Opinion
I. BACKGROUND
This аppeal raises the question of what is properly “incidental” to a grant of specific performance. The background facts may be quickly stated: There was a contract to sell a family residence. The sellers reneged. The buyers sought specific performance. The trial court denied it. The buyers appealed. This court reversed. We directed the trial court to grant the buyers’ request and enter a judgment granting them their requested specific performance. (See
Behniwal
v.
Mix
(2005)
On remand, however, the trial court added this twist to the judgment:
—not only are the sellers (the Mixes) to convey the property to the buyers (the Behniwals), and
—not only are the buyers to recover their attorney fees, but
—the buyers are to deduct the amount of their attorney fee award directly from the purchase price of the property.
Since the attorney fee award was over $250,000, and the purchase price of the property was $540,000, the practical effect of the judgment now under
review is to reduce the consideration the sellers will receive for their property to less than $290,000. The sellers have appealed from that part of the judgment. (They also
We thus deal mainly in this appeal
not
with the right to compensation or the attorney fee award as such. Rather, we deal with the
enforcement mechanism
of that right. In effect, by providing for a direct offset against purchase price, the trial court converted what would be, at best, the basis for a judgment lien against all the sellers’ property into a preexisting special lien with super-priority over all other liens on this particular property. (See
Isaac v. City of Los Angeles
(1998)
After canvassing the relevant authorities, particularly
Isaac, supra,
II. A REVIEW OF AUTHORITIES DEALING WITH MONETARY RELIEF INCIDENTAL TO SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE
We look first at the authorities dealing with the provision of monetary relief of some sort as an “incident” to a grant of specific performance. (See generally 13 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (10th ed. 2005) Equity, § 27, p. 315 et seq.) Segueing to our conclusion, however, we find that these cases focus on the rectitude of a given award of monetary relief as such. They do not discuss whether provision for the enforcement of that monetary relief by way of direct offset against the purchase price was itself appropriate.
Ellis v. Mihelis
(1963)
In adjusting for the passage of time, the trial court’s judgment, in addition to specific performance, also gave the buyer:
—the profits of the operation (i.e., the harvest), but minus the value of the services of the signing seller as ranch manager;
—the rental value of a home on the ranch;
—interest on the deposit and downpayment.
But, as an “offset” against those three items, the seller was given interest on the $130,000 in the installments that would have been received if the installments had been paid. However, the trial court did not award interest on the installments after the due dates in the agreement. The total “damages” for the buyer came to about $25,000, which the trial court directed “be deducted from the purchase price.”
(Ellis, supra,
To reiterate, the Supreme Court’s opinion was not concerned with the propriety of allowing the net result of the various credits and offsets to be deducted from the purchase price. Rather, its concern was with the proper ascertainment of those credits and offsets, and specifically whether the interest credited to the seller was too low, i.e., whether the seller should have been “permitted to offset against the profits [the] interest on the entire purchase price.”
(Ellis, supra,
Next there is
Dennis v. Overholtzer
(1961)
It is worth noting that
The next offset case is
Bravo v. Buelow
(1985)
Bravo
brings us to
Hennefer v. Butcher
(1986)
Once again there was no challenge on appeal to the direct application of the award against the price. Indeed, apropos the “accounting” approach of Bravo, the defaulting seller’s challenge was to the
absence
of an offsetting
award of the interest the seller lost during the delay. (See
Hennefer v. Butcher, supra,
A case that the buyers in the case before us now include as one of the offset line is
Hutton v. Gliksberg
(1982)
However, it is by no means clear from the
Hutton
opinion that the award of $122,000 was to be a direct offset or setoff (neither word appears in the decision) against the purchase price or simply an order of the court, otherwise enforceable in the normal course. The award was initially introduced to the reader as a “judgment in favor of Buyers, compelling Sellers to convey the property and awarding incidental compensation.”
(Hutton, supra,
In short, even if the (rather large) provision for “incidental compensation” in Hutton were an offset directly applied against the purchase price, that fact was unimportant to the judges on the Hutton decision, whose main concern was in justifying the fact of the compensation, 5 not the particular way that the plaintiffs would enforce it.
Finally, we must note
Stratton
v.
Tejani, supra,
To be sure, while the foregoing cases do not deal with propriety of the offset as such, they do appear to be animated by the principle that monetary relief incidental to specific performance is intended to, in essence, restore relations between the parties to what they would have been absent the breach, which is perhaps some inferential support for the offset mechanism. (See
Ellis, supra,
To reiterate, though, it is significant that none of the these cases involved any challenge to the fact that some monetary relief, incidental to the specific performance decree, was being directly deducted from the purchase price as distinct from enforced some other way. The focus of each case was the relief itself (or, in Dennis, the relief qua a supposed change in final judgment). The most we can derive from these cases for our purposes here is a tendency for judicial acquiescence toward direct deductions (as in Dennis) as a kind of rough justice in contexts when the issue hasn’t been directly raised.
Moreover, it is noteworthy that none of these cases involved offsetting a contractual attorney fee award against the purchase price. The trial court’s inclusion here of such an enforcement mechanism for contractually owed attorney fees thus appears to be, literally, unprecedented.
in. CAN A SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE JUDGMENT PROVIDE THAT ATTORNEY FEES ARE TO BE DEDUCTED DIRECTLY FROM THE PURCHASE PRICE?
Unprecedented, however, does not necessarily mean incorrect. As noted above, there is a powerful argument for
In the case before us, for example, there was probably no other way that the Behniwals, the buyers, could be truly restored to the status quo antebellum absent provision for taking their incurred fees off the top of the purchase price. Any other collection mechanism would at the very least entail some additional attorney fees (e.g., the effort necessary to record a copy of the judgment so as to obtain a judgment lien, and that is one of the least expensive ways to enforce a judgment), and, more importantly, would not be guaranteed to be successful. Reading between the lines in the briefs (the sellers, the Mixes, who are elderly, make much over the impact of their homestead exemption in the face of the trial court’s judgment), we gather that it is an open secret in this litigation that the sellers will not be good for the entire $250,000-plus attorney fee award if that amount isn’t collected first by way of deduction from the $540,000 purchase price.
However, powerful as it first appears, the argument fails upon closer scrutiny. The first reason is that, in substance, an attorney fee award sought by a successful buyer in a specific performance action is not a true “incident” to the judgment for specific performance. The attorney fee award (as distinct from, say, an adjustment for interest rate differentials to compensate for the lost time of performance on the contract to convey) is itself a matter of simple contract and the prevailing party’s right to its fees is under the contract in conjunction with section 1717 of the Civil Code, 7 which governs attorney fees awarded under contract. (Which, we would guess, is perhaps the reason for the paucity of precedent on the scenario before us—up until now, courts have treated the fee issue by itself and not merged it into the incidents of specific performance.)
Nor can, as we soon show, such an award be characterized as an “incident” of the specific performance judgment on the theory that the attorney fee provision is a mere “cost” authorized by statute. The logic for such a result goes like this: Attorney fees recoverable under contract are deemed “cоsts” under Civil Code section 1717 and Code of Civil Procedure section 1033.5;
Dennis
shows that “costs” awarded in a suit may be offset against the purchase price in a specific performance decree; ergo, attorney fees awarded under contract may be deducted from the purchase price in a specific performance decree.
The second reason is even more basic. Readers should think of it as yet another example of the law of unintended consequences: Deducting a contractual attorney fee award off the top of the purchase price plays absolute havoc with the law of liens and lien priorities. Under the judgment here, for example, the buyers’ attorney fees are being given effective precedence over even government liens for unpaid propеrty taxes and purchase money deeds of trust entered into prior to the litigation. That can’t be right. And we will hold that it is not.
A. Awarded Pursuant to Contract, Not Incidental to Performance
In the mid-1980’s through the early 1990’s, a conflict developed between panels of the Court of Appeal over the issue of just exactly how much of a bond an appellant needed to provide to stay a judgment that provided for attorney fees. The conflict developed analogous authority for us to consult as to what, precisely, is and isn’t an “incident” of a judgment.
Pecsok v. Black
(1992)
To the same effect as
Pecsok
was an earlier decision,
Nielsen
v.
Stumbos
(1990)
Arrayed against
Pecsok
and
Nielsen
was
Chamberlin
v.
Dale’s R.V. Rentals, Inc.
(1986)
The Supreme Court resolved the conflict in
Bank of San Pedro, supra,
However, the Supreme Court held otherwise, making three points that, as it turns out, are applicable to the case before us now. First, the court said expert witness fees—and in the process lumped attorney fees into the same category—are not “routine” costs. They are a directly litigated issue.
8
Second, expert witness
We recognize, of course, that the present case is not about whether a bond is required for an attorney fee award included in a judgment, but the Supreme Court’s resolution of the expert fee matter in Bank of San Pedro renders the buyers’ logic here untenable: In light of Bank of San Pedro, they cannot claim that their attorney fee award is merely a “routine cost” included in the judgment, deductible from the purchase price the same way that the costs of duplication of reply briefs were deductible in Dennis.
Further, the three points concerning the nature of fees awarded pursuant to right and otherwise described as “costs” under sections 1717 and 1033.5 cannot be ignored: The attorney fee award here was a directly litigated issue; it was the subject of a full hearing on remand. Alsо, attorney fee awards are always matters of discretion, even when a litigant has a right to them. (Courts never award unreasonable attorney fees.) Indeed, in our prior opinion we specifically directed that the attorney fee issue be heard by the same judge who presided over the trial of the case precisely because she was the judicial officer in the absolute best position to exercise
discretion
as to the reasonableness of any fees claimed. And, looking to the substance of the thing, there is no denying that a judgment which provides for $250,000 to be paid directly from the proceeds of a purchase price is, as the
Bank of San Pedro
said, an order directing the payment of money by “any practical or semantic measure.”
(Bank of San Pedro, supra,
We need only add that, in distinguishing directly litigated issues (like expert witness fees and attorney fees) from “routine” costs, the
Bank of San Pedro
decision validated a distinction impliedly drawn by the
Kamper v. Mark Hopkins, Inc., supra,
And then there is the reality of the situation: The contract right to attorney
In sum, in terms of this litigation involving the issue of whether an attorney fee award is a mere “incident” of the judgment for specific performance, the answer is a clear no.
B. No Ad Hoc Creation of “Super-Liens”
1. Deductibility of Attorney Award from Purchase Price Incorrect Generally
A lien is defined in the Civil Code as “a charge imposed in some mode other than by a transfer in trust upon specific property by which it is made security for the performance of an act.” (§ 2872.) The definition fits here both semantically and practically. Semantically, by structuring the judgment so that the purchase price of the property is reduced by the amount of the attorney fee award, the trial judge effectively levied a “charge . . . other than by transfer in trust” upon “specific property,” making that property “security” for the “performance” of the payment of the attorney fee award. Practically the case is even stronger: There can be no doubt that the judgment junctions as a lien by giving the buyers and their attorney first dibs on any proceeds from the sale of the property.
A few basics need to be noted though. A judgment lien is not created until an abstract of judgment has been filed. (Code Civ. Proc., § 697.310, subd. (a) [“Except as otherwise provided by statute, a judgment lien on real property is created under this section by recording an abstract of a money judgment with the county recorder.”].) And we can say with confidence that no judgment (at least one providing for the buyers to recover their attorney fees; remember that the judgment we reversed in the earlier litigation was adverse to them) existed in this case until after the filing of the judgment on remand.
Even assuming that the sellers or their attorney were to act with the absolute quickest dispatch possible,
12
a judgment lien based on the attorney fee award wоuld have lower priority than any existing liens on the property.
Code of Civil Procedure section 704.950 provides in its entirety: “(a) Except as provided in subdivisions (b) and (c), a judgment lien on real property created pursuant to Article 2 (commencing with Section 697.310) of Chapter 2 does not attach to a declared homestead if both of the following requirements are satisfied: [f] (1) A homestead declaration describing the declared homestead was
recorded prior to the time the abstract or certified copy of the judgment was recorded to create the judgment lien.
[|] (2) The homestead declaration names the judgment debtor or the spouse of the judgment debtor as a declared homestead owner. [1] (b) This section does not apply to a judgment lien created under Section 697.320 by recording a certified copy of a judgment for child, family, or spousal support. [f] (c) A judgment lien attaches to a declared homestead
in the amount of any surplus over the total of the following:
(1)
The import of section 704.950 is clear given the facts before us. There could be no judgment lien before the judgment now being appealed (else what “abstract” of it could be recorded?) and any judgment lien based on the attorney fee award is lower in priority than the combined amount of the preexisting liens on the property at the time of recording and the amount of the homestead exemption (currently $150,000 for the Mixes). 13 By providing for money off the top of the sales price, the judgment effectively circumvented the statute.
To illustrate our point, consider the havoc that would follow if the idea of deducting an attorney fee award were a general rule that a court might apply in any specific performance case. For example, suppose there were an ordinary specific performance action in which the breaching sellers had a purchase money first mortgage on the property taken out well prior to the litigation. To allow a deduction from the purchase price for the buyer’s attorney fee award would play absolute havoc with the established expectations of third party lenders. All of a sudden, the “cushion” between what they were owed and the value of the property would disappear.
Indeed, something of the sort almost happened in Los Angeles before the Court of Appeal set things right in
Isaac, supra,
Isaac arose from an impulse, not unlike that of the trial judge’s here, to absolutely ensure that a certain claimant recovered its claim from a debtor’s existing equity in given real property—except that in Isaac the underlying debt was any unpaid municipal utility charge, as distinct from a contractual attorney fee award. A city council passed an ordinance providing for the imposition of special аssessment liens on master-metered apartment buildings for the collection of estimated past due and future billings for (city-owned) water and electricity. And the ordinance provided that such liens would have priority over all previously recorded deeds of trust and other liens and encumbrances against the property. (Isaac, supra, 66 Cal.App.4th at pp. 591-592.) In effect, as various lenders noted and the appellate court quoted them, the city had created a “ ‘super-priority’ lien.” (Id. at p. 593.)
The appellate court upheld the trial court in striking down the ordinance, on the grounds of conflict with state statutory law. State law gives priority generally to liens according to the time of their creation (Isaac, supra, 66 Cal.App.4th at pp. 600-601), liens for taxes are “paramount,” and utility liens have the same priority as lesser judgment liens. (Id. at p. 601.) The city council’s super-priority utility lien disrupted that “balance by giving what is essentially a judgment lien priority normally accorded only to tax liens.” (Ibid.)
The same analysis applies here. If an attorney fee award can be deducted from the purchase price, all sorts of mischief are possible: Tax liens, even purchase money mortgageholders who lent money prior to the pending action, would literally take second place to an unliquidated obligation that did not exist until the conclusion of the litigation.
2. And Under the Particular Circumstances of This Case
Interestingly enough, though, the case before us does not involve the typical
Should the fact that the sellers encumbered the property after a notice of lis pendens was filed make any difference as to whether the attorney fee award could be deductible off the top? The buyers suggest in their briefs that the attorney fee award should, in essence, be given priority to the proceeds of the sale because their notice of lis pendens preceded the three mortgages now on the property. In effect, they assert that their judgment for attorney fees is a lien that relates back to the time of the filing of the notice of lis pendens.
We must conclude otherwise, however.
At this point it is necessary to emphasize the difference between a money judgment which can be the basis of a judgment lien and litigation involving a “real property claim” that can be the basis of a notice of lis pendens. As this court (indeed, this very panel) said in
Gale v. Superior Court
(2004)
We thus ask: In the case before us, what would a potential lender have found—indeed what did World Savings find—upon going to the courthouse and looking up the file and ascertaining the “nature of the claim” from the pleadings? Such a lender would have found an action for specific performance which, if successful, would guarantee payment to the sellers of $540,000.
Now, as our high court made clear in Ellis, an action for specific performance affirms the contract and asks that it be performed. (Ellis, supra, 60 Cal.2d at pp. 219-220.) A buyer or moneylender, then, could have reasonably relied on the buyers’ own pleadings to conclude that, should the buyers be successful, the court would forсe the sellers to convey the property for the contract price of $540,000. True, if one actually bought the property in fee, one’s interest would be subject to the ongoing litigation contemplating a forced sale for $540,000. But—a lender could also reasonably rely on the pleadings to conclude that the property could be safely encumbered up to that $540,000 amount.
To be sure, the pleadings also gave notice of a potential (and large) attorney fee award—a point stressed by the buyers in this appeal. But a contractual attorney
The distinction we have just drawn, between the litigation affirming the contract and seeking specific performance and the collateral attorney fee award enforceable as a money judgment, also solves an issue raised by the buyers regarding the effect of section 1214 of the Civil Code. The buyers read section 1214 for the proposition that all the post-lis pendens encumbrances should simply disappear.
Section 1214 provides in its entirety: “Every conveyance of real property or an estate for years therein, other than a lease for a term not exceeding one year, is void as against any subsequent purchaser or mortgagee of the same property, or any part thereof, in good faith and for a valuable consideration, whose conveyance is first duly recorded, and as against any judgment affecting the title, unless the conveyance shall have been duly recorded prior to the record of notice of action.”
The key words are “against” and “judgment affecting the title.” To the degree that the subsequent mortgagees claim interests in the property up to the $540,000 payment contemplated by the “judgment affecting the title,” the conveyances they hold are consistent with the buyers’ status as subsequent purchasers who gave notice of their specific performance action prior to the mortgages. The mortgagees simply had notice that if the litigation was successful their interests were limited to $540,000 in value. Of course, any other result would, of course, be highly inequitable because it would subvert the reasonable expectations created by the buyers’ own pleadings.
On remand, therefore, we direct the trial court to incorporate language in the judgment to the effect (and such that any escrow officer cаn implement the sale) that any postnotice of lis pendens encumbrances against the property are “void” as a matter of law after the first $540,000. Also, we should point out that in implementing the judgment, no issue of homestead will arise: Because the first, second, and third mortgages are all consensual, the homestead exemption will not apply. (See Ahart, Cal. Practice Guide: Enforcing Judgments and Debts (The Rutter Group 2006) ¶ 6:1016, p. 6E-53 [“The exemption does not apply where a lien other than an enforcement lien is being foreclosed . . . .”].) In practical effect, this means that of the $540,000 that the Behniwals must pay the Mixes for the property, World Savings will get paid first, and their attorney second, with the Mixes allocated the remainder, even if it is less than their homestead exemption.
We take a small digression at this point to note that this case is almost a parable of what can happen when disputes are not settled. Lincoln’s dictum about the winner being the loser and the loser being the loser in litigation has been vindicated again. In our last opinion we advised thе parties to settle, noting that real pain would be visited upon the Mixes in light of the specific performance judgment to come. At that point both parties might still have salvaged some of the money that would otherwise be lost to attorney fees. The fact that the Mixes, as sellers, obtain a partial reversal of the judgment in this appeal is going to be cold comfort given that they are likely to have almost nothing to show for the sale by way of proceeds and will still have a large attorney fee “judgment” hanging over them. On the other hand, the Behniwals, as buyers, lose the chance to have their attorney fees paid from the proceeds of the sale of the property and who knows what chances they or their attorney will have to collect on any remaining (collectible, that is, nonexempt) assets the Mixes still have. Shades of Dickens’s famous Jamdyce v. Jamdyce (nothing left of the estate after attorney fees were paid), the big winner is the attorney for the sellers, who will be paid from thе surplus of the proceeds of the $540,000 sale after World Savings takes it share. The case is nothing less than a parable that settlement judges may wish to tell warring litigants who would be better off settling with their adversaries quickly.
IV. FINAL ISSUE: WAS THE ATTORNEY FEE ORDER CORRECT IN THE FIRST PLACE?
The $250,000-plus attorney fee award includes amounts incurred by the buyers pursuing the sellers’ real estate broker
The issue is disposed of by the doctrine of law of the case. The last opinion addressed that point specifically. “That claim [on the part of the Behniwals for attorney fees to be litigated on remand] surely entails at least the amount of the ‘tort of another’ fee award that the trial court awarded the Behniwals from Seidenberg and Prudential.” (Behniwal v. Mix, supra, 133 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1043-1044, original italics.) The last decision, being a final judgment, cannot now be challenged on that point.
In addition to law of the case, we merely add that the fees spent pursuing the real estate broker and her company did indeed “arise out” of the contract—indeed directly from the signed contract given the initial (but later ratified) forgery. The fees were incurred, as it turned out, pursuing the sellers’ agents, who acted, when all was said and done, at the sellers’ behest.
V. CONCLUSION
All provisions in the judgment contemplating the deductibility or offset (or setoff) of the buyers’ attorney fee award from the $540,000 purchase price of the property are reversed, with directions that the judgment should be corrected to provide for specific performance as contemplated in the contract: The Behniwals pay the Mixes $540,000 and the Mixes convey the property. In all other respects—particularly the amount of the fee award—the judgment is affirmed. Obviously this decision is without prejudice to the Behniwals as regards other appropriate remedies by which they may wish to collect on the attorney fee award. However, because they are the substantially prevailing parties in this appeal, the Mixes shall recover their costs in this appeal, costs that can be characterized, ironically enough, as “routine.”
Rylaarsdam, J., and Ikola, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 6, 2007.
Notes
As we show below, even though this is a proceeding in equity, the inclusion of the off-the-top provision for the buyers’ attorney fees was legally impermissible. The trial court had no authority to do it at all. Therefore we do not characterize inclusion of the off-the-top provision in the judgment as an abuse of discretion. The binary and legal nature of the issue makes the appropriate standard of review de novo.
We will skip over the problem in Ellis that the property was owned by two brothers, one of whom didn’t sign and against whom the Supremе Court would hold was no enforceable contract.
Here is the critical text from the
Dennis
decision: “The judgment awarded respondent. . . her costs of trial, but the cost of a prior appeal was not inserted or offset in the judgment against the amount to be deposited by her. We feel that respondent.. . was entitled as a matter of right to offset against the sum payable in escrow costs which had been allowed. ‘It has been repeatedly held that the allowance of costs is a mere incident of the judgment on the merits.’
Kamper
v.
Mark Hopkins Inc.,
The
Bravo
court laid its foundаtion by making the point that “an award of compensation as an incident to a decree of specific performance” is justified as an “incident” to the specific performance decree itself and “ ‘is not for breach of contract and is therefore not legal damages.’ ”
(Bravo, supra,
As Witkin points out, the underlying assumptions in
Hutton
were soon questioned in
Stratton
v.
Tejani
(1982)
After noting that no precedent justified relief by way of compensation for interest rate differentials, the
Hutton
court started building up steam in the opposite direction: “However, we conclude that in the circumstances of this case Buyers should receive compensation for the difference in interest rates. Specific performance is an action in equity. In a world of change, equitable remedies have been expanded to meet increasing complexities. Equity is not bound by rigid precedent, but has the flexibility to adjust the remedy in order to do right and justice.”
(Hutton, supra,
All otherwise undesignated statutory references to sections 1214 and 1717 in this opinion are to the Civil Code. All otherwise undesignated statutory references to sections 704.950, 916, 917.1, and 1033.5 are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
The applicable passage from
Bank of San Pedro
demonstrates that the high court equated attorney fee awards with the expert witness award before it, and said both were nonroutine: “The Court of Appeal in this case correctly explained that, ‘Expert witness fees, like attorneys’ fees, are not ordinarily a part of costs awarded at trial. Further, the award of expert witness fees (1) is not the type of cost included in virtually every case and (2) was a directly litigated issue, as opposed to being an incidental matter. ... It would be a distortion of reality to classify expert witness fees as [routine] costs.’ We agree.”
(Bank of San Pedro, supra,
Here is the relevant passage: “Second, even when a defendant is entitled as a matter of right to other costs under section 998, subdivision (c), an award of expert witness fees is
always within the trial court’s discretion. This is in contrast to the costs awarded under section 1032, subdivision (b) which cоsts are awarded ‘as a matter of right.’ ”
(Bank of San Pedro, supra,
Here is the relevant passage: “First, a judgment directing the payment of expert witness fees is—by any practical or semantic measure—a judgment directing the payment of money and is therefore consistent with the language of section 917.1, subdivision (a) which provides that such a judgment is
not
automatically stayed.”
(Bank of San Pedro, supra,
The passage is quoted in footnote 8 above.
In this case we do not have occasion to pass on the question of whether a judgment lien can be created prior to a judgment’s becoming final (as distinct from prior to its having just been entered), so it is irrelevant for this case whether the buyers recorded an abstract of judgment upon entry of the judgment under review or are still waiting to record one upon the finality of this appeal.
Since at least one of them is over 65 years old, section 704.730, subdivision (a)(3)(A) of the Code of Civil Procedure applies, which makes the exemption $150,000.
Again, we emphasize that all attorney fee awards must pass muster as “reasonable,” hence our remand specifically to the judge best equipped to evaluate reasonableness. It may be that the amount incurred on a pure hourly rate times hours basis is reasonable, and the court may grant 100 cents on the bill, but that isn’t necessarily the case.
