Dеfendants-appellants appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court of the District of Connecticut (Vanessa L. Bryant, Judge) awarding $32,489.29 in attorney’s fees and costs to plaintiff-appellee. The issue presented by this case is whether a defendant remains liable fоr plaintiffs attorney’s fees accrued after defendant offered a settlement that included the maximum available damages and, as mandated by statute, plaintiffs fees and costs, but that did not include an offer of judgment. Because a settlement offer without an offer of judgment does not fully resolve the case, such a settlement offer does not moot the dispute, and defendants remain liable for any reasonable attorney’s fees accrued by plaintiff during further litigation.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff-appellee Joel J. Cabala began this action оn April 21, 2009, seeking damages for an alleged violation of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (“FDCPA”), 15 U.S.C. § 1692, by defendant Benjamin Morris, an attorney.
Less than two months after the complaint was filed, on June 25, 2009, David W. Rubin, counsel for Morris, contacted counsel for Cabala, Joanne S. Faulkner, and offered to settle for $1000, the maximum statutory damages mandated by the FDCPA, and also offered, as mandated by the statute, to pay Cabala’s attornеy’s fees and costs, with the amount of such fees to be determined by the court. Rubin indicated that in his view, as Morris’s offer included maximum recoverable damages for the underlying violation, Morris would not be liable for any further fees accrued by Cabala in the dispute. Faulkner’s reply rеquested a lump sum settlement including attorney’s fees, to which Rubin responded by again requesting that any dispute over the amount of the fees be resolved by the court. Faulkner in turn replied that a fee application to the court would not be cognizable without a judg
After several months of fruitless settlement discussions, the parties finally jointly stipulated for judgment in favor of Cabala, with damages set at the statutory maximum as provided in Morris’s initial settlement offer. The stipulation requested judicial determination of attorney’s fees and costs.
In the subsequent discovery and litigation over the amount of the fee award to which Cabala was entitled, Morris alleged that Faulkner had behaved improperly by failing to communicate Morris’s original settlement offer to Cabala. The district court, observing that there was a sincere dispute over the “nature and form” of the settlement — specifically about whether the settlement would include a judgment that would make the attorney’s fee award judicially enforceable — concluded that Morris’s original offer did not moot the action. Thus, the district court concluded, any reasonable attorney’s fees incurred by Cabala during the сontinuing litigation should be borne by Morris. Following a lodestar analysis of Faulkner’s hourly rate and the time spent on the matter, the district court found her fee request reasonable. Accordingly, the district court ordered Morris to pay Cabala the full amount of fees requested.
DISCUSSION
I. Attorney’s Fees Under the FDCPA
As а prevailing party under the FDCPA, Cabala is presumptively entitled to an award of reasonable attorney’s fees. See 15 U.S.C. § 1692k(a)(3); Savino v. Computer Credit, Inc.,
Morris does not challenge the district court’s conclusions that the hourly rate charged and the number of hours billed by Cabala’s attorney were reasonable for the work actually done by Faulkner. Rather, he argues that the district court’s award should not have included any fees for work done by Faulkner after Morris’s June 25, 2009 settlement offer. Morris submits that his initial offer for the maximum recovery available under the FDCPA (1) rendered the underlying action moot, or (2) was entitled to the same treatment as an offer of judgment under Rule 68, see Fed. R.Civ.P. 68 (providing that party who rejects “offer of judgment,” and then fails to obtain greater relief cannot recover any costs accruing after date of rejection).
In McCauley v. Trans Union, L.L.C.,
Morris’s settlement offer, however, specifically sought to avoid entry of judg
Morris’s remaining argument is that Cabala and his attorney acted unreasonably in continuing to litigate after communication of the June 25, 2009 settlement offer. We review a district court’s award of attorney’s fees for abuse of disсretion. Townsend v. Benjamin Enters., Inc.,
The district court concluded that the parties continued to litigate, and plaintiffs attorney’s fees continued to accrue, because of a substantive dispute over the “nature and form” of the settlement and due to рoor communication by both sides. As the district court noted, Faulkner’s insistence on an admission of liability and her refusal to provide Rubin with her fee records “were not founded in law,” and her posture may well have been unduly rigid. However, the district court also noted that Faulkner “demоnstrated a willingness to have the Court determine reasonable attorney’s fees should [defendants] file an offer or stipulation of judgment throughout the course of the litigation.” It takes two to stage a useless litigation; Faulkner’s insistence on a judgment was no more rigid than Morris’s and Rubin’s еqually determined opposition to such a judgment. Given the circumstances, and our deference to the district court’s judgment, we identify no abuse of discretion in the district court’s conclusion that Cabala’s attorney’s fees were reasonable.
As the district court also сorrectly noted, “[t]he availability of Rule 68 gives additional weight to this conclusion.” Under that rule, when a plaintiff refuses an offer that satisfies Rule 68 (by, inter alia, making an offer oí judgment) and then fails to win more than the offered amount at trial, costs are shifted to the plaintiff as part of the judgment. Morris could have at any time avoided liability for further costs by making such an offer, but he persisted in
Like the district court, we reject Morris’s argument that his settlement offer should be treated as equivalent to a Rule 68 offer of judgment. Morris consistently declined a resolution that included a judgment. A settlemеnt agreement between parties by which the defendant agrees to make a payment in exchange for dismissal of the plaintiffs action only creates a contract between the parties that must be interpreted and enforced by the state courts. See Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am.,
Our recent decision in Doyle v. Midland Credit Management, Inc.,
II. Alleged Ethical Violations
Morris contends that various alleged ethical lapses by Faulkner in dealing with Cabala provide a further reasоn to deny attorney’s fees. We note that the district court made no finding of an ethical violation, and we need not discuss the merits of the alleged lapses to reject Morris’s
CONCLUSION
Because Morris’s initial offer to settle did not include an offer of judgment, it did not fully resolve the dispute between the parties, and thus further litigation by Cabala was not per se unreasonable. We find no abuse of discretion in the district court’s award of full attorney’s fеes to the plaintiff. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Following the initial entry of judgment in the case, but before the award of attorney’s fees, Benjamin Morris died, and the co-executors of his estate were substituted as defendants. See Cabala v. Morris, No. 3:09-cv-651 (VLB),
. Not every circuit agrees with this approach. See Genesis Healthcare Corp. v. Symczyk, - U.S. -,
. We assume without deciding, beсause it is not necessary to our resolution of the case, that a Rule 68 offer forecloses fee awards even under "[sjtatutes that do not refer to attorney's fees as part of the costs,” such as § 1692k, noting that this view is not universally accepted. See Marek v. Chesny,
. Since Doyle in not inconsistent with our holding here, we need not address whether it is inconsistent with McCauley, which was not cited by the Doyle court. It is sufficient for our purposes to note that in all of the cases in which this Court has even considered finding a case moot, or treating a non-conforming offer as satisfying Rule 68, the argument was predicated upon the offer, or entry, of a judgment in favor of plaintiff, something that defendants here refused to tender until after the fees in question had already been incurred.
