UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. $186,416.00 IN U.S. CURRENCY, Defendant. United Medical Caregivers Clinic, Inc., Claimant-Appellant.
No. 07-56549
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit
April 26, 2011
642 F.3d 753
II
In sum, DFEH is in control of the lawsuit which it is bringing pursuant to a strong state interest in vindicating the state‘s non-discrimination policies. Cf. U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co., 204 U.S. 349, 27 S.Ct. 381 (holding that the federal government‘s interest in vindicating the rights of third parties can constitute a pertinent interest in a lawsuit). Under the rule enunciated in Atchison, this is more than sufficient to make DFEH a party whose citizenship counts for diversity purposes. Because the parties are not completely diverse, we lack jurisdiction. Therefore, I dissent.
Paul L. Gabbert, Santa Monica, CA, for the claimant-appellant.
Eric Honig, Marina Del Rey, CA, for amicus curiae National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.
Before: MICHAEL DALY HAWKINS, MARSHA S. BERZON, and RICHARD R. CLIFTON, Circuit Judges.
ORDER
Claimant United Medical Caregivers Clinic (“UMCC“) prevailed in a civil forfeiture proceeding initiated by the United States. See United States v. $186,416.00 in U.S. Currency, 590 F.3d 942 (9th Cir. 2009). The Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act (“CAFRA“) provides that in “any civil proceeding to forfeit property under any provision of Federal law in which the claimant substantially prevails, the United States shall be liable for reasonable attorney fees and other litigation costs reasonably incurred by the claimant.”
UMCC has moved for an award of attorney fees pursuant to CAFRA and has specifically requested that the fee award be paid directly to its counsel rather than to UMCC itself, as the claimant. The government does not contest UMCC‘s entitlement to fees as a substantially prevailing party but has objected to the amount sought by the motion and has opposed the request that the fee award be paid directly to UMCC‘s attorney.
We refer the matter to the Appellate Commissioner to calculate the amount of an appropriate fee award. We instruct the Appellate Commissioner to use the lodestar method, and conclude that the actual fee agreement between UMCC and its attorney may be taken into account but is not by itself determinative in calculating the appropriate amount of the fee award. As for the payee of the fee award, we conclude that attorney fees awarded under CAFRA are payable to the claimant, not to claimant‘s attorney, so the fee awarded here will be payable to UMCC.
1. The amount of the fee award
CAFRA does not specify precisely how fee awards should be calculated. The statute simply provides that the government is liable for “reasonable attorney fees and other litigation costs reasonably incurred by the claimant.”
This court has not yet addressed the proper method of determining a fee award under CAFRA. Other courts have used the lodestar method to determine the amount to be awarded under CAFRA. See U.S. v. One Star Class Sloop Sailboat, 546 F.3d 26, 37-8 (1st Cir.2008); U.S. v. $60,201.00 in U.S. Currency, 291 F.Supp.2d 1126, 1129-1130 (C.D.Cal.2003). In this case UMCC proposes that its fees be determined that way, but the government argues that the lodestar approach should not be used and that the fee should primarily be based on the actual agreement between UMCC and its attorney. UMCC has declined to make its fee agreement available, and the government asks that its production be ordered.
That does not mean that the actual fee agreement cannot be relevant to the fee determination. Under
This matter is referred to the Appellate Commissioner for the purpose of determining the amount of reasonable attorney fees and other litigation costs reasonably incurred by UMCC, consistent with this order. The Appellate Commissioner may issue an order awarding fees and other litigation costs. Any such order is subject to a motion for reconsideration by this panel. See Circuit Rule 39-1.9.
2. The CAFRA fee award should be paid to the claimant
CAFRA does not explicitly identify to whom an award for fees and costs under that statute are to be paid. It simply says that “the United States shall be liable for reasonable attorney fees and other litigation costs reasonably incurred by the claimant.”
Prior to CAFRA‘s enactment in 2000, attorney fees could be sought by successful claimants in forfeiture actions under the Equal Access to Justice Act (“EAJA“),
UMCC reads this difference to mean that CAFRA fees should go directly to attorneys instead of the prevailing litigant. Following the Supreme Court‘s recent decision in Astrue v. Ratliff, — U.S. —, 130 S.Ct. 2521, 177 L.Ed.2d 91 (2010), we conclude otherwise.
Ratliff resolved a longstanding circuit split on the question of whether fee awards under EAJA were payable to the party or the attorney by holding that EAJA awards are to be paid to the prevailing litigant. Id. at 2525-29. In part, the Court based its decision on the specific language in EAJA, noted above, directing payments to the “prevailing party.” “[P]revailing party is a ‘term of art’ that refers to the prevailing litigant.” Id. at 2525. CAFRA does not contain similar language directing fees to the prevailing party.
The Court‘s decision in Ratliff did not stop there, however. It went on to highlight the absence of language in EAJA explicitly directing fees to attorneys.1
Ratliff counsels that in the absence of explicit instructions from Congress awarding fees to the attorney, direct payment to the attorney should not be presumed. Id. There is no such explicit instruction in CAFRA.
Direct payment to the attorney is the exception, not the rule. “The Supreme Court has made it clear that, in general, statutes bestow fees on parties, not upon attorneys.” United States ex rel. Virani v. Jerry M. Lewis Truck Parts & Equip., 89 F.3d 574, 577 (9th Cir.1996). For example, attorney fee awards under
UMCC argues that by not including EAJA‘s language mandating fee awards to the “prevailing party” in CAFRA, Congress signaled its intent to reject EAJA‘s method of awarding attorney fees. Without further evidence, the use of the passive phrase “the United States shall be liable for reasonable attorney fees” in CAFRA, rather than “shall award to a prevailing party” in EAJA, cannot be read as a clear expression of congressional intent to create a direct fee award to counsel. If, as UMCC argues, Congress intended to liberalize fee awards in forfeiture cases with CAFRA, it did so by eliminating EAJA‘s language exempting the government for payment of fees where the “position of the United States was substantially justified,” not by providing for fee awards to be paid directly to attorneys.
UMCC attempts to extract a direct fee requirement from two phrases in
UMCC and amicus curiae National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL), appearing in support of UMCC‘s position, offer policy justifications in support of awarding the fees and costs to the claimant‘s attorney directly rather than to the client. If fee awards are paid to the claimant, they argue, attorneys may not be paid for their work, thus reducing the likelihood of competent representation and defeating congressional intent. It is pointed out that CAFRA fees due to be paid to the client may be offset in part or in full by the client‘s preexisting debts to the government, leaving nothing to be paid to the attorney.2 That argument did not persuade the Supreme Court in Ratliff, however. The Court explicitly noted that EAJA fees are “subject to offset where a litigant has outstanding federal debts.” Ratliff, 130 S.Ct. at 2528. The government in that case actually asserted the right to offset a debt owed by the claimant to the federal government against the fee award, producing exactly the result projected by UMCC‘s argument, but that did not lead the Court to conclude that payment of EAJA fees should be made directly to counsel. There is nothing in the background, text, or purpose of CAFRA that suggests that the same result should not apply to CAFRA fees. UMCC‘s policy arguments must be made to Congress, which could draft the fee award statute to specify payment to counsel. CAFRA was not written that way.
We decline to order direct payment to counsel. The attorney fees and litigation costs awarded in this case are payable to UMCC as the successful claimant.
The motion is referred to the Appellate Commissioner for further proceedings consistent with this order.
REFERRED TO THE APPELLATE COMMISSIONER
BERZON, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
I respectfully dissent.
I agree with the majority‘s conclusion that fees awarded under the Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act (CAFRA) should be determined using the lodestar approach. I do not agree, however, that the CAFRA attorney fees provision requires that attorney fees be paid directly to the client, rather than to the attorney. I would hold that the statutory provision leaves the question whether fees are paid to the attorney or to the client to the discretion of the district court, to be determined on a case-by-case basis.
A. Astrue v. Ratliff
The majority relies heavily for its interpretation of the CAFRA attorney fees provision on Astrue v. Ratliff, — U.S. —,
The interpretative method used in Ratliff is heavily textual, concentrating on the precise wording of EAJA. There is no mention in Ratliff of any presumption that fees are usually awarded to the attorney or to the client. Instead, the only presumption is that the terms, structure, and history of each statute should govern.
On examination, none of the factors that the Court found persuasive in Ratliff as to why EAJA directs fees to the client are present in CAFRA. And some of the factors relied on in Ratliff support the conclusion that fees awarded under CAFRA need not always be paid to the client.
First, and most importantly, the text of EAJA directs that courts “shall award to a prevailing party... fees and other expenses... incurred by that party....”
CAFRA contains no such express direction. The CAFRA attorney fees provision states only that “the United States shall be liable for... reasonable attorney fees....”
Second, other textual differences between EAJA and CAFRA further undermine the majority‘s reliance on Ratliff‘s interpretation of EAJA. The Court‘s interpretation was buttressed by subsections of EAJA that “distinguish the party who receives the fees award (the litigant) from the attorney who performed the work that generated the fees.” Id. at 2525-26. For instance, EAJA requires a “prevailing party” to submit “an itemized statement from any attorney,” id. at 2526, implying that the term “prevailing party” is not a reference to the attorney. In contrast, no subsection of CAFRA differentiates between the claimant and the claimant‘s attorney.
Similarly, the text of EAJA “award[s] to a prevailing party” “the reasonable expenses of expert witnesses’ and ‘any study, analysis, engineering report, test, or project,‘” yet no party in Ratliff suggested that those costs were “payable directly to the vendors who provide[d] the relevant services.” Id. at 2527 (quoting
CAFRA, unlike EAJA, does not use language awarding expert expenses “to a prevailing party” or “to the claimant.” Instead, CAFRA simply provides that the “United States shall be liable for... attorney fees and other litigation costs....”
Third, the Court contrasted the language of EAJA to that of the Social Security Act (SSA), which expressly authorizes payment of fee awards directly to attorneys. Id. at 2527-28 (citing
Finally, the textual differences between CAFRA and EAJA are especially pertinent given that, prior to the passage of CAFRA, forfeiture claimants had to rely on EAJA to seek fee awards in forfeiture cases. See, e.g., United States v. 22249 Dolorosa St., 190 F.3d 977, 981-82 (9th Cir.1999). As Congress was presumably aware of the text of EAJA, the textual divergence in CAFRA should be given some import. See, e.g., Corley v. United States, 556 U.S. 303, 129 S.Ct. 1558, 1567, 173 L.Ed.2d 443 (2009) (applying presumption that meaning should be ascribed to differences in statutory texts).
In sum, the Court‘s analysis in Ratliff was a textual one, a mode of analysis that points to a different result under CAFRA than under EAJA. The Court made no mention of a presumption that fees are ordinarily awarded to either the party or the attorney.
Nor is any such presumption discernible in other caselaw. The majority‘s observation that statutes ordinarily bestow fees on parties (not attorneys) might be correct as a descriptive matter, see Maj. Op. at 755-57, but the text of the statutes identified by the majority specifically direct payment to parties, and so cases interpreting those provisions provide no guidance here.
For example, the majority relies on a statement in United States ex rel. Virani v. Jerry M. Lewis Truck Parts & Equip., 89 F.3d 574 (9th Cir.1996) that “[t]he Supreme Court has made it clear that, in general, statutes bestow fees upon parties, not upon attorneys.” Id. at 577. To support that proposition, the Virani court cited cases that interpreted the attorney fees provision in
In other words, the cases identified by the majority simply interpret provisions that expressly direct fees to plaintiffs rather than to plaintiffs’ attorneys; they apply no presumption of such a result. And, in fact, Virani itself (in which we observed that statutes generally bestow fees on parties) did not apply any such presumption. Instead, it held that the payment of fees under the False Claims Act must be made directly to the plaintiff‘s counsel, even though the text of the provision at issue could be read as directing that fees be paid to the client. See 89 F.3d at 578 (interpreting
B. The Statutory Text of CAFRA
Proceeding in that fashion, and so without the presumption or clear statement requirement applied by the majority, I am not persuaded that there are statute-specific reasons for concluding that fees under CAFRA must always be paid directly to the client.
To support its argument that CAFRA fees should be universally awarded to litigants, not attorneys, the government first points out that the subsection containing CAFRA‘s attorney fee provision,
But the statutory text of CAFRA does not require that conclusion. There is no reason to think that all payments provided for by subsection (b)(1) should be payable to the same person. Subsection (b)(1) provides that the “United States shall be liable for” those three payments, but it does not indicate to whom they are to be paid. The neutral language, applicable to all three kinds of payments, most sensibly contemplates payment to whomever is appropriate—for interest, to the claimant, and for attorney fees, to the attorney or the client, depending on circumstances
Because there is nothing in subsection (b)(1) requiring that fees be paid to the claimant, the government advances a different argument premised on another subsection of CAFRA. The government points out that subsection (b)(2)(A) provides that “[t]he United States shall not be required to disgorge the value of any intangible benefits nor make any other payments to the claimant not specifically authorized by this subsection.”
The government‘s suggestion that subsection (b)(2)(A) cross-references (b)(1) is, in my view, incorrect. Again, subsection (b)(2)(A) reads: “The United States shall not be required to disgorge the value of any intangible benefits nor make any other payments to the claimant not specifically authorized by this subsection.”
The government next emphasizes that subsection (b)(1)(A) reads “reasonable attorney fees and other litigation costs reasonably incurred by the claimant.”
This argument is no more successful than the converse argument—that the phrase “incurred by the claimant” indicates that fees are to be paid to the attorney—correctly rejected by the majority. As noted by the majority, EAJA, like CAFRA, requires that recoverable fees be “incurred” by the client, yet prevailing parties are entitled to fees under EAJA even if they were represented free of charge. See Nadarajah, 569 F.3d 906, 916 (9th Cir.2009). Just as “a
Instead, the consideration that fees can be “incurred by” a client who did not agree to or actually pay any fees indicates to me that the choice of the neutral “is liable for” terminology was deliberate, and connotes similar flexibility in determining to whom the fees are to be paid. Paying fees directly to the client in instances where the client did not pay the attorney, or paid an amount less than market rates, could lead to a windfall to the client, or to the client‘s creditors. The majority‘s position does not account for this windfall possibility at all.
C. CAFRA Permits District Courts to Direct Fee Awards to Litigants or Their Attorneys
The sum of the matter is that the statutory text of CAFRA doesn‘t expressly direct fees to the client or to the attorney, and the textual arguments advanced by the government don‘t mandate a particular result. In other words, CAFRA isn‘t directly analogous either to EAJA (directing fees to the client) or to SSA (directing fees to the lawyer).
What EAJA and the SSA do show, as already noted, is that Congress is perfectly capable of making clear to whom the court is to order payment of fees, yet chose in CAFRA to use passive, neutral language. Compare
This choice, it seems to me, is best implemented by permitting district courts to direct fees to either the claimant or the attorney, depending on the circumstances. District courts faced with such a determination might consider: (1) the particulars of the agreement between the attorney and the client; (2) the likelihood that the attorney would be adequately compensated if fees were paid to the client; and (3) whether payment to the client or to the attorney would best further the goals of CAFRA.
That approach would allow district courts to avoid the windfall possibilities noted above. It would also correct an anomaly identified by the government—namely, many of the arguments in favor of awarding fees directly to the attorney assume that the attorney has not already been compensated by the client, but that often will not be the case, because some clients will pay a retainer or an hourly fee. Where the client has already paid the attorney an amount equivalent to the award, then the client likely has a superior claim to the fee award, and the district court can direct payment of the award accordingly. Likewise, if the client has paid the attorney, but less than the full amount of the award, the district court can order the payment of fees appropriately, some to the client and some to the attorney.
D. Final Considerations
For the reasons given, CAFRA‘s statutory text is best interpreted as leaving the question up to district courts to determine on a case-by-case basis. That result is also preferable to the majority‘s approach, because other factors, discussed below, indicate that universally awarding CAFRA
First, one might assume that the practical implications of who first receives a fee award are minimal, because attorneys and clients can enter into contracts dictating who will ultimately receive the money. For example, while it is the party‘s right to “waive, settle, or negotiate” entitlement to receive fees in a particular case, attorneys and clients can create private fee arrangements limiting that ability. Venegas v. Mitchell, 495 U.S. 82, 88, 110 S.Ct. 1679, 109 L.Ed.2d 74 (1990). In other words, attorneys can avoid the uncertainty that results from a party‘s ability to waive a right to receive fees by requiring a contractual agreement that the party won‘t waive that right. Contractual arrangements can also dictate the ultimate distribution of an award, regardless of whether the award is directly payable to the prevailing party or to the attorney. See Gilbrook v. City of Westminster, 177 F.3d 839, 875 (9th Cir.1999) (“[Section] 1988 requires that attorney fee awards be made directly to the prevailing party, with the ultimate disposition of the award dependent on the contract between the lawyer and the client.“).
But, as noted by the majority, fees paid directly to clients may be offset by the client‘s pre-existing debts to the government, leaving nothing for the attorney. See Maj. Op. at 757. And, unlike a client‘s ability to waive or negotiate an entitlement to a fee award, it is not clear that parties can contract around the uncertainty posed by offsets against debts owed by a claimant to the government, as such debts might constitute a lien superior to the attorney‘s contractual or other assignment-based right. Cf. Comm‘r v. Banks, 543 U.S. 426, 437, 125 S.Ct. 826, 160 L.Ed.2d 859 (2005) (“State laws vary with respect to the strength of an attorney‘s security interest in a contingent fee and the remedies available to an attorney should the client discharge or attempt to defraud the attorney“). I don‘t know whether such an argument, if advanced by the government, would be meritorious. But the scenario threatens a plausible complication that results from a blanket rule that fees are awarded to the client.
Second, certain characteristics specific to asset forfeiture caution against universally awarding CAFRA fees to claimants. Asset forfeiture occurs in circumstances involving crimes, and so CAFRA actions seem particularly likely to involve clients who may not fulfill contractual obligations to pay their attorneys. Moreover, if the government has seized all or nearly all of the claimant‘s property, the claimant may not have the means to pay fees in advance, and the attorney must agree to defer payment of fees until resolution of the case. Finally, given the backdrop of CAFRA actions, clients might be more likely to owe pre-existing debts to the government, and therefore fees might be more likely to be subject to offset in CAFRA actions than in other circumstances. In any event, CAFRA‘s purpose of facilitating legal representation for claimants will be undercut if fees are always awarded to the client, because lawyers will reasonably fear that they might never actually receive compensation, and so they might decline to represent CAFRA clients at all.
Third, whether attorney fees are paid directly to the client or to the attorney has
We agreed with the Commissioner that the plaintiff was liable for the deficiency under the theory that the plaintiff had bound himself to pay the law firm, and when the defendant satisfied this obligation, its payment constituted a discharge of the plaintiff‘s obligation. Id. (citing Old Colony Trust Co. v. Comm‘r, 279 U.S. 716, 729, 49 S.Ct. 499, 73 L.Ed. 918 (1929)). We found that theory applicable on the facts of Sinyard because “[u]nder the ADEA, attorney‘s fees are available to prevailing plaintiffs, not to plaintiff‘s counsel.” Id. at 759.
The logic of Sinyard suggests that the same result would not be required if the attorney fees were ordered paid directly to the attorney. If that were the case, then the defendant would not have been satisfying an obligation owed by the plaintiff to the law-firm, but rather it would have been satisfying its own obligation to pay attorney fees to the attorney. As the fees would never have been receivable by the client, they likewise would not have been taxable to the client.
A few years after Sinyard, the Supreme Court decided Commissioner v. Banks, 543 U.S. 426, 125 S.Ct. 826, 160 L.Ed.2d 859 (2005). In that case, the Court held that a money judgment or settlement paid to a plaintiff‘s attorney under a contingent-fee agreement must be reported as income to the plaintiff. Id. at 430, 125 S.Ct. 826. The Court, however, declined to decide the question addressed in Sinyard—namely, whether attorney fees awarded under statutory fee-shifting provisions (in that case, under
The Court did recognize that if attorney fees were taxable to the client, then a plaintiff could “lose[] money by winning the suit.” Id. at 438, 125 S.Ct. 826. For instance, if the plaintiff sought only injunctive relief, or if the damages awarded were otherwise substantially less than attorney fees, then the tax loss could result in a net after-tax loss for the plaintiff. Id. But the Court stated that such circumstances were unlikely to arise going forward, because Congress enacted the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 (AJCA) shortly after the claims in Banks arose. The AJCA amended the Internal Revenue Code to allow taxpayers to deduct “attorney fees and court costs paid by, or on behalf of, the taxpayer in connection with” actions brought under certain statutes that authorize fee awards. See
Importantly, though, while AJCA would correct this taxation problem for attorney fees related to suits under a substantial number of statutes—including actions un-
In short, if fees are awarded directly to the client, they might be taxed as income to the client, even where the client is represented pro bono and the fees are immediately turned over to the lawyer. And, unlike under most other fee-shifting statutory provisions, the client apparently cannot deduct the award from his income. These factors threaten the inequitable result of a net after-tax loss for the prevailing litigant, a result that could be avoided if district courts had discretion to determine on a case-by-case basis whether attorney fees are awarded to the attorney or to the client.
Conclusion
Leaving the question of to whom fees are to be paid up to district courts to determine on a case-by-case basis is the appropriate interpretation of the CAFRA attorney fees provision. I would so hold, and therefore respectfully dissent.
Raymond T. BALVAGE and Deborah A. Balvage, husband and wife; Charles E. Weaver and Susan M. Weaver, husband and wife; Joyce Marie Adams; Luvern Harland Allen; Edgar Ames; James Alvin Baker and Darla Jean Baker, husband and wife; Ralph Alvin Barfell, Jr.; Sharon Marie Banta; Ray Bodine and Janie Kay Bodine, husband and wife; Richard Anthony Braga, Jr. and Margaret Louise Braga, husband and wife; Charles Thomas Caldwell and Sandi Kay Caldwell, husband and wife; Laren Willbur Coleman and Pamela Denise Coleman, husband and wife; Alvin Dee Colpitts and Corabelle Colpitts, husband and wife; Betty Gene Donoghue; Elizabeth Elaine Dupree; Joyce Elain Fischer; Jeannette H. Headen; Glenn Richard Huestis and Carol Nadine Huestis, husband and wife; Barbara Jean Joy; Miriam Margaret Kennedy-Allen; Gerald Blair Kolb and Ethel May Kolb, husband and wife; Alfred Wesley Leach and Gloria Eileen Leach, husband and wife; Raymond Ernest Morris and Carolyn L. Morris, husband and wife; Arnold Nadeau; Karen Campbell; Bob Pistone and Doris Pistone, husband and wife; Vern Powell and Sharon Powell, husband and wife; Earleen M. Ruther-
