Litigation
Cal. Litig. 2014, Volume 27, Number 2
Content
- New Lawyer Column: Motion Buffet
- Riverisland: Inordinate Burdens or Leveling the Playing Field
- McDermott on Demand: Horsing Around
- Mum's the Word: Why Saying Too Much May Invalidate a Contract
- Litigation Section Executive Committee Past Chairs
- Editor's Foreword This Award-Winning Publication (?)
- Past Editors-in-Chief
- Table of Contents
- From the Section Chair
- Masthead
- From the Section Chair
- Masthead
- Table of Contents
- McDermott on Demand: Horsing Around
- Editor's Foreword This Award-Winning Publication (?)
- Litigation Section Executive Committee Past Chairs
- Mum's the Word: Why Saying Too Much May Invalidate a Contract
- Past Editors-in-Chief
- Riverisland: Inordinate Burdens or Leveling the Playing Field
- New Lawyer Column: Motion Buffet
- Sargon Enterprises v. Usc-a Different Perspective
- The Inelegant Art of Scorched Earth Discovery
- Fighting Procrastination in Legal Practice: Defining and Finding Your Role in the Cycle
- California Attorney Fee Orders: When to Appeal, Defend or Settle
- Mediation Research: What Really Works?
- Adr Update - the Pre-Mediation Conference: An Underused Step Toward Resolution
- Adr Update - the Pre-Mediation Conference: An Underused Step Toward Resolution
- Mediation Research: What Really Works?
- California Attorney Fee Orders: When to Appeal, Defend or Settle
- Fighting Procrastination in Legal Practice: Defining and Finding Your Role in the Cycle
- The Inelegant Art of Scorched Earth Discovery
- Sargon Enterprises v. Usc-a Different Perspective
California Attorney Fee Orders: When to Appeal, Defend or Settle
By Audra Ibarra
This article focusing on California attorney fee appeals is a companion piece to an article on Ninth Circuit attorney fee appeals, Ninth Circuit Attorney Fee Awards & De Novo Review, published in 26:1 California Litigation 35 (2013).
You’ve got to know when to hold ’em, know when to fold ’em, know when to walk away and know when to run," Kenny Rogers sang in "The Gambler." Of course, an attorney fee appeal is not gambling per se, but it is high-stakes. To maximize reward and minimize risk, you need to know when to appeal, defend, or settle. The answer, of course, depends largely on your chances of reversal. There is statistically an 18% chance of reversal, but your specific chances depend on many factors, including the facts, law, and standard of review. (Judicial Council of California, 2013 Court Statistics Report, Courts of Appeal, Figure 25.) While relevant facts and applicable law are case-specific, it is helpful to know which standard of review increases the chances of reversal and which issues have been reversed under that standard.
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