Gеorge Cann appeals the district court’s decision that he is entitled to only $19,847.00 of the $51,600.24 in attorneys’ fees that he requested under ERISA’s attorneys’ fees provision, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(g)(1). The issues are whether the statute allows for attorneys’ fees for the administrative phase of the claims process, аnd whether it allows for enhancement for contingency. We hold that it allows for neither, and affirm.
I. Facts.
Cann had disputes regarding his pension eligibility with the southern, and then the northern, carpenters’ union pension trusts. He prevailed against the Southern California trust in 1987.
Cann v. Carpenters’ Pension Trust for Southern California,
The parties settled the lawsuit in September of 1990. The terms were that Mr. Cann won on the merits, obtaining a $67 per month lifetime pension, but the amount of the attorneys’ fees to be awarded was to be litigated. Mr. Dean sought an award of $51,600.24. This figure was double the sum of the hours worked by each of the three attorneys on the case times their hourly rates. The hours ran from March 1988, when negotiations with the trust began, through the administrative appeal, and through the lawsuit and fee application.
*315 The district judge, in a colloquy with counsel, tried to sort out whiсh hours were work on the lawsuit filed February 20, and which were for work on the 1988 negotiations and administrative appeal. He asked Cann’s attorney, Mr. Dean, how many of the hours were for time put in prior to filing the lawsuit. Mr. Dean answered that “[t]he only time prior to that time was the administrative remedies with the defendant trust....” In his colloquy with the trust’s attorney, the judge suggested that some work prior to filing the complaint, such as conferences with the client, would be part of the attorneys’ fees for the action rather than the administrative appeal. The court ruled that no fees would be awarded for work done prior to January 1, 1990, 51 days prior to the filing of the action. Taken in the context of the judge’s colloquy with counsel, this date appears to have been the district judge's approximation of when reasonable efforts on the lawsuit began, after сompletion of the administrative proceedings.
The judge also found that no multiplier was appropriate. He indicated awareness that Ninth Circuit authority provided for a multiplier, but considered it discretionary, and denied it. The award was the lodestar amount, that is, hours times ratеs, for each of the three lawyers who worked on the ease, for all hours claimed beginning January 1, 1990.
II. Analysis.
The ERISA civil enforcement provision provides for a discretionary award by the district court of a reasonable fee:
In any action under this subchapter (other than an action described in paragraph 2) by a participant, beneficiary, or fiduciary, the court in its discretion may allow a reasonable attorney’s fee and costs of action to either party.
29 U.S.C. § 1132(g)(1). This appeal raises two issues of statutory construction: (1) whether the word “aсtion” limits fees to those incurred in the lawsuit, or allows awards of attorneys’ fees incurred during administrative proceedings prior to suit; and (2) whether the word “reasonable” requires a contingency multiplier in the circumstances of this case. We review the district court’s award of attorneys’ fees for abuse of discretion, except that questions of law are reviewed de novo.
Oviatt v. Pearce,
A. Fees for Administrative Proceedings.
Cann’s attorneys spent $5,953.12 worth of time trying to get the trust to pay Cann his pension through administrative proceedings. Cann could not file a lawsuit without exhausting his remedies before the trust, so there is no disрute about whether this time had to be spent. The dispute is limited to whether an award should have been made for it. Cann’s attorney suggests on appeal that a few hours before January 1 were spent drafting the complaint which was filed February 20, but when the district judge asked him, he did not point this out. The colloquy with counsel makes it plain that the judge sought to pare off the administrative work from the work on the lawsuit, and we cannot say that the district judge’s approximation, using January 1 as the cutoff date, was an abuse of discretion. Accordingly, no remand is necessary for additionаl findings on allocation of hours.
Cann’s attorney argues that: (1) ERISA requires that employee benefit plans afford an opportunity for the participant whose claim is denied to obtain review by the fiduciary, under 29 U.S.C. § 1133(2); (2) exhaustion of internal administrative procedures is ordinarily required as a prerequisite for filing a civil action, under
Amato v. Bernard,
We construe the statute as limiting the award to fees incurred in the litigation in court. Congress chose the words, “[i]n any action ... attorney’s fee and costs of action.... ” The word “action” in its usual legal sense means “a suit brought in a сourt; a formal complaint within the jurisdiction of a court of law,” and “includes all the formal proceedings in a court of justice attendant upon the demand of a right ... in such court_”
Black’s Law Dictionary
26 (5th ed. 1983). The word “action” generally designates only proceedings in court, not administrative proceedings even though necessary and valuable.
See Gates v. Columbia-Knickerbocker Trust Co.,
In contrast, the Supreme Court has construed “action or proceeding” in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as disjunctive, to provide for awards for administrative proceedings which are not court actions:
The words of § [2000e-5 (k) ] leave little doubt that fee awards are authorized for legal work done in “proceedings” other than court actions. Congress’ use of the broadly inclusive disjunctive phrase “action or proceeding” indicates an intent to subject the losing party to an award of attorney’s fees and costs that includes expenses incurred for administrative proceedings.
New York Gaslight Club, Inc. v. Carey,
The New York Gaslight decision distinguishes another statute, more like the one before us, which permits attorneys fees for “any action.” The Court found significance in the omission of “or proceeding,” and construed the “any action” fee-shifting provision as referring only to “court actions”:
The pertinent language of § 204(b) is identical ... except that § 204(b) permits an award only with respect to “any action commenced pursuant to this title.” The two provisions were enаcted contemporaneously as parts of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The omission of the words “or proceeding” from § 204(b) is understandable, since enforcement of Title II depends solely on court actions.... It is apparent, therefore, that the two fee provisions were carеfully tailored to the enforcement scheme of each Title. It cannot be assumed that the words “or proceeding” in § 706(k) are mere surplus-age.
Id.,
As New York Gaslight suggests, Congress has, in various attorneys’ fees statutes, specified which parts of the attorneys’ work were subject to the English rule of feе shifting instead of the usual American rule. For example, the Internal Revenue Code provides for awards “[i]n any administrative or court proceeding,” but sorts out “administrative costs” from “litigation costs” and treats them differently. 26 U.S.C. § 7430.
An examination of the statutory language, however, does not еnd our inquiry. In
Pennsylvania v. Delaware Valley Citizens’ Council,
We conclude that
Delaware Valley I
and
Hudson
are distinguishable, and in the ERISA context, we have no reason to depart from a literal construction. In both those cases, the attorneys’ fees were incurred after the court action, not before it as here. In
Delaware Valley I,
the attorneys’ fees were incurred in the course of enforcing through subsequent administrative proceedings a remedy ordered by the district court. Likewise, in
Sullivan v. Hudson,
the attorneys’ fees were incurred in prosecuting a remand through an administrative agency after the claimant’s attorney prevailed in the district court. In these circumstances, a court has already dеcided that the party is entitled to prevail, but in the pre-adjudication phase at issue before us, such a determination has not yet been made. Also, the administrative proceedings in those cases were before administrative agencies of government. In the case before us, although we have analogized the proceedings before the trust to administrative proceedings,
Amato v. Bernard,
In
Delaware Valley I,
the Court took note of the statutory purpose “to promote citizen enforcement of important public policies.”
B. The Contingency Multiplier.
Cann claims that the district court abused its discretion by denying him a contingency multiplier. He argues that the distriсt court failed to state any reasons which might justify denial of a multiplier under
Pennsylvania v. Delaware Valley Citizens’ Council,
Shortly after this case was submitted, the Supreme Court held that an award may nоt be enhanced to reflect the risk of non-recovery in a contingent-fee case under the attorneys’ fees provisions of the Solid Waste Disposal Act, 42 U.S.C. § 6972(e), and the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1365(d).
City of Burlington v. Dague,
— U.S. -,
The statute before us and the statutes construed in
Dague
authorize a court to award rеasonable attorneys’ fees. The dispute is about whether, to be reasonable, an attorney’s fee must reflect an enhancement over hourly rates to reflect contingency of recovery.
Dague
explains that the statutory language before it was “similar to that of many оther federal fee-shifting statutes,” and “our case law construing what is a ‘reasonable’ fee applies uniformly to all of them.” — U.S. at-,
Cann argues that we should not apply the rule of
Dague
retroactively to this case, based upon
Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson,
AFFIRMED.
