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Kensu v. Buskirk
2:13-cv-10279
E.D. Mich.
Nov 1, 2016
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Background

  • Plaintiff Temujin Kensu, a prisoner, sued under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging Eighth Amendment deliberate indifference to serious medical needs; trial in March 2016 resulted in a jury verdict for Kensu for $325,002 against five defendants.
  • Oliver Law Group initially represented Kensu, withdrew in Oct. 2013; Kensu proceeded pro se, then retained Solomon Radner in April 2015.
  • Post-judgment Kensu filed four motions: (1) attorney fees; (2) equitable relief (injunctive/declaratory and medical relief); (3) motion to compel phone recordings; and (4) motion for an indicative ruling. Defendants appealed after the fee motion was filed.
  • Court applied the PLRA (§ 1997e) four-step framework for fee awards, treated Oliver Law’s claim under quantum meruit, and performed a lodestar analysis for Radner and Oliver Law.
  • The Court awarded partial attorney fees to Kensu (total awarded $51,172.37 after applying 1% of judgment toward fees), allocated portions to Radner and Oliver Law (Oliver Law received $14,407.27), awarded costs $2,213.44, and apportioned fee liability among liable defendants.
  • The Court denied Kensu’s motions to compel phone call recordings and for equitable relief (and denied his indicative ruling), finding lack of need for recordings, mootness/waiver of equitable relief, and that the notice of appeal divested jurisdiction to grant the requested equitable relief.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument Defendant's Argument Held
Whether Kensu (and Oliver Law) are entitled to attorney fees under § 1988 and PLRA § 1997e(d) Kensu sought prevailing-party fees; Oliver Law sought recovery for pre-withdrawal work via lien or hourly/quantum meruit Defendants challenged scope under PLRA and proportionality (and generally opposed non-attorney fees) Granted in part: lodestar awarded with PLRA caps and proportionality adjustments; Oliver Law recovered via quantum meruit haircuted for deficiencies and clerical entries
Whether non-attorney/paralegal hours are recoverable Kensu sought $110/hr for non-attorney staff charged to the case Defendants objected to non-attorney recoveries and some entries as clerical Allowed recoverable non-attorney hours that reflect substantive legal work; disallowed purely clerical time and reduced certain mixed entries
Proper hourly rates under PLRA cap (§1997e(d)(3)) Plaintiff requested $217.50/hr for attorneys and $110/hr for non-attorneys Defendants objected to rates exceeding PLRA cap Court applied PLRA maximum (150% of CJA rate): $193.50/hr for attorneys; $110/hr for non-attorneys approved
Whether court should compel production of phone call recordings Kensu said recordings needed to verify recoverable call costs and resolve Oliver Law lien dispute Defendants produced call logs/costs but withheld recordings per MDOC policy and Michigan law; argued recordings not warranted Denied: recordings not necessary to establish recoverable costs; lien dispute moot given fee award approach; no basis to override MDOC policy/law
Whether court may grant equitable/medical injunctive relief post-judgment Kensu sought declaratory relief, transfer restraint, and medical orders; argued court previously said it would consider equitable relief Defendants argued appeal divested district court of jurisdiction; transfer mooted request Denied: appeal divested jurisdiction; in any event Kensu waived by failing to raise at closing, relief duplicative or moot (plaintiff transferred), and court unsuitable to micromanage medical treatment

Key Cases Cited

  • Hensley v. Eckerhart, 461 U.S. 424 (fee applicant must substantiate hours and rates)
  • Imwalle v. Reliance Med. Prods., Inc., 515 F.3d 531 (lodestar method as starting point for reasonable fee)
  • Hadix v. Johnson, 398 F.3d 863 (PLRA fee cap implementation tied to Judicial Conference/CJA rates)
  • Farrar v. Hobby, 506 U.S. 103 (nominal damages often preclude attorney fees)
  • Cramblit v. Fikse, 33 F.3d 633 (distinguishing nominal-damage outcomes in fee awards)
  • Idalski v. Crouse Cartage Co., 229 F. Supp. 2d 730 (quantum meruit entitlement for withdrawn/terminated contingent-fee counsel)
  • Polen v. Melonakos, 222 Mich. App. 20 (state-law principles re: quantum meruit for attorneys)
  • Island Lake Arbors Condo. Ass’n v. Meisner & Assoc., PC, 301 Mich. App. 384 (quantum meruit and consideration of contractual terms)
  • Siggers-El v. Barlow, 433 F. Supp. 2d 811 (applying PLRA four-step approach and assessments on applying judgment portion to fees)
  • Morrison v. Davis, 88 F. Supp. 2d 799 (examples where courts assessed nominal portion of judgment toward fees despite punitive damages)
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Case Details

Case Name: Kensu v. Buskirk
Court Name: District Court, E.D. Michigan
Date Published: Nov 1, 2016
Docket Number: 2:13-cv-10279
Court Abbreviation: E.D. Mich.