NEIMAN, United States Magistrate Judge.
Presently before the court is Plaintiffs' motion for attorneys' fees for time spent between July 1, 2008, and June 30, 2010 monitoring, implementing, and defending the court's orders in this matter on appeal. Acknowledging that the First Circuit's recent ruling, entered after they filed their motion, precludes them from obtaining $159,942 in fees for appellate work, Plaintiffs now seek $156,033 for such time as was spent on monitoring and implementing efforts.
Because the parties are fully familiar with this matter, the court will proceed directly to the issues raised by Defendants' opposition. For the reasons which follow, the court will allow Plaintiffs' motion in the amount of $130,625.75.
Plaintiffs' present fee application uses hourly rates equal to, and on occasion somewhat higher than, the rates sought but not utilized by the court in their prior fee application. See Rolland v. Patrick, 2009 WL 3258401, at *10 (D.Mass. Oct. 2, 2009). For example, the hourly fee requested
If the parties' countervailing invocation of case law proves anything, it is that the hourly rates applied in this district vary, although the differences may not be as great as might first appear. What variances do exist, in the court's view, can be chalked up in large part to the wide variety of civil rights cases, the circumstances of each, and the different time periods covered. That being so, the court believes that the history of fee applications in this case is the best guide as to what should be done now; accordingly, the court finds it unnecessary to revisit many of the arguments previously advanced by the parties and reprised in their current dispute. Moreover, the court is generally comfortable with the hourly rates it last chose for Plaintiffs' advocates in October of 2009 for the January 1, 2007 to June 30, 2008 time period and is, therefore, left merely to decide whether those rates should apply to the July 1, 2008 to July 30, 2010 time period presently at issue.
As an initial matter, the court notes that Plaintiffs' present fee application would increase the hourly rates last applied by the court anywhere from thirteen to thirty-nine percent depending on the particular advocate. There is, however, no apparent rhyme or reason to this variation other than Plaintiffs' implied dissatisfaction with at least some of the hourly rates last settled upon by the court. Nevertheless, Plaintiffs also argue as a general matter that prevailing market rates have increased since the last time period. In support, Plaintiffs offer the affidavit of Stuart Rossman which sets forth hourly rates charged effective September 1, 2010, by attorneys at the National Consumer Law Center ("NCLC") in Boston where he is Director of Litigation. Those rates have increased significantly since the last schedule was provided by Mr. Rossman in support of Plaintiffs' previous application, which schedule was effective January 1, 2007. For example, the hourly rate for an attorney with ten to twenty years experience increased from $375 to $495 and the hourly rate of an attorney with five to ten years experience increased from $300 to $350. It is unclear, however, what the pace of the rate increase had been over the intervening three and half years or exactly what rates may have been applicable in the time period now before the court.
Standing in some contrast is Mr. Rossman's reference in his affidavit to yet another scale, i.e., the "Laffey Matrix" of hourly rates prepared by the Civil Division of the United States Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia for use in cases in which a fee-shifting statute permits prevailing parties to recover fees. The matrix—adjusted for cost of living increases measured by the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers announced by the Bureau of Labor Statistics through May of 2011—shows only small increases in rates since the last matrix (with adjustments through May of 2008) was provided to the court by Mr. Rossman. For example, the hourly rate for attorneys with eleven to nineteen years of experience increased from $410 to $420 and the hourly rate for attorneys with from four to seven and eight to ten years of experience increased, respectively, from $270 to $275 and from $330 to $335. These slight increases,
To be sure, Defendants also argue that the Laffey Matrix, which provides rates for attorneys in the District of Columbia, is not indicative of rates in Massachusetts. They argue as well that the NCLC's rate schedule neither provides evidence of prevailing market rates nor indicates what attorneys are actually paid. Yet even were the court to accept these particular arguments, it is still evident that hourly rates have increased over the past several years, even if the rates proposed by Plaintiffs are not ones the court is prepared to adopt.
Accordingly, given the passage of time since the court's ruling, the period now before the court, the court's practice of revisiting applicable rates as the case has progressed, the increased experience of all the advocates, and the comparable rates applied by other courts in this district, the court will apply a modest increase of $10 per hour to the rates previously utilized. Those rates will be as follows: S. Schwartz $385; C. Costanzo $315; M. Boundy (para-legal) $100; M. Engel $315; F. Laski $335; J. Follet $315; C. Wicker $210; and N. Brown $185. Since Plaintiffs have suggested that the same rate apply to J. Patterson Rae, a new addition to the Plaintiffs' legal team, as is applied to Ms. Costanzo, the court will apply a $315 fee to him as well, despite what appears to be a significant difference in years of experience.
Defendants also argue that Plaintiffs' fee should be further reduced because of "limited success" on their prior fee application, the hours for which form
Defendants' argument is not persuasive. As Plaintiffs assert, Defendants raised this same argument before and it was rejected by the court:
Rolland, 151 F.Supp.2d at 150. The same reasoning applies here and Defendants have asserted nothing which convinces the court otherwise.
Given the court's analysis, the court ALOWS Plaintiffs' motion for fees in the amount of $130,625.75 in fees, calculated as follows:
Hours Rates Amount S. Schwartz 115.1 $385.00 $ 44,313.50 3.5 (travel) $192.50 $ 2,598.75 C. Costanzo 105.6 $315.00 $ 33,264.00 27.6 (travel) $157.50 $ 4,347.00 J. Rae 48.6 $315.00 $ 15,309.00 1.6 (travel) $157.50 $ 252.00 M. Boundy 102.9 $100.00 $ 10,290.00 16.0 (travel) $ 50.00 $ 800.00 M. Engel 5.1 $315.00 $ 1,606.50 F. Laski 44.7 $335.00 $ 14,974.50 6.0 (travel) $167.50 $ 1,005.00 J. Follet 2.3 $315.00 $ 724.50 C. Wicker .5 $210.00 $ 105.00 N. Brown 5.6 $185.00 $ 1,036.00 ___________ Total $130,625.75
IT IS SO ORDERED.