Nancy J. Jensen v. The Department of Transportation
This text of 858 F.2d 721 (Nancy J. Jensen v. The Department of Transportation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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This case results from the removal by the U.S. Department of Transportation of Nancy J. Jensen (Jensen). The Merit Systems Protection Board (board), in a final decision dated September 25, 1987, modifying and affirming the addendum initial decision of the board, dated July 2, 1985, denied Charles Padorr (Padorr), Jensen’s counsel, the full amount of the attorney fee award. The board awarded a portion of the attorney fee award to Jensen’s estate.1 We reverse and remand.
I. Issue
The principal question on appeal is one of first impression: Is an attorney fee award under the Civil Service Reform Act properly payable to the attorney, or to the client? The specific issue presented is whether the board erroneously limited the attorney fee award because the attorney would not agree on the record to reimburse his client.
II. Background
On July 25, 1980, Jensen was terminated from her secretarial position with the U.S. Department of Transportation and she appealed the termination to the board. The board denied relief on the basis that, because Jensen was a probationary employee, it did not have jurisdiction. Thereafter, Jensen appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, which court remanded to the board, finding that Jensen had the rights of a nonprobationary employee.2 Following remand, Jensen received a gross backpay award in the amount of $20,771.20.
When Jensen originally retained Padorr in this case, she entered into a contingent fee agreement by which she agreed to pay Padorr 40 percent of the amount of any backpay award, or the amount of any attorney fee award, whichever was greater. Although entitled to 40 percent of this award, [723]*723or $8,308.48, Padorr agreed to accept $5,846.24, waiving and releasing Jensen from the obligation to pay the remaining balance ($2,462.24) of his fee. In consideration, Padorr obtained the authorization to pursue and the right to receive any attorney fee award made by the board.
After receiving the backpay award, Pa-dorr then filed a request with the board on March 11, 1982,3 for attorney fees, pursuant to the Civil Service Reform Act.4 After the board denied relief in an order dated March 22, 1984, Padorr filed a petition for review with this court. On January 11, 1985, this court reversed the board’s decision, held that an award of attorney fees was warranted in the interest of justice, and remanded the case to the board for further proceedings on the amount of the award.5
On remand, the board ordered Padorr to agree to reimburse Jensen for the attorney fees which she had already paid. Padorr advised the board that he had received the right to pursue and to receive any fee awarded, and that Jensen had relinquished this right in consideration for Padorr having waived part of his fee. Thereafter, the board, in an initial decision, found that attorney fees of $16,423.53 were reasonable and warranted, but withheld payment of $5,846.24 because Padorr refused to reimburse Jensen that amount. The board then ordered, in a final decision, that a check in the amount of $5,846.24 be sent to Jensen’s estate, and it was so sent.6 Padorr, seeking to obtain the final $5,846.24, then filed a petition for review with this court.
III. Analysis
Before turning to the precise question raised, we must establish the statutory framework in which it appears. Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. § 7701(g)(1), the attorney fees provision in the Civil Service Reform Act (CSRA), “the Board * * * may require payment by the agency involved of reasonable attorney fees incurred by an employee * * * if the employee * * * is the prevailing party and the Board * * * determines that payment by the agency is warranted in the interest of justice.”
It is well settled that “the board is given great discretion under section 7701(g)(1) in awarding attorney fees and consequently this court will accord the board’s determination great deference.”7 However, under 5 U.S.C. § 7703(c), the board’s decision shall be set aside if it is determined by us to be arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, in disaccord with the law, obtained without following procedures required by law, rule, or regulation, or is unsupported by substantial evidence.8
The issue before this court is one of first impression. The board has considered it and, in the Blessin case, stated “[i]t is the Board’s view * * * that the [attorney fee] award must go to counsel rather than [to] the parties which pay their fees.”9 The board has also stated that the attorney should agree on the record to reimburse his client for the prepayment in whole or in part of the fee awarded.10
In other instances where a request is made for the award of attorney fees, the courts have ordered that the award must go to counsel. Under the Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Awards Act of 1976,11 which authorizes an attorney fee award to the “prevailing party,” the award must go to counsel rather than to the entities which [724]*724pay their salaries to avoid a windfall.12
Furthermore, a leading commentator in the field, Peter Broida, states that the board makes attorney fee checks payable to counsel. Broida also takes the view that disputes over attorney fees and their reimbursement to clients are the province of disciplinary boards, not the Merit Systems Protection Board.13
In the proceeding below, the board determined that Padorr was only entitled to receive $10,577.29 of the total amount of reasonable attorney fees warranted in the interest of justice. As grounds for its decision, the board found that, because Padorr had already received $5,846.24 from Jensen and would not agree to reimburse Jensen’s estate for that amount, Padorr would be receiving double benefits if he were allowed to collect the full amount of the attorney fee award. Although Padorr asserted before the board that he had agreed to waive part of his fee in exchange for the right to receive the full amount of any later attorney fee award, the board concluded that, in view of the board’s case law,14 to award Padorr the total attorney fee award would result in a windfall, because Jensen had already reimbursed Padorr for a portion of his services. We disagree.
Although we are not bound by the case law precedent of the board, we are in complete agreement with the holding in Blessin that the attorney fee award must be paid to counsel rather than to the parties who pay their fees.15 In the past, the board has required the attorney to agree on the record to reimburse his client for any fees already received. While such an agreement by the attorney may be enforceable, an attorney’s refusal to make such an agreement is no ground to reduce the attorney fee award payable to the attorney. We find no reimbursement requirement within the statutory language of the CSRA.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
858 F.2d 721, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 13168, 1988 WL 99263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nancy-j-jensen-v-the-department-of-transportation-cafc-1988.