APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
ORDER ON APPEAL
This cause is before the Court on appeal from the Order Allowing Compensation and Reimbursement of Expenses, dated December 24, 1991, and the Order Denying Motion of Fulbright & Jaworski for Clarification of an Order and Findings of Fact Regarding Order Allowing Compensation and Reimbursement of Expenses, dated June 22,1992, or alternatively for Rehearing under Bankruptcy Rule 9023, from the Findings of Fact dated March 23, 1992 Regarding Order Allowing Compensation and Reimbursement of Expenses, and from the Findings on Remand dated October 13, 1993.
ISSUE:
Whether or nоt the Bankruptcy Court correctly ordered, on remand, that the law firm Fulbright and Jaworski (“Fulbright”) is not entitled to reimbursement of disbursements totalling $65,453.20 based on this Court’s Order on Appeal whiсh found that expenses attributable to individual clients were reimbursable.
STANDARD OF APPELLATE REVIEW:
A district court shall not overturn a bankruptcy court’s award of attorney’s fees unless the judge abusеd his discretion in failing to apply proper legal standards or in making clearly erroneous factual findings.
Grant v. George Schumann Tire Battery Co.,
FACTS OF THE CASE:
The facts leading up to this appeal from the trial court’s order on remand are the same as were reported in this Court’s first Order on Appeal.
In re Mulberry Phosphates, Inc.,
Generally, actual and necessary expenses are reimbursablе. 11 U.S.C. § 330(a)(2). The traditional approach to determining which expenses are reimbursable and whieh are not depends on whether the particular expensе was allocable to a particular chent and therefore not overhead.
In re Mulberry Phosphates, Inc.,
At least one bankruptcy court has rejected the traditional approach.
In re New Hampshire Electric Cooperative, Inc.,
Yet another court referenced common practices in its analysis of reimbursement of expenses.
In re Miguel,
Although the New Hampshire court rejected the law firm’s reimbursement request and the Miguel court awarded reimbursement, the fact that both courts referred to actual billing practices as a factor in determining whether an item is reimbursable shows that the proper analysis is to consider the actual billing practices of the industry and the particular firm.
The essence of the dispute on appeal is what expenses should be separately billed as overhead and what expenses should be absorbed into the hourly fees charged to clients.
In re Mulberry Phosphates, Inc.,
However, if a firm charges particular expenses to particular cliеnts for particular uses, then those expenses are not overhead expenses.
In re Miguel,
On remand, Judge Paskay found that Fulbright’s user fee billing system could be used to double bill clients for overhead expenses by charging an hourly rate that subsumed particular expenses that the law firm could also charge the client directly. Judge Pas-kay also rejected the market-based argument that reference to how a firm actually charges expenses to other clients should be used. Subsequently, Judge Paskay analyzed the reimbursement requests for fax, copying, secretarial meals and overtime, limousine, and taxi expenses. He found that the law firm would had to have explained why certain expenses were used before such expenses would be reimbursed. He found no adequate explanation for any of the reimbursements sought.
The legal principle expressed by this Court in the first order on appeal was that reimbursable expenses are those that do not fall within the traditional definition of “overhead.”
In re Mulberry Phosphates, Inc.,
*753 Finding the requested reimbursement items as principally overhead, Judge Paskay also reached clearly erroneous factual findings. Judge Paskay refused to consider that those items were actually attributable to individual clients. Fulbright рrovided the Bankruptcy Court with ample evidence that expenses were directly attributable to Mulberry Phosphates, Inc. Properly applying the standard, the Bаnkruptcy Court should have found that the reimbursements requested by Fulbright were not overhead because they were expenses of representing Mulberry. Accordingly, Judge Pаskay abused his judicial discretion in his clearly erroneous findings of fact and by not applying the above legal standard.
Because the Bankruptcy Court failed to аpply the appropriate legal standard and reached clearly erroneous findings of fact, this Court again remands this ease to the Bankruptcy Court fоr further proceedings not inconsistent with this Order. Accordingly, it is
ORDERED that the case is REMANDED to the Bankruptcy Court for entry of an order awarding Fulbright reimbursement expenses in the amount of $65,453.20.
DONE AND ORDERED.
