Envtl. L. Rep. 20,119
KENNECOTT CORPORATION, Petitioner,
v.
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY, Respondent.
ASARCO INCORPORATED and Magma Copper Company, Petitioners,
v.
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY, Respondent.
The BUNKER HILL COMPANY, Petitioner,
v.
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY, Respondent.
MOLYCORP, INC., Petitioner,
v.
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY, Respondent.
ASARCO INCORPORATED, et al., Petitioners,
v.
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY, Respondent.
Nos. 80-2036, 80-2039, 80-2040, 80-2041 and 81-1173.
United States Court of Appeals,
District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued May 23, 1986.
Decided Nov. 7, 1986.
Bruce C. Swartz, with whom Nancy C. Shea, Washington, D.C., was on the motion for award of attorneys' fees, for petitioners, ASARCO, Inc., et al.
Carl Strass, Atty., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., for respondent.
Before BORK, STARR and SILBERMAN, Circuit Judges.
Opinion PER CURIAM.
PER CURIAM:
This case involves a dispute over attorneys' fees that grows out of our decision in Kennecott Corp. v. EPA,
EPA challenges petitioners' fee request on several grounds. EPA argues that petitioners "completely lost" on two issues and should not recover fees for time spent addressing those issues. The agency also contends that the fee request should be further reduced because petitioners have inadequately documented their request and because various specific items in the request are "suspect." Petitioners respond that no deduction should be made for the claims on which they were unsuccessful because overall they achieved "excellent results" and are therefore entitled to a "fully compensatory fee." See Hensley v. Eckerhart,
I.
Petitioners' fee request is grounded on section 307(f) of the Clean Air Act, which provides:
In any judiciаl proceeding under this section, the court may award costs of litigation (including reasonable attorney and expert witness fees) whenever it determines that such award is appropriate.
42 U.S.C. Sec. 7607(f) (1982). While most fee statutes are limited to "prevailing" parties, see, e.g., 5 U.S.C. Sec. 552(a)(4)(E) (1982) (Freedom of Information Act fee awards), Congress in enacting section 307(f) specifically decided not to limit the class of potential beneficiaries in that manner. See H.R.Rep. No. 294, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 337, reprinted in 1977 U.S. Code Cong. & Admin. News 1077, 1416. Thus, on its face, section 307(f) does not mandate success as a prerequisite to a fee award. The Supreme Court has held, however, that Congress did not by this broad standard intend to аuthorize fees for parties that were wholly unsuccessful on the merits. Ruckelshaus v. Sierra Club,
Sierra Club derived this issue-by-issue approach from Hensley v. Eckerhart,
As we have seen, Congress did not intend in section 307(f) to limit fee awards to prevailing parties. But the Supreme Court in Ruckelshaus determined that Congress did intend that section 307(f) be limited to parties who demonstrate at least some success. This court in Sierra Club examined Hensley and Ruckelshaus and concluded that a party may recover fees only for issues on which it achieved a "modicum of success," a lower standard than that of "prevailing party" and one that this court determined was consonant with the standard set forth in section 307(f). Sierra Club,
With these principles in mind, we are called upon to make an issue-by-issue assessment of petitioners' success and discount the fee request for time spent on issues on which a "modicum of success" was not achieved.
In its examination of the merits, this court ruled favorably on petitioners' procedural and financial-test claims, but rejected the sulfur dioxide streams argument. Kennecott v. EPA,
In light of this court's disposition of the various issues on the merits, we conclude that the ultimate fee award must be discounted for petitioners' failure to succeed on the sulfur dioxide streams issue. Petitioners' attack in this respect was predicated on their reading of EPA regulations to require installation of an additional acid plant to treat those streams. Petitioners claimed that EPA's imposition of such a requirement conflicted with the statute itself. This court disagreed, stating: "We cannot agree with Asarco and Magma's basic premise. There is, on this record, no basis to conclude that EPA's bypass rules require a smelter to install additional acid plant capacity."
Since it is clear that this circuit is "extremely reluctant to award fees for time expended on ... unsuccessfully raised issues," Sierra Club,
Petitioners were similarly unsuccessful in their argument regarding the exclusive regulatory power of the States. As we have seen, however, this argument was advanced in the form of an alternative attack on the validity of the financial eligibility test for NSO's.2 Petitioners claimed that the test was inconsistent with the statute and that its imposition usurped the exclusive regulatory power of the States. The cоurt rejected the second line of argument, but accepted the first, vacating the regulations and remanding to EPA for further proceedings. Kennecott,
II.
Our review of petitioners' fee request has been greatly hampered by the inadequacy of the records submitted by petitioners. Petitioners have refused to provide the contemporaneous time logs that were compiled to detail the hours spent on this litigation. Instead, they have provided two other sets of doсuments. The first is the stack of monthly bills sent by the firm to its clients, which do not separate the work billed on this litigation from other services performed for the same companies. A typically uninformative entry reads:
Disbursements for the period April 1 through June 30, 1980 (duplicating, postage, long-distance telephone charges, out-of-town travel expenses: Mr. Bеers to New York (4/7/80) and Ms. Shea to New York (6/11/80), miscellaneous expenses) ... $1,479.97.
Bill from Shea & Gardner to Magma Copper Company (Sept. 2, 1980). The second set of documents, which purports to segregate from those monthly bills the work done on this case, contains generalized summaries of work performed during the individual billing periods, summaries that were themselves reсonstructed from the contemporaneous time records that have been withheld. The summaries are only slightly more enlightening. A typical entry identifies the work performed for a given period as follows:
Analysis of final NSO regulations; first joint petition for review; research.
Monthly Breakdown of Attorneys' Fees, Billing Period July 1, 1980 to Sept. 30, 1980.
These documents are of very little help. Because they do not reveal how much time has been spent on each issue, we are unable to make that calculation ourselves unless we resort to a mechanical percentage figure. Other items in dispute here, such as the amount of time spent on the reply brief and whether time has been billed even thоugh it relates only to work before the agency, have also been made more difficult to resolve as a result of the imprecision of the documentation. This is one reason why contemporaneous time charges are generally required. See McCann v. Coughlin,
This circuit and others have indicated that contemporaneous time charges should be filed with the motion for attorneys' fees as a matter of course, and certainly should be provided once legitimate questions are raised by the opposing party. See Grendel's Den, Inc. v. Larkin,
Fee applicants bear the "heavy obligation to present well-documented claims," Concerned Veterans,
III.
EPA has raised a number of factual issues pertaining to the reаsonableness of petitioners' fee request: whether the number of hours spent on the reply brief, on the bill, and on preparation for oral argument were excessive; whether the number of attorneys used by Shea & Gardner was unreasonable; and whether petitioners' fee request includes time that cannot be recovered becаuse it was spent only on matters before the agency.4 Statutory provisions like section 307(f), which provide attorneys' fees for direct appeals of agency action to an appellate court, require factual inquiries that we are ill-equipped to judge in the first instance. Accordingly, we refer these remaining factual mattеrs to a magistrate. Although appellate courts do not have express authority to appoint magistrates under the Federal Magistrates Act, 28 U.S.C. Sec. 631 (1982), nothing in the statute prohibits us from exercising our traditional equitable powers--in cooperation with the District Court for the District of Columbia--to appoint a magistrate to assist us in making factuаl inquiries. See Ex parte Peterson,
In sum, we wish to restate our precise disposition of this case. The specific factual issues that we have identified as relevant to the reasonableness of petitioners' fee request are referred to a magistrate with instructions to determine if any aspects of the petitioners' request are unreasonable and, if necessary, to make appropriate adjustments to the $203,140 request.5 After making any such adjustments, the magistrate shall reduce the ensuing figure in two respects. First, the figure shall be reduced by the amount necessary to reflect petitioners' lack of success on the sulfur dioxide streams issue. If the amount of this adjustment cannot bе discerned from the record, then the figure shall simply be reduced by one-third. The remaining sum shall then be reduced by 15% for poor documentation to yield the ultimate fee award.
It is so ordered.
Notes
In addition, the panel reaffirmed its previous award of costs in the amount of $2,065 and denied petitioners' request for other costs. We do not reconsider that aspeсt of the order
In their 93-page opening brief on the merits, petitioners devoted 22 pages to the challenge to the financial eligibility test, of which only 4 1/2 pages dealt with the state-power issue. This contention was clearly a subsidiary, alternative argument
Petitioners point to Laffey v. Northwest Airlines,
EPA also contends that petitioners should not receive fees at its attorneys' commercial rate but rather "at the same rate as environmental lawyers who regularly handle similar issues." In Laffey, however, we rejected that argument and held that as long as the fees the firm charges are "in line with those prevailing in the community for similar services by lawyers of reasonably comparable skill, experience, and reputation,"
We would suggest, however, that two of the charges contained in the fee request seem excessive on their face. Petitioners seek fees for over 50 hours of attorney time spent preparing the bill. That figure seems unreasonable, especially if contemporaneous time charges are kept. Additionally, at least four attorneys devoted at least 93 hours of time to preparation for oral argument. (We say "at least" because portions of the time spent on preparation were amalgamated within the monthly breakdowns alоng with other activities, and thus it is impossible for us to know precisely how many hours above 93 were spent.) Given the substantial amount of time that already had been committed to researching and writing the briefs, 93 hours seems an excessive amount of time to prepare for oral argument. If there are facts of which we are unaware that justify these apparently excessive claims, the magistrate is, of course, free so to find
