MORRISON C. ENGLAND, JR., District Judge.
Through this "lemon-law" action, Plaintiffs David John Patty and Sheila Renee Kirchner ("Plaintiffs") sought redress from FCA US LLC ("Defendant") for breach of warranty as to Plaintiffs' $36,360.04 purchase of a 2013 Dodge Journey. The matter originated in the Sacramento County Superior Court and was removed here on June 16, 2016.
Plaintiff seeks to recover $37,872.50 in fees, subject to a multiplier of 1.5,
This Court is required "to make an initial determination of the actual time expended; and then to ascertain whether under all the circumstances of the case the amount of actual time expended and the monetary charge being made for the time expended are reasonable."
Fee awards may "be enhanced under some circumstances."
In this case, very few expenses were incurred before Defendant presented Plaintiffs with the Rule 68 Offer. According to the Court's review of Plaintiffs' counsels' billing records, the only hours billed before Defendant offered to settle this matter for $90,000 were 4.9 hours by Steve Mikhov, 2.7 hours by Amy Morse, and 13.1 hours by Alastair Hamblin. The Court concludes those billings are reasonable as counsel was undertook to, among other things, evaluate the merits of the case, initiate the action, file a motion to remand and evaluate settlement offers.
Over the course of the following year and a half, however, Plaintiffs' counsel proceeded to bring in five additional attorneys and expend an additional 83 hours litigating this case, before finally accepting the Amended Rule 68 Offer that was only $9,000 higher than the original offer. Especially given the experience Plaintiffs' counsel has in this area of the law, from which the Court infers counsel would be savvy enough to evaluate settlement offers and prepare reasonable counter-offers, it concludes that the bulk of the litigation in this case produced minimal returns. Accordingly, given the relative lack of value added after the Rule 68 Offer was extended, but considering the possibility that Plaintiffs still possessed a chance to enhance their recovery during that time, the Court exercises its discretion to award 30% of the fees incurred from January 1, 2017, to the present.
The Court also finds the billing rates requested to be unreasonably high for this jurisdiction. The Court finds that the rates awarded in similar cases in the Fresno division are consistent with the rates that would be awarded in the Sacramento division of this Court for these types of cases and thus determines the following rates are appropriate: $300 for Mr. Mikhov; $250 for Mr. Hamblin, Ms. Stephenson-Cheang, and Ms. Hernandez; $225 for Ms. Morse and $175 for the remaining attorneys.
Finally, as to fees, the Court finds no multiplier is appropriate. Nothing here was particularly novel or difficult. This was a garden variety lemon law case prosecuted by a firm that specializes in these types of cases. Given the lack of unusual circumstances, there is no reason to depart from the presumptively reasonable lodestar fee; this is simply not a rare or exceptional case for fees purposes justifying resort to a multiplier. Plaintiffs' request for a multiplier is thus denied, and fees are awarded as follow:
Plaintiffs also seek to recover $13,067.50 in costs. Defendant's only objection to Plaintiffs' request is that the $10,242.09 Plaintiffs claim to have incurred to compensate their automotive expert, Anthony Micale, is excessive and unreasonable. The Court need not address this argument, however, because Plaintiffs are entitled to recover in federal court only those costs incurred for "court appointed experts."
Plaintiffs' Motion for Attorney's Fees (ECF No. 34) is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part, with the Court finding that Plaintiff is entitled to $11,050.00 in attorneys' fees as set forth above. In addition, the Clerk of the Court is directed to tax costs in the amount of $2,825.41 as set forth above as well.
IT IS SO ORDERED.