Nassif v. Mission Pools of Escondido CA4/3 ( 2022 )


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  • Filed 12/5/22 Nassif v. Mission Pools of Escondido 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    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    TOBIAS NASSIF et al.,
    Plaintiffs and Respondents,                                      G060433
    v.                                                          (Super. Ct. No. 30-2016-00880613)
    MISSION POOLS OF ESCONDIDO,                                           OPI NION
    Defendant and Respondent,
    v.
    SAL VARGAS et al.,
    Defendants and Appellants.
    Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Robert J.
    Moss, Judge. Affirmed.
    Haight Brown & Bonesteel and Arezoo Jamshidi for Defendants and
    Appellants, Sal Vargas dba New Vision Landscape and New Vision Landscape, Inc.
    Hallstrom, Klein & Ward and Betty J. Levine for Plaintiffs and
    Respondents, Tobias and Julie Nassif.
    Resnick & Louis and Kenneth O. Taylor III for Defendant and Respondent,
    Mission Pools of Escondido.
    *              *               *
    Pursuant to an agreement to settle claims relating to the design and
    construction of a swimming pool, respondents Tobias and Julie Nassif (Nassifs) filed a
    motion for attorney fees. Respondent Mission Pools of Escondido (Mission Pools), the
    swimming pool contractor, opposed the fee motion, and also sought reimbursement from
    appellants Sal Vargas dba New Vision Landscape and New Vision Landscape, Inc. (New
    Vision), who was the subcontractor. The trial court granted attorney fees and
    apportioned the fee award between Mission Pools and New Vision. New Vision
    appealed, arguing there was no legal basis for the apportionment order because there was
    no contractual, statutory or equitable basis for the Nassifs to recover attorney fees from
    them. As discussed below, we conclude there is a statutory basis for recovery of attorney
    fees. Accordingly, we affirm.
    I
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On January 8, 2016, the Nassifs entered into a contract with respondent
    Mission Pools to construct a new swimming pool. The contract contained an attorney fee
    provision in the event of litigation related to the construction. Mission Pools hired
    appellants as the subcontractor for excavation, masonry and deck work. The Nassifs also
    hired appellants to demolish and replace their existing patio. They entered into a separate
    contract that did not contain an attorney fee provision.
    2
    On October 12, 2016, the Nassifs sued Mission Pools and appellants for
    substandard work on the pool. Mission Pools filed a cross-complaint against appellants
    for equitable indemnity, implied indemnity, and contribution on the basis of comparative
    fault. Mission Pool asserted it was “entitled to equitable indemnification, partial
    indemnification, and/or contribution from [appellants] for any expense that [Mission
    Pools] incurs in the settlement of the primary action.”
    The parties eventually entered into a global settlement to resolve “[c]ertain
    disputes . . . with regard [to] the design and construction of a swimming pool and
    hardscape.” The “Settlement Agreement and General Release (the ‘Agreement’)” stated
    that it was the intention of all parties to “settle and extinguish the obligations, disputes,
    and differences between and among the Parties related to or arising out of the Action.”
    “Action” was defined to include the Nassifs’ complaint and Mission Pools’s cross-
    complaint.
    Under paragraph 2 of Section II of the Agreement, the defendants agreed to
    pay the Nassifs $75,000, with Mission Pool paying $35,000 and appellants paying
    $40,000. The Agreement stated: “The total settlement amount is in payment only
    regarding Plaintiffs’ alleged damages for repairs associated with the swimming pool and
    hardscape.”
    Under paragraph 3, the parties agreed as follows:
    “The Parties agree and stipulate that Plaintiffs may file a motion to seek
    recovery of their reasonable attorney’s fees incurred in connection with and arising out of
    the Action. Defendant Mission Pools retains the right to oppose the reasonableness of the
    amount of attorney’s fees sought by Plaintiffs, but does not oppose Plaintiffs’ entitlement
    to recover attorney’s fees. Defendants/Cross-Defendants Vargas and New Vision reserve
    the right to oppose the reasonableness of the amount of attorney’s fees sought by
    Plaintiffs and to oppose Plaintiffs’ entitlement to recover attorney’s fees as against
    Vargas and/or New Vision. Mission Pools reserves all rights to seek indemnity and/or
    3
    reimbursement from New Vision for any attorney’s fees awarded to Plaintiffs, pursuant
    to its Cross-Complaint against New Vision. Vargas and New Vision reserve all rights to
    oppose any claim by Mission Pools for indemnity and/or reimbursement for any
    attorney’s fees awarded to Plaintiffs. Further, at all times hereunder the Court shall retain
    jurisdiction under Section 664.6 of the Code of Civil Procedure to enforce the terms
    specified in this Agreement.”
    Finally, the parties agree that “[s]ubject to Plaintiffs’ receipt of all
    consideration specified in Paragraph 2 herein above, and upon the Court’s determination
    of Plaintiffs’ motion for attorney’s fees specified in Paragraph 3 above, the Parties herein
    understand and agree that this Agreement is in full accord, satisfaction and discharge of
    all claims for damages (including compensatory damages, general and special damages,
    treble damages and punitive damages), equitable and other relief that are or could be
    asserted in the Action. In furtherance thereof, Plaintiffs and Mission Pools shall file
    requests for dismissal, with prejudice, of their Complaint and Cross-Complaint,
    respectively.”
    Subsequently, the Nassifs filed their attorney fee motion seeking $337,792
    in fees and costs. Appellants were the first to file their opposition to the attorney fee
    motion. In their opposition, appellants argued there are no contractual, statutory, or
    equitable grounds upon which the Nassifs can recover their fees against appellants.
    Alternatively, appellants argued the fees requested were excessive and unreasonable.
    In addition, the opposition specifically states that “[i]t is anticipated that
    Mission Pools will assert that any attorney’s fees awarded to Plaintiffs should be
    apportioned to New Vision based on the equitable indemnity cause of action contained in
    Mission Pools’ Cross-Complaint against New Vision.” Appellants argued the trial court
    should deny the equitable indemnity claim because requiring them to “reimburse Mission
    Pools for attorney’s fees that Mission Pools is contractually obligated to pay Plaintiffs
    4
    would be to disregard the prerequisite that the recovery of attorney’s fees be based on
    contractual, statutory, or equitable authority.”
    In its opposition, Mission Pools argued that the requested fees were
    unreasonable. As to appellants, Mission Pools argued that they should pay a proportional
    amount of any fee award on the basis of equitable indemnity because they were the
    primary tortfeasor. Mission Pools argued it was not “attempting to shift any of its own
    attorney’s fees” to appellants, but “rather pursuant to the stipulation of the parties in the
    settlement agreement that they may do so. Therefore, any award of attorney’s fees given
    to Plaintiffs is simply a further component of damages which was contemplated by all
    parties at the time of settlement.”
    The Nassifs filed a reply, arguing appellants were jointly liable for attorney
    fees because the claims against Mission Pools and appellants were “so intertwined . . .
    that it would be highly impracticable to separate the fees incurred to prosecute those
    claims.” The Nassifs argued that besides performing services as a subcontractor on the
    pool contract, appellants performed under a “direct contract with the Nassifs for the pool
    deck at the sole recommendation of Mission Pools. . . . The deficiencies with the pool
    construction and the deck are both factually and structurally intertwined in that certain of
    the problems with the pool also caused problems with the deck. . . . Moreover, the pool
    and deck construction are unequivocally part of the same transaction.”
    Prior to the hearing on the Nassifs’ attorney fee motion, the trial court
    issued its tentative ruling. The court awarded the Nassifs $268,051 in fees and costs. As
    to Mission Pools’s equitable indemnity claim against appellants, the court found that
    “[r]ather than trying its indemnity claims, the parties have agreed to have
    this issue determined by the court.” The court found Mission Pools did not provide
    “sufficient evidence . . . as to what proportionate share of plaintiffs’ attorney fees should
    be borne by [appellants.]” It concluded that “as the only evid ence currently before the
    court as to apportionment is Para[graph] 2 of the settlement agreement, the court applies
    5
    the same apportionment to plaintiffs’ attorney fees as in the settlement agreement.
    Accordingly, [Mission Pools] is liable for $125,099.59 of plaintiffs’ fees. [Appellants]
    are liable for the remaining $142,951.81.”
    At the hearing, appellants’ counsel argued the trial court incorrectly found
    plaintiffs were entitled to attorney fees from appellants, noting the contract between the
    Nassifs and appellants did not have an attorney fee provision. The court responded,
    “Counsel, I understood that clearly. That was not the basis for my apportionment of
    some of the fees to your client. It’s because of the indemnity claim by the other
    defendant.” Appellants’ counsel then argued there was no legal basis to apportion fees
    based on the equitable indemnity claim because equitable indemnity does not create an
    exception to the general rule that parties pay their own legal fees. After further argument,
    the court reaffirmed that the legal basis for finding plaintiffs are entitled to attorney fees
    from appellants was the claim of equitable indemnity. The trial court affirmed its
    tentative ruling in a minute order.
    After judgment was entered on May 26, 2021, appellants appealed.
    II
    DISCUSSION
    Appellants contend the trial court erred in apportioning attorney fees
    because (1) the Nassifs cannot recover attorney fees directly from appellants; (2) the
    terms of the settlement agreement did not permit the trial court to apportion attorney fees
    but simply reserved Mission Pools’s right to seek indemnity via trial pursuant to its
    Cross-Complaint; and (3) the trial court’s order deprived appellants of their right to a trial
    on the equitable indemnity claim and due process rights by failing to make a
    determination as to Mission Pools’s indemnity rights vis-a-vis attorneys’ fees.
    We first address appellants’ claim, based on the second and third
    contentions above, that they are entitled to trial on the equitable indemnity claim. After
    6
    independently reviewing the settlement agreement, we conclude appellants have waived
    their right to trial on that claim in the agreement. (See Citizens for Goleta Valley v. HT
    Santa Barbara (2004) 
    117 Cal.App.4th 1073
    , 1076 [“because there is no conflicting
    extrinsic evidence, we must independently construe the settlement agreement”].) The
    Agreement provides that in exchange for $75,000 and attorney fees, which amount would
    be determined by the trial court, the parties would “discharge” “all claims for damages
    (including compensatory damages, general and special damages, treble damages and
    punitive damages), equitable and other relief that are or could be asserted in the Action,”
    and “[i]n furtherance thereof, Plaintiffs and Mission Pools shall file requests for
    dismissal, with prejudice, of their Complaint and Cross-Complaint, respectively.” It is
    self-evident there is no right to trial on a dismissed complaint or cross-complaint.
    Nor does Mission Pools’s reservation of its right to seek indemnity for
    attorney fees “pursuant to its Cross-Complaint” limit Mission Pools to seek indemnity via
    trial. When viewed in context of the parties’ stated intention to end litigation, the
    reservation of right only limits the legal theories on which Mission Pool may seek
    reimbursement of fees from appellants, i.e., the theories advanced in the Cross-
    Complaint. The reservation of right does not preclude the trial court from determining
    Mission Pools’s entitlement to reimbursement for fees when addressing the Nassifs’
    attorney fee motion. Indeed, the Agreement expressly authorizes the trial court to do so
    because the reservation of right is placed in the paragraph 3 of the Agreement, which
    only addresses the Nassifs’ attorney fees.
    We reject appellants’ contentions that the trial court did not determine
    Mission Pool’s indemnity right regarding attorney fees and deprived them of due process
    in opposing the indemnity claim. The trial court ruled on the indemnity claim when it
    concluded the fees should be apportioned between appellants and Mission Pools in the
    same ratio as the apportionment of the $75,000. Appellants were not deprived of due
    process because they responded to the anticipated indemnity claim in their opposition to
    7
    the Nassifs’ attorney fee motion, and responded to the actual indemnity claim at the
    hearing on the motion. (See Goldberg v. Kelly (1970) 
    397 U.S. 254
    , 267 [“‘The
    1
    fundamental requisite of due process of law is the opportunity to be heard’”].)
    We turn to appellants’ strongest argument on appeal: there was no legal
    basis for the apportionment order because the Nassifs cannot recover attorney fees from
    appellants. The trial court concluded the equitable indemnity claim provided a sufficient
    legal basis for apportioning fees. As noted above, appellants argued the doctrine of
    equitable indemnity does not permit the transfer of Mission Pools’ contractual obligation
    to reimburse the Nassifs’ attorney fees and costs from Mission Pools to appellants.
    Appellants’ argument has merit. As the California Supreme Court has explained,
    equitable indemnification “‘is not automatically available . . . for all tortfeasors who
    injure the same plaintiff.’” (Western Steamship Lines, Inc. v. San Pedro Peninsula
    Hospital (1994) 
    8 Cal.4th 100
    , 109.) “[I]irrespective of the equities between or among
    multiple tortfeasors, the right is subject to qualification, and countervailing considerations
    may limit recovery.” (Ibid.) “[C]ourts have long recognized that ‘the doctrine is not
    available where it would operate against public policy. [Citation.]” (Id. at pp. 109-110.)
    One such policy is the “American rule,” “embodied in section 1021 of the Code of Civil
    Procedure, which provides that each party is to bear his own attorney fees unless a statute
    or the agreement of the parties provides otherwise.” (Gray v. Don Miller & Associates,
    Inc. (1984) 
    35 Cal.3d 498
    , 504, fn. omitted.) Stated differently, while the doctrine of
    equitable indemnity provides a legal basis for apportioning attorney fees among
    tortfeasors who are jointly liable for the fees, it does not provide a sufficient legal basis
    1
    It is unclear whether appellants object to the apportionment ratio, which the court
    determined based on the percentage the respective parties contributed to the $75,000
    settlement amount. To the extent appellants object, we conclude appellants failed to
    show the trial court abused its discretion in determining the ratio. (See Graciano v.
    Robinson Ford Sales, Inc. (2006) 
    144 Cal.App.4th 140
    , 148 [“We review an order
    granting or denying fees for an abuse of discretion”].)
    8
    for requiring a party who is not liable for attorney fees to pay another party’s obligation
    to reimburse another’s attorney fees.
    We reject Mission Pool’s argument that the settlement agreement permitted
    the transfer of its contractual obligation to pay the Nassifs’ attorney fees to appellants
    because the attorney fees was an element of damages. The Agreement provided that the
    $75,000 was for damages. As to the attorney fees, the Agreement never stated the
    attorney fees were compensation for damages. The Agreement does provide that the
    payment of $75,000 and attorney fees would result in an accord, satisfaction of discharge
    of all claims for damages but the fee portion of the statement could have referred only to
    claims against Mission Pools, which had a contractual obligation to pay appellants’
    attorney fees. Stated differently, the language of the Agreement is not sufficiently
    specific to overcome the general presumption that “attorney’s fees are not an ordinary
    item of actual damages.” (Davis v. Air Technical Industries, Inc. (1978) 
    22 Cal.3d 1
    , 8.)
    The apportionment order thus may be sustained only if appellants are
    directly liable for the Nassifs’ attorney fees. Although respondents have suggested
    several contractual, statutory or equitable bases for liability, we only address section 7168
    of the Business and Professions Code. Section 7168 provides: “In any action between a
    person contracting for construction of a swimming pool and a swimming pool contractor
    arising out of a contract for swimming pool construction, the court shall award reasonable
    2
    attorney’s fees to the prevailing party.” (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 7168.) Here, the
    “Action” referenced in the settlement agreement between the parties falls within the
    scope of section 7168, and based on the settlement, the trial court properly could find the
    Nassifs were the prevailing party on their claims against appellants related to the
    swimming pool.
    2
    All further statutory references are to the Business and Profession Code.
    9
    Appellants argue they are not “a swimming pool contractor” for the
    purposes of section 7168. Section 7150.1 provides in relevant part that a “home
    improvement contractor, including a swimming pool contractor, is a contractor as defined
    and licensed under this chapter who is engaged in the business of home improvement
    either full time or part time.” “[A] contractor is any person who undertakes to or offers to
    undertake to, . . . or does himself or herself or by or through others, construct, alter,
    repair, add to, subtract from, improve, move, wreck or demolish any . . . structure,
    project, development or improvement, or to do any part thereof. . . . ‘Contractor’ includes
    subcontractor and specialty contractor.” (§ 7026, italics added.) It is undisputed
    appellants were the subcontractor for the pool work. Appellants thus are liable for the
    Nassifs’ attorney fees under section 7168 and accordingly, there was a legal basis for the
    3
    trial court to apportion those fees between Mission Pools and appellants.
    3
    Appellants argue this argument was never advanced in the trial court, and the court did
    not rely on section 7168 to support its apportionment order. However, “we review a trial
    court’s ruling, not its reasoning, and we may uphold the ruling ‘on any basis presented by
    the record whether or not relied upon by the trial court.’” (See Alamo v. Practice
    Management Information Corp. (2013) 
    219 Cal.App.4th 466
    , 481, fn. 5.) Our denial of
    costs to respondents, however, reflects these factual circumstances.
    10
    III
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Each party shall bear their own costs on appeal.
    MARKS, J.*
    WE CONCUR:
    SANCHEZ, ACTING P.J.
    MOTOIKE, J.
    *Judge of the Orange County Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to
    article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: G060433

Filed Date: 12/5/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/5/2022