delivered the opinion of the court:
This is an appeal from an order entered on a petition for attorney fees in an action to enforce a commercial lease agreement.
The facts relevant to the issues presented are neither complex nor substantially disputed. The lessees, Jordan Kaiser and Walter Kaiser, filed an action against the lessor, MEPC American Properties, Inc. (MEPC), seeking a declaration of the rights and obligations of the parties under a lease agreement; and MEPC thereafter filed a breach of contract counterclaim against the Kaisers for amounts allegedly due it thereunder. MEPC also sought costs and attorney fees from the Kaisers pursuant to section 1401 of the agreement, which provided:
“Lessee shall pay all costs and expenses, including attorneys’ fees which may be incurred by or imposed on Lessor either in enforcing this lease or in any litigation to which Lessor, without fault on its part, may be made a party.”
Summary judgment was entered in favor of MEPC on July 28, 1986, and the cause was continued for a separate hearing on attorney fees.
In their petition, MEPC requested fees totalling $53,172.35 and costs of $1,938.39. In support thereof, it submitted the affidavits of (1) Peter Hess of Hess, Kaplan & McDowell, Ltd., the law firm originally retained to represent it in this litigation, and (2) Margaret Garvey, a partner in the law firm of Freeborn & Peters, which was retained following the withdrawal of Hess, Kaplan & McDowell from the case.
In his affidavit, Peter Hess set forth his and his partners’ educational backgrounds and stated that prior to July 1982, his firm had represented MEPC in various real estate transactions; that it represented MEPC in this litigation from July 1982 until June 1985; that the standard hourly rates charged to its clients, including MEPC, were $135 per hour between 1982 and 1984 and $150 per hour thereafter; that the exhibits attached to the affidavit were (a) copies of bills and daily time reports sent to and paid by MEPC, and (b) a list of the services performed and the time allotted to each; that Exhibit B was prepared from time records maintained in the ordinary course of business and available for inspection; and that the total amount of fees and costs billed to and paid by MEPC were $23,943.75 and $104.20, respectively.
Margaret Garvey likewise detailed the qualifications of the attorneys in her firm who were involved in this litigation and attached a chronological list, compiled from daily time records maintained in the regular course of business containing a description of the services performed, a notation indicating by whom they were performed, the amount of time spent thereon and the hourly rate charged for each of the attorneys, paralegals and docket clerks who had worked on the case. The final total amount requested for those services was $28,228.60, plus costs of $1,834.19.
In their responsivе memorandum, the Kaisers objected to the award of any of the fees requested by MEPC for services performed by Hess, Kaplan & McDowell. In support thereof, they submitted a second affidavit given by Peter Hess on August 27, 1986, following their request for production of the contemporaneous time records which, according to his first affidavit, had been relied upon in preparing the summary of charges attached thereto. In it, Hess stated that those records no longer existed; that following entry of the daily time logs of the individual attorneys into a “client control sheet” the time slips were destroyed; and that excepting the. exhibits attached to his original affidavit, there were no records relating to the fees for which MEPC was charged in connection with this litigation.
The Kaisers’ memorandum also urged the trial court to disallow (a) two-thirds of the legal fees requested by Freeborn and Peters and (b) all costs except those for the taking and transcription of their depositions. As to these amounts, they argued that the fees were excessive and unreasonable because the detailed time records attached to Garvey’s affidavit revealed numerous instances of duplication of services and excessive and unnecessary amounts of time spent by several attorneys on the same matters, and that the costs were not properly chargeable to them because they were of the type normally included in office overhead and/or were not reasonably and necessarily required by the litigation.
At the conclusion of the hearing on November 5, 1986, the trial court denied MEPC’s request for the fees it paid to Hess, Kaplan & McDowell and, after a second hearing, on December 6, 1986, the court awarded MEPC $13,729 for the fees Of Freeborn & Peters and $351.60 for the charges of the court reporter who took the Kaisers’ depositions.
Opinion
Provisions in contracts for awards of attorney fees are an exception to the general rule that the unsuccessful litigation in a civil action is not responsible for the payment of the opponent’s fees. (Abdul-Karim v. First Federal Savings & Loan Association (1984),
Once presented with these facts, the trial court should consider a variety of additional factors such as the skill and standing of the attorneys, the nature of the case, the novelty and/or difficulty of the issues and work involved, the importance of the matter, the degree of responsibility required, the usual and customary charges for comparable services, the benefit to the client (Ashby v. Price (1983),
With these principles in mind, we first consider MEPC’s contention that contrary to the trial court’s determination, there was sufficient unrefuted evidence to support its request for the fees it paid to Hess, Kaplan & McDowell, and that by denying that request in its entirety, the court abrogated the exрress terms of the lease agreement and abused its discretion. MEPC argues that the uncontroverted affidavit of Peter Hess and the supporting documents attached thereto, together with the court file containing documents and pleadings prepared by Hess, Kaplan & McDowell, sufficiently substantiated the requested fees.
Initially, we note that in accordance with the cases cited above, the existence of a contractual provision obligating one party to pay attorney fеes does not relieve the other of its burden to establish the reasonableness of the amount requested. Here the affidavit of Peter Hess consisted of (a) general information concerning the educational backgrounds of the members of the firm; (b) statements that the firm had represented MEPC both prior to arid in this litigation, that the hourly rate charged MEPC was the standard hourly rate charged to all its clients and that time, and that the information contained in exhibits A and B was compiled from time records maintained in the ordinary course of business and available for inspection; and (c) his opinion that the $24,047.95 charged to and paid by MEPC was “reasonable” and should be awarded to it.
As to exhibit A, we note that it is nothing more than a compilation' of 11 photocopied bills sent to MEPC between October 1982 and July 1984, together with approximately six “daily time reports” consisting of work descriptions such as “Court Appearаnce,” “Review Doc’s,” “Pleadings,” “Status,” and the like. As the trial court stated, these documents lacked foundation and were devoid of any meaningful information to assist it in determining the reasonableness of the fees charged; and the mere fact that MEPC paid the bills does not satisfy its burden in that regard. Parenthetically, we think it is noteworthy that on one of the bills is a handwritten notation “breakdown has been requested,” which, to us, indicates some dissatisfaction even by MEPC with the аdequacy of the information provided.
Similarly, with respect to exhibit B, the summary of charges prepared for purposes of the hearing, we note initially that although Hess stated in the affidavit presented by MEPC. that the information therein was compiled from time records maintained in the ordinary course of business, when presented with a subpoeria for their production, he gave a second affidavit stating that those records no longer existed.
Secoridly, as to the contents of the sumiriary, a review of it first reveals that while Hess stated that his firm “was engaged to represent MEPC in this case in July 1982,” the summary includes charges for approximately 9 hours of work at an hourly rate of $135 for services performed between October 1981 and July 1982. Also included in the summary are approximately 13.5 hours followed by the notation “no description” of the services performed. Seven hours were attributed to “file review,” four hours to “review of complaint,” 15.75 hours to “review” or “document review” and 27.25 hours to “pleadings” or “review of pleadings.” “Court appearances,” without more, accounted for 35 hours of charges and 17.75 hours were billed for services described only as “status.” “Research” charges totalled 5.5 hours and 5.25 hours were billed for “telephone calls,” only 1.5 of which were accompanied by a notation identifying the person with whom the conversation was hаd. Similarly, “meetings” and “conferences,” without further explanation, totalled 5.75 hours and meetings “with Hess,” “with plaintiff’s attorney,” “with defendant’s attorney,” and “with Kaiser’s attorney,” accounted for 9.25 hours. Also included in the summary were charges for items listed only as “correspondence,” “status letter,” “discovery,” “review of lease and complaint,” and “attorney opinion.”
The trial court found this list of descriptions to be an inadequate basis on which to predicatе a fee award, ruling that without detailed information concerning the nature of and the actual time expended on each of the legal tasks performed, the identity of who performed them, how they related to the litigation and whether they were necessarily required, it was impossible to render a finding that they were reasonable and, therefore, compensable. From our own review of exhibit B, we agree that even those descriptions which were provided are too vague and general to have any practical utility or to satisfy the burden MEPC was required to meet in order to demonstrate its entitlement to compensation from the Kaisers of the charges listed therein (cf. Board of Education v. County of Lake (1987),
Citing First National Bank v. Edgeworth (1981),
While it is true that the trial court has the discretion to consider the contents of the record in determining whether a party is entitled to fees and whether the fees requested are reasonable, we reiterate that the burden is on the party seeking the fees to produce detailed facts and computations upon which the claim for fees is predicated; and we note that Edgeworth does not represent an exception to this rule since in that case each of the attorneys petitioning for fees did, in fact, submit itemized statements of services and charges. (See also Ealy v. Peddy (1985),
MEPC additionally argues, however, that it provided the trial court with the requirеd evidence in its February' 6,, 1987, motion to reconsider and vacate the November 5 ruling, attached to which was an appendix in which the charges listed in the summary were matched to pleadings, correspondence and orders contained in the record. It is MEPC’s position that the trial court’s refusal to consider this evidence or to vacate its previous order disallowing any fees for the services of Hess, Kaplan & McDowell constituted a continuing abuse of its discretion.
It is well settled that the intended purpose of a motion to reconsider is to bring to the court’s attention newly discovered evidence which was not available at the time of the hearing (In re Marriage of Rosen (1984),
After rendering its ruling on that pоrtion of the petition concerning' the fees of Hess, Kaplan & McDowell, the trial court continued the hearing until December 6 for the purpose of reviewing the evidence presented in support of the request for the fees charged by Freeborn & Peters. On that date, the trial court stated that it had examined the entire summary of charges submitted with the affidavit of Margaret Garvey and remarked that in contrast to that of Hess, Kaplan & McDowell, it was véry detailed in its listing of services for which it billed MEPC in connection with this litigation. The court found, however, that it contained, inter alia, numerous charges for review, revisions, redrafting and corrections of pleadings and other documents as well as for office memoranda and conferences among the attorney with primary responsibility for the case activity — who was1 admitted to the bar in 1984 and had joined the firm in September of that year — and four other аttorneys (all partners) and three paralegals in the firm. The court stated without a showing of the reasons for the multiple revisions and corrections they were not properly chargeable to the Kaisers and, similarly, that it could not be determined from the summary, nor did it seemi tenable, that all of the time billed for conferences was spent on issues directly related to this litigation. Proceeding then through the summary in a line-by-line fashion, the, trial court disallowеd certain fees it determined were excessive, unnecessary, duplicative or unsubstantiated. The court also found some of the charges for work performed by the paralegals to be either noncompensable or only partially 1 compensable on the ground that several of the tasks performed by them were nonlegal in nature.
Initially, we note that although time and space considerations prevent us from discussing the trial cоurt’s rulings as to the allowance, disallowance or reduction of each of the time entries contained in the 17-page summary, we emphasize that we have thoroughly reviewed both the summary and the record of the hearings thereon. Secondly, it must be noted that while the summary is quite detailed in its itemization of work performed by Freeborn & Peters, it is impossible to determine exactly what amount of time was expended on each task listed because, in most instances, the time for all work performed by an attorney on a given day was aggregated into a single hourly total for that day. Consequently, there is no completely objective manner by which to determine the reasonableness of the charges. Nevertheless, we note that of the total 330 hours listed, it appears that at least 40 hours were billed for review and organization of file documents; that there are approximately 80 entriеs for office conferences and memoranda, totalling in excess of 70 hours and that, in addition to the time billed for the drafting of various pleadings and other documents, more than 40 hours were billed for redrafts, revisions and corrections thereof. Because these findings comport with those of the trial court and since it is clear from the report of proceedings that the court conducted a detailed and thoughtful review of the time records, gave careful consideration to the proper factors and standards to be applied in fashioning a fee award and, finally, relied where necessary on its own expertise and experience in determining the reasonableness of the amounts requested, we have no basis or reason to overturn its decision.
Similarly, we cannot say that the trial court abused its discretion to deny MEPC’s request for reimbursement of $639 for computerized legаl research charges, $493 for photocopying, $239 for “disbursement administrative fees” or for those amounts listed by Freeborn & Peters for delivery and telephone charges and “docket maintenance fees.”
With regard to the computerized research charges, MEPC cites Bennett v. Central Telephone Co. (N.D. Ill. 1985),
As to the remaining items contained in the statement of costs submitted by Freeborn & Peters, we, like the trial court, believe that under the reasoning in Losurdo Brothers v. Arkin Distributing Co. (1984),
We do, however, agree that the amounts paid by MEPC to Hess, Kaplan & McDowell for filing the complaint and serving summons are recoverable costs which, it appears from the transcript of proceedings, were inadvertently overlooked by the court in fixing the final award. Thus, the order should be modified to include an additional $104.20 to be paid by the Kaisers to MEPC.
For the reasons stated, the order of the trial court is affirmed as modified. ■ ' '
Affirmed as modified.
PINCHAM and MANNING, JJ., concur.
