JED S. RAKOFF, District Judge.
Before the Court on remand from the Second Circuit is the issue of what amount of attorneys' fees the Court should award to counsel to
More generally, familiarity with the prior proceedings in the overall
On February 1, 2018, after more than three years of extensive litigation in which Haynes and his counsel had no involvement, counsel for the class representatives ("Class Counsel") filed a notice of motion for preliminary approval of a settlement in the underlying class action against Petrobras. ECF No. 765. Haynes then objected and, in a brief dated May 10, 2018, raised several objections to the settlement.
The Court found the first set of objection to lack merit and, on June 22, 2018, the Court certified the settlement class and approved the proposed class action settlement. Opinion and Order dated June 22, 2018, ECF No. 834. The Court of Appeals subsequently affirmed these decisions. Summary Order at 8;
As to the second set of objections, however, while the Court awarded attorneys' fees to Class Counsel, it did so in an amount lower than requested.
Haynes subsequently filed a motion to recover $199,400 of attorneys' fees — representing a lodestar amount of $117,316.50 with a multiplier of 1.7 — for his counsel, Anna St. John, Esq., ECF Nos. 839 & 840. Given the fact that only one of Haynes's objections had resulted in any benefit to the class, the Court granted Haynes' request for attorneys' fees only in the amount of $11,731.65. Opinion and Order dated August 14, 2018, ECF No. 866.
"[I]t is well settled that objectors ... are entitled to an allowance as compensation for attorneys' fees and expenses where a proper showing has been made that the settlement was improved as a result of their efforts,"
The Court therefore determined that Haynes's attorney should only recover fees attributable to her time and effort developing the successful objection about the Brazilian contract attorneys, and the Court further determined that $11,731.65, or 10% of Haynes' lodestar, was the amount appropriately attributable to Haynes's one successful objection. Opinion and Order dated August 14, 2018 at 7.
Haynes appealed the Court's limited attorney fee award, and the Court of Appeals affirmed in part and vacated and remanded in part. Notably, the Second Circuit did not ask the Court to reconsider either its conclusion that Haynes's objection about the Brazilian contract attorneys was the only objection that significantly contributed to the class's recovery, nor its conclusion that $11,731.65 was the fee amount appropriately attributable to developing that objection. Rather, the Second Circuit asked the Court to reconsider the narrower questions of (1) whether Haynes's other objections to Class Counsel's award of attorneys' fees besides the successful one (the "additional fee objections") were so related to the Brazilian contract attorney objection that Haynes's counsel should also recover fees for the time spent developing these objections, and (2) whether Haynes's counsel should recover fees for various "all-inclusive" activities, such as satisfying the class notice requirements, preparing for the fairness hearing, and responding to discovery requests.
The Court considers these two questions in turn and holds that (1) the additional fee objections were sufficiently distinct from the successful objection as to merit no additional award of attorneys' fees, but (2) a $22,010 increase in the fee award to account for the all-inclusive activities is appropriate.
As to the first question, in addition to his successful objection, Haynes raised (along with some vague and conclusory objections) two further objections to Class Counsel's fee award — that the hourly rates for U.S.-based project attorneys used in the lodestar calculation were excessive and that Class Counsel failed to provide sufficient billing summaries. The Court ultimately found these and Haynes' other such objections unhelpful in its decision to reduce Class Counsel's fee award below the requested amount. Objection at 12-25. The Court denied Haynes's request for attorneys' fees for the time spent developing these unsuccessful objections, reasoning that while "objectors ... are entitled to an allowance as compensation for attorneys' fees and expenses where a proper showing has been made that the settlement was improved as a result of their efforts,"
The Second Circuit now directs the Court to reconsider that conclusion in light of the language in
Nonetheless, even after full reconsideration in light of
By contrast, the first of the additional fee objections was that Class Counsel should also account for the charges of U.S.-based project attorneys, who performed document review and translation work, at cost rather than adding thee charges to the lodestar, or, in the alternative, that these charges should be added to the lodestar at a lower hourly rate Objection at 14-17. This objection relied on a series of cases, e.g.,
Neither of these additional fee objections "involve a common core of facts or ... legal theories," Hensley, 461 U.S. at 435, with the Brazilian contract attorney objection. While, as the Second Circuit notes, these objections all (superficially) relate to overbilling, Summary Order at 9, they have little else in common. And indeed, virtually any conceivable objection to an attorneys' fee request by plaintiff's counsel in a class action would in some way allege that counsel was overbilling the class. The successful objection related only to Class Counsel's billing practices for foreign attorneys, and it relied on a distinct set of cases setting forth the narrow proposition that the work of foreign attorneys who were not capable of being admitted
Furthermore, these other objections were not "alternative legal grounds,"
For these reasons, the Court declines to increase the fee award to Haynes's counsel to account for her time litigating the additional fee objections.
Turning to the second question, the Second Circuit also directs the Court to reconsider whether Haynes's counsel is entitled to recover fees for the "all-inclusive" activities necessary to sustain Haynes's status as an objector, including "satisfying the class notice requirements, preparing for the fairness hearing, and responding to discovery requests." Summary Order at 10. The amount of Haynes's counsel's lodestar amount attributable to these activities appears to be $33,015, comprising 51 hours spent by Ms. St. John on "responding to class counsel's onslaught of abusive discovery requests" and 20 hours spent by Ms. St. John preparing for the fairness hearing, all charged at the rate of $465 per hour.
The Court believes it would be inappropriate to award this entire lodestar amount in additional attorneys' fees. As explained in the Court's original opinion and order on this motion for attorneys' fees, ECF No. 866 at 7, Haynes "was only involved in the case for a short period of time and faced no risks in his involvement." These factors counsel against an award of fees for the activities associated with maintaining the objection. Furthermore, the Court is also skeptical that all of the time spent responding to Class Counsel's discovery requests merits a recovery of attorneys' fees, as at least some of these discovery requests were likely prompted by Haynes's objections to the certification of the settlement class — which, in addition to being unsuccessful, resembled objections filed by the so-called "professional objectors" whom the Court had reason to believe might be acting in bad faith.
Nevertheless, the Court is persuaded that some recovery of fees for the time spent on the all-inclusive activities is appropriate. As the Second Circuit noted, Summary Order at 10, at least one out-of-circuit court has awarded attorneys' fees for such costs under similar circumstances.
Weighing all these factors, the Court's view is that the appropriate recovery for Haynes's counsel for her time spent on the all-inclusive activities is $22,010, or two-thirds of the above-calculated lodestar amount of $33,015, with no multiplier. When added to the previous recovery of $11,731.65, this results in a new award totaling $33,741.65.
The award of attorneys' fees to counsel to objector William Haynes is accordingly increased from $11,731.65 to $33,741.65, to be funded from Class Counsel's fee award.
SO ORDERED.