NATHANIEL M. GORTON, District Judge.
Defendants Cadlerocks Centennial Drive, LLC and Daniel Cadle ("Cadle") (collectively, "defendants") move for reconsideration of the award of $50,000 in attorneys' fees and $5,609.75 in costs to plaintiff ORIX Capital Markets ("plaintiff"). VFC Capital Partners 26, LLC ("VFC"), which became the plaintiff-in-substitution in July, 2013, opposes the motion. For the reasons that follow, the motion will be allowed, in part, and denied, in part, and the Court will award plaintiff $20,000 in attorneys' fees and $2,272.05 in costs.
In 2010, plaintiff brought suit against defendants for breach of a promissory note, a Guaranty and an Environmental Indemnity Agreement. In October, 2012, the Court entered partial summary judgment for plaintiff on the grounds that defendants had misappropriated rent payments worth $33,484. Following a three-day bench trial in December, 2012, the Court found defendants liable under the Guaranty and Environmental Indemnity Agreement and awarded plaintiff $104,106 in damages. Specifically, it awarded $102,536 for damages associated with environmental testing and $1,570 to account for defendants' failure to maintain the property. Thus, the total judgment against defendants amounted to $137,590.
Following the trial, plaintiff sought $85,095.50 in attorneys' fees and $6,187.79 in costs pursuant to defendants' agreement to reimburse the holder of the Guaranty and Mortgage for reasonable attorneys' fees and costs incurred in enforcing their contractual obligations. The Court awarded $50,000 in attorneys' fees and $5,609.75 in costs.
Defendants appealed the finding of liability and award of damages under the Environmental Indemnity Agreement. The First Circuit Court of Appeals agreed that defendants were not liable for the costs of environmental testing under that agreement. It vacated the award of $102,536 in damages and remanded for reconsideration of the award of attorneys fees and costs in light of that ruling.
Cadle is personally liable for attorneys' fees and costs based upon two contractual provisions. First, under the Guaranty, he agreed to
Additionally, the Mortgage renders Cadle liable for
Defendants nevertheless contend that plaintiff is entitled to only $1,068.22 in attorneys' fees and $822 in costs. Plaintiff argues that it is entitled to $31,103 in fees and does not address the cost award.
Where, as here, the parties agree
Generally, when determining a fee pursuant to a contractual provision the court considers the factors set forth in
188 N.E. 489, 492 (Mass. 1934). No single factor is dispositive.
Defendants maintain that plaintiff is entitled to claim only $1,068.22 in attorneys' fees. They first suggest that the lodestar should be set at $15,849 because 1) plaintiff did not prevail on any of the claims advanced at trial and therefore should not be compensated for time its attorneys spent at trial or preparing for trial and 2) the Court did not rely on any material obtained through discovery in awarding damages for misappropriation for rent on summary judgment. Furthermore, they argue that plaintiff is entitled to about 7% of that lodestar because it recovered only about 7% of its requested damages.
The Court declines to adopt that lodestar calculation or to limit recovery according to the ratio of damages obtained over damages claimed. Instead, the Court concludes that $20,000 in attorneys' fees is adequate under the aforementioned contractual fee-shifting agreements. First, it notes that plaintiff succeeded only on its misappropriation of rent claim and that result was obtained prior to trial. As a result, any fees incurred after October 10, 2012 are not compensable. The Court therefore bases the lodestar on the following calculations:
The Court will reduce that figure to $20,000, however, to account for the fact that at least some of the time spent on the summary judgment motion was allocated to its unsuccessful claim under the Environmental Indemnity Agreement. It declines defendants' invitation to limit fees to 7% of the lodestar because a rigid formula based solely upon damages awarded as a proportion of damages sought is at odds with the flexible and multi-factored test for determining a reasonable fee.
The Court previously awarded $5,609.75 in costs pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(d)(1), which allows the Court to award the "prevailing party" any costs incurred in litigating an action beyond attorneys' fees. For the reasons stated above, plaintiff was not the "prevailing party" at trial. Although it technically prevailed on its claim for property damage, it recovered only a small fraction of the damages it sought. Moreover, the First Circuit vacated this Court's award of damages under the Environmental Indemnity Agreement. Thus, while plaintiff "prevailed on the merits of at least some of [its] claims" asserted at trial,
Plaintiff is therefore not entitled to recover costs incurred between November, 2012 and January, 2013.
In accordance with the foregoing,