Karton v. Ari Design & Construction, Inc. ( 2021 )


Menu:
  • Filed 3/29/21 (unmodified opinion attached)
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF
    CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION EIGHT
    DAVID S. KARTON et al.,                      B298003
    Plaintiffs and Appellants,            (Los Angeles County Super. Ct.
    No. SC125392)
    v.
    ORDER MODIFYING
    ARI DESIGN &                                 OPINION AND DENYING
    CONSTRUCTION, INC., et al.,                  PETITION FOR
    REHEARING
    Defendants and
    Respondents.                          [NO CHANGE IN
    JUDGMENT]
    THE COURT:
    IT IS ORDERED the opinion in the above-entitled matter
    filed on March 9, 2021, be modified as follows:
    1. On page 10, in the third sentence of the second full
    paragraph, “multiplicand” is changed to “product”;
    2. On page 14, the first and second sentences of the third full
    paragraph are deleted and replaced as follows: “Weighing
    cost and benefit, this trial court concluded a fee much
    larger than the judgment was not reasonable. This was
    logical: rational investors or buyers would not spend more
    than $1 to get something worth $1.”
    The petition for rehearing is denied.
    There is no change in the judgment.
    ____________________________________________________________
    BIGELOW, P. J.             GRIMES, J.              WILEY, J.
    2
    Filed 3/9/21 (unmodified opinion)
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION EIGHT
    DAVID S. KARTON et al.,                       B298003
    Plaintiffs and Appellants,            (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. SC125392)
    v.
    ARI DESIGN & CONSTRUCTION,
    INC., et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of
    Los Angeles County, Elaine W. Mandel, Judge. Affirmed in part
    and reversed in part.
    Law Offices of Joe R. Abramson, Joe R. Abramson; Law
    Offices of David S. Karton and David S. Karton for Plaintiffs and
    Appellants.
    Ilan Messika, Jonathan Guttman and Shahar Toledano, in
    pro. per., for Defendants and Respondents.
    Hausman & Sosa, Carlos E. Sosa and Larry D. Stratton for
    Defendant and Respondent Wesco Insurance Company.
    ____________________
    Trial judges deciding motions for attorney fees properly
    may consider whether the attorney seeking the fee has become
    personally embroiled and has, therefore, over-litigated the case.
    Similarly, judges permissibly may consider whether an attorney’s
    incivility in litigation has affected the litigation costs.
    Here, the trial judge found attorney David Karton’s fee
    motion triggered these concerns. Karton had a dispute with his
    home remodeling contractor: defendant and appellee Ari Design
    and Construction, Inc. At one point, their difference amounted to
    only $22,096: Karton said Ari owed him $35,096, while Ari
    contended it owed $13,000.
    Karton sued Ari and won a judgment for $133,792.11 plus
    postjudgment interest. Karton then sought attorney fees of
    $271,530, which were later increased to $287,640 in the trial
    court and now to $292,140 in this court. The trial court awarded
    $90,000 in attorney fees. We affirm this award against Karton’s
    argument that $90,000 is not enough.
    On a different issue, the trial judge ruled the Kartons had
    no basis to collect the $90,000 award from an insurance company
    called Wesco that had posted a surety bond for Ari. The liability
    of the surety is commensurate with the liability of its principal.
    In this case, by statute, Ari must pay the attorney fees as a
    matter of costs. So too must Wesco. We reverse and remand for
    the trial court to amend the judgment to make surety Wesco
    liable for the $90,000 fee award as an item of costs.
    I
    Plaintiffs and appellants David and Cheryl Karton engaged
    Ari for $163,650 of construction work on their home. After
    months of work, a dispute arose and the Kartons told Ari to stop
    work in late 2015. At this point, the Kartons claimed Ari owed
    2
    them $35,096. Ari admitted to a debt but claimed it was only
    $13,000. The difference was $22,096.
    In February 2016, the Kartons sued Ari, which is a
    business entity. The Kartons also sued three people connected
    with Ari—Shahar Toledano, Jonathan Guttman, and Ilan
    Messika—as well as Ari’s surety: Wesco Insurance Company,
    which had posted a $12,500 construction bond for Ari. The
    Kartons alleged five counts: breach of contract (against all but
    Wesco), money had and received (against all but Wesco), violation
    of Business and Professions Code section 7031 (to recover
    compensation paid to an unlicensed contractor, against all but
    Wesco), license bond (against only Wesco), and unfair competition
    (against all but Wesco).
    The court held a three-and-a-half day bench trial in
    November 2017. The Kartons called seven witnesses. The
    defense called no independent witnesses.
    The court issued a 20-page tentative statement of decision
    it later adopted as its final ruling. We excerpt the findings.
    Ari began work on the Kartons’ home in June 2015 and
    continued daily through November 2015. During these months,
    Ari usually had between two and four people working on the site.
    In November 2015, David Karton began to suspect there was a
    problem with Ari’s workers’ compensation insurance. The
    Kartons ordered Ari to suspend work when they ascertained Ari
    was not properly licensed or insured.
    The Kartons had paid Ari $92,651 to that point but had
    overpaid: Ari had not yet done that amount of work. Karton and
    Ari agreed the Kartons had overpaid but disagreed about by how
    much. Karton said Ari owed $35,096; Ari said it owed only
    $13,000. The court found the Kartons were right: they had paid
    3
    Ari $92,651, but the contract value of Ari’s work to that point was
    only $57,555: the Kartons thus had overpaid by $35,096.
    This overpayment of $35,096, however, was not the
    measure of damages; rather, the Kartons were entitled to the
    entire amount they paid Ari: $92,651, plus prejudgment interest.
    This was despite the fact Ari’s workers had performed $57,555
    worth of construction work for the Kartons. No witness
    impugned the quality of Ari’s work.
    This $92,651 award was under section 7031, subdivision
    (b), of the Business and Professions Code, which entitles those
    using an unlicensed contractor to all compensation they paid the
    unlicensed contractor, even if they knew the contractor was
    unlicensed. This statute requires an unlicensed contractor to
    return all compensation it received, without reductions or offsets
    for the value of materials or services it provided. This statute
    can create a windfall for those hiring an unlicensed contractor
    that has done quality work. Courts may not resort to equitable
    considerations when applying this statute, however, for the law
    aims to create a harsh penalty to induce contractors to maintain
    proper licensure. (Ahdout v. Hekmatjah (2013) 
    213 Cal.App.4th 21
    , 30–31.)
    To this $92,651 award against Ari, the court added an
    additional $10,000 penalty under Code of Civil Procedure section
    1029.8. This section 1029.8 provides for treble damages and
    attorney fees against “[a]ny unlicensed person” whose work
    injures another person. This statute caps the permissible treble
    damages award at $10,000. (Id., subds. (a) & (c).) This treble
    damage provision, albeit capped, is an additional
    noncompensatory damage provision that created a further
    windfall for the Kartons. Together with its attorney fee
    4
    allowance, this statutory damage multiplier creates a
    supplemental incentive to maintain proper licensure. The
    incentive is potent to the point of having penal attributes. (Rony
    v. Costa (2012) 
    210 Cal.App.4th 746
    , 757.)
    The trial court also awarded the Kartons storage fees of
    $2,850.
    The damage award was against Ari and not against
    Messika, Guttman, and Toledano. The court found these three
    people were not Ari’s alter egos.
    The court awarded the Kartons $12,500 against Ari’s
    surety Wesco on the fourth cause of action concerning the
    construction bond.
    Although the court found Ari lacked its contractor’s license
    and did not obtain proper insurance, the court did not find Ari’s
    work to be defective or of poor quality.
    The court entered an amended judgment on October 24,
    2018, and retained jurisdiction to decide attorney fees.
    The trial court later held two hearings on the issue of
    attorney fees. The judge who had handled the case to that point
    had been reassigned; a new judge heard the Kartons’ attorney fee
    motion.
    The first fee hearing was on January 25, 2019. Lawyer
    Shani Kochav appeared for all defendants. Lawyers Joe
    Abramson and David Karton appeared for the Kartons; Karton
    said his appearance was “limited scope representing myself and
    my wife.” Karton argued first and did most of the speaking for
    the Kartons.
    Before this hearing, the court issued a tentative ruling.
    This ruling noted the Kartons were requesting $271,530 in
    attorney fees, $52,021 in discovery sanctions, and $203,646 for
    5
    proving matters at trial that had been denied in discovery. This
    tentative ruling also noted the amended judgment made fees
    recoverable only against Ari and not against the individual
    people who were defendants. The court determined $450 an hour
    was a reasonable rate for Abramson and that the issues in the
    case were “not particularly complex.” The court observed the
    Kartons’ motion lacked a breakdown of hours spent by counsel
    beyond a “bare-bones declaration” that merely asserted a total of
    603.4 hours and an estimate of percentages devoted to different
    tasks. The tentative ruling concluded the Kartons provided
    insufficient evidence for the court to assess whether the
    requested fees were reasonable. The court proposed to continue
    the hearing to allow the Kartons to supply the missing evidence
    to justify their request.
    At the hearing, Karton asked for 30 days to file
    supplemental papers. The court granted this request. The court
    set a 10-page limit on the filing. Karton said, “I assume that’s
    the text” and not the exhibits, and the court said yes.
    In February 2019, the Kartons filed 11 pages of text and
    over 400 pages of supplemental briefing. In this filing, the
    Kartons “updated” their demand by adding $16,110 to their fee
    request. Without explicitly saying so, the Kartons suggested
    their initial billing figures were incorrect.
    The second hearing was on March 25, 2019. Karton was
    the sole attorney representing the Kartons; Abramson did not
    appear. Karton and the court agreed the Trope case barred
    recovery for the time Karton himself had spent on the case. (See
    Trope v. Katz (1995) 
    11 Cal.4th 274
    , 292 [attorney litigants may
    not recover attorney fees as compensation for effort they spend
    litigating matters on their own behalf].)
    6
    Karton said the trial court’s damage award against Ari was
    $102,000.
    The court noted Karton’s original request was for about
    $270,000 in attorney fees but the request lacked evidence “as to
    the number of hours spent or the tasks performed by whom, et
    cetera . . . .”
    The court expressed surprise Karton now had increased
    that request “beyond what had previously been requested.”
    The trial court commented on the Kartons’ lack of civility in
    their briefing. “The briefing filed by [the Kartons’] counsel was
    replete with attacks on defense counsel such as that defense
    counsel filed ‘knowingly false claims of witness tampering,’ ‘her
    comments were frivolous,’ something was ‘typical of the improper
    tactics employed by defendants and their counsel’. [¶] It was
    really offensive to me, the attacks made in this case.”
    The trial court stated it had given Karton the “opportunity
    to revive a request that could have been denied by the court two
    months ago, and instead of denying it, I gave you the opportunity
    to file evidence. [¶] I did not expect to see a request for increased
    fees, and I did not expect to see these kind[s] of improper attacks
    on counsel in your briefing.”
    The court said Karton and his cocounsel “filed a lot of
    papers, several hundred pages worth of documents, of block
    billing, given the fact that you were told by the court to file
    documents with a 10-page limit. Again, I was surprised to find,
    oh, 300 pages of documents filed. [¶] I assumed that you would
    give me billing records, and you have, but I also have a lot of
    extraneous documentation, a lot of paper that I did not need and
    did not want in ruling on this motion. [¶] If this is reflective of
    the litigation that went on in this relatively simple-sounding
    7
    case, I understand how you may and your counsel may have
    spent the number of hours that you claim to have spent.”
    The court observed the Kartons had gone “so far beyond
    what was necessary on this matter.”
    The court concluded, “I cannot say that anything like
    $270,000 requested in this case is reasonable.” The $270,000 fee
    request was “excessive by a lot.”
    Karton said, “I’m sorry that you feel that I have offended
    the court.” He continued, “I’m facing a situation where a judge
    ruled that the other side completely cheated. They claimed—they
    claimed that they were insured, and they weren’t.” The court
    agreed: “That’s what Judge Newman found.”
    The court observed Karton was “agitated about this case.
    This is your personal matter, and I understand that. I see that
    you have strong feelings about this case and strong feelings about
    the course of this litigation and how it has proceeded.”
    The court asked Karton, “Can you not interrupt me. I
    would appreciate your letting me finish my sentence.” Karton
    apologized.
    The court stated that what Karton had “presented here
    went vastly beyond what I anticipated.” The court noted the
    additional 20 exhibits the Kartons attached to their supplemental
    10-page brief “is emblematic to me of the over-litigation of this
    case.” “[T]his was reflective of the amount of time that was spent
    on various tasks throughout the course of this litigation.”
    The court took the matter under submission.
    The next day the court issued a minute order approving
    200 hours at $450 per hour, for a total fee of $90,000. The order
    noted the court had given Karton leave to file supplemental
    briefing of 10 pages but that Karton had filed hundreds of pages
    8
    with 20 or more additional exhibits—an effort Karton claimed
    took 30 hours of attorney time. Karton’s supplemental briefing
    increased the size of his fee request. The order reviewed law
    about the lodestar method of fee calculation and noted its broad
    discretion to adjust an award downward or to deny it completely
    if it determined a request was excessive, citing Ketchum v. Moses
    (2001) 
    24 Cal.4th 1122
    , 1132 (Ketchum). (See also id. at p. 1138
    [“To the extent a trial court is concerned that a particular award
    is excessive, it has broad discretion to adjust the fee downward or
    deny an unreasonable fee altogether.”].)
    The order noted the “inflammatory language” in Karton’s
    briefing. The court reiterated the Kartons’ supplemental briefing
    “vastly exceeded” the scope of the court’s order and was
    “emblematic of the vast over-litigating of this matter.” “In its
    discretion, the court finds that 200 hours at $450/hour ($90,000)”
    was a reasonable attorney fee for the Kartons. “The issues of this
    case do not appear particularly complex, and the request for fees
    is vastly in excess of what is reasonable. Fees three times the
    award [do] not seem to be reasonable, nor [do] 600 hours of
    attorney time.”
    On a separate issue, the court ruled the Kartons had no
    statutory or contractual basis for a recovery of attorney fees
    against Wesco.
    The Kartons appealed.
    II
    We reject the Kartons’ complaint that the $90,000 attorney
    fee award is too small.
    A
    We review attorney fee awards for abuse of discretion. An
    experienced trial judge is in the best position to evaluate the
    9
    value of professional services rendered in the trial court. We
    presume the fee approved by the trial court is reasonable. We
    will not disturb the trial court’s judgment unless it is clearly
    wrong. The burden is on the objector to show error. (Laffitte v.
    Robert Half Internat. Inc. (2016) 
    1 Cal.5th 480
    , 488 (Laffitte).)
    Equitable principles inform this project. (PLCM Group, Inc. v.
    Drexler (2000) 
    22 Cal.4th 1084
    , 1095 (PLCM).)
    The benchmark in determining attorney fees is
    reasonableness. Courts have developed two ways to define a
    reasonable fee.
    The first method is the lodestar approach. This method
    traces back at least to the famous Lindy case: Lindy Bros.
    Builders, Inc. of Philadelphia v. American Radiator & Standard
    Sanitary Corp. (3d Cir. 1973) 
    487 F.2d 161
    , 168. The lodestar is
    the multiplicand of a reasonable hourly rate and a reasonable
    number of hours. (PLCM, supra, 22 Cal.4th at p. 1095.) The
    court then may adjust the lodestar based on a variety of factors.
    Germane factors include the nature, difficulty, and extent of the
    litigation, the skill it required, the attention given, and the
    success or failure of the enterprise, as well as other factors. (Id.
    at p. 1096.) Whether the attorney worked on a contingency is
    relevant. (Mikhaeilpoor v. BMW of North America, LLC (2020)
    
    48 Cal.App.5th 240
    , 248 (Mikhaeilpoor).) A trial court is not
    required to state each charge it finds reasonable or unreasonable.
    A reduced award might be fully justified by a general observation
    that an attorney over-litigated a case. (Id. at p. 250.)
    The second method is the percentage-of-recovery approach.
    The percentage approach arose in the class action context and
    predated the lodestar method, but has always shared the lodestar
    method’s fundamental goal of defining “reasonableness” in a
    10
    given case. (E.g., Laffitte, supra, 1 Cal.5th at p. 504 [the goal
    under both the percentage and lodestar approach is the award of
    a reasonable fee to compensate counsel for their efforts].)
    Over the decades, there has been a nationwide tug-of-war
    about which method is superior: lodestar versus percentage.
    (Laffitte, supra, 1 Cal.5th at pp. 489–503.) Each approach has
    advantages and disadvantages. The lodestar method better
    accounts for the amount of work done, while the percentage
    approach more accurately reflects the results achieved. (Id. at
    p. 489.)
    In 2010, the American Law Institute concluded “ ‘most
    courts and commentators now believe that the percentage
    method is superior. Critics of the lodestar method note, for
    example, the difficulty in applying the method and cite the
    undesirable incentives created by that approach—i.e., a financial
    incentive to extend the litigation so that the attorneys can accrue
    additional hours (and thus, additional fees).’ ” (Laffitte, supra, 1
    Cal.5th at p. 494, quoting ALI, Principles of the Law of Aggregate
    Litigation (2010) § 3.13, com. b.)
    Attorneys can be prone to opportunistic opinions on which
    approach they prefer, depending on the circumstances of their
    case. The reason is obvious: money.
    If the recovery is large, plaintiffs’ counsel can favor the
    percentage approach, because a percentage of a very large
    number itself can be large. (E.g., Augustus v. ABM Security
    Services, Inc. (2016) 
    2 Cal.5th 257
    , 260 [“trial court granted
    summary judgment for plaintiffs, finding ABM liable and
    awarding approximately $90 million”]; Augustus v. American
    Commercial Security Services (L.A.Super.Ct., June 30, 2017, No.
    BC336416) 
    2017 WL 11417614
     [attorney fee award of over 30
    11
    percent of that sum].) Correspondingly, defense counsel in such
    cases can be articulate as to why a percentage approach is
    misguided.
    If the recovery is comparatively slight, both sides can
    reverse field, with plaintiffs’ counsel insisting the lodestar
    approach must dominate and defense counsel praising the virtues
    of the percentage method.
    Our Supreme Court has concluded that, in common fund
    cases, trial courts have discretion to begin with a percentage
    approach and then to use the lodestar approach to cross-check
    the reasonableness of the percentage. (Laffitte, supra, 1 Cal.5th
    at pp. 503–506.) The court has stressed it has not mandated a
    blanket “lodestar only” approach. (Id. at p. 500; see also id. at
    p. 503.)
    The Supreme Court also has approved the trial court’s
    discretion to use a positive or negative multiplier to adjust the
    lodestar sum. (E.g., Laffitte, supra, 1 Cal.5th at p. 505.) Use of a
    multiplier can affect the final award considerably: it can double
    or treble the beginning figure, or more, and can reduce it
    drastically too. No established criteria calibrate the precise size
    and direction of the multiplier, thus implying considerable
    deference to trial court decisionmaking about attorney fee
    awards.
    B
    The trial court used sound discretion to limit the Kartons’
    attorney fees to $90,000.
    The court began with the conventional lodestar calculation:
    a reasonable hourly rate times a reasonable number of hours.
    The rate is undisputed. On hours, the Kartons said their
    attorney devoted more than 600 hours to this litigation. The
    12
    court did not doubt it, but thought the hours were “excessive by a
    lot.”
    The court gave five good reasons for concluding 600 plus
    hours was unreasonable.
    First, the trial court rightly found the questions in this case
    were relatively simple. Difficult issues require more attorney
    hours. (Ketchum, supra, 24 Cal.4th at p. 1138.) Simpler
    questions require fewer. Here the issues were pedestrian:
    whether a contractor had insurance and a license. On the issue
    of how much Ari owed the Kartons, Cheryl Karton testified Ari
    owed $35,096, and “[t]his testimony was not controverted by the
    Defendants.” In the realm of civil litigation in California, this
    case was relatively straightforward.
    Second, the court had an ample basis to conclude the
    Kartons over-litigated this matter. They had about a $23,000
    dispute with their contractor: the Kartons had said Ari owed
    $35,096 and Ari had claimed the debt was only $13,000. A
    $23,000 argument must be resolved, but it does not justify
    launching a disproportionate litigation offensive. The Kartons’
    strategy netted them windfall gains: the harshness of contractor
    licensing laws allowed them to recoup all their construction
    monies, plus $10,000, and to retain the benefit of months of free
    construction work. Notwithstanding this windfall, this remained
    a small case in the range of civil matters in the Los Angeles
    Superior Court. The trial court did not abuse its discretion by
    acknowledging this salient point.
    Third, the trial court fairly attributed some of the over-
    litigation to Karton’s personal embroilment in the matter.
    Karton is an experienced lawyer. He brought this suit about his
    own home. Karton declared, “I was substantially involved in this
    13
    case because I was cheated. So, yes, I was involved.” The trial
    court observed Karton’s demeanor at the hearings and saw he
    was “agitated about this case. This is your personal matter, and I
    understand that. I see that you have strong feelings about this
    case and strong feelings about the course of this litigation and
    how it has proceeded.” The court had reason to conclude
    embroilment undermined objectivity about the appropriate scale
    of litigation.
    Fourth, the trial court rightly sought an appropriate
    relationship between the result achieved and the size of the fee.
    For a century or more, California courts have considered the
    success or failure of attorney efforts when evaluating attorney fee
    requests. (E.g., Grass v. Rindge Co. (1927) 
    84 Cal.App. 750
    , 767;
    Mikhaeilpoor, supra, 48 Cal.App.5th at p. 247.)
    The size of a judgment is pertinent to rational evaluation of
    a requested fee. Rational decisionmaking weighs benefits and
    costs. The judgment measures the dollar benefit of the litigation.
    The attorney fee is the cost of obtaining that benefit. This was
    strictly a money judgment; there was no injunctive or equitable
    relief of an intangible value. The dollar and cents precisely
    quantified the benefit to the Kartons.
    Weighing cost and benefit, this trial court concluded a fee
    three times the judgment was not reasonable. This was logical:
    rational investors or buyers would not spend $3 to get something
    worth $1. The trial court properly connected the fee to the
    judgment.
    Fifth, the court correctly noted the incivility in Karton’s
    briefing. Attorney skill is a traditional touchstone for deciding
    whether to adjust a lodestar. (Ketchum, supra, 24 Cal.4th at
    p. 1132.) Civility is an aspect of skill.
    14
    Excellent lawyers deserve higher fees, and excellent
    lawyers are civil. Sound logic and bitter experience support these
    points.
    Civility is an ethical component of professionalism. Civility
    is desirable in litigation, not only because it is ethically required
    for its own sake, but also because it is socially advantageous: it
    lowers the costs of dispute resolution. The American legal
    profession exists to help people resolve disputes cheaply, swiftly,
    fairly, and justly. Incivility between counsel is sand in the gears.
    Incivility can rankle relations and thereby increase the
    friction, extent, and cost of litigation. Calling opposing counsel a
    liar, for instance, can invite destructive reciprocity and generate
    needless controversies. Seasoning a disagreement with avoidable
    irritants can turn a minor conflict into a costly and protracted
    war. All those human hours, which could have been put to
    socially productive uses, instead are devoted to the unnecessary
    war and are lost forever. All sides lose, as does the justice
    system, which must supervise the hostilities.
    By contrast, civility in litigation tends to be efficient by
    allowing disputants to focus on core disagreements and to
    minimize tangential distractions. It is a salutary incentive for
    counsel in fee-shifting cases to know their own low blows may
    return to hit them in the pocketbook.
    This trial court appropriately voiced this concern. (Cf.
    Briganti v. Chow (2019) 
    42 Cal.App.5th 504
    , 511 [citing authority
    about “the larger scourge of incivility afflicting law practice”]; 
    id.
    at pp. 511–512 [judges should help reduce incivility].)
    The Kartons respond to criticism of their personal attacks
    by attacking.
    15
    First the Kartons maintain opposing counsel indeed did
    knowingly make false statements. They point to a report by a
    discovery referee. The cited pages, however, recount the parties
    stipulated certain evidence would be inadmissible. They do not
    find someone knowingly made false statements. In oral
    argument on appeal, however, Karton continued to assert
    opposing counsel was a liar.
    Next the Kartons defend calling opposing counsel’s
    comments “frivolous.” They claim a meet and confer letter was so
    meritless as to justify this language. The Kartons do not,
    however, cite a finding faulting this supposedly meritless letter.
    On this point, the Kartons quote the Phil Spector murder
    case at some length, to no avail. There, in closing argument a
    prosecutor told a jury that expert witnesses will say anything if
    you pay them enough. (People v. Spector (2011) 
    194 Cal.App.4th 1335
    , 1404 (Spector).) This case is irrelevant. Spector involved
    neither an attack on opposing counsel’s integrity nor appropriate
    factors in setting an attorney fee award. (Id. at p. 1406.)
    Instead, it involved a closing argument about an expert witness
    jurors had to evaluate.
    Finally, the trial court noted the Kartons denigrated the
    actions of opposing counsel as “typical of the improper tactics
    employed by defendants and their counsel.” The Kartons argue
    “this characterization falls within the scope of the type of
    advocacy approved in People v. Spector . . . .” The Spector case
    did not involve attacks on the integrity of opposing counsel.
    (Spector, supra, 194 Cal.App.4th at p. 1406.) This argument
    fails.
    In short, in this appeal the Kartons have come out
    swinging, apparently believing the best defense is a good offense.
    16
    This approach demonstrates the trial court was within its
    discretion to conclude the Kartons conducted litigation that was
    less than civil.
    In sum, these five grounds were sound bases for reducing
    the requested attorney fee from about $300,000 to $90,000.
    The Kartons raise other objections to the reduction. They
    argue the trial court abused its discretion by comparing the size
    of the fee request to the size of judgment. The Kartons offer no
    authority for this assertion, which is contrary to the case law
    noted above. (E.g., Laffitte, supra, 1 Cal. 5th at p. 503 [“the
    percentage method is a valuable tool that should not be denied
    our trial courts”]; see also id. at p. 504.) It is logical and
    customary to compare cost to benefit.
    The Kartons say the trial court failed to consider materials
    they included with their supplemental brief. The record is to the
    contrary. The trial court referred to the Kartons’ papers during
    the hearing and based part of its ruling on those documents. The
    court’s written order also referred to these materials.
    The Kartons cite Stokus v. Marsh (1990) 
    217 Cal.App.3d 647
     (Stokus). That case supports Ari and the trial court, not the
    Kartons. In Stokus, a jury in an unlawful detainer action
    awarded possession of real property and $6,166 in damages to the
    plaintiff landlord. The trial court awarded this landlord $75,000
    in attorney fees. (Id. at p. 651.) The appellate court affirmed this
    award because the defense had “tenaciously over-litigated” the
    case. (Id. at p. 653 & fn. 3.) The Stokus opinion penalized over-
    litigation. So did this trial court.
    The Kartons cite Gorman v. Tassajara Development Corp.
    (2009) 
    178 Cal.App.4th 44
    , which also supports this trial court’s
    order. In contrast to this case, the trial court in Gorman issued
    17
    no tentative rulings on the fee motion. During the hearing the
    court asked no questions and expressed no views. The court took
    the matter under submission, and then issued a Delphic order
    cutting the fee request to $416,581.37. Note the 37 cents. The
    court did not explain its ruling. (Id. at pp. 53, 56–57.) The
    precision of this mystifying order implied some deep logic the
    appellate court struggled to uncover but failed to find. Unable to
    surmise a reasonable explanation, the appellate court concluded
    the order was merely arbitrary. (Id. at pp. 53 & 100–101.) There
    was no such veiled trial court conduct here. Rather, this trial
    court issued a tentative ruling, stated its views during two
    hearings, and in its written order repeated the same reasoning,
    which is cogent and consistent. Gorman shows one wrong way
    for a trial court to rule on fees. This trial court showed one right
    way.
    As an alternate basis for their request of their fee request,
    the Kartons fault the trial court for failing to impose monetary
    discovery sanctions against all defendants, including Wesco. We
    review a trial court’s decision to impose terminating sanctions for
    abuse of discretion, drawing all reasonable inferences in support
    of the court’s ruling. (Padron v. Watchtower Bible & Tract
    Society of New York, Inc. (2017) 
    16 Cal.App.5th 1246
    , 1260.)
    The Kartons point to a May 2017 report from a discovery
    referee as the basis for their sanction request. With our italics,
    this report recommended the possibility of future sanctions “in
    the event of any further non-compliance . . . .” There is, however,
    no later finding of further non-compliance.
    On appeal, the Kartons have not cited record evidence to
    show they moved for discovery sanctions between this May 2017
    report and the November 2017 trial. The trial court thus was
    18
    justified in concluding that pretrial discovery disputes were stale
    and that posttrial motions on the topic were tardy. We imply this
    determination in support of the order and do not upset it.
    In support of their sanctions argument, the Kartons cite
    the inapposite cases of Doppes and London.
    Doppes v. Bentley Motors, Inc. (2009) 
    174 Cal.App.4th 967
    is a memorable case about an expensive luxury car that smelled
    bad. A car buyer sued Bentley about a persistent interior odor
    that Bentley, despite many efforts, could not eliminate. In
    pretrial litigation, Bentley claimed to be unaware of an odor
    problem with this model. Then it came out Bentley knew
    perfectly well a wax on this model routinely created this odor
    problem. Bentley even had given its dealers an “Odour
    Reduction” procedure to combat the recurrent smell problem.
    The extent of Bentley’s discovery abuse did not emerge until trial,
    at which point the car buyer renewed its motion for discovery
    sanctions. (Id. at pp. 971–986, 993–994.) The motion in Doppes
    was timely. The motion here was not.
    London v. Dri-Honing Corp. (2004) 
    117 Cal.App.4th 999
    ,
    1008–1009 stressed the importance of timeliness for motions for
    monetary sanctions. The Kartons’ motion was untimely.
    The trial court thus correctly denied the Kartons’ sanctions
    motion as untimely.
    Additionally, the Kartons seek to offer an alternative basis
    for their attorney fee request, which is a cost-of-proof theory.
    The Kartons correctly acknowledge they are not entitled to
    duplicative fees. Their alternative recovery theory, however,
    likewise requires a finding the requested fees are reasonable.
    (Code Civ. Proc., § 2033.420, subd. (a) [allowing “reasonable
    expenses incurred in making that proof, including reasonable
    19
    attorney’s fees”].) The trial court properly concluded $90,000 was
    a reasonable attorney fee and more would not be allowed. That
    conclusion applies here as well.
    The Kartons criticize the trial court’s decision to confine
    liability for attorney fees to Ari as an entity and not to extend the
    obligation individually to Messika, Guttman, and Toledano.
    This decision turned on an interpretation on the amended
    judgment, which we have examined. The court’s statement of
    decision ruled Messika, Guttman, and Toledano were not alter
    egos of Ari. The trial court’s interpretation of the amended
    judgment is reasonable. We accept it.
    In conclusion, it was not an abuse of discretion for the trial
    court to limit the attorney fee award in this case to $90,000.
    III
    Separate from the size of the fee award is the question who
    must pay it. On this issue the Kartons are right: the trial court
    should have extended liability for attorney fees to Ari’s surety,
    which is Wesco. The trial court incorrectly reasoned no statute or
    contract provided for fees against Wesco. The Kartons properly
    disagree, for their attorney fees are recoverable as costs under
    section 1029.8 of the Code of Civil Procedure. We reverse this
    aspect of the court’s order. Wesco is liable for the $90,000 fee as
    a cost of litigation.
    As Wesco concedes, we independently review this question
    of law. (McKinnon v. Otis Elevator Co. (2007) 
    149 Cal.App.4th 1125
    , 1129.)
    The facts about this surety situation are undisputed.
    Sections 7071.5 and 7071.6 of the Business and Professions Code
    required contractors like Ari to procure a contractor’s bond.
    Before becoming involved with the Kartons, Ari complied with
    20
    this law by buying a $12,500 surety bond from Wesco. (At that
    time, the statute required the bond to be for $12,500; later the
    Legislature increased this sum.) When the Kartons sued Ari,
    their complaint stated a claim against Wesco and its $12,500
    surety bond. Rather than interplead these funds, Wesco tendered
    its defense to Ari’s lawyers. In other words, Wesco decided to
    fight the Kartons rather than pay them. After the court entered
    judgment against Ari and the Kartons filed their bill of costs,
    Wesco sent the Kartons a check for $38,768.49, which was the
    sum of the $12,500, of certain litigation costs, and of
    postjudgment interest. This sum excluded attorney fees, which
    the Kartons said Wesco had to pay as a litigation cost. The
    Kartons acknowledged Wesco’s $38,768.49 payment but reserved
    their claim that the proper cost figure should include attorney
    fees. The trial court ruled for Wesco and exempted it from
    liability for the $90,000 attorney fee award.
    This trial court ruling was error that ran contrary to
    precedent, which supports the Kartons. The crucial concept is
    that, by statute, the surety’s liability is commensurate with its
    principal, and here an underlying statute made Ari liable to the
    Kartons for reasonable attorney fees.
    The main case is Pierce v. Western Surety Co. (2012) 
    207 Cal.App.4th 83
     (Pierce). Pierce dealt with surety bonds, albeit for
    car dealerships and not construction contractors. (Id. at p. 86.)
    Pierce surveyed general surety law, including cases involving
    construction bonds. (See id. at p. 89 [reviewing Boliver v. Surety
    Co. (1977) 
    72 Cal.App.3d Supp. 22
     and T&R Painting
    Construction, Inc. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. (1994) 
    23 Cal.App.4th 738
    ].) Pierce held that the principal’s conduct
    violated the Consumers Legal Remedies Act (Civ. Code, § 1750 et
    21
    seq.) and this Act provided for attorney fees for prevailing
    plaintiffs. (Pierce, at p. 92 [referring to Civ. Code, § 1780, subd.
    (e)].) The surety’s obligation to pay costs under Code of Civil
    Procedure section 1032 was based on its status as a litigant and
    was not for breach of the condition of the bond. (Pierce, at p. 92.)
    The Pierce decision affirmed the award of attorney fees as an
    item of costs that was not limited by a statutory cap on damages.
    (Id. at p. 93.)
    The Pierce decision mandates victory for the Kartons
    against Wesco, as follows. A prevailing party is entitled to costs
    incurred in pursuing the claim. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1032, subd.
    (b).) When authorized by statute, attorney fees are allowable as
    costs. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1033.5, subd. (a)(10).) Under Civil Code
    section 2808, a surety’s liability is commensurate with that of the
    principal within the express terms of the bond and of pertinent
    statutes. If the principal would have been liable for attorney fees
    based on conduct secured by the bond, the surety also is liable for
    the attorney fees as a cost item. (Pierce, supra, 207 Cal.App.4th
    at pp. 92–93.)
    Wesco was a surety, as it readily agrees. Wesco’s liability
    therefore is commensurate with that of its principal Ari. By
    operation of section 1029.8 of the Code of Civil Procedure, Ari is
    liable to the Kartons for reasonable attorney fees of $90,000, as
    we have described. Under Pierce, then, so too is Wesco liable to
    the Kartons for reasonable attorney fees of $90,000 as a cost
    item.
    Wesco does not attack Pierce as wrongly decided. Rather,
    with a single paragraph, Wesco attempts to distinguish Pierce.
    Wesco writes, “Pierce is distinguishable because in that case
    there was an underlying statute (the Song-Beverly Consumer
    22
    Warranty Act) which had an attorney fee provision applicable to
    the terms of the bond. That is not the case here.”
    Wesco’s effort to distinguish Pierce founders because there
    indeed is an underlying statute with an attorney fee provision:
    section 1029.8 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The Kartons rely
    on this statute in their opening papers. Wesco ignores this
    statute when attempting to distinguish Pierce, and thereby
    effectively concedes the point: Wesco is liable for the Kartons’
    $90,000 in attorney fees as a cost item, according to the analysis
    in Pierce.
    Wesco protests its liability cannot exceed its bond amount
    and thus is limited to $12,500, which it already had paid. Wesco
    says this follows under the so-called “Hartford rule.” (See Harris
    v. Northwestern Nat. Ins. Co. (1992) 
    6 Cal.App.4th 1061
    , 1067–
    1068 (Harris) [citing Hartford Accident and Indemnity Co. v.
    I.A.C. (1932) 
    216 Cal. 40
    , 50, which in turn cites Hartford Fire
    Ins. Co. v. Casey (Mo.Ct.App. 1917) 
    191 S.W. 1072
    , 1076].)
    According to the precedent Wesco itself cites, however, the
    Hartford rule is consistent with Wesco’s obligation to pay costs
    that are not limited by the amount of its bond. (Harris, at p.
    1068.) The Kartons’ attorney fee qualifies as a cost Wesco is
    responsible to pay as a cost of its litigation. (Pierce, supra, 207
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 92–93.)
    The Supreme Court quoted Harris approvingly and in a
    pertinent way. (See Pilimai v. Farmers Ins. Exchange Co. (2006)
    
    39 Cal.4th 133
    , 144–145 [“ ‘As a losing party litigant, appellant is
    properly subjected to costs in addition to the amount of the
    bond.’ (Harris, supra, 6 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1065–1066.)”].)
    Wesco’s actions belie its argument. Wesco says it cannot be
    liable for more than the $12,500 sum of its bond. Yet it
    23
    voluntarily wrote the Kartons a check for $38,768.49, which was
    the sum of the $12,500, plus postjudgment interest, and plus
    costs. When a surety decides to fight a lawsuit, it can make itself
    liable for the costs of that litigation in excess of the face value of
    its bond, as Wesco’s own actions demonstrate.
    Wesco protests that it violates public policy to make it
    liable for attorney fees. Wesco says public policy favors low
    insurance premiums, and that to increase its liability would
    mean higher insurance rates.
    This argument runs afoul of case law, which explains that,
    to avoid the costs and risks of litigation, Wesco could have
    negotiated settlement of its own liability or used interpleader
    procedures to deposit the amount of its bond in court. (Harris,
    supra, 6 Cal.App.4th at p. 1066.) Instead, Wesco elected to
    gamble that it and Ari could avoid liability altogether on the
    merits. “Having lost that gamble, [Wesco] is not in a position to
    complain about liability for court costs . . . .” (Ibid.)
    Wesco has not answered this argument. In their opening
    papers, the Kartons quote this portion of Harris concerning
    Wesco’s interpleader option. Wesco does not respond; the word
    “interpleader” does not appear in Wesco’s brief. We infer Wesco
    has not answered because it cannot. This dispatches its public
    policy argument. If Wesco wished to avoid the open-ended costs
    of litigation, it could have done what it avoided doing here:
    interplead its $12,500 principal and minimize its liability for
    litigation costs.
    After receiving our tentative ruling, Wesco attempted
    during oral argument to launch a new argument about
    interpleader. Wesco’s failure to brief its interpleader argument
    24
    forfeited it. (Sunset Drive Corp. v. City of Redlands (1999) 
    73 Cal.App.4th 215
    , 226.)
    Wesco argues the trial court lacked jurisdiction to
    determine whether Ari was licensed because the Contractors
    State License Board has exclusive jurisdiction over this question.
    Wesco neglects the statute at issue, which vests jurisdiction “in
    any court of competent jurisdiction . . . .” (Bus. & Prof. Code,
    § 7031, subd. (b), italics added.) This statutory grant of
    jurisdiction refutes Wesco’s argument.
    DISPOSITION
    We reverse the trial court’s ruling exempting Wesco from
    liability for the $90,000 attorney fee award. We otherwise affirm
    the order and we remand the case for further proceedings. Ari,
    Guttman, Toledano, and Messika are to recover their costs on
    appeal from the Kartons. The Kartons and Wesco shall bear
    their own costs.
    WILEY, J.
    We concur:
    BIGELOW, P. J.
    GRIMES, J.
    25