Albion Pacific Property Resources, LLC v. Seligman

329 F. Supp. 2d 1163, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14738, 2004 WL 1698859
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedJuly 1, 2004
DocketC-03-3427 VRW
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 329 F. Supp. 2d 1163 (Albion Pacific Property Resources, LLC v. Seligman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albion Pacific Property Resources, LLC v. Seligman, 329 F. Supp. 2d 1163, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14738, 2004 WL 1698859 (N.D. Cal. 2004).

Opinion

ORDER

WALKER, District Judge.

Plaintiff seeks attorney fees after prevailing on a motion to remand this action to state court under a federal fee-shifting statute. Because 28 USC § 1447(c) provides for recovery of such fees, the court must decide whether and what to award. The latter calls upon the court to figure the amount of a “reasonable attorney fee.”

Defendants removed this case to federal court July 23, 2003. Doc # 1. On November 25, 2003, the court remanded the case and granted plaintiffs motion for costs and fees, with the amount of the cost and fee award to be determined after further submissions from the parties. Plaintiff submitted a request for costs and attorney fees in the amount of $81,288.96. PI Memo (Doc # 49). According to the analysis below, the court awards plaintiff costs and attorney fees in the amount of $27,956.36.

*1165 I

Plaintiffs request for attorney fees results from its successful motion to remand, in which plaintiff argued that the notice of removal was defective and untimely. See PI Mot (Doc # 15). Plaintiff subsequently filed a letter requesting leave to obtain discovery on the issue of the parties’ citizenship to determine whether a lack of federal subject matter jurisdiction also required remand. Letter, William Huckins to Vaughn Walker, October 21, 2003 (Doc # 36). Defendants opposed plaintiffs request for discovery and proposed, quite reasonably, that the court first consider the simple procedural arguments in plaintiffs filed motion before the parties researched and briefed the more complicated jurisdictional matters. Letter, Michael Kirby to William Huckins, October 10, 2003 (Doc # 56, Exh A) at 2-3. Plaintiff declined to follow defendants’ suggestion and spent a considerable amount of unnecessary time and effort researching and briefing the jurisdictional issue.

The court granted plaintiffs motion to remand on the procedural ground that removal was untimely. Order (Doc #47). The court noted that deciding the jurisdictional issue was unnecessary because the procedural ground sufficed to remand. Id. The court also granted plaintiffs request for costs and attorney fees with the amount to be determined after submission of supplemental memoranda.

Plaintiff submitted a request for costs and attorney fees in the amount of $81,288.96. PI Memo (Doc # 49). Broken down more specifically, plaintiff requests the following for the work of its attorneys on the case: 79.1 hours at $450 per hour (“/hr”) for Nicholas Waranoff, 52.3 hours at $335/hr for William Huckins and 71.5 hours at $240/hr for Kathryn Perko. Plaintiff requests the following for the work of the legal assistants: 20.7 hours at $160/hr for Delia Cuenca and 1.1 hours for Anita Manfreda at $95/hr. Finally, plaintiff requests $7,596.96 in internet-based legal research costs.

II

A

Under 28 USC § 1447(c), the court may award “just costs and any actual expenses, including attorney fees, incurred as a result of the removal.”

Read narrowly, section 1447(c) could bar many plaintiffs who successfully move for remand from recovering their attorney fees. For example, a plaintiff who is represented on a contingent fee basis does not incur an incremental expense for attorney services in moving for remand.

The Ninth Circuit has rejected such a narrow interpretation of section 1447(c). In Gotro v. R & B Realty Group, 69 F.3d 1485 (9th Cir.1995), the Ninth Circuit held that a plaintiff who is represented on a contingent fee basis may recover attorney fees under section 1447(c). The Ninth Circuit concluded that Congress could have had “two possible reasons” for choosing the language “actual expenses * * * incurred.” First, this language distinguishes an award under section 1447(c) “from a punitive award which was associated with the formerly required bad faith finding.” Id. at 1487. Second, this language distinguishes an award under section 1447(c) “from the former requirement of a bond upon removal.” Id. at 1488. Accordingly, the Ninth Circuit upheld the district court’s $13,564.05 award, an amount presumably based on a lodestar calculation.

With respect to the amount of an award under section 1447(c), the Tenth Circuit has concluded that section 1447(c) requires courts to determine whether the requested *1166 fee is reasonable. See Huffman v. Saul Holdings Limited Partnership, 262 F.3d 1128 (10th Cir.2001). The Tenth Circuit noted that district courts have long presumed that an attorney fee award under section 1447(c) must be reasonable. Id. at 1134 (collecting cases). Pointing to the section 1447(c) language “incurred as a result of removal,” the court observed that “unreasonably high fees are not ‘incurred’ as a result of removal; rather, excessive fee requests flow from, and accumulate by means of, improper billing practices * * Id. at 1135. Nothing in section 1447(c) requires courts to award unreasonable, even if actually incurred, fees. Ibid. The Tenth Circuit stated: “Our holding is that the statute’s limit on actual fees to those ‘incurred as a result of removal’ requires the district court to conduct some sort of reasonableness inquiry.” Id. If courts must conduct “some sort of reasonableness inquiry,” a lodestar analysis would appear to be appropriate.

The Seventh Circuit has rejected reasonableness in determining attorney fees under section 1447(c). See Wisconsin v. Hotline Indus., Inc., 236 F.3d 363 (7th Cir.2000). The Seventh Circuit focused on the “actually * * * incurred” language in concluding that a court must award the “actual amount of fees incurred,” whether reasonable or not. Id at 368.

But the Seventh Circuit’s decision in Wisconsin appears to conflict with Ninth Circuit law. First, in Gotro, the Ninth Circuit rejected the type of strict construction given section 1447(c) by Wisconsin. The dissent spells out this holding even more clearly than the majority opinion. 69 F.3d at 1489-90 (O’Scannlain, J). The dissenting judge argued that under section 1447(c) plaintiffs who “actually incur litigation costs should be reimbursed while those who have not incurred any costs should have no such claim.” Id. at 1490. The majority’s rejection this proposition signals plainly that whether the plaintiff has or has not paid the attorney and, if so, how much, does not determine whether the court should make an award under section 1447(c). Second, in the Ninth Circuit, “[ujnder a fee-shifting statute, the court must calculate awards for attorneys’ fees using the lodestar method.” Staton v. Boeing Co., 327 F.3d 938, 965 (9th Cir. 2003) (internal quotation omitted). Wisconsin recognizes that section 1447(c) is a fee-shifting statute. Id. at 366. This points to a “reasonable fee,” as that term is widely interpreted.

Furthermore, the Ninth Circuit’s approach makes sense.

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Bluebook (online)
329 F. Supp. 2d 1163, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14738, 2004 WL 1698859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albion-pacific-property-resources-llc-v-seligman-cand-2004.