Universal Services of America LP, et al. v. Daniel Mazzon
No. CV-23-00463-PHX-JAT
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA
October 4, 2024
James A. Teilborg, Senior United States District Judge
ORDER
Pending before the Court is Defendant Daniel Mazzon‘s (“Defendant“) Motion for Attorneys’ Fees under
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs are three related “security, janitorial, and other building maintenance services” companies: Universal Services of America, LP (“Universal“), Universal Protection Service, LP (“UPS“), and Universal Building Maintenance, LLC (“AUJS“). (Doc. 1-2 p. 15-16). Defendant was employed at AUJS, a “janitorial services company,” as a Business Development Manager beginning in May 2016. (Doc. 1-2 p. 16; Doc. 34 p. 2). Defendant filed articles of organization for his new company, Mazzon Industries, effective December 28, 2022. (Doc. 80-6 p. 2). Plaintiffs alleged that Defendant formed Mazzon Industries to compete with AUJS and UPS, used his AUJS-assigned laptop to pitch
Plaintiffs filed the instant action in Maricopa County Superior Court, alleging three counts: (1) breach of contract, (2) tortious interference with contract, and (3) breach of the duty of loyalty. (Doc. 1-2). The action was subsequently removed to federal court. (Doc. 1). The Court dismissed Plaintiffs’ breach of contract claim, leaving the tortious interference with contract and breach of duty of loyalty claims remaining. (Doc. 32). The Court granted Defendant summary judgment on the tortious interference with contract and breach of duty of loyalty claims. (Doc. 83). Defendant now seeks $64,067.00 in attorneys’ fees and $1,481.61 in court costs. (Doc. 90 p. 14).
II. DISCUSSION
“A federal court sitting in diversity applies the law of the forum state regarding an award of attorneys’ fees.” Kona Enters., Inc. v. Estate of Bishop, 229 F.3d 877, 883 (9th Cir. 2000) (citations omitted). Under Arizona law, “[i]n any contested action arising out of contract, express or implied, the court may award the successful party reasonable attorney fees.”
Here, the parties do not dispute that this case arises out of a contract.1 The parties also do not dispute that Defendant is the successful party. As such, the Court must decide whether an award of attorneys’ fees is appropriate and whether the requested fees are reasonable.
a. Discretion in Awarding Attorneys’ Fees
In determining whether to exercise its discretion to award attorneys’ fees under
i. Whether Plaintiffs’ Claims Were Meritorious
The first factor, the merits of the unsuccessful party‘s claims, weighs in favor of an award of attorneys’ fees. Defendant argues that Plaintiffs’ claims lacked validity because, despite Plaintiffs having “sole possession, custody[,] and control” of all evidence, “Plaintiffs never produced (1) a single one of the contracts discussed;2 (2) the ‘AUJS resources’ Defendant purportedly used in breaching his duty of loyalty; or (3) a single piece of evidence they had suffered any damages as a result of the matters discussed in their complaint.” (Doc. 90 p. 3 (emphasis in original); Doc. 94 p. 4). According to Defendant, “Plaintiffs pursued this litigation out of spite against a former employee, rather than out of any good faith basis.” (Doc. 90 p. 10).
In response, Plaintiffs note that “[c]laims can have merit even if they do not ultimately prevail.” (Doc. 93 p. 4) (citing Vera v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., No. CV-10-01568-PHX-JWS, 2011 WL 2200820, at *1 (D. Ariz. June 7, 2011)). Plaintiffs also note that “[c]laims have merit where, as here, the unsuccessful party relies on relevant case law
The Court thinks this case is distinguishable from the cases cited by Plaintiffs. First, the Court cannot say this case presented a precise issue never before addressed by an Arizona court. Second, the Court did not dismiss Plaintiffs’ claim for breach of contract “on an esoteric and rarely litigated legal issue.” (Doc. 93 p. 6). The Court dismissed the breach of contract claim because the contract Plaintiffs presented gave UPS, not AUJS, “the right to have Defendant refrain from soliciting certain customers.” (Doc. 32 p. 7). The Court found that “the language in the agreement [was] not reasonably susceptible to the meaning Plaintiffs propose[d]” and that Plaintiffs’ complaint did not plausibly allege that Defendant breached this agreement nor that the agreement was assigned. (Doc. 32 p. 6-7). Finally, in Plaintiffs’ response to Defendant‘s motion for summary judgment, Plaintiffs did not cite to the record in a meaningful way. In fact, for the tortious interference with contract claim, the Court noted that Plaintiffs did not point to evidence in the record that established a genuine issue of material fact and that Plaintiffs’ response was actually silent as to this claim. (Doc. 83 p. 6). Overall, there was “an absence of evidence to support Plaintiffs’ tortious interference with contract claim.” (Doc. 83 p. 6). On the fiduciary duty of loyalty claim, the Court found that “Plaintiffs [] failed to allege facts or provide any evidence sufficient to establish a genuine issue of material fact as to causation and damages” and therefore failed to establish a prima facie case. (Doc. 83 p. 12).
ii. Whether the Litigation Could Have Been Avoided or Settled
The second factor, whether the litigation could have been avoided or settled, weighs in favor of awarding attorneys’ fees to Defendant. “This factor looks primarily to whether a non-litigation solution was not pursued that could have solved the problem and whether litigation was not necessary.” 11333, Inc. v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd‘s, London, No. CV-14-02001-PHX-NVW, 2018 WL 1570236, at *6 (D. Ariz. Mar. 30, 2018).
iii. Whether Assessing Fees Against Plaintiffs Would Cause Extreme Hardship
Defendant points out that Allied Universal, the “parent” company of the three Plaintiff companies, “purports to have approximately $20 billion in revenue along with more than 800,000 employees.” (Doc. 90 p. 9). Plaintiffs do not disagree. (Doc. 93 p. 8). This factor weighs in favor of awarding attorneys’ fees.
iv. Whether Defendant Prevailed in Full
Although neither party addresses this factor directly, both parties address it indirectly, and it appears the parties agree Defendant prevailed in full. Under the “merit” factor, Plaintiffs argue their claims had merit “even though defendant prevailed.” (Doc. 93 p. 4). Defendant, arguing under an alternative statutory theory, said “Defendant has prevailed in full” because “Plaintiffs were not damaged, Plaintiffs did not present any contracts that were interfered with, Defendant was never associated with Plaintiffs Universal or UPS, and the purported non-compete agreement was ineffective.” (Doc. 90 p. 6, 10). The Court finds this factor weighs in favor of awarding attorneys’ fees.
v. Whether the Legal Issues Were Novel
Neither party addresses this factor.3 As a result, the Court surmises that this factor is neutral.
vi. Whether an Award Would Discourage Tenable Claims
This factor will weigh against an award of attorney fees if an “award would discourage other parties with tenable claims or defenses from litigating or defending legitimate contract issues for fear of incurring liability for substantial amounts of attorney‘s fees.” Harris v. Maricopa Cnty. Superior Court, 631 F.3d 963, 974 n.3 (9th Cir. 2011) (quoting Wagenseller v. Scottsdale Mem‘l Hosp., 710 P.2d 1025, 1049 (Ariz. 1985)).
Defendant claims that denying an award would discourage tenable claims because it would discourage prior employees from taking on businesses “with substantially greater resources” and it would allow businesses to “coerce former employees into illegal or unmerited restrictive covenants because [the employees] cannot afford to fight them.” (Doc. 94 p. 6). In response, Plaintiffs argue that a “reflexive” award of attorney‘s fees would “dissuade . . . smaller companies and individuals with limited financial resources [] from pursuing legitimate suits out of fear that they would owe attorneys’ fees to the opposing party if they were ultimately unsuccessful.” (Doc. 93 p. 8). Here, the “legitimacy” of Plaintiffs’ claims is tarnished by the lack of evidence Plaintiffs provided. Furthermore, under Arizona law, any party litigating an action “arising out of contract” runs the risk that they will not prevail, and the court will then have discretion to award attorneys’ fees. The circumstances of this case do not persuade the Court that an award would automatically deter future litigants.
vii. An Award of Attorneys’ Fees is Appropriate
On balance, the relevant six factors support an award of fees to Defendant. As a
b. “Reasonableness” of Requested Fees
After concluding that awarding attorneys’ fees is appropriate under the factors laid out in Associated Indemnity, the court must then decide whether the requested fees are reasonable. Manone v. Farm Bureau Prop. & Cas. Co., No. CV-15-08003-PCT-JAT, 2016 WL 1059539, at *3 (D. Ariz. Mar. 17, 2016). To determine whether the requested attorneys’ fees are reasonable, “the Court looks to whether the hourly rate is reasonable and whether the hours expended on the case are reasonable.” Maguire v. Coltrell, No. CV-14-01255-PHX-DGC, 2015 WL 3999188, at *3 (D. Ariz. July 1, 2015) (citing Schweiger v. China Doll Rest., Inc., 673 P.2d 927, 931-32 (Ariz. Ct. App. 1983)).
i. Reasonable Hourly Rate
To determine reasonable attorneys’ fees in commercial litigation, the analysis begins with the actual billing rate that the lawyer charged in the particular matter. See Schweiger, 673 P.2d at 931. “The best indicator of a reasonable hourly rate for a fee-paying client is the rate charged by the lawyer to the client.” Jackson v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., No. CV-13-00617-PHX-SPL, 2015 WL 13567069 at *2 (D. Ariz. Oct. 23, 2015) (citing Schweiger, 673 P.2d at 931-32).
Defendant submitted an Affidavit of Justin Fouts, primary counsel, (Doc. 90-1 p. 17-20), and a copy of the Hourly Fee Agreement indicating the agreed upon hourly billing rate between the firm and the Defendant for services performed. (Doc. 90-1 p. 22-26.). Mr. Fouts is a senior associate attorney with six years of experience. (Doc. 90-1 p. 17). He “was advised and supervised by partners Mark Horne and David Degnan – each of whom has been licensed to practice law for over a decade – and assisted by law clerks, paralegals, and legal assistants where appropriate.” (Doc. 90 p. 13). Mr. Fouts’ standard billing rate “progressively increased” from $325/hour at the start of litigation to $375/hour at the end. (Doc. 90-1 p. 18). Mr. Horne‘s standard billing rate also increased from $400/hour at the start of litigation to $425/hour at the end. (Doc. 90-1 p. 19). Mr. Degnan‘s billing rate was $500/hour throughout litigation. (Doc. 90-1 p. 19). Generally, associates billed between
ii. Hours Reasonably Expended
Generally, the prevailing party is “entitled to recover a reasonable attorneys’ fee for every item of service which, at the time rendered, would have been undertaken by a reasonable and prudent lawyer to advance or protect his client‘s interest[.]” Schweiger, 673 P.2d at 931-32 (quoting Twin City Sportservice v. Charles O. Finley & Co., 676 F.2d 1291, 1313 (9th Cir. 1982)). The party opposing the fee award “must provide specific references to the record and specify which amount of items are excessive.” In re Indenture of Tr. Dated Jan. 13, 1964, 326 P.3d 307, 319-20 (Ariz. Ct. App. 2014). An award may be reduced for hours not “reasonably expended.” Travelers Indem. Co. v. Crown Corr, Inc., No. CV-11-0965-PHX-JAT, 2012 WL 2798653, at *6 (D. Ariz. July 9, 2012).
Defendant provided a task-based, itemized statement of time expended and expenses incurred, which demonstrates that counsel and other professionals spent 253.2 hours on this case from March 1, 2023 to June 5, 2024. (Doc. 90-1 p. 28-80). Plaintiffs object that 64.30 hours of Defendant‘s entries—totaling $14,908.00—are unreasonable based on “block-billing/vagueness,” “clerical/administrative/secretarial tasks,” and “time spent talking with coworkers” and should therefore not be reimbursed.4 (Doc. 93-1 p. 1-25). These objections are considered in turn.
1. Block-Billing and/or Vagueness
Plaintiffs contend that 47 of Defendant‘s entries constitute impermissible block
The Court has carefully reviewed the itemized block-billing objections to Defendant‘s requested fees. Over half of Plaintiffs’ objections are to entries of one hour or less.5 Upon review, those entries do not constitute impermissible block billing because they bill for closely related tasks, each covering no more than one hour. The entries that Plaintiffs objected to that were over one hour are also not impermissible block billing because those entries list different parts of the same task and the Court can still ascertain the reasonableness of the fees. For example, the highest entry Plaintiffs objected to on the grounds of impermissible block billing was for 2.3 hours. The description reads: “Review, edit and finalize Motion to Dismiss from Justin; legal research in connection with the same.” (Doc. 93-1 p. 4). This entry merely lists different parts of the same task: preparing
2. Clerical, Administrative, and/or Secretarial Tasks
Plaintiffs object that 97 of Defendant‘s entries describe clerical or secretarial work which should not be reimbursed. (Doc. 93 p. 10-12). The Court agrees that clerical and secretarial tasks are not recoverable. See, e.g., Missouri v. Jenkins, 491 U.S. 274, 288, n. 10 (1989) (“[P]urely clerical or secretarial tasks should not be billed at a paralegal rate, regardless of who performs them.“); Neil v. Comm‘r of Soc. Sec., 495 F. App‘x 845, 847 (9th Cir. 2012) (holding that “the district court did not abuse its discretion in declining to award [] attorney‘s fees for purely clerical tasks“); Nadarajah v. Holder, 569 F.3d 906, 921 (9th Cir. 2009) (holding that clerical tasks “should have been subsumed in firm overhead rather than billed at paralegal rates“); Pearson v. Nat‘l Credit Sys., Inc., No. CV-10-0526-PHX-MHM, 2010 WL 5146805, at *3 (D. Ariz. Dec. 13, 2010) (“[T]asks which are clerical in nature are not recoverable.“). Examples of clerical or secretarial tasks include6 “filing documents and preparing and serving summons,” Neil, 495 F. App‘x at 847, “filing, transcript, and document organization,” Nadarajah, 569 F.3d at 921, and “scheduling, calendaring activities, and bates labeling documents.” Scottsdale Gas Co. LLC v. Tesoro Ref. & Mktg. Co. LLC, No. CV-19-05291-PHX-SPL, 2021 WL 2895501, at *5 (D. Ariz. July 9, 2021) (quoting eMove Inc. v. SMD Software Inc., 2012 WL 4856276, at *7 (D. Ariz. Oct. 11, 2012), aff‘d, 569 F. App‘x 527 (9th Cir. 2014)).7 Tasks “involv[ing] some legal skill as well as clerical skill” may be compensable. Quade ex rel. Quade v. Barnhart, 570 F. Supp. 2d 1164, 1167 (D. Ariz. 2008). If a court finds “clerical tasks [were] billed at hourly rates, the court should reduce the hours requested to account for the billing errors.” Nadarajah, 569 F.3d at 921.
The Court agrees that some of Defendant‘s time entries are for clerical tasks such as calendaring, scheduling, and bates labeling documents. Tasks that included a clerical
Many of the other objected-to tasks included sufficient legal skill to constitute legal work—not purely clerical work. The Court will not reduce the fees billed for those tasks. For instance, some of Plaintiffs’ objections concern time spent reviewing court orders and motions, but review of legal documents requires legal skill. Similarly, drafting a legal document, even if perfunctory, involves at least some legal skill, and is thus compensable as well. See Silva v. Colvin, No. EDCV 15-00154-DTB, 2016 WL 11520700, at *4 (C.D. Cal. Aug. 12, 2016); Quade, 570 F. Supp. 2d at 1167-68. Review and revision of documents that will be filed with the Court are also not purely clerical tasks. Royal All. Assocs. v. Mora, No. 15-cv-03706-JST, 2016 WL 3346521, at *3 (N.D. Cal. June 16, 2016). Finally, communication with one‘s client is compensable as it is an ethical obligation to “keep[] the client reasonably informed about the status of the matter and explain[] the matter to the extent reasonably necessary to permit the client to make informed decisions.” Quade, 570 F. Supp. 2d at 1167 (citation omitted); see also
3. Time Spent Talking With Coworkers
Plaintiffs object that over 100 of Defendant‘s entries include “time spent talking with coworkers” which should not be reimbursed. (Doc. 93 p. 12-13). Though Plaintiff cited cases to support this proposition, none of those cases applied Arizona law. The most persuasive case cited, and the case addressed by Defendant, is McNamara v. Infusion Software, Inc., No. CV-17-04026-PHX-SPL, 2020 WL 4921984 (D. Ariz. Aug. 21, 2020). Plaintiffs read this case as “recognizing that the court can reduce a requested fee award for
In McNamara, the disputed time entries were those “where several timekeepers billed for the same internal meeting” or “where only one timekeeper billed for an internal meeting” but that meeting was allegedly unnecessary. 2020 WL 4921984, at *4. In response, counsel said their practice was to “bill for conferences among timekeepers only if the conference is necessary for the delegation of work that can be more economically done for the client by a lower-cost timekeeper.” Id. The court did not find any of the entries “to be unnecessary or duplicative” because the entries reflected a need “to delegate work to save money to their clients.” Id.
The Court reviewed the time entries identified by Plaintiffs as “time spent talking with coworkers” and finds that the entries are appropriate.9 Plaintiffs objected to time entries where a partner met with a paralegal, others where a partner met with a senior associate, and others where a senior associate met with a paralegal. These are clearly the types of conferences referenced in McNamara: those “necessary for the delegation of work that can be more economically done for the client by a lower-cost timekeeper.” 2020 WL 4921984, at *4. All time entries included a description of the topic of communication in accordance with the local rules. For most intra-office communications, only one party billed time. Notably, nearly every time that a paralegal met with either a partner or a senior associate, only the paralegal billed time, resulting in the lower cost considered by McNamara. Puzzlingly, Plaintiffs also objected to some entries that did not involve communication on the basis that it was “time spent talking with coworkers.” See, e.g., Doc 93-1 p. 4 (“Review, edit and finalize Motion to Dismiss from Justin; legal research in connection with same“). The Court found one instance where two timekeepers billed different hours for what was readily identifiable as the same conference. (Doc. 93-1 p. 1).
iii. Whether Award Should Be Further Adjusted or Enhanced
Courts may also consider the thirteen factors listed in LRCiv 54.2(c)(3) when determining the reasonableness of an attorneys’ fee request. Neither party raises these factors and many of these factors have already been factored into the Court‘s analysis. Thus, the Court will not sua sponte analyze these factors as a means of adjusting the fee award.
c. Time Spent Preparing Reply
In the Reply, Defendant requests that the Court award an additional $2,035.50 for the attorneys’ fees incurred in preparing the Reply. (Doc. 94 p. 11).
The purpose of
d. Costs
III. CONCLUSION
The Court awards Defendant attorneys’ fees and costs totaling $64,376.00. The Court itemized its reductions to the fee award in the spreadsheet attached as an appendix to this Order.
For the reasons set forth above,
IT IS ORDERED that Defendant‘s Motion for Attorneys’ Fees (Doc. 90) is GRANTED to the limited extent that Defendant is awarded $64,376.00 in attorneys’ fees.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that to the extent Doc. 90 also contains a request for costs, that request is denied as duplicative of the bill of costs which will be processed in due course by the Clerk of the Court consistent with Local Rule Civil 54.1.
Dated this 4th day of October, 2024.
James A. Teilborg
Senior United States District Judge
Attached: APPENDIX A
*If a clerical task was included in a list that included non-clerical tasks and the entire entry was for .1 hours, the lowest billing unit possible, the Court did not make a reduction.
| Date | User | Description | Hours | Rate ($) | Billable ($) | Court‘s basis for reduction | Reduction (hours) | Overall Reduction ($) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3/2/2023 | C.M. | Conference with D. Degnan Re: Terms of Fee Agreement; Draft Fee Agreement; Open file in P:/Drive; Create new matter in Clio including Clio Connect; Email to Client Re: Same | 1.00 | $ 75.00 | $ 75.00 | Task does not involve legal skill. Purely clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 7.50 |
| 3/10/2023 | K.B. | Review Superior Court Docket; confer with M. Horne and J. Fouts re: Order to Show Cause Hearing; calendar same | 0.20 | $ 225.00 | $ 45.00 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 22.50 |
| 3/13/2023 | S.S. | Finalized Cease and Desist Demand Letter; emailed Cease and Desist Demand Letter to opposing counsel; calendared deadline to receive contractual documents from opposing counsel; email to client regarding same | 0.90 | $ 195.00 | $ 175.50 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 3/14/2023 | K.B. | Confer with M. Horne re: deadline to file Notice of Removal with Federal Court and need to pull all Superior Court documents | 0.20 | $ 225.00 | $ 45.00 | Reduced by .1 hours to match entry by Mark Horne for same conference. | 0.10 | $ 22.50 |
| 3/14/2023 | S.S. | Pulled copies of pleadings from eAccess Superior Court website and processed payment | 0.50 | $ 195.00 | $ 97.50 | Task does not involve legal skill. Purely clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.50 | $ 97.50 |
| 3/21/2023 | M.M. | Meet with attorney M. Horne regarding Order to Show Cause hearing set for Friday 3/24 (.1); conference call to judge‘s assistant to verify Order to Show Cause Hearing has been vacated (.1); update calendar to reflect same (.1) | 0.30 | $ 195.00 | $ 58.50 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 3/23/2023 | K.B. | Email from opposing counsel approving Stipulation and Proposed Order for Extension of Time (.1); revise and finalize Stipulation and Order (.2); file Stipulation and Order with Court (.1); email copy of filed Stipulation and Order to opposing counsel, chambers for Judge Rayes and client (.1) | 0.50 | $ 225.00 | $ 112.50 | Unclear what counsel actually did with regard to email from opposing counsel. | 0.10 | $ 22.50 |
| 3/24/2023 | K.B. | Confer with M. Horne and J. Fouts re: deadline for Response to Temporary Restraining Order; review Local Arizona Federal Rules and calendar same | 0.20 | $ 225.00 | $ 45.00 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 22.50 |
| 4/5/2023 | K.B. | Confer with M. Horne re: revisions to Motion to Dismiss and Certificate of Good Faith (.1); revise and finalize Motion and Certificate and file with Federal Court via ECF (.3); email copies of filed documents to opposing counsel and client and calendar response deadline (.1) | 0.50 | $ 225.00 | $ 112.50 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 22.50 |
| 6/16/2023 | S.S. | Confer with attorney J. Fouts regarding the Court‘s Order regarding the Motion to Dismiss and the Court‘s Order setting Rule 16 Conference; calendared Answer deadline; calendared deadline to file Motion for Reconsideration; calendared Rule 16 Conference and other deadlines contained in the Court‘s Order | 0.60 | $ 195.00 | $ 117.00 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.30 | $ 58.50 |
| 6/22/2023 | M.M. | Conference call with client to set meeting with attorney J. Fouts regarding Answer and other deadlines; calendar same | 0.20 | $ 195.00 | $ 39.00 | Scheduling is clerical / secretarial activity. Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.20 | $ 39.00 |
| 6/29/2023 | K.B. | Telephone call to client to set conference call with M. Horne re: Answer review | 0.10 | $ 225.00 | $ 22.50 | Scheduling is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 22.50 |
| 7/21/2023 | S.S. | Confer with attorney J. Fouts regarding the deadlines in the Scheduling Order; updated calendar information regarding deadlines | 0.30 | $ 195.00 | $ 58.50 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 7/31/2023 | S.S. | Conferred with attorney J. Fouts regarding Disclosure Statement; Revised and finalized Notice of Service of Defendant‘s Rule 26(A) Initial Disclosure Statement and Defendant‘s Rule 26(A) Initial Disclosure Statement; bates labeled exhibit; filed Notice of Service of Defendant‘s Rule 26(A) Initial Disclosure Statement; email to opposing counsel regarding same; email to client regarding same | 1.10 | $ 195.00 | $ 214.50 | Bates labeling documents is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 8/3/2023 | S.S. | Revised and finalized settlement letter; email to opposing counsel regarding same; email to client regarding same; calendared response deadline | 0.50 | $ 195.00 | $ 97.50 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 9/7/2023 | S.S. | Confer with attorney J. Fouts regarding scheduling a call with client; email correspondence with client regarding same; calendared appointment | 0.30 | $ 195.00 | $ 58.50 | Scheduling is clerical / secretarial activity. Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.30 | $ 58.50 |
| 9/27/2023 | S.S. | Email correspondence with client regarding scheduling conference call with attorney J. Fouts; calendared same | 0.20 | $ 195.00 | $ 39.00 | Scheduling is clerical / secretarial activity. Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.20 | $ 39.00 |
| 10/3/2023 | J.F. | (JF) Receive and review letter client sent to Allied Universal regarding hostile work environment issues; draft email to client setting up call to discuss same | 0.20 | $ 325.00 | $ 65.00 | Scheduling is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 32.50 |
| 10/4/2023 | S.S. | Email correspondence with client regarding possible deposition dates; updated calendar; email to opposing counsel regarding same | 0.10 | $ 195.00 | $ 19.50 | Scheduling is clerical / secretarial activity. Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 10/12/2023 | S.S. | Telephone call from client regarding Discovery Responses; created dropbox link and emailed link to client | 0.30 | $ 195.00 | $ 58.50 | Creating Dropbox link and sending to client does not require legal skill. Purely clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 11/13/2023 | D.D. | (DD) Review Discovery Dispute; conference with J. Fouts re: scheduling our own Discovery Dispute | 0.30 | $ 500.00 | $ 150.00 | Scheduling is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 50.00 |
| 11/20/2023 | S.S. | Conference with attorney J. Fouts regarding finalizing and sending letters (.1); finalized letters to opposing counsel (.3); emailed letters to opposing counsel (.1); emailed letters to client (.1); calendared deadline to receive contract and resources from opposing counsel (.1) | 0.70 | $ 195.00 | $ 136.50 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 12/18/2023 | S.S. | Conference with attorney J. Fouts regarding Discovery Dispute (.1); calendared internal deadline to file same (.1) | 0.20 | $ 195.00 | $ 39.00 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 12/19/2023 | S.S. | Reviewed and saved Order entered by the Court regarding Joint Discovery Request (.1); conference with attorney J. Fouts regarding same (.2); email to client regarding same (.1); calendared deadlines (.1) | 0.50 | $ 195.00 | $ 97.50 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 12/27/2023 | S.S. | Reviewed email from client regarding scheduling a call with attorney J. Fouts (.1); conference with attorney J. Fouts regarding same (.1); email correspondence with client regarding scheduling a conference call with attorney J. Fouts (.1); calendared conference call | 0.40 | $ 195.00 | $ 78.00 | Scheduling is clerical / secretarial activity. Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.40 | $ 78.00 |
| 12/28/2023 | S.S. | Reviewed and saved Subpoena‘s received from opposing counsel (.2); conferences with attorney J. Fouts regarding same (.2); email correspondence with client regarding same (.2); calendared objection deadline (.1) | 0.70 | $ 195.00 | $ 136.50 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 1/2/2024 | S.S. | Email correspondence with opposing counsel regarding scheduling a call with attorney J. Fouts regarding Subpoenas (.2); conference with attorney J. Fouts regarding same (.2); email to opposing counsel regarding scheduling a conference call with attorney J. Fouts (.1) | 0.50 | $ 195.00 | $ 97.50 | Scheduling is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.50 | $ 97.50 |
| 1/5/2024 | S.S. | Conference with attorney J. Fouts regarding possible deposition date for client (.1); placed a hold on the calendar regarding same (.1) | 0.20 | $ 195.00 | $ 39.00 | Scheduling is clerical / secretarial activity. Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.20 | $ 39.00 |
| 1/8/2024 | S.S. | Calendared deadline for opposing counsel regarding Discovery Dispute | 0.10 | $ 195.00 | $ 19.50 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 1/9/2024 | S.S. | Conference with attorney J. Fouts regarding depositions of Ace Building Maintenance Company and Restoration HQ (.1); calendared same (.1) | 0.20 | $ 195.00 | $ 39.00 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 1/15/2024 | S.S. | Conference with attorney J. Fouts regarding email from opposing counsel (.1); calendared response deadline (.1) | 0.20 | $ 195.00 | $ 39.00 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 1/16/2024 | S.S. | Finalized Defendant‘s First Request for Admissions to Plaintiffs, Defendant‘s First Request for Production of Documents to Plaintiffs and Defendant‘s First Request for Non-Uniform Interrogatories (.3); finalized and filed Notice of Service of Defendant‘s Discovery Requests to Plaintiffs (.3); email to opposing counsel regarding same (.1); email to client regarding same (.1); calendared response deadline (.1) | 0.90 | $ 195.00 | $ 175.50 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 1/18/2024 | S.S. | Calendared deadline to produce all documents or information per Court‘s Order | 0.10 | $ 195.00 | $ 19.50 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 1/18/2024 | S.S. | Conference with attorney J. Fouts regarding scheduling a call with client (.1); email correspondence with client regarding same (.1); calendared conference call (.1) | 0.30 | $ 195.00 | $ 58.50 | Scheduling is clerical / secretarial activity. Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.30 | $ 58.50 |
| 1/19/2024 | S.S. | Email to client regarding Notice of Deposition (.1); calendared deposition (.1) | 0.20 | $ 195.00 | $ 39.00 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 1/25/2024 | S.S. | Telephone call from client (.1); conference with attorney J. Fouts regarding same (.1); telephone call to client (.1); calendared conference call between client and attorney J. Fouts (.1) | 0.40 | $ 195.00 | $ 78.00 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 1/31/2024 | S.S. | Finalized Defendant‘s First Supplemental Response to Plaintiffs’ First Set of Requests for Production of Documents and Defendant‘s First Supplemental Response to Plaintiffs’ First Set of Interrogatories (.1); finalized Notice of Service of Defendant‘s First Supplemental Response to Plaintiffs’ First Set of Requests for Production of Documents and Defendant‘s First Supplemental Response to Plaintiffs’ First Set of Interrogatories (.1); bates labeled exhibits to Defendant‘s First Supplemental Response to Plaintiffs’ First Set of Request for Production of Documents (.2); created dropbox link for exhibits (.2) | 0.60 | $ 195.00 | $ 117.00 | Bates labeling documents is clerical / secretarial activity. Creating Dropbox link does not require legal skill. Purely clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.40 | $ 78.00 |
| 1/31/2024 | S.S. | Reviewed, revised and finalized Defendant‘s First Supplemental Disclosure Statement (.5); bates labeled exhibits (.2); created dropbox link for exhibits (.2); prepared Notice of Service of Defendant‘s First Supplemental Disclosure Statement | 0.60 | $ 195.00 | $ 117.00 | Bates labeling documents is clerical / secretarial activity. Creating Dropbox link does not require legal skill. Clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.40 | $ 78.00 |
| 2/13/2024 | S.S. | Email correspondence with client regarding scheduling conference call with attorney J. Fouts (.1); confer with attorney J. Fouts regarding same (.1); calendared conference call (.1) | 0.30 | $ 195.00 | $ 58.50 | Scheduling activities is clerical / secretarial activity. Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.30 | $ 58.50 |
| 3/4/2024 | S.S. | Email correspondence with client regarding scheduling a time to come to the office and review Motion for Summary Judgment (.2); calendared same (.1) | 0.30 | $ 195.00 | $ 58.50 | Scheduling is clerical / secretarial activity. Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.30 | $ 58.50 |
| 3/4/2024 | S.S. | Confer with J. Fouts regarding deadline to send any deposition changes to the court reporter (.2); calendared deadline (.1) | 0.30 | $ 195.00 | $ 58.50 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 3/5/2024 | S.S. | Confer with J. Fouts regarding copies of filed documents 1 and 2 (.1); accessed Court Docket; downloaded and saved copies of same (.2) | 0.30 | $ 195.00 | $ 58.50 | Document organization, such as downloading and saving, is a clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.20 | $ 39.00 |
| 3/6/2024 | S.S. | Email correspondence with Judge‘s Judicial Assistant regarding hand delivering a courtesy copy of Motion for Summary Judgment (.2); confer with attorney J. Fouts regarding same (.1); pulled and saved file stamped copy of Motion for Summary Judgment and Exhibits from Court‘s electronic filing website (.1); prepared instructions to courier to hand deliver a copy of Motion for Summary Judgment to the Judge‘s chambers (.1) | 0.50 | $ 195.00 | $ 97.50 | Document organization, such as downloading and saving, is a clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 3/11/2024 | S.S. | Confer with J. Fouts regarding response deadline to Motion for Summary Judgment (.1); re-calendared deadline (.1) | 0.20 | $ 195.00 | $ 39.00 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 4/15/2024 | S.S. | Reviewed email from J. Fouts to opposing counsel regarding counteroffer (.1); calendared response deadline (.1) | 0.20 | $ 195.00 | $ 39.00 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 4/22/2024 | S.S. | Email correspondence with client regarding scheduling a conference call with J. Fouts (.1); calendared same (.1) | 0.20 | $ 195.00 | $ 39.00 | Scheduling is clerical / secretarial activity. Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.20 | $ 39.00 |
| 6/7/2024 | S.S. | Confer with J. Fouts regarding the Court‘s ruling on our Motion for Summary Judgment (.1); reviewed ruling from the Court (.1); calendared deadline to file motion for fees (.1) | 0.30 | $ 195.00 | $ 58.50 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 6/10/2024 | S.S. | Telephone call from client regarding scheduling conference call with J. Fouts (.1); calendared same (.1) | 0.20 | $ 195.00 | $ 39.00 | Scheduling is clerical / secretarial activity. Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.20 | $ 39.00 |
| 6/21/2024 | S.S. | Calendared Meet and Confer regarding attorneys’ fees | 0.10 | $ 195.00 | $ 19.50 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| Below entries are time spent preparing the reply | ||||||||
| 7/12/2024 | S.S. | Reviewed and saved Stipulation for Extension of Time to Respond to Defendant‘s Motion for Award of Attorneys’ Fees, Taxable and Non-Taxable Expenses filed by opposing counsel and calendared deadline | 0.20 | $ 195.00 | $ 39.00 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 7/23/2024 | S.S. | Reviewed and saved Plaintiffs‘Response in Opposition to Defendant‘s Motion for Award of Attorneys’ Fees, Taxable and Non-Taxable Expenses along with the Exhibit (.2); email to client regarding same (.1); calendared deadline to file Reply (.1) | 0.40 | $ 195.00 | $ 78.00 | Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.10 | $ 19.50 |
| 7/24/2024 | S.S. | Email correspondence with client regarding scheduling call with J. Fouts (.1); calendared same (.1) | 0.20 | $ 195.00 | $ 39.00 | Scheduling is clerical / secretarial activity. Calendaring activities is clerical / secretarial activity. | 0.20 | $ 39.00 |
| Total Reductions | $ 1,726.50 | |||||||
| Requested Fees | $ 64,067.00 |
| + Requested Fees for time spent preparing reply | $ 2,035.50 |
| = Requested Fees (Total) | $ 66,102.50 |
| - Reductions (Total) | $ 1,726.50 |
| = Total Attorneys’ Fees Award (fees minus reduction) | $ 64,376.00 |
