Defendant Anderson, Crenshaw & Associates, L.L.C. (ACA) appeals from a district court order awarding plaintiff Elsa Anchondo $63,333.52 in attorney fees, gross receipts tax, and costs under 15 U.S.C. § 1692k(a) after ACA agreed to a settlement in favor of Ms. Anchondo and the class she represents on their claims against ACA under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA). ACA contends the district court erred in certain respects in determining the amount of the attorney fee award. We review the district court’s award for an abuse of discretion,
see, e.g., Jane L. v. Bangerter,
*1102 I. District Court’s Calculation of Fee Award
The district court arrived at its fee award by methodically proceeding through a calculation of the lodestar amount pursuant to
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
After summarizing the substantively straightforward but procedurally somewhat complicated litigation 1 — which led, after some fourteen months, to a favorable settlement of the underlying FDCPA claims — the district court began its lodestar analysis by determining the proper hourly rate for the two lawyers who served as co-counsel for Ms. Anchondo and the plaintiff class. The court looked to prevailing market rates in the New Mexico community for attorneys of their experience and found $195 per hour reasonable for local counsel Rob Treinen and $300 per hour reasonable for national FDCPA class action specialist O. Randolph Bragg. 2 See Memorandum Opinion and Order at 4-5 (Dec. 16, 2009).
The court then toned to the number of hours expended. Mr. Treinen and Mr. Bragg each submitted extensive billing records in support of the hours they claimed to have worked on the case. See ApltApp. at 35-56 (seven-page declaration and fifteen-page billing record for Mr. Treinen), 58-89 (eighteen-page declaration and eleven-page billing record for Mr. Bragg). The district court “reviewed carefully the detailed billing records,” concluded they “demonstrate that counsel exercised appropriate billing judgment and avoided duplicative efforts,” and found “the number of hours expended on this litigation is reasonable.” Memorandum Opinion and Order at 6. The court further determined “neither an upward nor a downward adjustment of the lodestar amount is necessary under the circumstances of this case.” Id. at 7.
II. ACA’s Objections to the Fee Award
ACA argues that the district court erred in its fee analysis by (1) failing to explicitly address the Johnson factors 3 ; (2) awarding fees to Mr. Bragg when his *1103 participation was unnecessary for the prosecution of the case; and (3) failing to reduce excessive hours claimed by both Mr. Tremen and Mr. Bragg. We take up these objections in order below.
A. Application of Johnson Factors
ACA’s objection regarding the
Johnson
factors is meritless. ACA concedes that “the Tenth Circuit has never held that a district court abuses its discretion by failing to specifically address each
Johnson
factor” — indeed, that we expressly held to the contrary in
Gudenkauf v. Stauffer Communications, Inc.,
The Supreme Court’s very recent decision in
Perdue
only confirms our reluctance to disturb a presumptively valid lodestar fee determination on the basis of a conclusory objection that
Johnson
factors were not discussed. In
Perdue
the Court appears to significantly marginalize the twelve-factor
Johnson
analysis, which it discounts as just “[o]ne possible method” that “gave very little actual guidance” and, due to its “series of sometimes subjective factors!,] ... produced disparate results.”
B. Objection to Participation of Mr. Bragg
ACA argues that the district court erred in awarding any fee for Mr. Bragg, because Mr. Treinen and his firm, particularly a senior partner in the firm, could have handled the case adequately without Mr. Bragg’s added experience. This unusual position- — -basically asserting that highly experienced, nationally prominent lawyers may not work (at least for compensation) on any but the most demanding cases, and even then may not act as co-counsel if another attorney with arguably commensurate experience is available from co-counsel’s firm — is not supported by a single on-point authority, and we decline to adopt it here. We emphasize that this is not a case of compensating an expert attorney at a rate unsustainable in the local legal community; as noted earlier, the district court substantially reduced Mr. Bragg’s hourly rate to bring it in line with the New Mexico market.
ACA seeks to bolster its argument by insisting that plaintiffs counsel’s position in the underlying litigation, where they asserted that the facts and law plainly supported their FDCPA case, demonstrates that the participation of a national FDCPA expert was unnecessary. Of course, ACA’s own litigation position hardly conceded such a straightforwardly meritorious case to plaintiff. To focus on such assertions — the standard rhetoric of adversarial legal argument-is to be distracted from the real point. Ultimately, the trial court must decide for itself whether an action was so simple as to undercut a subsequent fee request, and its uniquely informed on-the-spot judgment is owed much deference by an appellate court,
see, e.g., Case v. Unified Sch. Dist. No. 233,
C. Particular Objections to Hours Claimed
ACA advances several objections to hours claimed by Mr. Bragg. First, it contends that the twelve hours he spent working on plaintiffs (successful) motion to dismiss one of ACA’s counterclaims should have been struck. Picking up on its prior theme, ACA insists this work could have been done by a less experienced attorney. But, again, ACA does not cite any authority holding that an experienced attorney must work for free whenever the task at hand might not call for the full measure of his expertise (assuming ACA’s factual premise here). ACA notes that the motion focused on a single counterclaim, as if that made it too insignificant to warrant Mr. Bragg’s attention. But, as
*1105
the record shows, the narrowed focus of the motion was a thoughtful strategic choice, which is part of what an experienced practitioner brings to a legal team. It effectively thwarted an oblique attack by ACA on the merits of plaintiffs FDCPA action in the guise of a counterclaim for a declaratory judgment on a critical element of the case (whether ACA’s conduct constituted a “communication” implicating FDCPA protection). ACA also refers here, in conclusory fashion, to the rule that duplicative work is not compensable, citing
Norman v. Housing Authority of City of Montgomery,
ACA next complains of the 3.7 hours Mr. Bragg billed for communicating with Mr. Treinen regarding all aspects of the case over its fourteen-month duration. ACA again suggests that Mr. Bragg should be denied compensation for time not tied to an aspect of the case demanding his special expertise. We have already rejected this basic point in other contexts, and it is no more persuasive here than elsewhere. ACA also appears to contend that Mr. Bragg may not charge for communications with co-counsel, citing
Steffens v. Steffens,
ACA raises two objections to Mr. Bragg’s participation in the settlement conference. ACA generally contends that his attendance was unnecessary, as Mr. Treinen was there to represent the interests of Ms. Anchondo and the plaintiff class. But this was no minor hearing; the entire FDCPA case (save fees and costs) was resolved-quite favorably to plaintiff 7 — at the conference. It would have been a questionable judgment by Mr. Treinen not to ensure that Mr. Bragg was there in person to prepare and present the best case for settlement.
More specifically, ACA objects to compensating Mr. Bragg’s travel time. It is not clear whether this objection goes beyond ACA’s meritless challenge to Mr. Bragg’s attendance at the conference per
*1106
se, but even if it does, we reject it. We have recognized the compensability of necessary travel time, though a trial court has discretion to apply a reduced hourly rate if the time is otherwise unproductive.
8
See Smith v. Freeman,
Finally, ACA complains about 3.9 hours attributed by Mr. Bragg to the review of various orders, emails, and letters, in thirty-nine entries of .1 hour per document. The vast majority of these documents, ACA asserts, were only one page. We fail to see an abuse of discretion in allowing an allotment of six minutes to the review of even single-page documents. 9
Turning to Mr. Tremen, ACA first objects to the 9.8 hours he attributed to communication with Mr. Bragg during the fourteen-month course of proceedings below. On its face, a mere .7 horn’ per month in communication with co-counsel is not excessive. ACA insists that much time was expended on issues for which Mr. Bragg’s special expertise was not necessary, but, once again, ACA cites no authority for its facially implausible premise that expert co-counsel cannot assist on a case-related matter unless that matter is uniquely addressed to his particular expertise. Nor has ACA identified any specific communications between Mr. Treinen and Mr. Bragg that were unnecessary in any broader sense.
ACA asserts in conclusory fashion that experienced counsel should have benefited from work done in other cases, reducing the time required here, citing
Hagan v. MRS Associates, Inc.,
No. Civ. A. 99-3749,
ACA’s brief culminates in a plea for a substantial across-the-board cut in counsel’s compensable hours, with an associated complaint that it is unclear from the district court’s reasoning whether it even considered this option. Actually, the reason there is no mention of an across-the-board reduction in the district court’s decision is abundantly clear: the court had reviewed counsel’s billing records, concluded that they showed proper billing judgment, and found the hours expended to be reasonable. That determination, coupled with the court’s prior calculation of appropriate hourly rates of compensation, provided a fully adequate basis for an appropriate fee award. In sum, ACA has failed to demonstrate that the district court abused its discretion in its fee award to plaintiffs counsel, which we therefore affirm.
III. Plaintiffs Request for Appellate Fees
Plaintiff has requested an additional award of fees and costs expended on appeal in defending the district court’s award, citing
Gallegos v. Stokes,
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED. Plaintiffs request for an award of fees and costs on appeal is GRANTED and the matter is REMANDED for determination of an appropriate amount.
Notes
. Among other things, ACA asserted a counterclaim for declaratory relief, filed a motion to dismiss on the merits and on Due Process and First Amendment challenges to the FDCPA, and opposed discovery so as to require plaintiff to file a (partially successful) motion to compel.
. Mr. Bragg sought compensation at an hourly rate of $465, which he has received in FDCPA litigation elsewhere.
See, e.g., Silva v. Patenaude & Felix, P.C.,
No. C 08-03019 JW,
. In
Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc.,
. Of course, to the extent ACA advances specific, record-based arguments in connection with other objections it raises on appeal, we consider those in the corresponding sections of our decision.
. In this regard we note that a factor recognized by
Hensley
to be of unique importance
*1104
in particular cases — where a prevailing party has achieved only limited success,
see
. Indeed, these records reflect efficient cooperation, rather than redundancy, between Mr. Treinen and Mr. Bragg throughout their collaboration on the case. We emphasize this point to avoid giving any impression that our decision here constitutes an indiscriminate endorsement of multiplicitous representation.
. The settlement afforded compensation for class members, awarded additional compensation for plaintiff as representative, and granted injunctive relief to prevent ACA from engaging in the conduct that prompted the suit.
. We note that the only authority cited by ACA in support of its challenge to Mr. Bragg’s travel time, an unpublished district court decision out of California,
Johnson v. Credit Int'l, Inc.,
No. C-03-100 SC,
. Once again ACA relies on the unpublished California district court decision in Johnson, see supra note 8, as its sole authority for challenging the billing practice involved here. Actually, Johnson appears to be concerned with something different:
Mr. Bragg's custom was to itemize multiple activities that took place on the same day. Then, because his law firm rounds up to the nearest tenth of an hour, the result is that an activity such as preparing a fax of a document is billed for six minutes on top of preparing the document itself for 54 minutes. Putting aside the obvious question of why Mr. Bragg must prepare a fax at his hourly rate of $435 when he has a variety of assistants to call upon, this Court asks if Mr. Bragg could have perhaps prepared the document and the fax all in the same 54 minutes, without an additional six minute charge.
Johnson,
. This statutory entitlement is not dependent upon our limited authority to order appellate sanctions under Fed. R.App. P. 38, with its requirement of a "separately filed motion or notice" as a procedural prerequisite to consideration of a fee award to sanction frivolous appeals,
see, e.g., Smith
v.
Kitchen,
