RODNEY W. SIPPEL, District Judge.
Plaintiff in this disability education case seeks attorneys' fees and non-taxable expenses pursuant to 20 U.S.C. § 1415(i)(3). Plaintiff is the prevailing party, but only with respect to a portion of the relief sought. As a result, I will reduce Plaintiff's attorneys' fees proportionally to the amount of relief obtained, awarding Plaintiff $34,523.43 in attorneys' fees and $773.87 in taxable costs.
Minor Plaintiff D.L. brings this case appealing a ruling from the Missouri Administrative Hearing Council (AHC) pursuant to the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). In my order granting judgment on the administrative record, [No. 342], I concluded that D.L.'s November 2016 Individualized Education Plan (IEP) was not reasonably calculated to provide him with a free and appropriate public educate (FAPE), but only with respect to the period of time where the chosen school placement had no history of, nor preparation for, autism-related educational supports. (ECF No. 42). I ordered the defendant St. Louis School District to reimburse D.L. for costs incurred in his separate private school placement during that period of time. (
Plaintiff now moves for attorneys' fees, (ECF No. 43), and taxable costs, (ECF No. 45). Plaintiff also moves to supplement his original motion for attorneys' fees to include fees incurred litigating his motion for amended relief and motion for reimbursement.
The IDEA allows courts to award "
"There is no precise rule or formula for making these determinations."
In his first motion for attorneys' fees, Plaintiff seeks $103.875.00 in attorneys' fees and $773.87 in reimbursable litigation expenses through July 23, 2018. In his second motion, Plaintiff seeks to supplement an additional $13,500.00 in attorneys' fees, for a total of $117,375.00, for work completed from July 23 to October 15, 2018. The additional requested attorneys' fees were billed for work on an unsuccessful motion for amended relief and a motion for reimbursement that unsuccessfully relitigated aspects of Plaintiff's original motion for judgment on the administrative record.
The Defendant St. Louis City Public School District ("the District") argues that Plaintiff has received only a limited portion of his requested relief. "[T]he District believes that Plaintiff was, at best, 20% successful" and that any attorneys' fee award should be reduced to 20% of the fees billed by Plaintiff's counsel. (ECF No. 64 at 5). The District also identifies specific entries which were unnecessary to the relief obtained, or unsuccessful, and should not be included in any attorneys' fee award. Specifically, the District seeks reductions for
The District also argues that Plaintiff's counsels' hourly rates are unreasonable and should be reduced to reflect hourly rates billed for counsel representing school districts in IDEA cases.
The product of a reasonable rate and reasonable hours, the lodestar award, "is presumptively a reasonable fee."
Having carefully reviewed the District's objections and the Plaintiff's time entries, I agree with the suggested reductions: Plaintiff was not successful on the matters listed above, (
Finally, I disagree with the District's argument that Plaintiff failed to establish that his attorneys' hourly rates were reasonable for an attorney in this market practicing in this area of law. Popular clearinghouses for billing rates in the St. Louis metropolitan area do not appear to differentiate "disability education" lawyers from "civil rights" law or other practice areas. (ECF No. 44-6). However, Plaintiff did provide comparable rates for employment law and civil rights law, which Plaintiff's attorneys also practice. The rates that Plaintiff's attorneys, Sarah Jane Hunt and Thomas Kennedy, request are within the ranges provided for these areas. Specifically, attorney Hunt seeks to reimbursed at a rate of $300/hr, and attorney Kennedy seeks to be reimbursed at a rate of $400/hr. Plaintiff submitted a document demonstrating billing rates of $200-$350 for "attorneys" or "associates" practicing employment or civil rights law in the St. Louis metropolitan area and billing rates of and $350-$500 for "partners" practicing employment or civil rights law in the St. Louis metropolitan area. (ECF No. 44-6 at 3-7). As a result, when calculating an appropriate attorneys' fee, I will use the rates requested by Plaintiff's counsel.
In summary, incorporating the above reductions, I calculate a reasonable attorneys' fee as follows:
This value is slightly greater than the 20% requested by the Defendant District, but I conclude that it is a reasonable attorneys' fee, given the issues involved in the case and the degree of success obtained by the Plaintiff.
Accordingly,