MEMORANDUM OPINION
Pending before the Court is plaintiff Northwest Coalition for Alternatives to Pesticides’ (“NCAP”) Motion for an Award of Attorney Fees and Costs in the amount of $41,711.69. The request arises from NCAP’s lawsuit against defendant, Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”), pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”), 5 U.S.C. § 552. Plaintiff argues that it is eligible for attorney’s fees because it substantially prevailed when the Court granted partial summary judgment to plaintiff in its order of March 28, 2003, finding that EPA “violated FOIA in failing to provide an adequate response to NCAP’s April 1997 FOIA request.”
Northwest Coalition for Alternatives to Pesticides v. E.P.A.,
Defendant responds that plaintiff did not prevail because the Court ultimately granted defendant’s renewed Motion for Summary Judgment, and no documents were released. Defendant also argues that even if plaintiff could establish that it was a prevailing party, plaintiff is not entitled to attorney’s fees under FOIA because there is a lack of public benefit and because EPA’s withholdings were reasonable. Finally, defendant contends that the hours and rates claimed by plaintiff are excessive.
Upon consideration of plaintiffs motion, and the responses and replies thereto, the Court concludes that plaintiff did substantially prevail and that it is entitled to attorney’s fees. The Court finds, however, that plaintiff should not be compensated for the unnecessary litigation of its Motion for Entry of Judgment and has subtracted
I. Procedural Background
Plaintiffs claim arises from an April 18, 1997 request for copies of substantiation comments submitted by five companies. Plaintiff brought this suit claiming that EPA’s failure to fully respond to its FOIA request, and its delay in responding, was a violation of FOIA. Plaintiff also argued that the EPA regulation, pursuant to which the agency withheld a substantiation letter responsive to NCAP’s April 18, 1997 request, violated FOIA and the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”), 5 U.S.C. § 706.
Both parties filed motions for summary judgment and, on March 28, 2003, this Court granted in part plaintiffs motion and granted in part defendant’s motion.
NCAP v. E.P.A.,
Pursuant to the Court’s remand, defendant filed a supplemental Vaughn declaration on May 16, 2003. In its supplemental declaration, the agency stated that it had conducted another review of the information redacted by Uniroyal and had determined that this information was properly withheld pursuant to Exemption 4 of FOIA.
Plaintiff filed a Motion for Entry of Final Judgment on June 23, 2004 and defendant filed a Renewed Motion for Summary Judgment on July 6, 2004. In an Opinion dated March 16, 2005, the Court denied plaintiffs motion and granted defendant’s motion. Memorandum Opinion dated March 16, 2005 (the “2005 Order”) at 5-6. The Court held that final judgment in plaintiffs favor was inappropriate at that stage of the proceedings, and that plaintiff must file a separate motion for attorney’s fees if that was the purpose of its motion. 2005 Order at 3-4. The Court also granted defendant’s Renewed Motion for Summary Judgment. The Court found that in its supplemental submission, EPA explained that it conducted another review of the information redacted by Uniroyal in Uniroyal’s substantiation letter, and the Court determined that the information was properly withheld from plaintiff under FOIA’s Exemption 4.2005 Order at 4-6. Plaintiff did not contest that determination or make any other claims under FOIA. Id. Therefore, “plaintiff has successfully obtained all of the documents to which it is entitled under FOIA and there is no more for the Court to do.” Id.
II. Legal framework
FOIA allows awards of attorney fees and costs to prevailing plaintiffs for two purposes: (1) “to encourage Freedom of Information Act suits that benefit the public interest” and (2) to serve “as compensation for enduring an agency’s unreasonable obduracy in refusing to comply
To be eligible for attorney’s fees, a plaintiff must demonstrate that it “substantially prevailed.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(E). The meaning of the phrase “substantially prevailed” is defined as a “judicially sanctioned change in the legal relationship of the parties.”
Buckhannon Bd. & Care Home, Inc. v. West Virginia Dep’t of Health & Human Res.,
In determining whether a plaintiff is entitled to attorney’s fees under FOIA, the Court must consider 1) the public benefit derived from the case; 2) the commercial benefit to the complainant; 3) the nature of the complainant’s interest in the records sought; and 4) whether the government’s withholding had a reasonable basis in law.
See Cotton,
III. Plaintiff is eligible for attorney’s fees because the Court’s Order of March 28, 2003 changed the legal relationship of the parties
A party has substantially prevailed if it has “been awarded some relief by [a] court, either in a judgment on the merits or in a court ordered consent decree.”
Oil, Chem. & Atomic Workers Int’l Union v. Dep’t of Energy,
This Circuit’s opinion in
Edmonds v. FBI
emphasizes that when determining whether plaintiffs prevail, the Court should look to whether the Court’s order “required some action ... by the defendant,” regardless of whether the relief was granted midway through the proceeding rather than at its end.
Edmonds,
Defendant seeks to distinguish
Ed-monds
because the Court’s decision in that
IY. Plaintiff is entitled to attorney’s fees because the balance of the factors favor plaintiff
In determining whether a plaintiff is entitled to attorney’s fees under FOIA, the Court must consider 1) the public benefit derived from the case; 2) the commercial benefit to the complainant; 3) the nature of the complainant’s interest in the records sought; and 4) whether the government’s withholding had a reasonable basis in law.
See Cotton,
The “public benefit” factor “speaks for an award [of attorney fees] when the complainant’s victory is likely to add to the fund of information that citizens may use in making vital political choices.”
Cotton,
The balance of the factors, however, favor the plaintiff. Defendant does not dispute that plaintiff prevails on the second and third factors. Defendant argues that the fourth factor is not satisfied because there has been no finding that EPA’s with-holdings under FOIA were improper. The Court’s 2003 Order, defendant argues, simply directed the Agency to take another look at the records at issue; it did not compel the release of any additional records. The EPA determined that no additional records would be released, and the Court validated that conclusion by granting EPA summary judgment in 2005.
The appropriate baseline, however, is not the Court’s 2005 order but the Court’s 2003 order, which found that the “EPA had not fully complied with the requirements of FOIA.”
NCAP,
Y. Reasonableness of the Requested Award
Fee awards are calculated by multiplying the number of hours reasonably expended by a reasonable hourly rate, resulting in a lodestar amount.
See Copeland v. Marshall,
In this Circuit, fee awards may be calculated based on the
Laffey
Matrix because, in the absence of a specific sub-market analysis of attorney fees, “use of the broad Laffey matrix may be by default the most accurate evidence of a reasonable hourly rate.”
Covington,
NCAP requests, and defendant does not oppose, that hourly fees be calculated under the Laffey Matrix. Plaintiff seeks $41,711.69 in legal fees and costs, 2 which includes 140.6 hours by five different attorneys and 22.5 hours by legal interns. Defendant challenges the hours as excessive. In particular, defendant contends that it should not be required to compensate plaintiff for the hours attributed to briefing plaintiffs Motion for Entry of Final Judgment, which was unnecessary and which plaintiff ultimately lost.
The Court agrees that plaintiff should not be compensated for its unnecessary and unsuccessful “Motion for Entry of Judgment” filed in June of 2004. In its Order of March 16, 2005, the Court found that defendant “ha[d] complied with this Court’s March 28, 2003 Order by submitting the supplemental explanation for EPA’s determinations under FOIA [and] ____ that plaintiff does not contest that determination or make any other claims
Thus, plaintiffs Motion for Entry of Judgment was entirely unnecessary, and plaintiff should not be compensated for needless litigation. Review of plaintiffs fee report demonstrates that plaintiff spent 16.15 hours preparing for that round of briefings. When those hours are subtracted from plaintiffs total hours of 140.6, and the adjusted total is 124.45 hours.
Defendant further argues that plaintiff applied the wrong hourly rate. Attorney’s fees awarded against the U.S. must be based on the prevailing rates at the time the services were performed, not rates at the time of the award. See
NCAP v. Browner,
Rather than use this approximation, however, the Court directs the plaintiff to submit an amended fee report which applies the appropriate rate to the adjusted total hours of 124.45.
VI. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Court concludes that plaintiffs Motion for Attorney’s Fees is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART and fees and costs should be awarded to plaintiff.
ORDER
For the reasons discussed in the accompanying memorandum opinion, it is hereby
ORDERED that plaintiffs Motion for Attorney’s Fees is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART; and it is
FURTHER ORDERED that no later than April 21, 2006, plaintiff shall submit an amended fee report consistent with the Court’s memorandum opinion.
Notes
. As described below, the Court has insufficient information at this juncture to determine the exact amount of fees to be awarded. Therefore, plaintiff is directed to submit an amended fee report consistent with this Memorandum Opinion.
. Defendant does not dispute plaintiffs calculation of its costs, which total $1925.03.
