Court of Appeal clarifies criteria for lodestar multipliers in FEHA litigation: Bronshteyn v. Dept. of Consumer Affairs

In Bronshteyn v. Dept. of Consumer Affairs (2025) 114 Cal.App.5th 537, the Court of Appeal (Second Appellate District, Division Eight) clarified the criteria for awarding attorney’s fees and lodestar multipliers in FEHA cases, holding that a trial court acts within its discretion when crediting one fee expert over another and affirming the validity of post-judgment fee multipliers.

Plaintiff sued for disability discrimination under FEHA, obtaining a favorable jury verdict after Defendant rejected her section 998 settlement offer. Following unsuccessful post-trial motions and appeal, Plaintiff moved for statutory attorney fees and costs, requesting a 2.0 multiplier to the lodestar. The trial court, finding Plaintiff’s expert more credible than Defendant’s expert (who offered no supplemental evidence), granted the motion. The court awarded high-end hourly rates and applied multipliers of 1.75 (pre-verdict) and 1.25 (post-judgment), totaling almost $4,900,000. Defendant appealed.

The Court of Appeal affirmed, rejecting all of Defendant’s arguments. The court held the trial court had an ample basis for disregarding the defense expert and was entitled to award a corresponding hourly rate based on its personal observation of Plaintiff’s counsel’s skill and effectiveness, following Sargon Enterprises, Inc. v. University of Southern California (2012) 55 Cal.4th 747. The court noted that Defendant did not disclose the number of hours its own attorneys worked, robbing it of a basis to challenge the reasonableness of Plaintiff’s hours, and that Defendant improperly raised this theory for the first time on appeal. While acknowledging taxpayer burden as a relevant factor, the Court presumed the trial court considered it since it was not required to issue a statement of decision. Finally, the court rejected Defendant’s argument against awarding a multiplier for post-judgment work, noting that Gov. Code § 12965(c)(6) grants the court discretion to award fees, and that the 1.25 multiplier for post-judgment fee litigation was consistent with Graham v. DaimlerChrysler Corp. (2004) 34 Cal.4th 553.

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