Plaintiffs Kimberly Small, Yvonne Schlotzer, and Ursula Lentz, all former employees of Richard Wolf Medical Instruments Corp. (“Wolf’), brought this suit alleging that Wolf failed to pay them overtime in violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”), 29 U.S.C. § 207. After the parties reached a consent judgment on the issue of back wages, the plaintiffs filed a petition seeking $54,940.87 in attorney’s fees and costs. The court found both the hourly rate and the number of hours
In 1999, Ms. Small, Ms. Schlotzer, and Ms. Lentz brought suit to recover back wages and liquidated damages under the FLSA against Wolf, a manufacturer of medical instruments. All three claimed that during their employment they had worked more than forty hours per week but were not compensated for overtime as required by the FLSA. Wolf initially claimed that the plaintiffs fell under the administrative employee exception to the FLSA. In April 2000, however, shortly before the scheduled trial date but after completion of a final pre-trial order, jury instructions, and motions in limine, the parties reached a settlement as to overtime wages. Ms. Small received $2,539.90, Ms. Schlotzer $3,589.97, and Ms. Lentz $6,122.22. The court awarded double damages to each plaintiff in accordance with the FLSA’s liquidated damages provision, 29 U.S.C. § 216(b). The only remaining issue, then, was the plaintiffs’ attorney’s fees.
Plaintiffs’ counsel in this case, Ernest T. Rossiello, has previously appealed fee awards to this court.
See, e.g., Connolly v. National School Bus Serv.,
Attorney Rossiello alleged that neither he nor his firm had any clients who pay on an hourly basis, but that he collects all his fees on a contingency basis or through court award. To substantiate his requested hourly rate, Rossiello attached to his motion numerous fee awards he obtained in other employment (though not all FLSA) cases ranging from $250 to $375 per hour. Also attached to the motion were affidavits from three Chicago attorneys attesting, based on their familiarity with the rates charged in employment-related cases, to the reasonableness of the requested rates. To substantiate his billable hours, Rossiello attached typed time records for himself and each staff member.
Wolf submitted a detailed response to the plaintiffs’ motion, challenging both the hourly rate and the number of hours claimed. With respect to the hourly rate, Wolf argued that $425 was not Rossiello’s “market rate,” because the highest rate he had ever been awarded, as indicated by the cases he himself attached to his motion, was $375 an hour. The affidavits submitted by Rossiello were “disingenuous” and “irrelevant,” Wolf argued, because they failed to distinguish between the hourly rate for attorneys engaged in FLSA overtime cases and hourly rates for attorneys engaged in more complex civil rights litigation. Relying on several recent cases in which Rossiello’s fee awards ranged from $280 to $300, Wolf suggested an hourly rate of $300 for Rossiello and accordingly lower rates for his staff.
In their reply, plaintiffs asserted that their motion for attorney’s fees should be granted in its entirety, notwithstanding Wolfs “ad hominem remarks attacking counsel.” They asserted that Wolf failed to present any evidence that $425 was not Rossiello’s market rate. Plaintiffs did not submit line-by-line responses to the detailed objections in Wolfs five-page chart, but instead stated that “there are no unnecessary or unreasonable hours included.”
After the motion was fully briefed, counsel for Wolf sent a letter to the court with two recent decisions involving Rossiello’s fees in the
Dormeyer v. Comerica, Bank
litigation,
The district court concluded that both the hours and hourly rate claimed by Ros-siello were excessive. Citing a number of examples of what it believed to be excessive billings, the court reduced Rossiello’s hours from 111 to 66, but did not reduce the hours of his staff. The court also found that $425 was not in fact Rossiello’s market rate and was “unreasonable for a case which is neither novel nor complex.” The court found that a rate in excess of $400 “is not consistent with the rates charged by attorneys engaged in FLSA cases in this market.” The court considered the affidavits submitted by Rossiello but determined that they were “unpersuasive,” because they did not differentiate between rates charged for FLSA cases and rates charged for more complex employment discrimination cases. Based on the “noncomplex” issue presented in the case, as well as Rossiello’s prior fee history, the court determined that $300 was a reasonable hourly rate. Consistent with this reduction of lead counsel’s rate, the court reduced the rates of supporting counsel and staff to $200 for attorney Wal-icek, $170 for attorney Hajat, and $90 for paralegal Cavico. The court did not reduce attorney Kielczewski’s $137.50 rate. Plaintiffs timely filed their notice of appeal.
On appeal, plaintiffs raise three arguments: (1) that the court abused its discretion in reducing Rosiello’s hourly rates and those of his staff; (2) that the court failed to provide a proper explanation for its reduction of the hours claimed (which the plaintiffs have computed as a 40% reduction); and (3) that the district court abused its discretion in refusing to grant the request for an evidentiary hearing.
To determine fees under the FLSA, the district court will generally follow the “lodestar” approach, multiplying a reasonable hourly rate by the number of hours reasonably expended on the litigation. Up
hoff,
The fee applicant bears the burden of proving the market rate.
Uphoff,
Rossiello stated that he has no fee-paying clients and, therefore, no billing rate that can be presumed to be his market rate. Although the district court must consider submitted evidence of the hourly rates of attorneys with comparable experience, the court is “entitled to determine the probative value of each submission and must arrive at its own determination as to a proper fee.”
Batt,
Moreover, the affidavits submitted by the plaintiffs were “neutralized” by the evidence submitted by Wolf showing that Rossiello recently had been awarded rates of $280 and $300 for work in similar cases.
See Connolly,
Plaintiffs next argue that the court abused its discretion in reducing Rossiello’s billable hours. In determining the reasonable number of hours, the court should exclude hours that are “excessive, redundant or otherwise unnecessary.”
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
It is notable that Rossiello attributes 111 hours of work performed by him personally but only a total of 10.4 hours for his three subordinate attorneys. At oral argument, he insisted his expertise was required because the case was more complex than the district court determined. But it is understandable that the judge would assume that much of the more routine work would be delegated to competent attorneys in the firm who charge at a much lower hourly rate. Here, the district court provided a two paragraph explanation of its reasons for reducing the hours. The court offered a general explanation for the reduction, namely, that the hours were excessive for a “self-proclaimed highly experienced FLSA attorney” in a case which the court found was “neither novel nor complex.” The court spotlighted certain billings that it characterized as “excessive,” and although the court does not elaborate, the submissions on which it focused seem questionable. For instance, the claimed 12 hours for the fee petition appears excessive, given that this court recently affirmed a reduction from 9.9 hours to 1.6 hours for time Rossiello spent preparing a fee petition in a similar FLSA case.
See Uphoff,
Last, we conclude that the district court did not err in declining to conduct an evidentiary hearing on the fee petition. The plaintiffs made their request for a hearing only to determine the relevance of the
Dormeyer
decisions, not to respond to any particular objection raised by Wolf. The court agreed with the plaintiffs that these opinions had “no bearing” on the case. Further, the cases on which plaintiffs rely to support their request for an evidentiary hearing are distinguishable, because in those cases the party seeking fees was not given an opportunity to respond to the reasons for the reduction.
See Spellan v. Board of Educ.,
The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
Notes
. Plaintiffs' appellate brief, however, characterizes the district court as stating that the Dormeyer decisions "had no relevance."
