OPINION & ORDER
I. INTRODUCTION
This mаtter is before the Court on Plaintiffs Northeast Ohio Coalition for the Homeless’ (“NEOCH”) and Service Employees International Union, Local 1199’s (“SEIU”) (collectively “Plaintiffs”) First and Second Motions for Attorney’s Fees and Costs (Doc. Nos. 96, 176, 179). Also before the Court are Defendants Jennifer Brunner’s and Intervenor-Defendant the State of Ohio’s (collectively “Defendants”) and Plaintiffs’ cross-motions for reconsideration of the September 30, 2008 Opinion and Order dismissing Counts One and Two of Plaintiffs’ Complaint. (Doc. Nos. 183, 191.) For the reasons set forth below Plaintiffs’ and Defendants’ Motions for Reconsideration are DENIED. This Court GRANTS Plaintiffs Motion for Attorney Fees and Costs and AWARDS $401,905.50 in attorneys’ fees and $29,468.55 in costs and expenses, for a total of $431,374.05.
II. FACTS
A. Background
This case has a long and eventful history before this Court, stretching back tо the
1. Fall 2006 Election Season Litigation
During the fall of 2006, the Plaintiffs sought a temporary restraining order 1 and a preliminary injunction relating to Defendants’ enforcement of certain provisions of the Voter ID Law. That litigation resulted in the Court’s entry of a Consent Order negotiated by the parties that applied to the 2006 election. Following the 2006 election, Plaintiffs believed that Ohio Boards of Elections (“BOEs”) were improperly counting provisional ballots. Consequently, the parties negotiated an Agreed Enforcement Order, which the Court entered on November 15, 2007.
2. September SO, 2008 Opinion & Order
The Court granted Plaintiffs leave to request attorney’s fees and costs expended during the litigation of the 2006 Consent Order and Agreed Enforcement Order (Collectively “2006 Orders”). Accordingly, Plaintiffs filed their First Motion for Attorneys fees on January 4, 2008. On February 27, 2008, Defendants responded with a Motion to Dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and in opposition to the fees motion. Defendants argued that Plaintiffs lacked standing to challenge the constitutionality of the Voter ID Law and that Plaintiffs were not prevailing parties and thus not entitlеd to attorneys fees with respect to the 2006 Orders. Following a thorough review of the briefs, the Court dismissed six of Plaintiffs thirteen claims for lack of standing, but granted Plaintiffs’ request for attorneys’ fees and costs by an Opinion and Order dated September 30, 2008.
Ne. Ohio Coal, for the Homeless v. Brunner,
No. 2-06-896,
In the September 30, 2008 Opinion, the Court held that Plaintiffs’ lacked standing to bring, inter alia, Counts One and Two of their Complaint. Id. at *6-7. The Court also held that Plaintiffs were prevailing parties with respect to the 2006 Orders and were, consequently, entitled to attorney’s fees and costs. Id. at *9-10. The Court reserved for a subsequent hearing the issue of what constituted reasonable fees and costs given the degree of success obtained by the Plaintiffs. Id. at *10. The Court requested supplemental briefing on the reasonableness of fees. The Plaintiffs did so on January 20, 2009 and Defendants did so on February 27, 2009.
Now both Plaintiffs and Defendants move for reconsideration of the September 30, 2008 Opinion. Those motions are now before the Court.
S. Fall 2008 Election Season Litigation
This case erupted into activity again during the Fall 2008 Election season. In October 2008, Plaintiffs filed a motion for a preliminary injunction seeking to require the Ohio BOEs to apply uniform procedures for counting provisional ballots. As a result of the parties negotiations regarding the preliminary injunction motion, the Court entered two orders (collectively “2008 Orders”). The October 24, 2008 Order set forth procedures that would be used in the counting and processing of
On January 20, 2008, Plaintiffs filed their Second motion for Attorneys fees. In that motion, Plaintiffs claim that they are prevailing parties with respect to the 2008 Orders and are entitled to attorney’s fees and costs. Defendants oppose. On July 22, 2009, this Court held a hearing on Plaintiffs first and second motions for attorneys fees. Those motions are also before the Court.
III. LEGAL STANDARDS
A. Motions to Reconsider
The Federal Rules do not expressly provide for “Motions to Reconsider.”
Rodriguez v. Tennessee Laborers Health & Welfare Fund,
B. Motions for Attorneys Fees & Costs
The Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Award Act of 1976, 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b), permits a court to award reasonable attorney’s fees to the “prevailing party” in a civil rights action brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. A plaintiff is not entitled to any attorney’s fees unless it is a “prevailing party.”
Texas State Teachers Ass’n v. Garland Indep. Sch. Dist.,
IY. ANALYSIS
A. Defendants’ Motion for Reconsideration
Defendants do not assert any change in controlling law or new evidence in support of their motion to reconsider the September 30, 2008 Order. Instead, Defendants argue that the Court’s determination that Plaintiffs were prevailing parties with respect to the 2006 Orders was clear error. Defendants find no fault with the Court’s definition of what constitutes a prevailing party with respect to a motion for attorney’s fees. To recover attorneys’ fees as a prevailing party a party must show that it has obtained relief on the merits of its claim, including relief in the form of a consent decree or settlement, that materially alters the legal relationship between the parties and directly benefits the plaintiff at the time of the judgement.
Farrar v. Hobby,
Defendants claim three errors in the Court’s application of that standard to the facts of this case: the first and second
Defendants argue that Plaintiffs are not entitled to prevailing party status based on the November 1, 2006 Consent Order because that Order did not changе the legal relationship between the parties. According to Defendants, the content of the 2006 Consent Order merely restated the requirements of the Ohio Revised Code and, therefore, did not change the relationship between the parties. The Court notes that this is the exact argument that Defendants’ raised in their opposition to Plaintiffs first motion for attorneys’ fees (doc. No xx 13). Beyond restating their rejected arguments, Defendants do not produce any additional authority suggesting that the Court’s resolution of this issue is precluded by the law. The Court has already considered and rejected defendants’ argument, and the fact that Defendants continue to disagree with that ruling does not render the ruling legally erroneous.
Defendants also take issue with thе Court’s finding that the 2006 Consent Order changed the relationship between the parties because it prevented the Secretary from altering or rescinding Directive 2006-78. Defendants posit that because Directive 2006-78 “merely restated the Ohio Revised Code” Defendants power to rescind the Directive would have been a hollow gesture even without the 2006 Consent Order. (Defs.’ Reply Br. 2.) That argument, however, misrepresents the content of Directive 2006-78 which not only-restated the requirements of the Ohio Revised Code but also, as the Court pointed out in its September 30, 2008 Order, defined terms which were not defined by the Code. Those definitions could have freely been altered by subsequent preelection directives absent the Consent Order. Consequently, the 2006 Consent Order provided Plaintiffs with at least some of the clarity/uniformity they sought in filing suit. Moreover, as the 2006 Consent Order also defined some terms differently and more expansively than Directive 2006-78, it further changed the relationship between the parties and conferred a benefit on the plaintiffs. (See September 30, 2008 Order 19 n. 10.)
Next, Defendants claim the Court erred in finding that the 2006 Consent Order changed the relationship between the parties by effectively empowering Plaintiffs to monitor compliance with Directive 2006-78 and the Voter ID Law. Defendants’ point out that the 2006 Consent Order says nothing about “observers or enforcement” and that Plaintiffs were already able to obtain judicial review of questionable ballot handling, presumably by filing a new complaint. (Id. at 2.) This argument misconstrues the Courts meaning. Clearly, the 2006 Consent Order did not make Plaintiffs official election “observers” as that term is defined under the Ohio Revised Code. Instead, the existence of an enforceable Consent Order gave the Plaintiffs an expedited route for challenging Defendants ballot handling practice. The ability to bind Defendants’ to the definitions of statutory terms and procedures negotiated between the parties in securing the 2006 Consent Order through the means of an expedited enforcement procedure was a power over Defendants which Plaintiffs did not previously have.
Finally, Defendants argue that the Court erred by finding that the Agreed Enforcement Order altered the legal rela
All of Defendants’ arguments in support of their motion to reconsider are arguments which the Defendants unsuccessfully advanced in their motion to dismiss or otherwise fail to demonstrate that the Court committed clear error in concluding that Plaintiffs were prevailing parties based on the 2006 Orders. Upon review of its earlier Opinion, the Court concludes that the correct legal principles were applied and again concludes that the factual circumstances warrant a finding that Plaintiffs were prevailing parties with respect to the 2006 Orders. Accordingly, the Court finds that Defendants’ motion to reconsider is not well taken, and it is DENIED.
B. Plaintiffs’ Motion for Reconsideration
Plaintiffs contend that the Court should reconsider its dismissal of Counts One and Two of the complaint based on a recent Eleventh Circuit Opinion and “new evidence.” In those counts, Plaintiffs alleged that, due to the vagueness of Voter ID Law, Ohio BOEs were not uniformly applying five specific ID requirements relating to the definition of several types of identification and the type of identification required for absentee voters.
2
In its September 30, 2008 Order, the Court dismissed those claims for lack of standing because plaintiffs had not alleged that any of their members “would be affected by the five areas of disparate interpretation of the Voter ID Law.”
Ne. Ohio Coal, for the Homeless,
First, and most tellingly, Plaintiffs argument misrepresents the Court’s ruling. Contrary to Plaintiffs’ assertion, the Court did not hold that plaintiffs were required to prove or to plead that their members were
actually denied the right to vote
based on the BOEs misinterpretation or that they were required to show that such a
denial
would be statistically inevitable. Instead, the Court held (and Plaintiffs now concede) that, to demonstrate standing they had to plead or otherwise to establish that at least one of their members
fell within the category of voters who were potentially affected by the alleged lack of uniformity,
i.e., that they either intended to vote by absentee ballot or by using one of the disputed forms of identification.
Ne. Ohio Coal, for the Homeless,
Furthermore, the Eleventh Circuit’s ruling in
Billups
does not alter this result. First,
Billups
would not suggest standing for Plaintiffs in this case. In
Billups,
plaintiffs argued that a Georgia statute that required them to produce photo identification imposed an undue burden on their right to vote in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Unlike in
Billups,
Counts One and Two of Plaintiffs Complaint did not claim that the imposition of an identification requirement itself imposed an undue burden challenge to the Voter ID Law.
3
Instead, those
Finally, Plaintiffs claim that they have “new evidence” in the form of a declaration from one of their members stating that she voted absentee in the 2006 election. To constitute “newly discovered evidence” for purposes of a motion for reconsideration, however, evidence must have been previously unavailable.
GenCorp, Inc. v. Am. Int’l Underwriters,
For all of these reasons, Plaintiffs motion for reconsideration is DENIED.
C. Plaintiffs’ Motions for Attorney’s Fees and Costs
Plaintiffs have moved this Court for an award of attorneys’ fees and costs against Defendants for their work relating to the procurement of the 2006 Orders and the 2008 Orders. Defendants contend that Plaintiffs should not be entitled to recover attorney fees and costs incurred in the litigation; however, Defendants contend that if Plaintiffs are granted such fees and costs a reasonable fee award is $0 given the degree of Plaintiffs’ overall success.
1. Entitlement to a Fee Award
The Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Award Act of 1976, 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b), permits a court to award reasonable attorney’s fees to the “prevailing party” in a civil rights action brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. A plaintiff is not entitled to any attorney’s fees unless it is a “prеvailing party.”
Texas State Teachers Ass’n v. Garland Indep. Sch. Dist.,
a. Entitlement to Fees & Costs Based on 2006 Orders
The Court has already determined in its September 30, 2008 Order that Plaintiffs are prevailing parties with respect to their work securing the 2006 Orders. The Court has also denied, supra, Defendants’ motion to reconsider that ruling. Consequently, Plaintiffs are entitled to attorneys fees relating to the procurement оf the 2006 Orders and the only question that remains with respect to that claim is the reasonableness of the amount of Plaintiffs fee request.
b. Entitlement to Fees & Costs Based on 2008 Orders
In their Second Motion for Attorneys Fees, Plaintiffs argue that they are also prevailing parties and entitled to attorney’s fees and costs for their work in procuring the 2008 Orders. They requests fees and costs for periods of work which they claim are “reasonably related” to the 2008 Orders including: (1) fees and costs incurred in litigating the October 14, 2008 Preliminary Injunction Motion and procuring the 2008 Orders; (2) fees and costs incurred in attempting, unsuccessfully, to settle the ease between December 2006 and the October 14, 2008 filing of the preliminary injunction motion; (3) fees and costs incurred in opposing Defendants Motion to Dismiss the claims related to the 2008 Orders; and (4) fees and costs incurred as a result of Plaintiffs efforts to protect the 2008 Orders in a subsequent lawsuit,
State of Ohio ex rel. Skaggs v. Brunner,
The Court finds that Plaintiffs are a prevailing party in relation to their work procuring the 2008 Orders. In both their supplemental complaint and their October 2008 Motion for Preliminary injunction Plaintiffs challenged the alleged failure of the Ohio BOEs to apply uniform standards to the counting of provisional ballots. Plaintiffs alleged that there were several verifiable discrepancies in the standards that various BOEs intended to apply when counting provisional ballots that would result in a non-uniform treatment of provisional ballots jeopardizing the constitutional right of provisional voters, including Plaintiffs members.
Accordingly, the October 2008 Preliminary Injunction Motion sought, inter alia, an order identifying the standards that the BOEs were to apply. (Doc. No. Ill at 3.) The October 2008 Orders accomplished much of this goal, i.e., they provided the BOEs with a clear set of uniform procedures to guide their execution of their duties under the law. The 2008 Orders also clarified areas of ambiguity in the Ohio voting law and created new requirements designed to ensure the accurate counting of provisional ballots. Obtaining thе 2008 Consent Orders altered the legal relationship between the parties.
Despite Defendants’ claims, the overlap between the contents of the 2008 Orders and the pre-existing requirements of the Ohio Code does not preclude a finding that Plaintiffs were prevailing parties based on the 2008 Orders. In fact, the overlap is to be expected as Plaintiffs sought in their Preliminary Injunction Motion to have the Defendant Secretary of State provide clear guidance to the BOEs about how the existing law was to be implemented. The Court has no doubt that the 2008 Orders
2. Reasonable Fee Amount
“The starting point for determining the amount of a reasonable attorney fee is the ‘lodestar’ amount which is сalculated by multiplying the number of hours reasonably expended on the litigation by a reasonable hourly rate.”
Imwalle v. Reliance Med. Prods., Inc.,
A. Hours Reasonably Expended
A court may not “order a defendant to pay fees for time spent on matters unrelated to the issues on which plaintiff prevailed.”
Gautreaux v. Chicago Housing Auth.,
First, Defendants argue that Plaintiffs cannot reasonably recover for hours spent on a November 2006 show cause hearing involving Mr. Chandra. At oral argument, Plaintiffs conceded this to be the case, but argued that they did not include hours expended on the show cause hearing in their request. Having reviewed Plaintiffs billing records, the Court finds that 15.5 hours, at a total cost of $4,582.50, included in Mr. Hollenbaugh’s Declaration in Support of Plaintiffs’ Second Motion for Attorneys’ Fees represent time expended related to the show cause hearing. 5 Accordingly, that time will be deducted from Plaintiffs’ attornеys’ fee award. 6
Third, Defendants object to Plaintiffs’ attempt to recover for hours spent negotiating settlement of the case between December 2006 and their filing of a Supplemental Complaint and Motion for Preliminary Injunction on October 14, 2008. They argue that Plaintiffs cannot reasonably be deemed prevailing parties in relation to those settlement efforts because they failed to settle the case. The Court agrees that the 2008 Orders came аbout as a direct result of Plaintiffs filing of the October 14, 2008 Preliminary injunction motion and Supplemental Complaint and the parties joint efforts to settle the preliminary injunction motion. Efforts to settle the suit as it existed before the filing of the Supplemental Complaint and 2008 Preliminary Injunction Motion, however, were factually related to procurement of the 2008 Orders. Specifically, the settlement negotiations involved the lack of uniformity claims upon which the Plaintiffs ultimately received relief, and drove Plaintiffs’ decision to file the Supplemental Complaint and 2008 Preliminary Injunction Motion. Moreover, it is impossible for the Court to ferret out to what degree arguments made or evidence presented in the course of settlement negotiations influеnced Defendants’ willingness to agree to the 2008 Orders. The Court concludes that Plaintiffs’ settlement attempts were related to their ultimate success in securing the 2008 Orders and are compensable.
Gautreaux,
Fourth, Defendants object to Plaintiffs’ inclusion of hours spent working on the
Skaggs
case in their request for fees relating to the 2008 Order. The Court agrees that Plaintiffs are not entitled to a fee award for their work on the
Skaggs
case after they had secured the 2008 Orders. In the
Skaggs
case, Plaintiffs’ position was aligned with Defendants; therefore, there would be no basis for making Defendants liable to Plaintiffs for attorneys fees. Furthermore, Plaintiff is not entitled to recover fees for work performed on matters tangentially related to this lawsuit.
Cook v. City of Norwood,
No. C-l-02-073,
The resulting combined loadstar amount, accounting for all deductions listed above, is $502,381.87.
B. Reasonable Hourly Rates
“To arrive at a reasonable hourly rate, courts use as a guideline the prevailing market rate, defined as the rate that lawyers of comparable skill and experience can reasonably expect to command within the venue of the court of record.”
Geier v. Sundquist,
C. Reduction to Loadstar Based on Overall Degree of Success
[18-21] If a plaintiff has achieved only partial success compared to the scope of the litigation as a whole, the feе request may be reduced below the lodestar figure.
Hensley,
Plaintiffs contend that they have achieved such excellent results for their clients that they should be entitled to recover the full loadstar amount. Defendants counter that their partial success in securing the 2006 and 2008 Orders was de minimis and so technical a victory that a reasonable fee award would be no fee at all. The Court disagrees with both positions.
In filing their Original and Supplemental Complaints Plaintiffs sought to: (1) have the Voter ID Law declared unconstitutional; (2) enjoin its enforcement; and (3) obtain a declaratory order establishing uniform procedures for counting provisional ballots. It is clear from the record in this case that Plaintiffs’ counsel spent a significant time pursuing claims on which they did not prеvail, yet they have, to date, achieved considerable success on their claims. As things stand, Plaintiffs’ success in securing the 2006 and 2008 Orders substantially clarified the procedures for counting provisional ballots, helped to clarify the ID requirements, and lessened the burden of those requirements by expanding the definitions of acceptable forms of ID. The Court finds that this was more than a technical victory and that Plaintiffs’ counsel are entitled to more than a nominal fee award for their efforts.
If Plaintiffs had achieved all they set out to do, however, the Voter ID Law would have been declared unconstitutional and Plaintiffs would no longer be burdened by its identification requirements. None of the Court’s rulings or consent orders to date has declared any pоrtion of the Voter ID Law unconstitutional nor has the Court enjoined the enforcement of the Law. Thus, Plaintiffs have not achieved recovery related to all of their goals in this case. Given that a number of Plaintiffs’ claims have been dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, comparing the relief Plaintiffs obtained with the overall relief sought, the Court concludes that the full loadstar amount would be an excessive fee in this case. Plaintiffs have achieved substantial results to date, but the results are not so “excellent” that they are entitled to full recovery.
See Hensley,
Although the Court has been able to segregate certain hours for which attorneys’ fees may not be recovered,
supra
Section IV.C.2.A, the claims are generally so intertwined that the Court cannot ascertain what number of hours was spent on the unsuccessful claims. In addition, the time entries are not so detailed that the Court can identify which claim each time entry pertains to. Consequently, the Court believes that a percentage reduction is proper so that the fee accurately reflects the degree of overall relief obtained by the plaintiff in relation to the relief sought.
See Hensley,
Plaintiffs move the Court for a total award of costs and expenses in the amount of $39,792.48. Defendants object to Plaintiffs’ inclusion of costs relating to hotel accommodation and food for certain Porter, Wright, Morris & Arthur, LLP attorneys from the firm’s Dayton office. Defendants argue that it is unreasonable to for Porter Wright to recover those costs when the firm has a Columbus Office. Defendants are unable to offer any authority in support of this position and the Court is unaware of any such rule. The Court finds that Plaintiffs’ inclusion of costs related to travel are reasonable and declines to reduce the cost award on that basis.
Consistent with its reduction of attorneys fees for Plaintiffs work on the Skaggs matter, however, the Cоurt finds that Plaintiffs costs should be reduced by the amount of costs incurred in those endeavors ($10,323.93). The resulting combined costs and expenses award is $29,468.55.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons Defendants’ Motion for Reconsideration (doc. no. xx) and Plaintiffs’ Motion for Reconsideration (Doc. Nos. 183, 191) are both DENIED. The Court GRANTS Plaintiffs’ First and Second Motions for Attorney’s Fees and Costs (Doc. Nos. 96, 176, 179) and AWARDS $401,905.50 in attorneys’ fees and $29,468.55 in costs and expenses, for a total of $431,374.05.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. On October 26, 2006 Plaintiffs were granted a temporary restraining order ("TRO”) by this Court, the majority of which was stayed by an October 31, 2006 order of the the Sixth Circuit.
. Specifically Plaintiffs alleged that the following ID requirements were defined differently by different BOEs: (1) what constitutes a "current” government document or bill; (2) what constitutes an "other government document;” (3) which number on an Ohio driver's license may be used by absentee voters; (4) whether military identification cards without a current address are acceptable; and (5) whether early in-person absentee voters must produce identification.
. Plaintiffs did raise undue burden claims based on the identification requirements in Counts Three and Four, which survived Defendants’ motion to dismiss.
. For the 2006 Orders they seek $262,764.25 in fees and costs in the amount of $19,211.98. In relation to the 2008 Orders, Plaintiffs request attorneys' fees in the amount of $275,534.62 and costs in the amount of $20,580.50.
. Those hours are found on the first page of Exhibit A to Hollenbaugh’s second declaration (Doc. No. 182) for the billing entries dated: 11/17/2006 for timekeepers DJC and HRH and 11/20/2006-11/22/2006 for timekeeper HRH.
.Furthermore, from the Court's review it appears that certain time entries for the same 11.3 hours of work were inadvertently included in both the first and second fee request for certain work performed by Mr. Hollenbaugh’s firm between January 14, 2008 and October 20, 2008. Those hours appear both on tenth page of Exhibit A to Hollenbaugh's second
. That reduction represents: (1) $24,050.00 reduction in fees from Porter, Wright, Morris & Arthur, LLP’s fee request for hours spent on the Skaggs matter between 11/14/2008 and 12/12/2008; and (2) $5,394.50 reduction in fees from Carlile Patchen & Murshy LLP's fee request for hours spent on the Skaggs matter between 11/4/2008 and 12/31/2008.
