Williamson v. City Of Chicago et al
Filing
306
MEMORANDUM Opinion and Order: Ebert's petitions for attorney's fees based on quantum meruit 263 , 267 are granted in part and denied in part. The Court holds that Ebert is entitled to recover fees and costs in the total amount of $2 4,551.32 from Kierra Williamson's proceeds in this case and is entitled to recover fees and costs in the total amount of $13,755.97 from Princeton Williamson's proceeds in this case, and orders that an attorney's lien be placed on those amounts if they have not already been paid to the plaintiffs. Accordingly, Ebert's motions for a hearing 269 , 272 are denied. Plaintiff counsel's petition for fees and costs 268 is granted in part and denied in part. The Court awards the plaintiffs' current counsel $3,466,817 in fees. Signed by the Honorable Sharon Johnson Coleman on 7/31/2019. Mailed notice. (ym, )
Case: 1:14-cv-06397 Document #: 306 Filed: 07/31/19 Page 1 of 18 PageID #:6119
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS
EASTERN DIVISION
KIERRA WILLIAMSON, PRINCETON B.
WILLIAMSON, and MICHAEL C.
WILLIAMSON,
)
)
) Case No. 14-cv-6397
)
Plaintiffs,
) Judge Sharon Johnson Coleman
)
v.
)
)
CHICAGO POLICE OFFICER WILFREDO )
ORTIZ, Star no. 9748, and THE CITY OF
)
CHICAGO, a municipal corporation,
)
)
Defendants.
)
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
The plaintiffs, Kierra Williamson, Princeton Williamson, and Michael Williamson, brought
this action against Chicago Police Officer Wilfredo Ortiz and the City of Chicago, alleging that
Officer Ortiz used excessive force against the defendants. After a lengthy trial, a jury found in favor
of the plaintiffs, awarding a combined total of $4,250,000 in compensatory damages and $500,000 in
punitive damages. The plaintiffs’ attorneys, along with Princeton and Kierra Williamson’s former
attorney Regan Ebert, now move this Court to recover their respective fees and costs. For the
reasons set forth herein, their motions are granted in part and denied in part.
Procedural Background
The shooting at issue in this case happened on January 1, 2014. On January 6, 2014, Regan
Ebert was retained by Kierra and Princeton Williamson’s grandmother to represent Kierra and
Princeton, each of whom signed a one-third contingency fee attorney-client agreement. Jeffrey
Neslund and Michael Robbins subsequently filed appearances on January 8, 2015, and represented
to the Court that they were the plaintiffs’ sole counsel. On March 19, 2015, the Court terminated
Ebert’s appearance after the plaintiffs clarified that Neslund, Robbins, and Robert Robertson were
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representing them in this action. On March 28, 2017, the defendants filed a motion for partial
summary judgment, which was denied. The plaintiffs subsequently sought to amend their
complaint, but that motion was denied in light of the pending trial. The trial was bifurcated, so that
the jury would first resolve Officer Ortiz’s liability before then continuing to address the plaintiffs’
Monell claims. The trial was held from September 7, 2017 until September 17, 2018. During the
jury’s deliberations, the defendants agreed that they would accept the entry of an adverse judgment
on the plaintiff’s Monell claims in the event that the jury found against the city on the excessive force
claims. The jury subsequently returned a sizeable verdict in the plaintiffs’ favor. The plaintiffs’
lawyers now seek to recover $3,626,066.25 in fees for a total of 7,263 attorney and paralegal hours
spent working on the Williamsons’ case. Ebert seeks to recover $40,568.04 in attorney’s fees and
costs from Kierra Williamsons’ proceeds and $24,535.97 in attorney’s fees and costs from Princeton
Williamson’s proceeds that she incurred while working on their cases under a contingent fee
agreement.
Legal Standard
District courts have discretion to award reasonable attorneys’ fees to the prevailing party in a
section 1983 action. 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b). To determine what fees are reasonable, the Court begins
by calculating the lodestar amount based on the hours reasonably expended by counsel and their
reasonable hourly rates. Johnson v. GDF, Inc., 668 F.3d 927, 929 (7th Cir. 2012). The Court may then
adjust the lodestar based on various factors including the degree of success, the novelty and
difficulty of the issues, awards in similar cases, and the relationship between the lodestar amount and
the damages awarded. Hensley v. Eckerhart, 461 U.S. 424, 430 n. 3, 434, 103 S. Ct. 1933, 76 L.Ed.2d
40 (1983).
Current Counsel’s Fee Petition
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The defendants first contest the reasonableness of counsels’ hourly rates. The reasonable
rate for counsel’s time is calculated based on the market rate that lawyers of similar experience and
ability in the community normally charge their paying clients for the type of work in question.
Gautreaux v. Chicago Housing Authority, 491 F.3d 649, 659 (7th Cir. 2007) (quoting McNabola v. Chicago
Transit Authority, 10 F.3d 501, 519 (7th Cir. 1993)). Although the party seeking fees bears the initial
burden of producing evidence establishing her market rate, once evidence is provided it becomes the
opposing party’s burden to demonstrate why a lower rate should be awarded. Gautreaux, 491 F.3d at
660 (quoting Uphoff v. Elegant Bath, Ltd., 176 F.3d 399, 407 (7th Cir. 1999)). The best evidence of the
market rate for an attorney is the amount the attorney actually bills for similar work, but if that rate
cannot be determined the court may rely on the rates charged by similarly situated attorneys or the
rates charged by the attorney in similar cases. Johnson, 668 F.3d at 933.
Here, counsel requested the following hourly rates:
Attorney
Rate requested by plaintiffs
Jeffrey Neslund
$550 / hour
Robert Robertson
$525 / hour
Michael Robbins
$600 / hour
Courtney Smallwood
$225 / hour
Marko Duric
$325 / hour
Thomas Kougias
$400 / hour
Law Clerk / Paralegal
$100 / hour
Counsel supported these rates with personal affidavits, as well as affidavits from other civil
rights attorneys familiar with their work and experience. The defendants concede that the requested
rates for Courtney Smallwood and for law clerk/paralegal time are reasonable but assert that the
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remaining lawyers have failed to meet their initial burden of establishing a reasonable rate for their
work product. Generally speaking, the defendants contend that the plaintiffs have never billed a
client at the rates that they now seek to recover, that there is no evidence establishing that their
claimed rates are reasonable in the market at large, and that the proposed rates exceed those counsel
have previously received in similar matters.
As courts in this district have recognized, however, prior awards are of limited relevance
given that hourly fees increase over time as a result of both inflation and the increasing skill and
reputation of the billing attorney. Fox v. Barnes, No. 09 C 5453, 2013 WL 4401802, at *3 (N.D. Ill.
Aug. 15, 2013) (Holderman, J.). Fees, moreover, are calculated at counsel’s current billing rate to
compensate for the inherent delay in payment in contingent-fee civil rights cases. Mathur v. Bd. of
Trs. of S. Ill. Univ., 317 F.3d 738, 744–45 (7th Cir. 2003). Accordingly, the prior fee awards that the
defendants rely on are generally unpersuasive to this Court.
In this case, Neslund seeks to recover a rate of $550 per hour, Robbins seeks to recover a
rate of $600 per hour, and Robertson seeks to recover a rate of $525 per hour. These proposed
rates are supported by affidavits from peer attorneys averring that these sums are reasonable given
counsels’ skill and experience. These three attorneys truly acted as partners in this case and were
equally skilled and competent in their representation of the plaintiffs. Differences in respective
experience notwithstanding, the Court is therefore convinced that counsel are entitled to equal
compensation for their time and effort in this case. After reviewing the affidavits and caselaw
submitted, the Court concludes that it is appropriate to compensate Neslund, Robbins, and
Robertson at a rate of $550 per hour in light of the respective experience that they brought to bear
on this complicated case.
The defendants also dispute the hourly rates requested by Marko Duric and Thomas
Kougias. Duric, who was licensed in 2012, requests $325 an hour. Duric’s supporting affidavit,
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however, does not disclose his hourly rates or other information regarding his rates or those of his
peers to support his requested rate of $325 per hour. To the contrary, within the past year attorneys
of comparable experience have received awards of $310 per hour and $275 per hour. See Adamik v.
Motyka, No. 12 C 3810, 2018 WL 3574751, at *4 (N.D. Ill. July 25, 2018) (Durkin, J.) (awarding $310
to a civil rights attorney with five years of experience who served as trial counsel); First Midwest Bank
v. City of Chicago, No. 14 C 9665, 2018 WL 4126570, at *23 (N.D. Ill. Aug. 29, 2018) (Leinenweber,
J.). The defendants concede that $310 would be an appropriate award for Duric in this case. In
light of the extenuating circumstances warranting an elevated fee award in Adamik, which awarded a
similarly experienced attorney $310 per hour, the Court agrees that $310 per hour is an appropriate
rate for Duric’s services at the present time.
Kougias expressly swears that he currently bills his time at $400 per hour, although most of
his cases are taken on a flat-fee basis. The defendants nevertheless contend that this request is
unreasonable because Kougias’ work as a criminal defense attorney is not comparable to his work in
this civil rights case. Here, however, Kougias’ work occurred in his capacity as an experienced
criminal lawer; he was retained to secure access to evidence impounded in the criminal case of People
v. Michael Williamson. The defendants have offered no evidence to suggest that $400 per hour is an
unreasonable rate for Kougias to bill for appearances in criminal court, and this Court therefore
sustains the requested rate.
Review of IPRA Files
The defendants separately contend that counsels’ rates should be discounted during the time
spent reviewing the IPRA investigations of 219 officer-involved shootings in support of the
plaintiffs’ Monell claims. In total, this review required 1,219.85 hours. The defendants contend that
the review, billed at the attorneys’ usual rates, should be compensated at a paralegal rate because it
constitutes “first-level document review” and annotation. As other courts have previously found,
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however, review of files from other incidents relevant to a Monell claim requires legal analysis of their
content and is therefore appropriately compensated at attorney rates. Fields v. City of Chicago, 10-CV1168, Dkt. 1249 (N.D. Ill. Jan. 1, 2018) (Kennelly, J.). Here, the plaintiff’s Monell theory turned on
identifying proof of a pattern of inadequate investigations into deadly force incidents and therefore
required detailed legal analysis of the adequacy of prior investigations. The defendants do not, and
cannot, argue to this Court that the Monell claim in this case was not material and, absent specific
examples of waste, the Court declines to find that counsel’s review of the files did not require the
exercise of legal skill and judgment.
The Number of Hours Billed
The defendants next dispute the number of hours that plaintiffs’ counsel have billed.
Prevailing attorneys requesting a fee award are entitled to be fully compensated for their time so
long as it was reasonably expended. Hensley, 461 U.S. at 435. However, the defendants argue that
the plaintiffs should not receive full compensation for their fee requested fees because they were
inadequately documented, excessive or unnecessary, duplicative or overstaffed, not tasks appropriate
for attorneys, or connected to the underlying criminal case. The Court partially agrees.
Inadequately Documented Hours
When a fee petition is vague or inadequately documented, a court has broad discretion to
strike the problematic entries or to reduce the proposed fee by a reasonable percentage. Harper v.
City of Chicago Heights, 223 F.3d 593, 605 (7th Cir. 2000); Montanez v. Simon, 755 F.3d 547, 555 (7th
Cir. 2014). The defendants contend that, on total, 1,308.32 of the hours that the defendants seek to
recover for are inadequately described using conclusory language like “Rev. IPRA file,” “Rev. case
mat. and identify exhibits,” “Reviewed Minute Order,” “Court appearance,” and similar phrases.
The defendants further note that Robertson and Duric both engaged in block-billing, a practice
which makes it inherently difficult to distinguish how time was expended and whether the amount
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spent on each task was reasonable. Farfaras v. Citizens Bank and Trust of Chi., 433 F.3d 558, 569 (7th
Cir. 2006). After careful review, however, the plaintiffs’ fee petition is not vague or inadequate. The
defendants are demanding an excessive amount of specificity, complaining that counsel must not
only identify a category of records being reviewed (e.g. Michael Williamson’s VA Records) but must
specifically identify which documents were considered. The defendants have offered no authority
requiring this level of specificity of counsel. This Court, moreover, finds that it has no trouble
understanding what activities the plaintiffs seek to bill for and concluding that the time spent on
those tasks was reasonable. Although notations like “reviewed minute order” and “court
appearance” may be ambiguous on their face, the Court has had no difficult determining counsel’s
activities by reference to the surrounding time entries and the docket in this case. Accordingly, the
Court declines to hold that counsels’ time entries are inadequately vague.
Excessive or Unnecessary Hours
In determining the reasonable number of hours that an attorney may bill, courts deduct
those hours that are excessive, redundant, or unnecessary. Small v. Richard Wolf Med. Instruments Corp.,
264 F.3d 702, 708 (7th Cir. 2001). The defendants first contend that the 148.86 hours that Neslund
and Robbins spent communicating with their three clients was unreasonable. The plaintiffs,
however, have provided detailed explanation of the majority of these communications, and this
Court, after close review, has not found any communications that it considers excessive or
unreasonable in light of the nature and duration of this case.
The defendants further contend that plaintiffs’ counsel excessively billed for
communications between counsel and their staff. Indeed, over three years the defendants assert that
Neslund, Robbins, Robertson, and a paralegal spent 535.61 hours in consultation. This, the
defendants believe, constitutes unreasonable double or triple-billing that a client would not allow.
The defendants do not identify specific communications that they believe were unnecessary, but
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instead ask this Court to implement an across-the-board reduction of 50% of the time spent on
internal communications on the assumption that these meetings were excessive or are unreasonable
to bill.
The Seventh Circuit, however, has expressly recognized that the practice of law usually
involves significant periods of consultation between counsel, and that such time is reasonably
billable. Tchemkou v. Mukasey, 517 F.3d 506, 511 (7th Cir. 2008). The use of multiple lawyers is a
common practice resulting in the efficient distribution of work, and there is no hard-and-fast limit
on how many lawyers can attend a meeting or how long lawyers can spend discussing a project.
Gautreaux, 491 F.3d at 661. Indeed, a cursory review of defense counsel’s billing records shows that
they have billed their client for precisely the same sort of internal communications that they now
claim the plaintiffs should be unable to recover for. The Court might perhaps credit an argument
that specific communications between lawyers were excessive or unnecessary, but the defendants
have failed to single out any specific communications that were unnecessary or unwarranted.
Although the substantial amount of time spent communicating between counsel might give pause, it
is not plainly unreasonable given the scope and duration of this case.
The defendants next contend that the plaintiffs’ paralegal, Coronado, billed an excessive
amount of time compiling the plaintiffs’ fee petition. The defendants assert that Coronado spent
168.3 hours compiling the fee petition and that, given that she only billed 653.9 hours on this case,
that total is excessive and should be reduced. Defendants’ arguments to the contrary
notwithstanding, the Court does not find the amount of time spent preparing the fee petition to be
excessive when compared to the total number of hours expended on this case. The Court does,
however, take issue with the tasks that Coronado performed in preparing the fee petition.
Specifically, the Court notes that she billed 53.55 hours of time entering counsels’ hours from
dictations. This Court does not consider the transcription of dictations regarding time to be an
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activity requiring the specialized skills or competencies of a paralegal, and accordingly reduces
Coronado’s hours accordingly.
The defendants also assert that plaintiffs’ counsel spent an excessive amount of time
reviewing and drafting documents, and that counsel’s time should be arbitrarily halved for those
tasks that defense counsel considers excessive. As other courts have recognized, however, mere
allegations of superfluous or excessive hours are insufficient to overcome evidence of
reasonableness. Berthold Types Ltd. v. Adobe Systems, Inc., 186 F. Supp. 2d 834, 840 (N.D. Ill. 2002)
(Bucklo, J.). Here, the defendants have offered nothing aside from their own assertion that the
hours plaintiffs counsel claim are unreasonable. Those, however, are the hours the plaintiffs actually
expended, and the defendants have offered no evidence that they are disproportionate to the scope
or value of this case.
The defendants further contend that the plaintiffs should not be able to recover for time
spent litigating unsuccessful arguments. A prevailing plaintiff is not entitled to recover fees for time
spent pursuing reasonable but unsuccessful arguments in support of successful claims. Jaffee v.
Redmond, 142 F.3d 409, 413 (7th Cir. 1998). Here, the defendants contend that the plaintiffs should
not be able to recover for 26.4 hours devoted to the plaintiff’s unsuccessful motion for leave to file a
second amended complaint and the subsequent motion to reconsider or for the 14.4 hours spent
drafting the plaintiff’s motion to strike the defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment. The
motion to amend sought to add a newly-allowed federal claim arising from the facts of this case,
which, because of this Court’s ruling, is now being actively litigated in a separate proceeding. The
plaintiffs attempt to interject that claim into this litigation was reasonable given the efficiency
benefits that might have resulted. The Court does agree, however, that the plaintiffs’ motion to
strike was both unsuccessful and unreasonable given that the arguments it raised were focused on
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the merits of the defendants’ summary judgment motion. Accordingly, the Court will reduce the
plaintiffs’ fee request by the 14.8 hours that the Court concludes were dedicated to that motion.
The defendants next contend that the plaintiffs’ travel time in this case was excessive.
According to the defendants, counsel billed 89.8 hours to travel to San Francisco to depose their
expert witness. Disregarding the defendants’ duplicative arguments regarding the number of
partners who participated in the deposition, the defendants’ primary complaint appears to be the
sixty-some hours that Robertson billed while driving to and from California. Had Robinson billed
for his driving time alone, this Court would not hesitate to find the claimed hours excessive given
that Robinson elected to engage in a 30 hour drive rather than taking a three-hour flight. See Wade v.
Kroger Co., No. 3:01CV-699-R, 2008 WL 4999171, at *8 (W.D. Ky. Nov. 20, 2008) (finding it
unreasonable for an attorney to seek to recover driving time when any paying client would have
refused to compensate counsel for more than the time that a flight would have required). Here,
however, Robinson has represented that he was not driving and in fact spent a substantial amount of
time performing case-related work while his wife drove him to and from California. The defendants
have offered nothing to call this claim into question, and the Court therefore will award Robinson
fees for the time he spent working while traveling. The Court, however, will not award Robinson
fees for the time he spent traveling while otherwise unproductive and therefore reduces his claimed
time by 11.55 hours.
The defendants also claim that Robbins billed for work performed while flying back to
Chicago and also billed separately for his travel time. After close review, that assertion is not
supported by Robbins billing records. Finally, the defendants further challenge the travel time that
the plaintiffs’ law clerks claimed for traveling to and from this courthouse. The defendants,
however, have produced no evidence establishing how long it reasonably takes to travel from the
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plaintiffs’ offices to the federal courthouse, and this Court therefore has no basis for concluding that
the hour-long round trip that the law clerks billed for is unreasonable.
Finally, the defendants assert that the plaintiffs should not be able to recover the collective
24.5 hours that counsel spent waiting for the verdict on the final day of trial. The Court agrees that
this time was not reasonably expended and reduces counsels’ hours accordingly. See Warfield v. City
of Chicago, 733 F. Supp. 2d 950, 959–960 (N.D. Ill. 2010) (Castillo, J.) (holding that time billed
awaiting a verdict was not reasonably expended).
Duplicative Hours or Overstaffing
The defendants also argue that counsel overstaffed this case. In particular, the defendants
focus on the depositions in this case, which were predominantly attended by two or three partnerlevel attorneys, although they also argue more broadly that multiple attorneys were needlessly
involved in the motion practice occurring in this case. This Court is obligated to scrutinize fee
petitions for duplicative time. Jardien v. Winston Network, Inc., 888 F.2d 1151, 1160 (7th Cir. 1989).
As an initial matter, a lot of the “duplicative” time that the defendants have identified has been time
in which multiple attorneys worked on one task, such as drafting a brief. The Court does not
consider it duplicative for multiple attorneys to work on a shared task, and the defendants have
offered no legal authority establishing otherwise.
The defendants’ primary argument, however, is that it was duplicative for multiple attorneys
to attend depositions or hearings. Although some courts within this district have found it
duplicative to have two attorneys attend a deposition, others have recognized the efficiency benefits
of having multiple lawyers attend to a case. Compare Chicago Messenger Service v. Nextel Commc’ns, Inc.,
No. 01 C 8820, 2005 WL 643270, at *3 (N.D. Ill. March 16, 2005) (Norgle, J.) (finding it duplicative
to bill for a junior attorney’s attendance at court hearings and depositions) with Mostly Memories, Inc. v.
For Your Ease Only, Inc., 594 F. Supp. 2d 931, 935 (N.D. Ill. 2009) (Castillo, J.) (recognizing the
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benefits of having multiple attorneys working on a case); Bohen v. City of East Chicago, 666 F. Supp.
154, 157 (N.D. Ind. 1987) (Easterbrook, J.) (holding that having two lawyers involved in a case is the
“minimum in much private litigation” and that the presence of multiple lawyers at depositions may
be a practical necessity in some cases). Although it is not duplicative to have multiple attorneys
attend a deposition, however, the Court cannot ignore how many depositions multiple attorneys
were present at. Twenty-three depositions were attended by two partner-level attorneys, and eight
depositions were attended by three partner-level attorneys. In light of the complexity of this case
and the competency of counsel (as reflected by their fee requests), the Court finds this volume of
multi-attorney depositions to be excessive. The Court accordingly reduces each attorney’s billing for
time spent engaging in depositions where two or more lawyers were present by 20%, which reduces
Robertson’s fee request by 11.1 hours, Neslund’s fee request by 13.2 hours, and Robbins fee request
by 9.2 hours.
Administrative Tasks
An attorney cannot recover fees for time that would not be properly billed to a private
sector client. Spegon v. Catholic Bishop of Chicago, 175 F.3d 544, 553 (7th Cir. 1999). This includes
those hours expended by counsel or a paralegal on administrative tasks that are easily delegable to
non-professional assistance. Id. Among those tasks courts have considered noncompensable in the
past are are “time spent organizing file folders, preparing document[s], assembling filings,
electronically filing documents, sending materials, docketing or logging case events into an internal
case tracking system, and telephoning court reporters.” Delgado v. Village of Rosemont, N. 03 C 7050,
1006 WL 3147695, at *2 (N.D. Ill. Oct. 31, 2006) (Leinenweber, J.). After reviewing counsels’
hours, the Court agrees with the defendants that counsel have billed for administrative tasks such as
making copies, corresponding with court reporters, sending faxes, and assembling binders. The
Court accordingly reduces counsel’s claimed time as follows:
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Attorney
Reduction of hours claimed for Administrative Tasks
Neslund
3.1
Robbins
13.3
Robertson
2
Law Clerks
7
Smallwood
0.8
The Court also agrees that Coronado, the plaintiffs’ paralegal, has sought to recover for some
administrative tasks that are not properly billed at a paralegal rate. The Court, however, does not
agree with the defendants’ assertion that over one-third of her entries are administrative tasks. It is
often the case that paralegals perform tasks requiring both clerical and legal skills simultaneously,
such as when assembling exhibit binders from case files or interacting with counsel or the Court.
After careful review, the Court concludes that Coronado spent 45.15 hours on purely administrative
tasks, and reduces her hours accordingly.
Time Spent on the Criminal Case
The defendants next dispute whether counsel can recover for the hours that they spent
defending the criminal cases against Michael and Princeton Williamson. Some courts have
previously interpreted Section 1988 to allow counsel to recover for fees incurred in defending a state
criminal proceeding that was a necessary prerequisite to success in the section 1983 action. This has
been the case, for instance, in claims alleging false arrest or malicious prosecution. See, e.g., Castellano
v. Fragozo, 311 F.3d 689, 710 (5th Cir. 2002), reversed en banc on other grounds in 352 F.3d 939 (5th Cir.
2003) (allowing a plaintiff alleging malicious prosecution to recover the fees spent defending against
that prosecution under section 1988); Ingram ex rel. Ingram v. Jones, 46 F. Supp. 2d 795, 800; n. 9 (N.D.
Ill. 1999) (Keys, Mag. J.) (granting fees for criminal representation relevant to the plaintiff’s false
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arrest claims). Other courts, however, have recognized such fees to be compensatory damages
recoverable in the civil action itself. Kerr v. City of Chicago, 424 F.2d 1134, 1141 (7th Cir. 1970). At
least one Court in this district, moreover, has expressly concluded that criminal fees are not
recoverable under section 1988. See Lee v. City of Chicago, No. 07 C 2035, 2008 WL 5377798, at *3
(N.D. Ill. Dec. 18, 2008) (Lindberg, J.). Unlike a false arrest or malicious prosecution case,
moreover, this case does not involve claims arising directly from the criminal prosecution. Instead,
the plaintiffs’ criminal prosecution is relevant to the excessive force claims at issue here only to the
extent that, had the plaintiffs been found to be in possession of a firearm in the criminal case, it
would have made if more difficult for them to establish that the defendant used excessive force
against them. The plaintiffs have offered no legal authority establishing that this connection is
sufficient to permit the Court to award attorney’s fees for the criminal representation under section
1988. Plaintiffs’ counsel accordingly will not be permitted to recover for the time spent defending
against the plaintiffs’ criminal case, which amounts to 119.75 hours for Neslund, 56.10 hours for
Robbins, and 45 hours for Robertson.
Supplemental Fee Petition
As a final matter regarding plaintiffs’ counsel’s fee request, the Court turns to counsels’
supplemental fee petition. The Court rejects the plaintiffs’ request for prejudgment interest because
the depreciation of the fee award is already accounted for in this case by the Court’s use of counsel’s
current billing rates in calculating the award. Pickett v. Sheridan Health Care Center, 813 F.3d 640, 647
(7th Cir. 2016). The plaintiffs also request an additional $132,468.75 in fees, based on the 236.85
hours that counsel spent replying to the defendants’ response brief opposing their fee petition. The
Court finds it patently unreasonable that three partner-level attorneys each billed two work-weeks
preparing a single reply brief. The Court accordingly halves the requested time, and reduces
counsels’ hours to 35.8 hours for Neslund, 42.2 hours for Robbins, and 40.4 hours for Robertson.
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Final Calculations
The Court accordingly concludes that the plaintiffs’ current lawyers are entitled to be
compensated for the following hours and amounts. The Court declines to adjust the lodestar,
having concluded that the hours that counsel have sought compensation for accurately reflect the
difficulty of this case.
Attorney
Fee
Hours Approved
Total
Jeffrey Neslund
$550 / hour
2,203.8
$1,212,090
Robert Robertson
$550 / hour
2,146.45
$1,180,547.50
Michael Robbins
$550 / hour
1,693
$931,150
Courtney Smallwood
$225 / hour
19.8
$4,455
Marko Duric
$310 / hour
215.95
$66,944.50
Thomas Kougias
$400 / hour
11
$4,400
Law Clerk / Paralegal
$100 / hour
672.3
$67,230
Total
$3,466,817
Former Counsel’s Petition for an Attorney’s Lien
Regan Ebert, who originally represented Kierra and Princeton Williamson, separately moves
the Court to adjudicate her right to a lien on those plaintiffs’ judgment under the Illinois Attorney’s
Lien Act.1 Under Illinois law, when a client terminates an attorney working under a contingent-fee
contract the contract becomes inoperative, but the discharged attorney remains entitled to recover a
reasonable fee for services rendered on a quantum meruit basis. Wegner v. Arnold, 305 Ill.App.3d 689,
693, 713 N.E.2d 247 (1999). In determining the quantum meruit award, the Court considers the time
Ebert’s filings make no reference to 42 U.S.C. § 1988, and this Court is therefore compelled to conclude that she is
only proceeding on the basis that she is entitled to a quantum meruit recovery of her fees from the individual plaintiffs.
1
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and labor required, the attorney’s skill and standing, the nature and difficulty of the case, the usual
and customary charge for that kind of work, and the benefits resulting to the client. Will v.
Northwestern Univ., 378 Ill.App.3d 280, 304, 881 N.E.2d 481 (2007).
Here, Ebert testified that her hourly rate ranges from between $350 to $450 per hour. The
attached billing records further establish that Ebert seeks to recover a billing rate of $400/hour,
although this rate is never set forth in the body of her fee petitions. Ebert also failed to testify as to
the extent of her experience with civil rights litigation or the rates that she has charged in prior civil
rights cases. Nevertheless, the Court finds Ebert’s testimony about her current rates to be plausible,
especially in light of the rates that the defendants approved for the plaintiffs’ current counsel, and
notes that the defendants have offered no actual evidence calling the reasonableness of those rates
into question. The Court therefore accepts Ebert’s requested rate of $400/hour.
The Court finds, however, that the hours that Ebert seeks to recover for must be
substantially reduced. As an initial matter, Ebert has conceded that 7.3 of the hours that she claimed
for her work on behalf of Kierra Williamson were inadequately described and that 2.9 of those
hours were excessive. She has similarly conceded that 2.4 of the hours the expended on behalf of
Princeton Williamson were inadequately described and that 3.3 of those hours were excessive. The
Court, moreover, notes that Ebert has billed both of her clients for performing the same tasks.
After close review of Ebert’s billing records, the Court holds that she double billed for 11.7 hours.
The Court accordingly reduces her fee request for Kierra and Princeton by 5.85 hours each. The
Court further notes that Ebert seeks to recover time spent performing a number of administrative or
paralegal tasks such as sending third-party record requests, photocopying, and court filings. Based
on the caselaw previously set forth, the Court therefore reduces Ebert’s claimed time for Kierra by
13.2 hours and reduces Ebert’s claimed time for Princeton by 2.9 hours. The Court further deducts
the 12.5 hours that Ebert spent compiling her fee petition for Princeton and the 10.5 hours spent
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compiling her fee petition for Kierra, as Ebert has failed to establish that time spent drafting a fee
petition is properly recovered under a quantum meruit theory. The Court, however, does not find that
Ebert engaged in excessive client communication, that her timekeeping entries are undiscernibly
vague, or that she engaged in excessive billing. As a final matter, the defendants argue that Ebert
cannot recover for the time spent on Princeton Williamson’s criminal case. Here, however, Ebert is
seeking to recover her fees under a quantum meruit theory and not as a byproduct of the judgment in
this case under section 1988. Accordingly, those fees are recoverable. The Court will therefore
allow Ebert to recover for 63 hours of legal work on behalf of Kierra Williamson and 31.4 hours on
behalf of Princeton Williamson.
Ebert also seeks to recover costs for her work on behalf of Princeton and Kierra. The
defendants, however, correctly note that Ebert has failed to document $56.72 of the requested
$1008.04 in costs that she requests for her representation of Kierra. Ebert concedes that she did not
provide records supporting these costs, but instead argues that the Court should overlook this failing
based on her explanation of the origin of the costs. The court declines to do so, and accordingly
awards Ebert costs in the amount of $951.32. Based on the Court’s findings, Ebert is entitled to
recover $23,600 in attorneys’ fees and $951.32 in costs from Kierra Williamson’s proceeds in this
case and to recover $12,820 in attorneys’ fees and $935.97 in costs from Princeton Williamson’s
proceeds in this case.2
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, Ebert’s petitions for attorney’s fees based on quantum meruit [263,
267] are granted in part and denied in part. The Court holds that Ebert is entitled to recover fees
and costs in the total amount of $24,551.32 from Kierra Williamson’s proceeds in this case and is
2
As it is not presently clear whether the judgment in favor of these plaintiffs has already been paid, the Court declines to
order the defendants to take any action regarding the payment of these amounts.
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entitled to recover fees and costs in the total amount of $13,755.97 from Princeton Williamson’s
proceeds in this case, and orders that an attorney’s lien be placed on those amounts if they have not
already been paid to the plaintiffs. Accordingly, Ebert’s motions for a hearing [269, 272] are denied.
Plaintiff counsel’s petition for fees and costs [268] is granted in part and denied in part. The Court
awards the plaintiffs’ current counsel $3,466,817 in fees.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Date: 7/31/2019
Entered: _____________________________
SHARON JOHNSON COLEMAN
United States District Court Judge
18
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