LEWIS A. KAPLAN, District Judge.
This Court found after a lengthy trial that Steven Donziger and his co-conspirators attempted to extort billions of dollars from Chevron Corporation. They did so by, among other things, violating the Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act ("RICO"),
The details of this extraordinary behavior are contained in extensive findings. The judgment specifically provided, in words relevant here, that "Chevron shall recover of Donziger and the LAP Representatives,[
While Donziger appealed from the judgment, he challenged neither the factual findings nor the costs provision of the judgment. The entire judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeals, which commented that "[t]he record in the present case reveals a parade of corrupt actions by the LAPs' legal team [i.e., Donziger and his co-conspirators], including coercion, fraud, and bribery, culminating in the promise to [the Ecuadorian judge,] Judge Zambrano[,] of $500,000 from a judgment in favor of the LAPs."
Having prevailed in the litigation, Chevron gave notice of taxation of costs against Donziger and the LAP Representatives.
Donziger
Chevron filed its notice of taxation of costs on December 5, 2016, not long after the docketing of the mandate affirming the judgment.
Although Dongizer had not objected to the reactivation of proceedings to tax costs, his position changed after that motion was granted. On August 1, 2017, he wrote to the Clerk, arguing that taxation of costs should "be held in abeyance pending resolution of a number of critical and related legal and factual issues that are now pending or will soon be presented to the district court."
The Clerk declined to hold the taxation of costs in abeyance, which was entirely appropriate given the Court's prior direction to "proceed to tax costs."
The procedure for objecting to costs taxed by a district court clerk is specified in Rule 54(d)(1) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure — "On motion served within the next 7 days, the court may review the clerk's action." As costs were taxed on August 8, Donziger had until August 15 to file a motion seeking review of the Clerk's action. In fact, as discussed above, he never did file a motion. Rather, on August 16, 2017, the day after such a motion would have been due, he electronically filed a letter objecting to the Clerk's actions.
Taken together, Donziger's letters purport to articulate reasons that no costs should be taxed against him and, in any case, that Chevron forfeited any right to recover the special master fees and expenses. He has not challenged specifically any of the other items of costs taxed. With respect to the special masters, however, one point warrants particular note in order to understand the proceedings.
Chevron's bill of costs contained copies of the bills it had paid for the compensation and expenses of the special masters and their assistant. In the case of one of the two special masters, former Magistrate Judge Katz, the material included detailed, contemporaneous time records. In the case of the other, Max Gitter, Esq., it included invoices showing the hours worked and the billing rates but not time detail.
The special masters furnished the necessary time records to Donziger on November 21, 2017,
On January 12, 2018, the special masters submitted an invoice for the work they performed in preparing the report of December 8.
Donziger's application to review the Clerk's taxation of costs fails in material respects to comply with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the rules of this Court.
The application was made by means of a letter filed electronically. Rule 54(d)(1) provides that review of a clerk's taxation of costs is to be by motion. Local Civil Rule 7.1(a), with exceptions not here relevant, requires that motions be brought on by notice of motion or order to show cause and that they be accompanied by memoranda of law and "[s]upporting affidavits and exhibits thereto containing any factual information and portions of the record necessary for the decision of the motion." Section 13.1 of the Court's ECF Rules and Instructions make clear that the Court's letter motion practice, which applies to other sorts of mostly routine procedural applications, does not permit letter motions to review taxation of costs.
These rules serve important purposes. The requirement of affidavits, exhibits, and memoranda of law — rather than unsworn letters and other informal submissions — serves to place before the Court evidence, legal authority and argument "necessary for the decision of the motion." Accomplishment of that purpose is especially important here, as Donziger relies on (a) factual assertions that go well beyond the record in this case which, in any event, is enormous, and (b) legal contentions, the basis for which, if there is any, is far from self evident. Yet Donziger has not supported his contentions with the materials the rules require.
These deficiencies cannot be overlooked on the theory that Donziger is representing himself. Donziger is a graduate of the Harvard Law School and, according to the attorney search function of the website maintained by the New York Unified Court System, a member of the New York Bar for twenty years.
Accordingly, the application to review the taxation of costs — except as it relates to the taxation of the special master fees and expenses which, as discussed below, raises at least some issues that may be decided on the existing record and without briefing — is, to the extent it is denied, is denied based on Donziger's failure to comply with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the local rules of this Court. The Court nevertheless considers all of Donziger's arguments, based on such materials as are readily at hand, to determine whether they would have been meritorious had they been presented properly. Even on that basis, however, he would fail in substantially all respects. Hence, the ruling on this motion rests on alternative grounds.
Donziger's letter to the Clerk requested that she hold the taxation of costs in abeyance. While the letter thus ostensibly went to the timing rather than the substance of the taxation process, in fact only three of the several arguments he made there actually addressed the question of timing. Everything else went to the merits. We deal first with the timing arguments.
Among the bases for Donziger's attempt to have the Clerk hold costs in abeyance was the argument that Circuit precedent forecloses attorneys' fees in this case.
Donziger's argument for delay on this basis is frivolous.
First. The reference to "a variety of appropriate judicial bodies" is unexplained, not to mention unsupported by any evidence or legal authority.
The judgment of this Court is final and enforceable. It stands, regardless of whether courts or other "bodies" outside the United States recognize or enforce the Ecuadorian judgment or comment on testimony of Guerra either before this Court or before any other body.
Second. Although the foregoing is more than sufficient to dispose of Donziger's argument, it bears mention that Donziger overlooks the fact that the testimony of Guerra was far from indispensable to the judgment rendered in this case. As the Court's opinion makes clear, this Court would have reached precisely the same result in this case even without the testimony of Alberto Guerra.
The Court found that Donziger and his co-conspirators, among other misdeeds, (1) blackmailed Judge Yanez to abandon the judicial inspections and to appoint Cabrera as the global expert, (2) corrupted Cabrera, (3) wrote Cabrera's report, (4) falsely passed off Cabrera's report as the work of an independent and impartial expert, and (5) ghost-wrote former Judge Zambrano's purported decision which demonstrably relied on the fraudulent Cabrera report notwithstanding its disclaimer.
There is no valid reason to delay the taxation of costs on the theory that someday, somewhere, some other body may comment on Guerra's credibility in a manner more to Donziger's liking.
Donziger argued that the Clerk should defer taxation of costs based on an assertion that the chair of this Court's Grievance Committee has made a complaint against him to state disciplinary authorities.
Donziger has provided no evidence, whether by affidavit or by filing a copy of the supposed letter, that any such complaint was made. Assuming, however, that such a complaint was made, it would be immaterial here. There is no basis for the assertion that the law requires or even permits a change of venue on such a basis. The substance of Donziger's suggestion is frivolous.
Judges have a duty to refer reliable evidence of professional misconduct by lawyers to relevant disciplinary authority.
Having disposed of the timing arguments, we come to the merits of Donziger's arguments, assuming arguendo that they had not been forfeited for failure to comply with court rules.
Donziger advances three arguments that are inconsistent with the judgment and therefore no longer available to him. First, he contends that the imposition of costs on him would violate the First Amendment.
The First Amendment argument, to the extent it is comprehensible at all, is a reprise of an argument in his post-trial brief.
Donziger made neither the First Amendment nor the recusal argument on appeal
As our Court of Appeals has held, "a [district court] legal decision made at one stage of litigation, unchallenged in a subsequent appeal when the opportunity to do so existed, becomes the law of the case for future stages of the same litigation, and the parties are deemed to have waived the right to challenge that decision at a later time."
Donziger contends that costs should not be imposed on him because he is a person of limited means, whether considered in and of itself or in relation to the fact that Chevron is among the world's largest enterprises. These arguments too would fail even if the Court were to disregard Donziger's failure to comply with court rules governing motions to review taxation of costs.
Rule 54(d) "creates a presumption that the district court will award the prevailing party costs."
Donziger has not carried, or even attempted to carry, that burden, even as to the full amount taxed by the Clerk. Moreover, even if he had demonstrated that he would be able personally to pay the full amount of the costs taxed against him, that would not be dispositive. Although a district court "may deny costs based on financial hardship, indigency per se does not preclude an award of costs against an unsuccessful litigant."
Donziger and his clients have complained of a purported lack of resources through much of this litigation to support various arguments or to justify their behavior. Indeed, they flatly refused to comply with the Court's order that they bear part of the special master costs on an interim basis.
As an initial matter, Donziger repeatedly has refused to provide much information concerning his personal financial situation. Presumably to compensate for his failure to provide such information, he claims that his original trial counsel, the Keker firm, withdrew in the first half of 2013 claiming non-payment and invited an inference that it did so because Donziger lacked the ability to pay its bills. But even assuming that Donziger stopped paying the Keker firm's bills, the fact that he ceased payments would not necessarily say anything about the financial resources available to him.
Perhaps more fundamentally, Donziger's focus on his supposed personal circumstances should not blind one to the fact that the litigation with Chevron, including this case, has been financed by third-party funders.
Neither Donziger nor his clients have come forward with complete and current evidence concerning the monies available to them. The most that can be said is that the KPMG forensic accountant called by Chevron at trial, based on his examination of incomplete records all of which now are more than four years old, testified that:
In addition, the accountant concluded that:
Donziger himself admitted at trial that he spent over $21.4 million on the litigation from 2007 to 2013,
In sum, there is no substantial basis to credit Donziger's unsubstantiated claim of inability to pay. Given that the burden of proof to establish at least that payment would cause serious financial hardship is on the party seeking to avoid imposition of costs, and given that Donziger has provided no such evidence, the Court would decline to temper the award of costs even if it were to overlook his failure to comply with court rules.
The other branch of Donziger's means-related argument is straightforward.
Chevron is a huge enterprise. According to its 2016 annual report, the consolidated balance sheet for Chevron reflected net equity of $146.7 billion.
As noted previously by both this Court and the Court of Appeals:
Moreover, as one witness pointed out at trial, a singular irony of Donziger's misconduct is that its occurrence "probably means that we'll never know whether or not there was a case to be made against Chevron."
Donziger next argues that all costs should be denied to Chevron because it allegedly committed fraud, suborned perjury, and perhaps was guilty of other misconduct in connection with the testimony of Alberto Guerra. In essence, he claims that Guerra's testimony was false, at least in material respects, and that Chevron bought and paid for the alleged perjury. And it is true that costs may be denied to a prevailing party if the prevailing party is guilty of sufficiently serious misconduct in the course of the action.
First, as already noted, Donziger could have challenged the judgment's award of costs against him on the appeal from the final judgment but failed to do so. That failure forecloses the issue now.
Second, Donziger's argument would be unpersuasive even if it were not precluded. Donziger failed to prove any misconduct, let alone any of sufficient gravity to warrant denial of costs to the prevailing party.
The crux of Donziger's argument is twofold. First, he argues once again, as he did at trial, that Guerra perjured himself and now contends that Chevron suborned that false testimony.
To begin with, this Court heard Guerra's testimony. It heard as well the testimony of the other key witnesses on the relevant point, Donziger and former Ecuadorian judge Zambrano. It recognized that all three were highly flawed witnesses and laid out the economic and other inducements to Guerra to come to the United States and testify.
To the extent that the Court already has found that Guerra's testimony was credible,
Donziger's other argument fares no better.
To be sure, as the Court wrote previously, Guerra at the time of trial was "the beneficiary of what amount[ed] to a private witness protection program created for him by Chevron, which facilitated his relocation from Ecuador to the United States and ha[d] been supporting and assisting him since his arrival here."
But these arrangements would provide no basis for denying costs to Chevron even if Donziger had not forfeited the argument.
There was extensive motion practice concerning these issues prior to trial. The motions produced an extensive record, including expert affidavits concerning the ethical propriety of the participation by Chevron's lawyers in the Guerra arrangements.
Of course, we now consider the matter in a context distinct from whether Guerra's testimony should have been excluded. The concern, if the issue still were open to Donziger, would be whether Chevron engaged in misconduct and, if so, whether it was sufficient to warrant denial of costs. The evidence does not justify a finding of misconduct, let alone misconduct sufficient to warrant such a denial.
The principles that govern the propriety of Chevron's payment for the relocation of Guerra and his family from Ecuador, living expenses in the United States prior to and during trial, the many hours he spent being debriefed by Chevron counsel and preparing to testify, and legal expenses occasioned by the relocation such as the cost of immigration counsel are not in much dispute. Donziger and the other defendants conceded before trial that a party may pay a fact witness's expenses and reimburse the witness for time lost in connection with the litigation, provided the payments are reasonable.
In this case, there was abundant evidence, which the Court credits, that Guerra's decision to cooperate with Chevron and, ultimately, to testify in this case would have exposed him and his family to serious risks to personal safety and security had they remained in Ecuador.
So far as the payments for physical evidence are concerned, defendants' proffered professional responsibility expert conceded that "[l]awyers may pay reasonable costs to gather documents and other physical evidence from various sources" and for physical evidence itself.
To be sure, the Court understands the concern that motivated the defendants' witness's qualification — payments for information in a given case could edge along the spectrum in the direction of payments for testimony. But the assertion that any payment beyond the replacement cost of a piece of physical evidence inherently is unethical was entirely unsupported by any citation of authority. Chevron's expert, on the other hand, provided an extensive, well reasoned, and well supported opinion in which he said that Chevron's counsel appropriately could pay Guerra "solely for the information in his possession, so long as that payment [was] a fixed sum not in any way contingent on his testimony or the outcome of the litigation; the witness makes no promise to testify in return for the payment; and no future payment [would] be made to the witness for his testimony other than legally and ethically permitted payment for expenses incurred in connection with testifying."
In the last analysis, the Court need not resolve this abstract disagreement between experts. The relevance of misconduct by a prevailing party with respect to taxation of costs is that misconduct may be an equitable factor that, in a proper case, could warrant departure from the presumption that the prevailing party is entitled to recover costs. In this case, any undue aggressiveness with respect to the payment for physical evidence, and the Court makes no finding of any impropriety, would not warrant such a departure for a host of reasons:
No more need be said.
Finally, Donziger argues that Chevron has forfeited the right to recover, whether by taxation of costs or otherwise, the fees and expenses of the special masters because it failed to make a timely motion as supposedly required by the Court's July 9, 2013 order.
For reasons well documented in the extensive record,
Donziger and the other defendants refused to comply with the Court's orders to advance their half of the costs.
The special master bills that were submitted in support of the bill of costs were rendered in July, August and September 2013 and covered varying periods ending no later than August 31, 2013 and in some cases earlier.
Chevron did not move for an allocation of any part of the funds it had advanced within 14 days after receipt of the last of the invoices included in the bill of costs it filed in late 2016. Donziger argues that Chevron thus forfeited any right to recover any part of the money it advanced, even via taxation of costs at the conclusion of the case. This argument is unpersuasive for several reasons.
The starting point for this discussion is three straightforward propositions. The first is that Rule 53, which governs special masters, empowers a court to provide interim compensation for special masters, subject to reallocation of those expenses at the end of the case.
As the foregoing suggests, and as the First and Second Orders made clear by referring to reallocation in accordance with Rule 53(g)(3), those orders provided only for the payment of the special masters during the interim between their appointment and the conclusion of the appellate process.
It was in that context that the Second Order, which required Chevron to "advance" 100 percent of these expenses rather than to pay the 50 percent set out in the First Orders, gave Chevron on option with respect to those interim advances — half the amount of which was necessitated by Donziger and the LAP Representatives' disregard of the Court's orders and refusal to pay. The Second Order gave Chevron the option, but not the obligation, to move to recover on an interim basis any or all of the funds it advanced to cover Donziger and the LAP Representatives' share without waiting either for the ultimate reallocation of those expenses under Rule 53(g) or the taxation of costs at the conclusion of the case and any appeals.
Donziger nevertheless argues in substance that Chevron lost the right to seek to impose any part of the ultimate liability for the special masters on him by failing to move to change the interim responsibility to advance costs pending a determination of the ultimate liability.
Donziger's argument makes little sense. Nothing in the Second Order impaired Chevron's rights under the Order of Appointment of the Special Masters,
In sum, none of Donziger's arguments for review of the Clerk's taxation of costs has merit. The contention that the Clerk was obliged to hold the matter of costs in abeyance is frivolous. All or substantially all of his arguments could be rejected on the ground that he disregarded court rules in seeking review of the Clerk's actions. Even if the Court were to reach the merits notwithstanding that procedural default, the arguments would fail:
So what remains to be determined?
The foregoing rulings require denial of Donziger's motion insofar as it seeks review of the Clerk's taxation of costs for service fees, court reporter fees and translation costs, a total of $72,076.22. The rulings of December 6 and 27, 2017
Rules 53(g)(3)and 54(d) afford district courts a modicum of discretion with respect to the imposition of expenses of special masters in particular and taxable costs generally, respectively.
The pertinent factors mentioned in Rule 53(g)(3) are "the nature and amount of the controversy, the parties' means, and the extent to which any party is more responsible than other parties for the reference to the master."
Rule 54(d) differs somewhat. As previously noted, it "creates a presumption that the district court will award the prevailing party costs."
The record in this case reflects the reasons for the appointment of the special masters, which included anticipated difficulties with Donziger and the other defendants based on experience in prior related litigation.
The masters recommended ultimately that defendants, jointly and severally, be taxed 85 percent of the masters' costs and fees and that the remaining 15 percent be taxed to Chevron.
The masters highlighted, as an example, one occasion in which Donziger changed his position regarding a scheduling issue twice in the course of five days.
The report includes also examples of Donziger's frivolous assertions of privilege during depositions (objections that "turned the Guerra deposition from seven hours of testimony into a 10 ½-hour day"
But blame does not fall on Donziger alone. Chevron too occasionally was recalcitrant, "tr[ying] to take advantage of [the Special Masters'] presence to relitigate issues that had already been decided."
The report sheds significant light on the issue of the question of the allocation of fees. And, as noted above, the Court adopted the special masters' findings in the absence of timely objection from Donziger.
I begin with the presumption created by Rule 54(d)(1), that costs are awarded to the "prevailing party."
There are, of course, reasons that a court may decline to award costs in favor of the prevailing party: for example, "misconduct by the prevailing party, the public importance of the case, the difficulty of the issues, or the losing party's limited financial resources."
The issue of Donziger's financial resources is discussed in Point III.B. The Court's conclusions there apply here as well: Donziger has not demonstrated a lack of resources that would warrant relief here. Public importance and the difficulty of the issues provide little guidance here. The Advisory Committee's notes say that "parties pursuing matters of public interest . . . may deserve special protection."
In addition to the behavior detailed by the special masters in their report and summarized in Point IV.B above, Donziger engaged in repeated misconduct throughout this litigation. One major category of misconduct was his refusal to produce to Chevron documents that were physically located in Ecuador.
Donziger's history of misconduct in this litigation means that he has no substantial claim on the Court's exercise of its equitable discretion in his favor. But there is more to consider here. Rule 53(g)(3) instructs that special masters' fees must be allocated with consideration given to "the nature and amount of the controversy, the parties' means, and the extent to which any party is more responsible than other parties for the reference to a master." These factors — especially the third — considered in combination with other equitable principles lead to the conclusion that the masters' proposed 85/15 split of their fees is appropriate.
The nature and amount of the controversy and the parties' means have been discussed already, and the conclusion that these factors do nothing in defendants' favor stands. This leaves the parties' respective responsibility for the reference to the special master. The reference, of course, was requested by Chevron.
Broadening the scope of the question to consider whose behavior was more responsible for the substantial amounts of time and work devoted to this litigation by the special masters confirms Donziger's responsibility for a large bulk of the many hours the masters spent overseeing discovery. The masters' report, which is summarized in Point IV.B and which the court adopted,
Given the Court's discretion to decline strict application of the Rule 54 presumption when considering special masters, it is appropriate in this case to tax 85 percent of the special master costs against Donziger and other the other defendants, jointly and severally, with the remaining 15 percent taxed to the plaintiffs.
when considering special masters, it is appropriate in this case to tax 85 percent of the special master costs against Donziger and other the other defendants, jointly and severally, with the remaining 15 percent taxed to the plaintiffs.
For the foregoing reasons, Donziger's motion to review the taxation of costs is granted to the extent that the amount taxed for special master expenses is reduced to $741,526.49 and denied in all other respects. A supplemental judgment in the amount of $813,602,71 shall be entered.
SO ORDERED.
Chevron's motion for attorneys' fees against Donziger likewise was held in abeyance.
The Clerk taxed $1,550 for service fees, $47,126.22 for court reporter fees, $23,400 for translation services, and $872,387.63 for compensation and expenses of special masters.
Donziger's multiple prior recusal/reassignment requests all were denied. E.g., Chevron Corp. v. Donziger, 974 F. Supp.2d at 566; Id. 783 F.Supp.2d 713, 718 (S.D.N.Y. 2011) (both citing record).
The special masters recommended that 85 percent of the special master costs be apportioned to the defendants, jointly and severally. DI 1942.
While a KPMG forensic accountant did review some financial records and was a witness at trial, there was no audit. The accountant's unchallenged testimony was precisely to the contrary. Tr. (Dahlberg) 863:24-864:11 ("THE COURT: Is anything in here a certification or an opinion by you as a certified public accountant that the books and records here fairly present the financial condition of any company, entity, or person? THE WITNESS: No, it does not, your Honor. THE COURT: Okay. Are you claiming you did any audit of anything in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards? THE WITNESS: I am not, your Honor."). See also PX 4900R (Dahlberg witness statement) ¶¶ 24-27.
Not only was there no audit, there was no evidence at trial as to Donziger's financial situation beyond (1) his admission that he had obtained between $1.8 and $1.9 million in cash and property as the result of from "family estate related matters" in the two years prior to trial, Tr. (Donziger) 2537:20-2538:18, and (2) what little appeared in the incomplete and disorganized document production that the KPMG accountant reviewed, infra, at pp. 22-23; PX 4900R (Dahlberg witness statement); Tr. 815:18-887:3 (Dahlberg live testimony). Among other things, the accountant noted that he was not given records of payments to lawyers although they were requested by Chevron in this and related litigation. PX 4900R (Dahlberg witness statement) ¶ 27. So there was nothing resembling an accurate picture of Donziger's financial situation at the time of trial nor even reliable assessment of how much of the millions of dollars he raised went into and remained in his own pocket. Moreover, even if there had been adequate evidence of Donziger's financial situation as of the time of trial (fall 2013), it now would be long out of date.
In the period through 2009, most of the money came from the Kohn firm, but "Donziger largely controlled how and when it was spent." Id. After Kohn stopped its support, Donziger and Patton Boggs lined up financing from Burford Capital LLC ("Burford"), which provided $4 million but then refused to provide further funding upon its conclusion that Donziger and Patton Boggs had misled it. Id. at 474-75, 478-79. The funds provided by Burford were to be spent only with the agreement of both Donziger (referred to in the Funding Agreement as Claimants' U.S. Representative") and Patton Boggs (referred to as "Nominated Lawyers"). DI 356-2 (Funding Agreement), ¶¶ 3(b) and Sched. 3. Those funds, which perhaps by now have been exhausted, would have been available to pay Donziger's defense costs in this case as well as any costs imposed upon him. Id. ¶¶ 3(e), 3(f).
The retainer agreement provides also that Donziger's clients would have the right to seek to recoup from Donziger whatever they have paid to defend him in the event of a final judgment determining that Donziger "has committed actual fraud, professional malpractice or willful misconduct." Id. The judgment in this case determined that Donziger has committed actual fraud and willful misconduct, albeit not actual fraud on or misconduct with respect to his clients. In all the circumstances, it is questionable whether (a) the findings here would excuse Donziger's clients from their indemnity obligation given the lack of findings of fraud or misconduct directed at those clients, and (b) Donziger's clients would adopt this Court's findings of fraud and misconduct to avoid their obligation to pay for Donziger's defense in light of the possible implications of adopting those findings for their efforts to enforce the Ecuadorian judgment in other countries.
The available records showed receipt of only $16 million. Id.
The second round came on defendants' motion dismiss the action on the ground that the Guerra arrangements alone justified such action. The relevant papers with respect to that motion include DI 1422, DI 1423, DI 1472, DI 1474, DI 1475, DI 1481 and DI 1650.
The third was a motion to strike Guerra's trial testimony. The papers with respect to the third are DI 1640 and DI 1650. Of particular note are the expert affidavits, DI 977-4, DI 977-5, DI 977-6, and DI 1423-2, and a portion of Chevron's memorandum of law in opposition to the second motion, DI 1474, at 1-22.
Indeed, while the New York Rules of Professional Conduct prohibit offering witnesses inducement or compensation, "contingent upon the content of the witness's testimony or the outcome of the matter," that same rule allows a lawyer to "advance, guarantee or acquiesce in the payment of . . . reasonable compensation to a witness for the loss of time in attending, testifying, preparing to testify or otherwise assisting counsel, and reasonable related expenses." N.Y. R. PROF'L CONDUCT 3.4(b); see also N.Y. Comm. of Prof'l Ethics, Op. 668 (1994) (concluding the same under prior law); N.Y. Comm. of Prof'l Ethics, Op. 962 (2013) (reimbursement of travel expenses is reasonable).
The Court does not take into account his false protestations of lack of memory in his deposition in the 1782 proceeding or his obstruction of justice, witness tampering, and other misconduct in related cases, as it considers only misconduct in this action for purposes of striking an equitable balance with respect to costs. See Zeran v. Diamond Broad., Inc., 203 F.3d 714, 722 (10th Cir. 2000).
They asserted inability to pay but never documented any such thing. E.g., DI 1293, at 2-3.
The Court did not ask the special masters to address the parties' means, as the Court, although not the special masters, had extensive knowledge of the prior proceedings bearing on that issue