Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co. v. 104 Acres of Land, More or Less

32 F.3d 632 | 1st Cir. | 1994

                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                           

No. 93-2126

                 TENNESSEE GAS PIPELINE COMPANY,

                      Plaintiff - Appellee,

                                v.

                 104 ACRES OF LAND, MORE OR LESS,
                      IN PROVIDENCE COUNTY,
                      STATE OF RHODE ISLAND,

                      Defendant - Appellee,

                 WALTER R. AND CLARA J. LAWRENCE,
                    JUDITH B. MOREAU, ET AL.,

                     Defendants - Appellants.

                                           

No. 94-1283

                 TENNESSEE GAS PIPELINE COMPANY,

                      Plaintiff - Appellee,

                                v.

              WALTER R. LAWRENCE; CLARA J. LAWRENCE;
                        JUDITH B. MOREAU,

                     Defendants - Appellants.

                                           

          APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                 FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

           [Hon. Francis J. Boyle, U.S. District Judge]
                                                      

                                           

                              Before

                    Torruella, Cyr and Boudin,

                         Circuit Judges.
                                       

                                           

     Morton L.  Simons,  with whom  Barbara M.  Simons, Simons  &
                                                                 
Simons, Robert S. Bruzzi and Law Office of Robert S. Bruzzi, were
                                                           
on brief for appellants.
     Paul M. Sanford,  with whom Kathryn S.  Holley, Christine M.
                                                                 
Gravelle, Peter  V. Lacouture  and Tillinghast Collins  & Graham,
                                                                
were on brief for appellee.

                                           

                         August 24, 1994
                                           

                               -2-

          TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge.  Defendants Judith Moreau and
                                  

Walter and Clara Lawrence  ("the landowners") appeal the district court's  thirty percent reduction of an  award of attorneys' fees based upon  a failure  of the  landowners' counsel to  adequately document  the charges.   The landowners also  appeal the district court's failure to include certain costs and prejudgment interest in the award, and the district court's denial of a subsequent fee application seeking reimbursement for  fees and expenses incurred in  prosecuting the initial fee  application.  We  affirm in part and reverse in part.

                                I.

                            BACKGROUND
                                      

          The  facts  of this  case  are set  forth  with greater detail in  the district  court's opinion regarding  the principal fee application in  Tennessee Gas  Pipeline Co. v.  104 Acres  of
                                                                 

Land,  828 F.  Supp. 123  (D. R.I.  1993).   In 1986,  plaintiff-
    

appellee Tennessee  Gas Pipeline  Co. ("Tennessee Gas")  sought a certificate  of  public  convenience  from  the   Federal  Energy Regulatory  Commission   ("FERC")  to  allow   Tennessee  Gas  to construct facilities for  the transmission of natural  gas on the landowners' property.  In  May 1989, FERC issued Tennessee  Gas a conditional  certificate for  construction on  the property.   In December 1989  and February  1990, Tennessee Gas  brought eminent domain proceedings in the  district court against the landowners, seeking  to obtain rights-of-way and  a portion of  their land in order  to construct and maintain  the natural gas  pipeline.  The

                               -3- landowners retained  counsel to intervene in  the FERC proceeding and  requested  FERC  to  modify  its  May  1989  certificate  by rerouting  the final leg of the proposed line to utilize existing rights-of-way.   After proceedings  in the  district court and  a proceeding  before FERC, Tennessee  Gas changed the  route of its pipeline and dismissed the eminent domain proceedings against the landowners.  

          The  landowners moved  for costs  and attorneys'  fees, pursuant to  the Uniform Relocation Assistance  and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act ("Relocation Act"), 42 U.S.C.   4601  et
                                                                 

seq.   On  August  25,  1993,  the  district  court  awarded  the
    

landowners attorneys'  fees but disallowed thirty  percent of the fees requested by the law firm of Simons & Simons ("Simons"), one of the  two  firms that  represented the  landowners, because  it found that  the firm failed  to adequately document  its charges. Tennessee  Gas paid  the  fee award  on September  7,  1993.   On September  22,  1993, the  landowners  filed  a supplemental  fee application seeking reimbursement for fees and  expenses incurred in prosecuting  the principal  fee application during  the period from April 29, 1992, to  March 1993.  On September 24,  1993, the landowners filed  a notice of  appeal from  the district  court's order with respect to the principal fee application.  On March 2, 1994,   the  district   court   entered   judgment  denying   the supplemental fee  petition because the court  determined that the petition  was  untimely.   The  landowners appealed  the  March 2 order.    In  April, this  court  ordered  that  both appeals  be

                               -4- consolidated.

                               -5-

                               II.

                            DISCUSSION
                                      

          A.  Reduction in Attorneys' Fees

          The landowners sought an  award of costs and attorneys' fees  under  42  U.S.C.      4654,  which  provides  that   in  a condemnation action abandoned by  the condemnor, the court "shall award" the  property owner "such sums  as will in  the opinion of the  court  reimburse  such   owner  for  his  reasonable  costs, disbursements, and expenses, including  reasonable attorney . . . fees, actually incurred because of the condemnation proceedings." The  landowners  contend  that  because  Section  4654  uses  the mandatory  language "shall  award," an  award of  attorneys' fees under  this  section  is  not discretionary,  and  a  landowner's computation  of  hours  should  be  accepted  even  if  there  is insufficient documentation  absent a  specific showing  of abuse. We disagree.

          Section   4654  provides   for  the   reimbursement  of "reasonable" costs  and fees.   This Court's opinions  "have left reasonably  open   the  question  of  precisely   how  the  judge ascertains the number of hours reasonably expended" by counsel on a case  in which  attorneys' fees are  sought.  United  States v.
                                                              

Metropolitan  Dist.  Com.,  847  F.2d  12,  16  (1st  Cir.  1988)
                         

(internal quotations and citation omitted).  "What  we expect the trial  court  to do  is make  concrete  findings, supply  a clear explanation  of its reasons  for the fee award,  and most of all, retain  a sense of overall proportion."  Id. (internal quotations
                                            

                               -6- and  citations omitted).    Accordingly, we  review the  district court's fee award for  abuse of discretion.  Foley v. Lowell, 948
                                                            

F.2d 10 (1st Cir. 1991).

          The district  court indicated that it  would employ the lodestar analysis  in determining  the reasonableness of  the fee applications.  Tennessee Gas  Pipeline Co., 829 F. Supp.  at 128.
                                          

"If an alternative method is not expressly dictated by applicable law, we have customarily found it best to calculate fees by means of the  [lodestar] time and  rate method. .  . ."   Weinberger v.
                                                              

Great  Northern Nekoosa Corp., 925 F.2d 518, 526 (1st Cir. 1991).
                             

Because Section  4654 does not  dictate an alternative  method to calculate  fees, the district court's use  of the lodestar method was proper.

          Where a district court applies the lodestar method, the fee-seeker must  usually provide a particularized  account of his claim. Id. at  527.  "[T]he  absence of detailed  contemporaneous
          

time records, except  in extraordinary  circumstances, will  call for  a substantial reduction in any award or, in egregious cases, disallowance."   Grendel's Den, Inc. v. Larkin, 749 F.2d 945, 952
                                              

(1st Cir.  1984).  In order for  litigants to receive fee awards, this court has  required that  they submit "a  full and  specific accounting of the  tasks performed, the dates of performance, and the number of hours spent on each task."  Weinberger, 925 F.2d at
                                                    

527 (internal quotations and citations omitted).

          The district  court found that the  Simons' time sheets were not sufficiently  detailed to enable the court  to determine

                               -7- whether  the fees  were excessive or  duplicative.   The district court stated  that "[t]he  time summaries  are replete  with time charges  for such  matters as  'Confer with  co-counsel,' 'Confer with  client,' 'Review materials,'  Review documents,' and 'Legal Research' without any indication of the subject matter involved." The  district  court  explained that  in  addition  to  making it impossible for the court  to gage whether the task  performed was warranted, the failure to include some description of the subject matter of the  task made it  impossible to determine if  the time factor  allocated was  appropriate  or excessive.   The  district court also found that discrepancies in Simons' submissions raised questions as to their accuracy and whether such records were kept contemporaneously.    The district  court  clearly explained  its findings and the court  was justified in reducing the  fee award. The court did not  abuse its discretion by reducing  the award of fees  claimed by Simons by  thirty percent.   We therefore affirm the district court's reduction of Simons' attorneys' fees.

          B.  Prejudgment Interest and other Costs

          In  the  proceedings  before  the  district  court, the landowners requested  interest on fees  and costs from  April 29, 1992, the date  they had filed their  motion for fees  and costs. The  request for  prejudgment interest  was opposed  by Tennessee Gas.    The  district  court's   opinion  makes  no  mention   of prejudgment interest  and the  district court's judgment  did not include any  prejudgment interest.   The landowners  also contend that  the   district  court,  without   comment  and   apparently

                               -8- inadvertently, failed to include in the award an item of $889 for two  "round-trip"   airfares   between  Washington,   D.C.,   and Providence, R.I., to permit counsel for the landowners  to attend a settlement  conference  and  a meeting  on  the  Tennessee  Gas project.   According to  the landowners,  the vouchers  for these trips, accompanied  by an affidavit describing the purpose of the trips, were submitted to the district court and served on counsel for Tennessee Gas on March 12, 1993.

          Because the district court  did not advance any reasons for  its  denial  of  the  landowners'  request  for  prejudgment interest, or the cost of the airline tickets, we will remand this case to the  district court so that it  may determine whether the landowners  are   entitled  to   prejudgment   interest  and   to reimbursement for the cost of the airline tickets.

          C.  Supplemental Fee Application

          In  its memorandum  and order  denying the  landowners' supplemental fee application,  the district court indicated  that ordinarily a litigant should have one opportunity to obtain fees, but that "[t]here is no reason  why a pending application may not be supplemented to the  time the court acts on  the application." The  court acknowledged that there is  no stated time requirement for  filing fee  applications included  in 42  U.S.C.    4601, et
                                                                 

seq., but stated that there must be some time limit within  which
    

applications  must  be filed.   The  court  pointed out  that the Supreme  Court has  indicated  that fee  applications should  not result in secondary litigation, Commissioner, I.N.S. v. Jean, 496
                                                            

                               -9- U.S. 154, 163  (1990), and  that the First  Circuit has  embraced this principle, Par s v.  U.S. Dept. of Housing & Urban Dev., 988
                                                            

F.2d  236, 241 (1st  Cir. 1993).  The  district court stated that "if  [the  landowners']  application  was approved,  it  must  be expected that a third  application will be made for  the services rendered in  connection with this second application."  The court then pointed out  that "[h]ere the  second application was  filed September  12,  1993, 29  days  after  the  court's formal  order allowing the first petition, more than two months after the court filed its opinion, six months after the last of the services were rendered, and seventeen months after  the beginning of the period for which [the landowners] seek reimbursement."  The court stated that "[e]xcept in unusual circumstances not present in this case, application for  reimbursement for legal services rendered before the  court determines a fee application should be made before the court acts on the  application, otherwise reimbursement should be foregone."   The court then concluded that the second application for fees came too late.

          The landowners  contend that neither  the Uniform  Real Property  Acquisition  Policies  Act  nor  any  other  applicable statute imposed a time requirement for filing a  fee application, and  therefore, by  denying  their application  as untimely,  the district  court in effect enunciated a new rule which it unfairly applied  retroactively to  the landowners.   In support  of their position,   the  landowners   argue  that   the  amount   of  the supplemental  fee claim was unknown at the time the principal fee

                               -10- application  was submitted,  and  the landowners  could not  have known  precisely  what the  amount of  this  claim was  until the principal application  was resolved.   Therefore, they  could not determine the  amount, or  submit a supplemental  fee application until they had been  awarded fees.  The landowners  also contend, and the  record shows, that  they advised the  court on  March 3, 1993 -- 4 1/2  months before its preliminary fee  application and almost six months before the court entered its judgment regarding the  preliminary fee  application  -- that  they  would submit  a supplemental fee application at the appropriate time.

          We agree  with the  district court  that there  must be some time limit within which a party must file an application for supplemental fees,  and  we  believe that  it  is  reasonable  to require, absent any other statutory mandate, that where possible, such application be made  before the court acts on  the principal fee  application.    In  the  present case,  however,  where  the district  court  had   not  previously  articulated  this   novel requirement,  where  the  landowners  had advised  the  court  in writing   of  their   intention  to   file  a   supplemental  fee application, and  where Congress has directed  district courts to award  landowners their  reasonable  costs  and  attorneys'  fees incurred because  of aborted  condemnation proceedings,  we agree with the landowners that it would be unfair, and would contravene the  Congressional  purpose,   to  apply  the  district   court's requirement retroactively.

          We therefore vacate the district court's order  denying

                               -11- the landowners' supplemental fee  application, and remand for the district court  to determine the  reasonable fees to  be awarded. We further order that any application for fees in connection with this second application be submitted to the district court before the district court acts on the second application.

          Affirmed in part; vacated and remanded in part.
                                                        

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