TERESA J. JAMES, Magistrate Judge.
This matter is before the Court on the Motion for Fees on Motion for Sanctions, Cross Motion for Sanctions, and Response to Motion for Protective Order (ECF No. 350) filed by Plaintiffs National Railroad Passenger Corporation and BNSF Railway Company (jointly "Railroad Plaintiffs"). As authorized by the Court's February 7, 2018 Memorandum and Order (ECF No. 337), Railroad Plaintiffs' motion requests that Intervenor-Plaintiffs be ordered to pay the reasonable attorney fees incurred by Railroad Plaintiffs in responding to Intervenor-Plaintiffs' motion for sanctions and for protective order. Railroad Plaintiffs request a total of $36,288 in attorney fees, reflecting 211.8 hours charged by three attorneys. Intervenor-Plaintiffs contend the amount of attorney fees requested by Railroad Plaintiffs is grossly excessive. They request that the claimed hours be reduced by 90% and payment of any attorney fee award be stayed until the conclusion of trial. After the motion was fully briefed, the Court ordered Railroad Plaintiffs to file copies of the underlying billing records in support of their attorney fee request. For the reasons set forth below, the Court orders counsel for Intervenor-Plaintiffs to pay Railroad Plaintiffs attorney fees in the amount of
On November 13, 2017, Intervenor-Plaintiffs filed a five-page motion for sanctions and request for protective order against Railroad Plaintiffs, along with a 32-page memorandum in support with 421 pages of exhibits.
On January 19, 2018, the Court denied Intervenor-Plaintiffs' request for protective order and indicated it intended to award Railroad Plaintiffs their expenses under Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c)(3), but deferred addressing the amount of the award until it ruled on the sanctions motions.
The Court conducted a telephone motion hearing on the sanctions motions on February 1, 2018, and entered its Memorandum and Order on February 7, 2018 denying Intervenor-Plaintiffs' motion for sanctions and granting Railroad Plaintiffs' cross-motion for sanctions.
Pertinent to the fee request here, the Court found the filing of Intervenor-Plaintiffs' motion for sanctions directly caused Railroad Plaintiffs to incur significant expense in opposing the motion for sanctions and prompted the filing of their cross-motion for sanctions. Based upon this finding, the Court awarded Railroad Plaintiffs their reasonable expenses, including attorney fees, incurred in opposing Intervenor-Plaintiffs' motion for sanctions under the Court's inherent authority. It also granted Railroad Plaintiffs their reasonable expenses, including attorney fees, incurred in opposing Intervenor-Plaintiffs' request for protective order under Rules 26(c)(3) and 37(a)(5)(B).
Railroad Plaintiffs request attorney fees in the amount of $35,034.50 for 204.7 hours of work by two partner-level and one associate-level attorneys responding to Intervenor-Plaintiffs' motion for sanctions. They also seek $1,253.50 for 7.1 hours by these same three Kansas City attorneys responding to Intervenor-Plaintiffs' motion for protective order.
In determining reasonable attorney fees, the starting point for determining the amount of a reasonable fee is the "lodestar" figure, which is "the number of hours reasonably expended on the litigation multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate."
In examining the hourly rate, the court is to refer "to the prevailing market rates in the relevant community."
Railroad Plaintiffs must next show the claimed number of hours expended was reasonable. In order for the applicant to satisfy its burden of proving the number of hours reasonably spent on the litigation, the party must submit "meticulous, contemporaneous time records that reveal, for each lawyer for whom fees are sought, all hours for which compensation is requested and how those hours were allotted to specific tasks."
The multiple discovery abuses Intervenor-Plaintiffs asserted against Railroad Plaintiffs, and their extensive citations to the depositions, exhibits, and pleadings, required Railroad Plaintiffs' counsel to expend significant time reviewing the record and pleadings, conducting legal research, and drafting extensive briefing. Counsel for Railroad Plaintiffs submitted bills for 204.7 hours responding to Intervenor-Plaintiffs' motion for sanctions and 7.1 hours responding to the motion for protective order. The Court finds that Railroad Plaintiffs have provided a very detailed accounting of the services performed and thoroughly itemized billing invoices. They did not block bill for their work. Based upon the thorough billing invoices submitted, the Court does not question that Railroad Plaintiffs' counsel worked and billed all reported hours responding to the sanctions motion and that Railroad Plaintiffs paid them for all the time billed. However, for purposes of determining whether attorney fees are reasonable, the Court considers that Railroad Plaintiffs may choose to invest considerable resources by hiring multiple attorneys in defending against allegations such as those brought by Intervenor-Plaintiffs. But that does not mean all of the hours billed by all the attorneys should be reimbursed by Intervenor-Plaintiffs. If a party is represented by more than one attorney, the court must be vigilant to ensure that no billed attorney fees are duplicative.
After reviewing the billing records, the Court finds that, under the standards set out above, the 7.1 claimed hours responding to the request for protective order are reasonable. The Court, however, finds the 204.7 claimed hours of attorney time spent responding to Intervenor-Plaintiffs' motion for sanctions are in part duplicitous and included time researching and briefing that was not necessary to address issues raised in Intervenor-Plaintiffs' motion for sanctions. Railroad Plaintiffs' use of two partner-level and one associate-level attorneys resulted in some instances of time claimed for overlapping and duplicative labor. For example, time spent by one attorney reviewing the work of another attorney, time spent by two or more attorneys performing the same task, or time claimed for attorneys emailing or discussing the case with each other should be disallowed as duplicative. The Court also disallows time spent on activities not necessary to address the specific allegations in Intervenor-Plaintiffs' motion for sanctions, such as time expended investigating opposing counsels' alleged conduct in other cases, and time expended reviewing and analyzing articles and presentations authored by opposing counsel. After reviewing the detailed billing records submitted by Railroad Plaintiffs' attorneys, the Court disallows the following hours included by the three attorneys responding to Intervenor-Plaintiffs' motion for sanctions: 62.1 hours (of the claimed 94.5) expended by associate Throssell ($9,625.50), 27.7 hours (of the claimed 46.3) for partner Leff ($5,124.50), and 20.5 hours (of the claimed 63.9) for partner Hamer ($3,792.50). The disallowance of these 110.3 hours results in a total attorney fee reduction of $18,542.50 for time incurred responding to Intervenor-Plaintiffs' motion for sanctions. Taking into account the above reduction, the Court concludes that Railroad Plaintiffs are entitled to reasonable attorney fees of $16,492 incurred responding to Intervenor-Plaintiffs' motion for sanctions, and $1,253.50 incurred responding to Intervenor-Plaintiffs' motion for protective order. This results in a total of $17,745.50 allowed as Railroad Plaintiffs' reasonable attorney fees.
The Court rejects Intervenor-Plaintiffs' request that payment of the attorney fee award be stayed until the conclusion of trial, as contrary to the purpose of the sanction. The sanction must be paid within sixty (60) days of the date of this Memorandum and Order.