*1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA
Case No. 13-cv-3451 (SRN/HB)
In Re: RFC and RESCAP Liquidating Trust Action
REDACTED for public access 6/21/19 This document relates to : FILED UNDER SEAL ResCap Liquidating Trust v. Home Loan MEMORANDUM OPINION AND Center, Inc., Case No. 14-cv-1716 ORDER RE: ATTORNEYS’ FEES (SRN/HB)
SUSAN RICHARD NELSON, United States District Judge
Before the Court is the Motion for Attorneys’ Fees and Costs [Doc. No. 4852] filed by Plaintiff ResCap Liquidating Trust (“ResCap”). For the reasons set forth below, Plaintiff’s motion is granted in part and denied in part.
I. BACKGROUND
The Court has previously discussed the uniquely complex legal issues undergirding this contractual indemnification suit in numerous orders and opinions, most notably in its 182- page summary judgment opinion. See In re ResCap Liquidating Trust Litig. , 332 F. Supp. 3d 1101 (D. Minn. 2018). Accordingly, the Court will not revisit the many, and varied, legal issues that have arisen over the course of this five-year litigation.
However, for purposes of this attorneys’ fees decision, the Court will recount the equally complex procedural history of this case. Such background is necessary in light of HLC’s repeated and extraordinary contention that an unusually high fees award is not warranted because this case, and this jury trial, involved nothing more than a standard “two- *2 party contract case” between commercial entities. (Def.’s Opp’n [Doc. No. 4979] at 1, 4; see also Expert Decl. of Sam Hanson [Doc. No. 4997] (“Hanson Decl.”) at 3 (describing this case as a “single-plaintiff, single-defendant contract case”).) For the reasons detailed below, this characterization is completely off the mark and omits a great deal of context.
A. Following a Multi-Billion Dollar Bankruptcy, the ResCap Liquidating Trust Brings Dozens of Related Contract Suits in this District As this Court has explained before, the roots of this case lie in the bankruptcy of the Minnesota company formerly known as the Residential Funding Corporation (“RFC”). To briefly recap: following the collapse of the housing market in 2008, RFC was sued by various “Trusts” and “Monoline Insurers” for breaching the “representations” and “warranties” (“R&Ws”) RFC made when selling those entities (or their insureds) “residential mortgage- backed securities” (“RMBS”), i.e. , bundles of home mortgages. In re ResCap , 332 F. Supp.
3d at 1122-24. Faced with tens of billions of dollars in liability, RFC filed for bankruptcy in May 2012. While in Bankruptcy Court, and after much negotiation, RFC reached a series of settlements, totaling approximately $9 billion, with the RMBS Trusts and several of the Monoline Insurers. Id . at 1124. In December 2013, in a 134-page order, Judge Martin Glenn of the Bankruptcy Court of the Southern District of New York approved these settlements as “fair and reasonable.” Id . at 1124-25. Moreover, at the hearing in which Judge Glenn approved the settlements, he observed that “this case is certainly the most legally and factually complicated case that I’ve presided over in my seven years on the bench,” and that “ResCap presented more unsettled legal issues than I’ve seen in one case before, whether during my *3 seven years on the bench or thirty-four years in law practice before that.” (Dec. 11, 2013 Hr’g Tr. Excerpts [Doc. No. 5013] at 43-44.)
However, the conclusion of RFC’s “legally and factually complicated” bankruptcy
marked only the beginning of the present case(s).
Id
. As part of the bankruptcy settlements,
RFC’s creditors formed the ResCap Liquidating Trust to sue the dozens of banks and
mortgage lenders that had sold RFC the loans bundled into RFC’s securities, on grounds that
those lenders breached
their
(corresponding) R&Ws to RFC, and thus directly caused RFC
to breach
its
R&Ws to the Trusts and Monoline Insurers, which, in turn, contributed to RFC
incurring $9 billion in liabilities.
In re ResCap
,
Importantly, the Client Guide not only contained a series of R&Ws that lenders made to RFC upon each loan sale, such as a promise that all of the borrower information the lender provided RFC was accurate, but it also contained a broad “indemnification” provision requiring the originating lender to indemnify RFC from “all losses or liabilities” arising from the lender’s R&W breaches. See generally id. at 1151-54 (describing the stringency of the Client Guide’s indemnification provisions for breached R&Ws, which afforded RFC “considerable discretion” in determining whether a breach had occurred, as well as “wide- ranging remedies”). Notably for present purposes, the Client Guide also included a “wide- ranging remedy” in the form of a fee-and-cost-shifting provision. ( Client Guide § A212 [Doc. No. 3244-2] at 68 (“The Client also shall indemnify GMAC-RFC and hold it harmless *4 against all court costs, attorney’s fees and any other costs, fees and expenses incurred by GMAC-RFC in enforcing the Client Contract.”).)
Armed with this contract, and the $9 billion in “losses and liabilities” incurred by RFC in the bankruptcy settlements, in late 2013 and early 2014 ResCap [1] proceeded to file dozens of materially identical lawsuits in Minnesota state and federal courts against a wide range of mortgage lenders, all alleging breach of contract and contractual indemnification under the Client Guide. ( See Horner Decl., Ex. 3 [Doc. No. 4858-3] at 1 (“Consolidated Case Chart”) (noting that ResCap filed 73 such “Phase I” lawsuits in 2013 and 2014, 67 of which were in Minnesota courts).) [2] One of these lawsuits was against HLC. See Residential Funding Co., LLC v. Home Loan Center, Inc. , No. 14-cv-1716 (DWF/JJK).
At the outset of this litigation, ResCap was represented solely by attorneys at the Minneapolis firm Felhaber Larson (RFC’s longstanding local counsel), as well as attorneys at the Columbus, Ohio law firm of Carpenter, Lipps & Leland LLP (RFC’s bankruptcy *5 counsel). However, early on in the process, ResCap, in conjunction with its existing counsel, realized that it “needed to obtain national counsel with significant RMBS litigation and RMBS-related bankruptcy expertise to represent [it] in [the HLC] case and the many dozens of other cases like it.” (Heeman Decl. [Doc. No. 5010] ¶ 9 (emphasis added).) Indeed, “[ResCap] could not locate counsel in Minneapolis/St. Paul with the requisite expertise who were capable and able to litigate these cases, particularly in light of the many conflicts that law firms in this market had due to their ongoing representation of many of the defendant-originators in these cases.” ( Id .) This need for national counsel was further amplified by the fact that the “overwhelming majority of Defendants in these cases, including Home Loan Center, [also] hired lead counsel from outside of Minnesota,” often from some of the most prestigious law firms in the country. ( Id . ¶ 11; see also Nesser Decl. [Doc. No. 4856] ¶ 6 (noting that, in addition to Williams & Connolly’s representation of HLC, other defendants “engaged law firms including Jones Day; Munger, Tolles & Olson; Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe; Ropes & Gray; Simpson Thatcher & Bartlett; Sullivan & Cromwell; and Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz”).)
As such, in early 2014, ResCap retained the nationally recognized litigation firm of Quinn, Emanuel, Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP, in addition to Felhaber Larson and Carpenter, Lipps, and Leland. ( Nesser Decl. ¶ 3.) ResCap did so because of Quinn Emanuel’s well-regarded RMBS, bankruptcy, and insurance litigation work, including “its success in recovering over $25 billion for the Federal Housing Finance Agency in ground-breaking RMBS litigation.” ( Id . ¶ 2.) The representation agreement between ResCap and Quinn Emanuel called for Quinn Emanuel to discount its hourly billing rates by in return for *6 “an contingency fee on any ‘recovery.’” (Horner Decl. [Doc. No. 4857] ¶ 12
B. Pre-Trial Consolidation Through Summary Judgment
In the early days of this litigation, the ResCap cases were handled on an individual
basis, with each judge in the District presiding over approximately two to seven cases.
See,
e.g.
,
Residential Funding Co. v. Academy Mortg., Corp
.,
Minn.). The case then proceeded through joint discovery for the next three years, with this
Court and the two magistrate judges holding frequent, in-person, lengthy case management
*7
conferences with all participating counsel.
[4]
During discovery, the complexity of these cases
became readily apparent, as ResCap undertook the daunting task of attempting to apportion
billions of dollars in liabilities across dozens of defendants, and among the tens of thousands
of individual mortgage loans that defendants had sold to RFC over the course of the 2000s.
Simultaneously, ResCap prepared a case against the many, and sometimes individualized,
contract law defenses asserted by defendants, of which HLC was just one. Indeed, early on in
discovery, the Court approved a “statistical sampling” discovery protocol, largely because of
this litigation’s unique “complexity.”
See In re ResCap
,
Apr. 16, 2015) (preliminarily approving “statistical sampling” for the 23 defendants, including HLC, who sold RFC over 500 at-issue loans, and noting that “[t]he establishment of a statistical sampling disclosure schedule will assist the parties and the Court in managing such discovery in this very complex litigation”).
Moreover, during this time, ResCap’s three-firm legal team, totaling well over one hundred attorneys and staff, “responded to over 1,000 common written discovery requests,” “produced over 3,000,000 RFC documents (consisting of nearly 24,000,000 pages) to Defendants, including HLC,” “produced almost 9,000 additional documents exclusively to HLC (consisting of nearly 650,000 pages), “defended over 150 fact depositions noticed in the HLC case,” and “reviewed hundreds of thousands of third-party documents and participated *8 in third-party depositions subpoenaed in the Consolidated Actions.” (Nesser Decl. ¶ 7; see generally Doc. Nos. 100-3190.)
On April 3, 2018, ResCap and the remaining nine defendants in the Consolidated Action (the other 50 defendants had settled [5] ), filed dueling summary judgment motions on “common issues,” as well as Daubert motions. ( See Doc. Nos. 3194, 3243, 3251, 3253, 3264, 3421, 3518, 3602, 3713, 3720, 3884, 3889, 3894, 3909.) Collectively, the briefing totaled nearly 600 pages (not to mention thousands of additional pages in evidentiary submissions), and discussed numerous “common disputed issues,” along with the proposed testimony of 20 expert witnesses. Moreover, HLC, along with defendants Standard Pacific Mortgage and CTX Mortgage, filed defendant-specific briefing as to certain issues, and ResCap responded in kind. ( See Doc. Nos. 3500, 3580, 3617, 3788, 3794.) On June 19 and 20, 2018, the Court entertained approximately 15 hours of oral argument on these motions. ( See Doc. Nos. 3924, 3927; see also Doc. No. 4138 (noting that, on August 3, 2018, the Court heard another hour of oral argument on Standard Pacific’s defendant-specific summary judgment motion).)
On August 15, 2018, the Court issued its summary judgment opinion. The decision resolved some issues in favor of ResCap, other issues in favor of the remaining defendants, and left yet other issues for jury determination. For instance, the Court ruled that ResCap had sole discretion under the Client Guide to determine R&W breaches, that ResCap could prove its case with statistical sampling, and that ResCap could seek indemnification for the liabilities it incurred during the bankruptcy, rather than just out-of-pocket losses. See In re ResCap , 332 *9 F. Supp. 3d at 1151, 1154, 1158. The Court also ruled against ResCap, finding that two of the three damages models it proffered (both of which provided for substantially higher damages than the model the Court found acceptable) were not admissible, and that much of ResCap’s breach of contract claim (ResCap’s alternative to its contractual indemnification claim) was time-barred. See id . at 1189, 1198, 1205. [6]
Most importantly, though, the summary judgment opinion left a number of complex issues for jury determination, both with respect to HLC’s case in particular and the remaining defendants’ cases in general. ( But cf. Def.’s Opp’n at 19 (describing the case as “significantly less complicated” after summary judgment).) For instance, the jury would have to determine whether the Client Guide even applied to the (thousands of) at-issue loans, either as a matter of contract formation or as an equitable matter based on RFC’s conduct. See In re ResCap , 332 F. Supp. 3d at 1118 n.5 (applicability of Client Guide), 1175 (defendants’ equitable estoppel defenses to application of Client Guide). The jury would also have to determine if ResCap’s surviving damages model provided a “reasonably certain” basis by which to allocate damages as to individual defendant-lenders, id . at 1203-04, as well as whether the multi-billion-dollar bankruptcy settlements entered into by RFC were “reasonable and prudent.” Id . at 1157. [7] There also remained outstanding factual questions concerning *10 causation and allocation. See, e.g. , id . at 1168-69 (declining to determine causation as a matter of law, in part because of defendants’ “RFC sole responsibility” defense). [8]
C. Following the Court’s Summary Judgment Decision, ResCap Fully Turns Its Attention to the “Bellwether” HLC Trial
Although ResCap continued to simultaneously litigate its case against multiple defendants in the weeks after the summary judgment ruling ( see, e.g. , Doc. No. 4335 (noting six-hour motion in limine hearing on August 23, 2018 between ResCap, on the one side, and HLC, CTX, and Standard Pacific, on the other)), by September 14, 2018, following a final, unsuccessful settlement conference between ResCap and HLC, ResCap turned its attention fully toward the forthcoming HLC trial, which was set to commence on October 15, 2018.
( See Doc. No. 4455 (noting first pre-trial conference, on September 14, 2018, dealing solely with the HLC trial); accord Horner Decl. ¶ 20 (attesting that, between September 15, 2018 and the conclusion of the HLC trial, all of ResCap’s attorneys’ “Consolidated Action” billing time was solely connected to the HLC case).) [9] Given the likely impact the HLC trial would have on the remaining nine defendants’ trials (and/or settlement prospects), ResCap prepared *11 an extremely thorough and detailed case to present to the jury, as if this were a “bellwether” trial. ( See Sept. 19, 2018 ResCap Witness and Exhibit Lists [Doc. Nos. 4466-67] (listing 4,537 exhibits and 29 live witnesses).)
As reflected in its September 19 witness and exhibit lists, HLC had also prepared a vigorous case in defense. ( Sept. 19, 2018 HLC Witness and Exhibit Lists [Doc. Nos.
4465, 4467] (listing several thousand exhibits and 26 live witnesses).) Moreover, in the weeks
approaching trial, HLC litigated the scope of the Court’s summary judgment order
extensively, particularly as it related to its “RFC sole responsibility” defense. Indeed, in the
month before trial, the Court held four HLC-specific, in-person pre-trial conferences to
address these disputes (
see
Doc. Nos. 4455 (Sept. 14), 4480 (Sept. 21), 4516 (Oct. 4), 4580
(Oct. 9)), and issued several written orders following those conferences.
See, e.g.
,
In re
ResCap
,
On the eve of trial, HLC identified 19 live witnesses and over 150 exhibits in its final pre-trial witness and exhibit lists [Doc. Nos. 4531, 4612].
D. The HLC Trial
From October 15 to November 7, 2018, the parties tried this case before a jury. ResCap presented its case from October 16 to October 30 (approximately nine trial days). During this time, ResCap offered the jury the testimony of 15 fact witnesses (six live, nine videotaped), *12 and five expert witnesses, along with approximately 55 exhibits and numerous demonstrative PowerPoint slides. ( ResCap’s Rev’d Tr. Ex. List [Doc. No. 4733].)
In presenting its case, for which it bore the burden of proof, ResCap had to provide the jury with (a) a thorough explanation of how mortgage securitization worked, and how RFC’s Client Guide and “R&Ws” connected to that complex financial practice, (b) a detailed account of how RFC ended up in bankruptcy, and the kind of claims RFC was facing in its bankruptcy, (c) a complete justification for the reasonableness and good faith of the multi-billion-dollar bankruptcy settlements for which ResCap sought indemnification, (d) an exposition on how ResCap’s experts “re-underwrote” numerous loans in this case, and how that re-underwriting showed that HLC’s breaches caused a portion of RFC’s bankruptcy settlements and (e) a full accounting for ResCap’s “Allocated Breaching Loss” damages model, which relied on complex statistical sampling across multiple loan populations. In the Court’s experience, this kind of evidentiary presentation differs greatly from the standard two-party contract dispute in Minnesota federal district court. Accord In re ResCap , 2018 WL 4929394, at *1 (explaining that “the Bankruptcy Settlements differ from the usual Miller- Shugart settlement, and this litigation differs from the usual indemnification litigation under Minnesota law”). It also bears mentioning that, although HLC engaged in a thorough cross-examination of some of ResCap’s witnesses, especially Dr. Snow and Mr. Hawthorne, HLC did not cross-examine other of ResCap’s witnesses at length.
For its part, HLC ultimately put on a narrower presentation than its pre-trial exhibit and witness lists portended. Over the course of approximately three and a half trial days, HLC offered the jury the testimony of only six fact witnesses (two live, four videotaped), and two expert witnesses, along with approximately 40 exhibits. ( See HLC’s Tr. Ex. List [Doc. No.
4703].) Further, unlike ResCap’s expert witnesses, HLC’s “reasonableness expert,” Mr.
Phillip “Buck” Burnaman, only attacked a relatively small portion of ResCap’s reasonableness case (set forth by Mr. Hawthorne), and did not offer an affirmative opinion on reasonableness. ( HLC JMOL Order [Doc. No. 5131] at 16) (discussing Burnaman testimony in greater detail). Similarly, HLC’s “damages expert,” Dr. Justin McCrary, only attacked Dr. Snow’s statistical sampling as unreliable, and did not offer the jury an alternative damages model or a figure by which they could calculate HLC’s “fair share” of RFC bankruptcy settlement liability. ( See, e.g. , Trial Tr. at 2797 (McCrary cross) (acknowledging that he “was not asked to design a sample in connection with this case,” and “also was not asked to put forward an affirmative damages estimate in this case”).) Further, unlike HLC, ResCap engaged in a relatively lengthy cross-examination of almost all of HLC’s live witnesses. [11]
ResCap’s three re-underwriting experts lasted less than 35 pages combined (Dr. Richard Payne (10 pages), Mr. Louis Dudney (15 pages), and Mr. Steve Butler (9 pages)). Again, based on the Court’s rough calculations, three of ResCap’s four cross-
examinations lasted over 35 transcript pages: Mr. Burnaman (60 pages), Dr. McCrary (50 pages), and Mr. Rian Furey (45 pages).
At the conclusion of HLC’s case, following substantial briefing and oral argument, the Court granted ResCap JMOL on several issues, including the reasonableness of the settlements and HLC’s equitable estoppel defense, largely because HLC had refuted ResCap’s thorough trial presentation with only speculative evidence and attorney argument.
( See generally JMOL Order). However, the Court allowed the critical question of the Client Guide’s applicability to go to the jury, along with the questions of whether ResCap’s damages model provided a “reasonably certain” basis on which to allocate damages, and, if so, what amount of damages HLC owed ResCap. Id .
Following approximately two-and-a-half hours of deliberation, the jury rendered a $28.7 million verdict in favor of ResCap, which was approximately 70% of the damages Dr.
Snow testified was a conservative estimate of the damages to be allocated to HLC. ( Trial Tr. at 2098 (Snow) (stating that, under his Allocated Breaching Loss damages model, nearly $41.3 million was the most likely, conservative and reliable estimate of damages to be allocated to HLC).) [12]
E. Subsequent Developments
Shortly after the jury’s verdict, ResCap moved the Court to grant it prejudgment
interest and attorneys’ fees and costs, in accordance with the Client Guide’s indemnification
provisions. The Court recently granted, in part, ResCap’s motion for prejudgment interest,
which effectively increased ResCap’s recovery to approximately $42.8 million.
See In re
ResCap
,
Moreover, within three months of the conclusion of the HLC trial, all of the remaining “Phase I” defendants in the Consolidated Action had settled. Indeed, one of these cases, First Mortgage, settled after ResCap secured multiple favorable rulings from this Court based almost entirely on successful legal arguments ResCap had advanced both before and during the HLC trial. See, e.g. , RFC v. First Mortgage Corp. , No. 13-cv-3490 (SRN/HB), 2018 WL 6727065 (D. Minn. Dec. 21, 2018).
F. Procedural History of the Present Motion
ResCap filed the present motion for fees on January 5, 2019. ( Pl.’s Mem. Supp. of Fees and Costs [Doc. No. 4854] (“Pl.’s Mem.”); see also Pl.’s Reply [Doc No. 5000].) In its motion, ResCap seeks contractual reimbursement for $28,745,901.93 [13] in HLC-related fees the global sample sold loans for which they did not agree to be bound by RFC’s Client Guide”).) The Court’s total calculation of the itemized fee and cost summary, ( see First Supp’l
Horner Decl., Ex. 59 (Rev’d Fee & Cost Summ.)), is higher by one cent: $28,745,901.94. Nevertheless the Court will use Plaintiff’s requested amount of $28,745,901.93.
and costs incurred between December 2013 and January 2019. ( First Supp’l Horner Decl., Ex. 59 [Doc. No. 5004] (Rev’d Fee & Cost Summ.).) More specifically, ResCap seeks (1) $13,849,850.18 in fees for work performed by Quinn Emanuel attorneys and staff, (2) additional $ contingency fee for work performed by Quinn Emanuel attorneys and staff, (3) $3,548,011.24 in fees for work performed by Felhaber Larson and Spencer Fane attorneys and staff, [14] (4) $972,274.13 in fees for work performed by Carpenter Lipps & Leland attorneys and staff, (5) $2,988,483.18 in costs for work performed by 15 expert witnesses and their support firms, (6) $226,057.09 in costs for work performed by two document vendors, and (7) $1,863,979.20 in costs for various trial witnesses and vendors, i.e., non-expert trial witnesses ($47,705.25), office space ($251,221.21), trial graphics ($328,166.41), and jury consulting ($1,236,886.33). ( See id .; see also Horner Decl. (detailing these costs, and explaining how ResCap apportioned the cost of general consolidated action work to HLC in particular).) In sum, ResCap seeks $18,370,135.55 in attorneys’ fees, plus a $ contingency fee. ( Id. ) It seeks $5,078,519.47 in costs. ( Id. )
HLC filed an opposition brief on February 11, 2019, and argued that ResCap’s fee award “should be reduced to the range of $6.7 million to $11 million.” (Def.’s Opp’n at 2.) In making this request, HLC primarily focused on ResCap’s attorneys’ fees incurred between July and November 2018, which it deemed “grossly excessive,” in terms of both hours billed *17 and attorneys utilized. ( Id .; see also id . at 18 n.6 (noting that, “[f]or purposes of this opposition, HLC is not specifically challenging the excessiveness of the hours expended by [ResCap’s] firms during the pre-July 2018 period”).) HLC similarly argued that the trial and expert witness costs incurred by ResCap in that July-November 2018 time period were excessive. ( Id . at 33-37.) Moreover, attached to its motion, HLC included a declaration from former Minnesota Supreme Court Justice Sam Hanson. In his declaration, Justice Hanson opined that ResCap’s fee request was “unprecedented” for a “single-plaintiff, single- defendant contract case” in Minnesota, especially given the relative size of the jury’s verdict and the relative hours billed by HLC’s counsel, and that ResCap’s fee award should be reduced accordingly. ( See Hanson Decl. at 3.) Justice Hanson also opined that ResCap’s fee award should generally be reduced by “25-50%” because of various rulings the Court made against ResCap in its summary judgment decision. ( Id . at 11-12) (noting the Court’s elimination of ResCap’s two “higher yielding” damages models at summary judgment).
In light of these dueling submissions, the Court entertained two and a half hours of oral argument on February 21, 2019. ( Doc. No. 5021.)
II. DISCUSSION
A. Whether a Reasonableness Standard Should Be Read into the Client Guide Before delving into the particulars of ResCap’s fee and costs request, the Court addresses a threshold question: must the Court even conduct a reasonableness analysis of ResCap’s fees and costs at all ? The necessity of addressing this question arises directly out of the Client Guide’s fee-shifting language: “The Client also shall indemnify GMAC-RFC and hold it harmless against all court costs, attorney’s fees and any other costs, fees and *18 expenses incurred by GMAC-RFC in enforcing the Client Contract.” (Client Guide § A212 at 68 (emphasis added).) Importantly, this provision does not contain the word “reasonable.” Compare with, e.g. , 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b). As such, ResCap contends that the Court need not engage in a reasonableness analysis, and should simply “enforce the parties’ agreement as written,” which, after all, was negotiated by “two sophisticated business parties.” ( Pl.’s Reply at 6-8.) HLC disagrees, and argues that the Court should “read a reasonableness requirement into” the Client Guide “as a matter of public policy.” (Def.’s Opp’n at 6.)
The Court will first discuss ResCap’s cited cases.
[15]
In support of its position, ResCap
relies heavily on the Eighth Circuit decision,
Residential Funding Co. v. Terrace Mortgage
,
The Eighth Circuit, in
Terrace
, was not confronted with the exact question of whether,
as a matter of public policy, a court should always inquire into the reasonableness of
attorney’s fees and costs regardless of a contract’s language, because the parties only referred
to the issue in passing.
See
Brief of
Terrace
Appellant, 2012 WL 4340983, at *52-53
(devoting only a few sentences to this issue); Brief of
Terrace
Appellee,
Instead, Terrace argued that it should not have to indemnify RFC for all of the expenses incurred in bringing this action because RFC pursued legal theories that ultimately did not prove decisive in this Court’s grant of summary judgment to RFC. Brief of Terrace Appellant at *7–9, *52–53. RFC responded that it could pursue its claims “using multiple strategies,” and was thus entitled to all of its attorneys’ fees because they were “directly related to RFC’s enforcement of its contractual rights against Terrace.” Brief of Terrace Appellee at *68–69. The Eighth Circuit then ruled that RFC was entitled to all of its fees and costs, using the language quoted above. But because the parties did not discuss the public policy arguments presented by HLC here, the Eighth Circuit did not have an opportunity to address them.
Indeed, the Court finds that ResCap’s literal reading of
Terrace
potentially clashes
with important tenets of state contract law. Although the principle of freedom of contract is
accorded the utmost respect by Minnesota courts, the Minnesota Supreme Court has stated
that this freedom must give way “when the particular contract violates some principle which
is of even greater importance to the general public.”
Lyon Fin. Servs., Inc. v. Ill. Paper &
Copier Co.
,
668, 669 (Minn. 1894) (holding, in a somewhat different contractual context, that courts
should consider the “reasonableness” of a fees request, even in the absence of specific
contractual language, as a way to “prevent injustice and unconscionable extortion”);
see also
United Prairie Bank-Mountain Lake v. Haugen Nutrition & Equip., LLC
,
Moreover, arguably, ResCap’s reading of
Terrace
(and the Client Guide) is potentially
inconsistent with the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, which is implied into all
contracts under Minnesota law.
See, e.g.
,
In re Hennepin Cty. 1986 Recycling Bond Litig.
,
540 N.W.2d 494, 503–04 (Minn. 1995). And, applying Minnesota law, this Court has
previously implied a reasonableness standard to a fee request arising from a contractual fee-
*21
shifting provision that did not contain a reasonableness limitation.
See I-Sys., Inc. v.
Softwares, Inc.
, No. 02-cv-1951 (JRT/FLN),
1994) (stating that when a contract authorizes a party to recover attorneys’ fees, the courts will enforce it as long as the fees are reasonable.).
All told, the Court declines to accept ResCap’s argument that either Terrace or the Client Guide bar the Court from considering the reasonableness of ResCap’s fees and costs request at all.
By the same token, however, the Client Guide is “a freely negotiated agreement
between two sophisticated parties.”
Terrace
,
Sports Facilities Comm’n v. Gen. Mills, Inc.
,
Further, other provisions of the Client Guide
do
expressly limit ResCap’s recovery of
attorneys’ fees to only those that are “reasonable.” (
See, e.g.
, Client Guide §§ A202(II),
A210(A), A212 (concerning event-of-default and third-party litigation).)
[17]
If the parties were
*22
able to agree in other contractual provisions that RFC could only recover “reasonable”—but
not necessarily all—attorneys’ fees, surely they could have done so in the at-issue
indemnification provision as well.
See Quade v. Secura Ins.
,
2012) (requiring courts to read certain contractual provisions “in the context of the entire
contract”) (citing
Emp’rs Mut. Liab. Ins. Co. of Wis. v. Eagles Lodge of Hallock, Minn.
, 165
N.W.2d 554, 556 (Minn. 1969);
see also Chergosky v. Crosstown Bell, Inc.
,
In sum, it is not altogether clear whether the Court must review the reasonableness of ResCap’s petition for fees and costs—based on a contractual fee-shifting provision that contains no mention of reasonableness. However, in light of public policy considerations, the Court will conduct a review for reasonableness, although the Court is mindful that this is not a case in which the parties negotiated a “reasonableness” requirement into their indemnification agreement. In any event, as discussed below, the Court finds that with some modification, Plaintiff’s petition for fees and costs is generally reasonable.
B. Whether ResCap’s Attorneys’ Fees Are Reasonable
The amount of an attorney’s fee award must be determined on the facts of each case
and is within the district court’s discretion.
Hensley v. Eckerhart
,
Courts consider “all relevant circumstances” when determining the reasonableness of hours
and hourly rates.
Milner v. Farmers Ins. Exch.
,
(1) the time and labor required; (2) the nature and difficulty of the responsibility assumed; (3) the amount involved and the results obtained; (4) the fees customarily charged for similar legal services; (5) the experience, reputation, and ability of counsel; and (6) the fee arrangement existing between counsel and the client.
Id.
Federal courts consider the same or similar factors
[19]
when determining whether to adjust
the loadstar amount upward or downward, although “many of these factors usually are
subsumed within the initial [lodestar] calculation.”
Hensley
,
However, in determining the lodestar, courts “need not, and indeed should not, become
green-eyeshade accountants. The essential goal in shifting fees (to either party) is to do rough
justice, not to achieve auditing perfection.”
Fox v. Vice
,
Here, Plaintiffs seek to recover $18,370,135.55 in attorneys’ fees, plus a contingency
payment to Quinn Emanuel of $
[20]
. (First Supp’l Horner Decl., Ex. 59 (Rev’d
Fee & Cost Summ.).) The fee total reflects more than 33,074 direct hours of Quinn Emanuel
time, 11,163.6 hours of Felhaber time, and 2,462.9 hours of Carpenter Lipps time.
[21]
(
See
Horner Decl. ¶¶ 22, 26, 31.) In addition, Plaintiff seeks an award of costs in the amount of
Hensley
,
[20] The fees total, $18,370,135.55, consists of the following total amounts charged to HLC, per law firm: $13,849,850.18 (Quinn Emanuel) + $3,459,311.29 (Felhaber) + $972,274.13 (CLL) + $88,699.95 (Spencer Fane). (First Supp’l Horner Decl., Ex. 59 (Rev’d Fee & Cost Summ.).) ResCap provided these hourly totals in the initial Horner Declaration. (Horner Decl.
¶¶ 22, 26, 31.) Subsequently, it eliminated billing entries for 17 Quinn Emanuel timekeepers for the July to November 2018 period, reducing its earlier estimate by $17, 927.50, and for a Carpenter Lipps timekeeper for the same period, reducing the total by $135. ( First Supp’l Horner Decl. ¶ 3.) However, it also added billing entries for work performed between December 1, 2018 and January 30, 2019 related to Plaintiff’s prejudgment interest motion, the fee motion, case administration, and sealing of confidential documents, totaling $465,706.29. ( Id. ¶¶ 4, 7.) Given the net increase in its overall request, the total number of hours expended appears to be slightly higher than its original calculation.
$5,078,519.47. [22] ( First Supp’l Horner Decl., Ex. 59 (Rev’d Fee & Cost Summ.).) Included in Plaintiff’s total revised request are $465,706.29 in fees incurred in bringing their fee requests before this Court. [23] (First Supp’l Horner Decl. ¶¶ 4, 7.)
In preparing the fee petition, Plaintiff identified the fees and costs related to the HLC action, which consisted of both direct and indirect fees and costs. (Horner Decl. ¶ 7.) As Plaintiff explains, the direct fees and costs concerned work related directly to the HLC case, such as offensive depositions of HLC witnesses, reunderwriting and analysis of HLC loans, and work related to the HLC trial. ( Id. ¶ 8.) Indirect fees and costs were related to work applicable to multiple cases, including HLC, such as defensive depositions of RFC witnesses, work on the global sample, expert work related to the reasonableness of the bankruptcy settlements prior to the HLC trial, summary judgment and Daubert work in the consolidated actions, and work associated with meeting and conferring with the joint defense group. ( Id.
at ¶¶ 9, 11.) ResCap has thoroughly documented its methodology, ( see id. at ¶¶ 5, 17), and HLC does not appear to contest this aspect of Plaintiff’s petition.
1. Supporting Evidence In support of its motion, Plaintiff has submitted summaries of monthly invoices for approximately 30 professionals and witnesses, describing their work, in either redacted or *26 unredacted form. ( Stephens Decl. ¶¶ 2–3.) In addition, it has provided unredacted invoices to the Court for in camera review. ( Id. ¶ 3.) Further, ResCap has filed several declarations from its attorneys regarding their work and the billing records. ( See generally Nesser Decl. [Doc. No. 4856], Horner Decl. [Doc. No. 4857], First Supp’l Horner Decl. [Doc.
No. 5002], Heeman Decl. [Doc. No. 5010]; Stephens Decl. [Doc. No. 5011].)
a. Justice Hanson’s Opinion
As noted, in HLC’s opposition, it offers the expert opinion of Justice Hanson, whom
it retained in late January 2019. HLC points out that in contrast, ResCap offers no expert
“willing to opine” on the reasonableness of its fee request. (Def.’s Opp’n at 11–12.) As to
HLC’s criticism, the Court has observed that “[f]requently, when moving for or opposing a
fee petition, parties submit affidavits from local practitioners who opine on the reasonableness
of attorneys’ hourly rates, billing for legal services, and attorneys’ standing and reputation in
the local legal community.”
Harris v. Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc
., No. 13-CV-1719
(SRN/SER),
1934) (finding expert evidence unnecessary because the “judge . . . is himself an expert as to what are reasonable attorney fees.”).
On ResCap’s part, it urges the Court to exclude Justice Hanson’s opinion altogether. It argues that Justice Hanson’s opinion does not meet the standard necessary for the admission of expert opinion because: (1) his opinions are not sufficiently related to the facts so as to *27 assist the factfinder; (2) his opinions are not reliable or trustworthy in an evidentiary sense, since HLC provided him with only a smattering of documents on which to base his opinion; and (3) despite his qualifications as an attorney, he lacks the necessary expertise to opine on the reasonableness of fees in this case. (Pl.’s Reply at 8–11.)
The Court declines to exclude Justice Hanson’s opinion, but does not give it significant weight. Without question, Justice Hanson is a highly respected and experienced jurist in Minnesota. Plaintiff itself recognizes that he is a qualified attorney. ( Id. at 10.) However, through no fault of Justice Hanson, defense counsel inadequately prepared him about numerous aspects of this case, including central issues that consumed substantial amounts of attorney time. For example, he did not consider the extent to which Plaintiff’s breach of contract claim overlapped with its indemnification claim, (Stephens Decl., Ex. 65 (Hanson Dep.) at 138–41)), nor was he aware that at trial, Plaintiff was required to establish the reasonableness of the underlying bankruptcy settlements. ( Id. at 80–81.)
Of the thousands of documents filed on this docket, defense counsel provided Justice Hanson with a mere 21 court submissions, only ten of which were from the July to November 2018 period on which HLC bases much of its objections. ( Id. at 86–87, 92–93).) Among the documents that defense counsel did not provide were the complete trial transcript, Daubert filings, bankruptcy filings, witness and exhibit lists, and deposition designations. ( Id. at 30– 31, 97, 101–03, 105, 111–12, 158.) While Justice Hanson compared the number of trial witnesses as between ResCap and HLC, finding ResCap’s number “too high,” defense counsel did not provide him with the full trial transcripts so that he might review their testimony and consider how each side used their witnesses—critical, substantive information *28 that would inform any meaningful analysis of the numerical differences. ( Id. at 184.) Nor did Justice Hanson know that ResCap sought the same damages under both its breach of contract and indemnification claims. ( Id. at 136–37, 141.) Also, Justice Hanson did not analyze the amounts at issue in the cases that ResCap ultimately settled with other defendants in this consolidated action. ( Id. at 205.) In this regard, he did not evaluate the risks facing ResCap if it were to lose the HLC trial. ( Id. ) While his opinion may nonetheless be of some value to the Court, its weight will be qualified by the limitations in preparation and resources that HLC provided him.
Beginning his work only in late January, it would be difficult for even an experienced attorney such as Justice Hanson to grasp the magnitude and complexity of this case—a case that by that time had amassed nearly 5,000 docket entries, lasted over four years, involved hundreds of depositions, and Plaintiff’s document production of 3,000,000 documents (nearly 24,000,000 pages), plus 9,000 additional documents exclusive to HLC. ( Nesser Decl. ¶ 7.) Given the express fee-shifting provisions in the Client Guide, HLC had always been aware of the prospect of an award of attorneys’ fees. Moreover, given HLC’s own billings and involvement in this aggressively contested litigation, HLC should have reasonably anticipated that Plaintiff’s fee request would be substantial. While the specific amount may not have been known until ResCap filed the instant motion, HLC certainly could have begun the work of preparing an expert well in advance of January 2019. [24] Instead, HLC prepared *29 Justice Hanson with too little information, too late, approaching him a few days before January 28, 2019 to discuss his potential engagement, (Stephens Decl., Ex. 65 (Hanson Dep.) at 86–87, 92–93)), and giving him little more than two weeks to formulate his opinion.
Indeed, Justice Hanson acknowledged that he formulated his opinion after only approximately 40 hours of analysis, with all of the data analysis performed by HLC’s counsel.
( Id. at 86–87, 92–93.)
Consistent with the law, Justice Hanson defers to the Court’s expertise, acknowledging
that the undersigned judge is in a best position to assess the reasonableness of the fee request,
(
id.
at 110), and the complexity of the damages model. (
Id.
at 126);
see also 650 N. Main
Ass’n v. Frauenshuh, Inc.
,
b. Redacted Invoices
Given that counsel for both parties remain actively involved—and actively adverse—
in the Second Wave litigation, Plaintiff redacted portions of its billing statements on grounds
of attorney-client privilege and work product. ResCap provided unredacted copies for the
Court’s
in camera
review, which the Court compared against the redacted entries. Under
these circumstances, the redactions were proper, and the full billing entries need not be
disclosed.
See United States v. Petters
, No. 08-cv-5348 (ADM/JSM),
not disclosed to the Defendants,” who had an opportunity to review the total fees and costs requested).
While HLC claims that the redactions hindered its ability to properly challenge the billing records, ( see Def.’s Opp’n at 24), the Court disagrees. For instance, HLC’s argument as to excessive billing focuses solely on the period from July to November 2018. ( Id. at 18 n.6.) HLC is well familiar with that period of pre-trial and trial and, in consultation with the docket, it can sufficiently glean the activities for which Plaintiff’s counsel billed. Moreover, HLC has submitted a detailed, lengthy opposition memoranda that attacks Plaintiff’s fee petition on numerous grounds.
While Plaintiff asked the Court to require the production of HLC’s invoices for the same period, the Court deferred ruling on that request until it had reviewed the parties’ submissions on the instant motion. Having done so, the Court finds it unnecessary to review HLC’s billing records. As the Court will discuss below, given the substantially different legal burdens and litigation strategies, and the Court’s own familiarity with the facts and procedure of this case, a comparison of the two sides’ billing records would not be a particularly informative exercise.
2. Hourly Rates
Again, the Court examines the plaintiff’s hourly billing rates when determining the
proper lodestar.
Hanig
, 415 F.3d at 825. The hourly rates for Plaintiff’s counsel are as
follows: (1) Quinn Emanuel’s work reflects a
discount, with discounted hourly rates
ranging from $87.50 to $212.50 for paralegal and litigation support, and from $160 to $675
for attorneys, (Horner Decl. ¶22); (2) Felhaber’s hourly rates ranged from $130 to $210 for
*32
paralegal and litigation support, and from $85 to $440 for attorneys, (
id.
at ¶ 29); (3)
Carpenter Lipps’ hourly rates ranged from $100 to $130 for paralegal and litigation support,
and from $175 to $415 for attorney time, (
id.
¶ 32); and (4) Spencer Fane’s hourly rates ranged
from $145 to $500 for all timekeepers. (
See id.
, Ex. 64 (Spencer Fane Invoices).) And as
previously noted, for work performed by Quinn Emanuel, Plaintiff also seeks a contingency
payment of $
. (First Supp’l Horner Decl., Ex. 59 (Rev’d Fee & Cost Summ.).)
Generally, to determine whether an hourly rate is reasonable, courts look at the rates
“prevailing in the community for similar services by lawyers of reasonably comparable skill,
experience and reputation.”
Blum v. Stenson
, 465 U.S. 886, 895 n.11 (1984);
accord
McDonald v. Armontrout
, 860 F.2d 1456, 1458–59 (8th Cir. 1988). Sometimes, where
particular legal specialization is required, courts may consider a national billing rate.
Casey
v. City of Cabool
,
a. Quinn Emanuel As noted, Quinn Emanuel billed at a reduced hourly rate of $87.50 to $212.50 for paralegal and litigation support, and $160 to $675 for attorney time, in exchange for an contingency payment on any “Recovery.” (Horner Decl. ¶ 73.) In their representation agreement, ResCap and Quinn Emanuel defined “Recovery” as “
” ( Id. )
HLC’s expert, Justice Hanson, opines that Quinn Emanuel’s discounted hourly rates are “at the high end of, if not above, the Minneapolis market.” (Hanson Decl. at 9.) He states that in 2018, billing rates for paralegals at firms headquartered in Minneapolis and other
support staff for work from 2011 to 2015),
aff’d
,
North Dakota v. Lange
,
While Minnesota law provides an alternative method of calculating attorney fees, it does not prohibit contingency fees.” Id.
Zebeck , however, was an employment law case, in which plaintiff’s counsel worked solely on a contingency-fee basis, obtaining no hourly payments whatsoever. Id. at *2. In contrast, the arrangement here was a hybrid, with both hourly rates and the potential for a bonus. HLC, however, argues that the contingency bonus should be factored into the hourly rate calculation, resulting in a higher “effective” hourly rate for Quinn Emanuel attorneys.
(Def.’s Opp’n at 27–28.) Folding the contingency bonus into the hourly rate calculation results in hourly rates of $122.50 to $297.50 for paralegals and litigation support, and $224 to $945 for attorneys. ( Id. at 27.)
The Minnesota Court of Appeals has considered an hourly billing/contingency hybrid
fee arrangement, and advises that courts are to first determine the initial lodestar amount by
considering the reasonableness of the rate and whether the hours were reasonably expended,
and then consider the contingency enhancement if some other factor or exceptional
circumstance warrants it.
Comm’r of Transp. v. Krause
, No. A17-1362,
The Court finds that Quinn Emanuel’s reduced hourly billing rates, considered
separately from the contingency payment, are reasonable. The reduced paralegal and
litigation support hourly rates of $87.50 to $212.50, although at the upper end of Justice
Hanson’s Minneapolis 2018 market data, nevertheless fall within the Twin Cities market
range of hourly billing rates. While Quinn Emanuel’s attorney hourly rates of $160 to $675,
discounted, slightly exceed Justice Hanson’s experience-driven market range of $301 to $576,
they are still below the $700 hourly rate that he identifies as the outer limit of reasonableness
for a senior attorney’s time. And particularly given Quinn Emanuel’s RMBS and bankruptcy
expertise,
[27]
the Court finds Quinn Emanuel’s reduced rates are reasonable. Moreover, as
*36
Plaintiff has noted, courts in Minnesota have awarded attorney’s fees at hourly rates of $600
and $650.
[28]
Fancher
,
b. “Inefficient Staffing” by Quinn Emanuel and Carpenter Lipps
HLC also argues that due to “inefficient staffing” by counsel from Quinn Emanuel and Carpenter Lipps between July to November 2018, the Court should reduce the average billing rates used by those firms during that time. (Def.’s Opp’n at 31.) HLC advocates for a reduction in average hourly billing rates for Quinn Emanuel and Carpenter Lipps from $343.84 and $320.83, respectively, to $300 per hour for both firms. ( Id. ) Alternatively, HLC urges the Court to apply Felhaber’s average hourly rate of $235 to all three firms during this period.
The Court declines to reduce the hourly rates charged by Quinn Emanuel and Carpenter Lipps for the period of July to November 2018. These firms’ hourly billing rates themselves, while high, are not excessive and fall comfortably within the Twin Cities market *37 range. In the Court’s consideration of the Milner / Hensley factors, it will address whether a reduction in billed hours is warranted for inefficient or redundant staffing, but it will not reduce the hourly rates on this basis.
3. Reasonable Hours The Court next considers whether the expenditure of billed hours was reasonable. HLC argues that the expenditure of hours by ResCap’s counsel between July to November 2018 was excessive. [29] (Def.’s Opp’n at 15–26.) It contends that Plaintiff’s hours billed during this period comprise 65% of the total hours that Plaintiff’s firms billed during the course of this litigation. ( Id. at 18.) As noted, HLC argues that this was a relatively straightforward case at that time, as the summary judgment ruling had “substantially narrowed the issues for trial.” ( Id .) Also, HLC contends that by then, this was an individual contract dispute between a single plaintiff and a single defendant. ( Id. at 19.) It compares its own 12,300 billed hours to the 36,400 hours that Rescap’s attorneys billed, arguing that for this pre-trial and trial period, the attorneys were essentially performing the same tasks.
( Id. at 21.)
Specifically, HLC argues that Plaintiff’s fees must be reduced by: (1) substituting the hours expended by Williams & Connolly and Zelle during the five-month period for the hours expended by Quinn Emanuel and Felhaber; and (2) omitting the hours billed by Carpenter Lipps, as HLC contends that ResCap has failed to justify the need for this third *38 firm. ( Id. at 26.) HLC contends that these reductions would lower the hourly fee component of Plaintiff’s petition by over $7 million.
a. Scope of Litigation
The Court disagrees with HLC about the extent to which the summary judgment
ruling narrowed the issues for trial. As discussed at the outset of this opinion, while
summary judgment resolved some issues, significant issues remained, such as: (1) whether
the Client Guide applied to the at-issue loans through contract formation or equitable
estoppel,
see In re ResCap
, 332 F. Supp. 3d at 1118 n.5, 1175; (2) whether ResCap’s
remaining damages model provided a “reasonably certain” means by which to allocate
damages,
id.
at 1203–04; (3) whether the underlying bankruptcy settlements were
reasonable,
id.
at 1157; and (4) whether the question of reasonableness would be resolved
by a jury or through a separate bench trial.
See In re ResCap
, 2018 WL 4469249. In
addition, outstanding issues of fact remained concerning causation and allocation.
See In
re ResCap
,
For example, it was its burden to prove that Client Guide breaches contributed to claims for breaches of separate contracts by 506 trusts and 109 monoline insurers in RFC’s bankruptcy. (Pl.’s Reply at 11) (citing Stephens Decl., Ex. 65 (Hanson Dep.) at 128–29.) Moreover, to provide the jury with context, ResCap needed to explain the general workings of the RMBS industry, as well as the historical background in which RFC’s bankruptcy arose. These were are all significant, difficult issues of law and fact. Complicating matters, HLC repeatedly challenged the impact of the summary judgment ruling, seeking “clarification,” on certain issues, such as categories of evidence, sole responsibility *39 evidence, ResCap’s sample sizes, and the estoppel and waiver defense. ( See Stephens Decl. ¶¶ 7–11.) In short, HLC’s description of the case as “significantly less complicated” following summary judgment is simply not accurate.
And apart from the impact of the summary judgment order on the issues remaining for trial, HLC states that this case “has always been a single-plaintiff, single-defendant contract dispute.” ( Def.’s Opp’n at 14) (emphasis added). To HLC, it may have been a “single-plaintiff, single-defendant contract dispute,” in which it could always focus on its own case. But to characterize this case so narrowly ignores years worth of context. This case was never so limited for ResCap, which had, at one time, as many as 67 first-wave defendants to simultaneously litigate against. Throughout this opinion, the Court has attempted to recount four years of broad discovery, non-stop motion practice, and a 16-day jury trial in a “very, very complicated,” (Trial Tr. at 857), and contentious case, stemming from “the most legally and factually complicated case” that the bankruptcy judge had overseen. (Dec. 11, 2013 Hr’g Tr. Excerpts at 43-44.) Again, HLC vastly oversimplifies the time-consuming, difficult nature of this litigation.
It is not unexpected that ResCap would expend the largest percentage of its billed time in the five-month period of the HLC trial preparation and trial, given that ResCap allocated its resources across multiple cases. Even during the July to November 2018 period, ResCap was still preparing to go to trial with several other defendants, with the next trial in the queue scheduled for February 2019. Moreover, given that ResCap was still litigating against these other defendants, the HLC trial functioned as a “bellwether,” making its outcome all the more important to ResCap. That HLC’s trial served as a de *40 facto bellwether is borne out by the fact that the remaining defendants all settled within two months of the HLC trial.
For these reasons, the Court rejects HLC’s characterization of this case in general, and specifically rejects its characterization as the basis for a reduction in attorneys’ fees.
b. “Unprecedented” Award HLC argues that an award of over $28.3 million in attorney’s fees and costs would be unprecedented in Minnesota, and asserts that Plaintiff’s request “approach[es] 99% of its recovery ($28.3 million ÷ 28.7 million).” (Def.’s Opp’n at 2, 13–15.)
First, the Court must correct HLC’s arithmetic. By using the wrong denominator, it underestimates Plaintiff’s damages award, skewing it to HLC’s advantage. Importantly, HLC’s denominator does not include the award of $14,066,931.50 in preverdict prejudgment interest. [30] Preverdict interest is “not conventional ‘interest,’” but rather, “it is an element of damages awarded to provide full compensation by converting time-of-demand . . .
damages into time-of-verdict damages.”
Marvin Lumber & Cedar Co. v. PPG Indus., Inc.
,
1988)).
At oral argument on the instant motion, counsel for HLC argued that consideration
of the preverdict prejudgment interest award should not be part of the calculation, stating,
*41
“The analysis focuses on the comparison of the fees and costs to the damages.” (Feb. 21,
2019 Hr’g Tr. at 55 [Doc. No. 5031]) (citing
Asp v. O’Brien
,
1979)). The Court disagrees. Because preverdict prejudgment interest
is
part of the
damages, s
ee Lienhard
,
See id. at 383. The same is not true here, as the addition of $14.1 million in preverdict prejudgment interest on a $28.7 million jury verdict is not “small.” Thus, Plaintiff’s award of prejudgment interest must be included in the damages total. Including that amount results in a recovery for ResCap of $42,766,931.50.
While the consideration of fee awards in similar cases is a
Hensley
factor that bears
on reasonableness,
(Def.’s Opp’n at 13.) But as ResCap notes, “just because there is no comparable request does not mean that [Plaintiff’s fee petition] is unreasonable; it just means there is no comparable case.” (Pl.’s Reply at 11.)
HLC points to
Terrace Mortgage
,
Just as this case involved extremely complicated legal issues, it always involved extremely high sums of money, originating, after all, from ResCap’s efforts to indemnify itself for $9 billion in court-approved bankruptcy settlements. Here, after hard-fought, years-long litigation, the jury found HLC’s share of liability was $28.7 million. It is not surprising that there are no comparisons in Minnesota. If anything, the sizeable amount of Plaintiff’s recovery—apparently unique in Minnesota—lends support to its request for *43 significant attorney’s fees. Accordingly, the Court does not consider the “unprecedented” amount of ResCap’s fee request as reason to reduce Plaintiff’s award.
c. Amount Involved & Results Obtained Among the factors for determining a reasonable lodestar and whether an adjustment to the lodestar is warranted, courts consider the overall amount involved in the litigation.
Hensley
,
Courts do not apply a “dollar value proportionality rule,” but consider this factor, among many others, in assessing reasonableness. Green v. BMW of N. Am., LLC , 826 N.W.2d 530, 537 (Minn. 2013). And in particular, the Minnesota Supreme Court advises that the “amount involved” factor is not limited to the “prevailing party’s percentage of success,” but rather, should be considered in tandem with the results obtained. Id.
Thus, given these fact-specific considerations, a “court may find a fee award in
excess of damages to be reasonable.”
See Best Buy
,
App. 2006) (affirming award of $14,265 in attorneys’ fees for recovery of $3,838.33 in
contract damages). On the other hand, given different facts, courts have found fee requests
that exceed that the results obtained to be unreasonable.
See Milner
,
As noted, HLC characterizes Plaintiff’s motion as a request for $28.3 million in fees and costs, comparing it to the $28.7 million damages award, and describing it as an almost 1:1 request. ( Def.’s Opp’n at 1, 13.) It argues that this lack of proportionality merits a reduced award. ( Id. )
As discussed earlier, HLC’s comparison requires some correction. First, HLC lumps together fees and costs into an aggregate amount of $28.3 million. But the Court’s focus in this section of the opinion is on attorneys’ fees, for which Plaintiff seeks approximately $18.4 million, with a contingency fee bonus of approximately $ .
Second, HLC’s reference to the $28.7 million damages award does not include the award of preverdict prejudgment interest of $14.1 million, and the as-yet uncalculated award of postverdict prejudgment interest. In other words, Plaintiff is entitled to recover approximately $42.8 million. Thus, any analysis of the amount involved and the results obtained must start with accurate numbers: ResCap seeks fees of almost $18.4 million on a recovery of approximately $42.8 million, or, if the contingency bonus is included, it seeks fees of $ million on a recovery of approximately $42.8 million. Contrary to HLC’s characterization, Plaintiff’s fee request is far from a 1:1 proposition.
Along with the amount involved, the Court considers the results obtained.
Green
,
HLC notes that ResCap initially asserted claims for both breach of contract and indemnification, but, on summary judgment, the Court dismissed as time-barred ResCap’s breach of contract claims for loans sold prior to May 14, 2006. (Def.’s Opp’n at 32) (citing Summ. J. Order at 145). HLC posits that as a result of the Court’s ruling, ResCap “abandoned” its breach of contract claim altogether prior to trial and “completely failed.” ( Id. ) In addition, HLC observes that on summary judgment, the Court rejected two of Plaintiff’s three damages models—the “Breaching Loss Approach,” which calculated $61 million in damages, and the “Allocated Loss Approach,” which calculated $60 million in damages. ( Summ. J. Order at 162–63; Smallwood Decl., Ex. 15 (Add. to Corr. Snow Damages Rpt.) at App. G, Fig. 9.) Instead, the Court permitted Plaintiff to present its “Allocated Breaching Loss Approach,” which calculated $44 million in damages. ( Id .) Prior to trial, ResCap reduced its damages total under this methodology to $40.6 million, dropping its claim for bankruptcy-related fees and adjusting other elements. (Trial Tr. at 2098). HLC points to the excluded damages models as examples of Plaintiff’s limited success, and asserts that ultimately, Plaintiff’s damages award was “only $28.7 million in light of the flaws in its damages methodology.” (Def.’s Opp’n at 33.) Further, HLC argues that it was only as the fact discovery deadline was approaching that ResCap began to pursue allocation theories under its indemnification claim, having spent much of its time pursuing “its unsuccessful breach-of-contract claim and its doomed ‘Breaching Loss’ theory.” ( Id. ) *46 In light of the “limited success,” HLC urges the Court to reduce any award of attorney’s fees by 25% to 50%. (Hanson Decl. at 15.)
The Court disagrees with HLC’s characterization of the level of ResCap’s success.
Setting aside the multi-million-dollar jury verdict and prejudgment interest award for a
moment, before trial, the Court ruled in ResCap’s favor on numerous summary judgment
issues,
Daubert
and
in limine
motions. During trial, the Court granted several of Plaintiff’s
motions for judgment as a matter of law. True, ResCap voluntarily dismissed its breach of
contract claim. But its breach of contract claim and indemnification claim were closely
related and involved overlapping forms of proof.
See I-Sys., Inc.
,
of Mo. , 157 F.3d 1141, 1146–47 (8th Cir. 1998) (finding that Gumbhir represented an “extreme instance” warranting a fee reduction where only three of the plaintiff’s nine claims survived summary judgment, and the retaliation claim on which the plaintiff solely prevailed “was not his major claim.”) The vast majority of the work expended in pursuit of Plaintiff’s breach of contract claim was likewise expended on the indemnification claim.
See Ewald v. Royal Norwegian Embassy
, No. 11-cv-2116 (SRN/SER),
As to the damages models, although the jury did not award ResCap its requested
$40.6 million in damages, and the Court precluded the use of two of its damages
methodologies, its success is not “limited” merely because it failed to obtain all of its
requested relief.
See Simpson v. Merchant & Planters Bank
,
d. Comparison With Hours Billed by Opposing Counsel HLC also urges the Court to compare HLC’s billing totals from July through November 2018 with those of Plaintiff’s counsel in order to evaluate the reasonableness of Plaintiff’s request. (Def.’s Opp’n at 20.) It argues that the comparison is apt because counsel on both sides possessed similar skill, reputation, and experience, both sides performed comparable pre-trial and trial tasks, and “to the extent the case was complicated,” both sides were forced to contend with the complexities. ( Id. at 20–21.)
As for specific differences between Quinn Emanuel’s billable hours and Williams & Connolly’s, HLC asserts that Quinn Emanuel billed approximately 26,200 hours, or more than double the roughly 12,300 hours that Williams & Connolly billed. [32] ( Id. at 21) (citing Hanson Decl. at 13.) Furthermore, HLC criticizes Quinn Emanuel’s complement of staff, asserting that its partners and counsel billed over 3,000 hours more than the firm’s associates (9,991 vs. 6,490). ( Id. at 30) (citing Hanson Decl. at 7–8, 13).
While it may sometimes be useful to compare the hours billed by opposing counsel, the comparison is often irrelevant. See Burks v. Siemens En. & Automation, Inc. , 215 F.3d 880, 884 (8th Cir. 2000) (describing the relationship as an “apples-to-oranges comparison,” and noting that it requires courts to undertake an additional analysis of whether defense counsel’s billings were reasonable); Ewald , 2015 WL 1746375, at *15 (noting that while defense counsel’s fees may sometimes be relevant to a determination of the reasonableness of plaintiff’s counsel’s fees, “frequently, the comparison is irrelevant.”) (citations omitted).
This is a case in which the comparison is not particularly useful. For starters, HLC lost. With the benefit of hindsight, HLC might have billed more time or used additional staff. Had it done so, perhaps it might have enjoyed a different outcome. Moreover, even if one generally considers defense counsel’s billables, as found in HLC’s annual “10-K report” to the SEC, HLC expended a considerable amount in attorney’s fees and costs on this case in 2018 alone : approximately $12.8 million. [33] (S ee Stephens Letter [Doc. No.
*49 5037], Ex. A (Lending Tree, Inc. Form 10-K) at 41).) In contrast, ResCap’s request for nearly $18.4 million in discounted attorneys’ fees and nearly $5.1 million in costs encompasses work that accrued over at least four years .
And while counsel on both sides possessed similar skills and reputation, the Court rejects the notion that between July and November 2018, Plaintiff’s counsel and Defendant’s counsel performed the same work, or that the work was “just as complicated for HLC as it was for ResCap.” ( Def.’s Opp’n at 21.) Notably, their work was not the same due to the fact that ResCap bore the burden of proof. Among other things, ResCap created three complex damages models, presenting one at trial, while HLC offered no alternative model. In addition, ResCap presented the issue of the bankruptcy settlements’ reasonableness at trial, for which it ultimately obtained judgment as a matter of law. In addition, at trial, it presented more than twice as many expert witnesses and three times as many live fact witnesses as HLC and prepared 11 former employees that HLC had intended to call at trial, but ultimately did not.
During 2018, 2017 and 2016, loss from discontinued operations of $12.8 million, $3.8 million and $3.7 million, respectively, was attributable to the LendingTree Loans business. [Home Loan Center, Inc. operates as LendingTree Loans.] In 2018 loss from discontinued operations was primarily due to legal fees and litigation contingencies incurred in the Residential Funding Company, LLC v. Home Loan Center, Inc. matter. In 2017 and 2016, loss from discontinued operations was primarily due to litigation settlements and contingencies and legal fees associated with ongoing legal proceedings, primarily for the above matter.
(S ee Stephens Letter [Doc. No. 5037], Ex. A (Lending Tree, Inc. Form 10-K) at 41).)
In addition, ResCap was still preparing for the next three cases in the trial queue, unlike HLC, which could focus solely on its own defense. Because ResCap was working on multiple cases, it organized attorneys by subject matter, and utilized more timekeepers than HLC. (Stephens Decl. ¶ 15.) As noted above, because ResCap presented more witnesses at trial, and bore the burden of proof, it utilized more timekeepers.
To the extent that national counsel utilized different staffing complements, with Plaintiff’s counsel relying more heavily on partners as opposed to associates than defense counsel, that was an individual choice by counsel, over which each client had oversight.
In a case as complicated as this, ResCap’s decision to staff the case with more experienced legal counsel was reasonable. See Owner-Operator Indep. Drivers Ass’n , 2012 WL 6760098, at *12) (declining to reduce billable hours for time spent by senior attorneys conducting legal research, over defendant’s objection that junior attorneys should have performed the work). There is no indication that ResCap staffed the case with more experienced attorneys and paralegals so as to unreasonably drive up its attorneys’ fees. It staffed the case in the way it saw fit, just as HLC utilized a different staffing complement, as it saw fit.
HLC also compares the hours billed between local counsel. (Def.’s Opp’n at 22.) From July through November 2018, HLC contends that Felhaber billed 8,373 hours, compared to 226 hours billed by HLC’s local counsel, Zelle, LLP (“Zelle”). (Hanson Decl.
at 6.) It notes that Felhaber attorneys did not perform a single direct or cross-examination at trial, whereas counsel for Zelle cross examined a witness. (Def.’s Opp’n at 22.)
But as with national counsel, the way in which ResCap used local counsel was different than HLC’s use of local counsel—a decision that was certainly within each client’s prerogative. An important difference between local counsel is that Minnesota- based RFC had a longstanding relationship with Felhaber, which had represented it on a number of prior matters, including the Terrace Mortgage case. (Heeman Decl. ¶¶ 5–6.) In 2013, when RFC and ResCap began filing the first-wave cases here, they again hired Felhaber as lead local counsel. ( See id. ¶ 12.) Throughout this litigation, ResCap relied heavily on local counsel, with attorneys from Felhaber attending all of the monthly status conferences in the years leading up to July to November 2018. Felhaber attorneys also engaged in underwriting guideline and at-issue loan document analysis and actively participated in discovery and substantive motion practice. (Stephens Decl. ¶ 17 [Doc. No.
5011].) In contrast, in the years leading up to trial, HLC’s local counsel did not play as visible a role. Again, that was HLC’s choice, just as it was ResCap’s choice to give local counsel a larger role. Given the Felhaber attorneys’ hands-on experience over the course of this years-long litigation, and its prior history representing the client, it is not surprising that ResCap utilized more of local counsel’s time during the July to November 2018 period, as compared to HLC’s use of Zelle’s attorneys.
Nor does it matter that they performed different types of tasks. Regardless of whether Felhaber attorneys examined or cross examined witnesses at trial, Felhaber attorneys drafted pre-trial motions and letter submissions to the court, assisted with the preparation of direct and cross-examination outlines for both Plaintiff’s and HLC’s trial witnesses, conducted legal research and analysis, assisted with jury instructions and the *52 special verdict form, and actively participated in the development of pre-trial, trial, and post-trial strategy. ( Id. ) That HLC chose to use local counsel differently was its independent choice, but its different use of local counsel does not serve as the standard by which to evaluate the reasonableness of Felhaber’s billed hours. In light of these differences, the Felhaber attorneys billed more hours than the Zelle attorneys from July to November 2018. Any comparison between the two firms’ billables is not particularly useful and does not warrant a reduction in fees.
HLC further challenges the hours billed by attorneys from Carpenter Lipps, who billed over 1,800 hours from July through November 2018. (Hanson Decl. at 13.) While HLC acknowledges that one Carpenter Lipps attorney served as a fact witness during trial, it points out that Carpenter Lipps attorneys did not conduct any direct or cross examinations at trial. (Def.’s Opp’n at 22.) The Court sees no reason to reduce an award to Carpenter Lipps. As RFC’s former bankruptcy counsel, the firm’s institutional knowledge was necessary to ResCap’s indemnification case, and HLC itself notes that Mr. Lipps served as a fact witness. The reasonableness of the bankruptcy settlements was a central issue at trial, for which ResCap bore the burden of proof. And given the complexity of the bankruptcy process—described by Bankruptcy Judge Glenn as the most complicated case over which he had presided—the Court does not dispute the need for Carpenter Lipps’ unique bankruptcy expertise and institutional knowledge. Comparing Carpenter Lipps’ billables to those of defense counsel provides no insight on the reasonableness of Plaintiff’s fee petition.
Because the Court finds that comparisons to the work of opposing counsel is not a useful gauge of reasonableness here, the Court declines to reduce Plaintiff’s fee award on this basis.
e. Duplicative Work and Excessive Interfirm and Intrafirm Communications
HLC also argues that in terms of sheer numbers of timekeepers, Plaintiff overstaffed the case and performed redundant work, noting that Quinn Emanuel used 107 timekeepers compared to 30 timekeepers from Williams & Connolly. (Def.’s Opp’n at 23) (citing Hanson Decl. at 7.) It also argues that ResCap’s invoices reflect excessive interfirm and intrafirm communications. ( Id. at 24.) As one example, HLC points to entries for September 19, 2018, in which more than 30 timekeepers recorded over 50 entries for interfirm or intrafirm communications. ( Id. ) (citing Smallwood Decl., Ex. 1 at HLC-FP- 092–93; id. , Ex. 2 at HLC-FP-170; id. , Ex. 3 at HLC-FP-338–42; id. , Ex. 4 at HLC-FP- 595–97.) HLC estimates that Plaintiff’s counsel billed a combined average of 276 hours a day (including weekends and holidays) between July 1 and November 8, 2018, and from the narrower period of October 8 to November 8, 2018, HLC estimates that Plaintiff’s counsel billed 496 hours per day. ( Id. at 18.)
Again, given the scope of this litigation and its complexity, it is not surprising that
ResCap utilized the services of numerous attorneys and paralegals. The mere use of a large
number of attorneys or paralegals does not in itself establish that hours are excessive.
See,
e.g., I-Sys.
,
Inc.
,
While the Court is appreciative of ResCap’s voluntary reduction, having reviewed
ResCap’s unredacted invoices, the Court finds that a further reduction is warranted to
account for duplication, redundancy, and interfirm and intrafirm communications.
See BP
Grp., Inc. v. Capital Wings Airlines, Inc.
, No. 09-cv-2040 (JRT/JSM),
f. Fees for Preparing & Litigating the Fee Petition
HLC argues that ResCap is not entitled to any attorneys’ fees stemming from the
work performed, and costs incurred, in preparing the instant petition. (Def.’s Opp’n at 37–
39.) Relying on authority from other jurisdictions, HLC argues that absent contractual
language that expressly authorizes the recovery of attorney’s fees for the preparation of a
fee petition, Plaintiff may not recover fees for such work. (
Id.
at 38) (citing
IG Second
*55
Generation Partners, L.P. v. Kaygreen Realty Co.
,
2014); Houden v. Todd , 324 P.3d 1157, 1160, 1165 (Mont. 2014)). Although HLC acknowledges that courts have awarded “fees on fees” in statutory attorney’s fee cases, it argues that the “public policy concerns animating those cases . . . are not present here.” ( Id. ) (citing Jones v. MacMillan Bloedel Containers, Inc. , 685 F.2d 236, 239 (8th Cir.
1982)).
The Court disagrees. As HLC notes, under Minnesota law, “attorney fees are not
recoverable in litigation unless there is a specific contract permitting . . . such recovery.”
Dunn v. Nat’l Beverage Corp.
,
Ct. App. Apr. 11, 2016) (finding it within the trial court’s discretion to award attorney fees related to submitting the fee petition “as these were incurred in pursuing [a party’s] rights under a [fee-shifting contract]” which provided for “reasonable attorney[] fees”). The Client Guide was a freely negotiated contract between two sophisticated parties and it contains no fee-shifting exceptions for fee petition work. HLC fully anticipated that ResCap would move for attorney’s fees. The Court has reviewed Plaintiff’s invoices for *56 this work and finds them to be reasonable. Plaintiff is entitled to fees for its work related to the fee petition. The Court will not reduce the award for this work.
g. Lodestar Summary
The Court briefly considers the
Milner
factors that it has not yet expressly
addressed: the time and labor required, the nature and difficulty of the responsibility
assumed, and the experience, reputation, and ability of counsel.
[34]
First, the time and labor required for ResCap to successfully advance this case was extraordinary. While HLC portrays ResCap’s attorneys’ fees as excessive, the Court primarily disagrees, subject to the limited exceptions discussed above. This was a four- years-long lawsuit that involved intensive work, including reunderwriting, sampling, the creation of damages models, and expert witness preparation. The consideration of time and labor supports the general reasonableness of Plaintiff’s fee petition.
So too does consideration of the nature and difficulty of the responsibility assumed. This was an extremely complicated, aggressively litigated case. As noted throughout, the presiding Bankruptcy Judge found it to be the most complicated case of his career, and the undersigned judge likewise finds it to be among the most challenging, complex cases in her legal career. This case required the top-notch legal counsel that ResCap retained.
Finally, the experience, reputation, and ability of Plaintiff’s counsel was outstanding. The Court has had frequent opportunity to observe counsel, during the years *57 leading up to trial, during the 16-day trial itself, and in post-trial motions. The excellent reputation of Plaintiff’s counsel is well-deserved. At all times, they have been unquestionably candid, prepared, well-organized, effective, thorough, and respectful. Consideration of this factor supports a finding of reasonableness as well.
In sum, the Court finds that Quinn Emanuel’s discounted hourly rates, along with the regular rates of Felhaber, Carpenter Lipps, and Spencer Fayne, are appropriate to determine the lodestar. Plaintiff’s invoices reflect the expenditure of billable hours resulting in its lodestar fee calculation of $18,370,135.55. The Court finds that overall, the total hours were generally properly expended, subject to the reduction for duplicative work and interfirm/intrafirm communications, discussed earlier. With the reduction, this results in a lodestar of $18,002,732.84, which the Court finds reasonable.
4. Adjustments
The Court now considers any adjudgments to the loadstar, including the request for
the
contingency payment of $
to Quinn Emanuel.
See Krause
,
at 429–30 n.3 (considering whether the fee is fixed or contingent when determining whether to adjust the loadstar).
There is a strong presumption that the lodestar is a reasonable fee, and courts may
increase the amount only in “rare and exceptional cases.”
Pennsylvania v. Del. Valley
Citizens’ Council for Clean Air
,
Winn,
As the Supreme Court has noted, many of the factors noted in
Hensley
are subsumed
in the lodestar determination, such that the “novelty [and] complexity of the issues,” “the
special skill and experience of counsel,” the “quality of the representation,” and the “results
obtained” from the litigation are reflected in the lodestar amount, and “cannot serve as
independent bases for increasing the basic fee award.”
Del. Valley,
478 U.S. at
565 (citing
Blum,
The Court has considered these factors in its calculation of the lodestar and, as set
forth above, generally agrees that Plaintiff is entitled to most of its requested attorney’s
fees, which, for Quinn Emanuel’s work, involved a
discount in hourly rates. Quinn
Emanuel’s hourly discounted rates are at the upper end of the local market value for such
work, as discussed earlier. Given Quinn Emanuel’s experience in bankruptcy and RMBS
litigation, the Court finds that compensation at this upper end of the local market is fully
warranted. However, the Court does not find this to be a situation in which the lodestar
*59
calculation fails to adequately measure Quinn Emanuel’s true market value. And while
this case involved protracted litigation and significant expenses, Quinn Emanuel’s billing
arrangement was not on a pure contingency basis, such that it involved an exceptional
outlay of expenses or delay in payment.
See Ewald
,
While the Court recognizes the tremendous talent and efforts of Quinn Emanuel’s counsel, it respectfully declines to include the contingency payment in the award of attorney’s fees. For all of the reasons discussed earlier, the Court finds that the revised lodestar, $18,002,732.84, constitutes reasonable attorneys’ fees. This was a contentious, long lawsuit, and this award reflects the complexity, and time-consuming nature of this case. No further enhancements are warranted.
Nor are further reductions warranted. True, Plaintiff’s request for fees and costs is
high. But so too was the amount at stake in this litigation and the subsequent cases in the
trial queue. In addition, throughout the particularly contested period of July to November
2018, ResCap’s counsel expended considerable time responding to HLC’s requests and
arguments, some of which were variations of previously rejected arguments.
See I-Sys.,
Inc.
,
C. Whether Costs Are Reasonable
HLC also objects to Plaintiff’s request for the reimbursement of its costs, which was initially for $5.15 million. (Def.’s Opp’n at 33–34.) ResCap’s revised cost request is for $5,078,519.47, and includes expenditures for experts and support firms, document vendors, and trial witnesses and vendors. ( First Supp’l Horner Decl., Ex. 59 (Rev’d Fee & Cost Summ.).)
Although ResCap asserts that courts presumptively award all costs, (Pl.’s Mem. at
18 n.7), it cites authority discussing fees and costs set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 1920, s
ee
Concord Boat Corp. v. Brunswick Corp.
,
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. , 472 F.3d 515, 517 (8th Cir. 2006), as opposed to costs awarded pursuant to a contract. The Court will consider the reasonableness of Plaintiff’s costs. See I-Sys., Inc. , 2005 WL 1430323, at *14–15 (considering reasonableness of costs despite absence of “reasonable” qualifier in contractual fee-shifting provision for “any and all legal fees and costs.”).
HLC argues that Plaintiff’s costs are excessive, and again notes that ResCap incurred a significant portion of costs—about $2.72 million—from July through November 2018. (Def.’s Opp’n at 34.) Arguing that $5 million in total costs is excessive for “a case involving just $28.7 million in damages,” HLC again fails to acknowledge even the possibility that Plaintiff’s recovery might include prejudgment interest. As noted many *61 times, Plaintiff’s recovery is nearly $42.8 million. In any event, the Court is unaware of any requirement in Minnesota that costs be proportional to a Plaintiff’s recovery.
As with attorneys’ fees, HLC compares its costs with ResCap’s costs in support of its argument that ResCap’s costs were unreasonable. ( Id. at 35.) HLC states that Plaintiff spent about $1.48 million on trial witnesses, vendors for office space, graphics, and jury consulting, while HLC spent about $159,000 on similar services. ( Id. ) With respect to trial graphics and jury consulting in particular, HLC asserts that ResCap spent nearly $1.2 million, while HLC spent only about $157,000 on similar services. ( Id. ) HLC’s expert opines that ResCap’s expenditure on such services is “extraordinary” and is “greater than many local firms would charge in attorney time over a similar time frame to try a single- plaintiff, single-defendant contractual case.” ( Id. ) (citing Hanson Decl. at 10.) HLC also points to ResCap’s expenditure of over $47,000 on four fact witnesses, whereas HLC spent $2,070 on two fact witnesses. ( Id. ) (citing Hanson Decl. at 11.) Similarly, it notes that ResCap spent $1.23 million on expert witnesses, whereas HLC spent $635,000. ( Id. at 36) (citing Hanson Decl. at 11.)
As with the differences in attorneys’ fees, the Court does not find the comparisons between the firms’ expenditures particularly enlightening. For the reasons noted earlier, while the Court respects Justice Hanson’s background and experience, HLC did not sufficiently prepare him. [35] Many reasons account for the differences between ResCap’s *62 costs and HLC’s costs. Again, Plaintiff had the burden of proof at trial and HLC did not.
Given this fundamental difference, the fact that ResCap utilized more witnesses than HLC is not surprising. And even though the Court eliminated many of HLC’s expert witnesses on Plaintiff’s Daubert motions, Plaintiff was nevertheless required to establish the prima facie elements of its indemnification case, which required expert witnesses, to say nothing of presenting the highly complex factual background of the underlying bankruptcy proceedings and settlements to the jury. Moreover because the question of the reasonableness of the bankruptcy settlements remained for trial, it is not surprising that ResCap expended over $361,000 in preparing its bankruptcy reasonableness expert, Donald Hawthorne, for this seminal issue. Establishing the reasonableness of the underlying settlements, for which the Court granted Plaintiff judgment as a matter of law, was critical to the success of Plaintiff’s indemnification claim.
In the context of Plaintiff’s request for costs, HLC again portrays this case as a straightforward, two-party breach of contract suit. ( Def.’s Opp’n at 35) (referring to this as a “single-plaintiff, single defendant contractual case” in challenging Plaintiff’s costs for trial witnesses and vendors). It was anything but that. As Plaintiff notes, this was a case involving tens of millions of pages of documents, over 150 fact depositions, 25 has always been on notice of the very real prospect of a motion for attorneys’ fees and costs, given the Client Guide’s express provisions. Even setting aside its more general notice, HLC could have begun the work of providing an expert with the necessary, intensive background information weeks, if not months, prior to late January 2019— certainly shortly after the jury rendered its verdict on November 8, 2018. It did not do so.
The Court rejects any notion that a compressed briefing timetable excuses HLC’s inadequate preparation of its expert.
testifying experts, hundreds of individual loans, and a 16-day jury trial. (Pl.’s Reply at 16– 17) (citing First Supp’l Horner Decl., Ex. 59)). And, again, the case originated in $9 billion bankruptcy settlements. The dollar amounts at stake and the complicated underlying factual and legal issues rendered this case one of a kind. It could not be further from a typical, “single-plaintiff, single-defendant” breach of contract case in Minnesota, as reflected in the request for costs.
Also, HLC minimizes the impact that a verdict in the HLC trial would have on Plaintiff’s remaining cases. In effect, the HLC trial served as a bellwether. Because the verdict here would significantly impact ResCap’s settlement negotiations in the other remaining cases, ResCap invested considerable resources in preparing for trial, which included the use of jury consultants. One can reasonably infer that the HLC verdict did, in fact, impact the remaining cases, as all of them settled within two months of the HLC verdict. Given these circumstances, the Court does not find ResCap’s expenditures, including its expenditures on jury consultants, unreasonable. In hindsight, had HLC invested more resources in jury consultants or experts, the outcome of this trial might have been different. HLC’s costs do not set the bar for reasonableness and any comparison is not helpful to the Court’s analysis here.
Moreover, Plaintiff elected not to seek reimbursement for bankruptcy costs, any portion of the $2.4 million in costs that Quinn Emanuel incurred before September 2018, any portion of expert fees of AlixPartners/Dudney before July 2018, and costs from several document vendors. (Horner Decl. ¶¶ 23, 60, 63.) In addition, after HLC objected to particular costs, ResCap modified its request, excluding the pre-October 2018 fees of *64 expert Louis Dudney, which included work on other cases, and the fees of excluded expert Richard Solum, totaling $78,384.30. (Pl.’s Reply at 18 n.9.) This demonstrates ResCap’s good faith efforts to present a reasonable request for its costs.
In sum, for the reasons noted above, the Court declines to reduce Plaintiff’s award of costs based on comparisons to HLC’s costs. Also, for the reasons discussed earlier with respect to Plaintiff’s level of success, it further declines to reduce costs by an additional 25% to 50% to account for ResCap’s “limited success.” ( Def.’s Opp’n at 37) (citing Hanson Decl. at 16.) Rather, the Court finds that Plaintiff’s revised cost request of $5,078,519.47 is reasonable and it is entitled to an award of costs in this amount.
D. Postverdict Prejudgment Interest In the Court’s March 18, 2019 Order on prejudgment interest, it awarded ResCap postverdict prejudgment interest on the total award of damages. (Mar. 18, 2018 Order at 21 [Doc. No. 5039].) So that the Court may enter final judgment in this matter, Plaintiff shall promptly file its calculation of the appropriate award of postverdict prejudgment interest on the total award of damages, inclusive of preverdict prejudgment interest on the jury’s award, but not on the award of attorneys’ fees. ( See id. ) The Court directs Plaintiff to provide a calculation over a range of three to four days, to give the Court time to review the submission and direct entry of judgment with the correct calculation. See, e.g., Kelley v. Boosalis , 18-cv-868 (SRN/TNL), Plaintiff’s Am. Calc. of Prej. Interest [Doc. No. 122] at 1; id. , Order Directing Entry of J. [Doc. No. 124] at 6.
THEREFORE, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED THAT:
1. Plaintiff’s Motion for Attorneys’ Fees and Costs [Doc. No. 4852] is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part ;
2. Plaintiff is entitled to attorneys’ fees and costs from Defendant Home Loan Center in the amount of $23,081,252.31 ($18,002,732.84 in attorneys’ fees + $5,078,519.47 in costs);
3. Plaintiff shall promptly file its calculation of the appropriate award of postverdict prejudgment interest on the total award of damages; and 4. This Order is temporarily filed under seal. Within seven (7) days of the date of this Order, the parties are ORDERED to show cause as to why the Order should remain under seal, and if so, which portions of the Order should remain sealed and for how long. To that end, the parties must file (under seal) a joint brief, no longer than five (5) pages, and/or a proposed Redacted Order, if they would like portions to remain under seal.
Dated: June 12, 2019 s/Susan Richard Nelson
SUSAN RICHARD NELSON United States District Judge
Notes
[1] Although these lawsuits listed the plaintiffs as “RFC” and the “ResCap Liquidating Trust,” the Court will generally refer to the plaintiff as “ResCap” because it has always been the true party in interest in this case.
[2] ResCap appeared to file the vast majority of these suits in Minnesota courts because
of a venue selection clause in the Client Guide.
See RFC v. Cherry Creek Mortg. Co., Inc.
,
No. 13-cv-3449 (JNE/SER),
[3] Although the Consolidation Order referenced 68 cases, the declaration of Ms. Jill Horner (ResCap’s Chief Financial Officer) correctly notes that, because nine of the referenced cases were either default cases, sui generis “loan-level” cases, or simultaneously settled cases, the best number to use for initially “active” cases in the Consolidated Action is 59. ( See Horner Decl. ¶ 3.)
[4] Although Magistrate Judge Keyes’s day-to-day participation in this litigation concluded upon his retirement in 2016, he continued to play a seminal role as a private mediator in facilitating settlements between ResCap and individual defendants in the years afterwards.
[5] By this point, ResCap and HLC had held two unsuccessful, court-supervised mediations, first in August 2016 and then again in March 2018. ( Nesser Decl. ¶ 9.)
[6] ResCap later agreed to drop its breach of contract claim as to all remaining defendants. ( Oct. 4, 2018 Stipulation [Doc. No. 4513].)
[7] Moreover, in accordance with defendants’ joint request, the Court subsequently
ruled that the Seventh Amendment required that
the bankruptcy settlements’
“reasonableness” be tried to the jury alongside the rest of ResCap’s case (ResCap had
argued that this issue should be resolved through a separate bench trial).
See In re ResCap
,
[8] The Court also notes that, as a general matter, at summary judgment both the Court and the parties were faced with the difficult task of attempting to apply traditional Minnesota contract, insurance, and indemnification principles to the relatively uncharted territory of complex RMBS litigation, e.g. , determining the proper causal standard for indemnification under the Client Guide. Indeed, just as Judge Glenn noted with respect to RFC’s bankruptcy, the Court found the issues presented at summary judgment among “the most legally and factually complicated” it has had to resolve in its many years on the bench. (Dec. 11, 2013 Hr’g Tr. Excerpts at 43.)
[9] The next two trials in line, the Standard Pacific and CTX trials, were set to begin on February 25, 2019. ( Trial Notice [Doc. No. 4493].)
[10] While HLC cross-examined four of ResCap’s live witnesses at some length, for over 35 transcript pages (Mr. Hawthorne (125 pages), Dr. Snow (100 pages), Ms. Martha Forget (70 pages), and Mr. Jeffrey Lipps (60 pages)), for others, HLC’s cross-examinations of
[12] The Court notes that in contrast to HLC’s present description of this case as a standard “two-party contract dispute,” at trial, HLC repeatedly stated that it was “one mortgage lender-defendant among many,” and attempted to use this disparity to its advantage. ( See, e.g. , Trial Tr. at 312 (HLC opening) (arguing that HLC was “a small fry in the RFC securitization[s] that were the subject of the bankruptcy settlements,” and that “[o]ut of the more than two million loans involved in the settlements, [HLC] sold RFC less than one half of one percent of the loans”); id . at 2160, 2290, 2295 (Snow cross- examination) (eliciting testimony that Dr. Snow needed to use (arguably less precise) statistical sampling with respect to HLC’s breach rate because he had to “draw[] samples for 20-plus originators” in the consolidated litigation); id . at 3456-57, 3459 (HLC closing) (again emphasizing that Dr. Snow’s methodology was unreliable because he had to draw samples for “26 different cases” in the consolidated action, rather than focusing just on HLC); cf. id . at 3443 (HLC closing) (arguing that RFC did not intend for the Client Guide to apply to HLC’s bulk loan sales because “seven correspondent lenders who had loans in
[14] After the conclusion of the HLC trial, counsel from Felhaber Larson moved to the firm of Spencer Fane, and continued their work for ResCap from there. ( See First Supp’l Horner Decl. [Doc. No. 5002] ¶ 5.) Fees for Felhaber Larson, $3,459,311.29, + fees for Spencer Fane, $88,699.95, total $3,548,011.24.
[15] The parties agree that Minnesota law applies in this matter. As a general rule in
Minnesota, each party bears its own attorneys’ fees, absent a statutory or contractual
exception, such as the fee-shifting provision in the Client Guide.
See In re Silicone Implant
Ins. Coverage Litig.
,
[16] Admittedly, Surgical Principals was an unpublished decision that did not answer the precise question here; the plaintiff sought its legal fees through trial, despite not having prevailed on the claims remaining after summary judgment. However, the Court can still consider this decision, and other unpublished decisions cited herein, as evidence of how the Minnesota Supreme Court might treat an issue of state law. See Grinnell Mut. Reinsurance Co. v. Schwieger , 685 F.3d 697, 703 n.5 (8th Cir. 2012) (noting that even “unpublished” Minnesota state court of appeals decisions “can be of persuasive value” to a federal court sitting in diversity jurisdiction).
[17] On the Court’s count, the Client Guide uses the word “reasonable” or “reasonableness” on 33 different occasions.
[18] Although the Supreme Court applied the lodestar methodology in
Hensley
to a
statutory fee-shifting petition, courts have also applied it in cases involving contractual
fee provisions.
See Best Buy Stores, L.P. v. Developers Diversified Realty Corp.
, No. 05-
cv-2310 (DSD/JJG),
[19] These factors include: (1) the time and labor required; (2) the novelty and difficulty of the questions; (3) the skill requisite to perform the legal service properly; (4) the preclusion of employment by the attorney due to acceptance of the case; (5) the customary fee; (6) whether the fee is fixed or contingent; (7) time limitations imposed by the client or the circumstances; (8) the amount involved and the results obtained; (9) the experience, reputation, and ability of the attorneys; (10) the “undesirability” of the case; (11) the nature and length of the professional relationship with the client; and (12) awards in similar cases.
[22] This total consists of $2,988,483.18 in fees for experts and support firms + $226,057.09 in document vendor fees + $1,863,979.20 in trial witness and vendor fees. (First Supp’l Horner Decl., Ex. 59 (Rev’d Cost & Fee Summ.).)
[23] The December 1, 2018 to January 30, 2019 total of fees, $465,706.29, consists of $260,758 (Quinn Emanuel) + $112,361.84 (Felhaber) + $3,886.50 (CLL) + $88,699.95 (Spencer Fane). (First Supp’l Horner Decl. ¶¶ 4, 8–11.)
[24] ResCap observes that the parties met and conferred about Plaintiff’s fee motion as early as December 11, 2018, and Plaintiff filed its motion on January 4, 2019. (Pl.’s Mem. at 9 n.3.)
[25] Although the case proceeded for 17 days, the final day involved only jury deliberations and the verdict.
[27] Local counsel from Felhaber notes that it was difficult to locate co-counsel with the requisite expertise and lack of a conflict of interest. (Heeman Decl. ¶ 9.)
[28] Furthermore, while a comparison of the hours expended by Rescap’s counsel versus HLC’s counsel is not particularly useful, as discussed more fully below, even HLC’s expert concedes that HLC’s attorneys billed at higher hourly rates than the reduced hourly rates for Quinn Emanuel attorneys and litigation support staff. (Hanson Decl. at 9.) As a specific example, HLC balks at Quinn Emanuel’s discounted hourly rates, including a rate of $555 for one of the lead trial partners. But two of Williams & Connolly’s trial counsel associates billed at rates of $646 per hour. (Stephens Decl. ¶ 21.) Ultimately, however, these observations do not factor into the Court’s analysis, as Williams & Connolly’s Washington, D.C. office is not in the Twin Cities legal market, nor is it seeking attorney’s fees. If the Court were inclined to compare them, however, these hourly rates would provide a more relevant gauge of “reasonableness” than the billable hours that HLC urges the Court compare.
[29] HLC does not challenge the excessiveness of hours expended by Plaintiff’s counsel for other periods of this litigation, although it objects on other grounds. (Def.’s Opp’n at 18 n.6.)
[30] Granted, the Court issued the order awarding prejudgment interest after HLC filed its opposition to the instant motion. However, Justice Hanson testified that he did not consider the effect of prejudgment interest on the total damages award at all , stating, “I understand that’s an issue that’s being debated, but I’ve not been asked to look into that.” (Stephens Decl., Ex. 65 (Hanson Dep.) at 198.)
[31] Postverdict interest, however, “is compensation for the loss of use of money as a result of the nonpayment of a liquidated sum, for which liability has already been determined, not compensation for the injury giving rise to liability.” Lienhard , 431 N.W.2d at 865–66 (citing McCormack v. Hankscraft Co., Inc., 161 N.W.2d 523, 524 (Minn. 1968)). Therefore, the as-yet-to-be-determined amount of postverdict prejudgment interest appears to not factor into any proportionality analysis of fees and costs versus damages.
[32] HLC also argues that Plaintiff’s counsel performed redundant or duplicative work and engaged in excessive interfirm and intrafirm communications. ( Def.’s Opp’n at 24–25.) The Court addresses these issues separately in the next section of this opinion.
[33] Specifically, HLC reported to the SEC,
[34] The Court has already addressed the amount involved and the results obtained, and the fees customarily charged for similar legal services. The Court will consider the fee arrangement between counsel and the client in its separate analysis of the contingency payment.
[35] Even HLC admits that “[i]n light of the compressed timetable for Plaintiff’s motion, Mr. Hanson was unable to review all of the expert reports and testimony in this matter and thus is not opining on whether Plaintiff’s expert expenses from July through November 2018 were unreasonable.” (Def.’s Opp’n at 36 n.17.) As discussed earlier, however, HLC
