Spielbauer Law Office v. Midland Funding CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 26, 2023
DocketH049662
StatusUnpublished

This text of Spielbauer Law Office v. Midland Funding CA6 (Spielbauer Law Office v. Midland Funding CA6) 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
Spielbauer Law Office v. Midland Funding CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 6/26/23 Spielbauer Law Office v. Midland Funding CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

SPIELBAUER LAW OFFICE, H049662 (Santa Clara County Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. 18CV339157)

v.

MIDLAND FUNDING, LLC, et al.

Defendants and Respondents.

The trial court awarded attorney fees to respondents Midland Funding, LLC and Midland Credit Management, Inc. (collectively Midland) following appellant Spielbauer Law Office’s (Spielbauer) unsuccessful appeal from the judgment entered by the trial court after an order granting Midland’s special motion to strike Spielbauer’s complaint. On appeal from the attorney fees order, Spielbauer contends the trial court erred by refusing to consider an expert declaration and by denying Spielbauer’s requests for judicial notice of orders issued in other matters. We affirm the order. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND1 Spielbauer filed a complaint against Midland stating claims based on Midland’s alleged interference with the attorney-client relationship between Spielbauer and one of

1 Discussion of the background in this action is limited to the matters relevant to the issues raised in this appeal. its clients.2 The trial court granted Midland’s special motion to strike pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16 (anti-SLAPP motion) in July 2019, and entered judgment in favor of Midland in August 2019.3 Spielbauer filed a notice of appeal from the judgment in October 2019 (appeal No. H047393). Because Spielbauer did so more than 60 days after it was served with the order granting the anti-SLAPP motion, Midland moved to dismiss the appeal as untimely. This court granted the motion to dismiss, and denied Spielbauer’s petition for rehearing. The California Supreme Court denied Spielbauer’s petition for review (case No. S263930). This court thereafter issued the remittitur in appeal number H047393. Pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16, subdivision (c), Midland filed a motion for attorney fees it incurred in defending against Spielbauer’s appeal from the judgment. Midland sought $11,998.50 in fees required to defend the appeal, $3,220 in fees to draft the fee motion, and whatever fees it incurred in connection with the remaining briefing and argument of the motion. In support of its request, Midland filed a declaration from attorney Thomas F. Landers, a partner at Solomon Ward Seidenwurm & Smith LLP (SWSS), the law firm that represented Midland. Relevant to this appeal,

2 The instant matter is the third appeal arising from the underlying trial court action. As discussed, post, Spielbauer appealed the trial court’s August 2019 judgment in appeal number H047393. It thereafter appealed the trial court’s order granting Midland prevailing party attorney fees related its special motion to strike. Although ultimately heard as appeal number A165817 by Division 1 of the First District Court of Appeal, the appeal from the first attorney fees order originated in this court, as appeal number H047940. In the instant appeal, Spielbauer incorporated by reference the records filed in both of these previous appeals. On its own motion, this court takes judicial notice of the record filed in appeal number H047940, and of the opinion issued in Spielbauer Law Office v. Midland Funding, LLC, et al. (Mar. 23, 2023, A165817; review den. June 21, 2023) [nonpub. opn.] (Spielbauer). While there was no record filed in appeal number H047393, on its own motion, the court will take judicial notice of the docket in that appeal. 3 The trial court awarded Midland $49,896 in prevailing party attorney fees following grant of the anti-SLAPP motion, which was affirmed on appeal. (Spielbauer, supra, A165817, at pp. 1, 3.) 2 Landers attached three exhibits to his declaration, reflecting “[a]ll time entries related to anti-SLAPP Appeal and this fee motion. . .,” “[a]ll [Landers’s] time entries. . .,” and “[a]ll [Leah] Strickland’s time entries. . . .” Due to the numerous pleadings Midland filed relevant to the appeal and petition for review, Landers contended that the total hours spent by his firm on the appeal were reasonable. He further alleged that the hourly rate SWSS charged for each attorney was reasonable based on each attorney’s experience. The chief operating officer of SWSS provided a declaration stating that the firm’s hourly rates were “below or in line with the average billing rates for litigation partners and associations in the California market.” Spielbauer opposed Midland’s request for attorney fees. It argued that the fees were “grossly inflated to the point of being fraudulent.” Spielbauer contended that the issues presented in the motion to dismiss the appeal and the response to the petition for review were “routine,” such that the pleadings SWSS filed should have already been in the firm’s “brief banks” and only required “a couple of hours to prepare and file.” Given Landers’s declaration about Strickland’s qualifications, Spielbauer claimed it was “absurd” to believe that she and Landers required the number of hours claimed in order to prepare the pleadings. It further argued that it was “unnecessary” for Midland to respond to the petition for review before the Supreme Court ruled on the petition. Claiming that the fees were excessive, Spielbauer alleged that Midland “has had a troubled history of dishonesty and has had multiple judgments rendered against it,” citing Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection v. Encore Capital Group, Inc., et al. (S.D.Cal. 3:20-cv- 01750-GPC-KSC) (the BCFP case), as well as a matter involving Midland and the attorney general of Pennsylvania (the Pennsylvania matter). Additionally, Spielbauer claimed Midland had previously “been caught . . . seeking excessive fees,” citing a superior court case, Gilbert v. Midland (Super. Ct. Contra Costa County, 2016, No.

3 MSC16-01184). Spielbauer asked the trial court to take judicial notice of documents pertaining to each of the matters it referenced in its opposition.4 Ray Sowards provided a declaration in support of Spielbauer’s opposition. He stated that he was a licensed attorney, who had “practiced law and billed clients. I have also been an insurance claims adjuster and [investigator] prior to my bar admission and regularly reviewed attorney billings for matters before trial courts and appellate courts. As such, I have extensive experience in reviewing attorney billings.” Sowards opined that the number of hours billed by SWSS was unreasonable, such that there was an “overbilling of [at least] 13.8 hours pertaining to the appellate matters. . . .” In reaching his opinion, Sowards reviewed “the complaint, SLAPP motion, orders, appellate briefs, motions for attorneys fees and decisions by the Court of Appeals, and the billings submitted by MIDLAND and its attorney, SWSS.” Sowards also reviewed a “previous declaration of Kevin M. Sullivan. . . .”5 Midland objected to Sowards’s declaration, arguing that the testimony was irrelevant, as the trial court was the best judge of the value of professional services rendered in a matter and the opinion of an expert witness was not necessary to assist the court in evaluating the request. Midland further contended that the matters for which

4 As included in the appellant’s appendix filed in this appeal, Spielbauer did not attach any pleadings to the initial request for judicial notice. It included URL addresses for websites seemingly pertaining to the BCFP case, and the Pennsylvania matter.

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Spielbauer Law Office v. Midland Funding CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spielbauer-law-office-v-midland-funding-ca6-calctapp-2023.