C. v. City of Los Angeles

Summary: Plaintiffs’ counsel wins interest for class members on appeal and challenges trial court’s use of class recovery for attorney’s fees, and City’s retention of unclaimed class recovery.

C. v. City of Los Angeles, 205 Cal. App. 4th 140
Court of Appeal of California, Second Appellate District, Division Three
April 20, 2012, Opinion Filed
B228882

Counsel: Law Offices of S. Chandler Visher, S. Chandler Visher; Law Offices of Matthew J. Witteman, Matthew J. Witteman; Law Offices of Bradley C. Arnold and Bradley C. Arnold for Plaintiffs and Appellants.

Carmen A. Trutanich, City Attorney, Gary G. Geuss, Chief Assistant City Attorney, Laurie Rittenberg, Assistant City Attorney, and Adena M. Hopenstand, Deputy City Attorney, for Defendant and Respondent.

Judges: Opinion by Croskey, J., with Klein, P. J., and Aldrich, J., concurring.

Opinion by: Croskey, J. [145]

Opinion

CROSKEY, J.—BJC and GFH, individually and on behalf of persons similarly situated, appeal a judgment awarding them part of the amounts billed by and paid to the City of Los Angeles (city) for emergency response costs. They also appeal a postjudgment order awarding attorney fees and costs payable to class counsel. Plaintiffs contend the trial court erred by (1) awarding prejudgment interest from the date of the parties’ stipulation on the calculation of the amounts recoverable rather than the date of each class member’s payment to the city; (2) ordering the city to pay only 60 percent of plaintiffs’ reasonable attorney fees under Code of Civil Procedure section 1021.5 (section 1021.5), while requiring plaintiffs to pay the remaining 40 percent from their monetary recovery; (3) denying recovery for some of their claimed attorney and paralegal fees; and (4) allowing the city to retain unclaimed funds.

With respect to these four issues, we hold that (1) the amounts awarded were certain or capable of being made certain by calculation within the meaning of Civil Code section 3287, subdivision (a) on the date of each payment by a class member and that prejudgment interest therefore began to accrue on each payment date; (2) the trial court had the discretion to order part of plaintiffs’ reasonable attorney fees to be paid by the city undersection 1021.5 and part of those fees to be paid from plaintiffs’ monetary recovery, and plaintiffs have shown no abuse of discretion in such apportionment; (3) the court abused its discretion by denying fees claimed for certain tasks; and (4) the trial court did not abuse its discretion by allowing the city to retain unclaimed funds.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

1. General Background

The city billed persons who had been arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs for the city’s emergency response costs, pursuant to Government Code section 53150.1 The police department created a billing statement, known as a response reimbursement report, for each incident stating the time spent by police officers responding to the incident and identifying the officers. The report set forth a dollar amount for the time spent by each officer, a total dollar amount for the incident and a “total [146] requested” amount not exceeding $1,000.2 The dollar amount stated for each officer was calculated based on an hourly rate including salary, fringe benefits, and overhead costs.

2. Complaint and Other Pretrial Proceedings

C. filed a class action complaint against the city on March 23, 2005, seeking to recover part of the amounts billed by and paid to the city for emergency response costs. C. and H. filed a third amended complaint on December 1, 2006, alleging that the city improperly demanded and collected amounts for fixed costs that did not arise directly from an emergency response to an incident.

The parties filed a joint stipulation on February 11, 2008, on the city’s liability and calculation of the amounts recoverable. Under the terms of the stipulation, the city agreed not to challenge plaintiffs’ right to recover amounts paid for overhead costs, while plaintiffs agreed not to seek recovery of amounts paid for fringe benefits. The parties defined recoverable overhead costs by reference to certain categories of costs set forth in a document attached to the stipulation entitled “Cost Allocation Plan 26.” They agreed that the exact percentage of the total costs claimed by the city for each incident attributable to overhead costs varied from year to year and was subject to proof or stipulation.3 They agreed that individuals whose payment to the city included any overhead costs were entitled to recover that amount, subject to the city’s defenses.4

The trial court filed an order on February 22, 2008, certifying a class of persons who were billed by the city for emergency response costs associated [147] with an arrest for driving under the influence during a specified period of time. The court found that plaintiffs’ claims were for the specific recovery of property and that the Government Claims Act (Gov. Code, § 900 et seq.) therefore was inapplicable. The city petitioned this court for a writ of mandate, challenging the determination that the Government Claims Act was inapplicable. We concluded that plaintiffs’ claims were for “money or damages” within the meaning ofGovernment Code section 905 and that the Government Claims Act therefore applied. (City of Los Angeles v. Superior Court (2008) 168 Cal.App.4th 422, 425 [85 Cal. Rptr. 3d 560].)The trial court modified the class definition accordingly.

3. Trial and Judgment

The parties filed a joint statement of issues to be decided by the trial court, a joint stipulations of facts, trial briefs and declarations in March and April 2010. The city agreed to withdraw its affirmative defense of accord and satisfaction in exchange for $26,500 to be paid from unclaimed funds due to class members. The parties stipulated to an overhead cost percentage for each year at issue. Although the actual percentage of total costs incurred by the city attributable to overhead costs varied depending on the rank of the officers involved, the parties stipulated to an average percentage applicable to all police officers for each year at issue.

Plaintiffs argued that prejudgment interest on the amounts to be awarded under the judgment accrued on the date of each payment to the city. The city argued that prejudgment interest accrued on the date of the parties’ stipulation on overhead cost percentages, the date of the February 2008 stipulation on the city’s liability and calculation of the amounts recoverable, or the date of an appellate court opinion, California Highway Patrol v. Superior Court (2006) 135 Cal.App.4th 488 [38 Cal. Rptr. 3d 16], clarifying what amounts were properly billed by the city.

The trial court issued a tentative ruling on July 6, 2010, and filed a judgment on August 30, 2010, finding that eligible class members were entitled to refunds in the amounts stated on exhibits attached to the judgment. The judgment awards prejudgment interest on the amounts due at the rate of 7 percent from the date of filing of the February 2008 joint stipulation. The total amount to be paid to class members under the terms of the judgment, including principal and prejudgment interest, is $464,218. Of that amount, the principal amount of $22,812 is payable to class members who had not been located as of the date of the judgment. The judgment also includes exhibits [148] listing class members who did not pay the city’s bill or paid less than the amount billed. Those exhibits state the amounts by which the outstanding debts of class members are reduced, totaling $896,185.
The judgment states that the city must administer the refunds and must report to the trial court every 60 days on such administration. It states that amounts due class members who cannot be located despite reasonable efforts and the total amount of checks returned as undeliverable and checks that are not cashed will be retained by the city after the earlier of one year from the date of entry of judgment or entry of an order that no further efforts need to be made to locate class members.

4. Attorney Fee Award

Plaintiffs moved for an award of attorney fees and costs payable to class counsel undersection 1021.5 and the common fund doctrine. They requested a lodestar of $634,761 in attorney
fees payable by the city under section 1021.5. They also requested an additional $150,000 as an enhancement for delay, contingency risk and other factors, payable from plaintiffs’ recovery under the common fund doctrine. They also sought $13,131 in costs payable by the city plus $4,961 in costs payable from the recovery.

Plaintiffs argued that the judgment created a $464,218 class restitutionary fund and also resulted in the reduction of approximately $896,000 in emergency response costs charged to class members not receiving a refund. They argued that the total monetary value of the judgment was over $1.36 million. Plaintiffs argued that the existence of a common fund did not preclude an award of fees under section 1021.5.5 They argued that because their monetary recovery was less than their requested lodestar fees, those fees should be paid by the city under section 1021.5 rather than from the common fund. Plaintiffs did not specifically address the issue of apportionment of their lodestar fees between the city and the class fund.
The city argued in opposition that the requested lodestar amount was excessive. The city also argued that the judgment did not create a common fund and provided no monetary benefit to class members not receiving a refund, and that plaintiffs’ counsel were not entitled to a fee enhancement. [149] The city did not address plaintiffs’ argument that the lodestar amount should be paid by the city rather than paid from the recovery and did not argue that part of the fees should be paid from the recovery.

The city filed a declaration by Gerald G. Knapton, an attorney, who stated that he was an expert in the reasonableness of attorney fees. He stated his opinion that the attorney time claimed by plaintiffs was excessive and included administrative tasks that should not be included. He provided a detailed billing analysis indicating, among other things, entries that included attorney and paralegal time for administrative tasks and duplicative work. He stated that the entries including time for administrative tasks represented a total of 122 hours and fees totaling $38,482. He also stated that the claimed average hourly rate of $483 per attorney or paralegal was unreasonable and should be reduced to $300, and that no paralegal time should be included unless plaintiffs established that the individuals were qualified as paralegals under Business and Professions Code section 6450.
The trial court filed an order on September 23, 2010, stating that the city did not meaningfully dispute plaintiffs’ right to an attorney fee award under section 1021.5. The order states, “The Court has eliminated the administrative sums per the chart attached to the declaration of Gerald G. Knapton. His declaration also contains a chart of duplicative sums in the amount of $37,189. The Court has reviewed the chart and finds that 50% of that amount ($18,594) should be deducted from the claim fees.” Accordingly, the court found that the requested lodestar of $634,761 should be reduced to $577,691.6 The court awarded a total of $577,691 in attorney fees and $9,867 in costs.

The trial court denied plaintiffs’ request for a fee enhancement, stating among other things that the requested lodestar amount exceeded the approximately $464,000 payable to class members under the judgment and that the public benefit resulting from the litigation was small. The court stated that if fees were calculated on a contingency basis, the amount would be less than the lodestar. The court stated that a standard contingency fee is less than 40 percent and that 40 percent of the approximately $464,000 recovery is $185,600. The court stated that the claimed $896,000 benefit to class members not receiving a refund was uncertain and that a reasonable contingency fee for that amount would be 20 percent, or $179,200, yielding a total contingency fee of only $364,800.
[150]
The order states further: “The class members receiving monetary refunds are obtaining direct benefits from the lawsuit and, therefore, should pay 40% of the fees and costs—i.e., 40% of the fees and costs should be paid from the class restitution fund. City must pay the remainder of the fees and costs per Code of Civil Procedure section 1021.5.” Thus, the trial court awarded $346,615 in attorney fees and $5,920 in costs payable by the city undersection 1021.5 and $231,076 in attorney fees and $3,947 in costs payable from the recovery.

5. Appeal

Plaintiffs timely appealed the judgment and the postjudgment order awarding attorney fees.

CONTENTIONS

Plaintiffs contend (1) they are entitled to prejudgment interest accrued from the date of each class member’s payment to the city rather than the date of the parties’ February 2008 stipulation; (2) the trial court erred by ordering the city to pay only 60 percent of plaintiffs’ reasonable attorney fees under section 1021.5 while requiring plaintiffs to pay the remaining 40 percent from their monetary recovery; (3) the court erred by denying a fee recovery for 122 hours of attorney and paralegal work characterized as “administrative”; and (4) the city should not be entitled to retain all unclaimed funds.

DISCUSSION

1. Plaintiffs Are Entitled to Prejudgment Interest from the Date of Each Payment to the City

(1) A person who is entitled to recover damages that are “certain, or capable of [151] being made certain by calculation” is also entitled to recover prejudgment interest on that amount from the date that the right to recover arose.7 (Civ. Code, § 3287, subd. (a).) Damages are certain or capable of being made certain by calculation, or ascertainable, for purposes of the statute if the defendant actually knows the amount of damages or could calculate that amount from information reasonably available to the defendant. (Uzyel v. Kadisha (2010) 188 Cal.App.4th 866, 919 [116 Cal. Rptr. 3d 244].) In contrast, damages that must be determined by the trier of fact based on conflicting evidence are not ascertainable. (Ibid.) A legal dispute concerning the defendant’s liability or the proper measure of damages, however, does not render damages unascertainable. (Olson v. Cory, supra, 35 Cal.3d at p. 402; Uzyel, supra, 188 Cal.App.4th at p. 919.)

Thus, the general rule is that damages are unascertainable if the amount of damages depends on disputed facts or the available factual information is insufficient to determine the amount; and damages are ascertainable if the only impediment to the determination of the amount is a legal dispute concerning liability or the measure of damages. On appeal, we independently determine whether damages were ascertainable for purposes of the statute, absent a factual dispute as to what information was known or available to the defendant at the time. (KGM Harvesting Co. v. Fresh Network (1995) 36 Cal.App.4th 376, 390–391 [42 Cal. Rptr. 2d 286].)

The city’s response reimbursement reports stated the total costs claimed for each incident based on the number of hours spent by the responding police officers multiplied by an hourly rate for each officer. The hourly rate for each officer included the pro rata cost of the officer’s salary, fringe benefits and overhead costs. The city acknowledges that the hourly rate billed for each officer included an overhead cost component, the amount of which the city knew at the time of billing.8 The city therefore could have determined at the time of billing the amount of overhead costs billed to each plaintiff and could have determined at the time of payment the amount of overhead costs paid by each plaintiff.
This is readily apparent for those incidents where the total costs claimed for the incident did not exceed $1,000. In those circumstances, the city billed [152] the total costs to the plaintiff, so the amount of overhead costs claimed by the city equals the amount of overhead costs billed by the city. For those incidents where the total costs exceeded $1,000, the only impediment to determining the amount of overhead costs included in the amount billed by the city was uncertainty as to the allocation of overhead costs between the $1,000 billed to the plaintiff and the amount in excess of $1,000 that was not billed to the plaintiff. We conclude that this was a legal uncertainty concerning the measure of damages rather than a factual uncertainty. Such a legal uncertainty does not prevent damages from being ascertainable.

The parties’ stipulation shortly before trial to use an overhead cost percentage for each year resulted in a small discrepancy between the amount awarded to each plaintiff and the actual amount of overhead costs paid by each plaintiff. Such a minor discrepancy does not render damages uncertain. (Coleman Engineering Co. v. North American Aviation, Inc. (1966) 65 Cal.2d 396, 408–409 [55 Cal. Rptr. 1, 420 P.2d 713]; KGM Harvesting Co. v. Fresh Network, supra, 36 Cal.App.4th at pp. 391–392.)

Contrary to the city’s argument, the large discrepancy between the amount initially demanded by plaintiffs in this litigation and the amount awarded does not indicate that the damages were unascertainable. The discrepancy results from the resolution of legal disputes regarding the city’s liability and not from the resolution of factual disputes arising from conflicting evidence or the lack of factual information needed to readily calculate damages. (Uzyel v. Kadisha, supra, 188 Cal.App.4th at p. 920; see Wisper Corp. v. California Commerce Bank (1996) 49 Cal.App.4th 948, 961–962 [57 Cal. Rptr. 2d 141];Polster, Inc. v. Swing (1985) 164 Cal.App.3d 427, 435–436 [210 Cal. Rptr. 567].)

Accordingly, we conclude that the amount of overhead costs paid by each plaintiff was ascertainable at the time of payment and that plaintiffs therefore are entitled to prejudgment interest accrued from the date of each payment.

2. Plaintiffs Have Shown No Error in the Apportionment of Attorney Fees

a. Standard of Review

We review an attorney fee award under section 1021.5 generally for abuse of discretion. Whether the statutory requirements have been satisfied so as to justify a fee award is a question committed to the discretion of the trial court, unless the question turns on statutory construction, which we review de novo. (Connerly v. State Personnel Bd. (2006) 37 Cal.4th 1169, 1175 [39 Cal. Rptr. 3d 788, 129 P.3d 1]; Mejia v. City of Los Angeles(2007) 156 Cal.App.4th 151, 158 [67 Cal. Rptr. 3d 228].)
[153]

“An abuse of discretion occurs if, in light of the applicable law and considering all of the relevant circumstances, the court’s decision exceeds the bounds of reason and results in a miscarriage of justice. [Citations.] This standard of review affords considerable deference to the trial court provided that the court acted in accordance with the governing rules of law. We presume that the court properly applied the law and acted within its discretion unlessthe appellant affirmatively shows otherwise. [Citations.]” (Mejia v. City of Los Angeles, supra, 156 Cal.App.4th at p. 158.)

b. Apportionment of Attorney Fees May Be Appropriate Under Section 1021.5

(2) Section 1021.5 authorizes an award of attorney fees “to a successful party against one or more opposing parties in any action which has resulted in the enforcement of an important right affecting the public interest,” provided that three additional conditions are satisfied: “(a) a significant benefit, whether pecuniary or nonpecuniary, has been conferred on the general public or a large class of persons, (b) the necessity and financial burden of private enforcement, or of enforcement by one public entity against another public entity, are such as to make the award appropriate, and (c) such fees should not in the interest of justice be paid out of the recovery, if any.”9 (§ 1021.5.) All of the statutory requirements must be satisfied to justify a fee award. (County of Colusa v. California Wildlife Conservation Bd. (2006) 145 Cal.App.4th 637, 648 [52 Cal. Rptr. 3d 1].)
(3) “ ‘[T]he private attorney general doctrine “rests upon the recognition that privately initiated lawsuits are often essential to the effectuation of the fundamental public policies embodied in constitutional or statutory provisions, and that, without some mechanism authorizing the award of attorney fees, private actions to enforce such important public policies will as a practical matter frequently be infeasible.” Thus, the fundamental objective of the doctrine is to encourage suits enforcing important public policies by providing substantial attorney fees to successful litigants in such cases.’ [Citation.]” (Graham v. DaimlerChrysler Corp. (2004) 34 Cal.4th 553, 565 [21 Cal. Rptr. 3d 331, 101 P.3d 140].)

The trial court here found that plaintiffs had satisfied the statutory requirements for an attorney fee award under section 1021.5, and the city does not dispute that finding. We therefore need not address the “successful party,” “important right” and “significant benefit” requirements, which are satisfied. Instead, the dispute concerns the apportionment of the burden of paying [154] attorney fees between the city and plaintiffs. The court found that “class members receiving monetary refunds are obtaining direct benefits from the lawsuit and, therefore, should pay 40% of the fees and costs—i.e., 40% of the fees and costs should be paid from the class restitution fund. City must pay the remainder of the fees and costs per Code of Civil Procedure section 1021.5.” The court’s decision to apportion fees implicates the requirements that “the necessity and financial burden of private enforcement … are such as to make the award appropriate …” and “such fees should not in the interest of justice be paid out of the recovery, if any.” (§ 1021.5.)

(4) The necessity and financial burden requirement encompasses two issues: “ ‘ “whether private enforcement was necessary and whether the financial burden of private enforcement warrants subsidizing the successful party’s attorneys.” ’ [Citation.]” (Conservatorship of Whitley (2010) 50 Cal.4th 1206, 1214–1215 [117 Cal. Rptr. 3d 342, 241 P.3d 840](Whitley).) Private enforcement is necessary only if public enforcement of the “important right affecting the public interest” (§ 1021.5) at issue is inadequate. (Whitley, supra, at p. 1215.) The trial court’s finding that plaintiffs had satisfied the statutory requirements necessarily implies a finding that private enforcement was necessary, and its decision to apportion fees does not implicate this part of the necessity and financial burden requirement.

The financial burden of private enforcement concerns not only the costs of litigation, but also the financial benefits reasonably expected by the successful party. (Whitley, supra, 50 Cal.4th at p. 1215.) The appropriate inquiry is whether the financial burden of the plaintiff’s legal victory outweighs the plaintiff’s personal financial interest. (Ibid.; Woodland Hills, supra, 23 Cal.3d at p. 941.) An attorney fee award under section 1021.5 is proper unless the plaintiff’s reasonably expected financial benefits exceed by a substantial margin the plaintiff’s actual litigation costs. (Whitley, supra, at p. 1216.) The focus in this regard is on the plaintiff’s incentive to litigate absent a statutory attorney fee award. “ ‘[S]ection 1021.5is intended to provide an incentive for private plaintiffs to bring public interest suits when their personal stake in the outcome is insufficient to warrant incurring the costs of litigation.’ ” (Whitley, supra, at p. 1221, quoting Satrap v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. (1996) 42 Cal.App.4th 72, 79 [49 Cal. Rptr. 2d 348] (Satrap).)

The successful litigant’s reasonably expected financial benefits are determined by discounting the monetary value of the benefits that the successful litigant reasonably expected at the time the vital litigation decisions were made by the probability of success at that time.10 (Whitley, supra, 50 Cal.4th [155] at pp. 1215, 1220; Lyons v. Chinese Hospital Assn. (2006) 136 Cal.App.4th 1331, 1354 [39 Cal. Rptr. 3d 550]; Satrap, supra, 42 Cal.App.4th at p. 77.) The resulting value must be compared with the plaintiff’s litigation costs actually incurred, including attorney fees, expert witness fees, deposition costs and other expenses. (Whitley, supra, at pp. 1215–1216.) The comparison requires a “ ‘value judgment whether it is desirable to offer the bounty of a court-awarded fee in order to encourage litigation of the sort involved in this case. … [A] bounty will be appropriate except where the expected value of the litigant’s own monetary award exceeds by a substantial margin the actual litigation costs.’ ” (Id. at p. 1216, quoting Los Angeles Police Protective League v. City of Los Angeles, supra, 188 Cal.App.3d at pp. 9–10.)

(5) Apportionment of attorney fees may be appropriate under section 1021.5 if the court concludes that the successful litigant’s reasonably expected financial benefits were sufficient to warrant placing part of the fee burden on the litigant. (Woodland Hills, supra, 23 Cal.3d at p. 942 & fn. [156] 13;11 Saleeby v. State Bar (1985) 39 Cal.3d 547, 574 [216 Cal. Rptr. 367, 702 P.2d 525]; see Galante Vineyards v. Monterey Peninsula Water Management Dist. (1997) 60 Cal.App.4th 1109, 1128 [71 Cal. Rptr. 2d 1]; cf. Whitley, supra, 50 Cal.4th at p. 1226 [stating that apportionment of fees may be appropriate in connection with the “public interest” requirement].) In those circumstances, the court may award against the opposing party the difference between the full amount of reasonable attorney fees and an amount that the successful litigant could reasonably be expected to bear. (Woodland Hills, supra, 23 Cal.3d at p. 942, fn. 13.) Thus, an attorney fee award under section 1021.5 is not necessarily an all-or-nothing proposition.
Moreover, we believe that apportionment of attorney fees may be appropriate not only in connection with the “financial burden of private enforcement” (§ 1021.5, factor (b)), but also in connection with the requirement that “such fees should not in the interest of justice be paid out of the recovery, if any” (id., factor (c)).12 Thus, a court may deny or limit an attorney fee award under section 1021.5 pursuant to the “interest of justice” requirement if it determines based on the amount of the actual recovery and other circumstances that the fees should be paid in whole or in part from the recovery. (See Rider v. County of San Diego (1992) 11 Cal.App.4th 1410, 1422–1423 [14 Cal. Rptr. 2d 885]; Bank of America v. Cory (1985) 164 Cal.App.3d 66, 90–91 [210 Cal. Rptr. 351].) The absence of any specific guideline in factor (c) and the reference to the “interest of justice” indicate that the Legislature [157] intended to grant the trial court the discretion to determine in what circumstances fees should be paid by the opposing party rather than from the recovery. The court must exercise its discretion in accordance with the statutory objective of encouraging public interest litigation that would not be pursued absent the prospect of a fee award. (SeeGraham v. DaimlerChrysler Corp., supra, 34 Cal.4th at p. 565.)

(6) We believe that the “interest of justice” inquiry under section 1021.5, factor (c) requires a value judgment, similar to that involved in evaluating the “financial burden of private enforcement” (id., factor (b)), as to the desirability of offering the bounty of a fee award in order to encourage similar litigation. (Cf. Whitley, supra, 50 Cal.4th at p. 1216.) In some circumstances, the “financial burden of private enforcement” inquiry may encompass the “interest of justice” inquiry. (Beasley v. Wells Fargo Bank, supra, 235 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1413–1417.)

c. Plaintiffs Have Shown No Abuse of Discretion in the Fee Apportionment

Plaintiffs contend the trial court abused its discretion by awarding plaintiffs’ counsel only 60 percent of their reasonable attorney fees under section 1021.5 and by requiring plaintiffs to pay 40 percent of the fees, amounting to approximately 50 percent of their class restitution fund. They argue that 50 percent is an inordinately large portion of their monetary recovery to require them to bear in attorney fees and that “in the interest of justice” (§ 1021.5, factor (c)) a larger percentage of their reasonable attorney fees should be paid by the city rather than paid out of their recovery.13 We conclude that plaintiffs have shown no abuse of discretion.

The term “recovery” as used in section 1021.5, factor (c) suggests a monetary recovery. Although plaintiffs’ monetary recovery is limited to $464,218, plus additional prejudgment interest resulting from our decision, they have also received the benefit of reducing by $896,185 the amount owed to the city by class members who as of the date of the judgment had not paid their bills in full. The trial court regarded plaintiffs’ claim that class members had received the full benefit of $896,185 in debt reduction as “uncertain,” stating in the attorney fee order: “There is, however, no evidence that the City would have attempted to collect on these fees even if they had won the lawsuit or that the individuals would have actually paid those fees—i.e., some of the fees may be non-collectible, some might have paid reduced cost, etc. Thus, due to the uncertain nature of this claim, the Court considers a 20% fee to be a reasonable contingency fee.”
[158]
The application of a 20 percent contingency fee to the debt reduction amount in lieu of the 40 percent contingency fee applied to the monetary recovery, in comparing a contingency fee with the lodestar fees, suggests that the trial court discounted the value of the $896,185 in debt reduction by 50 percent. Plaintiffs do not argue on appeal that the value of the debt reduction is less than 50 percent of $896,185, or $448,093. In the trial court, they argued that the value of the debt reduction was the full $896,185.
(7) We believe that in determining the amount of attorney fees that a plaintiff reasonably could be expected to bear for purposes of apportioning a fee award under section 1021.5, a court should consider not only the actual or expected monetary recovery but the full monetary value of the judgment. This is apparent in connection with the “financial burden of private enforcement” inquiry. The reasonably expected financial benefits of the litigation are not necessarily limited to an affirmative monetary recovery. Similarly, we believe that a court considering whether some or all of the fees in the interest of justice should be paid by the opposing party or from the recovery should consider not only the actual monetary recovery but also any other direct financial benefits provided to the plaintiff by the judgment. Absent a showing to the contrary, we presume that the trial court did so here.

The monetary value of the judgment to plaintiffs includes the $464,218 monetary recovery and debt reduction impliedly valued by the trial court at $448,093, for a total monetary value to plaintiffs of $912,311. The judgment requires plaintiffs to bear $231,076 in attorney fees, or approximately 25 percent of the value of the judgment. We believe that an attorney fee award payable by plaintiffs in the amount of 25 percent of the value of the judgment is within the range of typical attorney fee awards and that the trial court’s finding that plaintiffs could reasonably be expected to bear that amount was not an abuse of discretion.

3. The Denial of Attorney and Paralegal Fees for Time Characterized by the City as Administrative Was Error

The trial court reduced plaintiffs’ fee request by $38,476 for administrative tasks and an additional $18,594 for duplicative work, stating: “The Court has eliminated the administrative sums per the chart attached to the declaration of Gerald G. Knapton. His declaration also contains a chart of duplicative sums in the amount of $37,189. The Court has reviewed the chart and finds that 50% of that amount ($18,594) should be deducted from the claim fees.”
[159]

The chart attached to the Knapton declaration listed billing entries coded by Knapton as “administrative.” Most of those entries stated two or three tasks including both attorney or paralegal work that ordinarily would be compensable, such as drafting correspondence, discovery requests or law and motion documents, and tasks that could be characterized as noncompensable administrative tasks, such as filing and serving documents. For each such billing entry, Knapton designated the entire entry and all of the time included as “administrative,” without explaining why some portion of the entry should not be compensable. The trial court agreed and also failed to explain why some portion of the time should not be compensable.

(8) The trial court is in the best position to determine the reasonable value of professional services rendered in a case before it and has broad discretion to determine the reasonable amount of an attorney fee award. (PLCM Group, Inc. v. Drexler (2000) 22 Cal.4th 1084, 1095–1096 [95 Cal. Rptr. 2d 198, 997 P.2d 511].) A court abuses its discretion only if there is no reasonable basis for its decision under the governing law and the reviewing court concludes that the court clearly erred. (Ryan v. California Interscholastic Federation (2001) 94 Cal.App.4th 1033, 1044 [114 Cal. Rptr. 2d 787].)
We conclude that there was no reasonable basis for the trial court to deny compensation for that part of the attorney and paralegal time designated by Knapton as administrative involving legal work that ordinarily is compensable. The court offered no reason to deny compensation for those billing entries apart from Knapton’s facially overbroad conclusion that all of the time in those entries was administrative. On remand, the court should determine what part of those entries involved compensable attorney or paralegal work and award fees accordingly.

4. Plaintiffs Have Shown No Error in Allowing the City to Retain Unclaimed Funds

The judgment states that the city will retain amounts due class members who cannot be located and amounts that are unclaimed and unpaid after a period of time. Plaintiffs argue that unclaimed funds in a class action should be distributed to class members or, failing that, to other persons or entities in furtherance of the interests of the class. They argue that there is no authority for the city to retain unclaimed class funds in which it has no legal or equitable interest.

(9) Code of Civil Procedure section 384 states that the unpaid residue of the amount payable to class members in a class action, meaning the difference between the total amount to which the class members are entitled and [160] the amount they are actually paid, must be paid “to nonprofit organizations or foundations to support projects that will benefit the class or similarly situated persons, or that promote the law consistent with the objectives and purposes of the underlying cause of action, to child advocacy programs, or to nonprofit organizations providing civil legal services to the indigent.” (Id., subd. (b).) This requirement, however, is expressly inapplicable in a class action against a public entity or public employee. (Id., subd. (c).) Code of Civil Procedure section 384 therefore does not preclude the retention of the unpaid residue by a public entity, but instead by establishing an exception for public entities seems to contemplate the possibility of such a retention.14
Plaintiffs cite no authority for the proposition that a public entity defendant in a class action cannot retain unclaimed funds. State of California v. Levi Strauss & Co. (1986) 41 Cal.3d 460 [224 Cal. Rptr. 605, 715 P.2d 564], cited by plaintiffs, did not consider the question. The California Supreme Court in that case, which did not involve a public entity defendant, noted the “principal methods” to dispose of the unpaid residue in a consumer class action, including “a rollback of the defendant’s prices, escheat to a governmental body for either specified or general purposes, establishment of a consumer trust fund, and claimant fund sharing.” (Id. at p. 473.) The court stated, “All of these methods promote the policies of disgorgement and deterrence by ensuring that the residue of the recovery does not revert to the wrongdoer.” (Ibid.) Levi Strauss & Co., however, did not consider whether reversion to a public entity defendant may be appropriate in some cases and therefore is not on point.
The federal opinions cited by plaintiffs similarly did not involve public entity defendants and are not persuasive on this point. We conclude that plaintiffs have shown no abuse of discretion in this regard.

DISPOSITION

The judgment is reversed as to the award of prejudgment interest with directions to the trial court to conduct further proceedings to determine the amount of prejudgment interest to which plaintiffs are entitled in accordance with this opinion. The judgment is also reversed as to the attorney fee award [161] with directions to the trial court to determine what part of the claimed attorney and paralegal fees for work previously characterized as “administrative” is compensable. The judgment is affirmed in all other respects. Each party is to bear its own costs on appeal.

Klein, P. J., and Aldrich, J., concurred.

A petition for a rehearing was denied May 8, 2012.
Footnotes
• 1
Government Code section 53150 states that any person whose negligent operation of a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol or any drug causes an incident resulting in an appropriate emergency response, and any person whose intentionally wrongful conduct causes an incident resulting in an appropriate emergency response, is liable for the costs of an emergency response by a public agency.
• 2
Government Code section 53155 formerly limited a person’s liability for emergency response costs to $1,000 per incident. (Stats. 1986, ch. 1112, § 1, p. 3908.) The current limit is $12,000. (Gov. Code, § 53155, as amended by Stats. 2004, ch. 51, § 1, p. 275.) The city continued to limit the “total requested” to $1,000 after 2004 despite the increased limit.
• 3
We will refer to the percentage of the total costs incurred by the city for each incident attributable to overhead costs as the “overhead cost percentage.”
• 4
The overhead cost percentage is used to calculate the amount of overhead costs paid by each plaintiff, which is the amount recoverable by each plaintiff pursuant to the February 2008 stipulation. If the total costs claimed by the city for an incident did not exceed $1,000, the city billed the total costs to the plaintiff. In those circumstances, the amount of overhead costs paid equals the overhead cost percentage of the amount paid to the city. If the total costs claimed by the city for an incident exceeded $1,000, however, the city billed the plaintiff only $1,000. The parties agreed in the stipulation to allocate overhead costs first to excess costs not billed to the plaintiff. As a result, the $1,000 billed to the plaintiff is deemed to include overhead costs only to the extent that the overhead costs for an incident (i.e., the overhead cost percentage of the total costs claimed by the city) exceed the excess costs not billed to the plaintiff. The February 2008 stipulation stated the example that if the overhead cost percentage was 50 percent and the city claimed total costs of $2,000, billed the plaintiff $1,000 and the plaintiff paid that amount, the plaintiff would be entitled to no monetary recovery.
• 5
When a successful litigant’s efforts result in the creation of a fund from which others derive benefits, the fund is known as a “common fund.” (Serrano v. Priest(1977) 20 Cal.3d 25, 35 [141 Cal. Rptr. 315, 569 P.2d 1303].)
• 6
The trial court reduced plaintiffs’ requested lodestar of $634,761 by $18,594 for duplicative work and $38,476 for administrative tasks.
• 7
Civil Code section 3281 states, “Every person who suffers detriment from the unlawful act or omission of another, may recover from the person in fault a compensation therefor in money, which is called damages.” Courts have broadly construed the term “damages” as used in Civil Code sections 3281 and 3287. (Olson v. Cory (1983) 35 Cal.3d 390, 402 [197 Cal. Rptr. 843, 673 P.2d 720] [held that wrongfully withheld salary and pension increases were damages under Civ. Code, § 3287]; Sanders v. City of Los Angeles (1970) 3 Cal.3d 252, 262 [90 Cal. Rptr. 169, 475 P.2d 201] [held that wrongfully withheld salary increases were damages underCiv. Code, § 3287]; Benson v. City of Los Angeles (1963) 60 Cal.2d 355, 365–366 [33 Cal. Rptr. 257, 384 P.2d 649] [held that wrongfully withheld pension payments were damages under Civ. Code, § 3287]; see Todd Shipyards Corp. v. City of Los Angeles(1982) 130 Cal.App.3d 222, 226 [181 Cal. Rptr. 652] [held that prejudgment interest was due on tax refunds]; Leaf v. Phil Rauch, Inc. (1975) 47 Cal.App.3d 371, 376 [120 Cal. Rptr. 749] [allowed prejudgment interest on the amount paid under a contract in a rescission action]; see also Cortez v. Purolator Air Filtration Products Co. (2000) 23 Cal.4th 163, 174 [96 Cal. Rptr. 2d 518, 999 P.2d 706] [“ ‘Damages,’ as that term is used to describe monetary awards, may include a restitutionary element … .”];Currie v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (2001) 24 Cal.4th 1109, 1116, fn. 3 [104 Cal. Rptr. 2d 392, 17 P.3d 749].) The city does not challenge the implied finding that the amounts payable under the judgment are damages within the meaning of Civil Code section 3287, so we have no need to consider that issue.
• 8
We judicially notice the declaration of Laura Filatoff filed by the city on May 4, 2007, in support of its motion for summary judgment or summary adjudication, explaining the calculation of the hourly rates in the response reimbursement reports. (Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (d).)
• 9
Section 1021.5 codifies the private attorney general doctrine. (Woodland Hills Residents Assn., Inc. v. City Council (1979) 23 Cal.3d 917, 925 [154 Cal. Rptr. 503, 593 P.2d 200] (Woodland Hills).)
• 10
Whitley, supra, 50 Cal.4th at page 1215, quoting Los Angeles Police Protective League v. City of Los Angeles (1986) 188 Cal.App.3d 1, 9 [232 Cal. Rptr. 697], stated, “ ‘The trial court must first fix—or at least estimate—the monetary value of the benefits obtained by the successful litigants themselves. … Once the court is able to put some kind of number on the gains actually attained it must discount these total benefits by some estimate of the probability of success at the time the vital litigation decisions were made which eventually produced the successful outcome. … Thus, if success would yield … the litigant group … an aggregate of $10,000 but there is only a one-third chance of ultimate victory they won’t proceed—as a rational matter—unless their litigation costs are substantially less than $3,000.’ ” Although these references to “ ‘the benefits obtained’ ” and “ ‘the gains actually attained’ ” seem to suggest that the monetary value of the benefits actually obtained is the starting point of the analysis (see Robinson v. City of Chowchilla (2011) 202 Cal.App.4th 382, 402 & fn. 6 [134 Cal. Rptr. 3d 696] [so construing Whitley while noting that this approach “might be regarded as incongruous”]), other language inWhitley indicates that the analysis of reasonably expected financial benefit is based instead on the monetary value of the benefits that the successful litigant reasonably expected to obtain: “[I]n assessing the financial burdens and benefits in the context of section 1021.5, we are evaluating incentives rather than outcomes. ‘ “[W]e do not look at the plaintiff’s actual recovery after trial, but instead we consider ‘the estimated value of the case at the time the vital litigation decisions were being made.’ ” [Citation.] The reason for the focus on the plaintiff’s expected recovery at the time litigation decisions are being made, is that Code of Civil Procedure section 1021.5 is intended to provide an incentive for private plaintiffs to bring public interest suits when their personal stake in the outcome is insufficient to warrant incurring the costs of litigation.’ ” (Whitley, supra, at pp. 1220–1221, quoting Satrap, supra, 42 Cal.App.4th at p. 79.)
Satrap, supra, 42 Cal.App.4th at page 79, held that the appropriate starting point for the analysis of reasonably expected financial benefits is the successful party’s “realistic expected recovery, rather than the amount actually recovered.” (SeeNotrica v. State Comp. Ins. Fund (1999) 70 Cal.App.4th 911, 955 [83 Cal. Rptr. 2d 89] [“the court must look at the estimated value of the case when the critical litigation decisions were made, not the actual recovery after trial”]; Beasley v. Wells Fargo Bank (1991) 235 Cal.App.3d 1407, 1414–1416 [1 Cal. Rptr. 2d 459], disapproved on another point in Olson v. Automobile Club of Southern California(2008) 42 Cal.4th 1142, 1151 [74 Cal. Rptr. 3d 81, 179 P.3d 882] [calculating the “estimated value” of the case based on the actual recovery, noting that the actual recovery was approximately the same as the amount that the plaintiffs had reasonably hoped to receive].) To the extent that these authorities conflict withRobinson v. City of Chowchilla, supra, 202 Cal.App.4th at page 402, we decline to follow Robinson.
• 11
“Although section 1021.5 does not specifically address the question of the propriety of a partial award of attorney fees, we believe that if the trial court concludes that plaintiffs’ potential financial gain in this case is such as to warrant placing upon them a portion of the attorney fee burden, the section’s broad language and the theory underlying the private attorney general concept would permit the court to shift only an appropriate portion of the fees to the losing party or parties. [Citation.]” (Woodland Hills, supra, 23 Cal.3d at p. 942.)
• 12
Woodland Hills enumerated three criteria under section 1021.5: “[I]n terms of the statutory criteria, we must consider whether: (1) plaintiffs’ action ‘has resulted in the enforcement of an important right affecting the public interest,’ (2) ‘a significant benefit, whether pecuniary or nonpecuniary has been conferred on the general public or a large class of persons’ and (3) ‘the necessity and financial burden of private enforcement are such as to make the award appropriate.’ Inasmuch as plaintiffs’ action has produced no monetary recovery, factor ‘(c)’ of section 1021.5 is not applicable.” (Woodland Hills, supra, 23 Cal.3d at pp. 934–935.) Thus, Woodland Hillsomitted “such fees should not in the interest of justice be paid out of the recovery, if any” (§ 1021.5, factor (c)) from the enumerated criteria only because there was no monetary recovery in that case. Baggett v. Gates (1982) 32 Cal.3d 128, 142 and footnote 17 [185 Cal. Rptr. 232, 649 P.2d 874], and Press v. Lucky Stores, Inc.(1983) 34 Cal.3d 311, 318 and footnote 5 [193 Cal. Rptr. 900, 667 P.2d 704], enumerated the same three statutory criteria under section 1021.5, again stating that factor (c) was inapplicable only because there was no monetary recovery. (SeeLyons v. Chinese Hospital Assn. (2006) 136 Cal.App.4th 1331, 1355 [39 Cal. Rptr. 3d 550]; Planned Parenthood v. Aakhus (1993) 14 Cal.App.4th 162, 169, fn. 3 [17 Cal. Rptr. 2d 510]; Beach Colony II v. California Coastal Com. (1985) 166 Cal.App.3d 106, 110–111 & fn. 3 [212 Cal. Rptr. 485]; State of California v. County of Santa Clara(1983) 142 Cal.App.3d 608, 615 & fn. 3 [191 Cal. Rptr. 204]; Slayton v. Pomona Unified School Dist. (1984) 161 Cal.App.3d 538, 545 [207 Cal. Rptr. 705].)
• 13
Plaintiffs do not challenge the apportionment based on their reasonably expected financial benefits, so we need not review the trial court’s decision with respect to the “financial burden of private enforcement” (§ 1021.5, factor (b)).
• 14
The exception in Code of Civil Procedure section 384, subdivision (c) for class actions against a public entity or public employee was added in 1994 as an emergency measure. (Stats. 1994, ch. 237, §§ 1–2, pp. 1818–1819.) The legislative history indicates that the bill was motivated by a concern that the then-existing statute could have a potentially adverse financial impact on the state because it would prevent the state as a defendant in class action lawsuits from retaining unclaimed funds. (Sen. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of Sen. Bill No. 2105 (1993–1994 Reg. Sess.) as amended Apr. 13, 1994, p. 2.)

R. v. California

Summary: Plaintiff’s counsel wins appeal for professional licensed under the Business and Profession Code against the State of California based on a breach of confidentiality provision in settlement agreement with the professional.

R. v. Cal., 94 Cal. App. 4th 64
Court of Appeal of California, First Appellate District, Division Two
November 30, 2001, Decided

Counsel: Law Offices of Matthew J. Witteman and Matthew J. Witteman for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Bill Lockyer, Attorney General, Pamela Smith-Steward, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Margaret A. Rodda, Assistant Attorney General, Tyler Pon and Bradley Solomon, Deputy Attorneys General, for Defendants and Respondents.

Judges: Opinion by Kline, P. J., with Lambden and Ruvolo, JJ., concurring.

Opinion by: Kline

Opinion

[67] KLINE, P. J.

John Roe filed a complaint claiming the Office of Real Estate Appraisers violated a confidentiality clause in the stipulation by which an administrative disciplinary action against him was settled. The trial court sustained respondents’ demurrer without leave to amend. Appellant contends the trial court abused its discretion because all his causes of action showed entitlement to relief or could have been amended to do so.

We reverse.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE AND FACTS

On January 6, 2000, appellant filed his first amended complaint for breach of contract, breach of mandatory duty and declaratory and injunctive relief against the State of California (State), the Office of Real Estate Appraisers (OREA) and individual defendants. In his cause of action for breach of contract, appellant alleged that on or about December 23, 1999, he entered into a confidential “Stipulation and Waiver” with the State and OREA in settlement of an inquiry and investigation of appellant by the State and OREA. Under the settlement, appellant waived his right to contest any charges against him, without admitting them, and agreed to certain educational and other requirements, while the State and OREA agreed that the complainants would be notified only of the “outcome” of the proceeding, not the results or findings of OREA investigations or contents of the stipulation. Appellant alleged that respondents represented the stipulation was a “private reproval and entirely confidential.” Appellant further alleged that respondents breached the stipulation by publishing letters to complainants indicating that respondents had performed a complete investigation and relating confidential information concerning the investigation, findings, conclusions and action taken against appellant. Appellant alleged that respondents “understood the risk that complainants against [appellant] and/or others would misuse confidential information about [appellant] to do him harm” and that their breach of contract proximately caused appellant damage to his reputation and trade as a real estate appraiser in the amount of $ 1.6 million (or an amount to be proven at trial), plus attorneys’ fees incurred in defending the OREA inquiry and in bringing the present action.

Appellant’s second cause of action, for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing and misrepresentation, alleged that respondents breached the covenant of good faith and fair dealing by making false and misleading representations that the agreement was confidential and that such confidentiality conformed with OREA practice, and by failing to disclose OREA’s practice or intent to disclose confidential information to the complainants or the public. The third cause of action alleged that respondents [68] breached the covenant of good faith and fair dealing by publishing the confidential information and by publishing other confidential information relating to another investigation of appellant. The fourth cause of action, for trade libel, alleged that respondents breached the covenant of good faith and fair dealing by publishing false or misleading information about appellant’s trade, including representations that a complete investigation had been done and “other confidential representations.”

The fifth cause of action, for negligence, alleged that respondents had a mandatory duty to maintain the confidentiality of investigations, findings and actions taken against appellant under Business and Professions Code sections 11317 and 11315.5, California Code of Regulations, title 10, sections 3726, 3728, 3729 and 3741, and other law, which duty was breached by the publication of the confidential information. The sixth cause of action, for trade libel, alleged that respondents breached the above mandatory duty by publishing false and misleading information including representations that a complete investigation had been done and “other confidential representations.” The seventh cause of action, for declaratory and injunctive relief, alleged that the OREA deprived appraisers of due process by interpreting the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice in a manner that resulted in its failure to consider, and base disciplinary actions upon, the totality of an appraiser’s opinion as delivered in judicial proceedings.
Respondents filed a demurrer to the first amended complaint on March 14, 2000, maintaining that the entire complaint was barred by the immunity provided under Government Code sections 821.6 and 815.2. Appellant opposed the demurrer, arguing that the first four causes of action were viable because they arose from contract and, therefore, under section 814 were not subject to immunity under the California Tort Claims Act. Appellant argued against the demurrer to the fifth and sixth causes of action on the ground that respondents were liable under section 815.6 for failing to discharge a mandatory duty. With respect to the seventh cause of action, appellant argued that the immunities cited by respondents did not apply to claims for injunctive and declaratory relief.
After a hearing on April 26, 2000, the trial court adopted its tentative ruling sustaining the demurrer to the first six causes of action without leave to amend and overruling it with respect to the seventh cause of action. Respondents filed their answer on July 26.
On December 27, 2000, appellant dismissed the seventh cause of action and requested entry of judgment against him on the first six causes of action. [69] Judgment was entered on the same date. Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal on January 19, 2001.
DISCUSSION
(1) The standard by which we review the trial court’s decision to sustain the demurrer without leave to amend is well settled. “The reviewing court gives the complaint a reasonable interpretation, and treats the demurrer as admitting all material facts properly pleaded. [Citations.] The court does not, however, assume the truth of contentions, deductions or conclusions of law. [Citation.] The judgment must be affirmed ‘if any one of the several grounds of demurrer is well taken. [Citations.]’ [Citation.] However, it is error for a trial court to sustain a demurrer when the plaintiff has stated a cause of action under any possible legal theory. [Citation.] And it is an abuse of discretion to sustain a demurrer without leave to amend if the plaintiff shows there is a reasonable possibility any defect identified by the defendant can be cured by amendment. [Citation.]” ( Aubry v. Tri-City Hospital Dist. (1992) 2 Cal. 4th 962, 966-967 [9 Cal. Rptr. 2d 92, 831 P.2d 317]; see Dunkin v. Boskey (2000) 82 Cal. App. 4th 171, 180 [98 Cal. Rptr. 2d 44].)
(2a) Appellant contends that the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the first four causes of action because these claims are based on contract and the California Tort Claims Act does not bar contract claims. He relies upon section 814, which provides: “Nothing in this part affects liability based on contract or the right to obtain relief other than money or damages against a public entity or public employee.” “The Legislative Committee Comment-Senate on this section was: ‘The doctrine of sovereign immunity has not protected public entities in California from liability arising out of contract. This section makes clear that this statute has no effect on the contractual liabilities of public entities or public employees.’ ” (Arthur L. Sachs, Inc. v. City of Oceanside (1984) 151 Cal. App. 3d 315, 320 [198 Cal. Rptr. 483], italics omitted.) (3) Thus, ” ‘[w]hen the state makes a contract . . . it is liable for a breach of its agreement . . . and the doctrine of governmental immunity does not apply. [Citations.]’ ” ( E.H. Morrill Co. v. State of California (1967) 65 Cal. 2d 787, 794 [56 Cal. Rptr. 479, 423 P.2d 551], italics omitted.) “Whether an action is based on contract or tort depends upon the nature of the right sued upon, not the form of the pleading or relief demanded. If based on breach of promise it is contractual; if based on breach of a non contractual duty it is tortious. [Citation.] If unclear the action will be considered based on contract rather than tort. [Citation.]” ( Arthur L. Sachs, Inc., supra, at p. 322.)
(2b) Appellant relies on the general rule that settlement agreements are governed by contract principles ( Nicholson v. Barab (1991) 233 Cal. App. 3d [70] 1671, 1681 [285 Cal. Rptr. 441]; In re Frye (1983) 150 Cal. App. 3d 407, 409 [197 Cal. Rptr. 755]), as well as case law applying this rule to agreements settling disciplinary actions by California licensing agencies. ( Frankel v. Board of Dental Examiners (1996) 46 Cal. App. 4th 534, 544 [54 Cal. Rptr. 2d 128]; Rich Vision Centers, Inc. v. Board of Medical Examiners (1983) 144 Cal. App. 3d 110, 115-116 [192 Cal. Rptr. 455]; see Department of Industrial Relations v. UI Video Stores, Inc. (1997) 55 Cal. App. 4th 1084, 1090-1096 [64 Cal. Rptr. 2d 457].) Appellant’s complaint alleged a breach of the confidentiality provisions of his settlement agreement with respondents. Accordingly, appellant reasons that, under section 814, his claims for breach of contract are viable.
Respondents, here as in the trial court, rely on the immunity provisions of sections 821.6 and 815.2. Section 821.6 provides: “A public employee is not liable for injury caused by his instituting or prosecuting any judicial or administrative proceeding within the scope of his employment, even if he acts maliciously and without probable cause.” Section 815.2, subdivision (b), provides: “Except as otherwise provided by statute, a public entity is not liable for an injury resulting from an act or omission of an employee of the public entity where the employee is immune from liability.” Respondents further maintain that section 814 is inapplicable because appellant’s causes of action are not based on contract. According to respondents, the stipulation by which the disciplinary matter in this case was settled was not contractual but rather made pursuant to a statutory scheme of discipline.
The trial court resolved this matter primarily on the basis of a single case, Kayfetz v. State of California (1984) 156 Cal. App. 3d 491 [203 Cal. Rptr. 33] (Kayfetz). In Kayfetz, a physician sued over the publication of a disciplinary action report that he alleged was inaccurate and violated promised confidentiality concerning his participation in a drug rehabilitation program. The disciplinary action against the physician was resolved by a stipulation under which the physician admitted charges of theft and possession and self-administration of dangerous drugs and accepted a decision revoking his license, staying the revocation and placing the physician on probation for five years. The stipulation provided that if the physician applied for and was admitted into a designated rehabilitation program, the decision would be suspended and, upon successful completion of the rehabilitation program, dismissed. ( Id. at pp. 494-495.) The physician ultimately completed the rehabilitation program, the decision was set aside and the accusation dismissed. ( Id. at p. 495.) Meanwhile, however, the disciplinary board published the charges and disposition of the matter in an official quarterly report in which it was statutorily required to publish disciplinary action. ( Id. at pp. 496-497.)
[71] Kayfetz held the physician’s action was barred by the immunity of section 821.6, because the publication of the official “action report” was part of the “prosecution” of a proceeding within the meaning of that statute. ( Kayfetz, supra, 156 Cal. App. 3d at pp. 496-498.) The court noted that publication of disciplinary action is part of the statutory scheme intended to protect the public and found no statute requiring confidentiality as to the fact of drug abuse. ( Id. at p. 498.) Quoting Citizens Capital Corp. v. Spohn (1982) 133 Cal. App. 3d 887, 889 [184 Cal. Rptr. 269], Kayfetz explained that immunity under section 821.6, ” ‘even from wrongfully motivated action, is granted, as a matter of public policy, to avoid the risk of public officers avoiding their public duty for fear of the burden of trial and risk of its outcome.’ ” (Kayfetz, supra, 156 Cal. App. 3d at p. 497.) Kayfetz has been viewed as suggesting “an expansive interpretation” of the “prosecution process” covered by section 821.6 “to include the period up to the service of the sentence or the execution of the penalty.” ( Cappuccio, Inc. v. Harmon (1989) 208 Cal. App. 3d 1496, 1500 [257 Cal. Rptr. 4].) In Cappuccio, section 821.6 immunity was held to bar libel and slander claims against a state officer who gave erroneous information in a public announcement concerning the plaintiffs’ conviction for violations of the Fish and Game Code and Business and Professions Code: Although the statements were made after the plaintiffs were convicted, Cappuccio viewed a report on the outcome of a prosecution as part of the prosecution process. (Cappuccio, Inc., at p. 1500.)
Respondents maintain that under Kayfetz, Citizens Capital and Cappuccio, the complaint in the present case is barred by section 821.6 immunity because respondents merely publicized the outcome of the disciplinary proceeding during the period before appellant’s penalty was executed. Citizens Capital and Cappuccio are not of direct assistance in resolving the question presented here, however, as neither of these cases involved a settlement agreement or claimed breach thereof. While Kayfetz applied section 821.6 immunity in a case involving a settlement agreement, appellant correctly points out that Kayfetz did not address section 814. Although Kayfetz referred to the physician’s allegations that the publication “violated promised confidentiality” ( Kayfetz, supra, 156 Cal. App. 3d at p. 494), the opinion did not indicate whether the stipulation expressly contained a confidentiality provision, how the promise of confidentiality was alleged to have been made, or whether the complaint alleged any breach of contract claim. [72] In the present case, by contrast, appellant has specifically alleged that the settlement agreement expressly provided that the complainants would be notified only of the “outcome” of the proceeding, not the results or findings of OREA investigations or contents of the stipulation, that respondents represented the stipulation was a “private reproval and entirely confidential,” and that respondents allegedly breached the stipulation by publishing letters to complainants indicating that respondents had performed a complete investigation and relating confidential information concerning the investigation, findings, conclusions and action taken against appellant.
The allegations of an express confidentiality agreement and breach thereof make it difficult to view Kayfetz as dispositive of the present case without further consideration. If appellant is correct that the stipulation in the present case is a standard settlement agreement subject to ordinary contract principles, this case pits the immunity granted by section 821.6 directly against the liability provision of section 814.
As indicated above, respondents argue that the stipulation in the present case was not really contractual because it was entered pursuant to a statutory scheme of discipline. They note that Frankel v. Board of Dental Examiners, supra, 46 Cal. App. 4th 534, the main case upon which appellant relies in arguing that the stipulation is governed by ordinary contract principles, actually stated: “Absent a statutory framework governing enforcement of agreements to settle accusations brought by licensing agencies, the parties assert that their ‘Stipulation and Settlement,’ like civil settlement agreements generally, is governed by contract principles.” ( Id. at p. 544, italics added.) In Frankel, the statutes which gave the Board of Dental Examiners authority to investigate allegations of misconduct and institute disciplinary action did not expressly authorize settlement of disputes; rather, case law afforded the Board implied power to settle licensing disputes. (Ibid.) In the present case, the governing statutes and regulations expressly give respondents the authority to settle disciplinary matters. ( Bus. & Prof. Code, § 11315.5; Cal. Code Regs., tit. 10, §§ 3741,3729, subd. (c)(2).) Business and Professions Code section 11317 specifically provides that “private reprovals or letters of warning” are to remain confidential. The regulations further require the agency to develop a “confidential investigative report” on each complaint against a real estate appraiser ( Cal. Code Regs., tit. 10, § 3728, subd. (a)) and to notify the complainant “that a confidential investigation has been commenced” and “of final action taken on the complaint.” ( Cal. Code Regs., tit. 10, § 3726, subd. (b).)
Respondents’ argument that the stipulation in the present case is not contractual is not well taken. The statutory scheme upon which respondents [73] rely in making this argument simply authorizes the OREA to settle disciplinary disputes; it is silent as to the enforcement of such settlement agreements. The situation thus differs little from that in Frankel v. Board of Dental Examiners, supra, 46 Cal. App. 4th 534. Additionally, the regulations impose the same requirement of confidentiality that appellant alleges was expressly included in the stipulation at issue. It would be anomalous to allow the existence of a statutory scheme requiring confidentiality as to all but the outcome of a disciplinary action to justify a failure to abide by the terms of a settlement agreement requiring the same confidentiality.
Indeed, to accept respondents’ argument would be to hold that a settlement agreement with the state is completely unenforceable. We recognize that a settlement agreement is necessarily entered into as a part of the prosecution of a judicial or administrative proceeding. A settlement agreement, however, is nevertheless a contract. The policy underlying the immunity provision of section 821.6, as indicated above, is to allow public officers to discharge their public duties in pursuing prosecutions without fear of reprisal. This policy does not justify immunizing conduct constituting a breach of a settlement agreement. To hold state officers liable for breaching a settlement agreement would not have a chilling effect on the state’s initiation and prosecution of judicial and administrative proceedings. Indeed, if the state could not be held liable for breaching a settlement agreement, state agencies would be hard pressed to convince parties to enter such agreements. Announcement of the outcome of a disciplinary proceeding may be part of the prosecution process within the meaning of section 821.6, but announcement of additional information in violation of both a settlement agreement and statutory provisions goes beyond any conduct appropriate for protection. Accordingly, appellant’s claim of breach of a settlement agreement is not subject to immunity under section 821.6.
It bears reiterating that our review in this case is of the trial court’s sustaining of respondents’ demurrer, requiring us to accept as true the allegations of the complaint. It of course remains to be seen whether appellant can establish that respondents represented the stipulation was a private reproval; that the stipulation in fact prohibited respondents from informing the complainants of the results or findings of their investigations or of the contents of the stipulation; that respondents informed the complainants of information they were required to keep confidential and/or released information to persons other than the complainants; and any other facts necessary to prove his claims.
(4) Appellant further argues that the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer to his fifth and sixth causes of action for breach of a mandatory [74] duty. Under section 815.6, “[w]here a public entity is under a mandatory duty imposed by an enactment that is designed to protect against the risk of a particular kind of injury, the public entity is liable for an injury of that kind proximately caused by its failure to discharge the duty unless the public entity establishes that it exercised reasonable diligence to discharge the duty.” Appellant argues that respondents are required by statute and regulation to maintain the confidentiality of administrative investigations, findings and private reprovals and are liable for their failure to do so.
As discussed above, the fifth and sixth causes of action of appellant’s first amended complaint allege that respondents breached a mandatory duty established by Business and Professions Code sections 11317 and 11315.5 and California Code of Regulations, title 10,sections 3726, 3728, 3729 and 3741 to maintain the confidentiality of the investigations, findings and actions taken against appellant. Appellant alleged that respondents represented that the stipulation he entered into was “a private reproval and entirely confidential.”
Several of the statutory and regulatory provisions cited in the complaint appear to establish a mandatory duty to maintain the confidentiality of disciplinary investigations and of private reprovals; appellant, as indicated above, alleged that respondents represented that the stipulation constituted a “private reproval.” Business and Professions Code section 11317provides that the OREA “shall publish a summary of public disciplinary actions taken by the office,” but “shall not publish identifying information with respect to private reprovals or letters of warning, which shall remain confidential.” California Code of Regulations, title 10,section 3726 establishes the requirements for initiation of disciplinary proceedings, and subdivision (b) of that section provides that the “complainant shall be notified that a confidential investigation has been commenced . . .; and shall be notified of final action taken on the complaint.” California Code of Regulations, title 10, section 3728, subdivisions (a) and (d) provide that “[e]ach complaint shall result in a confidential investigative report,” and that “[n]otwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, the Director may release information concerning confidential investigations and complaints to a law enforcement agency or to another regulatory agency to which the appraiser has applied for licensure.” Section 3729 of title 10 of the California Code of Regulations, subdivision (a), provides for a discretionary “informal” conference to allow the appraiser “an opportunity to show why the Office should not proceed with a disciplinary action,” and subdivision (b) provides that the office “shall not release or give out any information received in the conference or in connection with the confidential investigation report to any person [75] not authorized by law to receive such information.” The use of the term “shall” in these provisions denotes a mandatory obligation. ( Bus. & Prof. Code, § 19; see Morris v. County of Marin (1977) 18 Cal. 3d 901, 907-908 [136 Cal. Rptr. 251, 559 P.2d 606].) The requirement that the investigation be kept confidential except in specified particulars must be viewed as aimed at protecting the privacy, reputation and business of the person subject to the complaint. As appellant alleged damage to his reputation and trade, he appears to have alleged that respondents failed to discharge a mandatory duty imposed by an enactment designed to protect against the type of injury caused by that failure. (See Morris v. County of Marin, supra, 18 Cal. 3d at pp. 907-908.)
Respondents maintain that appellant cannot claim they violated a mandatory duty not to inform complainants of the outcome of the proceeding because appellant signed a stipulation that required notifying the complainants of that outcome. Respondents, however, ignore appellant’s allegations that they breached their mandatory duty by informing the complainants of more than what the stipulation allowed, by generally publishing confidential information. Section 3726, subdivision (b) of title 10 of the California Code of Regulations provides that the complainant must be notified of the “final action taken on the complaint”; appellant alleged that the stipulation provided for notification to the complainants “only of the ‘outcome’ of the proceeding, and not the results or findings of OREA investigations, or the contents of the Stipulation.” Appellant alleged that respondents “publish[ed] false or misleading information concerning [appellant’s] trade, including without limitation representations that a complete investigation had been done, and other confidential representations.” If indeed respondents informed the complainants of details the stipulation did not authorize them to reveal, or published information concerning the proceedings to persons other than the complainants, they would have exceeded the publication contemplated by the stipulation alleged by appellant. Notably, respondents do not suggest that they have no mandatory duty to maintain confidentiality as to matters other than the outcome of the proceeding. Rather, they argue only that appellant’s fifth and sixth causes of action are also barred by section 821.6 employee immunity, applied to the public entity via section 815.2.
Section 821.6 does not provide a defense to a claim of breach of mandatory duty under section 815.6. ( Bradford v. State of California (1973) 36 [76] Cal. App. 3d 16 [111 Cal. Rptr. 852].) In Bradford, the complaint alleged that the state breached a mandatory duty to record the dismissal of a criminal charge, resulting in the plaintiff’s arrest for failure to register as a sex offender. The court rejected the state’s argument that it was protected by section 821.6 immunity, finding that the employee immunity established by section 821.6was not a defense to entity liability under section 815.6. Bradford explicitly acknowledged and rejected the theory that employee immunity would apply to a claim of entity breach of a mandatory duty because the entity’s breach would necessarily consist of an employee’s act or omission. ( Bradford v. State of California, supra, 36 Cal. App. 3d at p. 20, fn. 8.) “[T]he fact that derivative liability . . . may be nullified by an employee immunity in no way affects direct liability based on section 815.6. Such liability could only be negatived by a statutory entity immunity.” ( Id. at p. 21.)
Respondents make no attempt in their briefing to respond to this analysis, completely ignoring Bradford and misrepresenting appellant as having premised his mandatory duty argument entirely on Shoemaker v. Myers (1992) 2 Cal. App. 4th 1407 [4 Cal. Rptr. 2d 203]. Shoemaker held that the immunity provisions of section 821.6 did not operate to bar liability for a claimed violation of a whistleblower statute which imposed liability on “any state officer or employee” who engaged in the proscribed conduct. (Shoemaker, at p. 1423.)Respondents argue that Shoemaker created a narrow exception to immunity which is inapplicable in the present case. We need not resolve this point, as Bradford v. State of California, supra, 36 Cal. App. 3d 16 independently establishes that section 821.6 does not provide immunity to a public entity for a claim based on section 815.6.
Again, we reiterate that the viability of appellant’s claims will ultimately depend on his ability to prove his allegations concerning the contents of the stipulation and actions taken by respondents. This decision holds only that his claims survive a demurrer based on section 821.6 immunity.
The judgment is reversed and the matter remanded for proceedings consistent with the views expressed herein.
Lambden, J., and Ruvolo, J., concurred.

S. v. Lyons Associates

Summary: Lifetime death benefits recovered for widow of spouse exposed to Agent Orange in Vietnam more than 40 years before disease manifests.

In the Matter of:

MS, Widow of CS (Deceased),

Claimant,

v.

LYON ASSOCIATES, INC., Employer, and INSURANCE COMPANY of the STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA,

Carrier.

Case No: 2011-LDA-00520 OWCP No: 15-049822

Appearances: Matthew Witteman, Esq. Law Offices of Matthew Witteman For Claimant

James M. Ralph, Esq. Laughlin, Falbo, Levy & Moresi For Respondents

Before: Russell D. Pulver

Administrative Law Judge

DECISION AND ORDER GRANTING BENEFITS

This case arises from a claim for compensation brought under the Defense Base Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1651, as an extension of the Longshore and Harbor Worker’s Compensation Act, as amended, 33 U.S.C. § 901 (“the Act”). The Act provides compensation to certain employees engaged in U.S. Department of Defense related employment for occupational diseases or unintentional work-related injuries, irrespective of fault, resulting in disability or death. Claimant, as the surviving spouse, brought this claim against employer, Lyon Associates (“Employer”) and Insurance Company of the State of Pennsylvania (collectively “Respondents”)

for death benefits and funeral expenses after the death of CS (“Decedent”) on July 3, 2005 due to cancer allegedly caused by exposure to Agent Orange during his employment with Employer in Vietnam.

The issues raised by the parties could not be resolved administratively and the matter was referred to the Office of Administrative Law Judges for hearing. On March 29, 2012, the undersigned convened the formal hearing in San Francisco, California. The parties had a full and fair opportunity to adduce testimony, offer documentary evidence and submit post-hearing briefs. The following exhibits were admitted into evidence: ALJ Exhibits (“AX”) 1-5, Claimant’s Exhibits (“CX”) A-M, and Respondents’ Exhibits (“RX”) 1-13. Hearing Transcript (“TR”) at 5-7, 15, 17-19, 89, 96. Dr. Arnold Schecter testified at the hearing on behalf of Claimant. Dr. Robert L. Owen testified on behalf of Respondents.

Based upon the evidence introduced and having considered the arguments presented, I make the following Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Decision and Order.

STIPULATIONS

The parties stipulate and I find:

1. Jurisdiction exists under the Act. TR at 7-8; AX 3; AX 4.

2. The Act applies to this claim. Id.

3. At the time of the alleged injury, an employer-employee relationship existed

between Decedent and Employer. Id.

4. The claim was timely noticed, timely filed and timely controverted. Id.

5. Claimant was married to Decedent at the time of his death and there are no other financial dependents. Respondents’ Post Trial Brief (“RPTB”) at 3.

ISSUES

1. Whether Decedent’s death arose out of and in the course of employment. TR at 8; AX 3; AX 4.

2. Amount of death benefit, if any.1 Id.

1 The parties discussed this issue in terms of “average weekly wage.” However, the issue is more appropriately termed the calculation of the death benefit payable to Claimant pursuant to Section 9 of the Act.

3. Whether Claimant is entitled to interest on benefits owed, attorney fees and costs. Id.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Decedent began his career as a civil engineer on projects in the United States beginning in June of 1951, and according to his resume worked on various projects, both domestic and international, until 1964. CX F at 3-4; RX 4 at 346-349. Decedent worked in Vietnam with Lyon Associates Inc. from February 13, 1964 to September 30, 1965 as an employee “on loan” from J.E. Greiner Company. RX 4 at 346; RX 8 at 490. Decedent then was hired by Lyon Associates, Inc. and was employed by them from February 3, 1966 to July 15, 1985 (records indicate that he left Vietnam in approximately 1974). RX 8. Decedent was employed as a civil engineer by Lyon Associates, Inc., and it appears that Decedent became the chief or head civil engineer of Lyon Associates, Inc. within a couple years of his joining the company. Id. at 490.

Lyon Associates, Inc. had contracts with the United States Department of Defense to design various infrastructure projects in Vietnam. Id. at 487-490. Lyon Associates, Inc. was a design firm and not a construction firm, and worked in corporate offices in Vietnam. Id. The design team, of which Decedent was a part, was stationed at the Saigon office. Id. Initially, the Saigon office was located near the airport in a structure that was formerly used as a house and, according to Mr. Lyon, was a completely enclosed building with air conditioning. Id. at 488. It appears that in the mid 1960s the Saigon office was relocated to a larger building in Saigon, which also had air conditioning. Id. As a civil engineer, Decedent would have mostly worked in the Saigon office where the design team was headquartered. CX M at 22-25. However, Decedent also made field visits to review sites. Id. Employees of Lyon Associates, Inc. were responsible for finding their own housing. RX 8 at 495. There is no evidence that any employees lived on military bases or performed work in areas where Agent Orange may have been stored. Id. at 491.

Decedent lived with a woman and two children in the local economy while in Vietnam. Id. at 496; CX E at 3. In a handwritten statement signed by Decedent on February 26, 2005, he detailed his work for almost nine years in Vietnam indicating that he traveled “extensively from the Delta to north of Hue.” CX F at 2. Decedent wrote that “Agent Orange was commonly used throughout many locations in which I traveled” and opined that his cancer was related to the Agent Orange exposure while in Vietnam. Id. In a resume prepared by Decedent and dated May 31, 1972, he noted that he “had planned and directed field surveys, alignment studies, roadway design and intersection geometry of 500 kilometers of national and interprovincial highway restoration and urban bypass studies.” Id. at 3. He also noted he had participated in “projects for airfields, ports, sewerage and water systems designs for the vast military buildup throughout Vietnam.” Id. While Decedent worked primarily at an office in Saigon, he did visit sites on which he was working in various parts of Vietnam. CX M at 9-10, 21. During his travels about Vietnam, Decedent would frequent local restaurants for meals. CX E at 3.

It appears that Decedent worked in Vietnam until 1974 when Decedent moved to Seoul, Korea. RX 8 at 492; RX 9 at 513-514. There are no records detailing which projects he worked

on there. In 1975, he became the Chief Highway Engineer for the Highway Bettermen Services in Indonesia. RX 9 at 514. It appears that he lived in Bandung, Indonesia until 1979, when he returned to Korea and worked on the Korea Port Phase III project. RX 4. It appears that Decedent may have briefly worked in Saudi Arabia in 1981, but otherwise continuously worked in Korea until July 15, 1985, when he resigned from Lyon Associates Inc. Id. Mr. Lyons testified that Decedent made $59,315.59 working for Lyons Associates in the calendar year of 1985 up until he left the company in November, 1985. RX 8 at 494; EX K at 1. According to the deposition testimony of Claimant, Decedent next worked for De Leuw Cather, in Singapore, Taiwan, Turkey, and Thailand. RX 9 at 514-515. Decedent then returned to the United States, first to Maryland, then to Arizona. Id. There is no evidence regarding what his employment with De Leuw Cather entailed.

Agent Orange is an herbicide developed for military use to defoliate trees and shrubbery where the enemy might hide.2 CX H at 2. Agent Orange was used extensively in Vietnam throughout the 1960’s until its use was discontinued in 1971 due to concerns about the product’s potential harmful health effects. Id.; RX 11 at 557. Primarily, Agent Orange was found to contain TCDD or dioxin, a man-made substance found to be harmful to man. Id. In later years, millions of dollars has been spent through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) to perform remediation of the soil in various parts of Vietnam found to be contaminated with dioxins, particularly Danang, Bien Hoa and Phu Cat. CX I at 1-2.

2 The term “Agent Orange” became the code name for this herbicide since it was stored in drums marked with an orange band.

Summary of Medical Evidence

Decedent had a history of smoking and a history of illness, including hypertension, atrial fibrillation, asthma, and eventually metastatic cancer. Claimant and Decedent eventually relocated to Phoenix, Arizona, and Decedent was treated at the Phoenix, Arizona Veteran Affairs Hospital. Mr. Fowler testified that Decedent smoked a pack or two a day of unfiltered cigarettes while he knew him in Vietnam. CX M at 23. His smoking habit was confirmed by Decedent’s widow. RX 9 at 520-521. Decedent had long suffered from hypertension. Hypertension was present when Decedent initially registered as a patient at the Phoenix Veteran Affairs Hospital on August 9, 2000. RX 13 at 1071-1073. It was also noted that he had asthma. Id. On March 11, 2002, Decedent complained of wheezing and congestion over a two month period.

In May of 2004, Decedent was diagnosed as having a seasonal allergy. RX 9 at 518. On September 10, 2004, Decedent had a lipoma removed from his left chest. The operative note states that Decedent had “a history of multiple sebaceous cysts removed.” Id. at 1076; see also RX 9 at 522 (Claimant testified that Decedent had two or three cysts removed previously). On November 18, 2004, Decedent was seen for persistent coughing and shortness of breath stating he had “had the worst six months of his life. Id. at 1088. A CT scan of his chest on November 18, 2003 showed extensive lymphadenopathy. Id.

On February 4, 2005, he was admitted for inpatient treatment with new onset atrial fibrillation with congestive heart failure. His admitting diagnosis was congestive heart failure secondary to uncontrolled hypertension vs. myocardial infarction vs. arrhythmia. Myocardial infarction was ruled out, but intermittent congestive failure persisted despite diuretics until his death. Id. at 993-1001. On June 20, 2005, when Decedent was admitted for hospice care with shortness of breath and anorexia, chest x-rays showed interstitial infiltrates. Id. at 732-735.

It appears that Decedent had widespread cancer of an unknown type at the time of his death. Decedent was documented to have spinal cord compression by metastases at T3 and T4 thoracic vertebrae. Id. The only specific attempts to make a tissue diagnosis as to type of cancer were on February 1, 2005, with a CT guided needle biopsy of a 2 cm right adrenal mass, and a fine needle aspiration of a thyroid nodule performed on May 5, 2005. CX B at 5-6. After the staff pathologists at the Phoenix VA were unable to determine the source of the cancer tissue, slides were sent to the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology but immunohistochemical stains did not suggest adrenal or thyroid origin of the cancer. Id. at 7-8. The AFIP Department of Pulmonary and Mediastinal Pathology could not confirm his cancer as definitive lung carcinoma. Id. The AFIP Departments of Hepatic and GU Pathology applied additional markers for hepatocyte and renal cells which were negative. Id. The records note, “CD10 appears to show brush border type expression, but they are still doubtful that this represents renal cell carcinoma; however, it cannot be completely ruled out”. Id. The final AFIP opinion was, “[a]t this point the most we can say is this looks like metastatic carcinoma, primary site undetermined.” Id. at 8. He was treated empirically by the Oncology Department at the Phoenix VA as if his cancer were non small cell lung carcinoma, even though there was no tissue confirmation of this diagnosis and no radiological evidence of a focal primary site in the lungs. See generally RX 13.

Decedent was provided radiation therapy and chemotherapy. RX 9 at 519-520. Decedent died on July 3, 2005. At the time of his death he had widespread malignancy of undetermined type, and had recently received radiation therapy and chemotherapy. The death certificate indicates Decedent died on July 3, 2005 from respiratory arrest as a consequence of “lung carcinoma, metastatic, Stage IV non-small cell.” CX C. A staff physician at Phoenix VA, Dr. Rami Sarid, wrote on July 12, 2005: “[Decedent] was a patient under my care. He died of lung cancer and has a significant history of exposure to agent orange. I believe his agent orange exposure caused his lung cancer.” CX B at 3.

Deposition Testimony and Report of Dr. David O. Carpenter

Dr. David O. Carpenter is a Harvard trained public health physician. CX D at 1; CX L at 2. His work has been mainly in research relating to environmental exposures. CX D at 1. Dr. Carpenter has researched the effects of Agent Orange exposure on the Vietnamese civilian population, having visited Vietnam on multiple occasions, and is an expert on health effects as a result of exposure to dioxins such as are contained in Agent Orange. Id. He has published numerous articles relating to his research including articles on environmental health issues. Id. at 7-16.

Dr. Carpenter reviewed the medical records of Decedent and information reported by David Fowler regarding the work done in Vietnam by Employer while Decedent was there. Id. at 1. Dr. Carpenter noted that Decedent was exposed to dioxin in Vietnam when he worked there from 1964 to 1970. Id. at 2. He also noted that Decedent died of widespread metastatic cancer on July 3, 2005, the etiology of which was unknown due to its widespread nature to numerous organs. Id. Dr. Carpenter opined that Decedent’s cancer was likely caused by or contributed to by his exposure to Agent Orange while employed by Employer in Vietnam. Id. Dr. Carpenter noted that the treating physician had attributed Decedent’s cancer to Agent Orange and also pointed to Decedent’s history of serbaceous cysts as evidence of dioxin exposure. Id. at 2-3.

Dr. Carpenter admitted that he is not a clinician involved in treating patients, but opined that as a researcher in environmental causes of human disease, he felt better qualified to opine on Agent Orange exposure and resultant health problems. CX L at 9. He testified that dioxin is a known human carcinogen and that it increases the risk of many more cancers than just those listed by the Veteran’s Administration for purposes of VA disability compensation, citing a number of other national and international organizations which have identified dioxin as a human carcinogen. Id. at 10, 15. Dr. Carpenter opined that Decedent traveled in areas of Vietnam where Agent Orange was used most extensively and also ate the local food which would have, and still does, contain high amounts of dioxin. Id. He noted that the areas in and around Saigon and the Danang air base were among the most heavily dioxin contaminated sites in Vietnam. Id. at 19. Dr. Carpenter testified that even if Decedent had lung cancer primarily caused by his smoking, that the dioxins from Agent Orange would have substantially contributed to his lung cancer. Id. at 12. He also indicated that Decedent may have had multiple chloracne outbreaks, a known result of dioxin exposure, throughout his life but basically ignored them as a minor aggravation. Id. at 21.

Deposition & Hearing Testimony and Report of Dr. Arnold Schecter

Dr. Arnold Schecter is primarily a researcher and professor of epidemiology and environmental and occupational health and has spent much of his time since 1980 engaged in research on dioxins. CX E at 1; TR at 27-28. He has published over 100 articles or book chapters dealing with dioxins, Agent Orange and related topics. CX E at 1. He believes that he is the “only U.S. scientist or physician conducting Agent Orange and dioxin research in Vietnam since 1984,” having visited that country 27 times for his research. Id.; TR at 32. Dr. Schecter reviewed the medical reports of Decedent along with information from Mr. Lyons and Mr. Fowler regarding Decedent’s work in Vietnam. CX E at 2-3. Dr. Schecter opined that based on his working in and near Saigon and the Danang and Bien Hoa airbases, Decedent likely was exposed to dioxin from Agent Orange through the soil and sediment as well as by his ingestion of local food grown and prepared in the area. Id. Dr. Schecter noted that dioxin is a known human carcinogen recognized by numerous organizations including the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and the World Health Organization. Id. at 2; TR at 63-64. Accordingly, Dr. Schecter opined that Decedent’s cancer was more likely than not initiated or promoted by his exposure to Agent Orange while in Vietnam. CX E at 2-3. While smoking may have initiated lung cancer, if that indeed was the etiology of Decedent’s cancer, Dr. Schecter opined that his exposure to dioxin would have combined with the smoking to act as a promoter of the cancer. Id.

Dr. Schecter testified that even today, there can be found high levels of dioxin in the food in Vietnam, particularly around Danang and Bien Hoa air bases where many Agent Orange spraying missions initiated. TR at 32. Using spray charts of Viet Nam, Dr. Schecter noted that these areas were among the heaviest concentrations where Agent Orange was used. Id. at 50-51. See also CX H. Dr. Schecter opined that since Decedent had a higher exposure to dioxin than an average American, that put him at a higher risk of developing cancer and that it was reasonably probable that the dioxin exposure at least contributed to the growth of his cancer whether or not it initiated it. TR at 59. Although the death certificate listed a cause of death as lung cancer, Dr. Schecter pointed out that actually the pathology studies were unable to confirm where the cancer started. Id. at 65-66.

Deposition & Hearing Testimony and Report of Dr. Robert Owen

Dr. Robert Owen is a Harvard trained epidemiologist who currently practices at the San Francisco VA Medical Center and is a professor at U.C. San Francisco. TR at 96-101. He served in the military including a stint with the Center for Disease Control. Id. at 100. He has worked for many years in the VA medical system and has had a particular interest in Agent Orange since 1978. Id. at 106-108. In his 42 years with the VA, Dr. Owen has conducted numerous compensation and pension reviews of veterans seeking VA benefits as a result of Agent Orange exposure. Id. at 108-111.

At the behest of Respondents, Dr. Owen reviewed all of the available medical records of Decedent. RX 10 at 531. Dr. Owen opined that Decedent died due to uncontrolled atrial fibrillation but also noted his death was contributed to by his hypertension, asthma, emphysema and metastatic cancer and the resultant chemo and radiation therefor. Id. at 532-533. Dr. Owen reviewed the relationship of Agent Orange exposure to Decedent’s illness and death through the lists used by the VA in determining whether there is sufficient evidence showing particular conditions as having a relationship to Agent Orange exposure. Id. at 533-536. While Dr. Owen agreed that Decedent was most likely exposed to Agent Orange, he decided that there was insufficient evidence to show that Decedent had any condition, including hypertension or chloracne, that could be related to Agent Orange exposure. Id.; TR at 129. Dr. Owen essentially opined that even if Decedent’s cancer had initiated in his lungs, then he felt that Decedent’s far longer and more direct exposure to smoking fumes was the overwhelming cause of his cancer and death. RX 10 at 536-537; see also TR at 143-144. Dr. Owen did testify that Decedent’s hypertension could be related to dioxin exposure. TR at 142. Dr. Owen also reported that Decedent’s smoking could well have been contributed to by the stress of working in a war environment. RX 10 at 536.

CREDIBILITY

Medical Experts

Much turns on resolving the factual dispute between the medical experts in this case. The administrative law judge determines the credibility and weight to be attached to the testimony of

a medical expert in whole or in part. The judge, in fact, can base one finding on a physician’s opinion and, then, on another issue, find contrary to the same physician’s opinion. Pimpinella v. Universal Maritime Service, Inc., 27 BRBS 154 (1993) (ALJ may rely on one medical expert’s opinion on the issue of causation and another on the issue of disability). Further, it is solely within the judge’s discretion to accept or reject all or any part of any testimony, according to his judgment. Perini Corp. v Hyde, 306 F. Supp. 1321, 1327 (D.R.I. 1969). In evaluating expert testimony, the judge may rely on his/her own common sense. Avondale Indus., Inc. v. Director, OWCP, 977 F.2d 186 (5th Cir. 1992). It is the judge who determines credibility, weighs the evidence, and draws inferences; the judge in fact need not accept the opinion of any particular medical examiner. See Banks v. Chicago Grain Trimmers Ass’n., 390 U.S. 459 (1968); Scott v. Tug Mate, Inc., 22 BRBS 164, 165, 167 (1989); Pimpinella v. Universal Maritime Service, Inc., supra. A judge is not bound to accept the opinion of a physician if rational inferences urge a contrary conclusion. Todd Shipyards Corp. v. Donovan, 300 F.2d 741 (5th Cir. 1962); Ennis v. O. Hearne, 223 F.2d 755 (4th Cir. 1955).

In this case, the opinions of the three retained expert physicians, all eminently qualified as experts in their field, differ primarily in only one respect. All of the expert physicians agree that Decedent was exposed to a higher degree of dioxins through Agent Orange from his work for almost nine years in Vietnam than he would have been exposed to in the United States. All three further agree that the dioxins contained in Agent Orange cause or contribute to a number of health problems including hypertension and lung cancer, among others. They also agree that Decedent had metastatic cancer affecting numerous organs of the body but that the origin of the cancer could not be determined primarily due to its advanced stage when detected. I accept all of these agreed opinions as being credible evidence.

The primary difference of opinion seems to be as to the effect of the unknown etiology of decedent’s cancer upon his right to recover herein. Doctors Carpenter and Schecter opine that the dioxin exposure in Vietnam more likely than not at least contributed to or accelerated Decedent’s cancer and resulting death pointing to various studies as well as Decedent’s hypertension and history of cysts as evidence of the dioxin’s effect on Decedent’s health. Doctor Owen, on the other hand, while apparently admitting the possibility that the Agent Orange exposure may have contributed at least to Decedent’s hypertension, opines that the major cause of his cancer was due to his smoking which spanned more years than his Agent Orange exposure and which continued later than such exposure. Dr. Owen relies upon the VA criteria for associating Agent Orange exposure to various health concerns to bolster his opinion that the smoking was the primary cause of Decedent’s cancer and not the Agent Orange exposure.

I find the opinions of Drs. Carpenter and Schecter to be more persuasive in this regard. I accept that Decedent’s smoking was most likely a cause, probably the primary cause of his cancer. However, the fact is that Decedent was exposed to the deleterious effects of Agent Orange for almost nine years particularly through his living on the local economy eating locally grown food with presumably high contamination from Agent Orange spraying through most of the years Decedent lived in Saigon. Thus, I find the opinions of Drs. Carpenter and Schecter that the dioxins from Agent Orange most likely at least contributed to the initiation of or acceleration of the decedent’s cancer and death. Further, I am reluctant to accept Dr. Owen’s opinion that smoking can unquestionably be related to Decedent’s death but not dioxin exposure where there

is no basis for determining the etiology of the cancer. I find that Dr. Owen’s opinions are perfectly acceptable within the VA medical regime for determining whether a veteran has proven a relationship of a particular health condition to exposure to Agent Orange. However, the rules under the Act differ from those of the VA, primarily in that the Act grants the Section 20(a) presumption to a Claimant, thus easing the Claimant’s burden of proof. I believe that Dr. Owen has not appreciated the influence of the Section 20(a) presumption in giving his opinion. Accordingly, I accept the opinion of Drs. Carpenter and Schecter that the Decedent’s exposure to Agent Orange in Vietnam played some causative role, even though perhaps a minor role, in Decedent’s cancer and health conditions leading to his death.

Claimant

Claimant gave limited factual testimony about the circumstances surrounding her husband’s death. She was not present at the time and therefore could not speak to what actually happened. She testified that Deceased had told her of his work in Vietnam for a number of years before they met which Employer does not dispute. Accordingly, I find her testimony to be credible, although of limited scope.

CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

The Act is construed liberally in favor of injured employees. Voris v. Eikel, 346 U.S. 328, 333 (1953); J.B. Vozzolo, Inc. v. Britton, 377 F.2d 144 (D.C. Cir. 1967). However, the United States Supreme Court has determined that the true-doubt rule, which resolves factual doubt in favor of the Claimant when the evidence is evenly balanced, violates Section 7(c) of the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. Section 556(d), which specifies that the proponent of a rule or position has the burden of proof and, thus, the burden of persuasion. Director, OWCP v. Greenwich Collieries, 512 U.S. 267 (1994), aff’g 990 F.2d 730 (3d Cir. 1993). In arriving at a decision in this matter, it is well settled that the finder of fact is entitled to determine the credibility of witnesses, to weigh the evidence and draw his own inferences therefrom, and is not bound to accept the opinion or theory of any particular medical examiners or other expert witnesses. Bank v. Chicago Grain Trimmers Ass’n, Inc., 390 U.S. 459, 467 reh’g denied, 391 U.S. 929 (1968); Atlantic Marine, Inc. and Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Bruce, 661 F.2d 898, 900 (5th Cir. 1981); Duhagon v. Metro. Stevedore Co., 31 BRBS 98, 101 (1997).

Section 2 of the Act states that the death or injury must “arise out of and in the course of employment.” 33 U.S.C. §902(2). Further, it is presumed that the claim comes within the provisions of the Act unless substantial evidence to the contrary is presented. 33 U.S.C. §920. The Supreme Court has held that a prima facie claim for compensation to which the statutory presumption refers “must at least allege an injury that arose in the course of employment as well as out of employment.” U.S. Indus./Fed. Sheet Metal v. Director, OWCP, 455 U.S. 608 (1982), rev’g Riley v. U.S. Indus./Fed. Sheet Metal, 627 F.2d 455 (D.C. Cir. 1986).

The parties dispute the causation of Decedent’s death. The causation analysis proceeds in three steps. First, Claimant must establish a prima facie case, thereby invoking the Section 20(a) presumption of causation. Second, Respondents may rebut the Section 20(a) presumption by producing substantial evidence tending to disprove Claimant’s prima facie case. Third, if

Respondents succeed in their rebuttal, then I must evaluate all of the evidence and reach a decision based on the record as a whole. Del Vecchio v. Bowers, 296 U.S. 280, 286 (1935); Glover v. Aerojet-General Shipyard, 6 BRBS 559 (1977); Norat v. Universal Terminal & Stevedoring Corp., 3 BRBS 151 (1976); Care v. Washington Metro. Area Transit Auth., 21 BRBS 248 (1988); but cf. Maher Terminals v. Director, OWCP, 992 F.2d 1277, 1284-85 (3d Cir. 1993), 27 BRBS 1 (CRT) (APA prohibits application of the true doubt rule to LHWCA).

Prima Facie Case

Section 20(a) Presumption

Section 20(a) entitles Claimant to a presumption that his “claim comes within the provisions of this Act.” 18 U.S.C. § 920(a). Claimant bears the burden to establish each element of his prima facie case by affirmative proof; the Section 20(a) presumption provides no aid to this effort and operates only after he has established his prima facie case. See Kooley v. Marine Industries Northwest, 22 BRBS 142 (1989); see also Director, OWCP v. Greenwich Collieries, 512 U.S. 267, 28 BRBS 43 (CRT) (1994). Section 20(a) of the LHWCA presumes, in the absence of substantial evidence to the contrary, that the claim for death benefits comes within the provisions of the LHWCA, i.e., that the death was work-related. Sprague v. Director, OWCP, 688 F.2d 862 (1st Cir. 1982). See also Woodside v. Bethlehem Steel Corp., 14 BRBS 601 (1982) (“It is well-established that, if an injury aggravates, exacerbates, accelerates, contributes to, or combines with a previous infirmity, disease, or underlying condition, the resultant condition is compensable….This rule is consistent with the maxim that ‘to hasten death is to cause it.'”); Fineman v. Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., 27 BRBS 104 (1993) (length of hastening is not significant).

To establish a prima facie claim for benefits, a claimant has the burden of establishing that: (1) the employee sustained physical harm or pain; and (2) an accident occurred in the course of employment, or conditions existed at work, which could have caused, aggravated, or accelerated the harm or pain. Port Cooper/T. Smith Stevedoring Co., Inc. v. Hunter, 227 F.3d 285, 287 (5th Cir. 2000); Kier v. Bethlehem Steel Corp., 16 BRBS 128, 129 (1984); D.D. (widow of E.D.) v. Electric Boat Corp., BRB No. 08-0103, slip op. 6 (Aug. 14, 2008). Once this prima facie case is established, a presumption is created under Section 20(a) that the employee’s injury or death arose out employment. 33 U.S.C. 920(a); Hunter, 227 F.3d at 287. In the Ninth Circuit, “[a]ll that must be proved is that the covered employer exposed the worker to injurious stimuli in sufficient quantities to cause the disease.” Todd Pacific Shipyards Corp. v. Black, 717 F.2d 1280, 1286 (9th Cir. 1983); Todd Pacific Shipyards Corp. v. Director, OWCP, 24 BRBS 36, 39 (1990) (“[M]inimal exposure to offensive stimuli at a place of employment is not sufficient to place responsibility on a covered employer in the absence of proof that exposure in such quantities had the potential to cause his disease.”).

It is important to note that, unlike some state workers’ compensation systems which may require apportionment, under the Longshore Act, an injury needs only to have been partially caused by work for a covered employer to be fully compensable. If a claimant’s employment aggravates a non-work-related, underlying disease or condition so as to produce incapacitating symptoms, the resulting disability is compensable. See Gardner v. Bath Iron Works Corp., 11

BRBS 556 (1979), aff’d sub nom. Gardner v. Dir., OWCP, 650 F.2d 1385, 13 BRBS 101 (1st Cir. 1981). Even the most minute of permanent increases to the degree of disability or symptoms is sufficient. See Indep. Stevedore Co. v. O’Leary, 357 F.2d 812 (9th Cir. 1966) (the relative contribution of the preexisting condition and the aggravation are not weighed); Lopez v. S. Stevedores, 23 BRBS 295, 297 (1990).

In this case, there is no dispute that Claimant’s Decedent sustained a physical harm, metastatic cancer resulting in his death.

To satisfy the causal element of a prima facie case, an ordinary Longshore claimant need only introduce affirmative evidence of the existence of working conditions that could conceivably have caused the harm alleged. See Champion v. S&M Traylor Bros., 690 F.2d 285, 295 (D.C. Cir. 1982). Under the Defense Base Act, however, the causation element is broadened, such that the requisite “working conditions” include the entire “Zone of Special Danger” created by the “obligations or conditions” of the claimant’s employment abroad. O’Keeffe v. Smith, Hinchman & Grylls Assocs., 380 U.S. 359 (1965); O’Leary v. Brown-Pacific-Maxon, Inc., 340 U.S. 504 (1951); Gillespie v. General Elec. Co., 21 BRBS 56 (1988); Smith v. Board of Trustees, S. Ill. Univ., 8 BRBS 197, 199 (1978). The “Zone of Special Danger” is so broad, in fact, that it encompasses nearly any harm sustained while abroad in the employ of a covered employer, including harm that results from purely recreational activities, e.g. O’Leary, 340 U.S. 507; Smith v. Board of Trustees, S. Ill. Univ., 8 BRBS 197, 199, or even purely coincidental disease-related harm, e.g. Ford Aerospace & Communications Corp. v. Boling, 684 F.2d 640 (9th Cir. 1982) (heart attack while off duty in barracks provided by employer in Thule, Greenland); Smith, 8 BRBS at 199 (1978) (gastrointestinal attack during off-duty round of golf). The Ninth Circuit in fact reversed, albeit without opinion, the Board’s prior view that the “Zone of Special Danger” doctrine only applies to the peculiar risks arising in foreign settings. Preskey v. Cargill, Inc., 12 BRBS 917 (1980), rev’d mem., 667 F.2d 1031, 14 BRBS 340 (9th Cir. 1981). Claimant’s causational theory must go beyond “mere fancy,” nonetheless. See Champion v. S&M Traylor Bros., 690 F.2d 285, 295 (D.C. Cir. 1982); Wheatley v. Adler, 407 F.2d 307, 313 (D.C. Cir. 1968).

Here, the evidence suffices to establish both the harm and causal elements of a prima facie case regarding the injury. Decedent suffered death as a consequence of cancer that had spread to a number of his organs. All three experts testified that Decedent was likely exposed to significant amounts of dioxins during his nine years of work and living in Vietnam. While Respondents argue in their brief that Dr. Owen did not find substantial exposure of Claimant to Agent Orange, Dr. Owen’s testimony and report are clearly to the contrary. See RX 10 at 533 (“He was therefore more likely than not exposed to Agent Orange in the course of his employment”); TR at129 (“I will accept that [Decedent] was exposed to a greater degree in Vietnam than we would be living in San Francisco at the present time.”) All three experts testified that the dioxins contained in Agent Orange can cause numerous health problems. Indeed, all three experts devote a large portion of their professional practices to the research into the health problems posed by exposure to the dioxins in Agent Orange. Clearly, Decedent’s exposure to Agent Orange while working in Vietnam brings him within the “zone of special danger.” See O’Leary v. Brown-Pacific-Maxon, Inc., 340 U.S. 504 (1951); Smith v. Board of Trustees, S. Ill. Univ., 8 BRBS 197, 199 (1978); Ford Aerospace & Communications Corp. v. Boling, 684 F.2d 640 (9th Cir. 1982).

On the basis of the testimony of Drs. Carpenter and Schecter, as well as that of Dr. Owen, Claimant therefore successfully has invoked the Section 20(a) presumption.

Employer’s Rebuttal

Rebuttal

An Employer may rebut the Section 20(a) presumption by presenting substantial evidence tending to sever the potential connection between the disability and the work environment. Hensley v. Washington Metro. Area Transit Auth., 655 F.2d 264, 267, 13 BRBS 182, 185 (D.C. Cir. 1981), rev’g 11 BRBS 468 (1979), cert. denied, 456 U.S. 904 (1982); Cairns v. Matson Terminals, 21 BRBS 252, 252 (1988); Webb v. Corson & Gruman, 14 BRBS 444, 447 (1981). Furthermore, it is well-settled that mere hypothetical probabilities are insufficient to rebut the presumption, Smith v. Sealand Terminal, 14 BRBS 844, 846 (1982), and that the presumption is not rebutted merely by suggesting an alternate way that the claimant’s injury might have occurred, Williams v. Chevron U.S.A., 12 BRBS 95 (1980). For example, in Neeley v. Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., the Board vacated a judge’s determination that an employer failed to rebut the presumption because three doctors maintained that the claimant’s cancer resulted solely from smoking and not asbestos exposure. 19 BRBS 138, 139 (1986). These medical opinions rebutted the Section 20(a) presumption because they were specific and comprehensive and thereby severed the connection between the claimant’s injury and his employment. Id.

In order to establish rebuttal, employer is not required to rule out any possible causal connection between claimant’s employment and his condition but must produce “substantial evidence” that the work injury is not due, even in part, to the work exposures. D.D. (widow of E.D.) v. Electric Boat Corp., BRB No. 08-0103, slip op. 6 (Aug. 14, 2008) (citing Bath Iron Works Corp. v. Director, OWCP [Harford], 137 F.3d 673, 32 BRBS 45 (1st Cir. 1998)). For example, in D.D. the Board indicated that the employer could rebut the presumption by presenting expert testimony that asbestos did not cause, contribute to or accelerate claimant’s kidney cancer or death. Employer’s experts supported their contentions by stating that the medical literature does not support an association between asbestos exposure and kidney cancer. The expert indicated that the reliance on the Selikoff study is misplaced because the results were not supported by the more recent studies and because asbestos fibers “do no concentrate in the kidneys to a significant enough level to promote carcinogenesis.”3 Id.

3 The BRB nevertheless remanded the case back to the ALJ because the ALJ relied on the “doctors’ statements that decedent’s exposure was not significant enough to cause cancer, which conflict[ed] with the administrative law judge’s finding that decedent had substantial exposure…” D.D., BRB No. 08-0103, at 8.

Medical evidence generally plays a central role in evaluating the employer’s substantial evidence rebuttal burden, and so it does here. Equivocal medical evidence as to causation does not suffice to satisfy an employer’s burden; any medical evidence tending to sever the causal link does not necessarily constitute substantial evidence. See MacDonald v. Trailer Maine Transp. Corp., 18 BRBS 259 (1986) (upholding ALJ’s determination that employer failed to satisfy substantial evidence burden by solely presenting physicians’ testimony that doubted, but could

not rule-out, a causal link between claimant’s injury and employment). To the contrary, Respondents may satisfy their burden by producing unequivocal credible medical evidence. See Kier v. Bethlehem Steel Corp., 16 BRBS 128 (1984); see also Sprague v. Director, OWCP, 688 F.2d 862, 15 BRBS 11 (CRT) (1st Cir. 1982), aff’g Sprague v. Bath Iron Works Corp., 13 BRBS 1083 (1981) (Section 20(a) rebutted by medical evidence that osteotongelitis caused by staph infection and not by alleged work-related leg wounds); Hislop v. Marine Terminals Corp., 14 BRBS 927 (1982) (medical report sufficient to establish heart attack did not arise out of exposure to carbon monoxide at work rebutted presumption); Orkisz v. U.S. Army Tank Automotive Command, 13 BRBS 948 (1981), aff’d, 708 F.2d 726 (6th Cir. 1982) (medical evidence sufficient to establish that the claimant did not sustain a compensable injury as a result of a slip and fall at work rebutted Section 20(a)); Clymer v. E-Systems, 13 BRBS 1067 (1981), rev’d mem., 694 F.2d 720 (5th Cir. 1982), cert. denied, 464 U.S. 956 (1983) (physician’s testimony that claimant’s hypertension and diabetes mellitus would have occurred regardless of employment and were not aggravated by his work environment sufficient to rebut).

Here, I find that Respondents ultimately fail to meet their substantial evidence burden. Respondents have offered the opinion of Dr. Owen that Decedent’s death was in no way related to his work but rather was due to his smoking. As noted previously, I do not find Dr. Owen’s opinion that Decedent’s exposure to Agent Orange was not causally related to his death to be credible. Dr. Owen uses the unknown etiology of Decedent’s cancer to opine that it therefore cannot be shown conclusively that the Agent Orange exposure contributed to his cancer and death. However, he has no problem in connecting the cancer and death to Decedent’s smoking even in the absence of the cancer’s etiology. Dr. Owen clearly arrives at his conclusion that smoking was the “main” cause of Decedent’s cancer rather than Agent Orange Exposure due to the longer number of years Decedent smoked as opposed to the number of years he was exposed by his work in Vietnam. See RX 10 at 536-537; TR at 143-144. This fails to recognize not only the Section 20(a) presumption and the “zone of special danger” doctrine, but also the slight contribution or aggravation factor required for complete coverage under the Act. Dr. Owen never ruled out the possibility that Agent Orange dioxins may have contributed or accelerated Decedent’s cancer and death; he merely opined that he could not adequately relate the exposure to the cancer due to its unknown etiology. Thus, Dr. Owen ascribed the unknown cancer to smoking. However, Dr. Owen also testified that Claimant’s smoking was most likely increased by the stress of the war conditions he lived and worked in during his employment in Vietnam. RX 10 at 536. This testimony alone is sufficient to find that Decedent’s working conditions, i.e.- stress of war conditions, caused or at least contributed to Decedent’s smoking and thus his eventual cancer and death, even under Dr. Owen’s theory.

I find, accordingly, that Respondents have failed to meet their substantial evidence burden, and likewise have failed to rebut the Section 20(a) presumption.

Review of the Record on the Whole

A review of the record on the whole still favors Claimant, even assuming, arguendo, that Respondents had successfully rebutted the Section 20(a) presumption. In reviewing the whole record, an ALJ is entitled to weigh the medical evidence and draw his own inferences from it and

is not bound to accept the opinion or theory of any particular medical examiner. Todd Shipyards Corp. v. Donovan, 300 F.2d 741 (5th Cir. 1962). It is solely within the discretion of the judge to accept or reject all or any part of any testimony according to his judgment. Perini Corp. v. Heyde, 306 F. Supp. 1321 (D.R.I. 1969); see also Poole v. National Steel & Shipbuilding Co., 11 BRBS 390 (1979); Grimes v. George Hyman Constr. Co., 8 BRBS 483 (1978), aff’d mem., 600 F.2d 280 (D.C. Cir. 1979); Tyson v. John C. Grimberg Co., 8 BRBS 413 (1978).

If the presumption is rebutted, it no longer controls and the record as a whole must be evaluated to determine the issue of causation. Del Vecchio v. Bowers, 296 U.S. 280, 286 (1935); American Grain Trimmers, Inc. v. Director, OWCP, 181 F.3d 810, 815-16 (7th Cir. 1999). In such cases, the undersigned must weigh all of the evidence relevant to the causation issue. If the record evidence is evenly balanced, then the employer must prevail. Director, OWCP v. Greenwich Colleries, 512 U.S. 267, 281 (1994). The burden of persuasion that the longshoreman’s death was caused or hastened by a work-related occupational disease or injury remains with the claimant. American Grain Trimmers, Inc. 181 F.3d at 816-17. However, an “employment exposure need not be the sole cause of the employee’s injury or death to be compensable.” D.D., BRB 08-0103, slip op. at 11 (holding that by “requiring claimant to minimize or rule out decedent’s non-occupational risk factors, the administrative law judge effectively required claimant to show that asbestos alone caused decedent’s disease and deal” and thus could not be affirmed); see SAIF Corp./Oregon Ship. v. Johnson, 908 F.2d 1434, 23 BRBS 113 (9th Cir. 1990) (holding employer liable for the entire disability despite that fact that the respiratory impairment was due in part to cigarette smoking, as well as the work exposure to asbestos); Director, OWCP v. Bessel Repair , Inc., 168 F.3d 190, 193 (5th Cir. 1999) (holding that “the only legally relevant question is whether the work injury is a cause of [the] disability,” not whether it is the sole cause).

Here, as discussed above, I find that the opinions of Drs. Carpenter and Schecter that the exposure of Decedent to Agent Orange was at least a contributing or accelerating cause of his cancer and death to be credible and well-reasoned. Accordingly, I therefore find that Claimant has established causation, even irrespective of the Section 20(a) presumption.4

4 I recognize that the result reached herein differs from the denials of benefits in Parker v. Amer. Nat. Red Cross, B.R.B. 92-0603 (Feb. 12, 1996); Wendler v. Am. Nat. Red Cross,B.R.B. 93-2319 (May 29, 1996); and Ebron v. Am. Nat. Red Cross, B.R.B. 02-0603 (May 16, 2003). However, in each of these prior cases, the alleged exposure was no longer than one year as opposed to the almost nine years of exposure in this case. Further, more is now known of the deleterious health effects of dioxins from Agent Orange, due in no small part to the research and work of the three expert witnesses who testified in this matter. Of particular note is the apparent assumption in these three prior cases that an individual had to be physically in contact with Agent Orange while the expert testimony in this case clearly established that dioxins from Agent Orange contaminated the soil in Vietnam and thus the food grown therein. I note the millions spent by the USAID on dioxin soil remediation in various parts of Vietnam. CX I at 1-2. Thus, the nine years spent by this Decedent living and eating the native food grown in Vietnam differentiate his level of dioxin exposure from that of the Claimants in the three earlier decisions.

Calculation of Death Benefit

The pertinent portion of Section 9 of the LHWCA reads as follows:

If the injury causes death, the compensation therefore shall be

known as a death benefit and shall be payable in the amount and

to or for the benefit of the persons following:

(b) If there be a widow or widower and no child of the deceased

to such widow or widower 50 per centum of the average wages of

the deceased, during widowhood, or dependent widowerhood…

(e) In computing death benefits, the average weekly wages of the

deceased shall not be less than the national average weekly wage

as prescribed in section 6(b), but—

(1) the total weekly benefits shall not exceed the lesser of the average weekly wages of the deceased or the benefit which the

deceased employee would have been eligible to receive under section 6(b)(1); and

(2) in the case of a claim based on death due to an occupational disease for which the time of injury (as determined under section 10(i) occurs after the employee has retired, the total weekly benefits shall not exceed one fifty-second part of the employee’s average annual earnings during the 52-week period preceding retirement.

Claimant argues that Decedent’s compensation rate should be calculated solely by reference to Section 9(e)(2) but without reference to the other portions of the Act. See Claimant’s Written Closing Argument at 23-22. In other words, Claimant argues that her death benefit should be based on one fifty-second of Decedent’s average annual earnings during the 52 week period prior to his retirement from his work. Id. Thus, Claimant asserts that the appropriate death benefit should be $926.48 per week calculated as 50% of 1/52 of $96,353.55, the amount earned by Decedent during his last year of employment. Id. Respondents argue that the language at Section 9(e)(2) is a limitation of the death benefit to no more than the actual average weekly wage earned by a decedent in the year prior to his retirement should the death benefit of 50% of the national average weekly wage at the time of injury, as set forth at Section 10(d)(2)(B) of the Act, be in excess of the decedent’s average weekly earnings in the year prior to his death. See Defendants’ Post Trial Brief at 18-19.

The pertinent provisions of Section 10 of the Act state:

(d)(1) The average weekly wages of an employee shall be one fifty-second part of his average annual earnings.

(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), with respect to any claim based on a death or disability due to an occupational disease for which the time of injury (as determined under subsection (i)) occurs—

(A) within the first year after the employee has retired, the average weekly wages shall be one fifty-second part of his average annual earnings during the 52-week period preceding retirement; or

(B) more than one year after the employee has retired, the average weekly wage shall be deemed to be the national average weekly wage (as determined by the Secretary pursuant to section 6(b) [33 USC § 906(b)]) applicable at the time of the injury.

(i) For purposes of this section with respect to a claim for compensation for death or disability due to an occupational disease which does not immediately result in death or disability, the time of injury shall be deemed to be the date on which the employee or claimant becomes aware, or in the exercise of reasonable diligence or by reason of medical advice should have been aware, of the relationship between the employment, the disease, and the death or disability.

Thus, in cases of voluntary retirement more than one year prior to the injury, Section 10(d)(2)(B) specifies that the average weekly wage shall be deemed to be the national average weekly wage [as determined under Section 6(b)] applicable at the time of injury. Taddeo v.Bethlehem Steel Corp., 22 BRBS 52, 54-55 (1989); Shaw v. Bath Iron Works Corp., 22 BRBS 73 (1989) (retroactive application constitutional); Machado v. General Dynamics Corp., 22 BRBS 176 (1989); Jones v. U.S. Steel Corp., 22 BRBS 229, 233 (1989); Macleod v. Bethlehem Steel Corp., 20 BRBS 234, 236-37 (1988). “Injury” in this context is defined as the date on which the employee or the claimant becomes aware, or in the exercise of reasonable diligence or by reason of medical advice should have been aware, of the relationship between the employment, the disease, and the death or disability. Adams v. Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., 22 BRBS 78 (1989). Thus, for the award of death benefits, the national average weekly wage in effect at the date of the decedent’s death is the proper average weekly wage. Bailey v. Bath Iron Works Corp., 24 BRBS 229, 231 (1991); Martin v. Kaiser Co., 24 BRBS 112 (1990); Jones v. U.S. Steel Corp., 22 BRBS 229 (1989).

According to Section 9(e)(2), as modified by the 1984 Amendments, in case of death due to an occupational disease for which the time of injury occurs after retirement, the total weekly benefits shall not exceed 1/52 of the employee’s average annual earnings for the 52-week period preceding retirement. Ponder v. Kiewit Sons’ Co., 24 BRBS 46, 53 (1990). Where Section 9(e)(2) applies and the weekly death benefits calculated under Section 9(b) exceed 1/52 of the employee’s annual earnings, the benefits will be modified so that they will not exceed the latter amount. Id. Pursuant to Section 9(e), as amended in 1984, “which establishes a minimum and maximum benefit level in computing death benefits, the average weekly wage of the deceased shall not be less than the national average weekly wage, and the total benefits awarded may not exceed the lesser of the actual average weekly wage of decedent or the maximum benefit which an employee is eligible to receive under 33 U.S.C. § 906(b)(1)…. Section 6(b)(1) also imposes a

cap on both disability and death benefits equivalent to 200 percent of the national average weekly wage.” Buck v. General Dynamics Corp. Elec. Boat Div., 22 BRBS 111, 114 (1989).

In Donovan v. Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., 31 BRBS 2 (1997), the Board examined the meaning of “shall not exceed” in Section 9(e)(1). The Board held that the phrase is applicable only to the initial calculation of the base rate at which death benefits are payable, and does not act as a ceiling on the rate at which death benefits can be paid to a surviving spouse. Accordingly, I find that Claimant’s death benefit should be calculated initially at 50% of the national average weekly wage at the time the injury was determined and as of death, which is $523.58. Thus, Claimant is entitled to death benefits at the rate of $261.79 from July 3, 2005 subject to adjustment annually thereafter pursuant to Section 10(f) of the Act.

Interest

The Claimant is entitled to interest on any accrued, unpaid compensation benefits. Watkins v. Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., 8 BRBS 556, 559 (1978), aff’d in part, rev’d in part sub nom., Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co. v. Director, OWCP, 594 F.2d 986 (4th Cir. 1979). Interest is mandatory and cannot be waived in contested cases. Canty v. S.E.L. Maduro, 26 BRBS 147 (1992); Byrum v. Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., 14 BRBS 833 (1982); MacDonald v. Sun Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., 10 BRBS 734 (1978). Accordingly, interest on the unpaid compensation owed by the Respondents should be included in the District Director’s calculations of amounts due.

Attorney’s Fees

Thirty days is hereby allowed to Claimant’s counsel for the submission of an application for attorney’s fees. See 20 C.F.R. § 702.132. A service sheet showing the service has been made upon all the parties, including the Claimant, must accompany this application. The parties have fifteen days following the receipt of any such application within which to file any objections.

ORDER

Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law and on the entire record, I issue the following compensation order. The specific dollar computations may be administratively calculated by the District Director.

It is therefore ORDERED:

1. Respondents shall pay the Claimant funeral expenses as surviving spouse pursuant to Section 9(a) of the Act.

2. Respondents shall pay interest on Claimant’s unpaid funeral expenses and death benefits from the date the amounts became due until the date of actual payment at the rate prescribed under the provisions of 28 U.S.C. § 1961.

3. Respondents shall pay Claimant death benefits at the rate of $261.79 weekly from July 3, 2005, with annual increases thereafter in accordance with Section 10(f) of the Act.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

Russell D. Pulver

Administrative Law Judge

San Francisco, California

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