Coalition to Save Our Children v. State Board of Education of Delaware

901 F. Supp. 824, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13771
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedAugust 14, 1995
DocketCiv. A. 56-1816-SLR to 56-1822-SLR
StatusPublished
Cited by124 cases

This text of 901 F. Supp. 824 (Coalition to Save Our Children v. State Board of Education of Delaware) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coalition to Save Our Children v. State Board of Education of Delaware, 901 F. Supp. 824, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13771 (D. Del. 1995).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

SUE L. ROBINSON, District Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

Presently before the court are two applications for attorney’s fees and costs associated *827 with plaintiffs opposition to defendant Red Clay Consolidated School District’s (“Red Clay”) motion for open enrollment (the “Open Enrollment Motion”). (D.I. 1802; 1811) (the “fee applications”) The attorneys originally applied for fees without any documentation to support their applications. The court then ordered the parties to submit documentation (D.I.1978) which counsel submitted and the court has now thoroughly reviewed. This is the court’s decision as to the merits of counsels’ applications.

II. BACKGROUND 1

Prior to the hearing on defendants’ motion for unitary status, defendant Red Clay moved the court to modify the standing injunction requiring students to attend a minimum of three consecutive years of education in formerly predominately black schools (“city schools”). (D.I. 1701) On August 29, 1995, the court denied Red Clay’s motion, holding as follows:

If one simply reviews the numbers generated in connection with this motion, one can argue (as plaintiff does) that Red Clay’s open enrollment proposal is not compatible with the desegregation process .... If Red Clay’s open enrollment proposal were being reviewed in the broader context of defining the ultimate goals of this litigation, the statistical snapshot presented at bar would be insufficient in and of itself, to sidetrack the proposal. In the context of the court’s past analytical framework, however, sufficient concerns have been raised to preclude approval of Red Clay’s motion for open enrollment as it applies to the 1994-95 school year.

(D.I. 1780 at 9) On September 20, 1994, plaintiffs lead counsel, the law firm of Cravath, Swain & Moore (“Cravath”) applied for attorney’s fees for legal services performed in connection with said motion. (D.I. 1802) On October 11, 1994, plaintiffs additional counsel, Louis Lucas, also applied for attorney’s fees in connection with his work on said motion. (D.I. 1811) Red Clay opposes each fee application both as a general matter, and as to specific components thereof. (D.I. 1808, 1822)

A. Cravath’s Application for Attorney’s Fees

Cravath seeks fees for three separate activities. First, it seeks fees for the preparation of three briefs and seven declarations. (D.I. 1715; 1721; 1771; 1773) These briefs consist of a total of 63 pages of text. Next it seeks fees for appearances before the court including several teleconferences and one hearing. 2 (D.I. 1713; 1723; 1757; 1770) As previously noted, the August 18, 1994 hearing addressed the Open Enrollment Motion only briefly. (D.I. 1770 at 1-20) Third, Cra-vath seeks compensation for the document discovery it alleges occurred May 20, May 23 — May 25, and August 8, 1994 and for the preparation of two depositions. (D.I. 1801 at 1-5) Cravath also seeks compensation for various expenses including: $7,101.72 for travel expenses, $6,959.47 for disbursements, $34,044.08 for document reproduction, telephone, facsimile, computer research and messenger charges. (Id. at 8; 1980)

Red Clay objects to Cravath’s application on several grounds. As an initial matter, Red Clay objects to the application philosophically, arguing without citation that Congress did not intend the fee shifting provision of 42 U.S.C. § 1988 to apply to “gross and excessive overlawyering” for a narrow motion such as the one at issue. (D.I. 1808 at 2) Red Clay also objects to the motion as deficient on its face and, based on the documents filed by Cravath, concludes that many of these services must have been performed in connection with the motion for unitary status. Finally, as to the expenses requested by Cravath, Red Clay notes that they are not compensable expenses. (D.I. 1808; 1986)

*828 In its initial motion, Cravath did not actually request a specific dollar amount. Rather, it requested compensation for a total of 3,525.4 hours expended by professional and paraprofessional staff. (D.I. 1801) After Red Clay challenged this figure, Cravath decreased its request to 3027.6 hours and withdrew its request to be reimbursed for secretarial expenses. (D.I. 1812 at 3; 1980 at 3) Originally, Cravath delineated the hours requested by partner, associate, summer associate, legal assistant, and secretarial staff. (D.I. 1801, Ex. A) Nowhere in its application had Cravath demonstrated how many hours any individual spent on any given task. Rather, it just listed various tasks and how many total hours staff utilized in connection with the Open Enrollment Motion. (D.I. 1801)

The court, concluding that it could determine neither the reasonableness of the hours spent nor the reasonableness of the fees charged and costs incurred without documentation, ordered Cravath to supplement its application with proof of the hours claimed and costs. (D.I. 1978) In a letter accompanying the documentation, Cravath states, inter alia, the following:

We neither requested nor expected the Court to award a figure equal to the total amount we expended in our representation of the Coalition.
Had Cravath hoped or expected that its representation of the Coalition would “pay for itself[,]”[ ] we would have submitted to this Court an attorney’s fees application for the full amount of hours worked by Cravath attorneys at our standard billing rates. Instead, and in the spirit of our pro bono undertaking, although Cravath attorneys spent the majority of their approximately 6,700 hours of work related to the Coalition matters through August 30, 1994 working on Red Clay’s Open Enrollment motion, we submitted to the Court the considerably more conservative figure of 3027.6 hours, or approximately 45% of the total attorney and paralegal hours spent representing the Coalition, at half our standard billing rates, for a total of $249,-488.75. (D.I. 1812 at 2). Our standard billing rates would require that the true fees at issue amount to about one-half million dollars.

(D.I. 1979 at 2) While the court appreciates Cravath’s self-professed intent to limit its attorney’s fees and cost application, the documents submitted to support said request fail to do so.

B. Lucas’ Application for Attorney’s Fees

Lucas’s fee application is quite similar to that of Cravath in that it originally provided no documentation for his claims. (D.I. 1811) Lucas originally asserted that he spent a total of 56.1 3 hours, among other things, assisting in drafting briefs and conducting discovery on May 20, 1994. (Id.) In response to the aforementioned court order (D.I. 1978), Lucas submitted additional documents supporting his request for fees and costs. Interestingly, although Lucas originally claimed his main tasks were the preparation of briefs and document review, when required to document his hours to reach a total of 56.2 hours, nearly half of them are for other tasks. (D.I.

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Bluebook (online)
901 F. Supp. 824, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coalition-to-save-our-children-v-state-board-of-education-of-delaware-ded-1995.