We are presented with the question of whether district courts may employ the lodestar method to determine whether an attorney fee constitutes a “windfall” under
Gisbrecht v. Barnhart,
Facts and Procedural Background
The named appellant in this appeal, Gary W. Jeter (“Jeter”), is a Social Security benefits claimant. He is represented by his attorney, John G. Ratcliff (“Ratcliff’), who is the real party in interest for purposes of this appeal’s pertinent analysis. 1 On appeal, Ratcliff challenges the district court’s denial of the contingency fee he made with Jeter. 2
On August 12, 2002, Jeter filed an application for Title II disability insurance benefits and Title XVT supplemental security income, alleging an inability to work due to physical impairments resulting from a myocardial infarction. On April 22, 2005, an administrative law judge issued a decision finding Jeter not disabled under the Act. Jeter requested review before the Appeals Council, and on November 29, 2005, the Council denied his request. As a result, Jeter had exhausted his administrative remedies and could then file an appeal of the Administration’s denial of his claim to the United States District Court, for the Western District of Louisiana.
Jeter sought out the services of Ratcliff. Ratcliff agreed to represent Jeter in his appeal of the Administration’s denial of his claim for benefits, and on January 12,
The case proceeded and six months later, on July 31, 2006, Ratcliff filed a brief arguing that the Administration’s failure to find Jeter disabled violated the Act. On October 4, 2006, the Administration filed a motion requesting remand. The matter was referred to' a magistrate judge, and the magistrate judge recommended remand. Soon thereafter, the district court adopted the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation in its entirety, and entered judgment remanding the case. After further proceedings before the Administration, including a hearing and a supplemental hearing, a second administrative law judge determined that Jeter had been disabled since March 20, 2002. In a notice of award dated May 4, 2008, the Administration stated that Jeter’s “past due benefits are $89,289.00 for September 2002 through March 2008.” 3 As highlighted above, Jeter and Ratcliffs contingency fee agreement set Ratcliffs fee at twenty-five percent. Twenty-five percent of $89,289.00 is $22,322.25.
Ratcliff then collected $5,300.00, the maximum fee permitted for his work at the administrative level, leaving a balance of $17,022.25 available for attorney’s fees under § 406(b). Ratcliff returned to the federal district court and, pursuant to § 406(b), requested the $17,022.25 in fees for the work he performed in the district court. At the same time, Ratcliff noted that he intended to refund Jeter the $2,827.50 in fees he had previously received under the Equal Access to Justice Act (EAJA), recognizing that “[f]ee awards may be made under both [EAJA and § 406(b)], but the claimant’s attorney must refund to the claimant the amount of the smaller fee.”
Gisbrecht,
The case was once again referred to a magistrate judge, and the magistrate judge issued a report and recommendation on December 29, 2008. The magistrate judge recommended granting Ratcliffs request for payment pursuant to his and Jeter’s contingency fee but reducing the total amount Ratcliff would be awarded to $3,993.75.
5
In her report and recommen
Thus, in undertaking a § 406(b) “reasonableness” analysis, the court considered several factors including: (1) Ratcliffs degree of expertise in Social Security cases; (2) the adequacy of Ratcliffs representation of Jeter; (3) the amount Jeter ultimately recovered; (4) the fact that Ratcliff sought twenty-five percent of Jeter’s recovered amount; and (5) Ratcliffs risk of loss. The court also considered the hourly rate Ratcliff would receive as a result of the contingency fee — by dividing the fee by the number of hours Ratcliff worked— and found that if the court deemed the whole fee to be reasonable, Ratcliff would be paid at a rate of $846.88 per hour for his services. In considering all of the aforementioned factors combined, the magistrate judge recommended that the district court find that Ratcliffs requested fee would result in an unreasonable windfall under Gisbrecht.
Since she found the contingency fee unreasonable, the magistrate judge recommended that instead of the requested $14,734.74, the district court award $3,993.75, reasoning that “[t]his will result in ... an amount the court considers reasonable and appropriate under the circumstances before it.” On April 3, 2009, the district court fully adopted the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation, finding the requested contingency fee unreasonable and awarding only $3,993.75.
This appeal timely followed. On appeal, Ratcliff asserts that the district court erred when it found his § 406(b) contingency fee would constitute a windfall under Gisbrecht. In particular, Ratcliff argues that the district court’s reliance on the lodestar method in making its fee determination violates the Supreme Court’s decision in Gisbrecht. As we will explain in greater detail to follow, we find that the district court did not rely exclusively on a lodestar calculation to find Ratcliffs requested fee unreasonable, and consequently, we cannot conclude that the district court’s fee award violates Gisbrecht. We write further, however, in order to provide our lower courts better guidance in navigating the circuitous contours of Gisbrecht’s “windfall” jurisprudence.
Standard of Review
A district court’s assessment of whether a contingency fee is reasonable under 42 U.S.C. § 406(b) “qualifies] for [this Court’s] highly respectful review.”
Gisbrecht,
“A district court abuses its discretion when it bases its decision on an erroneous legal conclusion or on a clearly erroneous finding of fact.”
James v. Cain,
Analysis
As the magistrate judge aptly noted in her report and recommendation, our
We find, however, that it is possible to construe Gisbrecht such that its prohibition against lone reliance on the lodestar method still permits a court to include a lodestar calculation in its consideration of the fee — specifically, in instances where the court simultaneously relies on additional factors to support its determination that the contingency fee constitutes an unearned advantage to the attorney — such that the fee award may be considered a windfall.
A brief examination of the rationale behind the Supreme Court’s decision in Gisbrecht provides support for our understanding and interpretation of Gisbrecht’s holding — and ultimately, demonstrates why the district court did not abuse its discretion in this particular instance.
I. The Supreme Court’s Decision in Gisbrecht
First, it is important to note that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Gisbrecht
came about in response to a circuit split.
See Gisbrecht,
In rejecting these courts’ cardinal reliance on the lodestar method to determine a “reasonable” fee under § 406(b), we find it important to note in particular that the
Gisbrecht
Court abrogated this Court’s decision in
Brown v. Sullivan,
In
Gisbrecht,
the Supreme Court explicitly rejected
Brown’s
primary reliance on the lodestar method as the “starting point” in determining a fee’s reasonableness pursuant to § 406(b). Although the Supreme Court noted that “the ‘lodestar’ figure has, as its name suggests, become the guiding light of our fee-shifting jurisprudence[,]”
Gisbrecht,
Furthermore, in contrast to the fee-shifting statutes that created the lodestar method, § 406(b) constitutes “the exclusive regime for obtaining fees for successful representation of Social Security benefits claimants.”
Id.
at 795-96,
With this in mind, Congress wrote § 406(b)(1)(A) in 1965 to read as follows:
Whenever a court renders a judgment favorable to a claimant under this sub-chapter who was represented before the court by an attorney, the court may determine and allow as part of its judgment a reasonable fee for such representation, not in excess of 25 percent of the total of the past-due benefits to which the claimant is entitled by reason of such judgment ....
Consequently, the
Gisbrecht
Court reasoned that by limiting contingency fees to no more than twenty-five percent, “Congress thus sought to protect claimants against ‘inordinately large fees’ and also to ensure that attorneys representing successful claimants would not risk ‘nonpayment of [appropriate] fees.’ ”
Gisbrecht,
Thus, the aforementioned discussion reveals that the
Gisbrecht
Court proscribes exclusive, primary reliance on the lodestar method to determine the reasonableness of a § 406(b) fee award. It is clear that the
Gisbrecht
Court first instructed our lower courts to give the contingency fee agreement “primacy” — recognizing that this would in some instances result in an excessively high fee award to an individual attorney — and justifying this potential for excessively high fees on the basis that § 406(b) is not a fee-shifting statute. Although in some instances a twenty-five percent contingency fee may result in a seemingly large fee, a particular claimant’s attorney often is not compensated at all for Social Security work in federal court.
9
Thus, the
Gisbrecht
Court recognized that Congress wrote § 406(b) to “ensure that attorneys representing successful claimants would not risk ‘nonpayment of [appropriate] fees.’ ”
Gisbrecht,
With this understanding of
Gisbrecht
in mind, the closing paragraph of
Gisbrecht
may seem a mystery. Although the
Gisbrecht
Court went to great lengths to explain its denouncement of the lodestar method for § 406(b) reasonableness determinations, the Court concluded by instructing lower courts that, “[i]f the benefits are large in comparison to the amount of time counsel spent on the case, a downward adjustment is ... in order [to] ... disallow
windfalls
for lawyers.”
Id.
at 808,
II. Whether Ratcliff’s Fee Constitutes a Windfall
On appeal, Ratcliff asserts that because the district court determined the reasonableness of his § 406(b) fee by considering the resulting hourly rate he would receive for his services, the district court abused its discretion and violated Gisbrecht’s edict against relying on the lodestar method. Thus, the crux of Ratcliffs argument is that Gisbrecht forbids any consideration of the lodestar method in § 406(b) fee determinations. Our reading of Gisbrecht, however, does not abide that position.
Ratcliffs proffered interpretation of
Gisbrecht
would render the concluding paragraph of
Gisbrecht
meaningless (where the Court held that “a downward adjustment [may be] ... in order [to] ... disallow for windfalls”
id.
at 808,
Although the Supreme Court did not set out a clear list of circumstances in which a court may find that a contingency fee results in an unreasonable windfall, we conclude that courts may consider the lodestar in their analyses so long as the court can articulate additional factors demonstrating that the excessively high fee would result in an unearned advantage. In other words, the Gisbrecht Court’s reference to windfall leaves room for consideration of an effective hourly fee rate, but only so long as this mathematical calculation is accompanied by consideration of whether an attorney’s success is attributable to his own work or instead to some unearned advantage for which it would not be reasonable to compensate him.
Any other reading would give attorneys a perverse incentive to delay proceedings or expend unnecessary hours in an effort to prolong successful litigation — all to ensure that their § 406(b) fee would not be reduced based on its appearing excessively high in comparison to the number of hours they expended.
10
Likewise, we do not read Gisbrecht’s “windfall” as support for the proposition that experienced, competent counsel should be punished for accomplishing an arduous task in a shorter span of time than less-experi
Thus, our district courts may consider the lodestar method in determining the reasonableness of a § 406(b) fee, but the lodestar calculation alone cannot constitute
the
basis for an “unreasonable” finding. Looking to the present case, we find that the district court did not rely exclusively on the lodestar method to find Ratcliffs requested fee unreasonable. Instead, the district court considered the resulting hourly fee rate in combination with a list of additional factors the district court found combined to demonstrate that the fee constituted an unearned windfall under
Gisbrecht,
and consequently we cannot say that the district court abused its discretion in declaring the fee unreasonable pursuant to § 406(b).
11
Again, in finding that the district court did not abuse its discretion, we read
Gisbrecht
as commanding that in order for district courts to rely on the lodestar method to find a particular fee constitutes a windfall, the district court must also articulate the factors that demonstrate to the court that the fee is unearned. Specifically, the district court must discuss the factors that demonstrate that the success on appeal is not of the attorney’s making, but rather, is attributable to some other source for which it would be unreasonable to compensate the attorney.
See Gisbrecht,
We hesitate, however, in this particular instance to prescribe an exhaustive list of the precise factors our lower courts must consider in order to determine whether a particular fee is unearned such that it may be considered a windfall. Because district courts are in a better position to determine what factors are relevant in considering whether the success of a claimant’s claim before their court can be attributed to the attorney’s work — or whether the success is unearned on the part of the attorney — we will refrain at this time forcing our lower courts into applying an arbitrary, formulaic set of factors of our own making.
12
We do note, however, that in the absence of more spe
[t]o guard against windfalls, some courts consider additional factors not explicitly proffered in Gisbrecht. These include risk of loss in the representation, experience of the attorney, percentage of the past-due benefits the fee constitutes, value of the case to a claimant, degree of difficulty, and whether the client consents to the requested fee. See, e.g., Hearn v. Barnhart,262 F.Supp.2d 1033 , 1036-38 (N.D.Cal., April 30, 2003) (considering risk of loss, experience of counsel, percentage of funds the fee consumes, value of the case to the plaintiff, and client’s consent to fee requested); Coppett v. Barnhart,242 F.Supp.2d 1380 , 1393-85 (S.D.Ga.2002) (considering risk of loss, difficulty of the case, and skill and experience of attorney.). 13
Civ. A. No. 99-325,
While we are not limiting courts’ consideration of what constitutes a windfall to some exhaustive list, we are instructing our courts that Gisbrecht’& windfall is not a simple reiteration of the lodestar method. Likewise, the Supreme Court’s decision in Gisbrecht does not altogether preclude a district court’s consideration of the lodestar method in a § 406(b) fee determination. Instead, Gisbrecht commands that where lower courts look to the lodestar method to evaluate the ratio of fee earned to number of hours expended, they cannot find that a particular fee award would result in a windfall unless the court can articulate additional, specific factors to demonstrate that the resulting high fee was unearned by the attorney-and thus not attributable to the attorney’s representation of the client before the court.
The Gisbrecht Court certainly did not expect our district judges to turn a blind eye to hourly fee rates that are excessively high for the services provided in their courts. Rather, the Gisbrecht Court made it clear that as a result of the legislative history behind § 406(b) — as well as the difficult nature of Social Security appeals and their low rates of success in general— an excessively high hourly rate alone does not render an otherwise reasonable fee unreasonable. Gisbrecht commands no more and no less.
Conclusion
For the aforementioned reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. As the Supreme Court noted in
Gisbrecht,
although Jeter is named as the appellant, the real party in interest is his attorney Ratcliff, who “seek[s] to obtain higher fee awards under § 406(b).”
Gisbrecht,
. Fees for representation of individuals claiming Social Security old-age, survivor, or disability benefits, both at the administrative level and in court, are governed by prescriptions Congress created in 1965. Social Security Amendments of 1965, 79 Stat. 403 (codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. § 406). The statute deals with the administrative and judicial review stages discretely: § 406(a) governs fees for representation in administrative proceedings; § 406(b) controls fees for representation in federal court. See also 20 CFR § 404.1728(a).
. For purposes of § 406(b), a successful decision on remand is considered a favorable decision before the district court. No party disputes that Ratcliff is entitled to some fee for his success in representing Jeter. The question is merely how much, and whether the district court erred when it failed to award the actual contingency fee award.
. “Congress harmonized fees payable by the Government under EAJA with fees payable under § 406(b) out of the claimant’s past-due Social Security benefits in this manner: Fee awards may be made under both prescriptions, but the claimant’s attorney must re-fun[d] to the claimant the amount of the smaller fee.”
Gisbrecht,
. The magistrate judge calculated the award to be $6,281.25, but after refunding Jeter the $2,287.50 previously awarded to Ratcliff as his EAJA fee, Ratcliff would be awarded only $3,993.75 for his services performed on Jet-er’s behalf in the district court.
.
See also, Gisbrecht,
.
See id.
at 809,
.
See also, Crawford v. Astrue,
. "Counsel always are accepting some risk in taking social security cases under contingency fee contracts because, statistically, roughly fifty percent will lose at the district court level.”
Mentzell v. Astrue,
. Apart from considering whether a fee would result in a windfall, the
Gisbrecht
Court also recognized that where a district court finds that an attorney unnecessarily delayed the proceedings in order to receive a large fee award, that is reason alone to reduce the fee award.
Gisbrecht,
. Ratcliff also argues that the district court erred when it reduced his fee in accordance with the court’s determination that his hourly rate was $125 per hour. Given that this Court reviews "[underlying findings of fact ... for clear error,” we do not find that the district court abused its discretion and committed clear error in adopting this specific factual conclusion. Squires-Allman, 117F.3d at 920. First, Ratcliff states in his brief that “[w]hen he last charged by the hour in cases unrelated to Social Security disability benefits, he charged $180.00 per hour.” Although the magistrate judge used $125.00 as the "hourly rate” — the magistrate judge multiplied that rate by 2.5 to get to $312.50 (which she then multiplied by the number of hours she reasoned Ratcliff reasonably worked). Since the actual number the magistrate judge used ($312.50) is considerably higher than the hourly rate Ratcliff listed as his own ($180.00), we would be hard pressed to conclude that the district court actually committed clear error in its factual findings that Ratcliff’s hourly rate was $125.00.
. If, later on down the line, it becomes clear to this Court that a list of factors would be instructive to our lower courts and lead to greater uniformity, we will certainly revisit the possibility of making such a list. At this time, however, there is no reason to assume
. If a district court considers whether the degree of risk undertaken by an attorney supports a fee reduction
(i.e.,
whether the risk of loss was so low that the claimant’s success was not particular to the attorney’s efforts), common sense dictates that the court's analysis begin with tire risk involved at the time the claimant and the attorney entered into the contingency fee agreement.
Cf. Gisbrecht,
