Dr. Bernard Heller Foundation, Herman Mark Harris and Ruth O. Freedlander, Herman Mark Harris v. Sidney Lee, Frieda Pettis, John Doe I, William Newkirk, Alan Bronstein, Andreas Esberg, Lewis Kranette, West Indies Investment Co., Inc., West Indies Investment Co. (St. Croix), St. Croix Real Estate Development Corporation, William Newkirk, Alan Bronstein, Andreas Esberg, Dr. Bernard Heller Foundation, Herman Mark Harris and Ruth O. Freedlander, Dr. Bernard Heller Foundation and Ruth O. Freedlander v. Sidney Lee, Frieda Pettis, John Doe I, William Newkirk, Alan Bronstein, Andreas Esberg, Lewis Kranette, West Indies Investment Co., Inc., West Indies Investment Co. (St. Croix), St. Croix Real Estate Development Corporation, William Newkirk, Alan Bronstein, Andreas Esberg

847 F.2d 83
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 27, 1988
Docket87-3609
StatusPublished

This text of 847 F.2d 83 (Dr. Bernard Heller Foundation, Herman Mark Harris and Ruth O. Freedlander, Herman Mark Harris v. Sidney Lee, Frieda Pettis, John Doe I, William Newkirk, Alan Bronstein, Andreas Esberg, Lewis Kranette, West Indies Investment Co., Inc., West Indies Investment Co. (St. Croix), St. Croix Real Estate Development Corporation, William Newkirk, Alan Bronstein, Andreas Esberg, Dr. Bernard Heller Foundation, Herman Mark Harris and Ruth O. Freedlander, Dr. Bernard Heller Foundation and Ruth O. Freedlander v. Sidney Lee, Frieda Pettis, John Doe I, William Newkirk, Alan Bronstein, Andreas Esberg, Lewis Kranette, West Indies Investment Co., Inc., West Indies Investment Co. (St. Croix), St. Croix Real Estate Development Corporation, William Newkirk, Alan Bronstein, Andreas Esberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dr. Bernard Heller Foundation, Herman Mark Harris and Ruth O. Freedlander, Herman Mark Harris v. Sidney Lee, Frieda Pettis, John Doe I, William Newkirk, Alan Bronstein, Andreas Esberg, Lewis Kranette, West Indies Investment Co., Inc., West Indies Investment Co. (St. Croix), St. Croix Real Estate Development Corporation, William Newkirk, Alan Bronstein, Andreas Esberg, Dr. Bernard Heller Foundation, Herman Mark Harris and Ruth O. Freedlander, Dr. Bernard Heller Foundation and Ruth O. Freedlander v. Sidney Lee, Frieda Pettis, John Doe I, William Newkirk, Alan Bronstein, Andreas Esberg, Lewis Kranette, West Indies Investment Co., Inc., West Indies Investment Co. (St. Croix), St. Croix Real Estate Development Corporation, William Newkirk, Alan Bronstein, Andreas Esberg, 847 F.2d 83 (3d Cir. 1988).

Opinion

847 F.2d 83

11 Fed.R.Serv.3d 354

DR. BERNARD HELLER FOUNDATION, Herman Mark Harris and Ruth
O. Freedlander, Herman Mark Harris, Appellant,
v.
Sidney LEE, Frieda Pettis, John Doe I, William Newkirk, Alan
Bronstein, Andreas Esberg, Lewis Kranette, West Indies
Investment Co., Inc., West Indies Investment Co. (St.
Croix), St. Croix Real Estate Development Corporation,
William Newkirk, Alan Bronstein, Andreas Esberg, Appellees.
DR. BERNARD HELLER FOUNDATION, Herman Mark Harris and Ruth
O. Freedlander, Dr. Bernard Heller Foundation and
Ruth O. Freedlander, Appellants,
v.
Sidney LEE, Frieda Pettis, John Doe I, William Newkirk, Alan
Bronstein, Andreas Esberg, Lewis Kranette, West Indies
Investment Co., Inc., West Indies Investment Co. (St.
Croix), St. Croix Real Estate Development Corporation,
William Newkirk, Alan Bronstein, Andreas Esberg, Appellees.

Nos. 87-3609, 87-3624.

United States Court of Appeals,
Third Circuit.

Argued April 18, 1988.
Decided May 23, 1988.
As Amended May 27, 1988.

Frederick G. Watts (argued), Garry W. Morse, Watts & Streibich, St. Thomas, U.S.V.I., for appellants.

Richard H. Hunter, Hunter Colianni Cole & Turner, Christiansted, St. Croix, U.S.V.I., for appellees, Andreas Esberg, Alan Bronstein and William Newkirk.

Before SEITZ, SLOVITER and BECKER, Circuit Judges.

OPINION OF THE COURT

SLOVITER, Circuit Judge.

I.

Factual and Procedural Background

The issues on this appeal concern only the district court's order requiring plaintiffs to pay for certain of the attorneys' fees and costs incurred by the successful defendants who are appellees here. Therefore, a brief summary of the underlying action will suffice for our purposes.

Dr. Bernard Heller and his nephew, Sidney Lee, each owned nearly 50% of the stock of West Indies Investment Co., Inc. and its two wholly-owned subsidiaries (jointly WIICO). When Dr. Heller died in 1976, he left his WIICO stock to the Dr. Bernard Heller Foundation (Foundation), a New York charitable trust. In 1985, the Board of Directors of WIICO agreed to liquidate WIICO, and such liquidation was completed by June 30, 1987.

In 1986, Herman Mark Harris, who had been Dr. Heller's attorney, and Ruth O. Freedlander, directors of WIICO and trustees of the Dr. Bernard Heller Foundation, and the Foundation, a major shareholder of WIICO, filed a stockholder's derivative suit in the District Court of the Virgin Islands, seeking an accounting and damages for alleged losses to WIICO attributable to financial transactions occurring over the course of a decade. The district court's jurisdiction was founded on V.I.Code Ann. tit. 4, Sec. 32 and tit. 13, Secs. 341 and 288.

The claims against the WIICO officers and directors, alleging that they converted corporate funds, committed fraud, and breached their fiduciary duties, were settled on April 27, 1987 for $250,000. These defendants are not parties to this appeal. The remaining claim, set forth in Count VII of the complaint, alleged that defendants William Newkirk, Alan Bronstein and Andreas Esberg, who were WIICO's accountants, breached their duty to "exercise the usual and customary skills required of certified public accountants" in preparing audits, which the accountants knew "would be relied upon by directors and shareholders of [WIICO, et al.], and said audits were in fact relied upon by the plaintiffs." App. at 17.

In their answer of June 6, 1986, the accountant defendants included the applicable statute of limitations as an affirmative defense. On April 8, 1987, after discovery was completed, the accountant defendants filed a motion for summary judgment in which they argued that "the applicable two year statute of limitations bar[red] all claims relating to transactions or accounting services which occurred more than two years prior to the date on which litigation was instituted" and that any action relevant to the financial statements and opinion letters of July 1984 and October 1985, while timely, was barred because the "plaintiffs ha[d] not, in fact, relied upon those documents to their detriment." App. at 98-99. The district court granted the defendants' motion and dismissed Count VII with prejudice.

The accountant defendants then filed a motion for attorneys' fees and costs pursuant to V.I.Code Ann. tit. 5, Sec. 541. After defendants supplemented their motion with more detail as required by the court, the district court awarded partial indemnification to the prevailing defendants including the following:

Legal Fees                                         $30,750.00
Expert Witness Fees                                 15,000.00
Other Expenses                                       5,540.451

---------------

1 There is a slight discrepancy in the Other Expenses figure which is not

materiall to a determination of this appeal. ----------------------------- Total $51,290.45 -----------------------------

Harris, Freedlander and the Foundation have appealed. They raise the following issues: First, relying on the recent Supreme Court decision, Crawford Fitting Co. v. J.T. Gibbons, Inc., --- U.S. ----, 107 S.Ct. 2494, 96 L.Ed.2d 385 (1987), they contend that the district court's grant of $15,000 toward the expert witness fees paid by defendants to specialists in forensic accounting was in excess of statutory authority and was erroneous as a matter of law. Alternatively, they argue that even if Crawford were not controlling in the instant case, the award of $15,000 toward witnesses who were not indispensable to the determination of the case was an abuse of discretion. Second, plaintiffs contend that the district court erred in awarding deposition and travel costs both because the court failed to make factual findings that the depositions were "reasonably necessary in the action" and because the award of travel costs is not authorized by statute. Third, plaintiffs maintain that the district court abused its discretion in awarding $30,750 in attorneys' fees. Finally, they argue that the district court erred in holding plaintiffs Harris and Freedlander jointly and severally liable for the award of attorneys' fees and costs. We proceed to consider these issues.

II.

Expert Witness Fees

In Crawford Fitting Co. v. J.T. Gibbons, Inc., --- U.S. ----, 107 S.Ct. 2494, 2496, 96 L.Ed.2d 385 (1987), the Supreme Court held that "when a prevailing party seeks reimbursement for fees paid to its own expert witnesses, a federal court is bound by the limits of [28 U.S.C.] Sec. 1821, absent contract or explicit statutory authority to the contrary." Therefore, it limited reimbursement for a party's expert witness fees to section 1821's $30-per-day limit.

Defendants argue that because the Crawford decision was based on the interrelationship of Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(d), 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1920 and 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1821, it does not preclude the district court's exercise of discretion to award a higher expert fee pursuant to V.I.Code Ann. tit.

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Related

Crawford Fitting Co. v. J. T. Gibbons, Inc.
482 U.S. 437 (Supreme Court, 1987)
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United States v. Moses Lewis
456 F.2d 404 (Third Circuit, 1972)
United States v. Etienne George
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Kriegel v. St. Thomas Beach Resorts, Inc.
18 V.I. 365 (Virgin Islands, 1981)
Damidaux v. Hess Oil Virgin Islands Corp.
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Dr. Bernard Heller Foundation v. Lee
847 F.2d 83 (Third Circuit, 1988)

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