ORDER ON MOTION FOR REVIEW OF APPELLATE ATTORNEYS’ FEES UNDER FLORIDA RULE OF APPELLATE PROCEDURE 9.400(C)
Jоhn D’Alusio seeks review of an order awarding him $6875 in appellate attorneys’ fees after he prevailed in this appeal. D’Alusio contends that the appellate fee award was inadequate; that the trial court erred when it failed to award him interest on his fees; and that the trial court should have taxed the costs of his expert witness’s
Background of the Case
After John D’Alusio prevailed on Gould & Lamb’s aрpeal of a final judgment refusing to enforce a noncompete agreement, see Gould & Lamb, LLC v. D’Alusio,
D’Alusio sought review of the trial court’s order in this appeal. During its pendency, the supreme court held that the rule sеt only an outside deadline for filing the attorneys’ fee motion. Barco,
Jurisdiction — The Appellant Sought Timely Review of the Fee Order
As a preliminary matter, we must consider the timeliness of this proceeding. Rule 9.400(c) requires thаt “(rjeview of orders rendered by the lower tribunal under this rule shall be by motion filed in the court within 30 days of rendition.” But D’Alusio did not file a motion in this case within the thirty-day period. Rather, after his motion for rehearing was denied by the circuit court, he filed a notice of appeal of the single order that аwarded him both trial and appellate fees, instituting case number 2D09-149. This court ultimately affirmed the judgment awarding trial-level attorneys’ fees in that case number on May 5, 2010.
Accordingly, upon Gould & Lamb’s motion, this court dismissed that portion of case number 2D09-149 seeking review of the order on appellate fees and transferred it to this case to be considered as if the proper procedure for review had been invoked. See Pellar,
As Judge Padovano observed in Pellar, an order on appellate attorneys’ fees “has the characteristics of a final order” even though it is not “necessary or even proper” to file a notice of appeal for review.
The Trial Court Abused Its Discretion in Awarding Appellate Attorneys’ Fees in an Amount without Any Eviden-tiary Basis
The circuit judge who presided over the hearing on both trial-level and appellate-level fees was not the same judge who had presided at the original trial. Most of the hearing was devoted to the trial-level fees.
D’Alusio’s attorney testified and рresented expert testimony on the number of hours expended for the appeal and a reasonable rate for the work. D’Alusio’s senior attorneys spent approximately 100 hours on the appeal, and associates had expended another 28.6 hours. Although, acсording to D’Alusio’s expert, a typical single-issue appeal might require only 30 hours of attorney time, this case presented a unique situation in that the Second District’s case law was contrary to that of all the other districts. Furthermore, even though D’Alusio had retained attorneys from both New Orlеans and Florida, the expert was careful to exclude duplicate time. Ultimately, D’Alusio’s expert testified that a reasonable number of hours for senior attorney time to do research, prepare briefs, and pursue the entry of an order after Gould & Lamb made concеssions was 70.1 and that a rate of $800 per hour was reasonable based upon rates of $275 to $450 typically charged by appellate attorneys in Tampa. The expert also reduced the associate hours to 14.1 at a rate of $165 per hour. Based upon these figures, the expert concluded that the total reasonable attorneys’ fee for the appeal would be $23,520.
Gould & Lamb then presented its expert, who testified at the outset that he “didn’t really have any dispute about what their expert said” concerning this single issue appeal relating to entitlement to attorney’s fees with the minor exception that he opined that a reasonable fee for a lawyer in the Twelfth Judicial Circuit to pursue an appeal of this nature would be $275 per hour. He concluded that a figure of $22,000 was a reasonable fee for the aрpellate work. And in closing argument, Gould & Lamb’s attorney reiterated that there was no real dispute about the amount of fees: “20 to 25 [thousand] for the appeal.”
Contrary to this evidence and argument, the circuit judge found that “25 hours is a reasonable amount to have expendеd on the appeal and that an hourly rate of $275.00 is reasonable,” which yielded a fee of $6875, an amount less than one-third of the fee proposed by either expert witness. In rendering this fee order, the court did not address any associate time, reduced the number of hours from approximately 85 to 25, and awarded the lowest rate that had been described as typical in the Tampa area for appellate work.
An appellate court reviews an order on appellate attorneys’ fees under an abuse of discretion standard. DiStefano Constr., Inc. v. Fid. & Deposit Co. of Md.,
We find that the circuit court abused its discretion in drastically reducing the number of hours that was reasonable for this appeal, in contravention of the
This appeal concerned the proper interpretation of amended rule 1.525. D’Alusio divided his initial brief into three issues: first, he argued that the amended rule prescribes a deadline for the filing of the motion no later than 30 days after judgment is entered but does not bar an earlier filed motion as premature; sеcond, he proposed that the court should certify conflict with the other districts or await the outcome of the Barco decision by the supreme court; and third, he contended that Gould & Lamb’s attorneys essentially blindsided him by remaining silent and not objecting until well over a year after the motion was filed. Under the circumstances, these were all reasonable arguments, set out in a coherent initial brief. Gould & Lamb vigorously argued in its answer brief that the amendment to the rule was not intended to correct the language that informed this court’s earlier, pre-amendment decisions on whеn the motion must be filed. By the time D’Alusio filed his reply brief, the supreme court had decided Barco, and he correctly argued that this court must reverse and remand based on this new precedent. Our review of the briefs, records, and applicable case law in this appeal, as well as our сommon sense understanding of the costs of appellate practice, convinces us that the circuit court’s appellate fee award was clearly inadequate and unsupported by any evidence. As Gould & Lamb conceded at the hearing, a reasonablе appellate fee award in this case is $22,000, and we disapprove the trial court’s order and remand for entry of an order granting fees to D’Alusio in that amount.
The reasonableness of our decision is confirmed by the Fifth District’s recent opinion in Hoegh,
Failure to Award Expert Witness Fees as Costs Was Error
We also disapprove the omission in the circuit court’s order of any finding that D’Alusio was entitled to a cost award for his expert witness’s fees. A party who seeks an award of appellate attorneys’ fees must present expert testimony concerning the reasonable time and hourly rate or the resulting order will be overturned as an abuse of discretion. See Snow v. Harlan Bakeries, Inc.,
Order disapproved; remanded with instructions.
