UPON DUE CONSIDERATION, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED that the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Claimant-appellant Emery Celli Brinckerhoff & Abady LLP ("Emery") appeals from the judgment of the district court ordering the firm to pay 20% of its fee (3% of its clients' settlement award) from the settlement of the Lockerbie bombing litigation against Libya to claimant-appellee the Plaintiffs' Committee ("Committee"), which was appointed by the district court to manage the class action on behalf of all plaintiffs. We assume the parties' familiarity with the underlying facts and procedural history.
We review a district court's award of attorneys' fees for abuse of discretion, "one of the most deferential standards," and thus "the scope of our appellate review . . . is narrow."
Emery contends that the district court failed to comply with the directive that our Court issued in the previous appeal in this case,
First, the district court had incorrectly treated certain statements made by one of Emery's clients, Mark Hudson, as evidence that Emery had not performed meaningful lobbying work in furtherance of an amendment of the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act ("FSIA") that made it possible for the plaintiffs to sue Libya, when in fact Hudson had strongly supported Emery's position.
We vacated the judgment and remanded for reconsideration free of these errors. Notably, we expressed "no view of the merits of the question."
On remand, the district court again concluded that Emery should contribute 3% of its clients' recovery to the Committee, because, inter alia, (1) there was "no tangible evidence that Emery's admittedly limited lobbying efforts were the cause of the amendment to the FSIA"; (2) the fact that Emery engaged in lobbying did not prove that the firm's activities "conferred a substantial benefit on plaintiffs herein such that it should be excused from contributing to the Committee"; (3) the fee awarded to the Committee was reasonable given the scope and impact of its work, and in fact was "decidedly modest" as compared to the recoveries in analogous cases; and (4) the Committee deserved "[n]inety-five percent or more of the credit for the success of this case," even "accepting as true . . . that [Emery's] filing of the Hudson lawsuit played some role in Congress amending the FSIA."
On appeal, Emery argues that the district court's second order failed to cure the errors that we identified, and applied the same flawed reasoning from the first order. Specifically, Emery asserts that the district court defied our mandate by refusing to credit the firm's lobbying efforts, which Emery says played a significant role in the FSIA's amendment, which in turn contributed importantly to the Libya settlement. In response, the Committee argues that lobbying work should not count for purposes of fee-contribution calculations, that the district court cured all of the errors our Court identified, and that district court did not abuse its discretion in ordering the 3% contribution.
Emery's argument that it should be subject to a lower fee-contribution percentage than non-lead attorneys who played no role in the FSIA lobbying effort is not unattractive. However, the question here is not whether Emery's lobbying efforts are in principle compensable. (To the extent the Committee argues that they are not, its position is inconsistent with the Supreme Court's decision in
The record provides few details about the nature of Emery's lobbying activities. The principal affidavit describing those activities hardly compels a conclusion that the firm's lobbying efforts were extensive:
The affidavit conspicuously omits any claim that Emery lawyers met with or wrote to a single member of Congress. Similarly, while the firm professed to have spent "2,900 plus" hours "prosecuting this case," it offered no evidence, despite available billing records, regarding how much of that time was spent on lobbying activities. Finally, however modest or extensive Emery's lobbying efforts were, the firm's evidence offers little that could persuade a factfinder, in the face of the inherent difficulty of disentangling the wellsprings of congressional action, that those efforts had a substantial effect on the decision to amend the FSIA. The district court was not required to conclude that Emery spent substantial time lobbying for the FSIA's amendment, or that its lobbying efforts had more than a de minimis impact on the amendment process or on the Libya settlement. Accordingly, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in ordering Emery to contribute 3% of its clients' total recovery to the Committee.
We have considered Emery's other arguments, including its claim that the district court failed to correct the specific errors identified in our prior opinion, and find them to be without merit. For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.