In Re: General Motors v.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 1, 1997
Docket94-1011
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: General Motors v. (In Re: General Motors v.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: General Motors v., (4th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

February 28, 1997 ______________

No. 94-1011 ______________

O R D E R

In Re: General Motors Corporation

James E. Butler, Jr. represented numerous plaintiffs who

brought products liability actions against General Motors in

state and federal court. One of these actions was Cameron v.

General Motors Corp., from which U.S. District Judge G. Ross

Anderson, District of South Carolina, recused himself. 1 As part

of his recusal order, Judge Anderson made certain factual

findings, including that a review of the documents in the case revealed "a substantial likelihood that perhaps perjury and the

systematic destruction of documents involving gross misconduct by

General Motors' regional counsel occurred." 2 Holding that the

new factual findings were improper, in March 1994 we issued an

order stating, in pertinent part: "[S]ection III of the recusal

order, as well as any other statements in the order relating to the possible destruction of documents [or] perjury by [General

1 Cameron v. General Motors Corp. , 1994 WL 159408 (D.S.C. Feb. 28, 1994). 2 Id. at *23. Motors or its counsel] . . . are hereby stricken from the

[recusal] order and should not be hereafter cited as authority." 3 Ignoring our ruling, Butler cited the stricken recusal order

passages during separate proceedings before a Georgia state court

and the U.S. District Court for the District of Kansas. On

August 8, 1995, we found Butler in civil contempt of our earlier

order and awarded General Motors reasonable costs for its efforts

to correct Butler's misconduct. 4 We referred the matter to U.S.

District Judge Robert G. Doumar of the Eastern District of

Virginia for a determination of the proper amount to be assessed

against Butler. 5 Judge Doumar subsequently filed a report and

recommendation.

We have carefully reviewed the report, Butler's objections

and General Motors' response. In order to calculate the award, Judge Doumar waded through the murky waters of legal billing. We

find no error in his meticulous findings of fact or his

conclusions of law. As Judge Doumar notes, in a pun that bears repeating, if the

Butler did it, the Butler pays for it. Butler may have had to

pay less, however, if he had not followed an ill-advised policy

of contesting each and every aspect of this contempt proceeding.

Judge Doumar recommends awarding General Motors $24,894.50 for

its legal costs in correcting the effects of Butler's misconduct,

3 Order of March 23, 1994 at 2-3 (quoted in In re General Motors Corp., 61 F.3d 256, 275) (4th cir. 1995)). 4 General Motors, 61 F.3d at 259-60. 5 Order of September 11, 1995. and $165,646.81 for its legal costs stemming from this contempt

proceeding. Butler, of course, had the right to put on a

vigorous defense. But in the aftermath of our decision to hold

Butler in contempt, a conciliatory stance on some issues would

have softened the blow of this order by reducing General Motors'

overall legal expenses. For the foregoing reasons, we adopt Judge Doumar's report

and recommendation in its entirety and award General Motors a

total of $190,541.31.

With the concurrence of Judge Hamilton and Judge Williams,

/s/ _________________________________ U.S. Circuit Judge Donald Russell

3 IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

_______________

No. 94-1011 _______________

IN RE: GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION,

United States District Court for the District of South Carolina, Columbia Division Civil Action No. 3-95-3236-16

FINAL REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION UNDER SEAL

This matter has been referred to the Court by the Fourth Circuit for a determination as to

the appropriate civil contempt amount that should be assessed against a lawyer, Mr. James E.

Butler ("Butler" or "Respondent"). The final response having been filed on May 20, 1996, this

case is ripe for decision. The Court DENIES Respondent's motion for an evidentiary hearing.

This Court recommends that Petitioner receive $18,897.50 for the harm caused by Respondent's

contempt in Moseley v. General Motors, $5997.00 for the harm caused by Respondent's

contempt in Cockrum v. General Motors, and $165,646.81 in attorneys' fees for this contempt

proceeding. Thus pursuant to the Fourth Circuit's directive, this Court recommends that Petitioner be awarded a total of $190,541.31 against the Respondent, including attorneys' fees

through January 30, 1996.

PROLOGUE

Revenge is a kind of wild justice, which the more man's nature runs to, the more ought law to weed it out.6

The issues in this case have been so much like every case the Court has ever seen before,

and yet at the same time, its parts have been quite exaggerated, so that the entirety has been like

no other case over which the Court has presided. When all is said and done, however, the matter

is simply one of attorneys' fees: what actions did Butler's contempt reasonably force General

Motors' counsel to undertake, and what were the reasonable fees for General Motors ("GM") to

prosecute this action to right the scales.

Likely typical of many federal district judges, the Court estimates that it passes on

between sixty and one hundred fee applications per year for attorneys representing indigent

criminal defendants and parties in civil rights cases.7 Thus the Court would further estimate that

the average federal judge in this district spends between five and ten percent of his or her time

considering and passing on applications for fee awards. The Court has become quite

6 Francis Bacon, "Of Revenge," Essays or Counsels, Civill and Morall (1625). 7 The Eastern District of Virginia, to which the undersigned is permanently assigned, is one of the few districts which has no public defenders and relies upon panel attorney for indigent criminal representation, with the attendant fee requests.

5 knowledgeable of the standards set forth in this Circuit in Barber v. Kimbrell's, Inc., 577 F.2d

216 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 439 U.S. 934, 99 S. Ct. 329 (1978).

At this point a little background of the present case would be instructive. Butler

represented numerous plaintiffs across the country in state and federal courts who sued GM after

accidents occurred in their C/K pickup trucks which resulted in gasoline tank explosions. The

discovery of certain information by plaintiffs' attorneys caused them to believe that young GM

attorneys, who have been derisively called by some individuals "fire babies," had destroyed or

hidden documents relating to GM's liability for those fires, or committed perjury relating to the

alleged destruction of documents. Judge Anderson was referring to these alleged incidents of

misconduct in Cameron. The Fourth Circuit thereafter struck that part of Judge Anderson's

order, yet Butler cited the stricken language on at least two occasions.

Given that background, the present matter between Butler, one of the country's most

successful trial attorneys, and General Motors, one of the world's largest industrial corporation,

has posed no great problems for the Court at its most basic level, fees. Now that the Court has

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