IN RE VIVIAN N. BROWN; ROSENAU LLP, APPELLANT
No. 16-PR-485
District of Columbia Court of Appeals
Decided July 3, 2019
Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (INT-480-14)
(Hon. Kaye K. Christian, Trial Judge)
(Submitted February 8, 2018)
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Emily Wheldon, with whom Patrick C. Horrell was on the brief, for appellant.
Before EASTERLY and MCLEESE, Associate Judges, and NEBEKER, Senior Judge.
I. Facts
Rosenau LLP represented Jennifer Brown, the daughter of Vivian N. Brown, in her successful attempt to be appointed her mother’s guardian. In 2015, Rosenau LLP petitioned the court under
The firm subsequently filed an amended petition in which it lowered the amount requested, corrected the double billing, and “earnest[ly] attempt[ed]” to separate unrelated bundled tasks. The trial court (the Hon. Kaye K. Christian), however, denied payment of the full amount requested. The court ruled that each “fee petition billing entr[y] regarding meetings, telephone conferences, or other written correspondence” must list “the subject matter of the correspondence, the person with whom Petitioner is corresponding, and said person’s relevance to the well[-]being of the ward.” The court concluded that more than 70 entries were deficient on this basis. The court also ruled that “‘block-billing,’ ‘aggregate’ or ‘blended’ time claims [are] forbidden because time records lumping together multiple tasks[] make it impossible to evaluate their reasonableness” (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted). The court concluded that an additional 17 entries were deficient on this basis. In all, the court disallowed entries from the amended petition totaling $11,325.41 out of $22,412.95 in fees requested. The court then granted the remainder of the requested fees and costs without engaging in any additional analysis. The firm filed a consent motion for reconsideration, which the court denied. This appeal followed.
II. Analysis
Persons who provide services in connection with a guardianship proceeding are entitled to compensation pursuant to
The trial court found that Rosenau LLP’s fee petition failed to meet the threshold requirement of
description of bundled tasks is sufficiently detailed to permit a court to assess the reasonableness of the time billed.3 We agree, however, that entries bundling time so vaguely as to make a reasonableness determination impossible may be appropriately disallowed. Cf. Hampton Courts Tenants Ass’n v. District of Columbia Rental Housing Comm’n, 599 A.2d 1113, 1117 & n.12 (D.C. 1991) (noting the agency found “the dearth of detail disturbing” where counsel “claimed 40 hours of compensation for ‘Research for Appellant’s Brief of Motion for Summary Reversal,’ without any more elaboration or description, and was simply dated ‘February 21–17 [sic]’“).
Because the trial court appeared to employ an incorrect standard for assessing
Of course specificity of the information in a petition is only a threshold requirement for obtaining fees under the Rule; payment of the specifically identified fees does not automatically follow. A trial court reviewing a fee petition must take the additional step of ensuring that the fees themselves are reasonable. See McDaniel, 953 A.2d at 1024–25. To assess the reasonableness of attorney’s fees requested, the court should consider the “(1) time, labor, and skill to perform the legal services; (2) fee customarily charged in the area for similar services; (3) attorneys’ experience and ability; and (4) limitations imposed by the client.” Id. at 1024–25.4 Using this analysis on remand, the trial court may decide whether the rates the attorneys charged for the contested amount of work billed in this matter are reasonable under the circumstances. Additionally, it may consider whether certain tasks are non-legal, more appropriately billed at a paralegal rate, or excluded altogether.5 Although the trial court did not take this next analytic step as to the $11,087.54 in fees it determined satisfied the threshold requirements of
For the reasons set forth above, we reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
