Edna L. HAYES, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. SECRETARY OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, Defendant-Appellee

923 F.2d 418, 1990 WL 258395
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 23, 1991
Docket89-3984
StatusPublished
Cited by217 cases

This text of 923 F.2d 418 (Edna L. HAYES, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. SECRETARY OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, Defendant-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edna L. HAYES, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. SECRETARY OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, Defendant-Appellee, 923 F.2d 418, 1990 WL 258395 (6th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

BOGGS, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is brought by John A. Cer-vay, counsel for successful social security claimant Edna L. Hayes. The district court denied Cervay his full 25% contingency fee, finding that it “represents a windfall.” This case involves an interpretation of our decision in Rodriquez v. Bowen, 865 F.2d 739, 746 (6th Cir.1989) (en banc), which established a rebuttable presumption that an attorney would receive the full 25% contingency fee under contract unless 1) the attorney engaged in improper conduct or was ineffective, or 2) the attorney would enjoy an undeserved windfall due to the client’s large back pay award or the attorney’s relatively minimal effort. Finding that the district court abused its discretion in reducing the fee in the way that it did, we reverse.

I

Cervay challenged in district court the Secretary’s unfavorable decision on Hayes’s application for widow’s benefits. On August 22, 1988, the magistrate recommended that the decision of the Secretary be reversed, and benefits be awarded to Hayes. No objections to the magistrate’s report were filed, and on October 27, 1988, the district court adopted the report and *420 entered judgment for Hayes. On January 3, 1989, the Social Security Administration notified Hayes that she was owed back benefits from March 1984, amounting to a total award of $30,085. Twenty-five percent, or $7112.75, was held for payment of attorney’s fees, while $22,972.25 was paid directly to Hayes. 1 This withholding was consistent with the contingency fee contract between Hayes and attorney Cervay’s law firm. 2

On June 15, 1989, Cervay filed with the district court a petition to collect his 25% fee. He documented his legal services, showing that he and his staff worked 39'/i hours on Hayes’s case at both the administrative and district court levels. In his petition, Cervay noted that his requested fee translated into an hourly rate of $181.22. 3 Cervay supported his petition writh documentation from six other cases, won by different attorneys between May 1988 and January 1989, in which the Secretary had not objected to attorney’s fees that were equivalent to hourly rates ranging from $163 to $188. In the appendix to his brief, Cervay provides documentation of three other cases (in two of which he acted as counsel) between June 19 and November 17, 1989 in which the Secretary approved attorney’s fees that were equivalent to hourly rates of $175 to $180.

On September 1, 1989, the district court ordered an award of attorney’s fees in the amount of $4906.25. In denying the request for $7112.75, the court stated:

Defendant objects to the amount of hours listed for several reasons, arguing that 25% of past-due benefits is a benchmark but not per se reasonable as instructed by the Rodriquez decision. Specifically, defendant argues that the requested fee results in an unreasonable hourly rate of $182.00 and that plaintiff’s attorney would enjoy a windfall if his requested fee is allowed.
It is the opinion of this Court that the average number of hours for an attorney to work on a social security case ranges from 30 to 40 hours and that the average rate ranges from $100 to $125 per hour. Therefore, this court believes that, absent extraordinary circumstances, a fee in excess of $5000 is suspect and must be carefully analyzed for a windfall.

(Emphasis in original). The court found no “extraordinary circumstances” to exist. In fact, the court found the following to be compelling evidence of the unreasonableness of the 25% fee: 1) there had been a 33-month lag between the onset of Hayes’s disability and the date Cervay was hired to represent her, and 2) the number of hours Cervay personally worked on the case was 17, while the remaining 22lh hours were attributable to clerical, secretarial, and paralegal time.

The court awarded Cervay the amount suggested by the Secretary ($4906.25), noting that the Secretary had commended Cer-vay for being “quite candid,” “scrupulous,” and “reasonably conservative” in his petition for fees. The $4906.25 represented an average hourly rate of $125 for 39'/4 hours.

II

A

In Rodriquez, we did not hold that all large fees are per se unreasonable. Rather, deductions for large fees are permissible under only two circumstances:

Deductions generally should fall into two categories: 1) those occasioned by improper conduct or ineffectiveness of counsel; and 2) situations in which counsel would otherwise enjoy a windfall because of either an inordinately large *421 benefit award or from minimal effort expended.

865 F.2d at 746 (emphasis added). Where none of these reasons applies, an agreement for a 25% fee, the maximum permitted under § 206(b) of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 406(b), is presumed reasonable. Ibid. The district court did not make a finding that the full $7112.75 fee would have been a result of an “inordinately large benefit award” or of “minimal effort.” The district court instead rested its finding of a windfall on the assumption that any award that translated into an hourly rate of over $125 was per se unreasonable. This result is not dictated by Rodriquez, and in fact is contrary to the admonition in Rodriquez that 25% fee contracts “should be given the weight ordinarily accorded a rebuttable presumption.” 865 F.2d at 746. The district court in this case, however, was not alone in assuming that its method of decision making was permissible under Rodriquez. See, e.g., Wiegand v. Sullivan, 900 F.2d 261 (6th Cir.1990) (unpublished per curiam) (reversing the district court’s determination that a $168 hourly rate constituted a windfall); Puryear v. Sullivan, 902 F.2d 34 (6th Cir.1990) (unpublished per curiam) (reversing the district court, which had engaged in “the transmogrification of contingent fee contracts into hourly rate agreements”).

In two recent published opinions, Royzer v. Secretary of Health and Human Services, 900 F.2d 981 (6th Cir.1990), and McGuire v. Bowen, 900 F.2d 984 (6th Cir.1990), we attempted to clarify some of the ambiguities unanticipated in Rodriquez. We held that it was error for the district courts to reduce the attorney’s fee awards on the ground that the amounts called for by the 25% contingency agreements computed to high hourly rates.

In Royzer, as in Cervay’s case, the attorney did not bill on an hourly basis.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
923 F.2d 418, 1990 WL 258395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edna-l-hayes-plaintiff-appellant-v-secretary-of-health-and-human-ca6-1991.