Phoenix Bond & Indemnity Co. et al v. Bridge et al
Filing
1115
CORRECTED MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER signed by the Honorable Matthew F. Kennelly on 12/22/12. (mk)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS
EASTERN DIVISION
PHOENIX BOND & INDEMNITY CO., et al.,
Plaintiffs,
vs.
JOHN BRIDGE, et al.,
Defendants.
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Case Nos. 05 C 4095
and
07 C 1367
CORRECTED
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
MATTHEW F. KENNELLY, District Judge:
The Court’s decision addressing plaintiffs’ fee petition directed the parties to
calculate the amounts appropriately attributable to certain reductions and adjustments
the Court made in the amount requested and ordered the make supplemental
submissions in this regard. The Court addresses those submissions in this decision.
Before getting to the particulars, plaintiffs note in their submission that the Court
erroneously stated that Bonnie Gray had been found not liable on all claims. See Dec.
7, 2012 Decision at 3 & 10. Actually Ms. Gray was found liable on one of the RICO
claims. The Court agrees that Ms. Gray is appropriately included among the BG
defendants who are liable for the attorney’s fee award.
1.
Time working on state court lawsuit. After Judge Holderman dismissed
the federal claims in December 2005, plaintiffs refiled their state claims in state court to
hedge their bets in case the court of appeals affirmed the dismissal of the federal
claims. The Court concluded that “none of the time devoted to the state court litigation
is compensable under RICO’s fee-shifting provision.” Dec. 7, 2012 Decision at 12.
Plaintiffs say that the amount of time devoted to the state court litigation amounts
to $6,745, all involving work by the Reed Smith firm. Defendants propose a much
higher figure, $38,099. The materials attached to defendants’ submission, however,
reflect that they have gone far beyond what the Court ordered would be deducted.
Specifically, they seek to deduct time that they contend was spent on state-law issues
within the federal suit. A number of the entries listed in Appendix A to defendants’
submission predate the dismissal of the federal case, before the state court case was
even a gleam in plaintiffs’ eyes. A number of other entries reference discussions or
research regarding state law, but in the context of the pending federal lawsuit. These
do not represent time devoted to the state court lawsuit, which is what the Court said it
would deduct from plaintiffs’ request.
Defendants’ objections to these time entries conceivably might have had some
merit had they asserted the objections in their briefs filed in opposition to the fee
petition. They did not make the objection in those briefs, however. The Court has rereviewed the defendants’ statements in support of their objections to the fee petition
(which groups their objections into various categories); the Sass defendants’ and BG
defendants’ responses to the fee petition; and their supplemental surreplies. There is
no discussion in those materials of any objections to time spent on the federal suit that
arguably only involved state law claims. Rather, the defendants’ objections on this topic
were specifically focused on time spent on the state court case – the objection that the
Court sustained. It is conceivable that the objections that defendants now make to the
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entries in question may be buried somewhere within the voluminous spreadsheets that
defendants submitted, but if so, that was insufficient to bring them to the Court’s
attention. The point has been forfeited.
Other entries listed in Appendix A to defendants’ supplemental submission
likewise do not represent time properly deductible because it was devoted to the state
court suit. Some of them reference the state court suit but make it clear that they
actually concern the federal suit and its interface with parallel state litigation. This time
is properly compensable under RICO’s fee-shifting provision.
There is, however, some time that appropriately should be deducted. This
includes the following. Reed Smith time: Michelle Walton 1/3/06 ($1,232); half of John
Moynihan 1/4/06 ($722.50), Richard Madamba 4/5/07 ($215), and Lowell Sachnoff
4/11/07 ($562.50). The total of these reductions is $2,732. Katten Muchin time: All of
the time listed in a summary at the end of Appendix A is appropriately deducted as time
devoted to the state court suit, with exception of the entries for 6/26/06, 6/30/06, and
7/10/06. Using the figures on the summary, the appropriate amount of the Katten
Muchin reduction is a total of $12,652. Jenner & Block: No deductions are appropriate.
All of the attorney time in question appears to concern the federal suit.
In sum, the reduction for time devoted to the state court litigation is $6,745 +
$2,732 + $12,652, a total of $22,129.
2.
Time spent working on ARDC matters. Plaintiffs propose a reduction of
$3,864. The Court agrees with defendants that the 9/12/09 entry for Andrew Mathews
should be included. Thus the appropriate reduction is $5,424.
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3.
Time spent by summer associates. The parties agree that the appropriate
reduction is $29,496.60.
4.
One-third of time working on fee petition. Plaintiffs say the one-third
reduction for time spent on the fee petition amounts to $90,931.50. It appears that
defendants are correct that plaintiffs have omitted certain entries from fee petition
exhibit 1B. The Court agrees with defendants that the appropriate reduction is
$97,164.16.
5.
Time spent on bankruptcy filings by certain BG defendants. The Court
overrules plaintiffs’ attempt to reargue the merits of this point. That aside, they argue
that the appropriate reduction is $62,825.25. Defendants say that plaintiffs missed
several bankruptcy-related time entries, listed in Appendix E to defendants’ submission.
Plaintiffs’ exhibits inexplicably do not include the entries they included in their
total, so the Court accepts defendants’ contention that plaintiffs missed the Appendix E
entries. But although defendants’ memorandum says that Appendix E includes entries
totaling $2,669.50, that is not actually so. The Appendix is a single page that lists 14
entries totaling over $12,000. Of these, two are highlighted, but these total $1,728, not
$2,669.50. The Court therefore focuses on the highlighted entries, because defendants
made no effort to explain the attachment. Of the two highlighted entries, the Bobo entry
for $709.50 appears bankruptcy-related, but the Stein entry for $1,018.50 does not.
The Court concludes that the appropriate reduction is $62,825.25 + $709.50, for a total
of $63,534.75.
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6.
Summary of reductions.
The reductions ordered by the Court are as follows:
$22,129.00
$5,424.00
Work on state court lawsuit
Work on ARDC matters
$29,496.60
Work by summer associates
$97,164.16
One-third of time on fee petition
$63,534.75
Work on bankruptcy filings
The total is $217,747.91.
Plaintiffs requested $12,185,352.10 in attorney’s fees. This amount is reduced to
$11,967,604.19 to account for the five subjects listed above. The Court finds that to be
the amount of plaintiffs’ reasonable attorney’s fees.
7.
Twenty percent reduction for non-overlapping matters. The Court said
that each defendant group would be responsible for eighty percent of the overall fee
award and that their liability for sixty percent of the overall fee award would be joint and
several. The Court made this reduction on account of non-overlapping aspects of
claims against defendants in different enterprises from those involving the Sass and BG
defendants. See Dec. 7, 2012 Decision at 18-20 & n.6. Plaintiffs argue that this
reduction should not apply to work after November 4, 2011, because no other
defendants were in the case after that date. The Court rejects this attempt to reargue
the point. That aside, the Court was certainly aware of that factor and took it into
account in making the twenty percent reduction.
The Court has found that plaintiff’s reasonable attorney’s fees amount to
$11,967,604.19. After making the apportionment, the Court finds that the Sass
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defendants are liable for $9,574,083.35 and that the BG defendants are liable for
$9,574,083.35. The Sass defendants and BG defendants are all jointly and severally
liable for $7,180,562.51; the Sass defendants are jointly and severally liable with each
other for $2,393,520.84 but are not jointly liable with the BG defendants for that amount;
and the BG defendants are jointly and severally liable with each other for $2,393,520.84
but are not jointly liable with the Sass defendants for that amount.
8.
Expenses and costs. In their supplemental brief, plaintiffs say the total
amount of expenses and costs they claim is $1,131,536.25 ($1,107,653.51 before
November 4, 2011 and $23,882.74 after that date). Defendants offer a different figure.
The Court has gone back to the original and supplemental fee petition for the most
reliable figure and takes it from those documents. The total is $1,071,352.08
($1,067,085.26 in the original fee petition and $4,266.82 in the supplemental petition).
The Court finds this to be plaintiffs’ reasonable costs and expenses.
The Court has previously concluded that $837,223.06 of this amount is not
subject to the twenty percent apportionment reduction just discussed. The Sass and
BG defendants are all jointly and severally liable for that amount.
The remaining $234,129.00 is subject to the apportionment reduction referenced
earlier. The Sass defendants are liable for eighty percent of this amount, or
$187,303.20, and the BG defendants are likewise liable for $187,303.20. The Sass and
BG defendants are all jointly and severally liable for $140,477.40; the Sass defendants
are jointly and severally liable with each other for $46,825.80 but are not jointly liable
with the BG defendants for that amount; and the BG defendants are jointly and severally
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liable with each other for $46,825.80 but are not jointly liable with the Sass defendants
for that amount.
Conclusion
The overall award of reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses is $13,038,956.27
($11,967.604.19 + $1,071,352.08). Of this amount, the Sass defendants1 and BG
defendants2 are all jointly and severally liable for $8,158,262.97 ($7,180,562.51 +
$837,223.06 + $140,477.40); the Sass defendants are jointly liable with each other for
$2,440,346.64 ($2,393,520.84 + $46,825.80) but are not jointly liable with the BG
defendants for that amount; and the BG defendants are jointly liable with each other for
$2,440,346.64 but are not jointly liable with the Sass defendants for that amount.
________________________________
MATTHEW F. KENNELLY
United States District Judge
Date: December 22, 2012
1
The Sass defendants that are liable are MD Sass Investors Services, Inc.; MD Sass Tax Lien
Management, Inc.; MD Sass Muni Finance Partners-IV, LLC; MD Sass Muni Finance PartnersV, LLC; Sass-Muni IV, LLC; Sass-Muni V, LLC; Vinaya Jessani; and Kirk Allison.
2
The BG defendants that are liable are BG Investments, Inc.; Bonnie Gray; David Gray;
Midwest Real Estate Investment Co.; Midwest Real Estate Investment Co. Profit Sharing Plan
and Trust; and Atlantic Municipal Corp.
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