Barko v. Halliburton Company

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedDecember 6, 2018
DocketCivil Action No. 2005-1276
StatusPublished

This text of Barko v. Halliburton Company (Barko v. Halliburton Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barko v. Halliburton Company, (D.D.C. 2018).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF'COLUMBIA

)

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ) ex rel. HARRY BARKO ) )

Plaintiff-Relator, )

v. ) Civil Case No. 05-1276

HALLI_BURTON COMPANY e_t al., ) )

Defendants`. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

After more than a` decade of litigation, twelve opinions by three different district judges, and two writs of mandamus from the Court of Appeals, this Court grant`ed summary judgment for defendants in this qui tam suit, rejecting Barko’s claim that government contractor KBR (a Halliburton subsidiary) engaged in improper procurement practices. A few weeks later, KBR submitted a proposed bill of costs for $109,446.74. Barko opposed the proposal, arguing it violated this Court’s Local Rules, this Circuit’s caselaw, and 28 U.S.C. § 1920. Nevertheless, the

clerk taxed the full bill.

Barko now moves to retax costs, asking this Court to overturn the clerk’s application of Local Rule 54.1. But he misunderstands the standard under 54. l (e) and has no answer to either the Court’s broader discretion under Federal Rule 54 or 28 U.S.C. § 1920’s more flexible definition of costs. Because KBR’s costs fall within § 1920 and are adequately justified, the

Court will deny Barko’s retax motion.

Before reviewing the clerk’s initial taxation, it is helpful to delimit this Court’s taxing

authority under Federal Rule 54 and § 1920 from the clerk’s taxing authority under Local Rule 54.1(¢Hd). y

Local Rule 54.l(c)-(d) constrains the clerk’s taxation. Absent agreement or court order, 54. l(c) requires the clerk to tax certain costs according to the prevailing party’s' request once the judgment becomes final. And 54. l(d) limits the clerk’.s taxation to fourteen discrete categories of

costs: 1. clerk’s .fees; 2. service of process costs; 3. marshal’s fees and expenses per 28 U.S.C. § 1921; 4. docket fees and costs p_er 28 U.S.C. § 1923; 5. cost of a security furnished under statute, court order, or rule;

6. costs, at the reporter’s standard rate, for the original and one copy of the transcript of any depositions the prevailing party noticed, and for one copy of any deposition any other

party noticed, if the deposition was used on the record, at a hearing, or trial;

7. costs, at the reporter’s standard rate, for the original and one copy of the transcript of a hearing or trial if the prevailing party alleged it was necessary for the determination of an

appeal within Fed. R. App. P 39(e), or if the court required it to be transcribed;

8. copying costs for exhibits introduced into evidence, used for impeachment, or filed with

the clerk;

10.

ll.

12.

13.

14.

other copying costs up to $300;

for witnesses who testified at a hearing or trial, fees, travel, and subsistence costs per 28

U.S.C. § 182l(b)-(c); costs for serving subpoenas on witnesses who testified at a deposition, hearing, or trial;

fees for court-appointed experts, fees for interpreters at a trial or hearing, and fees and

expenses for special interpretation services under 28 U.S.C. § 1828;

similar costs incurred in the District of Columbia courts prior to removal and recoverable

under District o_f Columbia Court of Appeals or Superior Court rules; and

costs` shown on the Court of Appeals’s mandate.

See also LCvR 54.l(a) (requiring the proposed bill “specifically itemize with supporting

documentation the particular costs sought under the[se] specific categories”).

But on either party’s retax motion, a judge may either deny costs the clerk allowed or tax

additional costs under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(d). LCvR 54.1(e). To “define[] the

term ‘costs’ as used in Rule 54(d),” Crawford Fitting C0. v. .I T. Gibbons, Inc., 4821 U.S. 437,

441 (1987), § 1920 identifies six general categories:

l.

clerk and marshal fees;

fees for printed or electronically recorded transcripts necessarily obtained for use in the

case; fees and disbursements for printing and witnesses;

exemplification fees and copying costs necessarily incurred for use in the case;

5. docket fees under 28 U.S.C. § 1923; and

6. compensation for court appointed experts and interpreters, and salaries, fees, expenses,

and costs for special interpretation services under 28 U.S.C. § 1828.

II Barko challenges th_e clerk’s initial taxation on three fronts:

First, Barko identifies four issues under Local Rule 54.1. He argues $99,662.09 of the initial taxation fell outside the 54.l(d) categories He also claims KBR’s concession to deposition transcript costs under 54.1_it initially requested $l9,653.68 but acceded to just $9,784`.65 in its reply brief_amounted to a second and untimely taxation request. In the alternative, he argues the clerk should not have taxed costs for five depositions ($2,801.10 of the $9,784.65) since those depositions were merely “lodged,” not “filed” with the Court. Similarly, he argues the clerk improperly taxed $442.10 for exhibit copying costs because the exhibits were merely

“lodged,” not “filed.”

In response, KBR challenges each contention’s merits, but also argues even if parts of the clerk’s taxation exceeded her authority under Local Rule 54.1, all of KBR’s proposed costs fall

into § l920’s six categories and thus within the Court’s taxation authority now.

Second, Barko claims Federal Rule 54, § 1920, and out-of-circuit caselaw support setting aside the clerk’s taxation. Given § l920’s necessity requirement for transcription and copying costs, Barko argues KBR failed to justify its need for expedited (including ASCII) deposition

transcripts or video recordings, for two status hearing transcripts, or for copying costs. Next

Barko claims § 1920 does not authorize the witness costs taxed by the clerk. Finally, Barko argues KBR misconstrued the persuasive authority it cites to support applying § 1920 to e- discovery materials, and marshals his own persuasive authority suggesting § 1920 should not

apply to e-discovery labor costs.

KBR argues it adequately justified its need for the expedited deposition transcripts and video recordings, for two status hearing transcripts, and for copying costs. lt also claims the witness costs are allowed by § 1920 and adequately justified As to the e-discovery issues, KBR cites some more out-of-circuit caselaw supporting § l920’s application to e-discovery copying

costs.

"l`hird_saving his biggest.arg`ument for last-Barko claims it is inequitable and ` inappropriate to award KBR any costs at all. For support, he cites more out-of-circuit cases and points to his goodfaith and reasonableness, the case’s alleged closeness and difficulty, the potential for a chilling effect on future relators, the financial disparity between him and KBR,

and his suit’s claimed public benefit.

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