FRIENDS OF THE COLUMBIA GORGE, Northwest Environmental Defense Center, Oregon Natural Desert Association, Oregon Wild, Hood River Valley Residents Committee, Columbia Riverkeeper, Wildlands Defense, Greater Hells Canyon Council, and Oregon Coast Alliance, Petitioners, v. ENERGY FACILITY SITING COUNCIL and Oregon Department of Energy, Respondents.
EFSC 52017
SC S065478
Supreme Court of Oregon
December 10, 2020
367 Or 258
477 P3d 1191
FRIENDS OF THE COLUMBIA GORGE, Northwest Environmental Defense Center, Oregon Natural Desert Association, Oregon Wild, Hood River Valley Residents Committee, Columbia Riverkeeper, Wildlands Defense, Greater Hells Canyon Council, and Oregon Coast Alliance, Petitioners, v. ENERGY FACILITY SITING COUNCIL and Oregon Department of Energy, Respondents.
(EFSC 52017) (SC S065478)
477 P3d 1191
Petitioners previously challenged rules adopted by Energy Facility Siting Council. Petitioners prevailed on two of the five challenges that they had raised: one procedural challenge and one substantive challenge. As a result of those successful challenges, this court invalidated the council’s rules. Petitioners, as the prevailing party in an administrative rules challenge, sought $541 in costs and $299,325.64 in attorney fees. Held: (1) Petitioners are entitled to mandatory attorney fees for work asserting their substantive challenge to the council’s rules because, in adopting those challenged rules, the council “acted without a reasonable basis in fact or law,”
Attorney fees and costs awarded.
En Banc
Gary K. Kahn, Reeves, Kahn, Hennessy & Elkins, Portland, submitted the petition for attorney fees and the reply to the objection to petition for attorney fees for
Nathan J. Baker, Friends of the Columbia Gorge, Portland, submitted the petition for costs and disbursements and the reply to the objection to the petition for costs and disbursements for petitioners.
Denise G. Fjordbeck, Assistant Attorney General, Salem, submitted an objection to the petition for attorney fees and an objection to the petition for cost and disbursements for respondents. Also on the filings were Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General.
BALMER, J.
Nakamoto, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which Nelson, J., joined.
Attorney fees and costs awarded.
FRIENDS OF THE COLUMBIA GORGE, et al., v. ENERGY FACILITY SITING COUNCIL, et al.
367 Or 258
BALMER, J.
This is an attorney fee dispute arising out of an administrative rules challenge. Petitioners successfully challenged rules adopted by the Energy Facility Siting Council that amended the process for reviewing requests for amendment (RFAs) to site certificates. Friends of Columbia Gorge v. Energy Fac. Siting Coun., 365 Or 371, 446 P3d 53 (2019). Petitioners now seek $299,325.64 in attorney fees under
I. BACKGROUND
Petitioners challenged the council’s rules on three procedural grounds and two substantive grounds. The court rejected two of the procedural challenges that petitioners raised, which addressed whether the council had to respond to certain comments and whether the council had adequately circulated copies of the proposed rules. 365 Or at 378-87. The court, however, agreed with petitioners’ third procedural challenge, concluding that the council had not substantially complied with
To provide appropriate direction to the parties for any future rulemaking, the court then addressed petitioners’ two substantive objections. First, the court rejected petitioners’ claim that the council had exceeded its statutory authority by permitting its staff to determine, with respect to RFAs, whether there would be a public hearing and whether the public could request a contested case proceeding. Id. at 390-94. Second, the court agreed with petitioners that the council had adopted rules improperly limiting judicial review of RFAs that were not subject to contested case proceedings. Id. at 394-95.
II. ANALYSIS
A petitioner who successfully challenges the validity of an administrative rule, as petitioners have done in this case, may obtain mandatory or discretionary reasonable attorney fees under
A. Mandatory Fees
Mandatory fees are available if “the state agency acted without a reasonable basis in fact or in law.”
We agree with the council that its position on the procedural issue was reasonable. As noted above, this court held that the council failed to substantially comply with
The council did not dispute that it was required to provide such a statement. Instead, the council maintained that it substantially complied with that requirement because, at a rulemaking hearing, council members discussed potential options for tracking whether the rules were accomplishing their objectives. For example, council members asked staff how they might track whether the new amendment processes were serving their intended purpose of enhancing efficiency and public participation. Staff informed the council that it would be able to observe how staff is handling requests for amendment as they are processed and that, after some time, staff could gather input from those affected by the rules and report that input to the council. Friends of Columbia Gorge, 365 Or at 388.
The council contended that, although it never took the next step of affirming the staff’s proposal, those discussions at the hearing were sufficient to substantially comply with the statute. The council based that contention on the fact that the staff suggestions were the most obvious way to track the success of the rules, that no participants, including petitioners, offered (nor did the council seek) other ways of assessing the new rules, and that those two facts combine to impliedly suggest the council’s intentions, which amounts to substantial compliance. This court rejected that argument, but that was not an unreasonable position for the council to advance, particularly in the absence of any prior appellate court decision on the scope of
With regard to the second issue—the council’s rules that improperly limited judicial review of amendment orders—we agree with petitioners and conclude that the council acted without a reasonable basis in law. The challenged rules had stated that, as to orders on RFAs that did not go through contested case proceedings, the right to seek judicial review was limited to those who provided comments
The council offered no statutory basis for its authority to limit judicial review in that way. Although the challenged rules applied to the review of orders that had not gone through contested case proceedings, the council relied only on
Regardless of what makes sense to the council or what it thinks would be more reasonable, it is not possible to read the statute that way. The statutory provision that the council relied on expressly applies to “contested case proceedings” and does not address noncontested case proceedings. No specific statutory provision expressly addresses who may seek judicial review of noncontested case proceedings involving an RFA. As a result, the judicial review of noncontested case proceedings involving RFAs is governed by the catch-all provision,
B. Discretionary Fees
Although petitioners are not entitled to mandatory fees based on their successful procedural objection, petitioners alternatively contend that the court should award discretionary fees based on that objection. Under
In applying those statutory factors to determine whether to award attorney fees against an agency under
Awarding attorney fees against an agency that has asserted a reasonable claim or defense “could easily make administrative agencies timorous about pursuing reasonable positions as to what the law is or ought to be,” which would not serve the public interest. McKean-Coffman v. Employment Div., 314 Or 645, 650, 842 P2d 380 (1992); see also Necanicum Investment Co. v. Employment Dept., 345 Or 518, 523, 200 P3d 129 (2008) (explaining that, although McKean-Coffman predates
The statutory factors in
As to that factor, we also find no support for a fee award. Leading up to the adoption of the rules, the council undertook its public participation obligations in good faith. “[Between January and October 2017], the council issued six public notices about the rulemaking process, extended the comment period four times, held three public hearings, circulated three draft versions of the proposed rules, and considered more than 150 written comments.” Friends of Columbia Gorge, 365 Or at 374. Further, at the public hearing during which the council discussed how it might determine whether the rules accomplished the council’s rulemaking objectives, petitioners did not object that the council’s discussion was inadequate to substantially comply with
C. Reasonableness of the Fee Award
Having concluded that petitioners are entitled to attorney fees for successfully challenging the council’s rules limiting judicial review, we must determine what a reasonable amount of attorney fees is. See
Those factors are frequently captured by the “lodestar” approach, under which a fee award is “based on a reasonable hourly rate, multiplied by a reasonable number of hours devoted to work on the case, with certain adjustments potentially made to that amount for factors such as the risk of loss and the quality of the attorney’s work.” Strawn v. Farmers Ins. Co., 353 Or 210, 217, 297 P3d 439 (2013). What constitutes reasonable attorney fees is within the sound discretion of the court ordering the fee award. See
Petitioners are seeking $299,325.64 for 660.75 hours of attorney time and 33.9 hours of paralegal time, with attorney rates ranging from $325 to $550 per hour. That total represents petitioners’ work on the challenge in this court, including work on all of petitioners’ claims as well as work done preparing its fee petition. The council challenges both the time that may be compensated and the rates sought by petitioners.
The council first objects to the time for which petitioners may receive compensation. As noted above, petitioners are seeking compensation for all the work devoted to the preparation, briefing, and argument challenging the rules in this court. The council maintains that petitioners are entitled only to fees for time devoted to the claim upon which this court is awarding fees—namely, fees for work on petitioners’ claim challenging the council’s rules on judicial review. In response, petitioners point out that a prevailing party is not necessarily limited to fees for work on only fee-generating claims. A prevailing party may be awarded fees on non-fee-generating claims that are sufficiently related to a fee-generating claim. See, e.g., Moro v. State of Oregon, 360 Or 467, 487, 384 P3d 504 (2016) (“[W]hen the successful and unsuccessful claims involve a common core of facts or are based on related legal theories, then attorney fees incurred in the presentation of unsuccessful claims are recoverable on the theory that they contributed to the plaintiff’s ultimate success.” (Internal citation and quotation marks omitted.)).
In this case, as an exercise of discretion, we agree with the council that petitioners’ fee-generating claim—that is, the claim challenging the council’s rules on judicial review—is sufficiently discrete and distinct from petitioners’ other claims that petitioners’ fees should be limited to that claim. Petitioners’ claim challenging the council’s rules on judicial review sought the invalidation of only those rules and did not rest on a legal theory that was related to petitioners’ other claims. The only point of commonality between petitioners’ claim on judicial review and petitioners’ other claims is that all the claims arose out of the same rulemaking proceeding. But that commonality reflects only the procedural posture of the claims, which we have found insufficient in other circumstances to justify an award of fees for work on non-fee-generating claims. See id. at 487-88 (denying fees for non-fee-generating claims challenging the same legislation as fee-generating claims).
As a result, petitioners are entitled to fees for work reasonably necessary to challenge the council’s rules on judicial review but not for the work on other claims. Petitioners
2. Rates
Petitioners seek attorney fees based on the prevailing market rates for the services provided and the experience, reputation, and ability of petitioners’ counsel. According to petitioners, the prevailing market rate—that is, the hourly rate that the attorneys could earn for their work—represents the “reasonable attorney fees” to which they are entitled.
The council does not dispute that the rates sought reflect the prevailing market rates. Instead, the council notes that four of the seven attorneys who worked on this case are in-house staff attorneys for petitioners. The council asserts that awarding market rates for those attorneys could provide petitioners with more money than the costs that they actually incurred in this litigation. Based on that fact, the council asserts that petitioners should be awarded only their actual costs for those attorneys, such as salary and benefits, plus a proportion of overhead. That method for calculating attorney fees is frequently referred to as the “cost-plus approach.”
In its briefing to this court, the council fails to fully develop its position, cite any legal authority, or argue for why the costs incurred by petitioners in this litigation must limit the amount that petitioners may recover as “reasonable attorney fees.”
Although the council does not say so expressly, we understand the council to argue that the court should consider petitioner’s actual costs under
The council appears concerned that awarding petitioners fees that are based on the market value of their attorneys could result in a windfall for petitioners. Conversely, however, awarding fees at less than the market rate could result in a windfall for the council. See Serrano v. Unruh, 32 Cal 3d 621, 642, 652 P2d 985 (1982) (so stating). In-house counsel for nonprofit public interest organizations, like petitioners, often accept less than the market value for their services because they support the organization’s mission. In doing so, the in-house counsel are, in effect, donating a portion of their services to the organization. Reducing the council’s attorney-fee liability based on that fact would transfer that donation to the council and away from the intended organization. See Cent. States, Se. & Sw. Areas Pension Fund v. Cent. Cartage Co., 76 F3d 114, 117 (7th Cir 1996) (“[T]he value of that gift belongs to the [employer].”).
Such a windfall for the council in this case would be inconsistent with the purpose of the fee-shifting statute, which is not only to “redress individuals who have borne unfair financial burdens defending against groundless charges or otherwise attempting to right mistakes that agencies should never have committed,” but also to “serve as [a] deterrent[] to groundless or arbitrary agency action.” Van Gordon, 63 Or App at 565-66; see also Brown v. Adult and Family Services, 293 Or 6, 11, 643 P2d 1266 (1982) (recognizing that, in granting courts the authority to award attorney fees in actions that successfully contest agency actions, the legislature “intended the authority to serve as a deterrent to agency error”).
In awarding attorney fees for salaried in-house attorneys, the “modern trend” has been to use the market-value approach. Milgard Tempering, Inc. v. Selas Corp. of Am., 761 F2d 553, 558 (9th Cir 1985); see AMX Enterprises, L.L.P. v. Master Realty Corp., 283 SW3d 506, 518 (Tex App 2009) (adopting the market-value approach and collecting cases); see also Blum v. Stenson, 465 US 886, 104 S Ct 1541, 79 L Ed 2d 891 (1984) (allowing a litigant represented by a nonprofit legal organization to recover fees using the market-value approach, even if that rate exceeded the salaries and expenses of the organization’s attorneys).
Courts adopting the cost-plus approach have frequently done so in cases in which the attorney-fee award was limited by statute to costs “incurred” by the prevailing party and have emphasized that the purpose of such an attorney-fee award is to indemnify the prevailing party. See, e.g., Softsolutions, Inc. v. Brigham Young Univ., 1 P3d 1095, 1107 (Utah 2000); see also Lacer v. Navajo Cty., 141 Ariz 392, 396, 687 P2d 400, 404 (Ct App 1984) (applying the cost-plus approach under a statute requiring that the amount awarded “‘not exceed the amount paid or agreed to be paid’” (quoting ARS § 12-341.01(B))). Neither limitation applies in this case.
This court has never addressed the question of how to assess statutory attorney fees for in-house counsel. In other contexts, the court has taken different approaches to weighing the relevance of the costs incurred by the prevailing party. For example, in the context of a contractual attorney-fee provision, this court stated that a prevailing party “is not entitled to more than it spent on attorney fees.” Associated Oregon Veterans v. DVA, 308 Or 476, 481, 782 P2d 418 (1989). But, later, this court affirmed a contractual attorney-fee award where the prevailing party incurred no costs at all because the attorney was provided by a third party. Domingo v. Anderson, 325 Or 385, 389, 938 P2d 206 (1997); id. at 390 n 7 (citing with approval numerous Court of Appeals decisions awarding attorney fees for pro bono representation). In Domingo, the court emphasized that the contract authorizing the attorney-fee award did “not contain any condition or qualification” limiting the reasonable attorney-fee award to the costs incurred by the prevailing party. Id. at 389.
We need not decide whether the market-value approach always is appropriate or whether the cost-plus approach is never appropriate for assessing statutory attorney fees for in-house counsel. As noted above, in the context of a statutory fee award, what counts as “reasonable attorney fees” is an exercise of judicial discretion based on the statutory factors in
3. Application
Having concluded that petitioners may receive an award at market rates for only their counsel’s work on
In the end, the most relevant statutory factor here in resolving the parties’ dispute is “[t]he time and labor required in the proceeding, the novelty and difficulty of the questions involved in the proceeding and the skill needed to properly perform the legal services.”
Nevertheless, it does require attorney time and effort to defeat even meritless arguments, like the council’s argument on this issue. Having carefully reviewed petitioners’ filing, and based on other fee petitions recently filed in this court and our experience with appellate briefing and argument as judges and lawyers, we conclude that it is reasonable to compensate petitioners for 70 hours of work for briefing the claim on judicial review and preparing a fee petition for work on that claim.8
We divide that time between attorneys Kahn, Baker, and Broderick. Based on their overall contributions to the presentation of this case, we allocate 10.5 hours to Kahn, 48.3 hours to Baker, and 11.2 hours to Broderick. The reasonable rates for those attorneys are $550 per hour for Kahn, $460 per hour for Baker, and $325 per hour for Broderick.9
That results in an award of $5,775 for work performed by Kahn, $22,218 for work performed by Baker, and $3,640 for work performed by Broderick. In total, petitioners are entitled to an attorney fee award of $31,633.
Attorney fees and costs awarded.
FRIENDS OF THE COLUMBIA GORGE, et al., v. ENERGY FACILITY SITING COUNCIL, et al.
367 Or 258
NAKAMOTO, J., dissenting
Nine organizations working on land use and environmental protection issues in Oregon1
successfully challenged administrative rulemaking by respondent the Energy Facility Siting Council, a state agency. Friends of Columbia Gorge v. Energy Fac. Siting Coun., 365 Or 371, 446 P3d 53 (2019). Now, the court has awarded 10.5 percent of the attorney fees that petitioners requested. The majority explains that the undersized amount is for work on one of petitioners’ winning arguments: that the council lacked authority to adopt rules purporting to limit the scope of judicial review of requests for amendment to site certificates (RFAs) that were not subject to contested case proceedings. Then, based on “other fee petitions recently filed” and “experience with appellate briefing and argument as judges and lawyers,” the majority awards fees for 70 hours of work in this appeal. 367 Or at 275. I respectfully dissent.
First, I disagree with the majority’s refusal to award fees for petitioners’ work on their second winning argument, which resulted in an invalidation of the council’s new rules. The winning argument was that, pursuant to
Second, even if the majority has correctly determined that petitioners should be awarded fees based only on their successful argument relating to the scope of judicial review of RFAs, I have more fundamental disagreements with how the majority applies
FEES FOR RULEMAKING CHALLENGE BASED ON
As the majority has explained, in accordance with petitioners’ argument, we held that the council was required by
The council took the position that it had satisfied the requirement in
As it did based on petitioners’ argument concerning the council’s disregard of the scope of review under the Oregon Administrative Procedures Act for other than contested cases, the court should have awarded petitioners fees for their successful argument concerning the requirement set out in
As I see it, the rationale that the majority provides to distinguish the council’s position on
Thus, this case is like Kaib’s Roving R.Ph. Agency v. Employment Dept., 338 Or 433, 111 P3d 739 (2005), which I would follow here. In that case, the court decided an attorney fee dispute arising after the company, which provided relief pharmacists to work in pharmacies in Oregon, successfully challenged the department’s assessment of unemployment taxes and interest in the Court of Appeals. In reversing the Court of Appeals, which denied the company’s request for attorney fees, this court observed that the agency had not proffered an interpretation of the governing
But even if the council could be said to have asserted a reasonable position, in this court, that it had substantially complied with the requirement for rulemaking contained in
The majority explains its refusal to award discretionary fees, first by way of the factors in
The factors in
“(a) The conduct of the parties in the transactions or occurrences that gave rise to the litigation, including any conduct of a party that was reckless, willful, malicious, in bad faith or illegal.
“(b) The objective reasonableness of the claims and defenses asserted by the parties.
“(c) The extent to which an award of an attorney fee in the case would deter others from asserting good faith claims or defenses in similar cases.
“(d) The extent to which an award of an attorney fee in the case would deter others from asserting meritless claims and defenses.
“(e) The objective reasonableness of the parties and the diligence of the parties and their attorneys during the proceedings.
“(f) The objective reasonableness of the parties and the diligence of the parties in pursuing settlement of the dispute.
“(h) Such other factors as the court may consider appropriate under the circumstances of the case.”
Thus, those statutory factors cover more ground than an assessment of the plausibility of the council’s arguments advanced in this court. The majority focuses on the council’s contentions that it advanced in this court, but that leaves out the importance of the council’s actions during rulemaking and petitioners’ contributions to Oregon law.
Petitioners offer arguments on all the factors in
In addition to the emphasized factor in
The underlying case leading to the disputed request for attorney fees in McKean-Coffman concerned whether, as provided by statute and in one of the agency’s rules, the claimant was disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits because she had “received” retirement benefits, even though she promptly had rolled the retirement money into an IRA. The agency, thus, had earlier construed the statute and developed a rule in accordance with its understanding of the statute, and it applied that rule to the claimant. When the claimant prevailed on her contrary understanding of the statute, she sought attorney fees under
This court explained in McKean-Coffman that the underlying case involved a legitimate dispute about what the statute meant, and the agency reasonably had relied on “the plain meaning of the pivotal term, ‘received[.]’” 314 Or at 649. It explained its decision to deny a discretionary award of fees this way:
“The underlying controversy, while hard-fought, was nonetheless a common variety of administrative contest that involved reasonable positions on both sides and that required a significant amount of independent effort by this court to resolve. An award of attorney fees under such circumstances, while certainly encouraging to individual litigants such as petitioner, could have the undesirable effect of discouraging agencies from vigorously advocating reasonable policy positions in the courts.”
In his seminal article, Dave Frohnmayer, a scholar of administrative law, described Oregon’s procedures for agency rulemaking as “probably the most all-encompassing of any state.” David B. Frohnmayer, The Oregon Administrative Procedure Act: An Essay on State Administrative Rulemaking Procedure Reform, 58 Or L Rev 411, 421 (1980). The purpose of the procedures prescribed in Oregon for agency rulemaking are to facilitate public participation in rulemaking. As the Court of Appeals said in its leading administrative law case about rulemaking,
“[t]he policies of an agency in a democratic society must be subject to public scrutiny. Published standards are essential to inform the public. Further, they help assure public confidence that the agency acts by rules and not from whim or corrupt motivation. In addition, interested parties and the general public are entitled to be heard in the process of rule adoption under the Administrative Procedures Act.”
Sun Ray Dairy v. OLCC, 16 Or App 63, 71, 517 P2d 289 (1973). Petitioners in this case not only had a view of what the new rules ought to look like that differed from the council’s view, but petitioners also rightly sought to hold the council to its obligations during rulemaking and, therefore, to hold the council accountable to the general public. Because I would award fees to petitioners for their work on both arguments on which they prevailed, I would award a significantly larger amount of fees than the majority awards in this case.
LODESTAR APPROACH
I also would hold expressly that Oregon courts should use the lodestar approach as the starting point for
“In determining what amount of fee is reasonable, two basic methods of calculation are generally available. One is the so-called ‘lodestar’ method, by which the attorney is awarded a fee based on a reasonable hourly rate, multiplied by a reasonable number of hours devoted to work on the case, with certain adjustments potentially made to that amount for factors such as the risk of loss and the quality of the attorney’s work. See Conte & Newberg, 4 Newberg on Class Actions § 14:5 at 541-42.”
353 Or at 217; accord Moro v. State of Oregon, 360 Or 467, 472, 384 P3d 504 (2016) (applying the lodestar approach to award attorney fees).
The parties in this case have accepted the lodestar approach in their briefing, and for good reason: The factors set out in
FEE AMOUNT
Petitioners argue why fees should be awarded for the work performed, addressing the factors in
Although it is more time-consuming, this court should discuss how it is evaluating the factors in
In regard to their petition for fees, as petitioners summarize it, their attorneys
“have spent hundreds of hours litigating this appeal, including closely evaluating Respondents’ rulemaking actions, researching and developing the claims for relief, preparing and filing the petition for review, reviewing and ensuring the completeness of the administrative record, fully briefing and arguing the merits of the appeal at the Supreme Court on an expedited timetable, monitoring Respondents’ actions implementing the challenged rules during the pendency of the appeal, communicating with and providing legal advice to Petitioners’ representatives, and preparing and filing this petition for attorney fees.”
Petitioners also explain that the lead appellate attorney, Nathan Baker, managed the appeal so that there was not duplicative effort; that multiple lawyers were needed due to the statutorily expedited nature of the appeal; and that the petition only includes time since the challenged rules were adopted—not the administrative rulemaking process
(when adopted in the 1980s, the rule required attorneys to file a statement of attorney fees that included the substance of the factors that were in DR 2-106 and that are now in
The council argues that it is not possible to understand from the submissions what claims each lawyer worked on and that petitioners should not be awarded any fees at all. I disagree that it is impossible to discern what the lawyers were working on at all, although I do agree that sometimes—or, in some instances, even much of the time—entries by an attorney lack enough information that would prompt me to award fees for the claimed time. An item that merely refers to time for “legal research” or to “prepare brief” or “email co-counsel” is insufficient.
However, petitioners’ lawyers did provide time entries specifically describing some of their work, and the majority fails to specify how it picked 70 hours as the correct number of those hours of work submitted by those lawyers. In my view, a court should explain what time is being awarded when it is relevant, as it is in this case. See McCarthy v. Oregon Freeze Dry, Inc., 327 Or 185, 191, 957 P2d 1200 (1998), adh’d to on remand, 158 Or App 654, 976 P2d 566 (1999), rev’d, 334 Or 77, 46 P3d 721 (2002) (on reconsideration) (vacating order of Court of Appeals awarding fees and remanding for the court to identify relevant facts and legal criteria on which it relies for award that would enable “meaningful appellate review”).
I would award the senior lead lawyer for the case, Gary Kahn, time for specific entries involving the preparation of the record, argument scheduling, brief preparation, and oral argument. For Nathan Baker, I would award time spent on preparing the petition for judicial review, including research about standing and jurisdiction; reviewing the administrative or judicial review record; drafting the statement of the case; correspondence with opposing counsel and the court; correcting the record; work on background and fee sections of the brief; work on preservation of errors section of brief; reviewing transcripts and recordings of meetings; work on any successful assignments of error; APA legislative history research and APA procedural requirements; editing of briefs; preparation of excerpt of record and appendix;
For Steve McCoy, I would award fees for all time spent regarding APA legislative history. That amounts, however, to a very small slice of what he billed.
Peter Lacy’s declaration is relatively detailed compared to other declarations submitted in this case. I would award fees for time spent considering the legal issues to be raised and whether his client would be joining the litigation; work on opening/reply briefs; preparation for moot arguments; attending oral argument; communication with the court; review of the opinion and communication with his client regarding the same; and preparing his part of fee petition. That amounts to approximately half of his requested time.
Peter Broderick also prepared a relatively detailed declaration supporting his portion of the work. He primarily worked on the successful third assignment of error regarding the scope of judicial review. But he also researched
Bryan Telegin claims fees for work on the briefs and the fee petition. I would award fees for that work.
Finally, David Becker provided expert testimony regarding the fees in the case and assisted counsel in preparing for oral argument. I would award all his fees except for time for attendance at oral argument. The majority provides no rationale for why it provides no fees for any time Becker spent to establish the reasonableness of the rates claimed by the lawyers in the case.
As that summary reflects, I would find that petitioners’ attorneys had to spend considerably more than 70 hours of time just to bring their contention that the council improperly had limited the scope of judicial review by rule to this court. But, as noted earlier, I disagree that that
In conclusion, the majority has misapplied
I respectfully dissent.
Nelson, J., joins in this dissent.
