MASERATI AUTOMOBILES INC. and Alfieri Maserati, S.P.A., Appellants,
v.
Robert CAPLAN, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
Yelen and Yelen and Jan Yelen, Coral Gables, for appellants.
Young, Stern & Tannenbaum and Barry Franklin and Andrew S. Berman, North Miami Beach, for appellee.
Before FERGUSON, COPE and LEVY, JJ.
LEVY, Judge.
Automobile manufacturers Maserati Automobiles Incorporated and Alfieri Maserati, S.P.A. [collectively Maserati] challenge the trial court's post-remand award of attorney's fees to automobile purchaser Caplan in his action predicated upon Maserati's sale to him of a defective automobile. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
*502 This case picks up, literally, where Maserati Automobiles Incorporated v. Caplan,
As to Maserati's appeal, the panel in Maserati I concluded that the trial court incorrectly based the award of attorney's fees upon its own recollection of the case rather than upon the evidence presented by the parties, and so reversed and remanded the case for an evidentiary hearing to determine reasonable fees for preparing the statutory claims against Maserati. As to Caplan's cross-appeal, the Maserati I panel agreed with Caplan that the trial court erred in finding that it was without the authority to award an attorney's fee in excess of the fixed-fee agreement between Caplan and his counsel to pay an initial fee of $125.00 per hour, and in failing to provide specific findings in accordance with Florida Patient's Compensation Fund v. Rowe,
The Court, in entering the final judgment awarding attorney's fees after remand, attempted to follow the Rowe formula by first determining that 410 hours were reasonably and necessarily expended on behalf of Caplan for trial purposes and by then multiplying the 410 hours expended by an "averaged" hourly rate of $150.00 to determine the base fee i.e., the "lodestar" of $61,500,00. The Court then proceeded to enhance the base fee, in consideration of the "results obtained" factor discussed in Rowe, by a multiplier of 1.35, thus yielding the $83,025.00 figure for attorney's fees at the trial level.
The trial court erred, however, when it applied a multiplier to the base fee in recognition of the "results obtained." Caplan's contract with his counsel was not a contingent fee contract, but, rather, a fixed fee contract by which he obligated himself to pay $125.00 per hour. Under Rowe, however, it is only contingent fee contracts which are susceptible of enhancement by use of a multiplier. Rowe,
Upon the prior remand, the trial court noted that most of the trial services rendered on Caplan's behalf were rendered by Mr. Franklin, a partner, for whom a reasonable hourly rate would be $175.00, but that some work was performed by the firm's associates who were billed out at lower rates. Accordingly, the court found it "fair and equitable to apply `an averaged' hourly rate of $150.00 per hour." While we find that there is substantial competent evidence in the record to affirm the trial court's findings that both the 410 hours for the trial work and the $150.00 per hour rate are reasonable, the record is silent as to whether the trial court has already considered the "results obtained" factor when it determined a reasonable hourly rate to be $150.00 instead of the *503 $125.00 fee to which Caplan and his counsel originally agreed. Accordingly, a remand is necessary for clarification and specific findings on this point.
We are cognizant of the Supreme Court's recent pronouncement on the matter of attorney's fees in Perez-Borroto v. Brea,
Finally, the trial court, having first arrived at an award of attorney's fees utilizing the court-determined "reasonable" hourly rate, must thereafter, following Perez-Borroto, take the additional step of comparing the court-determined "reasonable" fee award with the fee which would otherwise obtain under the noncontingent fee agreement, and, having done so, then award the lower of the two.[2] "[I]n no case should the court-awarded fee exceed the fee agreement reached by the attorney and his client." Perez-Borroto,
As far as appellants' challenge to the appellate attorney's fees awarded to appellee in connection with Maserati I is concerned, we do not agree with appellant's position, and, accordingly, affirm that particular award.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part.
NOTES
Notes
[1] This procedure was specifically disapproved in Perez-Borroto v. Brea,
[2] While we recognize that, under the facts of this case, utilizing a "reasonable" hourly rate of $150.00 (whether inclusive or exclusive of enhancement based upon "results obtained") will yield an award in excess of that which would be arrived at by using the agreed contractual rate of $125.00 per hour, the "reasonable" hourly fee will not always exceed the contract fee. The dual computation of the fees, and their comparison, is thus required by Perez-Borroto.
