BRIAN M. COGAN, District Judge.
This action is before me on plaintiff's motion for a default judgment. Sometimes these actions under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act suggest that the primary beneficiary is the plaintiff's lawyer and that the plaintiff's recovery is merely incidental. In this action, however, there is no suggestion; it is patently obvious. The motion contains no proof or even submission by plaintiff. It consists entirely of a memorandum of law. And that memorandum of law is directed entirely to justifying the claim of plaintiff's attorney to $3,540 in attorney's fees and $450 in costs. There is no mention of any recovery for plaintiff personally until the "Conclusion" section of the memorandum of law, and then it is limited to: "Plaintiff should be awarded further awarded [sic] $1,000.00 by this Court for statutory damages." There is no argument, let alone evidence, as to why the statutory maximum is appropriate here. The presentation of plaintiff's claim as an afterthought to the main event — the recovery of attorney's fees — could not be more apparent.
The complaint states a valid claim under the FDCPA and since its allegations are deemed true on a motion for a default judgment, it is sufficient for an award of some statutory damages. But with plaintiff's counsel entirely disinterested in justifying the statutory maximum or any particular amount, I see no reason to presume that the statutory maximum is appropriate. There has been no showing of any injury to plaintiff, nor is there any evidence of the nature of defendant's business from which I could conclude that a $1,000 award is more likely to have a deterrent effect than a $100 award. Based on the nominal reference to damages contained in the motion, a nominal award of $100 in statutory damages is appropriate.
As to the real raison d'être for this action, counsel's claim for $3,450 in attorney's fees, it is too high. Plaintiff's counsel, Subhan Tariq, was admitted to the New York bar in 2014. (The motion does not mention this information, but it is publicly available on the website of the New York State Unified Court System.) The motion claims without any supporting evidence that Mr. Tariq has been receiving attorney's fees based on a $300-per-hour rate since then. In a case last spring, one of comparable difficulty, Judge Chen reduced Mr. Tariq's rate from his requested $375 to $250 per hour to calculate a fee award.
The motion cites
Looking at counsel's performance in this case, Judge Chen's allowance of $250 per hour for this attorney is higher than a reasonable rate. Counsel's motion, as noted above, barely mentions why his client should recover anything, and the one sentence that addresses plaintiff's claim contains an obvious typographical error. The motion contains no reference to the complaint or to the facts giving rise to this action. It refers to plaintiff using mostly female pronouns but occasionally male pronouns as well. It was very apparently lifted from some attorney's fee application counsel filed in another case.
Based on my familiarity with the rates in this district and on the quality of work submitted in this case, my conclusion is that a reasonable — if not generous — hourly rate for this attorney is $225 per hour.
As to the amount of time spent, plaintiff submitted a fairly detailed attorney time report with the motion. Counsel claims he expended 11.8 hours, which seems like a long time for such an easy case. For example, eighteen minutes to determine that an answer has not been filed and that defendant has failed to contact counsel is a bit much. It is true that courts have granted fees based on a similar number of hours in FDCPA default cases.
With a reasonable rate of $225 per hour and 11 hours of time reasonably spent, the appropriate attorney's fee for this case is $2,475, plus costs of $450. The Clerk is therefore directed to enter judgment for plaintiff in the amount of $3,025.