JOHN A. MENDEZ, District Judge.
Plaintiff Scott Johnson sued Defendants Keang Sim Lim and Ly Tech Ngov, alleging that Defendants' restaurant in Fairfield, California did not comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act ("ADA") and California law.
A prevailing party is entitled to reasonable attorneys' fees and expenses under the ADA and the Unruh Act. 42 U.S.C. § 12205; Cal. Civ. Code § 52(a). "[A] plaintiff `prevails' when actual relief on the merits of his claim materially alters the legal relationship between the parties by modifying the defendant's behavior in a way that directly benefits the parties."
Plaintiff submitted a billing summary itemizing the hours billed by five attorneys: Mark Potter, Phyl Grace, Dennis Price, Amanda Lockhart, and Isabel Masanque. Billing Summary, ECF No. 36-3, at 1. Initially, Plaintiff requested $16,234.47 in fees and costs, but has reduced it to $13,784.47. Mot. at 1; Request for Modified Award, ECF No. 38, at 2.
The Court finds Plaintiff's attorneys fee request to be excessive. Plaintiff seeks nearly $14,000 for services billed in this relatively non-complex ADA case—an area of the law in which Plaintiff's attorneys have extensive experience. First, the Court finds it unreasonable and inefficient to staff five attorneys on a case that parallels hundreds of other cases these attorneys have brought on Plaintiff's behalf. Even counsel acknowledges that the "case presented no significant legal issues of first impression" and "did not present specialized or skillful challenges and was a fairly straight-forward application of the law." Mot. at 11, 13. Plaintiff's counsel does not explain why this case required two partners and three associates. To staff five lawyers is cumulative and inefficient; one partner and one associate should have sufficed.
Second, Plaintiff's attorneys frequently use boilerplate forms to litigate ADA cases. In fact, the Court is also reviewing another request by this law firm for attorneys' fees in a similar ADA case—the pleadings and briefing there parallel the pleadings and briefing here. This is not the first time this Court has addressed this issue with Plaintiff's attorneys. Just 4 months ago, this Court concluded that some of Potter's, Lockhart's, and Masanque's billing entries were unreasonable. See
The boilerplate nature of the filings in this case suggest that it should have taken Potter little time to draft the complaint, discovery requests, and attorneys' fees motion. The Court therefore reduces Potter's 1/18/2015 entry for drafting the complaint from 0.6 to 0.3 hours, 4/8/2015 entry for drafting discovery from 1.4 to 0.5 hours, and 10/17/2016 entry for drafting the fee motion from 1.2 to 0.5 hours.
Having made the above reductions, the Court finds that Potter reasonably expended 6.8 hours and Lockhart reasonably expended 14.3 hours. The Court declines to award fees for the hours Grace, Price, and Masanque billed because their work was unnecessarily duplicative and inefficient.
The Court must now multiply the reasonable hours expended in this litigation by the reasonable hourly rate for each attorney.
Plaintiff seeks hourly rates of $350 for Potter and $200 for Lockhart. Mot. at 3. Plaintiff's counsel relies on John O'Connor's expertise on attorneys' hourly billing rates, ECF No. 36-4, and the 2014 Real Rate Report. ECF No. 36-5. This Court is not persuaded that the requested hourly rates are reasonable. First, O'Connor's declaration offers no help because O'Connor does not evaluate disability access cases; instead, O'Connor's analysis primarily pertains to labor litigation. See ECF No. 36-4. Second, the Real Rate Report addresses reductions to hourly fees for numerous corporate practice areas, but not disability access. ECF No. 36-5, at 29. The Report does not provide a helpful benchmark for lawyers litigating disability access cases for non-corporate clients.
"District judges can . . . consider the fees awarded by other judges in the same locality in similar cases."
Accordingly, the attorneys' fees here are awarded as follows:
Lastly, the Court grants Plaintiff's motion to recover $3,979.47 in litigation expenses.
For the reasons set forth above, the Court GRANTS Plaintiff's motion for attorneys' fees and expenses. The Court awards $8,164.47.