Lead Opinion
Opinion for the Court filed PER CURIAM.
Sеparate statement filed by Circuit Judge SILBERMAN, dissenting from the award of attorney’s fees and costs.
ORDER
Upon consideration of the application for award of attorney’s fees and the amendments thereto, the responses thereto and the re
ORDERED, for the reasons stated in the accompanying memorandum, that petitioner be granted an award of attorney’s fees and expenses in the amount of $57,973.27.
Denver Cooper seeks an award of attorney’s fees and expenses in connection with his challenge to the Railroad Retirement Board’s (“Board”) refusal to waive the recovery of $40,661.24 in disability annuity over-payments made to him between 1980 and 1984.
Although Cooper views his fee petition as a single request, it is actually four requests addressing separate parts of his litigаtion against the Board: 1) Cooper v. Railroad Retirement Board,
1. Cooper I
Cooper requests compensation for 539.05 hours of attorney time at the rate of $113.85 per hour. The Board opposes awarding any attorney’s fees for Cooper I, arguing that Cooper did not “prevail,” and that the Board’s position was “substantially justified.” Alternatively, the Board argues that any fees awarded should nоt exceed $75 per hour, and that the number of hours should be reduced.
Under the Equal Access to Justice Act (“EAJA”), 28 U.S.C. § 2412 (1988), a court shall award attorney’s fees to a “prevailing party” unless the court concludes that the position of the United States was “substantially justified.” A party “prevails” when the outcome of his lawsuit “materially alters the legal relationship between the parties by modifying the defendant’s behavior in а way that directly benefits the plaintiff.” Farrar v. Hobby, - U.S.-,-,
The Board argues that Cooper did not “prevail” in Cooper I, since the court only decided that he was “without fault” in obtaining the overpayment, but did not determine that he was entitled to a waiver of the overpayment. The Board’s position is meritless. The Supreme Court has held that a party who obtains a remand, and then ultimately succeeds on the merits of his underlying claim, is entitled to an award for attorney’s fees incurred in obtaining the remand. See Sullivan v. Hudson,
The Board acknowledges that Cooper prevailed in Cooper II, where the court reversed the Board’s determination that repayment would not cause Cooper “hardship.” Both “fault” and “hardship” were аt issue in this case, and it is now clear that Cooper prevailed on both issues.
Nor was the Board’s position in Cooper I substantially justified. The Supreme Court has interpreted that standard to mean that agency action is justified “to a degree that could satisfy a reasonable person” and has a “reasonable basis both in law and fact.” Pierce v. Underwood,
In the agency decision underlying Cooper I, the Board concluded that Cooper, by virtue of his union experience and education, should have known that he could not convеrt his disability annuity into an age and service
Since Coopеr prevailed, and the government’s position was not substantially justified, he is entitled to a “reasonable” attorney’s fee. The court calculates the fee based on “the number of hours reasonably expended on the litigation multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate.” Hensley v. Eckerhart,
Under EAJA, the maximum rate of $75 per hour may be adjusted by the change in the cost of living since 1981, when EAJA was enacted. See 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(2)(A). Cooper seeks fеes at the rate of $113.85 per hour, which represents a 51.8% increase in the cost of living from 1981 to 1992. We agree with Cooper’s calculation of the cost of living increase, and will award fees at the rate of $113.85 per hour.
We conclude, however, that Cooper’s fee request must be reduced in several respects. First, Cooper seeks payment for 24 hours of work preparing his “Reply to Petitioner’s Motion for Emergency Relief.” In fact, leave to file this pleading out of time was denied and it was returned to Cooper. Accordingly, these hours will be deducted.
Second, Cooper seeks compensation for 13 hours he spent driving to and from oral argument. This circuit has not specifically addressed whether an attorney’s fee award may include travel time, as contrasted with travel expenses. Compare Environmental Defense Fund, Inc. v. Environmental Protection Agency,
Finally, it is clear that the time Cooper claims for performing certain tasks is unreasonable and should be reduced significantly. In particular, the time claimed for legal research and writing briefs, and for oral argument preparation, is excessive. Nearly all of the time claimed in June through September 1992 — 399.8 hours — relates to research and writing an opening and reply brief, and preparing for oral argument.
Although there is no doubt that the law concerning railroad retirement annuities is complex, and that Cooper’s attorney had lit-
2. Mandamus Petition
While his case was being considered by the Board on remand, Cooper filed petition for review No. 93-1102, which the court construed as a petition for a writ of mandamus. The court denied Cooper’s petition, although the order allowed Cooper to refile if the Board “unreasonably” delayed its remand proceedings.
It is clear that Cooper did not prevail in his mandamus petition, and therefore is not entitled to attorney’s fees. Therefore, the fee award will be reduced by the 10.7 hours Cooper claims for this task.
3. Remand Proceeding
The 136.7 hours Cooper claims for February and March 1993 relate to proceedings on remand before the Board. Since the court in Cooper I remanded the case to the Board and did not retain jurisdiction, Cooper is not entitled to fees for the remand proceedings. See Melkonyan v. Sullivan,
In addition, Cooper devoted 21 hours to preparing the “Amended Application for Award of Attorneys Fees,” and to responding to the Board’s opposition. The amended application mainly addresses the mandamus petition and the proceedings on remand. The court will therefore deduct 14 of the 21 hours Cooper devoted to the amended application.
4.Cooper II
The Board acknowledges that Cooper prevailed in Cooper II, in which the court held that the Board’s hardship determination was not supported by substantial evidence. The Board argues, however, that its position was substantially justified.
For essentially the same reasons discussed in relation to Cooper I, we conclude that the Board’s position was not substantially justified. As the court’s opinion in Cooper II made clear, the Board’s action in that case lacked the reаsonable basis in fact required for a finding of substantial justification. See Pierce,
We agree, however, that Cooper’s fee request for Cooper II should be reduced. As in Cooper I, Cooper seeks to be compensated for 13 hours of time travelling to oral argument. That time will be compensated at the rate of $56.92.
The amount of time spent on legal research and writing, and preparing for oral past income statements-while completely thе Board points out, there was only one issue involved in Cooper II, namely, whether the Board’s hardship determination was sup
5. Bill of Costs and Third Amendment to Petition
Finally, Cooper seeks reimbursement for $453.16 in duplicating costs related to Cooper II, and $200 in filing fees for Cooper II and No. 93-1102 (the mandamus petition).
The fee award is calculated as follows:
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Notes
. Costs for Cooper I have already been awarded in the amount of $281.91.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
Petitioner sought review of a Board decision refusing to waive recovery of $40,661.24 in disability annuity overpayments. The Board may grant such waivers to the beneficiary of the overpayment “who, in the judgment of the Board, is without fault when, in the judgment of the Board, recovery would be ... against equity or good conscience.” 45 U.S.C. § 231i(e) (1988). In Cooper v. Railroad Retirement Bd.,
Cooper seeks payment of attorney’s fees incurred over the course of both appeals,
Whether the government’s position is substantially justified, of course, depends on what constitutes the government’s position:
“[Pjosition of the United States” means, in addition to the position taken by the United States in the civil action, the action or failure to act by the agency upon which the civil action is based....
28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(2)(D) (1988). Thus, in addition to showing that its litigation posture is substantially justified, the government must also establish that the underlying agency action is reasonable. Congress so declared in an amendment to the Act, 99 Stat. 183 (1985), after Spencer v. NLRB,
Our opinion in Cooper I was properly circumscribed, and refrained from denouncing the Board’s action as unreasonable:
We do not here question thе Board’s reading of its own regulations to cover Cooper’s situation, although it is hard to discern a rationale for requiring someone like Cooper to return payments received during a time when all agree he was disabled. The important point is that we find no substantial evidence to indicate that Cooper’s education and union experience should have led him to the Board’s view.
We granted the petition for review in Cooper I because the record did not support the Board’s finding that a person with Cooper’s union experience should have known of the requirements applicable to his pension plan.
The case for the government is even stronger in Cooper II, where we decided that the Board’s gradual recovery of the money unlawfully paid to Cooper would be “against equity and good conscience.” I went along with the disposition because I, like most judges, do not think it wise to dissent in every ease that I think is wrongly decided, but only where the legal and practical consequences of the jurisprudential error justify comment. Now that Cooper has parlayed his recovery into an additional award of attorney’s fees, I regret my initial acquiescence.
The panel concluded in Cooper II that the Board had failed to explain how a $55 per month allowance for unanticipated expenses was adequate. In deciding that paying back $150 per month of money Cooper had received erroneously would not cause him a severe hardship, the Board relied on statements submitted by Cooper himself as to expenses he had incurred in the past. Those submissions accounted for actual expenditures and included both ordinary and unanticipated expenses. The Board gave Cooper the benefit of the doubt on two contingent items, monthly rent of $450 from his children and credit сard payments for past consumer debt; the former was not counted in Cooper’s income, and the latter was included as an expenditure. Even with such generous accounting, the recovery ordered by the Board still left Cooper with at least $55 in unencumbered income per month. The decision in Cooper II argued that the allowance may not be adequate for future expenses, but gives scant reason as to the relevance of that analysis. The past data thаt Cooper submitted predicts his future expenses, and the reasons Cooper later offers to defeat the reliability of such submissions — his “increasing debt, advancing age, deteriorating health and imminent major expenses” — were all accounted for in the previous statements, which included credit card payments, deductions for a union health plan and another plan which Cooper intended to join, medicine costs, and car and house repairs. Of course, it is just as plausible that his future unanticipated expenditures (say, for consumer debt, which was included in his expenses) would fall, thereby leaving Cooper with even more discretionary income. And the Board’s failure to make adequately explicit this intuitive assumption — even if unacceptable in the panel’s judgment — does not mean that, a reasonable person would think that the Board’s position is not justifiable.
