ORDER
By Order and Final Judgment, dated August 14, 2000 (“Order”), the Court approved, among other things, the instant class action settlement and awarded Plaintiffs’ counsel attorneys’ fees ($900,000) equal to 20% of the Settlement Fund as well as reimbursement of expenses ($136,-593.37) — for a total of $1,036,593.37. Plaintiffs’ counsel now moves, pursuant to Rule 59(e) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (“Fed.R.Civ.P.”) and Local Civil Rule 6.3, for reconsideration of that portion of the Order that declined to award them an additional $600,000 in attorneys’ fees or 33 1/3% ($1.5 million) of the Settlement Fund. 1
For the reasons set forth below, Plaintiffs’ counsel’s motion for reconsideration is denied.
Analysis
In this Judicial Circuit the standard for granting a Rule 59(e) motion “is strict, and reconsideration will generally be denied.”
Ursa Minor Ltd. v. Aon Financial Products, Inc.,
The premise underlying the Court’s Order, respectfully, is that too many lawyers (43) and related staff, from too many law firms (7), billed too many hours (4,612.50) at substantial rates (some in excess of $500 per hour), for too little result (i.e., the drafting of two complaints; the defense of two motions to dismiss; and the negotiation for the Class of a $4.5 million Settlement Fund or approximately $0.38 per share), to justify an award in excess of $900,000 in attorneys’ fees plus $136,593.37 in expenses. The fees and expenses which have been awarded — in excess of $1 million — are, in the Court’s view, quite substantial and fair. The Court reached its determination after carefully reviewing numerous briefs and affidavits.
2
The Court
Plaintiffs’ counsel have now submitted additional information to the Court, seeking to supplement and clarify previous submissions. For example, Plaintiffs’ counsel explains that three of the attorneys who billed time to this case were elevated from associate to partner during the pendency of the case; thus, some of their hours were billed when they were associates. 3
Having reviewed Plaintiffs’ counsel’s “new” submissions, the Court believes that the total award of $1,036,593.37 — $900,000 in attorneys’ fees plus $136,593.37 in expenses- — is reasonable, fair and appropriate compensation for Plaintiffs’ counsel. The new submissions do not change the fact that: (i) the results achieved by Plaintiffs’ counsel were relatively modest; (ii) Plaintiffs’ counsel did not engage in any formal discovery and (essentially) defended two motions to dismiss; and (in) many lawyers billed many hours at high rates in order to achieve a relatively modest result. See Order at 21-22, 32-36. That the Court helped bring the two sides together on this matter to reach a settlement— saving additional hourly fees — in no way detracts from the Court’s view that a fee award of $1.5 million (whether analyzed by the percentage of the fund, lodestar, or any other method) is — simply—too high.
Notes
. Among other things, Plaintiffs’ counsel argue that the Court’s award of $900,000 in attorneys’ fees “may have been the result of misperceptions based on unclear submissions by plaintiffs’ counsel’’ and that the fee award should be increased based upon certain “additional and clarified facts” that have now been provided to the Court. (Plaintiffs’ Counsel’s Brief at 1).
. The briefs and affidavits submitted for the Court’s review were as follows: Plaintiffs’
. This information does not really go to the "heart of the matter.” Moreover, it is well settled that a Rule 59 motion may not be used to raise arguments or present evidence that could reasonably have been presented before the entry of judgment.
See,
e.g.,
Lostumbo v. Bethlehem Steel, Inc.,
