CHRISTIAN J. MORAN, Special Master.
A January 24, 2020 decision found that a reasonable amount of attorneys' fees and costs was $160,882.10. On February 13, 2020, petitioner Zania Lewis filed a motion for reconsideration, presenting new information. Because Ms. Lewis has not met the standards for reconsideration or otherwise shown that the January 24, 2020 decision was unreasonable, her motion for reconsideration is DENIED.
Although Ms. Lewis titles her document "motion for reconsideration," her motion does not provide any guidance about the rules surrounding these motions. Special masters may grant motions for reconsideration "in the interest of justice." Vaccine Rule 10(e)(3). Motions for reconsideration are not intended to serve as vehicles for the submission of evidence that could have been presented earlier.
After receiving compensation through a decision incorporating a joint stipulation, Ms. Lewis filed a motion for an award of attorneys' fees and costs. As relevant to the pending motion for reconsideration, Ms. Lewis sought reimbursement for work performed by three experts: Hamid Djalilian, an otolaryngologist; Omid Akbari, a Ph.D. immunologist; and Larry Charleston IV, a neurologist.
The January 24, 2020 Fees Decision reduced the amount that was requested for each of the three experts, based upon a lodestar calculation in which a reasonable hourly rate was multiplied by a reasonable number of hours. The Fees Decision noted that the experts had requested hourly rates much higher than the rates that Ms. Lewis's attorney had recognized as typically awarded in the Vaccine Program. The Fees Decision also noted that with one exception, Ms. Lewis had not presented any evidence to justify the proposed hourly rates. Finally, the Fees Decision also found that the experts charged for an excessive number of hours.
Twenty days after the Fees Decision was filed, Ms. Lewis filed the pending motion for reconsideration. With her motion, Ms. Lewis filed Fee Exhibits A through J. She later added Fee Exhibit K.
The rationale of Ms. Lewis's motion for reconsideration seems to follow these steps: (1) petitioner could not "gauge the amount of information needed to justify fees and costs when the Respondent does not lodge any objections or counterarguments," Pet'r's Mot. at 6; (2) petitioner is now supplying additional evidence in the form of Fee Exhibits A-K that support the proposed hourly rate and/or the requested number of hours; and (3) thus, some additional compensation is warranted.
Ms. Lewis's motion falters on her first point—allegedly not knowing how much information to include in a motion for attorneys' fees. It has long been petitioners' burden to support their motions for attorneys' fees. A case from the beginning of the Vaccine Program states: "The fee applicant carries the burden of proof."
This principle has not changed. To facilitate the presentation of information with a motion for attorneys' fees and costs, the Office of Special Masters has issued Guidelines, which "reflect the accumulated wisdom of numerous decisions."
Ms. Lewis's pending motion for reconsideration acknowledges none of the authority that places a burden on petitioners to present information. Rather, Ms. Lewis seems to suggest that because the Secretary is not interposing objections to amounts requested in attorneys' fees and costs, any deficiencies in her application are correctable via a motion for reconsideration. However, this suggestion is erroneous in two respects.
First, the caselaw and Guidelines refer to petitioners' motions. "The request for fees must be complete when submitted."
Second, the independent obligation of special masters to assess motions for attorneys' fees and costs for their reasonableness is a practical reason for the petitioners' requirement to support their motions for attorneys' fees and costs. Since
Thus, the January 24, 2020 Fees Decision looked at what Ms. Lewis had presented in her motion. For Dr. Djalilian and Dr. Charleston, Ms. Lewis made the conclusory statements that their proposed hourly rates ($550-$578 per hour and $575 per hour, respectively) were "consistent" with rates for other experts or "commensurate with his specialty." Pet'r's Mot. for Attorneys' Fees and Costs, filed Sept. 11, 2019, at 3, 5. Ms. Lewis did not cite any cases and she did not submit any evidence in support of these rates. For Dr. Akbari, Ms. Lewis was in a stronger position in that she cited one case,
The thrust of Ms. Lewis's pending motion for reconsideration is a submission of material (Fee Exhibits A-K) that she could have presented with her motion. Ms. Lewis wants a change in the Fees Decision to avoid a precedent that might dissuade these experts from testifying in the Vaccine Program again. Ms. Lewis requests that the hourly rates awarded to Dr. Akbari be at least $500 per hour, to Dr. Charleston be $575 per hour, and to Dr. Djalilian be at least $500 per hour.
For Dr. Akbari and Dr. Djalilian, Ms. Lewis offers a "compromise." She proposes that the amount awarded in compensation remain constant with any increase in hourly rate being offset by a decrease in number of hours. Pet'r's Mot. for Reconsideration at 2, 6. In practical terms, Ms. Lewis's compromise would look something like this:
While the undersigned appreciates the spirit of compromise, a problem is that the January 24, 2020 Fees Decision found a reasonable number of hours for Dr. Akbari and Dr. Djalilian to be 115.6 and 117 hours. A decrease to 69.36 and 87.75 hours would be arbitrary.
For the reasons explained above, reconsideration is not warranted. Ms. Lewis has not shown that she is now offering evidence that she could not have offered earlier. If petitioners could always seek reconsideration by submitting previously available evidence, when would litigation end? Motions for reconsideration are not intended to allow second opportunities.
The need for finality seems especially acute in the context of attorneys' fees, which, "should not result in a second major litigation."
Finally, Ms. Lewis's worry about the precedential value of the Fees Decision seems overwrought. The Fees Decision stated that Ms. Lewis basically had little to no justification for the proposed hourly rates, and recognized that as Ms. Lewis's experts increase in efficiency and expertise, their hourly rate might increase. Thus, it is easy to imagine that another special master (or even the undersigned) would reach a different result when presented with different evidence.
Given the limited information Ms. Lewis provided in her motion for attorneys' fees and costs, the January 24, 2020 Fees Decision made reasonable findings about the amount of attorneys' fees and costs. Although Ms. Lewis filed additional evidence with her motion for reconsideration, a motion for reconsideration is not appropriate on the ground of new evidence. Thus, the motion for reconsideration is DENIED.
The January 24, 2020 Fees Decision remains in effect. For how an order denying a motion for reconsideration affects the submission of a motion for review,
Expert costs, reconsideration denied.