaintiffs to accept low or unreasonable section 998
settlement offers, and undermine the prosecution of meritorious civil rights or public
interest litigation and the legislative interest in awarding a prevailing plaintiff their
reasonable attorney fees and costs under mandatory fee-shifting statutes.” (Reck, supra,
at p. 698.) The present case, by contrast, involves a plaintiff who did not obtain a better
result than the section 998 offer.
Smalley also argues the fee-shifting provisions of section 998 and Civil
Code section 1794 must be read in his favor. California case law is to the contrary. In
Murillo v. Fleetwood Enterprises, Inc. (1998) 17 Cal.4th 985, 1001 (Murillo), the
California Supreme Court held: “Although the Legislature’s purpose in enacting the
10
Song-Beverly Act was admittedly to encourage consumers to enforce their rights under
the Act, nothing in Civil Code section 1794(d) suggests this legislative purpose should
override the Legislature’s desire—expressed in section 998—to encourage the settlement
of lawsuits.” The plaintiff in Murillo rejected a settlement offer and the defendants
obtained a complete victory at trial. (Murillo, supra, at p. 1000.) The Supreme Court,
having thoroughly examined the language and purpose of Civil Code section 1794 and
Code of Civil Procedure sections 998 and 1032 as well as the cases interpreting those
statutes, determined that when the plaintiff in a Song-Beverly Act case does not obtain a
better recovery than the unaccepted section 998 offer, the trial court does not err in
awarding the prevailing defendants costs and reasonable expert witness fees. (Murillo,
supra, at pp. 1000-1001.)
In Duale, supra, 148 Cal.App.4th 718, the appellate court applied the
Murillo holding to a situation where the plaintiff prevails at trial, but in a total amount
less than the amount of the defendant’s section 998 offer, which the plaintiff had not
accepted. The appellate court concluded that in such a case, the plaintiff was not entitled
to recover costs and attorney fees after rejecting the section 998 offer. (Duale, supra, at
p. 724.) “We see no reason not to extend the Supreme Court’s reasoning in Murillo to
include the circumstances posed here. Nothing in the relevant statutes or applicable case
law suggests the Legislature intended to exempt lemon law plaintiffs from the ‘carrot and
stick’ of section 998’s provisions encouraging settlement of pending cases. [Citation.]
Nor is the Song-Beverly Act’s purpose inconsistent with the application of the section
998 provision restricting the ability of prevailing plaintiffs to recover attorney fees and
costs if they fail to recover more at trial than a rejected pretrial settlement offer. The
[A]ct allows prevailing injured car buyers to recover attorney fees and costs in order to
render such lawsuits ‘economically feasible’ [citation]; but declining to award such a
buyer postoffer attorney fees and costs if he has refused a reasonable pretrial settlement
offer does not defeat that purpose. An injured plaintiff may be encouraged to sue by the
11
prospect of recovering his costs if successful, but no articulated public policy is served by
allowing him to maintain a lawsuit that loses its economic viability by virtue of the
seller’s willingness to settle on terms better than those a jury will award.” (Duale, supra,
148 Cal.App.4th at p. 728; see Covert, supra, 73 Cal.App.5th at p. 837 [“a valid and
reasonable section 998 offer by the seller, where the buyer recovers less than the offer,
precludes recovery by the buyer of postoffer attorneys’ fees and costs under Civil Code
section 1794, subdivision (d)”].)
Smalley contends Subaru acted in bad faith by failing to respond to his
objections or amend the section 998 offer. Nothing in California law requires a response
by an offering party when the offeree raises objections or questions regarding the offer.
Smalley’s objections to the 998 offer did not request an amendment to the offer or
propose a countersoffer. Smalley’s objections conclude, “Plaintiff objects to Defendant’s
998 Offer as it is not reasonable.” This is a rejection of the 998 offer. Neither Subaru
nor Smalley was precluded from making another section 998 offer within the statutory
time period or another type of settlement offer. But the failure to do so is not bad faith.
III
THE ORDER STAYING A RULING ON THE MOTION FOR ATTORNEY FEES I S NOT AN
APPEALABLE ORDER
Smalley argues the trial court abused its discretion by failing to rule on the
motion for attorney fees. Subaru contends the order is not appealable.
The trial court’s ruling on the motion for attorney fees reads, in relevant
part, as follows: “Each side also file[d] a motion to tax the other’s memorandum of costs.
The motions to tax costs required the court to determine the validity of defendant’s Code
of Civil Procedure section 998 offer to compromise (998 offer) served on plaintiff on
5/10/17. This issue was forcefully contested. Defendant argued that plaintiff was not
entitled to his post-offer costs because its 998 offer was valid and plaintiff failed to do
better than the offer at trial. Plaintiff, on the other hand, argued that the 998 offer was
12
invalid/void and made in bad faith; and that it was therefore ineffective to shift costs
under Code of Civil Procedure section 998.
“The court heard and ruled on the motions to tax costs on 12/16/20. After
determining that defendant’s 998 offer was certain and valid, and that plaintiff had failed
to obtain a better judgment than the offer at trial, the court granted defendant’s motion to
tax costs in part by taxing plaintiff’s memorandum of costs by the amount of $74,182.28,
resulting in a costs award in favor of plaintiff and against defendant in the total amount of
$1,351.17 (reflecting plaintiff’s pre-offer costs only). . . . The court also granted
plaintiff’s motion to tax costs in part by taxing defendant’s memorandum of costs by
$1,710.09, resulting in a costs award in favor of defendant and against plaintiff in the
amount of $16,684.92. . . .
“On 2/10/21, plaintiff filed a notice of appeal of the 12/16/20 rulings on the
parties’ motions to tax costs. As such, the validity of the 998 offer is currently pending
before the Court of Appeal. [¶] Plaintiff’s motion for attorney fees also encompasses the
validity of the exact same 998 offer. Given that the validity of the 998 offer is currently
an issue pending before the Court of Appeal, this motion is presently stayed pending the
outcome on appeal. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 916 [‘the perfecting of an appeal stays
proceedings in the trial court upon the judgment or order appealed from or upon the
matters embraced therein or affected thereby, including enforcement of the judgment or
order, but the trial court may proceed upon any other matter embraced in the action and
not affected by the judgment or order’ (Emphasis added)].)”
Not all postjudgment orders are appealable, despite the broad language of
Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1, subdivision (a)(2). (Roden v. AmerisourceBergen
Corp. (2005) 130 Cal.App.4th 211, 213.) Postjudgment orders that do not make a final
determination of the rights or obligations of the parties, and that anticipate or are
preparatory to later proceedings, are not immediately appealable. (Id. at p. 216.) The
order staying a ruling on the motion for attorney fees during the pendency of the appeal
13
on the order taxing costs did not make a final determination of the parties’ rights to
attorney fees, and was preparatory to later proceedings. The order is therefore not
appealable.
Additionally, the order is not appealable under the collateral order doctrine
because it is not dispositive of the parties’ rights and does not direct payment of money or
performance of an act. (In re Marriage of Skelley (1976) 18 Cal.3d 365, 368.)
Smalley requests that we exercise our discretion to construe the appeal
from a nonappealable order as a petition for writ of mandate. We have the authority to
treat an appeal as a petition for writ of mandate when there is an inadequate remedy at
law, the records and briefs in substance include the elements necessary for proceeding as
a writ of mandate, there is no indication the trial court would appear as a party in the writ
proceedings, the appealability of the challenged order is not clear, the parties urge the
court to decide the issue rather than to dismiss the appeal, and the failure to address the
issue immediately would lead to unnecessary delay and a waste of judicial resources.
(Olson v. Cory (1983) 35 Cal.3d 390, 401; SCC Acquisitions, Inc. v. Superior Court
(2015) 243 Cal.App.4th 741, 750.)
There is no lack of an adequate remedy at law. The relief requested by
Smalley is that we remand the motion for attorney fees to the trial court for decision,
which is exactly what will happen anyway. No unusual circumstances are present here
justifying our treating the appeal as a petition for writ of mandate.
14
DISPOSITION
The postjudgment order in appeal No. G059904 is affirmed. Appeal
No. G060441 is dismissed. Respondent to recover costs on appeal.
MOTOIKE, J.
WE CONCUR:
BEDSWORTH, ACTING P. J.
MARKS, J.*
*Judge of the Orange County Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to
article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
15