Lead Opinion
*255This case asks us to explore the relationship between the cost-shifting mechanism in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 68 and the fee-shifting provision in the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA),
I.
Appellants Krystal Gurule ("Gurule"), Melissa Hall ("Hall"), Ryan Matte ("Matte"), and Kimberly Taylor ("Taylor") were employees at the midtown Houston nightclub, Gaslamp. Gaslamp is owned and operated by Appellees Land Guardian and Mohammad Ayman Jarrah (collectively "Gaslamp"). Gurule and Hall were employed as bottle-service waitresses, Matte and Taylor as bartenders. In December 2015, those employees sued Gaslamp under the FLSA for failure to pay minimum wage and overtime. See
In July 2017 the court granted Gaslamp summary judgment on Matte and Taylor's remaining claim. The court found that Matte and Taylor failed to produce any evidence showing "as a matter of just and reasonable inference" that they had "performed uncompensated work." See Harvill v. Westward Commc'ns, LLC ,
*256See, e.g., Tyson Foods, Inc. v. Bouaphakeo , --- U.S. ----,
All that remained was Gurule's minimum wage claim, which would be tried to a jury in September 2017. About a year-and-a-half before that, in February 2016, Gaslamp made Gurule an offer of judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 68 in the amount of $3,133.44, which she rejected. She also declined to accept subsequent offers ranging from $1,566 to $5,000 in the months leading up to trial. After a one-day trial, a jury returned a verdict in Gurule's favor and awarded her $1,131.39 in compensatory damages. The district court subsequently awarded her $1,131.39 in liquidated damages and $25,089.30 in attorney's fees. See
Matte and Taylor timely appealed the summary judgment grant, and Gaslamp timely cross-appealed the district court's attorney's fee award.
II.
We first address Matte and Taylor's challenge to the summary judgment dismissing their FLSA claim. We review that judgment de novo , applying the same legal standards as the district court and drawing all justifiable factual inferences in favor of the non-moving party. Hemphill v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
*257claim at all, but instead challenged only their "stolen tip" claim. We disagree.
The district court addressed and rejected this argument in response to Matte and Taylor's pre-trial "Memorandum of Law," which argued that the summary judgment order "did not dispose of [their] minimum wage claims" but instead addressed only their "stolen tip" claims. The district court correctly concluded that these two claims were one and the same: "Plaintiffs' theory of the case is that because Defendants diverted their tips, they failed to satisfy the condition of the tip credit and therefore violated the FLSA requirement to pay the minimum wage. Th[ese] [are] not two separate causes of action but rather one for failure to pay minimum wage." See, e.g., Montano v. Montrose Rest. Assoc., Inc. ,
III.
We turn to Gaslamp's argument that the district court abused its discretion in awarding Plaintiffs' counsel $25,089.30 in attorney's fees. The FLSA provides that the court "shall, in addition to any judgment awarded to the plaintiff or plaintiffs, allow a reasonable attorney's fee to be paid by the defendant[.]"
The district court provided a "concise but clear explanation of its reasons for the fee award." Hensley v. Eckerhart ,
Next the court considered whether the Johnson factors counseled an adjustment to the lodestar. The court reasoned that six of those factors (time and labor required; novelty and difficulty of issues; skill required; preclusion of other employment; amount involved and results obtained; and awards in similar cases) "weigh[ed] in favor of a downward departure" whereas six were "neutral." The court's analysis properly recognized that the "most critical factor in determining a fee award-the degree of success obtained-strongly support[ed] a downward departure":
Here, only one of the four Plaintiffs prevailed at trial. Plaintiff Gurule was awarded $1,131.39 in compensatory damages, which is far less than the $25,683.66 that she requested in her disclosures. This recovery was also less than the four offers of judgment that Defendants made to Plaintiff Gurule between February 17, 2016 and September 6, 2017. While Defendants' offers of judgment ranged from $1,566 to $5,000, the only counter offer from Plaintiff Gurule was for $51,367.32. This number is nearly twice the amount of Plaintiff Gurule's damages disclosure and 45 times the amount of damages awarded at trial. Although there may be good reason for the gap between Plaintiffs' expectations and reality, Plaintiffs' counsel has not shown that he exercised good judgment in obtaining successful results.
Consequently, the court concluded that, "[b]ased on [the Johnson ] factors, the unique facts of this case, and other comparable cases, ... a downward departure of 60 percent of the lodestar is warranted." The court therefore calculated the lodestar by 55.754 hours instead of 139.384 hours, resulting in a total fee recovery of $25,089.30.
On appeal, Gaslamp argues that even this reduced fee award was an abuse of discretion because the district court failed to adequately consider Gurule's actual degree of success-or, more precisely, her lack thereof. See, e.g., *259Farrar v. Hobby ,
First, we consider Gaslamp's proportionality argument. It is true that " 'proportionality is an appropriate consideration' " in assessing a fee award. Saizan ,
Yet our court "ha[s] consistently emphasized that 'there is no per se requirement of proportionality in an award of attorney fees.' " Combs v. City of Huntington, Tex. ,
Second, we consider Gaslamp's argument that Gurule's rejection of the better *260Rule 68 offer should further reduce, or outright preclude, the fee award.
If an offeree rejects a timely pretrial settlement offer and the judgment finally obtained is "not more favorable than the offer," Rule 68 requires the offeree to "pay the costs incurred after the making of the offer." FED. R. CIV. P. 68(d). "The plain purpose of Rule 68 is to encourage settlement and avoid litigation," including litigation over civil rights. Marek ,
This case, however, involves the FLSA fee-shifting provision, which defines "attorney's fees" separately from "costs." See
While our circuit has not squarely addressed this issue,
We thus hold that in setting a reasonable attorney's fee under a fee-shifting statute such as
Applying that principle here, we find that the district court appropriately considered in its fee award Gurule's rejection of Gaslamp's Rule 68 offer. The court's opinion expressly considered the amount and timing of Gaslamp's initial and subsequent offers, noted "the gap between Plaintiffs' expectations and reality" shown by their response to those offers, and for that reason criticized Gurule's counsel for failing to exercise "good judgment in obtaining successful results." The court thus appropriately factored the rejection of Gaslamp's better offers into its 60 percent downward adjustment of the lodestar. See, e.g., McKelvey ,
IV.
We AFFIRM the grant of summary judgment dismissing Matte and Taylor's claims and AFFIRM the attorney's fee award to Plaintiffs' counsel.
In the same order, the court also granted Gaslamp's motion to dismiss Matte and Taylor's claim for "recovery of allegedly stolen tips" under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c). The court concluded that
Alternatively Matte and Taylor argue that-even assuming their minimum wage claim was raised by Gaslamp's summary judgment motion-Gaslamp's own evidence of their payroll records should have "defeated" summary judgment by (1) showing that Gaslamp paid them below $7.25 per hour and (2) failing to establish that Gaslamp satisfied the FLSA tip credit provision. See, e.g., Montano ,
The Johnson factors are: (1) the time and labor required to represent the client or clients; (2) the novelty and difficulty of the issues in the case; (3) the skill required to perform the legal services properly; (4) the preclusion of other employment by the attorney; (5) the customary fee charged for those services in the relevant community; (6) whether the fee is fixed or contingent; (7) the time limitations imposed by the client or circumstances; (8) the amount involved and the results obtained; (9) the experience, reputation, and ability of the attorney; (10) the undesirability of the case; (11) the nature and length of the professional relationship with the client; and (12) awards in similar cases.
A separate opinion in Migis previously urged adopting this approach to rejected settlement offers in the Title VII context. See Migis ,
We emphasize that our decision does not address the situation where a fee-shifting statute-unlike the FLSA-defines attorney's fees as part of "costs." Cf., e.g., McKelvey ,
Concurrence Opinion
Attorneys are fiduciaries. As such, they must expend client resources prudently-to serve the best interests of the client, not the attorney.
This principle applies with special force when an attorney fee is paid, not by a consenting client, but by an opposing party, pursuant to a fee-shifting statute. As we have long observed, Congress enacts fee-shifting statutes "not ... for the benefit of attorneys but to enable litigants to obtain competent counsel." Johnson v. Ga. Highway Exp., Inc. ,
It is thus well established that an attorney fee must be "reasonable," whether it is paid by a client or an opposing party.
To state the obvious, it is not reasonable for an attorney to charge for time spent on tasks that lack any reasonable prospect of creating value for the client. After all, to charge for that time would benefit only the attorney, not the client. Yet the practice is sufficiently widespread that a term has been coined for it: churning.
To be sure, not every attorney task will ultimately pay off for the client, even amongst the most conscientious of counsel. A legal theory might seem genuinely promising at the outset, but ultimately bear no fruit. Attorney time may be reasonably spent, even if it does not actually result in client value.
That is why we have said that we do not reduce attorney fees "solely on the basis of the amount of damages obtained." Black v. SettlePou, P.C. ,
These principles are not in conflict. Here's how to reconcile them: Attorney time must be spent in service of the best interests of the client. So where attorney time exceeds client value to a significant degree, courts should be suspicious. The overarching question that courts should ask in such circumstances is whether the *263attorney expended the time in a good faith pursuit of value for the client-or was instead engaged in churning attorney fees. If the former, the time may be awarded, even though it ultimately proved fruitless. If the latter, the churned time should be denied.
The opinion of the court champions these values, and I am delighted to join it. I write separately simply to point out that, consistent with Johnson , the district court could have (and perhaps should have) gone further. If an attorney cannot explain how time was spent in the good faith pursuit of client value, then a district court would be right not only to reduce the fee devoted to a wasted task, but to eliminate the fee altogether. For example, if the attorney in this case cannot offer a reasonable explanation as to how the time spent after rejecting the settlement offer was expended in a good faith pursuit for a higher judgment, the district court would have been well within its discretion to reduce post-offer fees to zero. And the same principle would of course apply to a case of attorney waste where no settlement offer was ever made. I concur.
See , e.g. , Texas Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.04(a) ("A lawyer shall not ... charge, or collect an illegal fee or unconscionable fee. A fee is unconscionable if a competent lawyer could not form a reasonable belief that the fee is reasonable .") (emphasis added);
See , e.g. , Peter Lattman, Suit Offers a Peek at the Practice of Inflating a Legal Bill , N.Y. Times (March 25, 2013), https://dealbook.nytimes.com/2013/03/25/suit-offers-a-peek-at-the-practice-of-padding-a-legal-bill/ ("[C]hurning, while not endemic, is an insidious problem in the legal profession. In a survey of about 250 lawyers ... more than half acknowledged that the prospect of billing extra time influenced their decision to perform pointless assignments, such as doing excessive legal research or extraneous document review.").
