Rash v. Moczulski

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 16, 2017
DocketN13C-06-068 VLM
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Rash v. Moczulski, (Del. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

SUPER|OR COURT oFTHE

STATE OF DEL.AWARE

CHARLES E. BUT|_ER NEW cAsTl_E couNTY couRTHousE .:uo¢E 500 NoR~rH KlNG sTREE~r, susz 10400 Wll_MlNGToN, DEL.AWARE 1980|-3733`

October 16a 2017 TE\_EPHoNE (302) 255-0656

Lawrance S. Kimmel, Esquire

Kimmel Carter Roman Peltz & O’Neill, P.A. PlaZa 273

56 West Main Street, 4th Floor

Christiana, DE 19702

Richard D. Abrams, Esquire Mintzer, Sarowitz, Zeris, Ledva & Meyers, LLP Citizens Bank Center

919 North Market Street, Suite 200 Wilmington, DE 19801

Re: Rash v. Moczulski, et al C.A. No. N13C-06-068 VLM Defendants’ Motion for Costs is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part.

Counsel:

This is (hopefully) the last matter to be cleared up concerning this litigation, which saw a verdict for the Plaintiffs for Zero dollars, a Superior Court denial of Plaintiffs’ new trial motion with additur of $10,000 in favor of Plaintiffs, an appeal of the denial of the new trial motion by the Plaintiffs and a cross appeal of the additur ruling by Defendants, resulting in an affirmance of the Superior Court, and now

Defendants’ Motion for Costs.

The basis for Defendants’ Motion for Costs is Defendants’ Offer of Judgment pursuant to Del. Super. Ct. Civ. R. 68. Rule 68 provides that where a defendant makes an Offer of J udgment that is not accepted by the plaintiff within 10 days, there may be consequences “If the judgment finally obtained by the offeree is not more favorable than the offer, the offeree must pay the costs incurred after the making of the offer.”l

Here, Defendants made an Offer of Judgment in the amount of $50,002 in June, 2015. The offer was not accepted, and a trial was subsequently held. The jury found that Defendants caused injury but assessed the damages at Zero dollars. That made no one happy. In lieu of granting a new trial, the Court awarded additur of $l0,000 which, we now know, fell quite a bit short of the previously rejected Offer of Judgment. Proving that no good deed goes unpunished, we must now sort out the relationship between “costs” payable after a judgment under Rule 54 and after an Offer of Judgment under Rule 68.

F or purposes of this discussion, these two superficially conflicting rules can be harmonized by saying that when a Rule 68 Offer of Judgment has been rejected and the judgment is for less than the offer, the Court has no discretion in that it must

award costs (a discretion it retains under Rule 54) but the amount of those costs are

1 Del. Super. Ct. Civ. R. 68.

subject to the definition of “costs” under Rule 54, which definition embeds the rule of reasonableness With all that said, we will get on with it. Transcript Fees After the jury’s award of zero dollars to the Plaintiffs, Plaintiffs moved for a new trial. The defense resisted and sought (and was granted) time to get the trial transcript prepared in support of its opposition to the new trial motion. These expenses came after the Offer of Judgment was made, and the Plaintiffs agree that these expenses should be assessed against them, so the Court will award $783 in trial transcript expenses to Defendants. §_f§t§_gi\__épne_al Both sides filed cross appeals to the Delaware Supreme Court. In the Court’s view, costs on appeal are governed by Supreme Court Rule 20, which states that if the judgment is affirmed, costs are to be taxed to the appellant In this case, both sides appealed, so both sides were “the appellant,” and the judgment was affirmed. The Court is therefore of the view that both sides must bear their own costs of the appeal. This would include Defendants’ use of a copy binding service and other miscellaneous charges. Expert Witness Fees Defendants’ largest post Offer of Judgment expense was for expert witnesses.

Defendants seek an award of the full costs of these experts.

Defendants have argued with some persistence that pursuant to the Delaware Supreme Court’s decision in Beaudet v. Thomas,2 this Court has no discretion to limit the award to costs that are “reasonable” and that Defendants are entitled to all post offer costs_reasonable or otherwise. In Beaudet, the Supreme Court said that in considering a motion for costs after an Offer of Judgment under Rule 68, “[t]he court’s discretion is limited to an analysis of whether the requested amounts are appropriately categorized as ‘costs’ under Superior Court Rule 54.”3

Rule 68 does not further delimit what is meant by the term “costs” In Marek v. Chesny,4 the U.S. Supreme Court dealt with the question of whether “costs” include attorney’s fees. In that case, the Court ruled that the question of recoverable costs under Rule 68 must necessarily reference the statutes or other substantive law being vindicated.5 In the Supreme Court’s view, the term “costs” under Rule 68 is deliberately vague because the recoverable costs may include or exclude various categories of post offer expenses So, for example, Defendants here make no claim for attorney’s fees, yet these “costs” were surely expended by Defendants in post

Offer of Judgment litigation. Thus, Defendants’ application to the Court is itself

2 2002 wL 416387 (Del. Mar. 11, 2002) (TABLE). 3 Id. at *l. 4 473 U.S. l (1985).

51d. at9.

inconsistent with its position that all costs, from whatever source, are recoverable after a Rule 68 Offer of Judgment.

And followed to the letter, Defendants have a problem: Rule 54 does not provide that all expert witness fees are taxable as costs In fact, the only reference to expert witness fees at all is the following, in Rule 54(h): “Fees for expert witnesses testifying on deposition shall be taxed as costs pursuant to 10 Del. C. § 8906 only where the deposition is introduced into evidence.”6 Otherwise, Rule 54 is silent on payment of any part of an expert’s costs If we look only at Rule 54, one supposes that a “live” expert is less valuable from a cost recovery standpoint than a deposed one, since the Rule allows costs only for the deposed expert.

But Rule 54 expressly incorporates 10 Del. C. § 8906, which as a matter of substantive law, allows expert witness fees to be “fixed by the Court in its discretion[.]”7 Defendants are not content with that, arguing instead that section 8906 is “inapplicable.”8 Defendants contend that Rule 68 actually has primacy over section 8906 because the Superior Court’s rulemaking authority can “supersede all

statutory provisions in conflict or inconsistent therewith.”9 Defendants would thus

6 Del. Super. Ct. Civ. R. 54(h) (emphasis added). 7 10 Del. C. § 8906. 8 Defs.’ Suppl. Br. Supp. Defs’ Am. Mot. Costs, D.I. 74, at 6.

9 Id. at 7 (quoting 10 Del. C. § 56l(c)).

have the Court read the reasonableness of expert fees out of section 8906 and Rule 54 on the grounds that Rule 68 says nothing about reasonableness But Rule 68 says nothing about expert witness fees either. lt is only when we look to Rule 54 and section 8906 that we find allowances for expert witness fees as “costs,” and those costs are circumscribed Moreover, the Court does not have the authority to overrule the legislature, and if it did, the Court would surely find greater injustices to remedy than this one.

lt has been said that Rule 68 lacks teeth,10 but Defendants’ somewhat creative arguments are no substitute for an appropriate rule change through appropriate channels In the meantime, Defendants will have to suffer the Court’s discretion to

award only “reasonable” expert fees.l]

10 Hedru v. Metro-North Commuter R.R., 433 F.Supp.2d 358, 361 (S.D.N.Y. 2006).

ll Defendants candidly direct the Court to numerous Delaware cases that have imposed “reasonable” restrictions on costs assessed under Rule 68. Defs.’ Am. Mot. Costs, D.I. 65, at 2 n.3, citing Rumanek v. Coons, 2013 WL 5788567 (Del. Super. Sept. 26, 2013); Miller v.

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Bluebook (online)
Rash v. Moczulski, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rash-v-moczulski-delsuperct-2017.