Anthony v. Li

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 13, 2020
DocketA156640
StatusPublished

This text of Anthony v. Li (Anthony v. Li) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anthony v. Li, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 4/13/20 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

CHAD ANTHONY, Plaintiff and Appellant, A156640 v. (San Francisco County XIAOBIN LI, Super. Ct. No. CGC-16-551957) Defendant and Respondent.

Plaintiff and appellant Chad Anthony (Anthony) filed a personal injury lawsuit against defendant and respondent Xiaobin Li (Li). Anthony prevailed at trial and sought to recover costs under Code of Civil Procedure sections 998 and 1032 and Li moved to tax (or strike) costs. 1 The court granted the motion, in part, denying reimbursement for expert witnesses, mediation, and court reporter fees. We see no merit to Anthony’s challenge to the court’s ruling and affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND In 2016, Anthony filed a lawsuit seeking to recover damages for personal injuries sustained in a 2014 car accident between him and Li in San Francisco. At the time of the accident, Li resided out of the United States

1 All further unspecified statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.

1 and was driving a vehicle rented from PV Holding Corporation (PV Holding), doing business as Avis Rent-A-Car. He purchased a $1 million liability insurance policy from PV Holding, which was self-insured for its own liability. The complaint alleged causes of actions for “motor vehicle” and “general negligence” and named as defendants Li (driver of vehicle) and PV Holding (owner and entruster of vehicle). Anthony served the summons and complaint on PV Holding as a named defendant, and separately served the pleadings on Li as a named defendant by service on PV Holding under Civil Code former section 1936 [now and hereinafter referred to as “section 1939.33” 2]. Li and PV Holding, represented by the same counsel, filed separate answers and separate discovery responses.

2 Civil Code section 1939.33 provides, in pertinent part: “(a) When a rental company enters into a rental agreement in the state for the rental of a vehicle to any renter who is not a resident of this country and, as part of, or associated with, the rental agreement, the renter purchases liability insurance, . . ., from the rental company in its capacity as a rental vehicle agent for an authorized insurer, the rental company shall be authorized to accept, and if served . . ., shall accept, service of a summons and complaint and any other required documents against the foreign renter for any accident or collision resulting from the operation of the rental vehicle within the state during the rental period. . . . (b) Within 30 days of acceptance of service of process, the rental company shall provide a copy of the summons and complaint and any other required documents . . . to the foreign renter by first-class mail, return receipt requested. (c) Any plaintiff, . . ., who elects to serve the foreign renter by delivering a copy of the summons and complaint and any other required documents to the rental company pursuant to subdivision (a) shall agree to limit his or her recovery against the foreign renter and the rental company to the limits of the protection extended by the liability insurance. (d) . . . . (e) Notwithstanding any other law, the requirement that the rental company accept service of process pursuant to subdivision (a) shall not create any duty, obligation, or agency relationship other than that provided in subdivision (a).”

2 In December 2017, the parties agreed to participate in voluntary private mediation pursuant to a JAMS standard form agreement. The agreement provided, in pertinent part, that the parties “agree to divide the professional fees and additional fees as follows: 50% [named counsel](Chad Anthony); 50 % [named counsel] (Xiaobin Li, et al.); and as set forth in the neutral’s Fee Schedule.” Each party further agreed “to pay its share of the estimated fees and expenses to be received by JAMS at least 14 calendar days prior to the session.” The parties paid the requested fees, and participated in mediation that ultimately was not successful. Four months later, in April 2018, Anthony filed a voluntary dismissal in favor of PV Holding. In June 2018, Anthony served a section 998 offer, seeking to compromise the action subject to the following terms and conditions: “Pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure [s]ection 998, Plaintiff, CHAD ANTHONY, hereby offers to allow judgment to be taken against Defendants, XIAOBIN LI, PV HOLDING CORPORATION, and in favor of Plaintiff, CHAD ANTHONY, in the sum of five hundred thousand dollars and no cents ($500,000.00), each side to bear its own fees and costs.” The attached “[NOTICE OF ACCEPTANCE OF OFFER TO COMPROMISE],” read: “Comes now Defendants, XIAOBIN LI, PV HOLDING CORPORATION, by and through their attorney of record with full and specific authority in the circumstances, and ACCEPT the within OFFER TO COMPROMISE to allow judgment to be entered against Defendants XIAOBIN LI, PV HOLDING CORPORATION and in favor of Plaintiff CHAD ANTHONY in the sum of five hundred thousand dollars and no cents ($500,000.00), each side to bear its own fees and costs.” Neither Li nor PV Holding accepted the offer.

3 In July 2018, Li alone made a section 998 offer to settle all claims against him for $175,001.00, in exchange for (1) “a dismissal with prejudice of plaintiff’s complaint against defendant;” (2) Anthony’s execution and acceptance of the terms stated in an attached document releasing all claims for damages sought or could be sought by Anthony as a result of the incident described in the complaint, and (3) each party bearing their own attorney fees and costs. The attached release sought to release Li and unspecified agents, employees, insurers, and corporate entities. Anthony did not accept the offer. In September 2018, the parties jointly hired a court reporting service, US Legal Support, to record the trial proceedings. Counsel signed a memorandum of understanding prepared by US Legal Support, which provided that the “parties . . . agree to share equally the fees for court reporting services rendered in the matter referred above [Anthony v. Li]. Services for this matter will be charged at the rates attached. Each party will be invoiced an equal share of the per diem fee and charges associated with the original transcript.” Anthony was billed and paid his share of court reporter fees. In October 2018, following a ten-day trial, a jury returned a verdict finding Li negligent and awarding Anthony damages of $650,235.00. Following entry of judgment, Anthony served a memorandum of costs for $83,048.06, seeking in pertinent part: $62,082.50 for section 998 post-offer expert witness fees; $2,650 for mediation fees, and $6,561.62 for court reporter fees. Li filed a motion to tax (or strike) costs, which was opposed by Anthony. The parties waived oral argument. The court granted the costs motion, in part, taxing expert witness, mediation, and court reporter fees. The court taxed expert witness fees because Anthony’s section 998 offer “was joint and not apportioned. The offer

4 was made on June 5, 2018 and was directed to two defendants, one of which had been dismissed on April 12, 2018. The offer was ambiguous and not effective to burden defendant Li with the fees of [Anthony’s] expert witnesses.” The court taxed mediation and court reporter fees because “[t]he papers show that the counsel agreed to split the fees equally, and it is undisputed that each party paid half of the fees incurred. The parties did not reserve the right to seek relief from that agreement or to seek prevailing party fees notwithstanding that agreement. The parties are bound by their agreement.” Anthony’s timely appeal ensued. DISCUSSION I. The Expert Witness Fees were Properly Taxed as the Section 998 Offer was Invalid

Reviewing the validity of the section 998 offer de novo (Barella v.

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Bluebook (online)
Anthony v. Li, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anthony-v-li-calctapp-2020.