After twelve years of litigation, which have witnessed three jury trials and two prior appeals, this complex commercial case is nearing its end.
Medcom Holding Co. v. Baxter Travenol Laboratones, Inc.,
[Baxter agrees] to pay, perform and discharge and indemnify and hold [mhc] harmless from and against any loss, damage or expense (including reasonable attorneys’ fees) ... resulting from (i) any breach by [Baxter] of this Agreement: [or] (ii) any inaccuracy in or breach of any of the warranties, representations, covenants or agreements made by [Baxter] herein, in any Sched *519 ule hereto, or in any other certifícate, document, instrument or affidavit required to be furnished by [Baxter] to [mhc] in accordance with the provisions of this Agreement....
Baxter concedes that mhc is entitled to recover reasonable attorneys’ fees under this language, but the parties could not agree on the appropriate amount. The district court awarded mhc approximately $4.3 million for fees and expenses, plus $1.5 million in prejudgment interest. 1999 U.S.Dist. Lexis 499,
Although the suit began under the federal securities laws, mhc ultimately recovered under Illinois law, which also supplies rules for the meaning and enforcement of the indemnity agreement. The district court asked whether prejudgment interest is available under 815 ILCS 205/2, a statute that has been understood to allow prejudgment interest on damages for breach of contract only when the amounts are “fixed or easily computed” prior to judgment. See, e.g.,
National Wrecking Co. v. Coleman,
Illinois does not treat 815 ILCS 205/2 as the sole authority for prejudgment interest. Contracting parties may supply their own rule of decision, as § 205/2 itself makes clear by limiting its application to “the absence of an agreement between the creditor and debtor governing interest charges”. See also, e.g.,
Blakeslee’s Storage Warehouses, Inc. v. Chicago,
An indemnity clause is designed to make the wronged party whole — to put it in the same position it would have occupied had the other side kept its promise. Baxter must “hold harmless” mhc from
“any
loss” (emphasis added). One kind of loss covered by such a promise is the time value of money, which mhc has been unable to use while the litigation continues. The way to make the prevailing party whole is to provide prejudgment interest at the market rate (rather than the statutory 5% rate for cases in which the contracts are silent). See
People ex rel. Hartigan v. Illinois Commerce Commission,
This way of understanding prejudgment interest presages our approach to the many disputes about the principal amount due. The district judge worked through each of Baxter’s objections as if operating under a fee-shifting statute rather than under a contract, mhc’s law firms submitted separate bills for legal fees and expenses (such as photocopying and secretarial overtime). Illinois usually requires lawyers to roll overhead into the hourly rate for purposes of fee-shifting statutes and denies reimbursement for separately-billed items such as delivery services and photocopies. See
Kaiser v. MEPC American Properties, Inc.,
Likewise with the district judge’s conclusion that some of the lawyers’ bills were not sufficiently detailed to show what services were provided, by whom, and at what hourly rate. Itemization is required under fee-shifting statutes, at least when the judge employs the “lodestar” method. Itemization is far less common when businesses pay them own lawyers, for having attorneys keep detailed records is a cost that many clients prefer to avoid.
Balcor
holds that an indemnity agreement similar to the one between mhc and Baxter has an implied limit to “reasonable” fees, but that reasonableness must be assessed using the market’s mechanisms.
*521 Notice the qualification: commercially-reasonable fees. Bakov observes that courts interpolate a reasonableness requirement into indemnity agreements to guard against moral hazard — the tendency to take additional risks (or run up extra costs) if someone else pays the tab. Instead of doing a detailed, hour-by-hour review after the fashion of a fee-shifting statute, therefore, the district judge should have undertaken an overview of mhc’s aggregate costs to ensure that they were reasonable in relation to the stakes of the ease and Baxter’s litigation strategy (plus the fact that this case was tried three times and appealed twice before). One indicator of reasonableness is that mhc paid all of these bills at a time when its ultimate recovery was uncertain. Another is that mhc’s total legal fees and expenses came to about $200,000 less than Baxter’s. Because Baxter knew from the start that it would be required to foot its own legal bill, the amount it incurred cannot have been influenced by moral hazard. That mhc laid out less than Baxter implies that it, too, engaged in prudent cost control and therefore is entitled to full indemnity.
By and large, the district court’s decision to treat a contractual indemnity just like a statute requiring fees to be shifted between strangers favored Baxter; in one respect, however, it worked to mhc’s benefit. Baxter contends that mhc pursued numerous unsuccessful lines of attack: it demanded punitive damages but did not obtain them, tried without success to add a rico theory, took a premature appeal that this court dismissed, and so on. As Baxter sees things, mhc cannot recover for any of these unsuccessful endeavors. Following the approach of fee-shifting statutes, however, the district court asked whether mhc’s endeavors were “related” to those on which it succeeded. See
Hensley v. Eckevhart,
On remand the district court should jettison the analogy to fee-shifting statutes and ask the questions posed by the parties’ agreement: did the legal expenses result from Baxter’s breach and, if so, were the fees reasonable (that is, were they fees that commercial parties would have incurred and paid knowing that they had to cover the outlay themselves)? Fees for the premature appeal might well have been caused by the breach; appellate jurisdiction can be uncertain when the district judge enters an ambiguous order, and a prudent lawyer will appeal rather than risk forfeiture. Thus an appeal that in retrospect was unnecessary might have been caused by Baxter’s breach, and the expenses may well have been reasonable. Moreover, work done in briefing the premature appeal may well have carried over to the later appeal that we decided on the merits; mhc is entitled to compensation for the cost of that legal work, which had to be done eventually, even if the fees were incurred and paid a little sooner than they needed to be.
Enough has been said, we think, to illuminate the path on remand. Additional subjects on which the parties have locked *522 horns in this court are just other applications of the choice between contractual and fee-shifting-statute approaches and therefore do not require separate discussion. Perhaps our framework will enable the parties at last to resolve the remaining issues amicably; but, if not, the district court should apply the contractual approach and bring this case to a long-overdue conclusion.
Vacated and Remanded
