"The court still is duty-bound to scrutinize the plaintiff's itemized statements of services to ensure that the overall bill is reasonable. Cass Sons, Inc. v. Stag's Fuel Oil Co., Inc.,
"`[A]ll of the time a lawyer spends on a case is not necessarily the amount of time for which he can properly charge his client.' The Morida Bar v. Richardson,
The `meter' approach (recording time) of computing compensation has created a tendency in applications of this sort to go so far as to obscure the objective value of the particular services to be evaluated in monetary terms. The meter method tends to disregard the fact that a fee for legal services must also bear a proper relationship to the value of the engagement to the client, the amount involved and the importance of the services required. The requirement that time records be kept by counsel seeking compensation through the courts was initiated as a check against runaway charges on the upside and to put in bold relief the actual time required and spent on a legal task. In short, time records were required to highlight unrestrained fee demands. However, the requirement of time records was not an invitation for the distortion of the value of the required services or the proliferation of unnecessary unwarranted activity in the light of the overall objective requirements of the case. CT Page 5121
It is possible to spend an enormous amount of time on relatively and objectively trivial and inconsequential matter either through a failure to appreciate the overall place in the total engagement of a particular segment, or through lack of basic fundamental knowledge of the subject matter, or some other reason. Consequently, before the meter is allowed to sweep the costs out of proportion to the subject matter it is incumbent on counsel to discriminately select his activities consistent with the requirements of an engagement, but with a realistic awareness that a case may not be worth what the meter will tally up to if left to run without restraint.
Browning v. Peyton,
Accordingly, the plaintiff is awarded $18,587.25 damages plus interest of $7,434.90 for a total judgment of $26,022.21, plus costs of this litigation.
HURLEY, J.
