WILLIAM ALSUP, District Judge.
1. As recently held by our court of appeals, defendants are entitled to recover their attorney's fees and costs.
2. The following procedure will be used to determine the amount of an award herein. It will be structured to allow meaningful evaluation of the time expended.
3. No later than
4. All entries for a given project must be presented chronologically one after the other, i.e., uninterrupted by other projects, so that the timeline for each project can be readily grasped. Entries can be rounded to the nearest quarter-hour and should be net of write-down for inefficiency or other cause. Please show the sub-totals for hours and fees per project, as in the example above, and show grand totals for all projects combined at the end. Include only entries for which compensation is sought, i.e., after application of "billing judgment." For each project, the declaration must further state, in percentage terms, the proportion of the project directed at issues for which fees are awardable and must justify the percentage. This percentage should then be applied against the project total to isolate the recoverable portion (a step not shown in the example above).
5. A separate summary chart of total time and fees sought per individual timekeeper (not broken down by project) should also be shown at the end of the declaration. This cross-tabulation will help illuminate all timekeepers' respective workloads and roles in the overall case.
6. The declaration must also set forth (a) the qualifications, experience and role of each attorney or paralegal for whom fees are sought; (b) the normal rate ordinarily charged for each in the relevant time period; (c) how the rates were comparable to prevailing rates in the community for like-skilled professionals; and (d) proof that "billing judgment" was exercised.
On the latter point, as before, the declaration should describe adjustments made to eliminate duplication, excess, associate-turnover expense, and so forth. These adjustments need not be itemized but totals for the amount deleted per timekeeper should be stated. The declaration must identify the records used to compile the entries and, specifically, state whether and the extent to which the records were contemporaneous versus retroactively prepared. It must state the extent to which any entries include estimates (and what any estimates were based on). Estimates and/or use of retroactively-made records may or may not be allowed, depending on the facts and circumstances.
7. Ordinarily, no more than one attorney and one paralegal need be present at a deposition; more will normally be deemed excessive. Ordinarily, no more than one attorney need attend a law-and-motion hearing; more will normally be deemed excessive. To allow for symmetry, however, the award will take into account the staffing used by the opposing party.
8. If the opposing party doubts the accuracy of the declaration, then the moving party must immediately produce the original underlying time records for inspection upon request. The opposing party must then file and serve any opposition. In this case, the opposition will be due
9. The opposing submissions may not simply attack the numbers in the application. It must also set forth a counter-analysis. The counter-analysis should be in the same format required of the applicant, arriving at a final number. The opposition must clearly identify each line item in the application challenged as excessive, improper or otherwise unrecoverable and explain why. The opposition, for example, may annotate (legible handwriting will be acceptable) the applicant's declaration to isolate the precise numbers at issue.
10. With the benefit of both sides' filings, representatives of the parties with final decision authority shall meet in person and confer to try to resolve all differences as to the amount. If no agreement is reached, the moving party must file and serve a declaration showing full compliance with this paragraph, explaining when, where and who met, their decision authority, how long they met, what documents were reviewed together, and the principal points of disagreement. This must be done within
11. If no agreement is reached, a special master shall be appointed. If the parties cannot agree on a special master, then the Court shall select a special master. The parties must so advise the Court on this within
12. The special master shall have all the powers set forth in FRCP 53(c) and FRCP 54(d)(2)(D). The parties shall provide the special master with copies of all motion papers and other documents relevant to this dispute. The special master shall review the briefs and declarations by the parties on the pending motion, hear argument, and then determine a reasonable amount to award, including any fees on fees. The special master shall also determine the extent to which any discovery should be permitted — with the caution that further discovery should be the exception and not the rule. The special master shall then prepare and file a report on recommended findings and amount.
13. Absent any supplementation allowed by the special master, the foregoing submissions (together with the briefs already filed) shall be the entire record for the motion. There will be no replies unless allowed later by the special master. Any further submissions for the special master's use should not be filed with the Court. If objections are later made to the special master's report, the objecting party must file a declaration submitting to the Court a complete appendix of relevant communications with the special master.
14. The Court will allocate the fees of the special master in a fair and reasonable manner, taking into account the reasonableness of the parties' respective positions and the special master's recommendation in this regard. If the movant must pay, then the special master's compensation shall be deducted from the attorney's fee award. If the opposing party must pay the special master, then it shall pay the special master and pay the award. The Court will, however, reserve final judgment on allocation of the expense of the special master until a final determination of the fee issue. A final award shall then be entered.
15. Costs will be determined in strict compliance with the local rules. If a review is sought regarding taxable costs, then the issue may also be referred to a special master (or may not).