ResCap Liquidating Trust v. Primary Residential Mortgage, Inc.
Filing
132
REDACTED VERSION OF 131 Amended Order on Motion for Attorney Fees. (Written Opinion). Signed by Judge Susan Richard Nelson on 4/28/2021. (MJC)
CASE 0:16-cv-04070-SRN-HB Doc. 132 Filed 04/28/21 Page 1 of 107
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA
ResCap Liquidating Trust,
Plaintiff
v.
Primary Residential Mortgage, Inc.,
Defendant
Case No. 0:16-cv-4070 (SRN/HB)
REDACTED for public access
4/28/21
AMENDED ORDER ON ATTORNEY’S
FEES, COSTS, AND PREJUDGMENT
INTEREST ∗
Temporarily Filed Under Seal
Isaac Nesser, Heather Christenson, Peter Calamari, and Jeffrey Carl Miller, Quinn Emanuel
Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP, 51 Madison Ave., Floor 22, New York, NY 10001; Anthony
Alden and Matthew R. Scheck, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP, 865 Figueroa St.,
Floor 10, Los Angeles, CA 90017; Donald Heeman, Jessica Nelson, Randi Winter, and Laurie
Quinn, Spencer Fane, 100 S. 5th St., Ste. 2500, Minneapolis, MN 55402, for Plaintiff.
Matthew Johnson, Jesse T. Smallwood, Matthew Nicholson, and Krista Anderson, Williams
& Connolly, LLP, 725 12th St. NW, Washington, DC 20005; Elizabeth Kniffen and Rory
Zamansky, Zelle, LLP, 500 Washington Ave. S., Ste. 4000, Minneapolis, MN 55415, for
Defendant.
_________________________________________________________________________
This Order amends the April 20, 2021 Order [Doc. No. 126] to correct a
typographical error on page 102. Other than this correction and the designation in the
caption of this Order as an “Amended Order,” it is identical to the April 20, 2021 Order.
∗
CASE 0:16-cv-04070-SRN-HB Doc. 132 Filed 04/28/21 Page 2 of 107
I.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
BACKGROUND ..................................................................................................... 1
A.
B.
Indemnification and Fee-Shifting Provisions ................................................ 2
C.
Litigation in Minnesota ................................................................................ 3
D.
Summary Judgment and Trial Between ResCap and PRMI ........................ 7
E.
II.
RFC’s Bankruptcy ........................................................................................ 1
Plaintiff’s Motion for Attorney’s Fees, Costs, and Prejudgment Interest ..... 8
DISCUSSION ........................................................................................................ 13
A.
Whether ResCap’s Attorney’s Fees are Reasonable ................................... 14
1.
Supporting Evidence ....................................................................... 17
a.
Expert Opinions of Messrs. Remele and Cambronne ........... 18
b.
Redacted Invoices ................................................................. 21
2.
Reasonable Hourly Rates ................................................................. 25
3.
Reasonable Hours ............................................................................. 28
a.
The Nature and Difficulty of the Responsibility Assumed ... 29
(1)
PRMI Loan-Specific Work ........................................ 30
(2)
PRMI’s New Arguments............................................ 31
(3)
Comparable Litigation ............................................... 33
(4)
Challenges to Work Performed .................................. 35
(a)
Pre-Complaint Period Through Month
Complaint Filed (December 1, 2014 to December 31,
2016) .......................................................................... 36
(b)
Pre-Stay Period/Document Discovery (January
1, 2017 to July 31, 2018)............................................ 36
(c)
Stay Period (August 1, 2018 to January 31,
2019) .......................................................................... 39
(d)
Fact Depositions and Opening Expert Reports
(February 1, 2019 to May 31, 2019) .......................... 40
ii
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(e)
Expert Discovery/Opening Summary-Judgment
and Daubert Briefs (June 1, 2019 to October 31, 2019)
.................................................................................... 41
(f)
Summary Judgment and Daubert Opposition,
Replies, and Hearings (November 1, 2019 to
December 11, 2019), and Pre-Trial Proceedings
(December 12, 2019 to February 9, 2020) ................. 43
(g)
Bench Trial (February 10, 2020 to March 13,
2020) .......................................................................... 45
(h)
Post-Trial Submissions (March 14, 2020 to
April 30, 2020) ........................................................... 48
(i)
Months Following Post-Trial Submissions
(May 1, 2020 to July 31, 2020) .................................. 49
(j)
Fee Petition Litigation (November 2020 to
December 2020) ......................................................... 49
b.
Amount Involved and Results Obtained ............................... 50
(1) Prejudgment Interest Included in Damages Award ......... 52
(2) Amount of Plaintiff’s Attorney’s Fees ............................ 53
(3) Challenges to Components of Damages Claim ............... 54
(a) Countrywide Loan ................................................ 55
(b) Monoline Allocation............................................. 56
(c) At-Issue Population and NDS Trusts ................... 58
(d) Assetwise Loans ................................................... 59
(4) Previously-Decided Issues .............................................. 60
(5) ResCap’s Warnings ......................................................... 65
(6) Results Obtained .............................................................. 68
c.
Fees Customarily Charged for Similar Legal Services ......... 72
(1) Comparison with Opposing Counsel’s Billable Hours ... 72
(2) Comparison Between ResCap’s Hours Billed in PRMI
and HLC ................................................................................ 74
(3) Comparison of Hours Billed Among Plaintiff’s
Counsel .................................................................................. 75
iii
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d.
e.
Fees for Preparing the Fee Petition ...................................... 81
f.
B.
Remaining Milner Factors..................................................... 79
Adjustments to the Lodestar ................................................. 82
Whether ResCap’s Costs are Reasonable ................................................... 83
1. Expert and Support Firms ...................................................................... 84
a. ResCap’s Allocation Methodology .............................................. 84
b. ResCap’s Request and Supporting Documentation for
Expert Costs ..................................................................................... 87
2. Document Vendors ................................................................................. 93
3. Witnesses and Trial Vendors................................................................... 93
C.
III.
Post-Award Prejudgment Interest .............................................................. 96
ORDER ................................................................................................................ 102
iv
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SUSAN RICHARD NELSON, United States District Judge
Before the Court is the Motion for Attorney’s Fees, Costs, and Prejudgment Interest
[Doc. No. 22] filed by Plaintiff ResCap Liquidating Trust (“ResCap”). For the reasons set
forth below, Plaintiff’s motion is granted in part and denied in part.
I.
BACKGROUND
The Court has previously addressed the complex background and unique legal issues
involved in this contractual indemnification lawsuit in numerous orders and opinions, most
notably in its 210-page Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law (“FOF & COL”) following
the parties’ 13-day bench trial in this case. In re ResCap Liquidating Tr. Litig., No. 13-cv3451 (SRN/HB), 2020 WL 4728109 (D. Minn. Aug. 14, 2020); (ResCap Consol. Liquid. Tr.
Litig., 13-cv-3451 [Doc. No. 5527].) While the Court will not reiterate its past findings in
detail here, to provide the necessary context for Plaintiff’s motion, the Court will briefly
describe the origins of this case, the underlying relationship between Plaintiff’s predecessor,
Residential Funding Corporation (“RFC”), and Defendant Primary Residential Mortgage,
Inc. (“PRMI”), and the procedural history of this action, including the relationship of this case
with similar cases filed in this District.
A. RFC’s Bankruptcy
This lawsuit stems from the 2012 bankruptcy (the “Bankruptcy”) of the Minnesota
company known as RFC. (FOF & COL ¶ 1.) Following the 2008 collapse of the housing
market, RFC was sued by various “Trusts” and “Monoline Insurers” for breaching the
“representations” and “warranties” (“R&Ws”) RFC had made to those entities, or their
insureds, when selling them bundles of home mortgages pooled together into residential
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mortgage-backed securities (“RMBS”). In re RFC & ResCap Liquid. Tr. Action, 399 F. Supp.
3d 827, 831 (D. Minn. 2019) (“HLC Fee Award”). Facing billions of dollars of liability, RFC
filed for bankruptcy in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New
York (the “Bankruptcy Court”). (FOF & COL ¶ 2.) In the Bankruptcy Court, after much
negotiation, RFC reached a series of settlements, totaling approximately $9 billion, with the
RMBS Trusts and several of the Monoline Insurers. HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 831.
In December 2013, the Bankruptcy Court Judge, the Honorable Martin Glenn, approved the
settlements as “fair and reasonable” in a 134-page order. (FOF & COL ¶ 111); HLC Fee
Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 831. At the hearing in which Judge Glenn approved the
settlements, he further observed that “this case is certainly the most legally and factually
complicated case that I’ve presided over in my seven years on the bench,” and that “ResCap
presented more unsettled legal issues than I’ve seen in one case before, whether during my
seven years on the bench or thirty-four years in law practice before that.” HLC Fee Award,
399 F. Supp. 3d at 831.
B. Indemnification and Fee-Shifting Provisions
As part of RFC’s Bankruptcy, RFC’s creditors formed ResCap, a trust authorized to
sue the dozens of banks and mortgage lenders that had sold RFC the loans that were
subsequently bundled into RMBS, on grounds that those lenders breached their
(corresponding) R&Ws to RFC, and thus directly caused RFC to breach its R&Ws to the
Trusts and Monoline Insurers, which, in turn, contributed to RFC’s $9 billion in Bankruptcy
liabilities. Id. ResCap’s legal claims against the lenders were rooted in the “Client Contract”
that those lenders had signed with RFC, which itself incorporated a lengthier agreement called
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the “Client Guide,” or in PRMI’s case, both the Client Guide and a similar agreement called
the “AlterNet Guide” (collectively, “the Guides”). Id.
In addition to the R&Ws that the lenders made to RFC, such as a promise that all of
the borrower information the lender provided RFC was accurate, (FOF & COL ¶¶ 20–21),
both the Guides contained broad indemnification provisions requiring the originating lenders
to indemnify RFC from “all losses, damages, penalties, fines, forfeitures, court costs and
reasonable attorneys’ fees, judgments, and any other costs, fees and expenses resulting from
any Event of Default.” (Id. ¶¶ 26, 28) (citing PTX-001 § 274; PTX-032 § A223; PTX-1055
§ A212; In re ResCap Liquid. Tr. Litig., 428 F. Supp. 3d 53, 67 (D. Minn. 2019) (“PRMI
Summ. J. Order”) (emphasis added)).
C. Litigation in Minnesota
Based on this broad indemnification language, and the $9 billion in “losses and
liabilities” incurred in RFC’s Bankruptcy settlements, in late 2013, ResCap began filing
dozens of materially identical lawsuits in the District of Minnesota against a wide range of
mortgage lenders, all asserting claims for breach of contract and contractual indemnification.
(Horner Decl. [Doc. No. 27] ¶ 3.)
At the outset of the litigation, ResCap was represented solely by attorneys at the
Minneapolis firm of Felhaber Larson, (“Felhaber”), RFC’s longstanding counsel, as well as
attorneys at the Columbus, Ohio law firm of Carpenter, Lipps & Leland LLP (“Carpenter
Lipps”), RFC’s Bankruptcy counsel. HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 832. Early in the
proceedings, ResCap and counsel at Felhaber determined that ResCap also “needed to obtain
national counsel with significant RMBS litigation and RMBS-related bankruptcy expertise to
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represent [it].” (Heeman Decl. [Doc. No. 26] ¶ 9.) However, “[ResCap] could not locate
counsel in Minneapolis/St. Paul with the requisite expertise who were capable and able to
litigate the cases, particularly in light of the many conflicts that law firms in this market had
due to their ongoing representation of many of the defendant-originators in these cases.” (Id.)
Plaintiff was not alone in seeking national counsel, as “the overwhelming majority of
Defendants in these cases, including PRMI, hired lead counsel from outside of Minnesota,”
(id.), often from some of the most prestigious law firms in the country. HLC Fee Award, 399
F. Supp. 3d at 833 (noting that defense counsel included Williams & Connolly, Jones Day,
Munger, Tolles & Olson, Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, Ropes & Gray, Simpson Thatcher
& Bartlett, Sullivan & Cromwell, and Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz).
Ultimately, ResCap obtained the services of national counsel at the firm of Quinn
Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP, due to Quinn Emanuel’s well-regarded RMBS,
bankruptcy, and insurance litigation experience, including its success in recovering over $25
million for the Federal Housing Finance Agency in RMBS litigation. HLC Fee Award, 399
F. Supp. 3d at 833; (Heeman Decl. ¶13). Plaintiff also continued to be represented by local
counsel, attorneys at Felhaber, with those attorneys subsequently moving to Spencer Fane
LLP, and by RFC’s Bankruptcy counsel, Carpenter Lipps. (See Heeman Decl. ¶¶ 3, 12–15.)
As of January 2015, 68 of ResCap’s cases were consolidated for pretrial purposes
before the undersigned judge as part of the ResCap RMBS Litigation. (Horner Decl. ¶ 3.)
Of these 68 cases, five involved default, three were “loan-level cases” distinct from the other
consolidated cases, and one settled shortly after consolidation. (Id.) As of February 2015, 59
cases remained part of the consolidated ResCap RMBS Litigation. (Id.)
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In addition, as of February 2015, there were three non-consolidated cases pending in
this District (with one additional case filed the following month), four cases pending in
Minnesota state court, and five cases pending in the Southern District of New York. (Id. ¶ 4.)
The cases filed on or before 2015, which did not include the instant case against PRMI, were
considered part of a “first wave” of ResCap’s litigation, and have been referred to as “Wave
One” or “First Wave” actions during this litigation. (Id.)
After the consolidation of the Wave One cases, the litigation proceeded through joint
discovery for three years, with the Court holding monthly in-person case management
conferences with all participating counsel. HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 833. As the
Court has observed, during that time, “the complexity of these cases became readily apparent,
as ResCap undertook the daunting task of attempting to apportion billions of dollars in
liabilities across dozens of defendants, and among the tens of thousands of individual
mortgage loans that defendants had sold to RFC over the course of the 2000s.” Id. At the
same time, ResCap prepared a case against the many, and sometimes individualized, contract
law defenses asserted by defendants, and utilized a sampling protocol in order to manage the
sheer volume of discovery in this complex litigation. Id. ResCap’s legal team responded to
voluminous discovery requests and defended over 150 fact depositions and third-party
depositions in Wave One. Id. at 834.
In April 2018, ResCap and the remaining nine defendants in Wave One of the
consolidated action (the other defendants had settled), filed cross motions for summary
judgment on “common issues,” as well as Daubert motions. Id. The briefing totaled nearly
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600 pages, and some defendants also filed defendant-specific briefing, to which ResCap
responded in kind. Id.
At the end of 2016, and the beginning of 2017, ResCap filed 10 additional actions
against loan originators—including the instant lawsuit against PRMI—in the District of
Minnesota. (Horner Decl. ¶ 5.) These additional cases were considered part of the “second
wave” of ResCap’s litigation, and have been referred to as “Wave Two” or “Second Wave”
actions. (Id.) Shortly after these cases were filed, they were consolidated before the
undersigned judge, and four remaining Wave Two actions were assigned to the Honorable
Paul A. Magnuson. (Id.)
In July 2018, the Court stayed proceedings in the PRMI case, pending the outcome of
the Wave One summary judgment and Daubert motions, and the results of ResCap’s potential
trial against the first defendant in the Wave One trial queue, Home Loan Center (“HLC”).
(See July 24, 2018 Hr’g Tr. [Doc. No. 4061] at 31–32.) HLC was represented by the same
counsel who represent PRMI in this action, Williams & Connolly.
The Court’s August 15, 2018 summary judgment order in the Wave One cases left a
number of complex issues for jury determination. See HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at
834. Given the potential impact of the HLC trial on the remaining cases in Waves One and
Two, ResCap prepared an extremely thorough and detailed case to present to the jury, as if
the HLC trial were a “bellwether” trial. Id. at 835.
At the conclusion of the 16-day trial against HLC in November 2018, the jury returned
a verdict of $28.7 million in favor of ResCap. (In re ResCap Liquid. Tr. Litig., 13-cv-3451
(SRN/HB) [Doc. No. 4705].) Subsequently, the Court awarded ResCap $14,066,931.50 in
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preverdict prejudgment interest, for a total damages award against HLC of $42,766,931.50.
HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 851, 862. Also, pursuant to the same contractual feeshifting provision found in the instant case, the Court awarded ResCap an additional
$23,081.252.31 in attorney’s fees and costs. Id. Finally, the Court awarded ResCap $2.6
million in postverdict prejudgment interest. (ResCap v. HLC, 14-cv-1716 (SRN/HB) [Doc.
No. 82 at 2].)
The verdict against HLC impacted the remaining cases, because within a few months
of the HLC trial, all of the remaining Wave One defendants had settled their cases with
ResCap, and by August 2019, PRMI was the only remaining defendant among the Wave Two
cases. See HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 835, 861; (Christenson Decl. [Doc. No. 25] ¶
7.)
D. Summary Judgment and Trial Between ResCap and PRMI
After an unsuccessful mediation in June 2019, (Christenson Decl. ¶ 5), ResCap and
PRMI filed cross motions for summary judgment and Daubert motions in the instant action.
The Court’s 176-page summary judgment order granted some aspects of ResCap’s motion
and denied others, and deferred ruling on some aspects of PRMI’s motion and denied others.
PRMI Summ. J. Order, 428 F. Supp.3d at 53.
The parties proceeded to a 13-day bench trial in February and March 2020, during
which they introduced over 300 exhibits and testimony from 27 witnesses. (FOF & COL,
2020 WL 4728109, at *4.) While the content of the PRMI trial shared some similarities with
the HLC trial, it differed in several ways, as the Court discusses in greater detail below. In
brief, Plaintiff was required to undertake the review, analysis, appraisal, and reunderwriting
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of PRMI’s specific loans, and present this loan-level evidence at trial. (Supp’l Christenson
Decl. [Doc. No. 85] ¶¶ 21, 24–27, 29, 32, 44.) PRMI also raised significant causation and
allocation issues specific to securitization-level representations, (id. ¶¶ 47–48), and litigated
the case breach-by-breach. Also unlike HLC, which solely involved loans sold under the
Client Guide, the loans that PRMI sold to RFC were governed by the AlterNet Guide, in
addition to the Client Guide. (FOF & COL ¶¶ 132–55.) Also, PRMI raised new arguments
not previously asserted in HLC concerning Assetwise Loans and the Additional Settling Trust
Settlement, both of which the Court addresses separately, below.
On August 14, 2020, the Court issued its Findings of Fact & Conclusions of Law,
finding that PRMI had breached its Client Contracts with RFC, the breaches contributed to
RFC’s liability, and ResCap’s damages methodology was reasonable and non-speculative.
(Id. ¶¶ 113–73, 174, 450.) The Court therefore directed entry of judgment in favor of ResCap,
and against PRMI, in the full amount of $5.4 million in damages, and permitted Plaintiff to
submit a motion for attorney’s fees, costs, and prejudgment interest. (Id., 2020 WL 4728109,
at *91.)
E. Plaintiff’s Motion for Attorney’s Fees, Costs, and Prejudgment Interest
In the instant motion, Plaintiff seeks $14,156,095.26 in attorney’s fees and costs,
(Second Supp’l Horner Decl. [Doc. No. 118] ¶ 9, Ex. 48 [Doc. No. 118-1]), and
$1,999,180.27 in pre-award prejudgment interest. (Pl.’s Mem. [Doc. No. 24] at 3, 13, 19.1)
It further asks that the Court permit it to calculate post-award prejudgment interest on the total
All pinpoint citations to the parties’ memoranda refer to the parties’ internal
pagination found on the bottom of each page.
1
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of the damages award and pre-award interest (i.e., a total of $7,399,180.27), from August 14,
2020 to the date on which the Court enters final judgment, at a rate of 10% per year. (Id. at
13, 20.) In support of its motion and initial memorandum, ResCap submits the following: (1)
the Declaration of Jill Horner, ResCap’s Chief Finance Officer (“CFO”), who oversaw the
review and payment of invoices received by ResCap; (2) the Declaration of Heather
Christenson, one of ResCap’s attorneys at Quinn Emanuel; (3) the Declaration of Donald
Heeman, ResCap’s lead local counsel; (4) full or redacted invoices showing detailed time
entries and time spent; and (5) summaries of invoices for 24 professionals and witnesses. (See
Pl.’s Mem. at 8; Horner Decl. ¶¶ 21–23, 26–28, 31–33, 36–37, 41–42, 45–47, 50, 52, 56–57,
60, 62, 64–68, Exs. 7–22, 23-A, 23-B, 24, 25-A, 25-B, 26-A, 26-B, 27-A, 27-B, 28–31, 32A, 32-B, 33-A, 33-B, 34, 35-A, 35-B, 37–38, 39-A, 39-B, 40, 41-A, 41-B, 42, 43-A, 43-B,
44–48.)
Prior to filing the instant motion, ResCap asked PRMI whether it intended to retain an
expert to challenge the reasonableness of Plaintiff’s fee request, and if so, to disclose its
expert. (Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶ 55.) At that time, PRMI stated that it had made no
decision about the use of an expert. (Id.) On September 2, 2020, ResCap submitted the instant
motion, which was not accompanied by an expert opinion.
On September 16, 2020, after ResCap again asked PRMI if it intended to retain an
expert in opposition to ResCap’s fee petition, PRMI responded that it had still not made a
decision. (Id., Ex. A.) On September 23, 2020, after the parties met and conferred to discuss
ResCap’s invoice redactions, counsel for ResCap emailed defense counsel asking about
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PRMI’s intention to use an expert, noting that PRMI had agreed to inform ResCap of its
decision by October 1. (Id., Ex. B.)
The following day, PRMI filed a letter with the Court, voicing its opposition to
Plaintiff’s redacted invoices, (Def.’s Sept. 24, 2020 Letter [Doc. No. 41]), accompanied by
the Declaration of Lewis A. Remele, Jr., an expert witness whom PRMI had retained “to
review the reasonableness of the fee and expense request submitted by the Plaintiff.” (First
Remele Decl. [Doc. No. 41-1] ¶ 1.)
PRMI argued that it was unable to assess the
reasonableness of Plaintiff’s billing entries because they contained improper redactions that
either removed non-privileged, non-protected information, or were so excessive as to make
the billing entries “indecipherable.” (Def.’s Sept. 24, 2020 Letter at 1.)
In HLC, after the defendant there raised nearly identical objections about redacted
invoices, the Court denied HLC’s requests for unredacted time entries and a privilege log, and
instead required HLC to identify a reasonable number of disputed redactions, for which it
required ResCap to submit the corresponding unredacted entries to the Court for in camera
review. HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 845–46. Ultimately, after conducting the review
in HLC, the Court found the redactions were proper. Id.
With respect to Plaintiff’s fee petition in the instant case, ResCap followed the
methodology used in HLC and redacted billing entries subject to privilege or work-product
protection. (Pl.’s Oct. 2, 2020 Letter [Doc. No. 44] at 1–2.) ResCap opposed PRMI’s request
for revised redactions and a privilege log because the parties remain adverse in ongoing
litigation, as PRMI has stated its intention to appeal the Court’s rulings and trial findings.
(Id.)
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In response to the parties’ dispute about redactions, the Court followed HLC
procedures and conducted an in camera review of certain invoices to determine whether
ResCap had properly redacted information subject to attorney-client privilege or workproduct protection. (Oct. 9, 2020 Order [Doc. No. 46] at 4–5.)
On October 21, 2020, PRMI filed its opposition memorandum (“Def.’s Opp’n”) [Doc.
No. 54], along with a second declaration from its expert, Mr. Remele (“Second Remele
Decl.”) [Doc. No. 63], and the supporting Declaration of D. Keith Clouser [Doc. No. 57], one
of PRMI’s attorneys formerly at Williams & Connolly. PRMI argues that ResCap has not
proven the reasonableness of its request for attorney’s fees and costs for the following reasons:
(1) the nature and difficulty of the case do not justify the requested amount; (2) the request is
disproportionate to the amount at issue in the case and the results obtained; (3) Plaintiff failed
to produce adequate documentation to assess reasonableness of law-firm hours; (4) the
information provided shows excessive or duplicative billing; and (5) Plaintiff cannot shift the
blame for its excessive fees to PRMI’s defense strategy. (Def.’s Opp’n at 8–34.) In addition,
PRMI argues that ResCap has not proven the reasonableness of its costs, including expert
costs pertaining to common work from Wave One, and expert costs and fact witness costs
incurred in this action. (Id. at 34–40.) Further, PRMI contends that ResCap may not recover
fees for the work performed in preparing its fee petition, and is not entitled to prejudgment
interest. (Id. at 40–42.)
After the Court conducted an in camera review of Plaintiff’s invoices, it found that the
relevant billing entries “describe[d] tasks undertaken by ResCap’s counsel relating to trial
preparation, including preparation for the testimony of trial witnesses, experts, the preparation
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of exhibits, the preparation of deposition designations, the identification of objections to
PRMI’s exhibits, the preparation of motions in limine, the preparation of the trial brief, the
preparation of ResCap’s opening statement, and strategy discussions regarding trial.” (Nov.
3, 2020 Order [Doc. No. 70] at 2.) Accordingly, the Court found that the entries were properly
redacted either as work product or attorney-client privileged. (Id.)
Plaintiff responded to PRMI’s criticisms of its fee petition in its Reply memorandum
[Doc. No. 84] and accompanying declarations and exhibits, including the Supplemental
Declaration of Heather Christenson, and the First Supplemental Declaration of Jill Horner
(“First Supp’l Horner Decl.”) [Doc. No. 90]. In addition, in response to Mr. Remele’s expert
opinion, ResCap submitted the Rebuttal Expert Declaration of Karl L. Cambronne
(“Cambronne Decl.”) [Doc. No. 88].
Although the parties had already stipulated that PRMI would be permitted to file a surreply memorandum, (see Nov. 12, 2020 Order [Doc. No. 79] at 1–2), PRMI filed a letter on
December 8, 2021, objecting to the Court’s consideration of Plaintiff’s additional
declarations. (Def.’s Dec. 8, 2020 Letter [Doc. No. 94] at 1.) PRMI argued that the
declarations addressed issues “that Plaintiff reasonably should have anticipated at the time it
filed its initial motion and on which Plaintiff bears [the] burden of proof.” (Id.) It also argued
that the Court should strike Plaintiff’s Reply declarations, as they were not filed with its initial
motion. (Id.)
In PRMI’s sur-reply, it repeats these arguments, (Def.’s Sur-Reply [Doc. No. 98] at 1
n.1), but if the Court considers Plaintiff’s Reply declarations, PRMI asks that the Court
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consider a third declaration from Mr. Remele (“Third Remele Decl.”) [Doc. No. 102], along
with the Declaration of Jesse T. Smallwood (“Smallwood Decl.”) [Doc. No. 99].
On December 18, 2020, the Court entertained two hours and 45 minutes of oral
argument on the instant motion, via video-conference. (Dec. 18, 2020 Minute Entry [Doc.
No. 107].)
With the Court’s permission, on February 23, 2021, ResCap filed the Second
Supplemental Declaration of Jill Horner, updating its prior request for attorney’s fees and
costs to include the more recent fees and costs incurred with respect to the instant motion.
(See Feb. 19, 2021 Order [Doc. No. 117] at 2.)
Also with the Court’s permission, PRMI filed a memorandum in response to the
Second Supplemental Horner Declaration (“Def.’s Supp’l Opp’n”) [Doc. No. 120], again
arguing that it would be improper for the Court to consider the Cambronne Declaration, filed
with Plaintiff’s Reply, and that Plaintiff may not recover fees or costs for litigating its fee
petition. (Id. at 1–6.)
Furthermore, PRMI contends, even if such fees and costs are
considered, ResCap has not demonstrated the reasonableness of its request. (Id. at 8–15.)
II.
DISCUSSION
As a general rule in Minnesota, each party bears its own attorney’s fees, absent a
statutory or contractual exception, such as the fee-shifting provision in the Guides. HLC Fee
Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 839 n.15 (citing In re Silicone Implant Ins. Coverage Litig., 667
N.W.2d 405, 422 (Minn. 2003)). PRMI acknowledges the Court’s prior rulings holding that
the Guides permit Plaintiff to shift fees. (Def.’s Opp’n at 5 n.2.) However, in a footnote in
its opposition memorandum, PRMI argues that the applicable indemnification provisions do
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not include language “expressly requiring” PRMI to pay ResCap’s fees and costs in the event
of “litigation between the parties.” (Id.)
This Court has previously observed that the Guides contained provisions highly
favorable to RFC, providing it with broad discretion, recourse, and protections. See, e.g., In
re RFC & ResCap Liquid. Tr. Action, 332 F. Supp. 3d 1101, 1134 (D. Minn. 2018) (“HLC
Summ. J. Order”). However, “because RFC and [PRMI] were sophisticated business parties,
there can be no claim that [PRMI] lacked either understanding or notice of [its] obligation to
indemnify[.]” Id. The Court finds no reason to revisit its long-settled finding that the Guides
contain a fee-shifting provision, applicable to the parties here. Indeed, the plain language of
the Guides requires PRMI to identify RFC for “all losses, damages, penalties, fines,
forfeitures, court costs and reasonable attorneys’ fees, judgments, and any other costs, fees
and expenses resulting from any Event of Default.” (FOF & COL ¶¶ 26, 28) (citing PTX001 § 274; PTX-032 § A223; PTX-1055 § A212; PRMI Summ. J. Order, 428 F. Supp. 3d at
67); accord HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 839 n.15.
A. Whether ResCap’s Attorney’s Fees are Reasonable
The amount of an attorney’s fee award must be determined on the facts of each case
and is within the district court’s discretion. Hensley v. Eckerhart, 461 U.S. 424, 429, 437
(1983); see Hanig v. Lee, 415 F.3d 822, 825 (8th Cir. 2005) (citation omitted) (“Attorney’s
fees are within the broad discretion of the district court . . . .”). The starting point for
determining a reasonable attorney's fee is the “‘lodestar’” calculation, which is the number of
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hours reasonably expended on the litigation multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate.2 Hanig,
415 F.3d at 825 (citation omitted); see Hensley, 461 U.S. at 433. The fee applicant “should
submit evidence supporting the hours worked and rates claimed.” Hensley, 461 U.S. at 433.
If “the documentation of hours is inadequate, the district court may reduce the award
accordingly.”
Id. Courts consider “all relevant circumstances” when determining the
reasonableness of hours and hourly rates. Milner v. Farmers Ins. Exch., 748 N.W.2d 608,
621 (Minn. 2008) (citing State v. Paulson, 188 N.W.2d 424, 426 (Minn. 1971)). Factors
relevant to the determination of reasonableness (the “Milner factors”) include:
(1) the time and labor required; (2) the nature and difficulty of the
responsibility assumed; (3) the amount involved and the results obtained;
(4) the fees customarily charged for similar legal services; (5) the
experience, reputation, and ability of counsel; and (6) the fee arrangement
existing between counsel and the client.
Id. Federal courts consider the same or similar factors3 when determining whether to adjust
the loadstar amount upward or downward, although “many of these factors usually are
subsumed within the initial [lodestar] calculation.” Hensley, 461 U.S. at 434 n.9.
Although the Supreme Court applied the lodestar methodology in Hensley to a
statutory fee-shifting petition, courts have also applied it in cases involving contractual fee
provisions. See Best Buy Stores, L.P. v. Developers Diversified Realty Corp., No. 05-cv2310 (DSD/JJG), 2011 WL 1321387, at *3–4 (D. Minn. Apr. 4, 2011).)
2
3
These factors include:
(1) the time and labor required; (2) the novelty and difficulty of the questions;
(3) the skill requisite to perform the legal service properly; (4) the preclusion
of employment by the attorney due to acceptance of the case; (5) the
customary fee; (6) whether the fee is fixed or contingent; (7) 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 attorneys;
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However, in determining the lodestar, courts “need not, and indeed should not, become
green-eyeshade accountants. The essential goal in shifting fees (to either party) is to do rough
justice, not to achieve auditing perfection.” Fox v. Vice, 563 U.S. 826, 838 (2011). Courts
“may take into account their overall sense of a suit, and may use estimates in calculating and
allocating an attorney’s time.” Id. But “[t]he determination of fees ‘should not result in a
second major litigation.’” Id. (quoting Hensley, 461 U.S. at 437).
Here, Plaintiff seeks to recover $14,156,095.26 in attorney’s fees and costs, with
$10,627,716.35 attributable to attorney’s fees.4 In preparing the fee petition, Plaintiff
identified the fees and costs related to the PRMI action, which consisted of both direct and
indirect fees and costs. (Horner Decl. ¶¶ 6–11.) As Plaintiff explains, the direct fees and
costs were incurred solely in the PRMI action, such as drafting the complaint, settlement
negotiations during a tolling period, offensive depositions of PRMI witnesses, reunderwriting
and analysis of PRMI loans, and work related to dispositive motions and the PRMI trial. (Id.
(10) the “undesirability” of the case; (11) the nature and length of the
professional relationship with the client; and (12) awards in similar cases.
Hensley, 461 U.S. at 429–30 n.3 (citing Johnson v. Ga. Hwy. Express, Inc., 488 F.2d
714 (5th Cir. 1974)).
This revised fees total, $10,627,716.35, consists of the following total amounts billed
per law firm: $6,714,563.18 (Quinn Emanuel) + $3,114,595.08 (Spencer Fane) +
$609,353.23 (Felhaber) + $189,204.86 (Carpenter Lipps). (Second Supp’l Horner Decl., Ex.
48.) It also reflects a deduction in the amount of $5,828 for an error in Plaintiff’s original
submission that ResCap discovered upon review. (First Supp’l Horner Decl. ¶ 9.) Although
ResCap believes that it would also be appropriate for the Court to award a contingency fee
based on its arrangement with Quinn Emanuel, because the Court declined to grant a
contingency award in HLC, ResCap is not seeking such an award here. (Horner Decl. ¶ 21
n.3.)
4
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¶ 9.) Indirect fees and costs were related to work applicable to all active Wave One and Two
cases, or a subset of them, such as preparing for Wave Two case management conferences
and Wave One expert work related to the global sample and the reasonableness of the
bankruptcy settlements (which was relevant to the PRMI action). (Id. ¶¶ 10–11, 18.) ResCap
allocated a portion of this work to PRMI for common work applicable to all cases after
December 2, 2016, when PRMI became an active case. (Id. ¶ 10.)
PRMI does not appear to challenge Plaintiff’s allocation methodology as a general
matter, but argues more narrowly that Plaintiff may not charge PRMI for expert costs
pertaining to common work from Wave One. (Def.’s Opp’n at 34–37.) The Court addresses
this issue in its discussion of Plaintiff’s request for reimbursement of its costs.
ResCap has thoroughly documented its methodology for allocating its attorney’s fees
to PRMI, (Horner Decl. ¶¶ 13–38), and the Court finds that its methodology is reasonable.
1. Supporting Evidence
In support of its motion, ResCap has submitted hundreds of full or redacted invoices
showing detailed time entries and time spent, along with summaries of invoices for
approximately 24 professionals and witnesses, describing their work, in either redacted or
unredacted form. (See Pl.’s Mem. at 8.) Along with those invoices and summaries, ResCap
has filed several declarations from its attorneys regarding their work, as well as declarations
from Ms. Horner, ResCap’s CFO, describing the billing records and her methodology in
identifying the fees and costs incurred in the ResCap litigation related to work on the PRMI
case. (See generally Christenson Decl. [Doc. No. 25]; Heeman Decl. [Doc. No. 26]; Horner
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Decl. [Doc. No. 27]; Supp’l Christenson Decl. [Doc. No. 85]; First Supp’l Horner Decl. [Doc.
No. 90]; Second Supp’l Horner Decl. [Doc. No. 118].)
a. Expert Opinions of Messrs. Remele and Cambronne
As noted, in PRMI’s opposition, it offers the expert opinion of attorney Lewis A.
Remele, Jr., a well-regarded Twin Cities attorney with many years of experience, including
experience in RMBS litigation. (Second Remele Decl. ¶ 3.) In general, Mr. Remele states
that Plaintiff’s substantially redacted invoices make it impossible to conclude that its fees are
reasonable, without speculation. (Id. at 11.) Even so, Mr. Remele opines that Plaintiff has
not met its burden of proving that its fees are reasonable. (Id.)
PRMI notes that in ResCap’s opening memorandum, it failed to submit its own
objective expert opinion regarding the reasonableness of its fee petition. (Def.’s Opp’n at 8–
9.) By simply relying on the opinions of ResCap’s own attorneys and its CFO, Ms. Horner,
PRMI argues that ResCap cannot establish the reasonableness of its request for fees and costs.
(Id.)
In response to PRMI’s opposition, ResCap offers the rebuttal expert opinion of Karl
L. Cambronne, who is also a well-regarded Twin Cities attorney with many years of
experience in complex litigation. (Cambronne Decl. ¶¶ 1–2.) In general, Mr. Cambronne
opines that “Mr. Remele fails to account for applicable rulings and other important
considerations in rendering his opinion,” and that “the Court is best positioned to assess the
reasonableness of Plaintiff’s counsels’ time spent litigating this case.” (Id. at 19.)
As noted earlier, PRMI opposes the Court’s consideration of Mr. Cambronne’s
rebuttal opinion, arguing that ResCap improperly submitted the opinion with its Reply
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memorandum, as opposed to affirmatively offering the opinion with its initial memorandum.
(Def.’s Dec. 8, 2020 Letter at 1.)
In his third declaration, Mr. Remele agrees with Mr. Cambronne that “given [the
Court’s] extended supervision of the ResCap litigation, [it] has the experience and skills to
determine the reasonableness of Plaintiff’s fee request.”
(Third Remele Decl. ¶ 3.)
Nonetheless, Mr. Remele opines that Plaintiff bears the burden of establishing the
reasonableness of its request, and he notes that Mr. Cambronne does not opine that Plaintiff’s
fees are reasonable. (Id. ¶ 4.)
In the context of dispositive motions, the comments to Local Rule 7.1(b)(2) state that
the factual basis for such motions “will be established with affidavits and exhibits served and
filed in conjunction with the initial motion and the responding party’s memorandum of law.”
D. Minn. L.R. 7.1(b)(2) 1999 Advisory Cmte. However, the comments note that the rule
“neither permits nor prohibits the moving party from filing affidavits or other factual
material” in support of a reply memorandum. Id. Rather, reply affidavits “are appropriate
only when necessary to address factual claims of the responding party that were not
reasonably anticipated.” Id.
Assuming that Local Rule 7.1(b)(2) applies to the instant motion, the Court finds that
ResCap’s Reply declarations were properly submitted, as they address PRMI’s factual claims
and expert opinions that were not reasonably anticipated. Prior to ResCap filing its initial
memorandum, its counsel asked defense counsel if PRMI planned to retain an expert witness
to challenge the fee petition, but received no definite answer. (Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶
55.) Instead, PRMI dodged the question until it filed Mr. Remele’s initial declaration with
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the Court. (Id.) Mr. Cambronne’s opinion simply rebuts Mr. Remele’s opinion. It does not
present new information. Nor did ResCap “withhold” Mr. Cambronne’s opinion in order to
gain an advantage. See D. Minn. L. R. 7.1(b)(2), 1999 Advisory Cmte. Note (“It is improper
to withhold information—either from discovery or from initial moving papers—in order to
gain an advantage.”). If anything, PRMI withheld from ResCap its plans to retain an expert,
not the other way around. Moreover, the Court permitted PRMI to file a sur-reply in which
it could respond to the Cambronne Declaration, which PRMI filed, along with the Third
Remele Declaration. Under these circumstances, the Court does not find it “improper” to
consider Mr. Cambronne’s rebuttal opinion.5
But setting aside the propriety of Mr. Cambronne’s opinion, ultimately, the Court finds
it unnecessary to consider the opinion of either expert. There is no question that both Messrs.
Remele and Cambronne are eminently qualified, well-respected attorneys, whom the Court
holds in high regard. However, here, both attorneys understandably defer to the Court’s
expertise in evaluating the reasonableness of Plaintiff’s requested fees and costs. (Third
Remele Decl. ¶ 3; Cambronne Decl. ¶ 27.) In addition to all of the cases in Wave One and
Wave Two over which the Court presided for more than seven years, the Court presided over
this case from its 2016 filing through monthly status conferences, countless written disputes,
dispositive motion practice, motions in limine, in-trial rulings, a 13-day bench trial, resulting
Additionally, the Court does not find it improper to consider the supplemental
declarations submitted by Ms. Christenson and Ms. Horner, as they either respond to
arguments raised by PRMI that could not be reasonably anticipated, or correct or update the
amount of ResCap’s request for fees and costs in light of the discovery of an error or
subsequently-incurred fees and costs.
5
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in the Court’s 210-page Findings of Fact and Conclusions of law, and the instant motion,
which spawned a number of ancillary disputes concerning redactions, expert witnesses, and
supplemental briefing. When compared to the Court’s in-depth, years-long experience in this
litigation, the Court respectfully finds that the opinions of Messrs. Remele and Cambronne
do not meaningfully inform the question of reasonableness.
In addition to the Court’s deep familiarity with this litigation, “courts may draw on
their own experience and knowledge of prevailing market rates.” Warnock v. Archer, 397
F.3d 1024, 1027 (8th Cir. 2005). The undersigned is also well acquainted with the local
billing market. See HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 845 n.26. For all of these reasons,
the Court finds it unnecessary to consider the parties’ expert opinions, and declines to do so.
b. Redacted Invoices
As noted, Plaintiff submitted redacted portions of its billing statements on grounds of
attorney-client privilege and work-product protection, and, in response, PRMI argued that the
redactions were improper and rendered it unable to assess the reasonableness of the fee
petition. Consistent with the procedure ResCap utilized with respect to its fee petition in
HLC, it provided unredacted copies of its invoices for the Court’s in camera review. (Horner
Decl. ¶¶ 22, 26–27, 31–32, 36–37.) The Court compared the redacted entries against the
unredacted entries that PRMI identified, and found that the redactions were properly made.
(Nov. 3, 2020 Order at 2.)
Defendant relies on Yamada v. Nobel Biocare Holding AG, 825 F.3d 536, 544 (9th
Cir. 2016), for the proposition that due process requires PRMI to have access to ResCap’s
unredacted invoices. (Def.’s Opp’n at 16.) But Yamada does not dictate that result under
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these facts. Rather, in Yamada, class counsel did not provide any time records to the
defendants “in the first instance” due to concerns that the records contained privileged
information. 825 F.3d at 544. The district court found it was a “more efficient use of time
and resources” for the court to review the records in camera, as opposed to requiring class
counsel to redact the time records and provide a copy to the defendants. Id. The Ninth Circuit
disagreed, finding that the lack of any access whatsoever to billing records violated the
defendants’ due process rights. Id. at 545–46. On remand, the Ninth Circuit directed the
district court to allow the defendants access to the redacted timesheets. Id. at 546. The Ninth
Circuit distinguished the facts in Yamada from those in United States v. Eyraud, 809 F.3d
462, 471 (9th Cir. 2015), in which the court found no denial of due process where the
defendant had access to the victim’s law firm’s declaration “describing the work it performed
relating to Eyraud’s fraud and the invoice summaries listing the amount of time that work
took.” 825 F.3d at 546 n. 7.
Relying on Yamada, the district court in In re Anthem, Inc. Data Breach Litigation,
15-MD-02617-LHK, 2018 WL 3960068, at *34 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 17, 2018), found no due
process violation where plaintiffs partially redacted their timesheets to remove privileged
information, providing narrative descriptions such as “email/call to [client] regarding
___,” and “research legal issues relating to ___.”
Even if Yamada or In re Anthem were controlling authority here, ResCap has provided
similar descriptions in many of its invoices. (See First Remele Decl. ¶¶ 5–9) (providing
examples of billing entries such as “review and revise ___”; “revise and update ___”;
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“analysis and correspondence with Quinn regarding ___ and coordinate review of ___”;
“teleconference with PRMI regarding ___.”).
And again, the Court has reviewed Plaintiff’s invoices and continues to find that the
redactions contain attorney-client privileged and work-product information. Given that the
parties remain adverse and the entries are voluminous, ResCap’s full billing invoices need not
be disclosed. See HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp.3d at 845–46 (finding redactions were proper
and ResCap was not required to disclose unredacted invoices) (citing United States v. Petters,
No. 08-cv-5348 (ADM/JSM), 2009 WL 1922320, at *2 (D. Minn. June 30, 2009) (finding,
in case involving in camera review of billing statements, that disclosure of billing statements
was not required due to burdensomeness and “risk of inadvertently disclosing confidential
and protected information” while related criminal proceedings were ongoing); Bruckelmyer
v. Ground Heaters, Inc., No. 02-cv-1761 (DWF/RLE), 2003 WL 21524741, at *3 (D. Minn.
June 5, 2003) (noting that “in recognition of the privileged status of the time entries of
Plaintiff's counsel, the time sheets involved were not disclosed to the Defendants,” who had
an opportunity to review the total fees and costs requested)); see also Minn. Supply Co. v.
Raymond Corp., 472 F.3d 524, 545 n.14 (8th Cir. 2006) (noting that the defendant was free
to argue on remand that the district court abused its discretion in awarding attorney’s fees for
time entries that the court examined in camera, but which were not disclosed to the defendant,
but discouraging such an argument and “remind[ing] the [defendant] that the District Court
has substantial discretion in awarding fees and costs); In re Genetically Modified Rice Litig.,
764 F.3d 864, 871–72 (8th Cir. 2014) (“In large cases, especially one of prodigious
proportions like this, reliance on summaries is certainly within the direction of the district
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court,” and “discovery in connection with fee motions is rarely permitted.”); Fair Isaac Corp.
v. Experian Info. Sols. Inc., 711 F. Supp.2d 991, 1008 n.4 (D. Minn. 2010) (“To the extent
that Fair Isaac contends that the decision to allow the in camera submission is improper, the
Court is not persuaded), aff’d, 650 F.3d 1139 (8th Cir. 2011); Riverview Muir Doran, LLC
v. JADT Dev. Grp., LLC, 776 N.W.2d 172, 180 (Minn. Ct. App. 2009) (noting that under
Minnesota law, “a moving party may either submit unredacted billing statements to a
district court for in camera review or, alternatively, ‘the court can permit submission of
redacted copies, with privileged material removed from all copies.’” (citing Minn. R. Gen.
P. 119).
Unlike Bores v. Domino’s Pizza LLC, No. 05-cv-2498 (RHK/JSM), 2008 WL
4755834, at *5 n.8 (D. Minn. Oct. 27, 2008), invoked by PRMI for the notion that a fee
petitioner may not simply “dump” voluminous time records on the court with little
explanation of billing rates and work expended, (Def.’s Opp’n at 7), ResCap has, in fact, fully
explained its hourly rates and the propriety of the hours expended here. Moreover, this Court
is exceptionally familiar with all aspects of the work performed on this case, having
shepherded it, and the other consolidated cases, from discovery through trial or settlement.
The Court also rejects PRMI’s argument that ResCap’s redactions hindered PRMI’s
ability to properly challenge the billing records. PRMI is well acquainted with all periods of
this litigation and can sufficiently glean any redacted activities for which ResCap’s counsel
billed. Borrowing Defendant’s own turn of phrase, its claim that the redactions render it
unable to assess Plaintiff’s invoices “blinks reality.” (Id. at 32.) In fact, given PRMI’s own
experience litigating this case alongside ResCap’s counsel, even with redacted invoices,
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PRMI presents a plentiful array of substantive arguments in opposition to Plaintiff’s motion
in the form of: (1) three memoranda in opposition totaling 73 pages, (see [Doc. Nos. 54, 98,
120]); (2) three expert declarations from Mr. Remele totaling 84 pages, (see [Doc. Nos. 411, 63, 102]); (3) two substantive declarations from counsel totaling 61 pages, (see [Doc. Nos.
57, 99]); (4) numerous single-spaced letters totaling 33 pages, (see [Doc. Nos. 41, 50, 66, 68,
94, 116]); and (5) 95 minutes of oral argument at the hearing on the fee petition. (See Dec.
18, 2020 Hr’g Tr. [Doc. No. 109] at 28–94.)
Again, the goal in evaluating and potentially awarding a fee request is to “do rough
justice, not to achieve auditing perfection,” Fox, 563 U.S. at 838, lest the determination of
fees “result in a second major litigation.” Id. (quoting Hensley, 461 U.S. at 437). The Court
finds that the redactions here were properly made, and PRMI has access to the redacted
invoices, as well as declarations from Plaintiff’s counsel and ResCap’s CFO describing the
work performed and the methodology used to prepare the fee petition. The procedure
followed here has not deprived PRMI of due process, nor had it hindered its ability to
challenge the reasonableness of Plaintiff’s petition.
2. Reasonable Hourly Rates
As noted, the Court examines the plaintiff’s hourly billing rates when determining the
proper lodestar. Hanig, 415 F.3d at 825. The hourly rates for Plaintiff’s counsel are as
follows:
(1) Quinn Emanuel incorporated a
discount, with hourly rates for
attorneys ranging from $160 to $722.50, and hourly rates for paralegal and
litigation support ranging from $150 to $167.50;
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(2) Spencer Fane’s hourly rates for attorneys ranged from $145 to $540, and
hourly rates for paralegal and litigation support ranged from $100 to $150;
(3) Felhaber’s hourly rates for attorneys ranged from $85 to $440, and hourly
rates for paralegal and litigation support ranged from $130 to $160; and
(4) Carpenter Lipps’ hourly rates for attorneys ranged from $280 to $415.
(Horner Decl. ¶¶ 21, 28, 33, 38.)
Generally, to determine whether an hourly rate is reasonable, courts look at the rates
“prevailing in the community for similar services by lawyers of reasonably comparable skill,
experience and reputation.” Blum v. Stenson, 465 U.S. 886, 895 n.11 (1984); accord
McDonald v. Armontrout, 860 F.2d 1456, 1458–59 (8th Cir. 1988). Sometimes, where
particular legal specialization is required, courts may consider a national billing rate. Casey
v. City of Cabool, 12 F.3d 799, 805 (8th Cir. 1992). Again, “[t]he party seeking an award of
fees should submit evidence supporting the . . . rates claimed.” Hensley, 461 U.S. at 433.
Here, the Court finds that the requested hourly rates are reasonable and supported by
the local billing rate for similar work or the particular expertise of counsel. In the HLC Fee
Award, 399 F. Supp.3d at 847, the Court found that counsel’s rates, which, like here, included
Quinn Emanuel’s
hourly discounted rate, were reasonable. At that time, Quinn
Emanuel’s highest discounted hourly rate for attorneys was $675 per hour, id. at 846, whereas
here, the highest discounted hourly rate for Quinn Emanuel attorneys is $722.50. Courts in
Minnesota have awarded fees to attorneys at similar hourly rates. Id.; see also Miller v. Bd.
of Regents of Univ. of Minn., 402 F. Supp.3d 568, 592 & n.17 (D. Minn. 2019) (finding hourly
rates up to $750 for attorneys and $250 for paralegals “do not exceed the upper limit of what
professions with comparable experience, expertise, and reputation command in this market”
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for a case litigated from 2015 to 2019); Roeser v. Best Buy Co., No. 13-cv-1968 (JRT/HB),
2015 WL 4094052, at *12 (D. Minn. July 7, 2015) (concluding that attorney hourly rates up
to $880 and administrative professional rates up to $160 per hour for work performed between
2013 and 2015 were reasonable in light of quality of work and contingency nature of case);
see also Mgmt. Registry, Inc. v. A.W. Cos., Inc., No. 17-cv-5009 (JRT/KMM), 2020 WL
1910589, at *16 (D. Minn. Apr. 20, 2020) (finding that $500 attorney hourly rate was
reasonable for work performed in 2019), report and recommendation adopted, 2020 WL
4915832 (D. Minn. Aug. 21, 2020); Polaris Indus. Inc. v. TBL Int’l, Inc., No. 19-cv-291
(WMW/DTS), 2020 WL 1075019, at *7 (D. Minn. Mar. 6, 2020) (approving hourly rates
ranging from $315 to $550); Radisson Hotels Int’l, Inc. v. Fairmont Partners LLC, No. 19cv-1176 (WMW/BRT), 2020 WL 614810, at *4 (D. Minn. Feb. 10, 2020) (concluding that
attorney hourly rates between $220 and $550 were “reasonable and comparable to the rates
charged by law firms of similar size and stature in the Minneapolis legal market for attorneys
with similar levels of experience).
While the hourly rates for Quinn Emanuel and Spencer Fane attorneys have increased
slightly from those approved by the Court in HLC, the increase is reasonable in light of the
expertise of ResCap’s counsel, and the passage of time.6 Notably, Quinn Emanuel possesses
As noted, in HLC, Quinn Emanuel’s highest approved hourly rate was $675 per
hour, versus $722.50 per hour here, and Spencer Fane’s highest approved hourly rate in
HLC was $500 per hour, versus $540 per hour here. Compare HLC Fee Award, 399 F.
Supp. 3d at 846, with Horner Decl. ¶¶ 21, 28.) The highest approved hourly rates in HLC
for work performed by counsel from Felhaber and Carpenter Lipps remain unchanged, at
$440 per hour, and $415 per hour, respectively. Compare HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp.
2d at 846, with Horner Decl. ¶¶ 33, 38.
6
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specialized RMBS litigation experience, and Felhaber/Spencer Fane was RFC’s longtime
counsel, with prior experience in its mortgage-related litigation. The Court likewise finds the
hourly rates for timekeepers at Carpenter Lipps to be reasonable, particularly given the firm’s
RMBS bankruptcy-related expertise.
In general, Defendant does not challenge the reasonableness of ResCap’s counsel’s
hourly rates. However, PRMI notes that the rates for the attorneys at Felhaber increased when
they moved to Spencer Fane, and PRMI argues that ResCap provides no explanation for the
increase. (See Second Remele Dec. ¶ 12.) The Court does not find the hourly increase of
approximately $100 between the upper range of Felhaber’s and Spencer Fane’s billing rates
to be unreasonable. Local counsel moved between these two firms in January 2019, and it is
not unusual for firms to have different billing rates within the same market, or for firms to
increase hourly rates annually within a given firm. Ms. Horner, ResCap’s CFO, states that
counsel must obtain ResCap’s approval prior to implementing any rate increases. (First
Supp’l Horner Decl. ¶ 16.) When ResCap’s local counsel moved from Felhaber to Spencer
Fane, ResCap found the rate increase to be reasonable and approved it. (Id.) The Court does
not disagree.
Accordingly, for all of the foregoing reasons, the Court finds that the requested billing
rates are reasonable.
3. Reasonable Hours
The next considers whether the expenditure of billed hours was reasonable. PRMI
argues that ResCap fails to establish reasonableness in light of the nature and difficulty of the
case, and the amount involved and the results obtained. (Def.’s Opp’n at 8–13.) In addition
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to PRMI’s general objections to ResCap’s redacted invoices, it also argues the invoices show
that ResCap billed excessive or duplicative hours, particularly with regard to local counsel’s
work, and in comparison with defense counsel’s hours. (Id. at 18–34.)
a. The Nature and Difficulty of the Responsibility Assumed
Among the factors that courts consider when determining a reasonable lodestar is the
nature and difficulty of the responsibility assumed by counsel. Hensley, 461 U.S. at 434 n.3;
Milner, 748 N.W.2d at 621.
Unlike defense counsel’s prior argument in HLC that the lawsuit was straightforward,
HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 850, PRMI does not necessarily dispute the complexity
of this case, which involved issues such as statistical sampling, allocation, structured finance,
appraisals, and bankruptcy. (See Def.’s Opp’n at 8.)
However, it asserts that in light of
ResCap’s involvement in Wave One, and in particular, the HLC case, ResCap should have
litigated this “follow-on case” much more efficiently. (Def.’s Opp’n at 8; Def.’s Sur-Reply
at 4–6.) PRMI contends that “Plaintiff’s firms largely recycled work product from prior
cases,” and the amount of additional work that this case entailed was “far from extraordinary.”
(Def.’s Opp’n at 8.) PRMI asserts that the parties took only 14 fact or 30(b)(6) depositions,
the Court held only “15 case management conferences addressing Wave [Two] or this case,
12 of which were brief hearings following Wave [One] conferences; four in-person or
telephonic motions hearings; and only one pretrial conference.” (Id. at 9) (citing Clouser
Decl. ¶¶ 26–45, 85–86, 91).
The Court takes exception with PRMI’s characterization of this case as streamlined,
non-exceptional, or less difficult than HLC. PRMI freely entered into contracts with ResCap
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in which it agreed to pay attorney’s fees and costs that were incurred on PRMI’s account.
Nothing in the Guides requires that those fees and costs be incurred due to extraordinary
litigation or exceptional circumstances. That said, this litigation was exceptional. As the
Court explained in the HLC Fee Award ruling, the very nature of this type of litigation is
expensive, complicated, and time-consuming. 399 F. Supp. 3d at 849–50.
(1) PRMI Loan-Specific Work
While PRMI focuses narrowly on the number of depositions or other proceedings,
(Def.’s Opp’n at 9), the bench trial in this case represented the culmination of four years of
aggressive, complicated litigation about scores of individual PRMI loans. Throughout the
course of the instant lawsuit, ResCap was required to engage in time-consuming, case-specific
work, which included, among other things: (1) reunderwriting the 157 loans in question; (2)
addressing complicated causation questions concerning securitization representations in
different Trust documents; (3) presenting and responding to evidence regarding RFC’s
Bankruptcy; (4) presenting and defending a complicated damages allocation model as to
PRMI; and (5) presenting and responding to unique fact witnesses.
Each of these activities required numerous underlying case-specific steps.
For
example, with respect to reunderwriting, ResCap undertook the following actions: (1)
identifying and reviewing all versions of all loan files for each of PRMI’s loans, some of them
hundreds of pages long, and providing them to experts and vendors; (2) identifying and
providing all relevant program-specific guidelines and contract representations to ResCap’s
vendors and experts to assess alongside the loans; (3) retaining valuation and mortgage loan
schedule experts to conduct analyses for use in ResCap’s reunderwriting expert report; (4)
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providing the information to ResCap’s reunderwriting expert, Steven Butler, in order to
identify PRMI’s material breaches; and (5) confirming all of the data points and document
citations supporting each breach, and performing the same work with respect to Mr. Butler’s
rebuttal opinion. (Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶¶ 21, 24–27, 29, 32.)
At trial, ResCap’s
reunderwriting expert presented breach-level evidence for 12 PRMI loans with 24 breaches,
totaling 50 pages of testimony and the introduction of 5,711 pages of loan file exhibits. (FOF
& COL ¶¶ 152–73; 13-cv-3451, Feb. 12, 2020 Trial Tr. [Doc. No. 5481] at 544:11–547:4;
574:22–623:13.)
(2) PRMI’s New Arguments
Even with this loan-specific work, PRMI argues that this case was similar enough to
HLC that ResCap could have nevertheless litigated this “follow on” case much more
efficiently. (Def.’s Opp’n at 8; Def.’s Sur-Reply at 4–6.) Ironically, throughout the Wave
Two litigation, when Plaintiff sought to minimize duplicative work from Wave One, PRMI
frequently objected to such proposals, citing the unique facts of its case. PRMI repeatedly
emphasized that it was “differently situated than the first-wave defendants,” (13-cv-3451
[Doc. No. 5223] at 1), and that this case was “fundamentally different,” (13-cv-3451 [Doc.
No. 5020] at 2), with evidence that differed in “myriad ways.” (13-cv-3451 [Doc. No. 5296]
at 6.) Consequently, when ResCap suggested that the Wave Two parties streamline discovery
by relying on the Wave One depositions of some of ResCap’s witnesses, PRMI adamantly
opposed the suggestion:
There will be an issue in the Second Wave cases if Plaintiffs’ position is some
other Defendant deposed some other—deposed a witness in Wave One about
their case and you should live with their testimony in your case in Wave Two.
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My client PRMI has a right under the federal rules to depose individuals that
are relevant to the case against it where Plaintiffs are seeking millions of dollars
in damages.
So I’ll say at the outset that to the extent that Plaintiffs’ refrain here is going to
be, Well, somebody was deposed in Wave One so they shouldn’t be deposed
in Wave Two, we’re going to have an issue.
(13-cv-3451, Apr. 19, 2018 CMC Tr. [Doc. No. 3498] at 68:25-69:8, 70:23-71:8.)
Indeed, there were new issues and new evidence in this case. Causation and allocation
issues regarding the fraud disclaimers and pool-wide representations were a much more
significant issue at PRMI’s trial than in the HLC trial. (Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶¶ 47–48.)
This required ResCap to search for documents showing the meaning that industry
representatives ascribed to these representations at the time, prepare Plaintiff’s witnesses
Teresa Farley and Steven Butler to testify at their depositions and trial, and prepare to crossexamine defense witnesses Kori Keith, David Woll, and Steven Schwarcz on these
representations and disclaimers.
In addition, unlike HLC, ResCap was required to litigate this case breach-by-breach,
as PRMI’s reunderwriting expert contested the breaches that ResCap had identified. (FOF &
COL ¶¶ 126–73.) Thus, at trial, ResCap “had to develop . . . a presentation explaining each
of the 24 breaches” by “identif[ying] and explain[ing] all evidence supporting those breaches
from loan files and other information spanning thousands of pages,” and respond to PRMI’s
challenges to each breach. (Pl.’s Mem. at 9.)
This was also the only case involving loans sold, in part, by PRMI to RFC pursuant to
the AlterNet Guide. The loans at issue in HLC were exclusively sold pursuant to the Client
Guide. In this case, ResCap “undertook extensive searches for later versions of the AlterNet
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Guide” to respond to PRMI’s contention that the 1997 version of the AlterNet Guide was not
the applicable version, and to demonstrate that Mr. Butler’s use of the 1997 version was
appropriate. (FOF & COL ¶ 127–28.) Also, given the presence of the two Guides in this
case, ResCap and its expert undertook a comparison of the two Guides, concluding that the
R&Ws were “very similar.” (Id.)
Finally, while the issue of Assetwise-approved loans was present in HLC, in this case,
PRMI offered the new argument that the applicable R&Ws were limited to those identified in
an Assetwise Direct Criteria Agreement. (13-cv-3451, Jan. 23, 2020 Pretrial Hr’g Tr. [Doc.
No. 5389] at 90:17-23.) Thus, ResCap was required to litigate this issue through motion
practice, by preparing its witnesses Renee Bangerter and Steven Butler, and by preparing to
cross-examine defense witness Dave Zitting.
(3) Comparable Litigation
PRMI minimizes all of the complex and time-intensive work in this case, comparing
it to Assured Guaranty Municipal Corporation v. Flagstar Bank, FSB, an RMBS case
involving $90 million in damages, but only $3.69 million in attorney’s fees. (Def.’s SurReply at 5) (citing 920 F. Supp. 2d 475 (S.D.N.Y. 2013)). Flagstar, however, is an inapt
comparison, as it lasted merely one-and-a-half years from the filing of the complaint to trial,
with only 107 docket entries during that time. See 920 F. Supp. 2d at 477–78. By contrast,
the docket entries here related to the instant motion alone span over 90 entries, and the docket
entries in the consolidated action number 5,529 entries. In addition, Flagstar involved only
two underlying trusts, id. at 478, whereas this case involved over 500 settling trusts. (See
FOF & COL ¶ 323 (discussing whether a defense applied to a subset of the “506 Trusts
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covered by the Bankruptcy Settlements.”); HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 849 (referring
to the 506Trusts involved in the Bankruptcy Settlements). And unlike the damages expert in
Flagstar, who calculated how the defective loans impacted the two trusts by dividing the
original loan balance of defective charged-off loans against the total original loan balance of
all charged-off loans, 920 F. Supp. 2d at 486–87, ResCap’s expert, Dr. Snow, performed far
more complicated calculations. Dr. Snow was tasked with allocating billions of dollars of
RFC’s Bankruptcy Settlements to PRMI, while accounting for all of the losses and breach
rates of hundreds of defendants and other originators. (See FOF & COL ¶¶ 271–76.)
Indeed, the only comparable case is HLC, which involved a final award of
$42,766,931.50 in damages, and $18,002,732.84 million in attorney’s fees. HLC Fee Award,
399 F.3d at 851, 862. Despite the fact that the extrapolated damages at issue in this case were
less than those in HLC, in both cases, ResCap utilized a complicated sampling methodology
to determine damages. This required ResCap to analyze over 150 PRMI-specific loans, just
as it analyzed over 150 HLC-specific loans in HLC.
Certainly, some of the groundwork for this case was laid in the Wave One actions,
including HLC, in particular. When possible, ResCap sought to maximize any efficiencies
from the prior litigation. ResCap’s streamlined approach is apparent when looking at
comparable billing-intensive time periods in the months immediately surrounding and
including the trials in both HLC and PRMI. ResCap expended 40,698.4 hours in HLC (from
July 2018 through November 2018), compared to only 11,681.5 hours in PRMI (from
November 2019 through April 2020). (First Supp’l Horner Decl. ¶ 14, Ex. 54 [Doc. No.
105].) Similarly, while ResCap’s fees in HLC amounted to $13,851,133 during this window
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of time, the fees in PRMI during the comparable period—in fact, a one-month longer time
period, to account for ResCap’s preparation of proposed findings of fact and conclusions of
law—amounted to $9,214,243. (Id.) ResCap utilized the services of a smaller team of
attorneys, including more junior attorneys and local counsel, to a greater degree in the instant
action, leading to lower fees.7 (Id. ¶¶ 12–13; see also Dec. 18, 2020 Hr’g Tr. at 16–17.)
PRMI also overlooks a critical component of the factor “the nature and difficulty of
the responsibility assumed by counsel” as it applies to this case.
Hensley, 461 U.S. at 434
n.3; Milner, 748 N.W.2d at 621. As a court-appointed liquidating trust, ResCap is responsible
for pursuing recoveries against originating lenders such as PRMI for selling RFC defective
mortgage loans. (Horner Decl. ¶ 2.) As such, ResCap has been obliged to conduct the
litigation in a manner that will maximize its overall recovery. (See First Supp’l Horner Decl.
¶ 17) (“Over the course of the last seven years of litigating these cases, ResCap has viewed
its expenditure of legal fees in each action in light of the larger context of the ResCap
litigation, which has yielded $1.3 billion in settlements as of September 30, 2020.”).
(4) Challenges to Work Performed
PRMI presents challenges to the reasonableness of ResCap’s billable hours, broken
down by specific time periods. Overall, it argues that ResCap’s fees are excessive because it
merely recycled work from prior litigation and overstaffed this case.
In the Court’s consideration of other Milner/Hensley factors below, it will address
whether a reduction in billed hours is warranted for any inefficient or redundant staffing.
7
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(a) Pre-Complaint Period Through Month Complaint
Filed (December 1, 2014 to December 31, 2016)
First, PRMI objects to 105 hours billed from the “Pre-Complaint Period Through
Month Complaint Filed” (December 1, 2014 to December 31, 2016), arguing that during that
time period Plaintiff merely entered into tolling agreements and filed a complaint that
“mimick[ed] complaints” that ResCap had filed in prior actions. (Def.’s Opp’n at 20.)
The Court disagrees with PRMI’s assessment. The Complaint here contained PRMIspecific allegations, revisions to ResCap’s global allegations, and included specific examples
of breaches in PRMI loans that required loan-level analyses. (Compl. [Doc. No. 1] ¶¶ 2–3, 6,
14–15, 18–22, 26–27, 31–47, 52–55, 61–62, 66, 68, 70.) ResCap’s counsel also prepared
PRMI-specific exhibits to the Complaint that summarized the loan defects found during presuit reunderwriting and forensic review. (See id., Exs. A, B.) During this period, counsel for
ResCap also spent considerable time negotiating tolling agreements with defense counsel and
engaging in pre-suit settlement negotiations. (Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶¶ 17–18.) Finally,
during this time, ResCap relied heavily on local counsel with lower billable rates to finalize,
file, and prepare the Complaint, and to prepare pre-mediation materials. (Id. ¶ 19.)
In short, the Court finds that Plaintiff has sufficiently supported its billable hours and
distribution of work during this time period, set forth in its invoices and declarations.
(b) Pre-Stay Period/Document Discovery (January 1,
2017 to July 31, 2018)
PRMI also objects to the reasonableness of work performed during the “pre-stay
period/document discovery” (January 1, 2017 to July 31, 2018), during which ResCap’s
counsel billed 4,784 hours. (Def.’s Opp’n at 20–21.) While it acknowledges that Plaintiff
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produced discovery during this period, PRMI contends that ResCap hired a separate vendor,
Night Owl, to collect, process, review, search, and maintain 300,000 documents. (Id. at 21)
(citing Horner Decl. ¶ 62). Given the assistance of Night Owl, PRMI argues that ResCap
cannot justify its firms’ expenditure of billable hours for document production, and it also
argues that as to written discovery, “Plaintiff’s firms largely recycled requests and responses
from earlier cases.” (Id. at 21) (citing Clouser Decl. ¶ 19). Finally, PRMI asserts that ResCap
offers no explanation for why its local counsel billed more hours than its national counsel
during this period. (Id.)
The Court disagrees with PRMI’s characterization of the work performed by ResCap’s
counsel during this pre-stay discovery period. As ResCap’s counsel observes, multiple issues
arose during this time that required the attention of counsel, including: (1) negotiating and
preparing the Wave Two case management order; (2) negotiating and briefing the duration
and scope of additional 30(b)(6) testimony sought by Wave Two defendants; (3) negotiating
and supplementing ESI search terms and additional custodians, then analyzing the new
documents; (4) addressing a discovery dispute concerning third-party Ocwen; (5) conferring
with PRMI and presenting argument regarding PRMI’s desire to re-depose Wave One
witnesses; and (6) briefing and arguing a dispute concerning PRMI’s service of a subpoena
on a person who had served an expert report in pre-Bankruptcy litigation, James Aronoff.
(Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶ 20.)
Moreover, ResCap could not “recycle” its past work without considering the specific
work and analysis relevant to Wave Two. (Id. ¶ 21.) To that end, it was required to identify
information specific to PRMI’s relationship with RFC and serve several unique loan-level
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disclosures, including a PRMI-specific loan list with detailed information about all at-issue
loans. (Id.) Furthermore, during this time, ResCap’s counsel analyzed PRMI’s Answer, met
and conferred with PRMI’s counsel, filed a motion to strike PRMI’s affirmative defenses, and
attended 13 case management conferences that required the attendance of both local and
national counsel, as well as preparation for the conferences, including written submissions.
(Id. ¶ 22.)
Also, among other things, Plaintiff’s counsel identified contracts and matched
guidelines for the reunderwriting in this matter, with local counsel taking the lead in this
process.
(Id. ¶ 23.)
The parties exchanged disclosures identifying all the contracts,
commitments, and bulk purchase agreements applicable to the at-issue loans subject to the
Contract Identification Protocol (13-cv-3451 [Doc. No. 3154]), which involved an
extraordinary amount of underlying work, including searching additional sources of data in
order to identify potential exceptions or variances to the underwriting guidelines. (Supp’l
Christenson Decl. ¶¶ 24–25.) As part of the guideline-matching process, ResCap’s counsel
then analyzed on a loan-level basis the applicable guidelines, contracts, commitment data, bid
tapes and loan files or exception documents pertinent to each of the 157 loans in the PRMI
sample, and provided that information to its reunderwriting experts. (Id. ¶ 27.)
Finally, during this time, ResCap’s counsel furnished additional time-consuming loanspecific analyses for its Automated Valuation Model (“AVM”) experts and appraisal experts,
Drs. John Kilpatrick and Albert Lee, and Mr. Steve Albert. (Id.)
In sum, the Court finds that ResCap has sufficiently supported the necessity of the
work performed during this time period, as well as the distribution of labor between local and
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national counsel, as reflected in its invoices and declarations. It was also not unreasonable
for ResCap to rely heavily on local counsel at this time, given their lower billing rates.
(c) Stay Period (August 1, 2018 to January 31, 2019)
Next, PRMI argues that during the “stay period” (August 1, 2018 to January 31, 2019),
ResCap’s counsel unreasonably billed 921 hours. (Def.’s Opp’n at 21–22.) Again, it also
questions why local counsel billed more hours than national counsel during this time period.
(Id. at 22.)
As ResCap’s counsel notes, the majority of fees during this period were billed in
January 2019, when the parties were preparing to reengage in fact and expert discovery and
litigation. (Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶ 28.) Throughout December 2018 and January 2019,
the parties held lengthy negotiations regarding the scope of post-stay discovery. (Id.) In
anticipation of the stay being lifted, ResCap also began preparing for depositions and expert
discovery in January, which involved resuming work on the labor-intensive guidelinematching project. (Id. ¶ 29.)
The Court finds that ResCap has sufficiently supported the necessity of the work
performed during this time, as well as its billable hours and distribution of work, through the
submission of its invoices and declarations. The Court accounts for any duplicative work,
infra, in its discussion of fees customarily charged for similar services, but as a general matter,
it was reasonable for ResCap to rely heavily on the services of local counsel at this time, given
their lower billing rates.
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(d) Fact Depositions and Opening Expert Reports
(February 1, 2019 to May 31, 2019)
PRMI next points to the period of fact depositions and opening expert reports
(February 1, 2019 to May 31, 2019) during which ResCap’s counsel billed 6,186 hours.
(Def.’s Opp’n at 22–23.) PRMI contends that ResCap took only eleven depositions during
this period, yet routinely overstaffed them. (Id.) (citing Clouser Decl. ¶¶ 50–59, 61–63). In
addition, while PRMI acknowledges that Plaintiff issued expert reports during this time, it
claims that Plaintiff “repurposed expert reports from prior cases,” and that ResCap’s local
counsel “inexplicably” billed nearly as many hours as national counsel, raising concerns about
duplicative billing. (Id. at 23.)
PRMI understates the labor-intensive work performed during this time period. In
addition to preparing for fact depositions and opening expert reports, the parties were engaged
in ongoing disputes and negotiations concerning the case management order and schedule,
fact depositions, and the scope of 30(b)(6) depositions. (Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶ 30.)
Plaintiff’s preparation for fact depositions was understandably time-consuming, involving
witness preparation about events occurring years ago, and the disclosure of all potential
deposition exhibits in advance of the deposition. (Id. ¶ 31.) For example, PRMI identified
over 100 documents for the deposition of ResCap witness Renee Bangerter, which
necessitated hours of review. (Id.)
As to PRMI’s claim that ResCap simply “repurposed” past expert reports, it overlooks
the substantial work involved in submitting PRMI-specific exhibits and analyses with certain
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reports. (Id. ¶ 32.) For example, in support of Mr. Butler’s expert report, he submitted 12
exhibits detailing his breach analyses for the PRMI loans. (Id.)
In addition, during this time period, PRMI served case-specific written discovery on
ResCap, requiring substantial document searches and analyses, as well as document-bydocument review for privileged material, since some of the requests targeted documents
involving RFC’s in-house counsel. (Id. ¶ 33.)
Local counsel was actively involved during this period, serving deposition exhibit
disclosures, handling custodial document certification for deposition witnesses, secondchairing depositions, and meeting and conferring regularly with PRMI’s counsel. (Id. ¶ 34.)
The Court finds Plaintiff has sufficiently demonstrated the reasonableness of the work
performed during this period and the delegation of work, as reflected in its invoices and
declarations. Again, the Court accounts for any duplicative work in its discussion of fees
customarily charged for similar services.
(e) Expert Discovery/Opening Summary-Judgment
and Daubert Briefs (June 1, 2019 to October 31,
2019)
Next, PRMI notes that in the period of “expert discovery/opening summary-judgment
and Daubert briefs” (June 1, 2019 to October 31, 2019), ResCap’s counsel billed 4,174 hours.
(Def.’s Opp’n at 23.) PRMI finds these billable hours unreasonable because the parties took
only two additional fact or Rule 30(b)(6) depositions during this period. (Id.) (citing Clouser
Decl. ¶¶ 60, 64). And, regarding expert discovery, PRMI contends that ResCap spent most
of this period “waiting for PRMI’s rebuttal reports to be issued in August,” after which
ResCap issued “only three short reply reports,” two of which included work previously done
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in Wave One cases. (Id. at 23–24) (citing Clouser Decl. ¶ 68). PRMI also claims that the
work involved in expert depositions was relatively minor (“the parties took or defended only
seven expert depositions” for a total of “only about 41 hours”), and the preparation of opening
summary judgment and Daubert memoranda was not unusual (the briefs “were within
standard word limits,” with the Daubert brief incorporating prior briefing or rulings on 19 of
24 issues.”). (Id. at 24) (citing Clouser Decl. ¶¶ 68, 70–71, 80–82).
The Court finds that PRMI understates the amount of work and its necessity during
this time period. As to expert discovery, ResCap’s expert reports were not copies of its prior
work, as reflected in Dr. Snow’s supplemental report, which addressed two new PRMIspecific damages approaches (a monoline-by-monoline approach, and a non-extrapolated
approach.) (Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶ 35.) Counsel for ResCap also prepared for the seven
expert depositions during this time, and the parties were involved in other expert-related work,
including stipulations concerning the expert reports of Mr. Thomas Kaufman, Prof. George
Triantis, and Justice Anthony Carpinello, as well as ResCap’s Motion for a Protective Order,
and PRMI’s Motion to Compel the production of Wave One expert reports and a resulting
stipulation. (Id. ¶ 36.)
Also during this period, PRMI belatedly, and unsuccessfully, sought to demand a jury
trial for the first time, arguing that the Court was biased due to its role in presiding over the
HLC trial. (Id. ¶ 37; see also July 25, 2019 Order [Doc. No. 5189].) PRMI’s belated motion
to request a jury trial necessitated the filing of memoranda and argument.
In addition, because of new issues in this case, ResCap’s summary judgment and
Daubert memoranda were substantially different from those in Wave One.
42
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Christenson Decl. ¶ 38.) In fact, ResCap limited its discussion of 19 previously-decided
issues to five pages of its 28-page initial summary judgment memorandum. (13-cv-3451,
Pl.’s PRMI Summ. J. Mem. [Doc. No. 5276] at 4–9.) Its remaining briefing either addressed
new issues or responded to arguments that PRMI had asserted on previously-decided issues.
(See id.)
Also at that time, ResCap’s counsel engaged in ongoing negotiations and
modifications of case scheduling, numerous submissions to the Court on discrete issues,
multiple meet and confers, letter briefing, and argument on whether PRMI intended to pursue
41 affirmative defenses identified in its Answer. (Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶ 39.)
Having reviewed ResCap’s invoices and declarations, the Court finds that ResCap’s
fee request for work performed during this period is sufficiently supported and is reasonable.
(f) Summary Judgment and Daubert Opposition,
Replies, and Hearings (November 1, 2019 to
December 11, 2019), and Pre-Trial Proceedings
(December 12, 2019 to February 9, 2020)
Next, PRMI takes issue with Plaintiff’s counsel’s 1,671 hours billed during the period
of filing summary judgment and Daubert opposition memoranda, reply memoranda, and
related hearings (November 1, 2019 to December 11, 2019). (Def.’s Opp’n at 27–28.) While
PRMI acknowledges that ResCap filed various briefs, it argues that “they all were within
standard word limits and largely addressed issues Plaintiff had briefed before.” (Id. at 27)
(citing Clouser Decl. ¶¶ 80–84). In addition, PRMI argues that ResCap overstaffed the
hearings on summary judgment and Daubert with more timekeepers than those who presented
substantive arguments. (Id.) It also notes that during this time, while Plaintiff’s counsel billed
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1,671 hours, PRMI’s counsel only billed 881 hours.8 (Id. at 28) (citing Second Remele Decl.
¶ 63).
PRMI also challenges ResCap’s 4,426 billable hours incurred during the period of
“pre-trial proceedings” (December 12, 2019 to February 9, 2020). (Id. at 28–29.) It argues
that opposing counsel “should have been far more efficient, especially since they already had
tried a similar case to verdict.” (Id. at 28.) It notes that Plaintiff used three repeat witnesses
from the HLC trial, Plaintiff filed just three motions in limine, PMRI filed no motions in
limine, and the parties filed short trial briefs. (Id.) (citing Clouser Decl. ¶¶ 89–90). These
activities were not so extraordinary, PRMI argues, to justify the number of ResCap’s billable
hours, and PRMI also contends that ResCap has not explained why its local counsel billed
more than 1,500 hours during this time. (Id. at 28–29.) By contrast, PRMI notes that during
this same period, PRMI’s counsel billed only 2,210 hours compared to ResCap’s 4,426 hours.
(Id. at 29) (citing Second Remele Decl. ¶ 68).
The Court finds that, again, PRMI understates the significant case-specific work that
ResCap’s counsel undertook during this time—work that led to an outstanding result. For
example, PRMI’s initial trial exhibit list included 725 documents which ResCap’s counsel
had to individually analyze, and identify all of its evidentiary objections for each document
in advance of trial. (Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶ 40.) Likewise, ResCap’s counsel prepared
responses to PRMI’s objections to the 364 documents on ResCap’s own exhibit list. (Id.)
The Court addresses the general matter of comparing the billable hours of Plaintiff’s
counsel and Defendant’s counsel, infra, in its discussion of fees customarily charged for
similar services.
8
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As to the 14 fact and expert witnesses whom PRMI intended to call for live testimony,
ResCap’s counsel prepared examination outlines based on prior testimony and analysis of
related exhibits, in addition to preparing for the examination of Plaintiff’s own nine identified
witnesses. (Id. ¶ 41.) The case also involved significant deposition testimony, requiring
ResCap’s counsel to analyze transcripts from 17 witnesses, making affirmative and rebuttal
designations to the testimony of its own witnesses, and objecting to the testimony of PRMI’s
witnesses. (Id. at ¶ 42.)
Furthermore, during this time, the parties engaged in substantial briefing on
evidentiary issues, met and conferred regarding ResCap’s breach of contract claim and the
submission of alternative damages calculations at trial, and submitted multiple trial
stipulations. (Id. ¶ 43. ) Regarding the number of attorneys attending hearings, there were
many reasons for multiple attorneys to be present, including the ability to research issues as
they arose, and to draw upon an attorney’s expertise. Again, the Court accounts for any
duplicative work in its discussion of fees customarily charged for similar services, infra.
The Court finds that through its invoices and declarations, Plaintiff has sufficiently
demonstrated the overall reasonableness of the hours billed to these tasks during this period
of time.
(g) Bench Trial (February 10, 2020 to March 13, 2020)
PRMI also finds unreasonable the 4,117 hours billed by ResCap’s counsel during the
period of the bench trial in this matter, held on non-consecutive days from February 10, 2020
to March 13, 2020. (Def.’s Opp’n at 29–31.) It argues that the bench trial was not exceptional
in length, there were only 12 live witnesses, and there were collective deposition designations
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from 14 witnesses. (Id. at 29–30) (citing Clouser Decl. ¶¶ 94, 108). In addition, PRMI
contends that ResCap overstaffed its trial team, with 30 timekeepers compared to PRMI’s 16
timekeepers, and “overstaffed the trial itself.” (Id. at 30) (citing Second Remele Decl. ¶¶ 71,
73). In particular, PRMI takes issue with the 125 hours billed by Carpenter Lipps during trial,
noting that counsel from that firm did not question witnesses or enter an appearance at trial.
(Id. at 30) (citing Second Remele Decl. ¶ 74). Overall, PRMI argues that a comparison
between ResCap’s 4,117 billable hours and PRMI’s 2,296 billable hours during trial shows
that ResCap’s billable hours are unreasonable. (Id. at 31.)
The Court has reviewed the applicable invoices and finds that the hours billed by
ResCap’s counsel during trial were reasonable. As noted, the trial involved multiple
complicated issues. At trial, ResCap was required to identify the loan-level breaches in
question, requiring its expert to master details contained in loan files and related documents
that spanned thousands of pages. (Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶ 44.) To that end, ResCap’s
reunderwriting expert presented breach-level testimony for 12 PRMI loans relating to 24
breaches, amounting to 50 pages of testimony and the introduction of 5,711 pages of loan file
exhibits. (Id.)
In addition, with respect to a single loan issued by Countrywide Financial, discussed
separately, infra, ResCap presented breach-level evidence at trial and prepared for and took
the deposition of PRMI’s fact witness, Jim Crawford, during trial. (Id. ¶ 45.) After PRMI
rejected ResCap’s offer to submit Mr. Crawford’s full deposition testimony in lieu of trial
testimony, five trial witnesses addressed this loan, totaling 62 pages of trial testimony. (Id.)
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With respect to loans that had been approved through RFC’s proprietary automated
underwriting system, Assetwise (the “Assetwise Loans”), also discussed separately, infra, six
trial witnesses testified for 309 pages of trial testimony. (Id. ¶ 46.)
Moreover, as compared to the HLC trial, securitization-level representations and
warranties were a much more significant issue in the PRMI trial. (Id. ¶¶ 47–48.) In PRMI, a
total of nine witnesses (four ResCap witnesses and five PRMI witnesses) testified about these
issues for over 927 pages of the trial transcript, whereas in HLC, four ResCap witnesses
provided unrebutted testimony about securitization representations for 101 pages of the trial
transcript. (Id.)
In addition, the damages testimony in the PRMI trial involved a significant number of
PRMI-specific issues and approaches. (Id. ¶ 49.) Drs. Snow and McCrary testified for 101
pages of trial testimony regarding the monoline allocation methodology, and for 83 pages of
trial testimony regarding the at-issue population and the NDS Trust breach rate. (Id. ¶ 50.)
Finally, as to staffing at trial, there are many reasons for attorneys to be present,
including the ability to research issues as they arise, and to draw upon an attorney’s expertise.
Because of that expertise, long-standing institutional knowledge, and preexisting relationship
with trial witnesses, counsel from Carpenter Lipps appropriately attended trial. (First Supp’l
Horner Decl. ¶ 12.)
In sum, having considered the parties’ arguments and after reviewing the applicable
invoices, the Court finds that Plaintiff has sufficiently supported its fee request for the
complicated work performed during trial.
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(h) Post-Trial Submissions (March 14, 2020 to April
30, 2020)
PRMI next challenges the 1,467 hours billed by ResCap’s counsel during the post-trial
period from March 14, 2020 to April 30, 2020, when the parties prepared and submitted
proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. (Def.’s Opp’n at 31–32.) By comparison,
PRMI notes that its counsel billed only 762 hours, yet filed a document of comparable length.
(Def.’s Opp’n at 31–32.) Also, PRMI argues that the number of hours billed by local counsel
at this time (548) raises concerns about duplicative billing and overstaffing. (Id. at 31.)
Having reviewed the invoices for this period, the Court finds that Plaintiff’s billable
hours incurred during this period were generally reasonable. ResCap’s 233-page proposed
findings of fact and conclusions of law was understandably the product of multiple attorneys,
including the members of the attorney teams who had been responsible for certain witnesses
during the trial. (Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶ 52.) Moreover, ResCap delegated the timeconsuming work of providing record citations to junior attorneys, with lower billable rates.
(Id. ¶ 53.) The fact that PRMI billed fewer hours on its own proposed findings of fact and
conclusions of law is not an apt comparison, as the Court discusses in greater detail, infra,
regarding fees customarily charged for similar services. Again, the Court finds ResCap’s
staffing complement at this time to be generally reasonable, given the magnitude of the work
performed and the need for multiple attorneys’ familiarity with the issues and evidence.
Again, the Court accounts for any duplicative hours below.
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(i) Months Following Post-Trial Submissions (May 1,
2020 to July 31, 2020)
PRMI argues that from May 1, 2020 to July 31, 2020, after the filing of the proposed
findings of fact and conclusions of law, ResCap unreasonably incurred 376 billable hours.
(Def.’s Opp’n at 32.) It argues that there was no case activity during this time, therefore
ResCap’s billable hours are unreasonable. (Id.)
The Court disagrees. As Plaintiff notes, during this time period, it anticipated the
instant motion and began drafting its supporting memorandum and declaration. (Supp’l
Christenson Decl. ¶ 54.) Plaintiff’s counsel worked with ResCap to analyze and prepare the
supporting law firm and vendor invoices, which included applying search terms, categorizing
fees, reviewing entries of privileged material, and redacting privileged information. (Id.)
Having reviewed the numerous invoices for this period submitted in connection with the First
Supplemental Horner Declaration, the Court finds that the 376 hours billed during this time
were reasonable.
(j) Fee Petition Litigation (November 2020 to
December 2020)
Finally, PRMI objects ResCap’s billable hours for the period of time it labels “fee
petition litigation” (November 2020 to December 2020), for which ResCap seeks $316,751
in fees and costs. (Def.’s Supp’l Opp’n at 5.) It again takes issue with the provision of
redacted invoices and the amount of billable hours. (Id. at 5–6.) And, in general, it argues
that Plaintiff may not recover fees incurred in litigating or preparing the fee petition. (Id. at
7–8.)
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Having reviewed the invoices applicable to this period, submitted with the Second
Supplemental Horner Declaration, the Court finds ResCap’s $316,751 in fees and costs
related to this work to be reasonable. ResCap obtained an expert, submitted several letters,
and additional briefing, declarations, and exhibits in response to PRMI’s opposition to the
instant motion. The Court addresses the general propriety of recovery of fees for the
preparation of a fee petition separately, below.
In sum, having considered the nature and difficulty of the responsibility assumed, the
Court finds that this litigation was extraordinarily complex, and involved issues unique to this
particular lawsuit and this particular Defendant. PRMI also downplays the fact that this case
involved expensive loan-by-loan litigation.
When possible, ResCap sought to streamline its work and its staffing complement. At
all times, however, because it carried the burden of proof, ResCap was required to
affirmatively establish its right to indemnification in a complex case, and to respond to
PRMI’s equally complex defenses and arguments. PRMI was entitled to vigorously defend
itself. However, based on the provisions of the Guides, PRMI conducted its defense knowing
full well that it might be required to compensate ResCap for its attorney’s fees. The Court
has reviewed ResCap’s detailed invoices, and for all of the foregoing reasons, finds that
consideration of the nature and difficulty of the responsibility assumed supports Plaintiff’s
request for attorney’s fees.
b. Amount Involved and Results Obtained
Another factor for determining a reasonable lodestar and whether an adjustment to
the lodestar is warranted, is the overall amount involved in the litigation and the results
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obtained. Hensley, 461 U.S. at 434 n.9; Milner, 748 N.W.2d at 621 (citing Paulson, 188
N.W.2d at 426). This factor is not dispositive. Best Buy Stores, L.P. v. Developers
Diversified Realty Corp., No. 05-cv-2310 (DSD/JJG), 2011 WL 1321387, at *4 (D. Minn.
Apr. 4, 2011). Courts do not apply a “dollar value proportionality rule,” but consider this
factor, among many others, in assessing reasonableness. Green v. BMW of N. Am., LLC,
826 N.W.2d 530, 537 (Minn. 2013). And in particular, the Minnesota Supreme Court
advises that the “amount involved” factor is not limited to the “prevailing party’s
percentage of success,” but rather, should be considered in tandem with the results
obtained. Id.
Thus, given these fact-specific considerations, a “court may find a fee award in
excess of damages to be reasonable.” See Best Buy, 2011 WL 1321387, at *4; While this
may arise more commonly in civil rights litigation, where damages awards do not
necessarily reflect the overall public benefit of the litigation, see City of Riverside v. Rivera,
477 U.S. 561, 575 (1986), courts have also awarded fees exceeding damages in breach of
contract actions. On the other hand, given different facts, courts have found fee requests
that exceed that the results obtained to be unreasonable. See Milner, 748 N.W.2d at 620
(finding enhanced fee award of $1.8 million, on a $376,000 Minnesota Fair Labor
Standards Act judgment inappropriate and not “reasonable in relation to the results
obtained.”).
PRMI argues that ResCap’s fee request is particularly unreasonable in light of the
amount involved and the results obtained—$5.4 million. (Def.’s Opp’n at 9–13; Def.’s SurReply at 2–4.) It argues that ResCap’s requested attorney’s fees of $14,156,095.26 are
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entirely disproportionate to the $5.4 million damages award, and demonstrate the
unreasonableness of the fee request. (Def.’s Opp’n at 9–13; Def.’s Sur-Reply at 2–4.)
(1) Prejudgment Interest Included in Damages Award
An accurate comparison between the amount of ResCap’s fee request and the amount
of its damages must include pre-award prejudgment interest on the damages side of the ledger.
As in HLC, defense counsel again argues that prejudgment interest should not be included in
the damages total. (Def.’s Opp’n at 12 n.4.)
As relevant here, Minn. Stat. § 549.09 provides for pre-award prejudgment interest on
pecuniary damages from the time of the commencement of the action until the time of the
verdict or award. Minn. Stat. 549.09, subds. 1(a), (b) & (c)(2). Where the damages award is
greater than $50,000, as is the case here, the interest rate is 10% per year. Minn. Stat. §
549.09, subd. 1(c)(2). Plaintiff’s damages award is not for future damages likely to occur in
the future, but for losses incurred many years ago, see In re RFC & ResCap Liquid. Tr. Litig.,
No. 13-cv-3451 (SRN/HB), 2019 WL 1237166, at *4 (D. Minn. Mar. 18, 2019) (“HLC
Prejudgment Int. Order”), since “final and actual liability is required for the accrual of an
indemnification claim” in Minnesota. HLC Summ. J. Order, 332 F. Supp. 2d at 1187 (citing
Metro. Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co. v. Metro Transit Comm’n, 538 N.W.2d 692, 695 (Minn. 1995)).
Consequently, in HLC, the damages award including pre-verdict prejudgment interest was
$42,766,931.50, and the Court awarded attorney’s fees and costs in the amount of
$23,081,252.31. HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 850–51, 862.
The Court finds that here too, pre-award prejudgment interest is an element of
ResCap’s damages, as opposed to an award of future damages. See id.; HLC Prejudgment
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Int. Order, 2019 WL 1237166, at *4. Accordingly, adding ResCap’s requested prejudgment
interest of $1,999.180.27 to its previously-awarded damages of $5.4 million results in a total
damages award of $7,399,180.27.
(2) Amount of Plaintiff’s Attorney’s Fees
While the addition of approximately $2 million in pre-award prejudgment interest to
the damages award increases ResCap’s damages total to approximately $7.4 million, ResCap
seeks an award of attorney’s fees of approximately $10.6 million. (Supp’l Horner Decl., Ex.
48.) There are several reasons why ResCap’s requested fee award is higher than its damages
award. First, as discussed earlier, the sheer complexity of numerous issues in this case
resulted in time-consuming, expensive litigation, as did the loan-by-loan nature of this
litigation, unlike HLC.
Second, a significant driver for the high amount of ResCap’s attorney’s fees was the
manner in which PRMI conducted its defense. PRMI contends that ResCap cannot assign
blame for its high attorney’s fees on PRMI. (Def.’s Opp’n at 32–34.) That proposition is
incorrect as a general matter. See, e.g., Riverside, 477 U.S. at 580 n.11 (“[A defendant] cannot
litigate tenaciously and then be heard to complain about the time necessarily spent by the
plaintiff in response.”) (quotation omitted); Ewald v. Royal Norwegian Embassy, No. 11-cv2116 (SRN/SER), 2015 WL 1746375, at *15 (D. Minn. Apr. 13, 2015) (Noting that “a
heavily-litigated case is not typically a one-sided affair,” which explains why [plaintiff’s]
attorney’s fees and costs are relatively high.”); Coral Grp., Inc. v. Shell Oil Co., No. 4:05CCV-633-DGK, 2013 WL 4067625, at *5 (W.D. Mo. Aug. 12, 2013) (Awarding attorney’s
fees to defendant, and stating, “Of course, both parties litigated this case with a concede
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nothing, contest everything attitude which dramatically increased their litigation costs. But it
is well-established that where one party, in this case the Plaintiffs, litigates tenaciously, they
cannot complain about the time spent by the other party.”)
PRMI’s contention that it cannot be “blamed” for ResCap’s attorneys fees is
especially inapt here, given the Guides’ fee-shifting provision. PRMI was fully aware of the
Guides’ fee-shifting provisions and the possibility that it might be required to pay ResCap’s
attorney’s fees. Moreover, it was equally aware of this Court’s attorney’s fee award in HLC,
as both HLC and PRMI involved the same attorneys on both sides. Nevertheless, PRMI’s
defense counsel employed legal strategies that significantly increased ResCap’s attorney’s
fees by challenging individual components of Plaintiff’s damages claim that were of relatively
low or modest financial value; and rearguing numerous issues that were either previously
decided in HLC, on very similar facts, or previously decided in the instant case. Due to the
Guides’ fee-shifting provisions, PRMI’s conduct carries consequences.
(3) Challenges to Components of Damages Claim
PRMI aggressively challenged components of ResCap’s damages claim, even when
the individual components had a relatively low or modest financial impact on damages.
While PRMI argues that ResCap’s fee request is out of proportion to its damages award,
PRMI overlooks its own practice of litigating aspects of Plaintiff’s damages claim in ways
that were out of proportion to the amounts at issue, thereby driving up ResCap’s attorney’s
fees.
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(a) Countrywide Loan
One example of PRMI’s disproportionate defense conduct with respect to damages
concerned the “Countrywide Loan.”
PRMI had purchased loans from Countrywide
Financial, also an originating lender, that were underwritten to Countrywide’s guidelines.
PRMI Summ. J. Order, 428 F. Supp. 3d at 88. PRMI later sold a pool of the Countrywideunderwritten loans to RFC, and a single one of these loans, the Countrywide Loan, was at
issue in this litigation, amounting to approximately $30,000 in damages. (FOF & COL ¶
171.) PRMI argued that because the loan had been underwritten to Countrywide’s guidelines,
the Guides’ more stringent R&Ws were inapplicable to it. PRMI Summ. J. Order, 428 F.
Supp. 3d at 90. Litigating the $30,000 Countrywide Loan involved discovery, motion
practice, expert and fact witness deposition testimony (some of which occurred in the midst
of trial), and trial testimony.9 However, at trial, even PRMI’s expert, Kori Keith, conceded
At the final pretrial conference in this case, counsel addressed issues concerning
the deposition and trial testimony of PRMI’s proposed fact witness on the Countrywide
Loan, Mr. Crawford. ResCap’s counsel stated:
9
On Countrywide, I don’t want to spend any more time on this than we already
have . . . except to say Mr. Crawford should be stricken as a witness. . . .
[T]here’s no need and no basis for Mr. Crawford to come and do the same
thing [as PRMI’s fact witness Mr. Zitting] in the context of a loan where our
claim is worth $30,000. And not only that, but then they are asking us to fly
to Utah to depose him pretrial.
The whole thing is—counsel used the word “crazy,” and I won’t go that far,
but the whole thing is distressing. I will go that far.
And I will say two more things on this. Number one, I think it will be useful
for us to know if Mr. Crawford will be covering anything other than the
Countrywide [Loan]. And I would also be interested to know whether if we
were forced to fly to Utah, will they stipulate that if we prevail in the
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that no set of guidelines would permit borrower fraud, and PRMI’s fact witness, Jim
Crawford, agreed that a prohibition on misrepresentation in origination is a standard industry
representation required by all investors, including Countrywide. (FOF & COL ¶ 173.)
Despite the relatively low value of the Countrywide Loan, PRMI unsuccessfully
persisted in challenging it, in a manner that far exceeded the loan’s impact on damages.
Ultimately, the Court concluded that ResCap “easily” met its burden to establish that the
Countrywide Loan was in breach and contributed to its damages. (Id.) Despite PRMI’s
arguments to the contrary, (Def.’s Sur-Reply at 9–10) (citing Smallwood Decl. ¶ 49), PRMI’s
outsized approach to the Countrywide Loan increased ResCap’s attorney’s fees
exponentially.
(b) Monoline Allocation
Although PRMI downplays the impact of its Monoline Allocation argument on
Plaintiff’s fees, (Def.’s Sur-Reply at 9), it litigated the $400,000 Monoline Allocation, worth
approximately 7% of ResCap’s total damages, as if it were a multi-million-dollar issue.
PRMI’s expert Dr. McCrary criticized Dr. Snow’s methodology to allocate a portion of the
Monoline Settlement to PRMI, which relied on blended monoline breach rates that included
loans insured by different monoline insurers. (FOF & COL ¶ 358.) But the Court found that
Dr. Snow’s methodology accounted for potential differences between the breach rates in
litigation and put in an attorneys’ fee application, will they stipulate that they
are not going to argue that spending $50,000 to depose somebody on a
$30,000 issue is unreasonable.
(13-cv-3451, Jan. 23, 2020 Pretrial Hr’g Tr. at 108:18-109:25.)
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different monoline settlements.
(Id. ¶ 359.)
Moreover, the costs of drawing and
reunderwriting monoline-by-monoline samples, in the manner Dr. McCrary advocated,
would have added approximately $11 million to ResCap’s expert expenses, far outstripping
the $400,000 in damages that ResCap sought for the Monoline Allocation. (Id. ¶ 360.)
While Dr. McCrary failed to quantify the impact of his critique on the Monoline
Allocation, in a rebuttal response to Dr. McCrary’s criticisms, Dr. Snow verified his
methodology, and further performed a non-extrapolated calculation, to which Dr. McCrary
did not meaningfully object. (Id. ¶ 361.) In fact, Dr. Snow’s subsequent calculations, which
accounted for the maximum possible impact of Dr. McCrary’s criticisms, found a difference
of only $115,000 between Dr. Snow’s baseline calculation and his non-extrapolated
calculation. (Id.) Although PRMI claims that the Monoline Allocation accounted for just
3.5% of the time at trial, (Def.’s Sur-Reply at 9), it glosses over the fact that this $115,000
potential difference in damages necessitated ResCap’s rebuttal report, argument in Daubert
motions and summary judgment motions, deposition testimony, and expert testimony and
cross-examination at trial. (13-cv-3451, Feb. 20, 2020 PRMI Trial Tr. [Doc. No. 5486] at
16–22) (“Q: And so the 40 minutes that all of us in this courtroom spent in cross-examination
regarding your monoline allocation methodology, that was all a dispute around $115,000? .
. . Dr. Snow: Yes.”). The Court ultimately concluded that Dr. Snow’s baseline monoline
methodology, resulting in a Monoline Allocation of $400,000, was reasonable and reliable,
(FOF & COL ¶ 361), and was part of ResCap’s overall damages allocation that met the
requirements of Minnesota law for the determination of damages, and the allocation of
settlements across multiple defendants. (Id. ¶ 450.)
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(c) At-Issue Population and NDS Trusts
Through trial, PRMI litigated Dr. Snow’s determination of the At-Issue Loan
Population and his treatment of the NDS Trust breach rate. As to the At-Issue Population,
Dr. Snow based his allocation methodology on samples drawn from the At-Issue Population
of loans, i.e., loans included in the Bankruptcy Settlements that had actual losses of at least
$500, or expected losses, as of May 2013. (Id. ¶ 354.) Regarding the NDS Trust breach rate,
Dr. Snow deducted $269 million from the RMBS Trust Allowed Claim to account for
settlement proceeds attributable to NDS Trusts for which ResCap did not seek indemnity.
(Id. ¶ 350.)
PRMI chose to contest these issues, even though its damages expert, Dr. McCrary, had
previously acknowledged in HLC that the maximum possible impact of these issues on
damages was “minor.” (Id. ¶ 369.) In fact, while PRMI attempts to undercut the impact of
this issue on Plaintiff’s attorney’s fees, it concedes that this issue was previously litigated,
stating, “both experts already had addressed these issues in HLC, and the issues accounted for
just 3% of this trial.” (Def.’s Sur-Reply at 9) (citing Smallwood Decl. ¶ 53). But PRMI’s
refusal to fully consider Dr. McCrary’s prior opinion, and to press the issue instead, both
amplified ResCap’s attorney’s fees and costs in PRMI, and undermined Dr. McCrary’s
credibility. (FOF & COL ¶ 369) (“Indeed, after having testified that a larger $350,000 impact
[of the issues regarding the NDS Trust and at-issue population] in Home Loan Center was
minor, Dr. McCrary undermined his credibility here by insisting that it was ‘not for [him] to
say’ whether a $330,000 impact here would be too small.”).
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(d) Assetwise Loans
Also fiercely litigated by PRMI were loans underwritten through RFC’s proprietary
automated underwriting system, Assetwise (the “Assetwise Loans”). (Id. ¶ 150.) In general,
PRMI argued that some of the Guides’ R&Ws were inapplicable to the Assetwise Loans, and
that by purchasing the Assetwise-approved loans, ResCap was estopped from seeking
recovery for them. The Assetwise Loans were worth approximately $425,000, but were the
subject of letters to the Court, summary judgment motions, Daubert motions, and fact and
expert witness testimony. ResCap warned PRMI that the cost to litigate the Assetwise
Loans—and other issues—eclipsed their value, (13-cv-3451, Pl.’s Jan. 21, 2020 Letter [Doc.
No. 5380] at 1, 3–5), but PRMI insisted that the loans were “incredibly consequential to
PRMI,” and that “plaintiff doesn’t get to dictate how PRMI defends itself.” (13-cv-3451, Jan.
23, 2020 Pretrial Hr’g Tr. at 127:22–23; 128:16–17.) ResCap reviewed and objected to 300
Assetwise-related trial exhibits, which the Court found were “insufficient, even cumulatively,
to establish waiver or estoppel, and [would] be subject to exclusion. (13-cv-3451, PRMI
Mots. in Limine Order [Doc. No. 5390] at 34.) In addition, although PRMI’s reunderwriting
expert was “not capable of offering testimony . . . about estoppel and waiver,” (13-cv-3451,
Jan. 23, 2020 Pretrial Hr’g Tr. at 93:16–17), PRMI argued that she should be permitted to
rebut Assetwise Loan breaches. ResCap then had to cross-examine her and PRMI’s fact
witnesses Mr. Zitting and Mr. Crawford about Assetwise Loans. However, Mr. Zitting
confirmed that all Assetwise Loan breaches “relate[d] to Reps that PRMI concedes continue
to apply . . . even under its theory of estoppel.” (FOF & COL ¶ 391.)
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Following trial, the Court concluded that PRMI had approved the four Assetwise
Loans in question without complying with certain requirements of the Client Guide, and that
ResCap could, in any event, declare a breach of these loans in its sole discretion to do so under
the Client Guide. (Id. ¶¶156–70.) In short, PRMI’s Assetwise arguments increased ResCap’s
attorney’s fees out of proportion to the impact of the Assetwise Loans on ResCap’s damages.
(4) Previously-Decided Issues
In addition to PRMI’s extensive defense to relatively modest components of ResCap’s
damages, it repeatedly required ResCap and the Court to revisit previously-decided issues or
slight variations of previously-decided issues for purposes of “clarification.” While PRMI
could have briefly noted a continuing objection to the Court’s prior rulings, it instead pursued
previously-decided issues as if litigating them for the first time. Because this unquestionably
increased Plaintiff’s legal fees, any discussion of the amounts involved and the results
obtained must consider this aspect of PRMI’s litigation conduct.
One example of PRMI’s litigation déjà vu was its insistence in expert discovery,
Daubert motions, summary judgment motions, motions in limine, and at trial, that the Court
failed to understand and properly apply UnitedHealth Group Incorporated v. Executive Risk
Specialty Insurance, 870 F.3d 856, 863 (8th Cir. 2017), to Plaintiff’s damages model. The
Court’s reading of UnitedHealth could hardly surprise PRMI, since here, the Court ruled
consistently with its ruling in HLC that UnitedHealth did not alter long-standing Minnesota
law on the allocation of damages, or on the calculation of damages generally. (Compare FOF
& COL ¶ 443, with HLC Summ. J. Order, 332 F. Supp.3d at 1199–1204.)
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PRMI also relitigated matters previously settled in prior rulings in this case. While
PRMI raised an admittedly new issue in this case involving the Additional Settling Trust
Settlement, it continued to assert its argument, despite the Court’s contrary rulings in
summary judgment and Daubert orders. PRMI had argued in its expert’s supplemental report
that ResCap’s damages model was impermissibly speculative because it failed to account for
separate settlement amounts with respect to the Original Settling Trusts and the Additional
Settling Trusts. See PRMI Summ. J. Order, 428 F. Supp. 3d at 134–43. On summary
judgment, the Court rejected PRMI’s argument, id., and therefore precluded PRMI’s expert
from testifying about the Original Settling Trusts and the Additional Settling Trusts. In re
ResCap Liquid. Tr. Litig., 432 F. Supp. 3d 902, 947 (D. Minn. 2020) (“PRMI Daubert
Order”).
Yet shortly before trial, PRMI again found the issue of the “separate” settlement for
the Additional Settling Trusts “still relevant” to the case. (See 13-cv-3451, PRMI Mots. in
Limine Order at 36.) In fact, in PRMI’s effort to downplay the impact that this recurring
issue had on ResCap’s fees, it actually catalogs the extent to which it repeatedly asserted the
issue of the Additional Settling Trust Settlement, forcing ResCap to repeatedly respond.
Addressing the Additional Settling Trusts in its sur-reply to the instant motion, PRMI states,
“This issue concerned a discrete set of bankruptcy documents, and Plaintiff[] addressed it in
(i) less than 1 page of a letter, (ii) less than 10 pages of summary-judgment briefs, (iii) less
than 3 pages of Daubert briefs, (iv) 1 sentence in a motion in limine, (v) in less than 3
transcript pages at the pre-trial conference, and (vi) in less than 2 transcript pages at trial.”
(Def.’s Sur-Reply at 9) (citing Smallwood Decl. ¶ 39). Every time PRMI resurrected this
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issue, it necessitated more work in opposition, and required the Court to reiterate its summary
judgment and Daubert rulings on the matter, stating, in its order on the motions in limine,
“Factually and legally, there is no relevance to evidence concerning a separate allocation for
the Additional Settling Trusts—whether the evidence comes from the Supplemental Term
Sheet, Dr. McCrary, or from the cross examination of Plaintiff’s witnesses. The underlying
“Additional Settling Trust Settlement” was not the RMBS Trust Claim allowed by the
Bankruptcy Court, for which ResCap seeks indemnification in this lawsuit.” (13-cv-3451,
PRMI Mots. in Limine Order at 36.)
In addition, PRMI argued that ResCap’s allocation methodology failed to account for
the value of purportedly non-indemnifiable claims against RFC’s parent, Ally Financial. This
argument relied on the opinion of the defendants’ excluded expert from Wave One. (See id.
at 41.) On summary judgment in PRMI, the Court found as a matter of law that it was
undisputed that Ally was not a debtor, and therefore Plaintiff’s allocation methodology did
not “fail” to account for the value of claims against Ally. PRMI Summ. J. Order, 428 F. Supp.
3d at 147–48.
Yet, before trial, PRMI maintained that the Ally allocation remained a live issue
simply because the Court had denied summary judgment to PRMI on an issue for which
ResCap had not affirmatively sought summary judgment. (See 13-cv-3451, PRMI Mots. in
Limine Order at 42.) Granting Plaintiff’s motion in limine to exclude any such Ally evidence,
the Court explained that because it had ruled as a matter of law on summary judgment, no
issues of material fact remained in dispute, and the Court precluded PRMI from offering any
evidence concerning Ally at trial. (Id. at 43.) Again, in PRMI’s effort to minimize the impact
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of the recurring Ally issue on Plaintiff’s fees, it effectively concedes that its refusal to abide
by the Court’s rulings repeatedly necessitated ResCap’s opposition work, stating, “Plaintiff
addressed this issue in less than 2 pages of its summary-judgment opposition and in 2
sentences of a motion in limine; it later filed a letter addressing it in 3 paragraphs and citing
designations of at most 23 pages.” (Def.’s Sur-Reply at 9) (citing Smallwood Decl. ¶ 41).
Plaintiff performed much of this work because PRMI failed to follow the Court’s rulings.
As to expert opinions, the Court excluded PRMI’s experts’ opinions on a number of
issues, noting that the Court had previously rejected them. PRMI Daubert Order, 432 F.
Supp. 3d at 928–930, 935–36, 941–42. Citing its past rulings, the Court excluded the
following opinions of PRMI’s experts: (1) Phillip Burnaman’s views on loss causation,
(“Nothing has changed between Mr. Burnaman’s testimony on this subject in HLC and this
case, and accordingly, Mr. Burnaman’s testimony on this issue is still unreliable due to a lack
of competent, reliable evidence on this supposed ‘break in causation’”); (2) Mr. Burnaman’s
opinion regarding the proxy MLS data presented by Plaintiff’s expert, Louis Dudney, (noting
that Mr. Burnaman’s opinion in this regard had been “consistently rejected by this Court); (3)
Steven Schwarcz’s opinion on whether RFC was solely responsible for its liabilities, (“[T]he
Court rejects any invitation to return to, or request for reconsideration of, Wave One briefing
on this issue. Those questions have long been decided, and the Court sees no reason to depart
from its prior conclusions. The fact remains that whether characterized as a causation
argument or allocation critique, PRMI offers no competent evidence sufficient to permit the
“sole responsibility” theory to go to the factfinder”); and (4) Lee Kennedy’s critique of
Plaintiff’s AVM methodology, (“[T]he Court has already held several times that the Guides'
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knowledge- and reliance-sections established that PRMI’s R&Ws to RFC were ‘not affected
by any investigation or review made by RFC unless expressly waived in writing’ and that
RFC’s knowledge of any potential defects in a loan file ‘is wholly irrelevant.’”). Id. Again,
PRMI concedes that it reasserted these arguments, but downplays the extent to which ResCap
was forced to respond, stating, “Plaintiff addressed ‘inadmissible’ reports in less than two
pages of a letter, . . . , and in summary judgment and Daubert briefs that were within standard
limits and incorporated prior briefing.” (Def.’s Sur-Reply at 9) (citing Clouser Decl. ¶¶ 80–
84). But the only reason that ResCap was put to this extra work was because PRMI
persistently pressed previously-rejected arguments.
As an example of PRMI relitigating previously-decided issues at trial, PRMI disclosed
certain proposed exhibits for use in its cross-examination of ResCap’s witnesses Ms.
Bangerter and Mr. Butler that included repurchase documents, documents lacking foundation,
and RFC/PRMI business relationship documents, all of which the Court had excluded in the
Order on the parties’ motions in limine. (13-cv-3451, PRMI Mots. in Limine Order at 22–23,
24–34, 47–48.) As Plaintiff’s counsel observed, “PRMI continues its pattern of forcing the
Court and parties to revisit settled issues and relitigate volumes of inadmissible evidence
based on its self-servingly implausible readings of prior rulings.” (13-cv-3451, Pl.’s Feb. 9,
2020 Letter [Doc. No. 5415] at 1.)
These are a few examples of the ways in which PRMI routinely reasserted previouslydecided issues. While PRMI balks at the notion of having to “pick up the entire tab” for
ResCap’s attorney’s fees and costs, (Def.’s Opp’n at 32), the plain language of the Guides
and the HLC Fee Award alerted PRMI to the possibility that the parties would not “split the
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tab” or “go Dutch” on attorney’s fees and costs. Given all of this notice, PRMI cannot
credibly express indignation now. Its own poor judgment in relitigating settled issues
throughout this litigation significantly drove up ResCap’s attorney’s fees and costs.
(5) ResCap’s Warnings
Not only did the HLC Fee Award and the plain language of the Guides put PRMI on
notice of its potential liability for attorney’s fees and costs, ResCap’s counsel expressly raised
the issue at multiple points in this litigation in response to PRMI’s litigation tactics. At nearly
every step of the proceedings, PRMI knew that the manner in which it conducted its defense
was increasing ResCap’s attorney’s fees and costs.
At the May 9, 2019 case management conference, for example, Plaintiff’s counsel
expressed concern about the scope of expert discovery in Wave Two, and with respect to
PRMI, in particular. (13-cv-3451, May 9, 2019 CMC Tr. [Doc. No. 5105] at 19:17-22:14.)
ResCap had sought to discuss with PRMI the ways in which the parties might streamline
expert discovery, in light of the Court’s rulings in Wave One. (Id. at 22:2-9.) ResCap reported
that PRMI did not find it appropriate to have any such conversations, leading ResCap to
comment at the case management conference, “I’ll say as an aside, you know, if we go down
that route, that’s exactly the kind of, you know, attorney’s fees and waste that . . . we had
HLC complain about when we made our attorney fee application. I mean, there’s just no
reason for it that we can see.” (Id. at 22:10-14.)
Four months later, in a status report to the Court in advance of a case management
conference, ResCap similarly reported that PRMI refused to discuss the applicability of the
Court’s Wave One rulings on summary judgment and Daubert to the parties’ contemplated
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summary judgment and Daubert motions in PRMI. (13-cv-3451, Pl.’s Sept. 13, 2019 Letter
[Doc. No. 5204] at 3.) ResCap stated, “Unfortunately, however, unless the Court has a
different preference or instruction, the Trust perceives no meaningful option other than to
make the Court aware of the issue now; to include all of the relevant issues in its forthcoming
motions with appropriate cross-references to the Court’s prior rulings; and to make a record
now, for purposes of any forthcoming fee application, as to PRMI’s unapologetic insistence
on processes that will require the Trust to waste time and money litigating settled issues.”
(Id.) (emphasis added).
At numerous other times in this case, while not expressly invoking the fee-shifting
provision, ResCap noted the costs of engaging in Wave One-duplicative work. (See, e.g.,
Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶15(a)–(n); 13-cv-3451, Pl.’s July 24, 2018 Letter [Doc. No. 4050]
at 4–5) (asking the Court to put reasonable limits on Wave Two discovery, and stating,
“PRMI’s demand for a full seven-hour deposition of witnesses who have already provided
extensive testimony, including on common issues, is disproportionate and unnecessary.”);
(id., Pl.’s Jan. 29, 2019 Letter [Doc. No. 4968] at 1) (stating, “[T]he Court should . . . deny
PRMI’s request to eliminate the current prohibition against taking deposition testimony that
is duplicative of testimony in Wave One [and] PRMI’s request to re-depose four former RFC
employees who testified at length in Wave One (half of whom also testified in MBIA.”); (id.,
Pl.’s Feb. 26, 2019 Letter [Doc. No. 5027] at 2) (“[S]upplementing Ms. Whealdon’s MBIA
and Wave One testimony with yet a third deposition would not be ‘proportional to the needs
of the case[,]’ [under] Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1)”); (id., Pl.’s Apr. 25, 2019 Letter [Doc. No.
5060] at 2–5) (“[E]ven ignoring the irrelevance and impropriety of the [proposed Rule
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30(b)(6)] testimony, the topics should be disallowed because RFC has already provided days
of fact and Rule 30(b)(6) testimony on these issues. . . . There is nothing new or PRMIspecific about the testimony PRMI is now requesting—it is a transparent effort to revisit the
same issues that have been litigated repeatedly before.”); (id., May 9, 2019 CMC Tr. [Doc.
No. 5105] at 30:11-31:2) (addressing PRMI’s subjective bad faith argument, stating, “And
certainly I have concern, and the Trust has concern, about whether an exercise like that would
be proportional to the size of this case and to the needs of the case.”); (id., Pl.’s Mem. Supp.
Mot. for Protective Order [Doc. No. 5140] at 1) (stating that “PRMI is inexplicably insisting
on dragging the Trust and the Court into an irrelevant, expensive, and time-consuming
process of rebuttal and reply reports, depositions, and associated motion practice (and, in
PRMI’s view, trial testimony) on th[e] same issues [previously rejected by the Court in prior
orders]. The Court ought not indulge PRMI’s bid to make believe that the Court’s prior orders
do not exist.”); (id., Dec. 2, 2019 Summ. J. Hr’g Tr. [Doc. No. 5352] at 7:12–19)
(commenting, “I should note that the briefs, of course, dealt with all kinds of issues, pages
and pages were rehashed of things that the Court has already addressed. We were somewhat
frustrated to do that all over again but we are—especially given the size of the case—but we
are where we are.”); (id., Pl.’s Jan. 21, 2020 Letter at 1) (asserting, “Generally, the evidence
to be introduced at trial should be limited to the issues left open under this Court’s summary
judgment, Daubert, and other decisions; presented in an efficient and non-cumulative
manner; and reasonably reflective of the dollar amount of the Trust’s claim in the aggregate
and of the relative significance of the various disputed issues. PRMI’s positions . . . have
been inconsistent with these principles, and would force the parties and Court to spend time
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and resources relitigating settled issues, addressing volumes of irrelevant and cumulative
evidence, and otherwise proceeding in seemingly as inefficient and expensive manner as
possible.”).
In sum, Plaintiff’s counsel frequently reminded PRMI of the financial ramifications of
how it chose to conduct its defense. PRMI was free to aggressively defend itself, and it did.
However, it conducted its defense with full knowledge of the consequences of its conduct and
its potential liability for ResCap’s attorney’s fees and costs.
(6) Results Obtained
Along with the amount involved, the Court considers the results obtained. Green, 826
N.W.2d at 537. The results obtained here were exceptional. ResCap obtained a damages
award of $5.4 million, amounting to 100% of its requested damages. On top of that, preaward prejudgment interest has increased ResCap’s damages award to approximately $7.4
million. PRMI cannot seriously dispute ResCap’s undeniable success. Instead, it argues that
ResCap’s expenditure of higher amounts in attorney’s fees and costs diminishes the value of
ResCap’s success and renders the fee petition unreasonable. (Def.’s Opp’n at 9–10.)
As noted earlier, Minnesota courts do not apply a “dollar value proportionality rule”
between the amount involved and results obtained. Green, 826 N.W.2d at 537. Moreover,
PRMI’s myopic focus on “proportionality” ignores several important considerations here: (1)
the financial impact that PRMI’s own disproportionate litigation conduct, discussed above,
had in increasing ResCap’s attorney’s fees and costs; (2) ResCap’s investment of thousands
of hours of sunk costs into this lawsuit and its concern that the outcome of PRMI could impact
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other pending actions; and (3) past awards in Minnesota of “disproportionate” attorney’s fees
exceeding the amount of damages.
As the Court has previously observed, “a heavily-litigated case is not typically a onesided affair,” and may explain why a party’s attorney’s fees and costs are relatively high.
Ewald, 2015 WL 1746375, at *15. PRMI “contest[s] only the aggregate outlay, yet the high
total is the expected result of the way the defense was conducted.” Id. (quoting Cuff v. Trans
States Holdings, Inc., 768 F.3d 605, 610 (7th Cir. 2014)); see also Green v. BMW of N. Am.,
LLC, No. A14-0378, 2014 WL 5800412, at *4 (Minn. Ct. App. Nov. 10, 2014) (noting that
the consideration of “[the defendant’s] unwillingness to accept or acknowledge any liability”
as “the primary factor driving up the legal fees from the beginning to date for this litigation”
was relevant to the lodestar analysis of “the time and labor required” and “the amount
involved and the results obtained.”).
In Cuff, Judge Easterbrook of the Seventh Circuit acknowledged that the ratio between
the plaintiff requested amount of attorney’s fees ($325,000) and the awarded damages (less
than $50,000) seemed high. 768 F.3d at 610. However, he recognized the “sunk costs” that
plaintiffs continue to incur over the course of litigation, and criticized an analysis of attorney’s
fees that examines only the “bottom line,” explaining,
Sometimes events during the litigation change the calculus, and a lawyer must
avoid the sunk-cost fallacy. If, after spending $25,000 in legal time, a lawyer is
confronted with a defense that will cost $30,000 to defeat, counsel will not say:
“It is irrational to spend $55,000 to get $50,000.” The $25,000 is sunk; if the
suit is abandoned the recovery will be zero, so the right question is whether it
is reasonable to spend $30,000 more to get $50,000, and the answer is yes.
Suppose the same thing happens over and over in a suit, with one unexpected
development after another raising the costs without raising the expected
recovery. It can be reasonable to meet each of these events by investing more,
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even though an analysis that looks only at the bottom line ($325,000 invested
to get $50,000) makes the total seem unreasonable.
Id.
Judge Easterbrook further stated that “hyperaggressive defendants who drive up the
expense of litigation must pay the full costs, even if legal fees seem excessive in retrospect.”
Id.
Although Judge Easterbrook’s comments about sunk costs and high legal fees arose
in the context of a case involving a fee-shifting statute, they are just as apt here. Moreover,
ResCap’s CFO, Ms. Horner, observes that while PRMI was the only remaining action at the
time ResCap filed the instant motion, up until October 21, 2020, HLC’s appeal, and ResCap’s
action against HLC’s successor, ResCap Liquid. Tr. v. LendingTree, LLC, 19-cv-2360
(SRN/HB), remained open. (First Supp’l Horner Decl. ¶ 17.) Ms. Horner attests to ResCap’s
concern that potential adverse rulings in the PRMI action could jeopardize ResCap’s position
in the HLC and LendingTree actions. (Id.) In addition, she states that over the course of seven
years of ResCap’s litigation in this district, it took a long view of its legal fees because, as of
September 20, 2020, its litigation had resulted in $1.3 billion in settlement recoveries. (Id.)
Indeed, Minnesota courts have awarded attorney’s fees in excess of damages in cases
involving breach of contract claims, commercial disputes, and/or cases involving fee-shifting
contracts. See, e.g., Kelbro v. Vinny’s on the River LLC, 893 N.W.2d 390, 400–01 (Minn. Ct.
App. 2017) (affirming $22,088.73 award of attorney’s fees and costs pursuant to contractual
fee-shifting provision in breach of contract suit involving a $5,437.23 damages award); 650
N. Main Ass’n v. Frauenshuh, Inc., 885 N.W.2d 478, 494–98 (Minn. Ct. App. 2016)
(approving a statutory attorney’s fees award of $171,000 in a breach of warranty action that
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involved $101,250 in damages); Northfield Care Ctr., Inc. v. Anderson, 707 N.W.2d 731, 736
(Minn. Ct. App. 2006) (approving attorney’s fees award of $14,265.62 pursuant to contractual
fee-shifting provision in breach of contract action involving $3,838.33 award).
Consideration of a broader scope of Minnesota cases involving statutory awards of
attorney’s fees exceeding damages is informative as well, particularly where courts have
observed that the defendant’s litigation conduct played a substantial role in increasing the
plaintiff’s attorney’s fees, as is the case here. See, e.g., Ewald, 2015 WL 1746375, at *15–16
(awarding statutory attorney’s fees ($1,773,719.05) far exceeding damages ($270,594) in an
employment law action under federal and Minnesota law, and noting that the parties’ “tooth
and nail” litigation explained why the plaintiff’s fees and costs were relatively high); Braatz
v. Parsons Elec. Co., 850 N.W.2d 706, 712 (Minn. 2014) (rejecting a requirement of
proportionality and affirming award of statutory attorney’s fees ($12,578.74) in worker’s
compensation case exceeding recovery of medical benefits ($11,893.69)); Toyota-Lift of
Minnesota, Inc. v. Am. Warehouse Sys., LLC, A18-0199, 2018 WL 4201188, at *4 (Minn. Ct.
App. Sept. 4, 2018) (affirming award of attorney’s fees ($217,209.11) greater than the
underlying recovery ($143,000) because the defendant’s “‘steadfast opposition throughout
the course of this case’ prolonged the litigation and led [the plaintiffs] to ‘incur[ ] significant
attorneys’ fees, in excess of the underlying award for commissions,” and because of presence
of novel legal issues and public policy considerations).
The Court therefore finds that consideration of the results obtained supports the
reasonableness of Plaintiff’s fee request. Not only did ResCap obtain its requested damages
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award and pre-award prejudgment interest, it did so in a case involving numerous complex
issues, and vigorous opposition that greatly increased its attorney’s fees and costs.
c. Fees Customarily Charged for Similar Legal Services
When evaluating the reasonableness of a fee petition, courts also consider the fees
customarily charged for similar legal services. Milner, 748 N.W.2d at 621. In response to
PRMI’s criticisms about inefficient staffing, ResCap urges the Court to assess the
reasonableness of its fee petition here by comparing it to its higher fee petition in HLC. (Pl.’s
Reply at 12–14.) PRMI argues that ResCap’s fee request is unreasonable based on a
comparison between the hours billed by ResCap’s counsel versus PRMI’s counsel. It also
contends that the fee request is unreasonable based on a comparison of the hours billed among
Plaintiff’s counsel. The Court first turns to PRMI’s invitation to compare ResCap’s counsel’s
billable hours against defense counsel’s billable hours.
(1) Comparison with Opposing Counsel’s Billable Hours
As noted in the Court’s discussion of the work performed during various time periods
of this litigation, PRMI invites a comparison between the hours billed by its counsel against
those billed by ResCap’s counsel during various periods of this litigation. (See Def.’s Opp’n
at 25.)
While it may sometimes be useful to compare the hours billed by opposing counsel,
the comparison is often irrelevant. See Burks v. Siemens En. & Automation, Inc., 215 F.3d
880, 884 (8th Cir. 2000) (describing the relationship as an “apples-to-oranges comparison,”
and noting that it requires courts to undertake an additional analysis of whether defense
counsel’s billings were reasonable); Ewald, 2015 WL 1746375, at *15 (noting that while
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defense counsel’s fees may sometimes be relevant to a determination of the reasonableness
of plaintiff’s counsel’s fees, “frequently, the comparison is irrelevant.”) (citations omitted).
Williams & Connolly suggested the same exercise in HLC, which the Court found not
particularly useful. HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 854–56. For similar reasons, it is
not useful here. “For starters, [PRMI] lost.” Id. at 854. Had it devoted additional time to the
case or retained additional counsel, it might have enjoyed a better outcome. Moreover, the
billing arrangements as between Plaintiff and Defendant were entirely different. While
ResCap utilized an hourly billing arrangement, PRMI utilized a flat-fee arrangement with
Williams & Connolly. (Def.’s Opp’n at 4 n.1.) While both types of billing arrangements are
proper, they involve such different considerations—some of which, for example, may
incentivize additional work, and some of which may discourage additional work—that a
comparison between Plaintiff’s and Defendant’s counsels’ billable hours is particularly nonilluminating here in light of the different billing arrangements.
However, even comparing billable hours between national counsel from November
2019 to April 2020, for example, the 7,324 hours from Quinn Emanuel, and the 5,936 from
Williams & Connolly are fairly similar. Assuming that Williams & Connolly’s hours were
reasonably expended, the relative similarity in hours suggests that Quinn Emanuel’s hours
were likewise reasonably expended.
While PRMI breaks down its comparative analysis of billable hours over particular
time periods consistent with Mr. Remele’s approach, (Def.’s Opp’n at 18–32), the work
performed by both sides throughout this litigation was not the same. (See Supp’l Christenson
Decl. ¶¶ 16–54.) At all times, ResCap bore the burden of proof. While ResCap did not build
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three damages models from scratch in this case, as it did in HLC, it was still required to
perform the case-specific work discussed above with respect to the at-issue loans, witnesses,
and its damages model, and respond to PRMI’s criticisms of its methodology. At no time did
PRMI offer an alternative damages model. And, as discussed at length, ResCap was required
to establish PRMI’s liability loan-by-loan and breach-by-breach, and to respond to PRMI’s
strategy of relitigating previously-decided matters from HLC and this case.
Under these facts, the Court finds that a comparison between the hours billed by
Plaintiff’s counsel and Defendant’s counsel does not meaningfully inform the reasonableness
of Plaintiff’s fee petition. Moreover, PRMI’s invitation to engage in such an accounting
comparison would require the Court to don “green eyeshades,” Fox, 563 U.S. at 838, which
it is not required to do. As noted, the Supreme Court reminds us that “[t]he essential goal in
shifting fees (to either party) is to do rough justice, not to achieve auditing perfection.” Id.
(2) Comparison Between ResCap’s Hours Billed in PRMI and
HLC
Rather than the apples-to-oranges comparison of ResCap’s billable hours with PRMI’s
billable hours, a more informative comparison is between ResCap’s attorney’s fees in HLC
and in this case. Despite undertaking a similar amount of work under the case-specific facts
of each case, including a jury trial and bench trial of comparable length, ResCap’s counsel in
this case substantially reduced the number of timekeepers and billable hours when compared
to a similar period in HLC. ResCap prudently implemented a reduced staffing strategy for
the Wave Two cases in light of the lower amounts at issue in those cases as compared to the
Wave One cases. (First Supp’l Horner Decl. ¶ 11.) For the six months leading up to and
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including trial and the proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law in PRMI (November
2019 through April 2020), ResCap seeks fees from 37 timekeepers. (Id. ¶ 13, Ex. 54.) By
contrast, in the five months leading up to and including trial in HLC (July 2018 through
November 2018), ResCap sought fees for 137 timekeepers. (Id.) Thus, ResCap reduced the
number of timekeepers by 100 as between the two trials. (Id.)
And, as noted earlier, with respect to billable hours, although the comparative period
in PRMI includes an additional month of work to account for the preparation of the proposed
findings of fact and conclusions of law, ResCap’s counsel billed 11,681 hours in the months
surrounding and including the trial in PRMI, as compared to 40,698 hours during the
comparable trial period in HLC—a 71% difference. (Id. ¶ 14.) ResCap incurred $4,636,890
in fees in PRMI during this period, compared to $13,851,133 in fees in HLC during the
comparable period—a 67% difference. (Id.)
(3) Comparison of Hours Billed Among Plaintiff’s Counsel
PRMI contends that a comparison of the hours billed among ResCap’s counsel also
underscores the unreasonableness of its fee request. (Def.’s Opp’n at 18–32.) In particular,
PRMI argues that the hours billed by ResCap’s local counsel, Spencer Fane, and its
Bankruptcy counsel, Carpenter Lipps, show that ResCap overstaffed the case. (Id.) Further,
PRMI contends, these billable hours raise concerns about inefficient work and duplicative
billing. (Id.) As of the filing of PRMI’s opposition memorandum, PRMI asserts that national
counsel at Quinn Emanuel billed 15,698 hours, while local counsel at Spencer Fane
unreasonably billed 12,614 hours “in a supporting role.” (Id. at 18.) As to Carpenter Lipps,
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PRMI argues that its work in this case did not necessitate 469 billable hours, noting that
counsel from that firm did not argue any motions or examine witnesses. (Id. at 19.)
Again, ResCap tailored its legal team to the size of this case by substantially reducing
the number of timekeepers and hours as compared to HLC. (First Supp’l Horner Decl. ¶¶ 13–
15, Ex. 54.)
As ResCap attests, local counsel at Felhaber/Spencer Fane, “played an
instrumental role as co-counsel in this matter,” as they did in the other Wave One and Wave
Two matters. (Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶ 4.) Minnesota-based RFC had a longstanding
relationship with Felhaber, which had represented it on a number of prior matters. HLC Fee
Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 855. When ResCap’s counsel at Felhaber moved to Spencer Fane,
the same attorneys continued to represent ResCap in financial services litigation, as they had
for the last 16 years. (Heeman Decl. ¶¶ 5–6.)
As in HLC, ResCap’s use of local counsel was different than PRMI’s use of its local
counsel. HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 855–56 (“But as with national counsel, the way
in which ResCap used local counsel was different than HLC’s use of local counsel—a
decision that was certainly within each client’s prerogative.”). At ResCap’s request, local
counsel at Felhaber/Spencer Fane played a larger role in managing the Wave Two cases,
(First Supp’l Horner Decl. ¶ 12), and was actively involved in the case against PRMI.
For example, Felhaber/Spencer Fane attorneys regularly met and conferred with
PRMI’s counsel throughout the litigation, and were involved in the initial case management
order, case management conference agenda items and submissions, contract identification
protocol, guideline matching, the loan documentation review process, discovery disputes,
numerous stipulations, deposition disputes, trial submissions, evidentiary disputes, and
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disputes regarding the fee petition. (Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶¶ 6, 9.) In addition, they
handled the preparation, management, and communications regarding third-party subpoenas,
and first- and second-chaired both fact and expert witness depositions in PRMI. (Id. ¶¶ 6–7.)
Felhaber/Spencer Fane attorneys also attended every mediation in the Wave One and Wave
Two cases, conducted legal research, assisted in the preparation for hearings on dispositive
motions, motions in limine, the pretrial conference, and trial. (Id. ¶ 10.) They also filed every
document submitted to the Court in this case, and served nearly every document during fact
discovery and in advance of trial. (Id. ¶ 12.)
In terms of trial, the Spencer Fane attorneys drafted trial submissions, letters, and
portions of legal memoranda and the proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. (Id.)
Furthermore, Felhaber/Spencer Fane attorneys prepared witness deposition and trial
examination outlines, and analyzed and designated hundreds of potential deposition excerpts
and trial exhibits. (Id. ¶ 11.) Felhaber/Spencer Fane attorneys also presented arguments at
Wave Two case management conferences, and presented arguments, admitted deposition
testimony and exhibits, and conducted a fact witness examination at trial. (Id. ¶ 13.)
Carpenter Lipps attorneys, while playing a more limited role, maintained institutional
knowledge from RFC’s Bankruptcy, and had preexisting relationships with many of
Plaintiff’s fact witnesses. (Id. ¶ 14.) In light of this background, ResCap found it important
for counsel from Carpenter Lipps to attend the PRMI trial. (Id.) In fact, Carpenter Lipps
attorney Jeff Lipps was scheduled to testify as a trial witness in this matter before the parties
stipulated to submit his Wave One testimony. (Id.) Moreover, in PRMI, Carpenter Lipps
counsel also prepared deponents and defended fact witness depositions. (Id.)
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In short, the Court finds that ResCap’s reliance on local counsel and Bankruptcy
counsel does not render its fee request unreasonable. In fact, as discussed above, ResCap
utilized a leaner complement of attorneys in its case against PRMI than in its case against
HLC. ResCap had long-standing relationships with counsel from Felhaber/Spencer Fane and
Carpenter Lipps, and relied on their collective institutional knowledge and expertise. While
PRMI’s local counsel played a more limited role, that was PRMI’s choice, just as it was
ResCap’s choice to give local counsel a larger role. As the Court explained in HLC, “[g]iven
the Felhaber[/Spencer Fane] attorneys’ hands-on experience over the course of this yearslong litigation, and its prior history representing the client, it is not surprising that ResCap
utilized more of local counsel’s time during [the period surrounding and including trial], as
compared to [PRMI’s] use of Zelle’s attorneys.” HLC Fee Award, 399 F.3d at 856. Nor was
ResCap’s use of Carpenter Lipps reflective of overstaffing. Carpenter Lipps possessed
important institutional memory stemming from RFC’s Bankruptcy, as well as unique
bankruptcy expertise that was important in a case involving complicated bankruptcy law
issues.
As in HLC, however, the Court notes that by using three law firms, and, in particular,
by using local counsel in tandem, at times, it would not be surprising to find some overlap or
redundancy in work, including some redundancy in communications among counsel. Id. at
857. While such communications and tandem work are sometimes necessary, at other times,
the work could best be streamlined and performed by fewer attorneys, even on a case with a
leaner legal team. See United States ex rel. Thompson v. Walgreen Co., 621 F. Supp. 2d 710,
716 (D. Minn. 2009). The Court appreciates that ResCap voluntarily reduced its fee request
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by eliminating billable hours attributable to a number of professionals at Spencer Fane ($2,060) and Felhaber (-$28,801.01) who billed a relatively small number of hours. (Horner
Decl. ¶¶ 25, 30.)
Even so, having reviewed ResCap’s unredacted invoices, the Court finds that a further
reduction is warranted to account for duplication, redundancy, and interfirm communications
with respect to local counsel’s portion of ResCap’s overall $10,627,716.35 fee request. See
HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 857 (reducing fee request by 2% to account for
duplicative work and intrafirm and interfirm communications); BP Grp., Inc. v. Capital Wings
Airlines, Inc., No. 09-cv-2040(JRT/JSM), 2011 WL 4396938, at *2 (D. Minn. Sept. 21, 2011)
(reducing fee request to account for numerous interoffice conferences). Accordingly, the
Court deducts 2% ($62,291.90) of the $3,114,595.08 portion of ResCap’s fee request
attributable to duplicative work performed by Spencer Fane, and 2% ($12,187.06) of the
$609,353.23 portion of ResCap’s fee request attributable to duplicative work performed by
Felhaber. (Second Supp’l Horner Decl., Ex. 48.) Consequently, the revised portion of
Plaintiff’s fee request attributable to Spencer Fane is $3,052,303.18, and the revised portion
of Plaintiff’s fee request attributable to Felhaber is $599,166.17, resulting in an overall revised
fee total to Plaintiff of $10,553,237.39.
d. Remaining Milner Factors
The Court briefly addresses the remaining Milner factors that it has not expressly
addressed: the time and labor required, the experience, reputation, and ability of counsel, and
the fee arrangement between the attorney and client. Milner, 748 N.W.2d at 621. The time
and labor required for ResCap to successfully advance this case was substantial. While PRMI
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characterizes ResCap’s fee request as “brazen” and “excessive,” (Def.’s Opp’n at 1, 8), the
Court disagrees, subject to the limited exception to account to duplicative work and interfirm
communications.
Consideration of this factor supports the general reasonableness of
ResCap’s fee request.
As to the experience, reputation, and ability of counsel, the Court’s prior assessment
of Plaintiff’s counsel remains unchanged: their work was outstanding. The Court has had
frequent opportunity to observe their work over the course of several years, including monthly
status conferences, motions hearings, the 16-day jury trial in HLC, and the 13-day bench trial
in this action. As the Court stated in HLC, “The excellent reputation of Plaintiff’s counsel is
well-deserved. At all times, they have been unquestionably candid, prepared, well-organized,
effective, thorough, and respectful.” HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 858. Consideration
of this factor also supports a finding of reasonableness.
Finally, consideration of the fee arrangement between ResCap and its counsel does
not impact the Court’s assessment of the reasonableness of ResCap’s petition.
In sum, the Court finds that the hourly rates of Plaintiff’s counsel are appropriate to
determine the lodestar. Plaintiff’s invoices and summaries reflect the expenditure of billable
hours resulting in its lodestar fee calculation of $10,627,716.35. (Second Supp’l Horner Decl.
¶ 9, Ex. 48.) Overall, the Court finds that these hours were generally properly expended,
subject to the reduction for duplicative work and interfirm communications, discussed earlier.
With the reduction, this results in a lodestar of $10,553,237.39, which the Court finds
reasonable.
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e. Fees for Preparing the Fee Petition
As noted, ResCap has supplemented its fee petition in support of its request for
attorney’s fees and costs for work performed on preparing the fee petition. PRMI argues that
Plaintiff is not entitled to any such fees or costs, relying on authority from other jurisdictions.
(Def.’s Opp’n at 40–41) (citing F.H. Krear & Co. v. Nineteen Named Trustees, 810 F.2d
1250, 1266 (2d Cir. 1987); Houden v. Todd, 324 P.3d 1157, 1165 (Mont. 2014)).
In HLC, defense counsel raised the same objection, which the Court rejected. HLC
Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d at 857. The Court sees no reason to depart from the ruling in
HLC. Under Minnesota law, “attorney fees are not recoverable in litigation unless there is
a specific contract permitting . . . such recovery.” Dunn v. Nat’l Beverage Corp., 745
N.W.2d 549, 554 (Minn. 2008)). The Guides expressly provide for all reasonable attorneys’
fees and costs incurred in enforcing the contract or resulting from any event of default, without
limitation. (FOF & COL ¶¶ 26, 28) (citing PTX-001 § 274; PTX-032 § A223; PTX-1055 §
A212; PRMI Summ. J. Order, 428 F. Supp. 3d at 67). Pursuant to general contractual feeshifting provisions, Minnesota courts have permitted the award of attorney’s fees for work
expended in preparing the fee petition, or relatedly, for fees incurred after entry of judgment.
See Boundary Waters Bank v. McGaughey, No. A15-1950, 2016 WL 1397305, at *1, 5
(Minn. Ct. App. Apr. 11, 2016) (finding that “[i]t was within the district court’s discretion
to award attorney fees related to submitting the motion for fees, as these were incurred in
pursuing its rights under the note and mortgage,” which provided for “reasonable attorney
fees”); Riverview Muir Doran, 776 N.W.2d at 180 (stating, in a case in which the loan
agreement required the borrower to pay the lender’s attorney’s fees incurred in enforcing
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the agreement, “[the borrower] provides no legal authority stating that a district court is
unable to add attorney fees that a party has continued to incur after that judgment has been
entered.”).
Here, as in HLC, the Guides were freely negotiated contracts between two
sophisticated parties and they contain no fee-shifting exceptions for fee petition work.
PRMI fully anticipated that ResCap would move for attorney’s fees, including fees and
costs incurred in preparing the fee petition, particularly as it had successfully done so in
HLC, in which Williams & Connolly also served as defense counsel. The Court has
reviewed Plaintiff’s invoices for this work and finds them to be reasonable. Plaintiff is
entitled to fees for its work related to the fee petition.
f. Adjustments to the Lodestar
Finally, the Court considers whether any adjustments to the lodestar are warranted.
Courts may adjust the lodestar upward or downward in limited circumstances, such as a
possible upward adjustment in contingency-fee cases to reflect counsel’s risk of
representation with no assurance of compensation, and in light of “the quality of the work
performed as evidenced by the work observed, the complexity of the issues and the
recovery obtained.” Pennsylvania v. Del. Valley Citizens’ Counsel for Clean Air, 478 U.S.
546, 563 (1986); see also Milner, 748 N.W.2d at 624. However, because there is a strong
presumption that the lodestar amount represents a reasonable fee calculation, adjustments
are only warranted in rare and exceptional cases. Del. Valley, 478 U.S. at 563; Milner, 748
N.W.2d at 624.
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Plaintiff does not seek an enhancement here. While the Court recognizes the
exceptional talents and efforts of ResCap’s counsel, it finds that the lodestar calculation
adequately measures their performance and market value. Nor are further reductions
warranted. Indeed, Plaintiff’s request for fees and costs is high, but so was the amount at
stake in this case and its potential effect on two other cases that overlapped during the
pendency of this litigation. Moreover, given ResCap’s charge to obtain compensation for
the trust’s beneficiaries to the greatest extent possible, this case was part of ResCap’s
considerable effort to recoup some portion of the $9 billion in losses and liabilities incurred
by RFC in the Bankruptcy Settlement. And, as the Court has noted, ResCap’s counsel
expended considerable time responding to PRMI’s requests and arguments, many of which
were variations of previously rejected arguments. See HLC Fee Award, 399 F. Supp. 3d
at 860 (declining to reduce the lodestar in light of defendant litigating previously rejected
arguments, and based on impact of case on other pending cases) (citing I-Sys., Inc. v.
Softwares, Inc., No. 02-cv-1951 (JRT/FLN), 2005 WL 1430323, at *12 (D. Minn. Mar. 7,
2005) (noting that “the extent of the work expended by plaintiffs’ attorneys was not
conducted in a vacuum. Rather, much of plaintiffs’ attorneys’ effort was spent responding
to defendants’ three sets of attorneys, whose participation and output in this case was
prodigious.”)). PRMI was entitled to present a vigorous defense, but it did so with full
knowledge that the Guides contemplated an award of attorney’s fees.
B. Whether ResCap’s Costs are Reasonable
ResCap also seeks reimbursement of its legal costs, in the amount of $3,528,378.92.
(See Second Supp’l Horner Decl. ¶¶ 2, 8–9, Ex. 48.) ResCap divides these expenses into
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three categories, in the following amounts: (1) experts and support firms ($2,623,614.92);
(2) document vendors ($528,642.61); and (3) fact witnesses and trial vendors
($376,121.39). (Horner Decl. ¶¶ 39–69; Second Supp’l Horner Decl., Ex. 48.)
“As with the award of attorneys’ fees, the standard for the award of costs is one of
reasonableness.” I-Sys., 2005 WL 1430323, at *14. PRMI argues that ResCap has failed
to demonstrate the reasonableness of its costs with respect to expert costs and fact witness
costs. (Def.’s Opp’n at 36–40; Def.’s Sur-Reply at 11–12.)
1. Experts and Support Firms
a. ResCap’s Allocation Methodology
As noted, Plaintiff seeks to recover costs for expert witnesses and related support
firms in the amount of $2,623,614.92. (Second Supp’l Horner Decl., Ex. 48.)
To
determine costs for experts and support firms, ResCap’s CFO, Ms. Horner, identified costs
specifically related to the PRMI case, (Horner Decl. ¶ 9), and also sought to allocate to
PRMI portions of common costs applicable to all Wave One and Two cases, and common
work related only to the Wave Two cases. (Id. ¶¶ 10–11, 39.) As to the allocations, she
identified the number of active cases in Waves One and Two during a given month. (Id.
¶¶ 10–11.) She then used the pleadings in these cases, along with settlement information
from ResCap, to identify the active Wave One and Wave Two cases by month. (Id.) Ms.
Horner divided common work pro rata based on the number of cases during the time of the
work. (Id.) ResCap is only seeking costs against PRMI for common costs applicable to
all cases after December 2, 2016, when PRMI became an active case. (Id. ¶ 10.)
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In response, PRMI argues that ResCap unreasonably seeks $430,111 in expert costs
for common work performed during Wave One, from January 1, 2016 to December 31,
2018. (Def.’s Opp’n at 34–35.) It argues that just as “‘an attorney is not entitled to be paid
in a case for the work he or another attorney did in some other case,’” an expert is not
entitled to be paid in a case for the work he did in another case. (Id. at 35) (citing ACLU
of Ga. v. Barnes, 168 F.3d 423, 430 (11th Cir. 1999)).
PRMI cites a charge of
approximately $18,000 for Dr. Snow’s work in February 2018, when he was deposed in
Wave One, noting that it was not a party to that deposition (Id.) (citing Horner Decl., Ex.
39-A). Moreover, PRMI argues, ResCap seeks costs of $94,000 for Dr. Snow’s work in
October 2019, the month that he was deposed in the PRMI case. (Id.) It objects to the
notion that it should be required to reimburse ResCap for both a share of Dr. Snow’s Wave
One deposition, and the entirety of his deposition in this case. (Id.) PRMI contends that
just because its case was pending during Wave One does not warrant charging PRMI with
Wave One expert costs, particularly because PRMI did not engage in expert discovery until
the spring of 2019. (Id.)
PRMI further asserts that Plaintiff’s allocation is unreasonable, stating, “the mere
fact that Plaintiff’s experts repurposed work from prior cases does not justify charging
PRMI for that prior work.” (Id. at 36) (citing Darula v. BMW of N. Am., LLC, No. A111457, 2012 WL 1813406, at *5) (Minn. Ct. App. May 21, 2012) (stating that where
attorney’s work is merely an adaptation of prior work, courts should closely scrutinize the
time billed to such tasks)).
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But even if it were proper to charge Defendant for this work, PRMI argues that
ResCap’s allocation methodology would be inappropriate, as PRMI finds the pro rata
allocation fails to account for each defendant’s share of liability. (Id.) (citing Grendel’s
Den, Inc. v. Larkin, 749 F.2d 945, 959 (1st Cir. 1984) (noting that the law concerning
apportionment between defendants of liability for attorney’s fees and costs “remains
relatively unsettled,” with some courts dividing the award equally among defendants, but
opting, under specific facts, to apportion by degree of each defendant’s liability)). PRMI
contends that its liability in this case is “just $5.4 million,” while other defendants faced
liability of up to $236.9 million. (Id.)
The Court finds that both parties unquestionably benefitted from work performed in
Waves One and Two, resulting in lower costs to both sides in the instant matter. For
example, the fact that PRMI took a half-day deposition of Dr. Snow in this case was made
possible only because he had been previously deposed. Under these circumstances, it is
reasonable to allocate a portion of those prior expenses to PRMI—expenses that would
otherwise be borne by ResCap. Notably, Plaintiff is only seeking costs against PRMI for
common costs applicable to all cases after December 2, 2016, when PRMI became an
active case. (Horner Decl. ¶ 10.)
The Court also finds ResCap’s pro rata allocation proper. This case is unlike a
multi-defendant case in which relative percentages of liability have been adjudged per
defendant. Relatedly, throughout PRMI’s opposition to the instant petition, it has argued
that fees and costs should be proportional to damages and its share of liability. Yet a
cursory review of a sample of PRMI’s invoices demonstrates that its own costs—in a $5.4
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million case—were comparable to ResCap’s. (Johnson Decl., Ex. 4 [Doc. No. 56-2].) In
the six-month period from November 2019 through May 2020 for which PRMI has
submitted partial invoices from Williams & Connolly (for November and December, 2019,
and January, March, and April, 2020) and Zelle (for February through May, 2020), its costs
total approximately $1.1 million. 10 (See id. at 2, 7, 17, 23, 53, 139, 147, 152, 155.) By
contrast, ResCap’s request for all costs spans over a four-year period, totaling $3.5 million.
Certainly, the six-month period for which PRMI incurred its $1.1 million in costs included
the intensive period of trial preparation, trial, and the preparation of its proposed findings
of fact and conclusions of law. However, the fact that ResCap, which bore the burden of
proof, incurred total costs of $3.5 million over a number of years supports a finding that a
pro rata allocation of a portion of ResCap’s expert-related costs is reasonable here.
b. ResCap’s Request and Supporting Documentation for Expert
Costs
In support of its initial memorandum, ResCap submitted supporting documentation
for the costs incurred from fifteen experts and expert support firms who performed work
attributable to the PRMI case. (Horner Decl., Ex. 22.) The experts and support firms
performed work in the following general categories: (1) reunderwriting; (2) AVM and
Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (“USPAP”); (3) bankruptcy
settlements; (4) damages; and (5) securitization. (Id. ¶ 39.) Additionally, in response to
PRMI’s expert opinion from a local attorney offered in opposition to the instant motion,
ResCap obtained its own rebuttal expert, Mr. Cambronne. (Second Supp’l Horner Decl.
10
The costs reflected in PRMI’s invoices are not limited to expert-related costs.
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¶¶ 2, 8.) In connection with that work, ResCap incurred costs for the work involved in
preparing Mr. Cambronne’s declaration, and preparing for and attending his deposition,
among other things. (Id. ¶ 8.)
As to reunderwriting, ResCap’s experts and expert support firms conducted
reunderwriting of the PRMI loans, reunderwriting of the global sample for Wave One that
was performed after December 2, 2016, when PRMI became an active case, and prepared
the global sample expert report submitted in PRMI and used at trial. (Horner Decl. ¶ 40.)
Plaintiff’s expert, Steven Butler, conducted reunderwriting analysis with the support of
three vendors: Digital Risk, LLC, Opus Capital Markets Consultants, LLC, and the Barrent
Group. (Id.) ResCap has submitted summaries of the costs associated with this work, as
well as invoices. (Id., Exs. 23-A, 23-B, 24, 25-A, 25-B, 26-A, 26-B, 27-A, 27-B.)
With respect to AVM/USPAP experts and support firms, costs were incurred for
work on PRMI-specific loans, and allocations for work performed on the global sample of
loans after December 2 2016, and on the “GAVM” (automated valuation model) after
December 2, 2016. (Horner Decl. ¶ 44.) The following vendors performed this work:
Greenfield Advisors (including John Kilpatrick), Summit Consulting (including Albert
Lee), and Allstate Appraisal (including Steve Albert). (Id.) ResCap has submitted
summaries of the costs associated with this work, as well as invoices. (Id., Exs. 28–31, 32A, 32-B, 33-A, 33-B, 34.)
As to the Bankruptcy Settlements, Axinn Veltrop Harkrider LLP conducted this
expert work, which was performed by Donald Hawthorne, Anthony Saunders, and
Compass Lexecon LLC (“Compass”). (Id. ¶ 49.) Mr. Hawthorne served as ResCap’s
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expert witness on RFC’s underlying liability prior to the Bankruptcy Settlements, and Mr.
Saunders and Compass provided servicing analysis related to the Bankruptcy Settlements
for purposes of responding to PRMI’s expert Mr. Phillip Burnaman. (Id. ¶ 52.) ResCap
has submitted summaries of the costs associated with this work, along with invoices. (Id.,
Exs. 35-A, 35-B, 36–38.)
Regarding ResCap’s experts and vendors on damages, it hired Bates White LLC ,
(including testifying expert Dr. Karl Snow), and expert Richard Solum. (Id. ¶ 56.) Mr.
Solum was an expert on the reasonableness of the damages methodologies across all cases
in Wave One. (Id.)
Although PRMI’s pro-rata share of Mr. Solum’s work reflects
$5,088.97 in costs, ResCap has chosen not to seek reimbursement of these costs from
PRMI. (Id. n.11.) For work performed from May 2016 to March 2020, ResCap allocated
all PRMI-specific work to PRMI in full. (Id.) It divided all non-defendant-specific
common work pro rata by the number of active cases at the time of the work (in both Waves
One and Two), and charged PRMI its pro rata share. (Id.) All work performed by Bates
White after August 1, 2019, consisting of preparing for, testifying at, and assisting with the
PRMI trial, was PRMI-specific work. (Id. ¶ 57.) Unless that work was otherwise identified
as pertaining to a different defendant, ResCap charged all such work directly to PRMI.
(Id.) ResCap has submitted summaries of the costs associated with this work, as well as
invoices. (Id., Exs. 39-A, 39-B, 40.)
For ResCap’s securitization-related work, it hired AlixPartners, which included
testifying expert Louis Dudney, as well as Henry Hayssen. (Id. ¶ 59.) ResCap retained
AlixPartners to analyze mortgage loan data and schedules for PRMI and the global sample.
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(Id. ¶ 60.) ResCap seeks reimbursement from PRMI of a pro-rata share of AlixPartners’
expenses for work performed between March 1, 2019 through August 1, 2019, related to
the Wave One cases. (Id.) For AlixPartners’ work performed between August 1, 2019 to
October 31, 2019, ResCap charged the full amount of the costs to PRMI, as all of the work
was PRMI-specific. (Id.) ResCap has submitted summaries of the costs associated with
this work, as well as invoices. (Id., Exs. 41-A, 41-B, 42.)
PRMI argues that ResCap’s requested reimbursement for expert expenses is
unreasonable, pointing to $2.15 million in expert costs for direct or Wave Two common
work, and, in particular, to the work of Dr. Snow and Mr. Hawthorne. (Id. at 37–39.)
Again, PRMI contends that “Plaintiff’s experts largely recycled their opening reports from
Wave One.” (Id. at 37–38) (citing Clouser Decl. ¶¶ 68, 68(a)). Also, PRMI asserts that
during another period of this lawsuit, ResCap’s experts were “simply waiting for PRMI’s
experts to issue rebuttal reports,” and Mr. Hawthorne issued a short reply report that
tracked his supplemental report in Wave One. (Id. at 38) (citing Clouser Decl. ¶¶ 69–70).
While PRMI concedes that Dr. Snow’s reply report “contained some new monoline
analyses,” it argues that the report also repeated analyses from his supplemental report in
Wave One. (Id. at 38–39) (citing Clouser Decl. ¶ 68(b)). Further, PRMI argues that
although the parties tentatively planned to depose Mr. Hawthorne, PRMI ultimately did
not do so in this case, and Dr. Snow’s deposition was limited to a half day. (Id.) (citing
Clouser Decl. ¶¶ 70 n.8, 73). Finally, PRMI also takes issue with ResCap’s expert costs
from December 1, 2019 to March 31, 2020, arguing that “[o]nly three of Plaintiff’s experts
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testified at trial,” and two of them (Mr. Hawthorne and Dr. Snow) “already had testified
about similar issues in HLC. (Id. at 39) (citing Clouser Decl. ¶¶ 97–98, 100–02).
The Court rejects PRMI’s characterization of the “recycled” nature of the work
performed by Plaintiff’s experts, for the many reasons set forth in the analysis of Plaintiff’s
request for attorney’s fees. Simply because ResCap’s expert reports may have been similar
in certain respects to some of the earlier reports from Wave One, does not mean that the
experts could simply cut and paste their prior work, without familiarizing themselves with
the facts of this case and without responding to PRMI’s experts’ specific critiques. Nor
does the fact that PRMI took shorter depositions of ResCap’s experts, or ultimately elected
not to depose other experts, mean that the experts were not performing necessary work.
Much of the work performed by ResCap’s experts here was unique to the at-issue
PRMI loans, and to issues newly raised in this action. For example, as discussed earlier,
in addition to deposition and trial preparation, Dr. Snow also performed qualitative analysis
regarding Dr. McCrary’s critiques of his methodologies. (See Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶
35.)
In fact, his supplemental report addressed two new PRMI-specific damages
approaches. (Id.)
As to Mr. Hawthorne, given the greater emphasis in this case on securitization-level
representations and warranties than in HLC, Mr. Hawthorne addressed, in greater detail
here, the impact of various disclaimers and representations on RFC’s underlying risk of
liability prior to entering into the Bankruptcy Settlements. (See, e.g., FOF & COL ¶¶ 216
(No-Default Rep), 233 (Loan Program Rep), 244 (Loan Program Rep), 251 (Fraud
Disclaimer), 261 (Fraud Disclaimer), 266 (Substantial Compliance, Loan Program, and
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Credit Grade Reps).) Furthermore, in this case, unlike HLC, PRMI countered Mr.
Hawthorne’s testimony with that of its own expert, Mr. Woll.
PRMI also argues that ResCap is not entitled to recover costs associated with Mr.
Cambronne’s expert opinion. (Def.’s Sur-Reply at 11–12.) As discussed earlier in the
context of PRMI’s overall objections to the Court’s consideration of Mr. Cambronne’s
opinion, PRMI argues that his opinion was not a proper opinion offered in rebuttal to Mr.
Remele’s opinion, but an untimely affirmative declaration. (Id.) The Court disagrees with
PRMI’s characterization. PRMI was entitled to offer Mr. Remele’s opinion, even though
the Court gave little weight to the opinion of HLC’s attorney’s fees expert in the HLC Fee
Award because of the Court’s own in-depth knowledge of the case, among other things.
399 F. Supp. 3d at 843–45. Given the guidance of the HLC Fee Award, and this Court’s
ever-increasing familiarity with the facts of this RMBS trust litigation, it is not surprising
that ResCap chose not to affirmatively offer an expert opinion in support of its fee petition.
But it is also not surprising that after unsuccessfully seeking confirmation from PRMI
about its intent to submit an expert opinion in opposition to the fee petition, and after PRMI
ultimately disclosed its expert, ResCap obtained Mr. Cambronne’s rebuttal opinion. That
opinion was limited to the issues that Mr. Remele had raised. Accordingly, the Court finds
it reasonable to award Plaintiff the costs incurred in obtaining Mr. Cambronne’s opinion—
an expense it would not have otherwise borne, but for PRMI’s use of an expert.
In sum, the Court finds that ResCap’s expert and expert-related costs were
reasonably incurred in the amount of $2,623,614.92. (See Second Supp’l Horner Decl.,
Ex. 48.)
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2. Document Vendors
Plaintiff seeks to recover $528,642.61 for costs incurred from one of its document
vendors. (Id.) Although it used a number of document vendors during this litigation to
process, store, and review over 60 million documents, it seeks reimbursement for costs
incurred from only one vendor, NightOwl Discovery, Inc. (“NightOwl”), and only with
regard to NightOwl’s Wave Two document review. (Horner Decl. ¶ 61.) Between
November 2017 and April 2018, ResCap used NightOwl to review documents in the Wave
Two cases, including those produced by Wave Two defendants, and to make productions.
(Id. ¶ 62.) ResCap hired NightOwl to collect, process, review, search, and maintain over
300,000 documents produced to PRMI. (Id.) After reviewing the Wave Two NightOwl
invoices from November 2017 to April 2018, ResCap calculated $528,642.61 as PRMI’s
pro rata share. (Id.) In support of its request for costs, ResCap has submitted summaries
of NightOwl’s fees, along with the applicable invoices. (Id., Exs. 43-A, 43-B.)
PRMI does not lodge a specific objection to this element of Plaintiff’s costs. Based
on the Court’s longstanding familiarity with this litigation, and its review of ResCap’s
supporting documentation, the Court finds ResCap’s costs for document vendors were
reasonably incurred and awards these costs ($528,642.61) in full. (See Second Supp’l
Horner Decl., Ex. 48.)
3. Witnesses and Trial Vendors
ResCap seeks to recover costs totaling $376,121.39 for fact witnesses and trial
vendors. (Id.) With regard to trial witnesses, ResCap paid the expenses, including travel
expenses, of Ms. Bangerter and Ms. Farley to attend trial, and also reimbursed them at an
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hourly rate based on wages lost as a result of attending and preparing for depositions and
trial. (Horner Decl. ¶ 64.) Two other witnesses whom PRMI deposed, but who were not
called as trial witnesses, Brenda Evans and Lisa Lundsten, were reimbursed at an hourly
rate based on their individual wages lost as a result of attending and preparing for
depositions. (Id.)
In addition, ResCap incurred costs from four vendors related to the trial: Hyatt
Place, Gamma Lending Omega LLC (“Gamma”), Connect Litigation, and TrialGraphix.
(Id. ¶ 65.) Specifically, ResCap incurred lodging fees from Hyatt Place for its witnesses
and lawyers during trial, rented office space for trial through Gamma, and rented office
equipment and catering for trial through Connect Litigation. (Id. ¶ ¶ 66–67.) During trial,
ResCap used the services of TrialGraphix for its graphics. (Id. ¶ 68.) ResCap has provided
a summary of its costs from each vendor, along with the related invoices. (Id., Exs. 44–
47.)
PRMI specifically objects to the amount of costs that ResCap seeks to recover for
its fact witnesses Ms. Bangerter and Ms. Farley, noting that Ms. Bangerter billed at a rate
of $250 per hour, and Ms. Farley at a rate of $425 per hour. (Def.’s Opp’n at 40) (citing
Johnson Decl. [Doc. No. 55], Exs. 10–11).
The Court finds that the costs incurred for ResCap’s fact witnesses (Ms. Farley, Ms.
Bangerter, Ms. Lundsten, and Ms. Evans) were reasonable. (See Horner Decl., Ex. 44.)
Ms. Farley is an attorney with over 35 years of legal and executive experience, including
experience at the Minneapolis law firm of Dorsey & Whitney, and in the RMBS industry
in general, and at RFC, in particular, where she served as the co-head of its securitization
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group and as a member of its leadership team. (FOF & COL ¶ 29; Feb. 10, 2020 Trial Tr.
[Doc. No. 5479] at 97:11-24.) The Court finds that her $425 hourly witness billing rate
reasonably reflects the value of her time, and her billed hours were reasonably incurred.
Ms. Farley took time away from her work, and refamiliarized herself with events occurring
10 to 20 years ago. (Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶ 31.) Moreover, in preparation for her
testimony, she reviewed many lengthy, technical securitization documents and related
information. (Id.) She also testified at length at trial over the course of two days, totaling
approximately 162 pages of the trial transcript. (Feb. 10, 2020 Trial Tr. at 96–212; Feb.
11, 2020 Trial Tr. [Doc. No. 5480] at 282–328.)
Ms. Bangerter worked at RFC as a sales director, where she was involved in the
execution of business contracts. (FOF & COL ¶ 7.) Following her tenure at RFC, Ms.
Bangerter went on to work at a number of financial institutions. (Feb. 11, 2020 Trial Tr.
at 335:25-337:13.) She later owned and operated an art gallery, and she now provides care
for her grandchild, who is in her custody. (Id.) Like Ms. Farley, Ms. Bangerter was
required to take time away from her other responsibilities, and to refamiliarize herself with
events occurring 10 to 20 years ago. (Supp’l Christenson Decl. ¶ 31.) For her deposition,
PRMI identified over 100 documents, which necessitated not only attorney review, but Ms.
Bangerter’s review and preparation as well. (Id.) Also like Ms. Farley, Ms. Bangerter
testified at length at trial, for a total of approximately 188 pages of the trial transcript. (Feb.
11 Trial Tr. at 333–521.) The Court finds her hourly rate of $250 per hour was reasonable,
as were her billed hours.
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Having reviewed the fact witnesses invoices, and given the Court’s familiarity with
this case, the Court finds that the costs incurred by ResCap’s fact witnesses were
reasonable. Likewise, the Court finds the costs incurred from ResCap’s trial vendors were
reasonable. Accordingly, the Court grants ResCap’s costs in full ($376,121.39) for its fact
witnesses and trial vendors. (See Second Supp’l Horner Decl., Ex. 48.)
In conclusion, as to costs, the Court finds that Plaintiff’s total cost request of
$3,528,378.92 is reasonable and it is entitled to an award of costs in this amount.
C. Post-Award Prejudgment Interest
Earlier, in its discussion of proportionality, the Court addressed pre-award
prejudgment interest. Again, ResCap is entitled to pre-award prejudgment interest in the
amount of $1,999,180.27. Plaintiff also seeks post-award prejudgment interest on the sum
of the award ($5.4 million) and pre-award prejudgment interest ($1,999,180.27), i.e.,
$7,399,180.27, at the rate of 10% per year, running from the award date to the date on
which final judgment is entered. (Pl.’s Mem. at 20) (citing Minn. Stat. § 549.09, subd.
1(a)). Plaintiff argues that the award date is August 14, 2020—the date on which this Court
issued its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law and awarded $5.4 million in damages.
(See Pl.’s Reply at 21; Pl.’s Proposed Order [Doc. No. 34].)
As discussed earlier, PRMI disputes ResCap’s entitlement to prejudgment interest
as a general matter. However, even if ResCap is entitled to prejudgment interest, PRMI
argues that Plaintiff is not entitled to interest at the state-proscribed rate of 10% beyond
August 17, 2020—the day that the Clerk’s Office entered judgment. (Def.’s Opp’n at 41–
42.)
Beyond August 17, 2020, PRMI contends that federal law governs the rate of
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postjudgment interest, which has a much lower floating interest rate (currently, 0.06%),
citing http://www.txnd.uscourts.gov /post-judgment-rates. (Id. at 41–42) (arguing that
“federal law governs the award of postjudgment interest”; “The question here concerns
post-judgment interest.” (emphasis added)). In other words, PRMI claims that postjudgment interest began accruing (and apparently prejudgment interest stopped accruing)
on August 17, 2020 because, it asserts, that is the date this Court entered judgment. (See
id. at 41–43.)
While PRMI attempts to invoke the interest rate for postjudgment interest under 18
U.S.C. § 1961, its argument is beside the point with respect to the Court’s present
undertaking. Specifically, the Court’s task is determining: (1) the prejudgment interest rate
that applies; and (2) the prejudgment interest rate accrual period. PRMI conflates postaward prejudgment interest with postjudgment interest.
“Because ResCap’s indemnification claim was asserted under state law, Minnesota
law governs Plaintiff’s request for prejudgment interest.” See HLC Prejudgment Int. Order,
2019 WL 1237166, at *3; Ewald, 2015 WL 1746375, at *21 (stating general rule that
“prejudgment interest is a substantive remedy governed by state law when state-law claims
are brought in federal court”). Prejudgment interest can be broken down into two subcategories: pre-award prejudgment interest and post-award prejudgment interest. See
Hogenson v. Hogenson, 852 N.W.2d 266, 274 (Minn. Ct. App. 2014).
Pre-award prejudgment interest “should be calculated exclusively under section
549.09” if “damages are not readily ascertainable.” Hogenson, 852 N.W.2d at 274. If “the
value of a claim must be determined by litigation, . . . it is not ‘readily ascertainable.’”
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HLC Prejudgment Int. Order, 2019 WL 1237166, at *3 (quoting Hogenson, 852 N.W.2d at
274). Further, “prejudgment interest, including from the date of the verdict to the date of
judgment”—i.e., post-award prejudgment interest—“should be calculated under the
appropriate subdivision of section 549.09 in every case.” Hogenson, 852 N.W.2d at 274.
Here, the value of the claims was litigated at a bench trial, at which the parties
strongly contested the calculation of damages. (See, generally, FOF & COL ¶¶ 267–371;
441–80.) Thus, the value of the claim here was not “readily ascertainable,” which makes
Minn. Stat. § 549.09 the exclusive authority for pre-award prejudgment interest. See
Hogenson, 852 N.W.2d at 274.
Minn. Stat. § 549.09 states that “[f]or a judgment or award over $50,000, . . . the
interest rate shall be ten percent per year . . . .” Minn. Stat. § 549.09, subd. 1(c)(2). Such
interest (i.e., prejudgment interest) starts accruing “from the time of the commencement of
the action” and continues “until judgment is finally entered.” Id., subd. 1(a) & (b)
(emphasis added). The date on which pre-award prejudgment interest ends, marking the
beginning of post-award prejudgment interest, is noteworthy because post-award
prejudgment interest is calculated by using the total sum of the award and pre-award
prejudgment interest. Hogenson, 852 N.W.2d at 276 (concluding that pre-award
prejudgment interest is “part of compensatory damages”); see, e.g., HLC Prejudgment Int.
Order, 2019 WL 1237166, at *9.
The Minnesota Court of Appeals has relied on Black’s Law Dictionary’s definition
of “prejudgment interest,” which defines the term as “[s]tatutorily prescribed interest
accrued either from the date of the loss or from the date when the complaint was filed up
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to the date the final judgment is entered.” Kinworthy v. Soo Line R.R. Co., 841 N.W.2d
363, 367 (Minn. Ct. App. 2013) (emphasis added) (quoting Prejudgment Interest, Black’s
Law Dictionary (9th ed. 2009)), aff’d, 860 N.W.2d 355 (Minn. 2015). Under Minnesota
law, prejudgment interest does not stop accruing until “final judgment is entered.” Id.
(emphasis added). In the instant case, and contrary to PRMI’s apparent suggestion, final
judgment has clearly not yet been entered.
The Court’s August 14, 2020 Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law awarding
ResCap $5.4 million, plus to-be-determined fees, costs, and prejudgment interest, did not
constitute entry of final judgment. (See FOF & COL, 2020 WL 4728109, at *91)
(“Defendant shall pay Plaintiff $5.4 million in damages; and . . . [w]ithin 10 days, the
parties shall meet and confer regarding a briefing schedule on Plaintiff’s motion for an
award of attorney’s fees, costs, and pre-judgment interest, and shall inform the Court of
the schedule forthwith.”).
Nor was the August 17, 2020 judgment from the Clerk of Court a final decision, as
it contained the very same language as the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law,
reserving the Court’s determination of the amount of attorney’s fees, costs, and
prejudgment interest owed by PRMI. (13-cv-3451, Aug. 17, 2020 Order [Doc. No. 5528]);
Parke v. First Reliance Standard Life Ins., 368 F.3d 999, 1002 n.2 (8th Cir. 2004) (“The
Order for Judgment dated September 25, 2002, was not a final decision because the district
court explicitly reserved its determination of the amount of attorney’s fees and interest
owed by [Defendant].” (emphasis added)); Minn. v. Kalman W. Abrams Metals, Inc., 155
F.3d 1019, 1023 (8th Cir. 1998) (“[W]hat is required [to constitute final judgment] is ‘some
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clear and unequivocal manifestation by the trial court of its belief that the decision made,
so far as the court is concerned, is the end of the case.’” (quoting Goodwin v. United States,
67 F.3d 149, 151 (8th Cir.1995))); Reinholdson v. Minn., 346 F.3d 847, 849 (8th Cir. 2003)
(same). In cases in which the judgment contains no such reservation for a determination
of attorney’s fees or costs, see Chavez-Lavagnino v. Motivation Educ. Training, Inc., No.
10-cv-14 (DWF/SER), Judgment in a Civil Case [Doc. No. 110] (D. Minn. May 20, 2011),
and the prevailing parties belatedly move to amend the judgment for attorney’s fees, costs,
and prejudgment interest, courts have considered the motion to be an untimely
postjudgment motion for prejudgment interest. Chavez-Lavagnino v. Motivation Educ.
Training, Inc., 767 F.3d 744, 752–53 (8th Cir. 2014).
The Eighth Circuit held in Dieser v. Continental Cas. Co., 440 F.3d 920, 923–24
(8th Cir. 2006), that orders “indicat[ing] that the amounts of additional statutory penalties,
pre-judgment interest[,] and attorney’s fees and costs remain[] unresolved,” as well as
orders “indicat[ing] that the amount of pre-judgment interest [is] yet to be determined,” are
not “final.” This Court expressly stated in its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law
that the amounts of attorney’s fees, costs, and prejudgment interest remained unresolved,
as it ordered the parties to propose a briefing schedule, “on Plaintiff’s motion for an award
of attorney’s fees, costs, and pre-judgment interest.” (FOF & COL, 2020 WL 4728109,
at *91.) This language plainly indicated the Court’s job was not done and it remained
tasked with resolving substantial issues, including the potential award of attorney’s fees,
costs, and prejudgment interest. See Dieser, 440 F.3d at 923–24; cf. Knowlton v. AnheuserBusch Cos. Pension Plan, 849 F.3d 422, 427 (8th Cir. 2017) (finding that “the district court
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issued final relief because it purported to address and resolve all of the issues in the case.”
(emphasis added)). PRMI’s legal authority fails to support the proposition that the Court
has already entered final judgment. See Weitz v. Mo-Kan Carpet, 723 F.2d 1382, 1385–86
(8th Cir. 1983) (stating that federal law governs the award of postjudgment interest, and
state law governs award of prejudgment interest), and Maddox v. American Airlines, 298
F.3d 694, 699–700 (8th Cir. 2002) (addressing conflicts of law issue regarding availability
of prejudgment interest under Arkansas and Oklahoma law).
This action commenced on December 2, 2016, when service was effective.
(Summons Returned [Doc. No. 6] at 3.) The court issued its Findings of Fact and
Conclusions of Law on August 14, 2020, awarding $5.4 million to ResCap, and left open
for consideration an award of attorney’s fees, costs, and prejudgment interest that are still
not yet determined. (See FOF & COL, 2020 WL 4728109, at *91.) Therefore, pre-award
prejudgment interest runs from December 2, 2016 to August 14, 2020, at a rate of 10% per
year. See Minn. Stat. § 549.09 subd. 1(a), (b), & (c)(2); Hogenson, 852 N.W.2d at 274.
As for post-award prejudgment interest, Section 549.09 likewise controls, running
from the date of the award through the date of final judgment. See Hogenson, 852 N.W.2d
at 274. See Kinworthy, 841 N.W.2d at 367. “[I]nterest from the time of the verdict . . . until
judgment is finally entered shall be . . . added to the judgment or award. . . . [T]he interest
rate shall be ten percent per year . . . .” Minn. Stat. § 549.09, subd. 1(a) & (c)(2) (emphasis
added). Furthermore, “when awarding post[-award] prejudgment interest, courts may
‘includ[e] the pre[-award] [prejudgment] interest in the total sum of the award upon which
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post[-award] prejudgment interest [is] calculated.’” HLC Prejudgment Int. Order, 2019 WL
1237166, at *9 (quoting Hogenson, 852 N.W.2d at 276).
So that the Court may enter final judgment in this matter, Plaintiff shall promptly file
its calculation of the appropriate award of postverdict prejudgment interest on the total award
of damages, inclusive of pre-award prejudgment interest, but not on the award of attorney’s
fees and costs. The Court directs Plaintiff to provide a calculation over a range of four days,
to give the Court time to review the submission and direct entry of judgment with the correct
calculation.
III.
CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, and all the files, records, and proceedings herein, IT IS
HEREBY ORDERED THAT:
1. Plaintiff’s Motion for Attorney’s fees, costs, and Prejudgment Interest [Doc.
No. 22] is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part;
2. Plaintiff is awarded $14,081,616.31 in attorney’s fees and costs
($10,553,237.39 in attorney’s fees + $3,528,378.92 in costs);
3. Plaintiff is awarded $1,999,180.27 in prejudgment interest on the Court’s
damages award from the commencement of this litigation on December 2,
2016, to the award date of August 14, 2020;
4. Plaintiff is awarded post-award prejudgment interest on the sum of the award
and pre-award interest, from the award date through the date the Court enters
final judgment in this matter;
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5. Within seven (7) days of this Order, Plaintiff shall file a calculation of the
appropriate award of post-award prejudgment interest over a range of four days
so that the Court can enter final judgment in this matter; and
6. This Order is temporarily filed under seal. Within seven (7) days of the date of
this Order, the parties are ORDERED to show cause as to why the Order
should remain under seal, and if so, which portions of the Order should remain
sealed and for how long. To that end, the parties must file (under seal) a joint
brief, no longer than five (5) pages, and/or a proposed Redacted Order, if they
would like portions to remain under seal.
Dated: April 28, 2021
s/Susan Richard Nelson
SUSAN RICHARD NELSON
United States District Judge
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