Coalition for Adequate Review v. City & County of S.F. , 229 Cal. App. 4th 1043 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 9/15/14
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    COALITION FOR ADEQUATE REVIEW
    et al.,
    Plaintiffs and Respondents,                A135512
    v.                                                 (San Francisco City & County
    CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN                             Super. Ct. No. CPF-08-508038)
    FRANCISCO,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    I. INTRODUCTION
    The City and County of San Francisco (City) prevailed in this California
    Environmental Quality Act (CEQA; Pub. Resources Code, § 21000 et seq.)1 writ
    proceeding brought by the Coalition for Adequate Review and Alliance for
    Comprehensive Planning (collectively, petitioners). After securing judgment, the City
    filed a memorandum of costs totaling $64,144, largely for costs incurred in preparing a
    supplemental record of the proceedings. Petitioners filed a motion to tax. The trial court
    granted the motion and denied all costs. The court’s reasoning was two-fold: First, it
    relied on the fact petitioners had elected to prepare the record, themselves, as allowed by
    CEQA’s record preparation statute (§ 21167.6, subd. (b)(2)). Second, it feared sizeable
    cost awards would have a chilling effect on lawsuits challenging important public
    projects. Neither rationale is a legally permissible basis for denying record preparation
    costs to the City. We therefore reverse in part and remand for further proceedings.
    1
    All further statutory references are to the Public Resources Code unless
    otherwise indicated.
    1
    II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In our prior opinion affirming the denial of petitioners’ writ petition on the merits
    (Coalition for Adequate Review v. City and County of San Francisco (June 25, 2013,
    A131487) [nonpub. opn.]), we discussed at length the land use plans, rezoning, and
    projects around Octavia and Market streets at issue in this case. We need set forth here
    only the facts relevant to the City’s appeal from the order granting petitioners’ motion to
    tax costs.
    Initial Record Preparation
    Petitioners chose to prepare the record of proceedings, themselves, as permitted by
    CEQA’s record preparation statute, specifically, section 21167.6, subdivision (b)(2). The
    City maintains it thereupon made available some 26,000 pages of material to facilitate
    petitioners’ preparation of the record. Petitioners contend the City, in fact, obstructed and
    delayed access to these documents and made the process of copying unduly cumbersome
    and expensive. Petitioners also contend that at 4 p.m. the day before they were, by
    agreement, to present the record to the City for its review and certification, the City
    suddenly notified them of an additional 3,000 pages of material and a CD of unknown
    volume, and claimed it was going to prepare a supplemental record containing these
    items. The City did not produce this material to petitioners until a few weeks later.
    Nevertheless, on August 28, 2008, the agreed-upon date, petitioners presented the City
    with a 30-volume record, totaling 8,306 pages in length.
    Two weeks later, on September 12, 2008, the City certified the record petitioners
    had prepared, but only in part, stating it was incomplete. It appeared to the City that
    petitioners had omitted documents statutorily required to be in the record under
    section 21167.6, subdivision (e), and which the City had, at least at some point, made
    available to petitioners. The City therefore notified petitioners it reserved the right to
    seek inclusion of any of the additional 21,000-plus pages of material it had produced to
    petitioners which were not already in the record.
    The City then made several attempts to add materials to the record—both through
    ex parte applications and by negotiations with petitioners. During negotiations, the City
    2
    proposed augmenting the record when it filed its opposition to the writ petition in order to
    avoid including unnecessary materials.
    As part of a November 19, 2008, case management statement, the City attached an
    index of its proposed additions to the record, totaling 4,809 pages in 12 volumes. A
    month later, on December 12, 2008, the City formally moved to supplement the record of
    the proceedings with these 12 volumes.
    Petitioners opposed the motion. They argued they were in control of the record,
    and the City had no right to make additions. They also asserted the City sought to add
    irrelevant and duplicative materials, and the proposed supplement was a ploy to raise
    costs. Petitioners denied having excluded from the record any materials that supported
    the City’s approval of the project.
    The City disputed petitioners’ contentions about the proposed supplemental
    record, except for 10 documents which it acknowledged were duplicates or near
    duplicates of materials already in the record prepared by petitioners. The City also
    maintained it timely produced most of the required documents, except for certain studies
    cited in the EIR, which it made available to petitioners after learning of the omission.
    On May 12, 2009, the trial court (Judge Feinstein) granted the City’s motion to
    supplement the record, finding petitioners had omitted materials statutorily required to be
    in the record under section 21167.6, subdivision (e). It disallowed, however, the 10
    concededly duplicative documents (approximately 250 pages of the 4,809-page proposed
    supplement). The court also expressly rejected petitioners’ assertion that the City’s
    efforts to supplement the record violated its statutory duty to control record preparation
    costs, set forth in section 21167.7, subdivision (f). The court noted in this regard
    petitioners had rejected the City’s proposal to file a supplemental record when it filed its
    opposition to the writ petition and, instead, had insisted the record be fixed before
    briefing on the merits. The court also ruled “[w]ithout prejudice to the City’s ability to
    seek cost recovery at the conclusion of this litigation, as appropriate, Petitioners shall pay
    to the City the reproduction costs associated with Petitioners’ copy and the court’s copy
    of the City’s Supplement.” Petitioners moved for rehearing, arguing the immediate order
    3
    to pay for reproduction costs was improper. In August 2009, the court denied rehearing,
    concluding the issue of interim reproduction costs had been briefed and properly
    determined.2
    Document Requests
    In addition to the supplemental record dispute, the parties also sparred over
    whether certain document requests petitioners made at the outset of the litigation were
    overbroad and burdensome. Petitioners, for instance, requested production of “[a]ll files
    relating to all projects, including all proposed developments, public works and building
    projects and building permits of any kind that are either within the pipeline or not within
    the pipeline but within the Market-Octavia project area . . . .” (Emphasis omitted.) The
    City viewed these requests as creating busywork unrelated to the writ petition.
    Petitioners viewed them as essential to their writ petition, and even without regard to the
    pending litigation, legitimate under the State’s Public Record Act (Gov. Code, § 6250 et
    seq.) and City’s Sunshine Ordinance.
    Merits Hearing and Cost Proceedings
    Ultimately, the trial court (Judge Sullivan) denied the petition for writ of mandate
    on the merits. In so doing, the court adopted a lengthy proposed statement of decision
    prepared by the City. The statement largely cited to the record prepared by petitioners,
    but made a few citations to the supplemental record.
    The City then filed a memorandum of costs, seeking $64,144 for “administrative
    record, professional messenger, and service.” This included $3,231.62 for production
    (copying, binding, and page numbering) of the supplemental record; $383.32 for
    production (copying and binding) of a four-volume “excerpts of record;” $804.34 the
    petitioners had charged the City for a copy of the record they prepared; $50,191.50 for
    paralegal time; $8,053.14 for City Planning Department time; and $1,480.36 for
    professional couriers.
    2
    The City therefore made a demand for $1,764.80 in copying costs. Whether this
    was paid at the time, or whether it was included in the record preparation costs the City
    later claimed in its memorandum of costs, is unclear.
    4
    Petitioners moved to tax costs. They maintained section 21167.6, subdivision
    (b)(2)—pursuant to which petitioners had prepared the record—precluded the recovery of
    any record preparation costs by the City. They also specifically objected to the City’s
    claimed costs related to the excerpts of record, paralegal and staff costs, and courier fees,
    and additionally claimed that, even if allowable, all the costs were unnecessary and
    unreasonable. In the latter regard, petitioners maintained the supplemental record played
    no meaningful role in the resolution of the writ petition. The City opposed the motion on
    all grounds.
    Following a hearing, the trial court (Judge Sullivan) issued an order granting the
    motion to tax and denying all costs. The court concluded petitioners were “not liable” for
    costs “under . . . section 21167.6(b)(2),” reasoning the City, not petitioners, sought to
    supplement the record and therefore the City should bear the cost of supplementation.
    Ancillary to this conclusion, the court concluded petitioners’ discovery requests were not
    “extraordinary” and not the “but for” cause of the City’s claimed costs. The court further
    concluded a cost award as large as the City sought would “certainly chill any desire by
    members of the general public to seek court review of important civic undertakings,”
    observing petitioners had made neither a frivolous nor bad faith challenge to an
    “important” project. The City timely appealed.
    III. DISCUSSION
    A. Standard of Review
    The standard of review applicable to a cost order depends on the issue raised on
    appeal. When the question is whether a claimed cost comes within the general cost
    statutes and is recoverable at all, the question is one of statutory interpretation, subject to
    de novo review. (Baker-Hoey v. Lockheed Martin Corp. (2003) 
    111 Cal. App. 4th 592
    ,
    597 [
    3 Cal. Rptr. 3d 593
    ].) Similarly, the interpretation of CEQA’s record preparation
    provisions set forth in Public Resources Code section 21167.6, subdivisions (a)–(f),
    presents a question of law subject to de novo review. (Hayward Area Planning Assn. v.
    City of Hayward (2005) 
    128 Cal. App. 4th 176
    , 182 [
    26 Cal. Rptr. 3d 783
    ] (Hayward Area
    Planning).) Whether a cost item was reasonably necessary to the litigation, however,
    5
    “ ‘ “presents a question of fact for the trial court and its decision is reviewed for abuse of
    discretion.” ’ ” (Gorman v. Tassajara Development Corp. (2009) 
    178 Cal. App. 4th 44
    , 71
    [
    100 Cal. Rptr. 3d 152
    ] (Gorman), quoting Ladas v. California State Auto. Assn. (1993)
    
    19 Cal. App. 4th 761
    , 774 [
    23 Cal. Rptr. 2d 810
    ].) Similarly, “ ‘[w]hether a particular cost
    to prepare an administrative record was necessary and reasonable is an issue for the
    sound discretion of the trial court.’ ” (California Oak Foundation v. Regents of the
    University of California (2010) 
    188 Cal. App. 4th 227
    , 293–294 [
    115 Cal. Rptr. 3d 631
    ]
    (California Oak Foundation), quoting River Valley Preservation Project v. Metropolitan
    Transit Development Bd. (1995) 
    37 Cal. App. 4th 154
    , 181 [
    43 Cal. Rptr. 2d 501
    ] (River
    Valley).)
    B. CEQA’s Record Preparation Statute (§ 21167.6)
    Public Resources Code section 21167.6 is one of several statutes spelling out the
    procedures for challenging a CEQA determination. (See Pub. Resources Code, §§ 21167
    et seq.) The statute applies to any CEQA challenge, whether brought as a traditional
    mandamus proceeding under Code of Civil Procedure section 1085 (Pub. Resources
    Code, § 21168.5) or as an administrative mandamus proceeding under Code of Civil
    Procedure section 1094.5 (Pub. Resources Code, § 21168). It addresses both the
    preparation of the “record of proceedings” upon the commencement of an action (Pub.
    Resources Code, § 21167.6, subds. (a)–(f)) and the preparation of the “clerk’s transcript
    on appeal” if an appeal is taken from the judgment in such an action (id., subd. (g)). (See
    Madera Oversight Coalition, Inc. v. County of Madera (2011) 
    199 Cal. App. 4th 48
    , 61,
    fn. 4 [
    131 Cal. Rptr. 3d 626
    ] (Madera Oversight Coalition) [“[c]are must be taken to
    distinguish the administrative record (i.e., the ‘record of proceedings’) from the record on
    appeal”], disapproved on other grounds by Neighbors for Smart Rail v. Exposition Metro
    Line Construction Authority (2013) 
    57 Cal. 4th 439
    , 457 [
    160 Cal. Rptr. 3d 1
    , 
    304 P.3d 499
    ].) We are concerned here with the preparation of the record of proceedings.3
    3
    The “record of proceedings” is often referred to as the “administrative record,”
    regardless of whether the challenge is brought as a traditional or administrative
    mandamus action. (Madera Oversight 
    Coalition, supra
    , 199 Cal.App.4th at p. 61, fn. 4.)
    6
    Section 21167.6 provides flexibility as to how the record of proceedings is
    prepared. The traditional procedure is set forth in subdivision (a), which provides in
    pertinent part: “At the time the action or proceeding is filed, the plaintiff or petitioner
    shall file a request that the respondent public agency prepare the record of proceedings
    . . . . The request, together with the complaint or petition, shall be served personally upon
    the public agency not later than 10 business days from the date that the action or
    proceeding was filed.” (§ 21167.6, subd. (a).) The statute also provides for other record
    preparation options to help reduce record preparation costs. Subdivision (b)(2), thus,
    provides: “The plaintiff or petitioner may elect to prepare the record of proceedings or
    the parties may agree to an alternative method of preparation of the record of
    proceedings, subject to certification of its accuracy by the public agency, within the time
    limit specified in this subdivision.” (§ 21167.6, subd. (b)(2); see generally St. Vincent’s
    School for Boys, Catholic Charities CYO v. City of San Rafael (2008) 
    161 Cal. App. 4th 989
    , 1013–1014 [
    75 Cal. Rptr. 3d 213
    ] (St. Vincent’s School).)
    Additional specifics with respect to the handling of the record are set forth in
    subdivision (b)(1). It provides: “The public agency shall prepare and certify the record
    of proceedings not later than 60 days from the date that the request specified in
    subdivision (a) was served upon the public agency. Upon certification, the public agency
    shall lodge a copy of the record of proceedings with the court and shall serve on the
    parties notice that the record of proceedings has been certified and lodged with the court.
    The parties shall pay any reasonable costs or fees imposed for the preparation of the
    record of proceedings in conformance with any law or rule of court . . . .” (§ 21167.6,
    subd. (b)(1).) Subdivision (c), in turn, provides the 60-day period for certification may be
    extended by stipulation of the parties or by court order. (Id., subd. (c).)
    Thus, CEQA’s record preparation cost provision, in particular, appears at the end
    of the subdivision that begins by spelling out an agency’s 60-day certification obligation
    upon being served with a request to prepare the record (§ 21167.6, subd. (a)) or upon
    being provided with a record prepared by the petitioner or party or by some other, agreed-
    to means (id., subd. (b)(2)). The cost provision, by its plain terms, places the costs an
    7
    agency incurs in preparing the record on the parties, not the public agency. (Ibid.; see
    Black Historical Society v. City of San Diego (2005) 
    134 Cal. App. 4th 670
    , 677–678
    [
    36 Cal. Rptr. 3d 378
    ] (Black Historical Society).) The rationale for doing so is that
    “ ‘taxpayers . . . should not have to bear the cost of preparing the administrative record in
    a lawsuit brought by a private individual or entity.’ ”4 (Black Historical 
    Society, supra
    ,
    134 Cal.App.4th at p. 677, quoting River 
    Valley, supra
    , 37 Cal.App.4th at p. 182.)
    Accordingly, a petitioner can be ordered to pay for a requested record during the
    early stages of the litigation, before the merits of the case are ever heard. (See, e.g., San
    Diego Citizenry Group v. County of San Diego (2013) 
    219 Cal. App. 4th 1
    , 10
    [
    161 Cal. Rptr. 3d 447
    ] (San Diego Citizenry) [prior to merits hearing, the county “moved
    for an order determining and directing payment of” record preparation costs; court issued
    single ruling both denying relief on the merits and ordering reimbursement of record
    preparation costs]; Black Historical 
    Society, supra
    , 134 Cal.App.4th at pp. 673, 677–678
    [when petitioner failed to pay agency’s record preparation costs after agency’s request
    that it do so, followed by a court order that it do so, trial court did not abuse its discretion
    in dismissing case for lack of prosecution].) Indeed, a public agency can refuse to release
    a record it has been asked to prepare until the petitioner making the request has paid the
    agency’s preparation costs. (Black Historical Society, at pp. 674, 677–678.)
    This does not mean a public agency can charge a petitioner or party whatever it
    wants for preparing the record. Section 21167.6, subdivision (f), mandates the “party
    preparing the record shall strive to do so at reasonable cost in light of the scope of the
    record.” (§ 21167.6, subd. (f); see generally St. Vincent’s 
    School, supra
    , 161 Cal.App.4th
    at pp. 1014–1019 [discussing the “cost-containment policy embodied in
    4
    In fact, in one of the earliest cases discussing an agency’s recoupment of record
    preparation costs under section 21167.6, the Court of Appeal affirmed the agency’s
    recovery of such costs and the denial of the petitioner’s motion to tax, even though the
    appellate court reversed the decision on the merits that had been in favor of the agency.
    The trial court had not, however, examined the reasonableness of the agency’s claimed
    costs and was directed to do so on remand. (Citizens for Quality Growth v. City of Mount
    Shasta (1988) 
    198 Cal. App. 3d 433
    , 447–448 [
    243 Cal. Rptr. 727
    ] (Citizens for Quality
    Growth).)
    8
    section 21167.6”].) A petitioner can also, by interim motion, challenge an agency’s
    record preparation charge as excessive or unreasonable. (See, e.g., River 
    Valley, supra
    ,
    37 Cal.App.4th at pp. 164, 180–182 [during initial stages of the litigation, petitioner filed
    “motion to determine the costs of preparing the administrative record”].) Similarly, a
    petitioner can, by interim motion, challenge a record prepared by a public agency as
    being incomplete or as including documents not properly part of the record. (See, e.g.,
    Citizens for Ceres v. Superior Court (2013) 
    217 Cal. App. 4th 889
    , 900–901 [during early
    stages of litigation, petitioner filed objection to certified record claiming city’s exclusion
    of documents on attorney-client and work product grounds was erroneous; appellate court
    granted interlocutory writ review of trial court’s interim order and granted writ relief in
    part]; Madera Oversight 
    Coalition, supra
    , 199 Cal.App.4th at pp. 63–66 [case
    management order specified record disputes were to be raised no later than merits
    briefing; petitioners then filed multiple requests that certified record be augmented, which
    trial court ruled on at same time it ruled on merits].)
    With this overview of CEQA’s record preparation statute, we turn to the principal
    issue on appeal—whether petitioners’ election to prepare the record, themselves, under
    section 21167.6, subdivision (b)(2), precludes an award of record preparation costs to the
    City.
    C. A Petitioner’s Election to Prepare the Record Does Not Preclude a Public Agency
    From Recovering Supplemental Record Preparation Costs When Incurred to Ensure a
    Statutorily Complete Record
    Petitioners maintain the whole point of CEQA’s alternative record preparation
    provisions is to avoid agency preparation costs, and, therefore, their election to prepare
    the record under section 21167.6, subdivision (b)(2), precludes any award of such costs to
    the City. The trial court appears to have taken a more nuanced approach and concluded a
    petitioner’s election under subdivision (b)(2) precludes an agency from recovering record
    preparation costs except in “extraordinary” circumstances like those in St. Vincent’s
    School.
    In St. Vincent’s School, the plaintiff also chose to prepare the record. (St.
    Vincent’s 
    School, supra
    , 161Cal.App.4th at p. 1014.) To enable it to do so, the city was
    9
    required to locate 2,208 documents, totaling more than 58,000 pages, which ultimately
    took up more than 20 boxes. (Id. at p. 1017.) Noting few e-mails were included, the
    plaintiff filed a Public Records Act (Gov. Code, § 6250 et seq.) request asking the city for
    “all writings evidencing or reflecting communications, stored on [any city] computer hard
    drive or server” relating to the property in question. (St. Vincent’s School, at p. 1017.)
    This required the city to review nine more boxes of materials. (Ibid.) After the city
    provided copies of all responsive, nonprivileged documents, the petitioner made yet
    another demand to inspect documents. (Id. at pp. 1017–1018.) Before this last set of
    demands was resolved, the plaintiff filed its merits brief in support of its writ petition.
    (Id. at p. 1018.) After the city prevailed on the merits, it sought and was awarded
    $26,362.50 in costs incurred in searching its computer files. (Id. at p. 1013.)
    The Court of Appeal affirmed. It first addressed and rejected the same argument
    the plaintiffs make here—that because the plaintiff chose to prepare the record under
    subdivision (b)(2), the city was foreclosed from recovering any record preparation costs.
    (St. Vincent’s 
    School, supra
    , 161 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1014–1019.) The court pointed out
    the city was not seeking to recover “the entire cost for preparation.” (Id. at p. 1014.) It
    further concluded disallowing the city’s costs would undermine the cost-containment
    policies embodied in section 21167.6, subdivision (f), and reward the petitioner for
    abusive document demands. (St. Vincent’s School, at pp. 1018–1019.) “St. Vincent’s
    actions, which caused the City to expend considerable time and resources in responding
    to its discovery demands, reflect a complete abandonment of its statutory responsibility to
    ‘strive to [prepare the record] at reasonable cost.’ ” (Id. at p. 1019.) The appellate court
    thus concluded “section 21167.6 does not preclude an award of costs in favor of the
    City.” (Ibid.) It also concluded the trial court had not abused its discretion as to the
    amount awarded. (Ibid.)
    We agree with St. Vincent’s School that the fact a petitioner elects to prepare the
    record under section 21167.6, subdivision (b)(2), does not ipso facto bar the recovery of
    record preparation costs by a public agency. Subdivision (b)(2) contains no such
    prohibition. Moreover, that subdivision expressly refers to and incorporates the 60-day
    10
    period for record certification set forth in the first sentence of subdivision (b)(1).
    (§ 21167.6, subd. (b)(2).) Thus, the two subdivisions are inter-related. The record
    preparation cost provision—specifying the parties, not the public agency, are to pay for
    the record—is, as we have discussed, set forth in the third and final sentence of
    subdivision (b)(1) and, significantly, does not refer to any particular means by which the
    record is prepared. (Id., subd. (b)(1).) Finally, as St. Vincent’s School recognized, the
    fact a petitioner makes an election to proceed under subdivision (b)(2), does not mean the
    agency will never, under any circumstances, incur record preparation costs.
    The trial court appears to have read St. Vincent’s School as identifying the only
    circumstance in which an agency can recoup record preparation costs where the petitioner
    has chosen to prepare the record under subdivision (b)(2), i.e., where the petitioner has
    made “extraordinary” production demands purportedly in connection with its preparation
    of the record. The appellate court did not suggest, however, it was doing anything other
    than addressing the particular circumstances before it. We therefore do not read St.
    Vincent’s School as drawing the bounds of an agency’s recovery of record preparation
    costs where the petitioner has opted to prepare the record under subdivision (b)(2).
    There is no question the alternative record preparation procedures authorized by
    section 21167.6, subdivision (b)(2), are intended to reduce record preparation costs. (See
    generally Hayward Area 
    Planning, supra
    , 128 Cal.App.4th at pp. 183–184 [discussing
    cost control provisions of § 21167.6].)
    But just as a record prepared by an agency at the request of a petitioner under
    subdivision (a) must be complete, so, too, must a record prepared by alternative means
    under subdivision (b)(2). (See § 21167.6, subd. (e); see Madera Oversight 
    Coalition, supra
    , 199 Cal.App.4th at p. 62 [“[r]egardless of which [record preparation] method is
    chosen, the administrative record is ‘subject to certification of its accuracy by the public
    agency’ ” quoting § 21167.6, subd. (b)(2)].) When a record prepared under
    subdivision (b)(2) is incomplete, and an agency is put to the task of supplementation to
    ensure completeness, the language of the statute allows, and the purpose of the record
    11
    preparation cost provision to protect public monies counsels, that the agency recoup the
    costs of preparing the supplemental record.
    CEQA is clear about what the record must contain—it “shall include,” at a
    minimum, the documents enumerated in section 21167.6, subdivision (e). (See San
    Diego 
    Citizenry, supra
    , 219 Cal.App.4th at pp. 26–27 [subdivision (e) specifies the
    materials “required” to be in the record].) This “language is mandatory—all items
    described in any of the enumerated categories shall be included in the administrative
    record.” 
    (Madera, supra
    , 199 Cal.App.4th at p. 63; see also Eureka Citizens for
    Responsible Government v. City of Eureka (2007) 
    147 Cal. App. 4th 357
    , 366
    [
    54 Cal. Rptr. 3d 485
    ] [“content of administrative records in CEQA proceedings is
    governed by . . . section 21167.6, subdivision (e)”].)
    We see no reason why parties cannot agree to a smaller (and thus less expensive)
    record if it will provide the court with all the materials relevant to the issue(s) raised by
    the petitioner. (See § 21167.6, subds. (b)(2) [“the parties may agree to an alternative
    method of preparation of the record of proceedings”], (f) [“party preparing the record
    shall strive to do so at reasonable cost in light of the scope of the record”]; 2 Kostka &
    Zischke, Practice Under the Cal. Environmental Quality Act (Cont.Ed.Bar 2014) § 23.73,
    p. 23-86 [“parties should consider stipulating to exclude extraneous documents from the
    record”].)
    However, where no such agreement is reached, a public agency is not required to
    put itself at risk of a statutorily incomplete record. (See County of Orange v. Superior
    Court (2003) 
    113 Cal. App. 4th 1
    , 13 [
    6 Cal. Rptr. 3d 286
    ] [“when it comes to the
    administrative record in a CEQA case, any reduction in its contents is presumptively
    prejudicial to project proponents,” as it is they “who will be saddled with the task of
    pointing to things in the record to refute asserted inadequacies in the EIR”], italics
    omitted; Protect Our Water v. County of Merced (2003) 
    110 Cal. App. 4th 362
    , 373
    [
    1 Cal. Rptr. 3d 726
    ] [“The consequences of providing a record to the courts that does not
    evidence the agency’s compliance with CEQA is severe—reversal of project approval.”];
    
    Madera, supra
    , 199 Cal.App.4th at p. 75; Friends of Lagoon Valley v. City of Vacaville
    12
    (2007) 
    154 Cal. App. 4th 807
    , 834 [
    65 Cal. Rptr. 3d 251
    ] [“Because it risked reversal of the
    Project’s approval if the record lacked supporting evidence, Triad properly took pains to
    ensure the court was provided with a complete record of all relevant proceedings.”].)
    Here, the City offered to defer supplementation of the record until it filed its
    opposition to the writ petition, since only then would it know with certainty what
    additional materials, if any, were pertinent to its defense of the project approval.
    Petitioners, however, rejected this suggestion and, instead, insisted the record be fixed
    before they filed their opening merits brief.
    Moreover, the City did not unilaterally prepare a supplemental record. Rather, it
    filed a motion for leave to do so, identifying the documents it intended to include.
    Petitioners filed opposition, making some of the same arguments they have made in
    opposition to the City’s claimed record preparation costs. The trial court granted the
    City’s motion, but not entirely, excluding from the supplemental record documents that
    essentially duplicated documents already included in the record petitioners had prepared.
    As to the documents the trial court allowed, it expressly found they were statutorily
    required to be in the record under section 21167.6, subdivision (e). The court also
    expressly found the City’s preparation of a supplemental record to include these
    documents did not violate the City’s obligation under subdivision (f) to minimize record
    preparation costs. In our prior opinion we affirmed the court’s supplementation order,
    including on the ground petitioners failed to carry their burden on appeal to demonstrate
    error. (Coalition for Adequate Review v. City and County of San 
    Francisco, supra
    ,
    A131487.)
    Under these circumstances, we have no trouble concluding the City was
    effectively put to the task of preparing a statutorily complete record and, therefore, may
    recover its reasonable costs of preparing the supplemental record.5
    5
    At oral argument, petitioners argued that, in light of their election to prepare the
    record under subdivision (b)(2), the City improperly moved to prepare a supplemental
    record and, instead, should have moved for an order directing petitioners to prepare the
    desired supplement. Petitioners never made this assertion in the trial court. While they
    13
    The trial court also denied record preparation costs on the ground a sizeable cost
    award “would certainly chill any desire by members of the general public to seek court
    review of important civic undertakings.” The court’s “chill” analysis would pertain to
    any CEQA challenge, whether brought as a traditional or administrative mandamus case,
    since both are employed to challenge “important” civic projects. Yet, Public Resources
    Code section 21168, by referencing Code of Civil Procedure section 1094.5, expressly
    provides for the prevailing party in a CEQA administrative mandamus proceeding to
    recover the costs of record preparation. (See Wagner Farms, Inc. v. Modesto Irrigation
    Dist. (2006) 
    145 Cal. App. 4th 765
    , 772–773 [
    52 Cal. Rptr. 3d 683
    ] (Wagner Farms)
    [discussing fact Code of Civil Procedure section 1094.5, pertaining to administrative
    mandamus, expressly provides for the prevailing party to recover record preparation
    costs, but section 1085, pertaining to ordinary mandamus, does not].) Thus, CEQA,
    itself, refutes a general “chill” rationale to deny record preparation costs to a public
    agency. (See also San Diego 
    Citizenry, supra
    , 219 Cal.App.4th at p. 11 [affirming
    agency’s request for record preparation costs and quoting trial court’s observation that
    “ ‘[g]roups like petitioner are free to exercise their petition rights, but as has been often
    said in other contexts, freedom is not free’ ”].) Furthermore, as we have discussed,
    section 21167.6, subdivision (b)(1), expressly provides that the parties, not the public
    agency, are to pay record preparation costs. This statutory obligation implements a
    opposed the City’s motion to file a supplemental record on numerous grounds, they never
    argued the City was asking for inappropriate relief and never claimed, if the trial court
    was inclined to allow a supplemental record, they should be the ones to prepare it. Nor
    do either of the cases petitioners cited at oral argument—Madera Oversight 
    Coalition, supra
    , 
    199 Cal. App. 4th 48
    , and Leavitt v. County of Madera (2004) 
    123 Cal. App. 4th 1502
    [
    22 Cal. Rptr. 3d 101
    ] (Leavitt)—suggest the City should have sought an order
    directing petitioners to prepare the supplemental record. As we have discussed, Madera
    Oversight Coalition generally discusses the trial court’s power to resolve record disputes.
    (Madera Oversight 
    Coalition, supra
    , 199 Cal.App.4th at pp. 63–64.) Leavitt recognizes a
    trial court can impose terminating sanctions when a petitioner undertakes but fails to
    complete the record preparation process, but only if “given an opportunity to comply.”
    
    (Leavitt, supra
    , 123 Cal.App.4th at p. 1526.) Neither case even suggests a public agency
    cannot, itself, take action to ensure a statutorily complete record where, as here, the
    petitioner disputes the agency’s assessment that the record is incomplete.
    14
    different, but equally important policy—that public monies should not be used to fund
    CEQA challenges brought by private parties. (See Black Historical 
    Society, supra
    ,
    134 Cal.App.4th at p. 677; River 
    Valley, supra
    , 37 Cal.App.4th at p. 182.) This policy is
    all the more compelling where, as here, a private party loses its CEQA challenge on the
    merits.
    We thus conclude the trial court erred in its interpretation of CEQA’s record
    preparation statute and reverse that portion of the order denying supplemental record
    preparation costs to the City, and remand for further proceedings.
    D. Specific Cost Items
    In addition to insisting their election to prepare the record under section 21167.6,
    subdivision (b)(2), constituted a bar to the City’s recovery of supplemental record
    preparation costs, petitioners also challenged the reasonableness of the City’s claimed
    costs. Because the trial court denied costs entirely, it did not consider the reasonableness
    of the City’s claimed costs. On remand, it must exercise its discretion in this regard.
    (See Wagner 
    Farms, supra
    , 145 Cal.App.4th at pp. 772–773; Citizens for Quality
    
    Growth, supra
    , 198 Cal.App.3d at p. 448.) To provide further guidance on remand, we
    turn to specific cost items sought by the City.6
    Paralegal Costs Related to Supplemental Record
    In addition to the costs of copying, binding, and page numbering the supplemental
    record, the City seeks approximately $50,000 for over 300 hours of paralegal time (at a
    rate of between $159 to $165 per hour) in connection with preparing the supplemental
    record. The City submitted billing records showing time spent reviewing the record
    prepared by petitioners for certification, reviewing other materials for inclusion in a
    supplemental record, organizing those documents, preparing an index, working with
    vendors on the supplemental record, and meeting with attorneys.
    6
    Petitioners may not, on remand, challenge the reasonableness of the contents of
    the supplemental record and contend any of the documents need not have been included.
    As we have discussed, the trial court long ago determined the materials included in the
    supplemental record were statutorily required under section 21167.6, subdivision (e), and
    that determination has been affirmed on appeal.
    15
    The City may claim reimbursement for reasonable labor costs required to prepare
    the supplemental record. (See California Oak 
    Foundation, supra
    , 188 Cal.App.4th at
    pp. 293–295 [affirming $46,563 in costs for “labor in compiling the record,” including
    paralegal time; university personnel “retrieved, reviewed, organized, and indexed over
    40,000 pages of documents”]; River 
    Valley, supra
    , 37 Cal.App.4th at pp. 181–182
    [affirming costs for time spent by assistant transportation engineer and paralegal
    reviewing and compiling documents].)
    However, we have been cited no authority, nor are we aware of any, indicating
    labor costs to review a petitioner-prepared record of proceedings “for completeness” in
    connection with certification pursuant to section 21167.6, subdivision (b)(1), are
    recoverable record preparation costs. This sort of review is a chore public agencies face
    in every case in which the petitioner elects to prepare the record under subdivision (b)(2),
    and if an agency could always claim a sizeable amount for review “for completeness” or
    “certification,” that would defeat the Legislature’s aim of providing for lower-cost record
    preparation alternatives. (§ 21167.6, subds. (b)(2), (f); cf. Hayward Area 
    Planning, supra
    , 128 Cal.App.4th at pp. 183–186 [denying city’s claimed record preparation costs
    because delegating preparation to real party in interest “undermined the statutory scheme
    for controlling the costs of record preparation”].) Additionally, record review “for
    completeness” can easily blur into review for strategy, implicating the kind of attorney
    fee award neither authorized nor sought here. (See Wagner 
    Farms, supra
    ,
    145 Cal.App.4th at p. 779 [drawing distinction between time agency employees spent
    that was “necessary for preparation” of record and time “that went beyond that merely
    related to prepar[ation],” such as preparing the agency’s own case].)
    Because the trial court denied record preparation costs entirely, it did not review
    the City’s claimed paralegal costs to determine which of these costs were for work
    reasonably required to prepare the supplemental record (e.g., locating, copying, indexing,
    and assembling documents) and are recoverable, and which were for review of the record
    petitioners prepared “for completeness” and are not recoverable. On remand, the trial
    court will need to make this determination. (See 
    Wagner, supra
    , 145 Cal.App.4th at
    16
    p. 779 [where claimed labor costs could not be segregated between time attributable to
    preparing record and other tasks, matter was remanded for further proceedings].)
    Costs to Retrieve Documents to Prepare Record
    The City also seeks approximately $392 for messenger costs for transporting
    record materials between the City’s planning department and City Hall. To the extent
    these retrieval costs were incurred, as the City asserts, in compiling the supplemental
    record, we discern no material difference between these costs and other labor costs of
    assembling the record, and they are recoverable. (See California Oak 
    Foundation, supra
    ,188 Cal.App.4th at pp. 294–295 [affirming costs for retrieving documents “located
    in many departments throughout the campus”].) But because the trial court denied costs
    entirely, it also did not review the reasonableness of the City’s claimed retrieval costs.
    On remand, the trial court will need to make this determination. (See 
    Wagner, supra
    ,
    145 Cal.App.4th at p. 779.)
    Planning Department Labor Costs to Locate Documents Provided to Petitioners
    The City additionally seeks $8,053.12 for staff time spent responding to
    petitioners’ request for “all files relating to all projects . . . within the Market-Octavia
    project area.” The City maintains this document request was not reasonably related to
    petitioners’ efforts to prepare the record, themselves, under section 21167.6, subdivision
    (b)(2), petitioners therefore violated their statutory obligation under subdivision (f) to
    limit record preparation costs, and the City should, accordingly, recover its production
    costs under St. Vincent’s School.
    The trial court found, however, petitioners’ document request did not approach the
    egregious abuse that occurred in St. Vincent’s School, thus implicitly finding petitioners
    did not “abandon[ their] statutory duty to contain costs.” (See St. Vincent’s 
    School, supra
    , 161 Cal.App.4th at p. 1018.) The court’s determination in this regard is
    adequately supported by the record. In St. Vincent’s School, after the city produced 20
    boxes of material, the petitioner subjected the city “to a costly and lengthy process of
    trawling through its entire computer system”—“not because it had identified any ‘gaps’
    in the voluminous planning documents” the city had produced, but because it was “not
    17
    satisfied with the number of emails” in the 20 boxes. (Id. at p. 1018.) Even after the city
    combed its computer systems, the petitioner remained dissatisfied because the few
    additional e-mails the city produced were almost entirely nonsubstantive and duplicative.
    (Ibid.) So, the petitioner made yet a further demand. At the same time, it was able to file
    the record and its merits brief, without ever receiving the supposed trove of e-mails it
    maintained must exist. (Id. at pp. 1017–1018.) Here, in contrast, petitioners made their
    document request at the outset of the litigation, during the time they were gathering
    together materials to prepare the record. The trial court reasonably distinguished St.
    Vincent’s School and did not abuse its discretion in denying the City’s document
    production costs claimed pursuant to the reasoning of that case.7
    Production of “Excerpts of Record”
    The City seeks $382.32 for copying and binding a four-volume “Excerpts of
    Record.” The excerpts were copies of selected materials in the record of proceedings,
    and were proffered as an aide to the trial court. We conclude an “excerpt of record” in a
    mandamus action can qualify as a photocopy of an exhibit under Code of Civil Procedure
    section 1033.5, subdivision (a)(13) (allowing costs of “[m]odels and blowups of exhibits”
    and “photocopies of exhibits” if “they were reasonably helpful to aid the trier of fact”),
    since it can serve the same purpose—to direct the trial court’s attention to material the
    party maintains is especially relevant. (See Chaaban v. Wet Seal, Inc. (2012)
    
    203 Cal. App. 4th 49
    , 59 [
    136 Cal. Rptr. 3d 607
    ] [while “evidence was presented to the jury
    through audiovisual equipment,” party objecting to exhibit costs “overlook[ed] the fact
    that counsel (for both sides), the witnesses, and the judge all used paper exhibits, in trial
    binders” without which “it would have been even more difficult to conduct this trial than
    it already was”].)
    7
    We therefore need not, and do not, consider petitioners’ alternative argument
    that the City cannot recover its production costs because petitioners sought these
    documents under the Public Records Act, under which a governmental entity is not
    entitled to recover production costs.
    18
    Since the trial court denied costs entirely, it did not review the City’s claimed
    costs of preparing the “Excerpts of Record” and, thus, did not make any determination as
    to its helpfulness to the court or reasonableness under Code of Civil Procedure
    section 1033.5, subdivisions (a)(13). On remand, the trial court will need to make this
    determination.
    City’s Copy of Record Prepared by Petitioners
    The city also seeks $804.35 it paid petitioners for a copy of the record petitioners
    prepared and submitted to the City. Petitioners state that after they provided the City
    with their record for certification and submission to the trial court, the City asked to keep
    it. Petitioners agreed, but charged the City the cost of making another copy for the court.
    Code of Civil Procedure section 1033.5, subdivision (c)(4), allows cost items not
    listed in subdivision (a) “in the court’s discretion”. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1033.5, subd.
    (c)(4).) Since the trial court denied costs entirely, it did not review the City’s claimed
    cost of procuring a copy of the record prepared by petitioners. On remand, the court will
    need to consider the City’s claim and exercise its discretion. (See Wagner 
    Farmers, supra
    , 145 Cal.App.4th at pp. 776–777 [affirming trial court’s exercise of its discretion in
    allowing as “reasonably necessary,” agency’s costs of preparing five copies of record,
    including copies for itself, its outside counsel and its environmental consultant].)
    Overnight Service Costs
    The City additionally seeks approximately $1,090 for express delivery, postage
    costs, and messenger costs for court filings. Postage and express delivery costs are
    expressly disallowed as costs under Code of Civil Procedure section 1033.5, subdivision
    (b). 
    (Gorman, supra
    , 178 Cal.App.4th at p. 75.) “Messenger fees,” though “not
    expressly authorized by statute . . . may be allowed in the discretion of the court” under
    Code of Civil Procedure section 1033.5, subdivision (c)(4). (See Foothill-De Anza
    Community College Dist. v. Emerich (2007) 
    158 Cal. App. 4th 11
    , 30 [
    69 Cal. Rptr. 3d 678
    ]
    [costs of messenger court filings].)
    19
    Since the trial court denied costs entirely, it did not review the City’s claimed
    messenger costs for court filings. On remand, the court will need to consider this cost
    item and exercise its discretion.
    DISPOSITION
    The order granting petitioners’ motion to tax costs is affirmed to the extent it
    denied the City’s claimed costs for responding to petitioners’ document request, and for
    postage and express delivery. In all other respects the order is reversed and the matter
    remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. The parties shall bear
    their own costs on appeal.
    20
    _________________________
    Banke, J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Margulies, Acting P. J.
    _________________________
    Dondero, J.
    A135512, Coalition for Adequate Review v. City and County of San Francisco
    21
    Trial Judge:                           Honorable Donald J. Sullivan
    Trial Court:                           San Francisco City & County Superior Court
    Mary Miles and Law Office of Alexander Henson and Alexander T. Henson for the
    Plaintiff and Respondent.
    Dennis J. Herrera, City Attorney, Kristen A. Jensen, Susan Cleveland-Knowles and
    Andrea Ruiz-Esquide, Deputy City Attorneys for Defendant and Appellant.
    22