Schofield v. Suraj Properties, Inc. et al
Filing
93
ORDER granting 79 Motion for Attorney Fees and denying 82 Motion for Attorney Fees. Judgment will await a determination on costs. Signed by Judge William F. Jung on 8/21/2019. (JWW)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
TAMPA DIVISION
ERIC W. SCHOFIELD as Father and
Natural Guardian of E.D.S., a minor,
Plaintiff,
v.
CASE NO. 8:18-cv-31-T-02JSS
SURAJ PROPERTIES, INC., et al.,
Defendants.
/
ORDER GRANTING ATTORNEYS= FEES
AND COSTS TO PLAINTIFF
This matter comes before the Court upon the motion by Plaintiff, the minor
E.D.S. (Eric D. Schofield referred to here and at trial as AEric, Jr.@) for attorneys=
fees. The Court received written submissions in support of Eric, Jr.=s motion (Dkt.
79) as well as a Response (Dkt. 88) and Reply (Dkt. 90). The Court also had the
benefit of a hearing on the matter on August 14, 2019.
The Court grants judgment for attorneys= fees to movant Eric Jr. in the
amount of $23,000.
The Court=s General Impression of the Trial and this Motion:
This was a four-day jury trial involving wages and overtime sought by the
movant Eric Jr., a high school student, his father Eric Sr.1, and his father=s
girlfriend2. The three separate lawsuits by these three Plaintiffs were consolidated
for trial. The Defendants were the low-end motels and the motel owners where the
plaintiffs lived together and claimed they worked. Part of the wage remuneration
for Eric Jr.=s father was rent at the motel. The three plaintiffs claimed they did
janitorial, housekeeping, yard-work, etc. at the motels, and sought overtime wages
under the Fair Labor Standards Act, 9 U.S.C. § 203, and unpaid hourly wages under
the Florida Minimum Wage Act. Fla. Stat. § 448.110. Both father Eric Sr. and his
girlfriend lost their jury trials against the Defendant motels.
Eric Jr. impressed the undersigned as a well-mannered young man, and he
made a good witness. The jury found that he worked ten hours per week at the
motels during the (partial) calendar year 2017, which resulted in $3,483.00 in
unpaid Florida minimum wages on Eric Jr.=s claim under the Florida Minimum
Wage Act. Fla. Stat. § 448.110(6)(a). The Court has entered a judgment for Eric, Jr.
in the amount of these wages, doubled under Fla. Stat. § 448.110(4)(c)(1) for
statutory Aliquidated damages@ to a total judgment in Eric Jr.=s favor of $6966.00.
1
Eric Scofield, Sr. v. Suraj Properties, et. al., No. 8:18cv30-T-02JSS.
2
Dkt. 76. Because Eric, Jr. received this judgment after overcoming defendants= legal
and factual defenses, the Court finds him to be the Aprevailing party@ in his trial.3
This amount of the judgment was a small fraction of what Eric Jr. asked the jury
for. Initially Eric Jr. sought minimum wages plus overtime for five years, which
was partly reduced by pretrial Order. At trial, the jury found one year=s liability
[actually a partial year—2017], and a greatly reduced amount of hours per week
with no overtime. Eric Jr. is entitled to attorneys= fees under the Florida Minimum
Wage Act. Id. at § 448.110(6)(c)(1). He seeks $98,532.50 in attorneys= fees.4
Calculating the Lodestar:
The Alodestar@ is simply the rate times the amount of time worked. The
reasonable rate and number of hours are contemplated using the familiar Johnson v.
Georgia Highway factors.5 The Court agrees that the rates sought, $275 and $200
2
Amanda Lewis v. Suraj Properties, et. al., No. 8:18cv42-T-02AEP.
The Court declines defendants= request to be declared the prevailing parties in Eric, Jr.=s case,
Dkt. 82. Having secured a judgment on the merits in his suit, plaintiff Eric, Jr. is a Aprevailing
party.@ Buckhannon Bd. And Care Home, Inc. v. Virginia Dept. of Health and Human Resources,
532 U.S. 598 (2001); Farrar v. Hobby, 506 U.S. 103 (1992).
4
The movant originally sought $100,872.50 in fees, but then conceded in the Reply that $2,340
could be subtracted. Dkts. 79, 90.
5
Johnson v. Ga. Highway Express, Inc., 488 F.2d 714, 717 (5th Cir. 1974); Loranger v.
Stierheim, 10 F.3d 776, 781 n.6 (11th Cir. 1994): 1) the time and labor required; 2) novelty and
difficulty of issues; 3) skill required to perform the services properly; 4) the preclusion of other
employment; 5) the customary fee; 6) whether fee is fixed or contingent; 7) the time limitations
imposed by the client or the circumstances; 8) the amount involved and the results obtained; 9)
the experience, reputation and ability of the lawyers; 10) the Aundesirability@ of the case; 11) the
nature and length of the professional relationship with the client; 12) awards in similar cases.
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per hour for the one lead trial counsel, and $175 per hour for the second trial
lawyer, are not unreasonable.
As to the work done, and hours spent, the jury trial lasted just under four full
days. Plaintiffs stated at the fees hearing that they spent approximately $230,000 in
fees all told, for the three plaintiffs in the three consolidated trials. In contrast, the
sole defense counsel incurred just half that time, under $116,000 in attorney time,
inclusive of all three plaintiffs and claims. Dkt. 82-1. Eric Jr. here seeks for his own
case fees of $98,532.50, about the same fees that the defense spent to defend all
three cases.
It seems only fair to apportion the plaintiffs= fees among the three separate
plaintiffs for whom the claimant lawyers prosecuted the three consolidated trials.
Each of the three consolidated suits was tried at the same time, and the Court agrees
that just trying Eric Jr.=s case alone would have taken several days. But he was only
one-third of the claimants, and his father=s suit was the driving force behind the
prosecution. Eric Jr. moved into the hotels as a very young boy, and did not start
helping out doing yard work, etc. for several years. In contrast, father Eric Sr.
moved to the Bartow motels from south Florida expressly for this job, and Eric Sr.=s
duty was the main focus of the case. The Court believes that the total fees, some
$230,000 according to plaintiff=s counsel at the hearing, should be split into thirds,
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with Eric Jr.=s one-third share, and the presumptive lodestar for Eric Jr., being
$76,666.67.
That the plaintiffs used two counsel for this short trial is not itself
problematic, so long as the time claimed can be understood and determined to be
non-duplicative. AA reduction is warranted only if the attorneys are unreasonably
doing the same work.@ Johnson v. Univ. of Ala. Birmingham, 706 F.2d 1205, 1208
(11th Cir. 1993). The duty to explain and present non-duplicative, clearly described
tasks is the burden of the claimant. But this task is impeded here due to block
billing. For example, when prime trial counsel seeks 7.8 hours of payment for ATrial
preparation@ on April 27, 2019, or 8.2 hours of payment for ATrial preparation@ the
next day, it is entirely unclear what was done or why. Dkt. 79-1 at 4. A full
descriptor might have taken the biller 30 more seconds to write out
contemporaneously, but now we know nothing and have no idea what was
done—other than defendants should pay for it.
Secondary trial counsel block billed in the identical generic, indecipherable
manner on dates such as March 20, 21, 27, 28, 29, April 5, 8, 9, 11, 12, 15, 16, 17,
18, 22, 23, 25, 27, 28, 29. Dkt. 79-2. Simply generically stating Atrial preparation@
and seeking thousands of dollars daily in reimbursement with a block claim of 8.0
hours, or 14.0 hours does not allow anyone to see what has been done, and does not
5
permit a reviewer to determine if Lawyer One is duplicating Lawyer Two. Even the
paralegal seeks reimbursement for $960 daily on April 29, 30 and May 1 and May
2, simply with a generic entry: Atrial.@ Did the paralegal sit and watch the trial, go
to the break room and just drink coffee, or manage exhibits and prepare witnesses
for the lawyers? No one knows.
A[B]lock billing makes [review of bills] unnecessarily difficult.@ Kearney v.
Auto-Owners Ins. Co., 713 F. Supp. 2d 1369, 1377 (M.D. Fla. 2010). AIt also
>warrants reduction of the number of hours claimed in the attorneys= fee motion.=@
Id. In Hensley v. Eckerhart, 461 U.S. 424, 437 (1983) the Supreme Court counseled
that attorneys should Amaintain billing time records in a manner that will enable a
reviewing court to identify distinct claims.@
A single time entry, and a generic descriptor obscures the amount of time
spent on a particular task. This is especially problematic here, where the Court must
determine if two trial lawyers in a short trial duplicated each other=s work
unnecessarily. Accordingly, the Court reduces the presumptive lodestar of
$76,666.67 by 25% to account for extensive block billing: to $57,500. Galdames v.
N.D. Inv. Corp., 432 F. App=x 801, 807 (11th Cir. 2011) (block billing 20%
reduction); Kearny, supra, (denying and reducing fees due to block billing); see
also Gundlach v. NAACP, Inc., 2005 WL 2012738 at *4 (M.D. Fla. 2005)(AGiven
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the block billing APreparation for trial@ catch-all Plaintiff used on the invoice . . . a
reduction in the amount of thirty percent is appropriate because of lack of
documentation . . . and to offset redundancy@).
Reduction for Level of Success:
This was not a public interest or civil rights case. In those type of cases, the
level of success often is not judged entirely by the resulting money verdict, and
attorneys= fees in those matters often compensate for public, or more inchoate
victories. In contrast, this was basically a mercenary dispute with three Plaintiffs
seeking money from their landlord and putative employer in this consolidated trial.
The theme of Plaintiffs= case was that the greedy Defendants ran dilapidated old
roadhouse motels and took advantage of the Plaintiffs who were indentured by
circumstances to live there and work. The case was not successful overall. Two of
the three Plaintiffs failed to prevail, and Eric Jr. prevailed only on a fraction of what
he claims. Defendants argue that Eric Jr. prevailed on less than 10% of all his
claims overall, and the pretrial claims of Eric Jr. and his unsuccessful co-plaintiffs
made settlement impossible.
A very difficult lawyering skill that takes years to develop is case intake
assessment. This intake assessment, ab initio, turned out to be flawed and that flaw
lies upon the lawyers now claiming fees.
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The plaintiff Eric Jr. did wrest slightly under $7000 in wages (once doubled
post-trial) out of a resisting employer, and Eric Jr. is entitled to fees under the
statute. The Eleventh Circuit eschews a flat arithmetical formula like a set
multiplier for reasonable fees. Cullens v. Georgia Dept. of Transportation, 29 F.3d
1489, 1492–93 (11th Cir. 1994). However, especially in non-civil rights, non-public
interest cases, the Adistrict court has wide discretion. We know that the amount of
damages is relevant.@ Id. AResults obtained@ is an Aimportant factor@ according to
the Eleventh Circuit and the Supreme Court. Id., at 1492 (citing Hensley v.
Eckerhart, 461 U.S. 424, 434, 440 (1983).) The Eleventh Circuit has repeated the
Supreme Court=s admonition that Awhere the plaintiff achieved only limited success,
the district court should award only that amount of fees that is reasonable in relation
to the results obtained.@ Id.; Collens, 29 F.3d at 1492.
So ordained, the Court reduces the adjusted lodestar of $57,500 attorneys=
fees by 60% to $23,000.00 to account for Eric Jr.=s poor result of the $3483 jury
verdict (doubled by the court post-judgment to $6,966 per the Florida statute). The
Court views this fee award as quite favorable to Eric Jr. In this regard, the Court
takes a lesson from Andrews v. United States, 122 F.3d 1367, 1376 (11th Cir.
2011). There the Eleventh Circuit remanded a fee award of four times judgment,
noting that the district court failed to consider plaintiffs= minimal success in
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granting such a fee. Id. The Court noted that Athis was not a civil rights action. As
noted, the best—and perhaps only—measure of plaintiffs= success on their . . .
claims as their monetary damages award.@ Id. With Andrews= admonition, a fee
award to Eric Jr. at this level appears appropriate, and is a boon to him, indeed. The
basis for this reasoning is as stated above, but also when one considers the Johnson
Highway factors, the lodestar is overstated in light of the thin result.6
Accordingly, the Court grants Plaintiff’s motion for attorneys’ fees (Dkt. 79)
and denies Defendants’ motion for attorneys’ fees (Dkt. 82). Judgment will be
entered in Eric Jr.=s behalf against the Defendants, jointly and severally, for
attorneys= fees of $23,000. Final entry of judgment will await the costs calculation,
which is pending.
DONE AND ORDERED at Tampa, Florida, on August 21, 2019.
s/William F. Jung
WILLIAM F. JUNG
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
COPIES FURNISHED TO: Counsel of Record
6
Plaintiffs= time and labor involved was about twice that of defense counsel, who handled the
case solo with a better result; the issues were not novel or difficult; the skill required to perform
the tasks was normal for competent lawyers; there is no evidence other employment was
precluded; the fee was standard; there was no apparent time limitations imposed by the client or
other circumstances; the amount involved was relatively small by federal trial standards and the
results obtained were unfavorable; the ability of plaintiffs= two young lawyers was competent but
no special skill was needed or present; there is no indication the case was Aundesirable;@ the
lawyers= professional relationship with the clients was unremarkable; awards in similar cases
have not been provided in this record.
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