UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA SOUTHERN DIVISION
SHACONDA PATTON, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Case No. 2:17-cv-803-RDP ) PMTD RESTAURANTS, LLC, ) ) Defendant. )
REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION Before the court is Plaintiff Shaconda Patton’s Motion for Attorney’s Fees and Costs. Doc. 102. The District Court referred Patton’s motion to a Magistrate Judge for a report and recommendation. Doc. 124. Consistent with the District Court’s order (Doc. 117), the parties submitted a Joint Report identifying their positions on the fees and costs related to the relevant requests for admission. Doc. 123. The Magistrate Judge also held an evidentiary hearing on February 11, 2021, at which the parties presented additional arguments and testimony. As required by the Magistrate Judge, the parties submitted supplemental evidentiary materials after the hearing. Docs. 131 & 132. Upon consideration of all of the evidence before the court and the applicable law, the Magistrate Judge recommends that the District Court withhold judgment on the motion until it can determine whether Patton’s pending appeal is intertwined with the issues raised in the motion. However, when the District Court determines that it does have jurisdiction, the Magistrate Judge recommends that it grant Patton’s motion to the extent she requests fees in the
amount of $23,317.83 and costs in the amount of $1,305.55 for a total award of $24,623.38. I. BACKGROUND
Patton brought claims for race discrimination and retaliation against her former employer, Defendant PMTD Restaurants LLC (“PMTD”). Doc. 1. On September 5, 2017, PMTD served responses to Patton’s requests for admission (“the RFAs”):
1. Plaintiff complained in July 2016 that the actions taken against her were racially motivated. RESPONSE: Denied. 2. Plaintiff complained that Defendant’s treatment of her on July 20, 2016 was racially motivated. RESPONSE: Denied. 3. Within one week after Plaintiff complained that the actions taken against her were racially motivated, Defendant took management duties and responsibilities were taken away from Plaintiff. RESPONSE: Denied. 4. Within one week after Plaintiff complained that the actions taken against her were racially motivated, Defendant changed her work schedule. RESPONSE: Denied. 5. After Plaintiff complained that the actions taken against her were racially motivated, Defendant reduced the number of hours she worked per week. RESPONSE: Denied. Doc. 117 at 1–2. At trial, the evidence proved that these RFAs had been wrongfully denied. Doc. 117 at 2. Consistent with the jury’s verdict, the court entered a final judgment for PMTD and against Patton. Doc. 100.
Patton then filed her Motion for Attorney’s Fees and Costs pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(c)(2), in which she sought to recover fees and costs associated with proving the truth of the matters wrongfully denied in the RFAs. In the motion, Patton argued that she should receive reimbursement for approximately
40% of the total fees and 65% of the total costs incurred in the entire litigation process after PMTD served its RFA responses. Doc. 117 at 4. The District Court found this request “patently unreasonable” and ordered the parties to submit a joint
report listing which expenses are directly tied to the requests for admission. To be clear, the expenses should be limited to fees and costs incurred in obtaining testimony on the requests for admission, discovery on the requests for admission, and similar expenses. Plaintiff shall not be permitted to recover fees or costs related to general trial preparation, the use of technology during trial, or discovery (including depositions) on tangentially related issues. Doc. 117 at 4. In the parties’ Joint Report, Patton itemized her requested fees and costs and reduced most entries by 50% because the RFAs related only to her retaliation claim, one of the two claims against PMTD. Doc. 123 at 1. Following this adjustment, Patton now seeks a total of $64,653.35 in fees and costs. Doc. 123 at 1. PMTD
objected to each line item in the Joint Report and argues that any award of fees and costs should not exceed $4,404.80. Doc. 123 at 11. II. DISCUSSION
A. Jurisdiction “The filing of a notice of appeal is an event of jurisdictional significance—it confers jurisdiction on the court of appeals and divests the district court of its control over those aspects of the case involved in the appeal.” Griggs v. Provident Consumer
Discount Co., 459 U.S. 56, 58 (1982). But the district court may “entertain[] motions on matters collateral to those at issue on appeal.” Mahone v. Ray, 326 F.3d 1176, 1179 (11th Cir. 2003). For example, the Eleventh Circuit has held that even after a
notice of appeal the district court has jurisdiction over a motion for attorney’s fees filed under a state statute similar to 42 U.S.C. § 1988. Rothenberg v. Sec. Mgmt. Co., 677 F.2d 64, 65 (11th Cir. 1982); see also Zinni v. ER Solutions, Inc., 692 F.3d 1162, 1168 n.10 (11th Cir. 2012) (“We note that if a judgment is entered by the district
court, it will retain jurisdiction to resolve any attorneys’ fees and costs disputes.”); but see Thompson v. RelationServe Media, Inc., 610 F.3d 628, 637 n.14 (11th Cir. 2010) (holding that the district court did not have jurisdiction over a Rule 11 motion
for sanctions filed after a notice of appeal). The Eleventh Circuit has not decided whether a district court retains jurisdiction over a Rule 37(c)(2) motion after a party has filed a notice of appeal.
Only two circuit courts have resolved this question. In G&M, Incorporated v. Newbern, 488 F.2d 742, 746 (9th Cir. 1973), the Ninth Circuit held that the filing of a notice of appeal precludes the district court from exercising jurisdiction over a
post-judgment Rule 37(c)(2) motion. In Chemical Engineering Corporation v. Essef Industries, Incorporated, 795 F.2d 1565, 1574–75 (Fed. Cir. 1986), the Federal Circuit interpreted Seventh Circuit caselaw to hold that a district court retains jurisdiction to award costs under Rule 37(c)(2) after a notice of appeal of a judgment
but before the filing of an appeal brief. Patton argues that motions to award attorney’s fees are collateral matters over which the district court retains jurisdiction even after the filing of a notice of appeal.
Doc. 123 at 1–2 (citing Zinni, 692 F.3d at 1168 n.10). PMTD responds by noting that the record before the court does not reflect whether Patton’s appeal relates to the Rule 37 motion because her notice of appeal, which has been filed pro se, does not indicate her basis for appealing. Doc. 123 at 31; see Doc. 113. PMTD
hypothesizes that Patton’s appeal may relate to her counsel’s decision to rely on PMTD’s responses to the RFAs. Doc. 123 at 31. In that case, the Rule 37 motion may not be collateral to the appeal, and this court would no longer have jurisdiction
over the motion. Doc. 123 at 31. The court agrees that it can only speculate as to the basis of Patton’s appeal before she files her appeal brief. Therefore, the Magistrate Judge recommends that
the District Court withhold its judgment on the pending request for attorney’s fees and costs until Patton files that brief, allowing the District Court to determine the relationship between the appeal and the Rule 37 motion, or the Eleventh Circuit
otherwise disposes of the appeal. If the Rule 37 motion is collateral to the issues raised on appeal, the Magistrate Judge recommends a finding that the District Court has jurisdiction over the pending motion. If the issues on appeal are intertwined with the Rule 37 motion, the Magistrate Judge recommends a finding that the District
Court does not have jurisdiction over the instant motion during the pendency of the appeal. B. Specific Fees and Costs
Assuming the court eventually will have jurisdiction over the Rule 37 petition, the Magistrate Judge makes the following recommendations as to the fees and costs that are properly attributable to PMTD’s wrongful denial of the RFAs. 1. Introduction and Initial Assumptions
The court calculates reasonable attorney’s fees by the lodestar method because “the most useful starting point for determining the amount of a reasonable fee is the number of hours reasonably expended on the litigation multiplied by a
reasonable hourly rate.” Hensley v. Eckerhart, 461 U.S. 424, 433 (1983). Counsel for Patton has provided evidence that the rates of $500 per hour for Jon Goldfarb and $300 per hour for L. William Smith are reasonable. Doc. 102 at 11. At the
hearing, counsel for PMTD did not dispute these requested rates. Doc. 136 at 8. Therefore, the Magistrate Judge recommends that the court accept as reasonable the rates of $500 per hour for Goldfarb and $300 per hour for Smith.
While they agreed on the lawyers’ hourly rates, the parties contest the number of hours reasonably expended on proving the falsity of PMTD’s responses to the RFAs. It is Patton’s burden as the movant to demonstrate that her counsel’s time relates to relevant tasks. See Loranger v. Stierheim, 10 F.3d 776, 784 (11th Cir.
1994). Even so, many of counsel’s time entries aggregate several tasks into large blocks of time. For some of these blocks and for many of the constituent tasks, Patton seeks full reimbursement. But relevance to the RFAs is not an all-or-nothing
proposition. Even for a deposition covering certain subjects relating to the RFAs, the entirety of the deposition cannot fairly be attributed to disproving PMTD’s RFA responses. For this reason, the court attempted during the evidentiary hearing to parse through these block billing entries in order to drill down on the portions
directly attributable to the RFAs. Although the parties were on notice that the court intended to receive additional evidence during the hearing, see Doc. 125 at 1, often counsel could not delineate the time devoted to each task due to imprecise
timekeeping practices, the passage of time, or other limitations. The upshot of this information deficit is that the court has been forced to make a series of assumptions and adjustments to arrive at its calculation of the fees and costs due to Patton.
As Patton’s counsel has conceded, the RFAs related only to the retaliation claim, one of the two causes of action at trial. For this reason, Patton’s counsel took the position at the hearing that their block entries may be reduced by 50% in the
absence of more specific information about the nature of the tasks at issue. Doc. 136 at 41–43. The Magistrate Judge would go one step further. The court’s jury instructions set out the four elements for the retaliation claim: (1) the plaintiff engaged in protected activity; (2) the defendant took an adverse employment action;
(3) the defendant took the adverse employment action because of plaintiff’s protected activity; and (4) the plaintiff suffered damages because of the adverse employment action. Doc. 130 at 87. No party has argued that the RFAs related in
any way to Patton’s damages. Therefore, further refinement of counsel’s voluntary 50% reduction is in order if the District Court accepts the premise that the elements of the cause of action serve as an appropriate metric for approximating the time actually spent on proving the truth of the RFAs. Therefore, the Magistrate Judge
recommends an additional 25% reduction to all unattributable block entries in order to zero out the fourth element of the retaliation claim. The recommended assumption, then, is that as a starting point all block entries including tasks both
related and unrelated to the RFAs are compensable at 37.5% of the claimed time, which is equal to 75% of 50% of the total time. Of course, the court may dispense with the 37.5% adjustment when Patton has carried her burden of showing that the
entirety of a time entry, or an identifiable portion of an entry, relates directly to the RFAs. Relying on these assumptions, the court next must determine which litigation
tasks related to Patton’s effort to prove the truth of the RFAs such that any portion of the time spent on those tasks is compensable. The discussion to follow sets out the Magistrate Judge’s recommendations as to whether counsel should be allowed to shift any of the fees and costs devoted to developing testimony from certain
witnesses, addressing summary judgment matters, drafting the pretrial order, or litigating the pending motion. Finally, the court applies its assumptions and conclusions to each fee request and summarizes its recommended findings in the
data tables below. 2. Testimony of Bill Byrd, Chris Capps, and David Barr The District Court previously found that Byrd’s testimony proved the truth of the RFAs: “Bill Byrd, a partial owner of PMTD and who served as PMTD’s
designated corporate representative, testified at trial that Plaintiff complained of racial discrimination in July 2016 and, therefore, that Defendant should have admitted to the requests for admission quoted above.” Doc. 117 at 2; see also Doc.
102 at 3. The District Court further noted that Bill Byrd testified that he was unaware of Plaintiff’s complaint of racial discrimination until September 2016 because he overlooked an email referring to her complaint. However, that testimony is irrelevant to whether Defendant truthfully answered Plaintiff’s requests for admission. After all, the disputed requests for admission refer to Plaintiff’s complaint and the events following that complaint—not Defendant’s awareness of Plaintiff’s complaint and the events related to that awareness. Doc. 117 at 2 n.1. Therefore, some of Byrd’s testimony was directly relevant to proving the truth of the RFAs, and Patton should recover a portion of the fees and costs associated with his testimony. The District Court also found that Capps’ testimony directly related to Patton’s effort to prove the falsity of the RFA responses: “And, the jury was presented with evidence showing that Chris Capps, the Director of Operations for PMTD, texted Bill Byrd to inform him that Plaintiff was complaining that she was subject to racial discrimination.” Doc. 117 at 2; see also Doc. 102 at 6. The evidence at trial included an email (Doc. 102-3) and a text message from Capps to Byrd. Doc. 102-12. Therefore, Patton should recover some of the fees and costs associated with
developing Capps’ testimony. Patton asserts that Barr’s deposition and cross-examination at trial were essential to proving the timing of her demotion. Doc. 123 at 3, 5, 9 & 10. Her counsel
also noted at the evidentiary hearing that Barr was one of the executives who made the decision to demote Patton and that he received the relevant text message and email from Capps. Doc. 136 at 44. On these facts, the court finds that portions of Barr’s deposition and trial testimony were relevant to the RFAs and that PMTD should bear some of the fees and costs associated with his testimony.
3. Testimony of Patton At the hearing, Patton’s counsel argued that her testimony was central to proving the truth of the RFAs. Doc. 136 at 62–63. PMTD counters that Patton
admitted in her deposition that she never claimed racial discrimination to anyone but the EEOC. Doc. 123 at 17. The Magistrate Judge has reviewed Patton’s deposition testimony and disagrees with this interpretation. For example, Patton testified in her deposition that she told Regina Wingard that she was suffering discrimination
because of her race. Doc. 30-1 at 118. Because Patton’s actions and her treatment are at the heart of the subject matter of the RFAs, her testimony is directly relevant to proving their truth. Therefore, Patton should be compensated for fees and costs
associated with some portion of her own testimony. 4. Testimony of Regina Wingard The District Court noted Wingard’s testimony at trial that Patton did not explicitly mention racial discrimination when complaining to Wingard. Doc. 117 at
3 n.2. Patton’s counsel argued at the hearing that they had to disprove Wingard’s testimony to prove the truth of the matters in the RFAs. Doc. 136 at 39–40. Because Wingard directly contradicted the RFAs, the court finds that a rebuttal of her
testimony was necessary to proving the truth of the matters asserted in the RFAs. Therefore, Patton should recover some of her fees and costs relating to Wingard’s testimony.
5. Testimony of Brandon Warren Patton’s counsel admitted during the hearing that Patton is not seeking to recover fees relating to Warren’s testimony (Doc. 136 at 38), and the court finds no
other reason for recommending that she receive compensation for fees and costs relating to this time. 6. Summary Judgment Briefs and Pretrial Order Patton seeks to recover fees associated with her counsel’s work on her
summary judgment briefs and the court’s pretrial order. Doc. 123 at 3–4. The matters asserted in the RFAs did relate to Patton’s retaliation claim at summary judgment and trial. However, the District Court ordered that Patton’s counsel should
limit their requested fees and costs to those “incurred in obtaining testimony on the requests for admission, discovery on the requests for admission, and similar expenses” and should not seek “to recover fees or costs related to general trial preparation.” Doc. 117 at 4. This limitation is consistent with the plain language of
Rule 37, as discussed below. Counsel’s summary judgment briefs and the pretrial order referenced discovery materials pertaining to the subject matter of the RFAs but did not develop new evidence. Therefore, the Magistrate Judge does not
recommend any shifting of fees related to the preparation of Patton’s summary judgment briefs or the court’s pretrial order. 7. Fees for Rule 37 Litigation
Patton also seeks to recover fees and expenses related to the Rule 37 motion itself. “Rule 37(c)(2) mandates that the court award the expenses incurred by the party in proving a denied admission, including attorneys’ fees, unless it finds that an
enumerated exception applies . . . .” Mut. Serv. Ins. Co. v. Frit Indus., Inc., 358 F.3d 1312, 1326 (11th Cir. 2004). The court’s “basic point of reference when considering the award of attorney’s fees is the bedrock principle known as the American Rule: Each litigant pays his own attorney’s fees, win or lose, unless a statute or contract
provides otherwise. . . . We consequently will not deviate from the American Rule absent explicit statutory authority.” Baker Botts L.L.P. v. ASARCO LLC, 576 U.S. 121, 126 (2015). Under Rule 37(c)(2), a party who served RFAs “may move that
the party who failed to admit [the matters in the RFAs] pay the reasonable expenses, including attorney’s fees, incurred in making that proof.” Thus, the plain language of the rule does not allow for the recovery of fees associated with litigating a Rule 37(c)(2) motion when the party already has proven the truth of the matter denied.
See Weaver v. Stringer, 2019 WL 1495279, at *5 n.10 (S.D. Ala. Apr. 4, 2019) (finding that a party could not recover attorney’s fees associated with litigating a Rule 37(a)(5) motion); but see McCarthy v. Ameritech Pub., Inc., 763 F.3d 488, 494
(6th Cir. 2014) (“To harmonize Rule 37(c)(2) with other Rule 37 provisions serving a substantially similar purpose, we interpret the scope of Rule 37(c)(2) to encompass reasonable attorney’s fees and costs associated with the preparation and presentation
of the fee application.”). The Eleventh Circuit has not decided whether Rule 37(c)(2) permits attorneys to recover fees associated with litigating a Rule 37 motion. However, as discussed
above, the American Rule requires litigants to shoulder the burden of their own attorney’s fees unless a statute or contract expressly provides otherwise. Consistent with the American Rule and the plain language of Rule 37, the court finds that Rule 37(c)(2) permits the recovery of attorney’s fees incurred only in proving the truth of
matters wrongfully denied, not in litigating a downstream Rule 37 motion. Therefore, the Magistrate Judge recommends the denial of Patton’s request to recover any fees associated with litigating the Rule 37 motion.
C. Tables The tables beginning on the next page have been adapted from the parties’ tables set out in the Joint Status Report (Doc. 123 at 3–29), and they summarize the Magistrate Judge’s recommendations as to the fees and expenses reasonably related
to Patton’s efforts to prove the truth of the assertions in the RFAs. FEES Date Claimed Patton’s Compens- Hourly Adjusted Court’s Hours Description of able Rate Fee Explanation Services Hours Rendered1 9/5/17 0.70 Review requests 0.40 $500 200.00 Patton’s counsel for admission (Goldfarb) testified to responses, email spending 0.40 defense counsel, hours reviewing review protective RFA responses. order Doc. 136 at 33–34. The other tasks are not compensable. 10/5/17 3.00 Go through file 1.00 $500 500.00 Patton’s counsel and respond to (Goldfarb) testified to discovery spending 1.00 hour responding to Interrogatory No. 18. Docs. 123 at 3 & 136 at 34. The other tasks are not compensable. 6/27/18 11.30 Prepare for and 0.80 $500 400.00 Patton’s deposition defend deposition (Goldfarb) is compensable, of Plaintiff and and counsel mother and testified to prepare for spending 0.80 tomorrow’s hours of her depositions deposition on matters related to the RFAs. Doc. 136 at 36.
1 The court has adopted the descriptions from Patton’s counsel without correcting typographical errors. 6/28/18 8.40 Prepare for and 8.20 x $500 1537.50 Testimony of take the 37.5% = (Goldfarb) Byrd, Capps, and depositions of 3.075 Wingard is Billy Byrd, Regina compensable. Wingard, Brandon Warren’s Warren, Chris testimony is not. Capps Counsel testified to spending little time on Warren, and thus only 0.20 hours account for his testimony. Doc. 136 at 45–50. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 7/17/18 8.40 Prepare for and 8.40 x $500 1575.00 Barr’s testimony is take deposition of 37.5% = (Goldfarb) compensable. David Barr 3.15 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 8/24/18 4.80 Working on SJ 0 $300 0 Summary response (Smith) judgment is not compensable. 8/27/18 9.00 Working on SJ 0 $300 0 Summary brief. (Smith) judgment is not compensable. 8/28/18 2.30 Go through brief 0 $500 0 Summary and exhibits and (Goldfarb) judgment is not edit brief compensable. 8/31/18 3.00 Revising and 0 $300 0 Summary finalizing SJ brief. (Smith) judgment is not compensable. 8/13/20 0.40 Start draft of 0 $125 0 Pretrial order is pretrial. (Paralegal) not compensable. 8/17/20 2.30 Working on draft 0 $300 0 Pretrial order is pretrial order. (Smith) not compensable. 8/18/20 1.30 Continuing to 0 $300 0 Pretrial order is work on draft (Smith) not compensable. pretrial. 8/25/20 0.90 Working on 0 $300 0 Pretrial order is proposed pretrial (Smith) not compensable. order. 10/19/20 6.30 Conference with 1.50 x $500 281.25 Patton’s counsel Court, prepare for 37.5% = (Goldfarb) testified to trial by working on 0.5625 spending 1.50 cross examination hours on Byrd’s of Bill Byrd and cross. Doc. 136 at review documents 55–56. His cross is for filing today compensable. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 10/20/20 7.90 prepare for trial by 7.90 x $500 740.63 Patton’s counsel working on cross 50% x (Goldfarb) testified to examinations and 37.5% = preparing for the review filings for 1.4813 cross exams of trial Byrd and Capps but could not allocate the time between cross exams and reviewing court filings. Doc. 136 at 61. Therefore, assume 50% of this time related to cross exams. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 10/21/20 8.30 Prepare for trial by 4.15 x $500 778.13 Patton’s counsel working on cross 37.5% = (Goldfarb) testified to of Capps and 1.55625 spending 4.15 going through hours on Capps doucments and cross exam. Doc. motions in limine 136 at 62. Capps’ testimony is compensable. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 10/21/20 8.30 Drafting direct 8.30 x $300 933.75 Patton’s testimony examination of 37.5% = (Smith) is compensable. Plaintff 3.1125 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 10/22/20 7.90 Prepare for trial by 3.00 x $500 562.50 Patton’s counsel working on crosses 37.5% = (Goldfarb) testified to of Capps and Barr 1.125 spending 3.00 and motions in hours on Capps lime talk to Will and Barr cross about exams. Doc. 136 at 64. Their cross exams are compensable. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 10/22/20 6.70 Working on 6.70 x $300 753.75 Patton’s testimony Plaintiff’s direct 37.5% = (Smith) is compensable. exam 2.5125 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 10/23/20 8.40 Continue trial 4.20 x $500 787.50 Patton’s counsel prep, review 37.5% = (Goldfarb) testified to defendants MIL, 1.575 spending 4.20 work on cross -- hours on Barr’s mostly focus on testimony. Doc. Barr 136 at 65. His testimony is compensable. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 10/23/20 3.70 Continuing to 3.70 x $300 416.25 Patton’s testimony work on Plaintiffs 37.5% = (Smith) is compensable. direct examination 1.3875 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 10/26/20 8.40 Work on cross 8.40 x $500 1575.00 The testimony of examinations 37.5% = (Goldfarb) Capps, Barr, and Wingard, Capps 3.15 Wingard is and Barr compensable. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 10/27/20 8.40 go through 3.00 x $500 562.50 Patton’s counsel exhibits and work 37.5% = (Goldfarb) testified to on cross 1.125 spending 3.00 examinations hours on focusing on Wingard’s cross Regina and exam. Doc. 136 at Brandon and 70. Her testimony conference with is compensable. Court on MIL and 37.5% adjustment review the same for block billing. 10/28/20 7.20 continue preparing 3.00 x $500 562.50 Patton’s counsel for trial finish 37.5% = (Goldfarb) testified to cross of Brandon 1.125 spending 3.00 Warren, go by and hours on Byrd’s work on Bill Byrd cross exam. Doc. cross and work 136 at 71. His through testimony is Defendant’s compensable. exhibits to prepare 37.5% adjustment for trial for block billing. 10/29/20 6.30 Prepare for trial by 6.30 x $500 885.94 Patton’s counsel working on cross 75% x (Goldfarb) testified to examinations 37.5% = working on the 1.7718 cross exams of Byrd, Capps, Wingard, and Warren. Doc. 136 at 71. Only Byrd, Capps, and Wingard are compensable, so 37.5% adjustment to 75% of the total time. 11/2/20 8.90 Prepare for trial by 4.00 x $500 750.00 Patton’s counsel working on cross 37.5% = (Goldfarb) testified to examinations of 1.50 spending 4.00 Byrd, Warren, hours on the cross Capps exams of Byrd and Capps. Doc. 136 at 72. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 11/3/20 9.80 continue preparing 4.00 x $500 375.00 Patton’s counsel for trial by 50% x (Goldfarb) testified to working on all 37.5% = spending 4.00 cross 0.75 hours on cross examinations, exams but could going through not identify the exhibits, review witnesses. Doc. Court’s order on 136 at 72–73. MIL Therefore, assume 50% of this time related to compensable witnesses. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 11/3/20 8.00 Trial preparation: 2.00 x $300 225.00 Patton’s counsel working on 37.5% = (Smith) testified to Plaintiffs direct 0.75 spending 2.00 exam, opening hours on Patton’s statement direct exam. Doc. 136 at 73. Her testimony is compensable. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 11/4/20 10.90 prepare for trial by 5.00 x $500 468.75 Patton’s counsel workin on cross 50% x (Goldfarb) testified to examinations, 37.5% = spending 5.00 office conference 0.9375 hours on cross with plaintiff for exams but could trial prep, and go not identify the through exhibits witnesses. Doc. for trial. 136 at 74. Therefore, assume 50% of this time related to compensable witnesses. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 11/4/20 11.20 This entry is for 5.75 x $300 646.88 Patton’s counsel Wednesday. 37.5% = (Smith) testified to Continuing to 2.1563 spending 5.75 prepare for trial. hours on Patton’s Reviewing court’s direct exam. Doc. order on motion in 136 at 74. Patton’s limine and testimony is discussing with compensable. Jon. Continuing 37.5% adjustment throughout day to for block billing. work on Plaintiffs direct exam and opening statement (working on both documents at once). Meeting with client from 3:30-7:15 PM to discuss court’s rulings, discuss plans for trial, and prepare for her testimony. 11/5/20 8.80 Prepare for trial by 8.80 x $500 825.00 Patton’s counsel working on all 50% x (Goldfarb) could not identify cross examinations 37.5% = the witnesses. Doc. 1.65 123 at 7. Therefore, assume 50% of this time related to compensable witnesses. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 11/5/20 10.20 Continuing to 2.00 x $300 225.00 Patton’s counsel work on opening 37.5% = (Smith) testified to and direct of 0.75 spending 2.00 plaintiff, preparing hours on her direct for meeting with exam. Doc. 136 at witness, leaving at 75. Patton’s 5 to drive to testimony is Moody to meet compensable. with witness and 37.5% adjustment meeting with for block billing. witness there until 6:15 or so. 11/6/20 9.90 continue trial prep 4.00 x $500 375.00 Patton’s counsel working on cross 50% x (Goldfarb) testified to examinations of 37.5% = spending 4.00 witnesses and 0.75 hours on cross work on trying to exams but did not get Brandon identify the Warren served witnesses. Doc. 123 at 7. Therefore, assume 50% of this time related to compensable witnesses. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 11/6/20 9.50 Preparing for trial. 4.50 x $300 506.25 Patton’s counsel’s Continuing to draft 37.5% = (Smith) notes reflect that opening and 1.6875 he spent 4.50 revising and hours on her direct reworking exam. Doc. 123 at plaintiff’s direct 7. Patton’s examination. testimony is Meeting with compensable. plaintiff again in 37.5% adjustment the afternoon to go for block billing. over it. 11/7/20 10.70 Work on cross 10.70 x $500 2,006.25 The testimony of examinations of 37.5% = (Goldfarb) Capps and Capps and 4.0125 Wingard is Wingard compensable. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 11/8/20 12.50 Prepare for trial, 3.00 x $500 281.25 Patton’s counsel’s work on cross, 50% x. (Goldfarb) notes indicate he review defendant’s 37.5% = spent 3.00 hours motion and our 0.5625 on compensable response, go witnesses but did through exhibits not specify which and prepare witnesses. Doc. everything for trial 123 at 8. Therefore, the Magistrate Judge will assume only 50% of that time was spent on compensable witnesses. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 11/8/20 8.30 Continuing to 3.00 x $300 337.50 Patton’s counsel’s revise and practice 37.5% = (Smith) notes indicate that opening; revising 1.125 he spent 3.00 plaintiff direct hours on her direct exam; meeting exam. Doc. 123 at with plaintiff to go 8. Patton’s over direct exam testimony is and discuss last compensable. minute discovery 37.5% adjustment issues; and 1.8 for block billing. hours drafting response to defendant’s motion to withdraw from stipulation 11/9/20 15.00 1st day of trial. 6.00 x $500 1125.00 Patton’s counsel’s Prepare for and 37.5% = (Goldfarb) notes indicate he conduct cross of 2.25 spent 6.00 hours Bill Byrd and on Byrd’s cross prepare for next exam. Doc. 123 at day 8. His testimony is compensable. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 11/9/20 11.80 At work by 6:30 to 2.00 x $300 225.00 Patton’s counsel’s practice opening 37.5% = (Smith) notes indicate he and prep for early 0.75 spent 2.00 hours argument with on her direct exam. Court regarding Doc. 123 at 8. Her Defendant’s testimony is motion to compensable. withdraw 37.5% adjustment stipulation; then for block billing. voir dire and jury selection, opening statements, Jon’s cross of first witness; back from Court by 5:30, then working on Plaintiffs direct to address issues raised in defendant’s opening statement and first witness. 11/10/20 15.40 Prepare for trial. 7.70 x $500 1443.75 Patton’s counsel’s attend trial and 37.5% = (Goldfarb) notes indicate he cross examine 2.8875 spent 7.70 hours witnesses Byrd. on the cross exams Barr, Capps and of Byrd, Barr, Wingard and Capps, and prepare for next Wingard. Doc. 123 day at 9. Their testimony is compensable. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 11/10/20 14.50 Preparing for trial 1.00 x $300 112.50 Patton’s counsel’s in morning, then 37.5% = (Smith) notes indicate he trial. Continuing to 0.375 spent 1.00 hour on work on Plaintiffs her direct exam. direct exam and Doc. 123 at 9. Her direct exam of testimony is Demelrice Jones as compensable. evidence comes in, 37.5% adjustment taking detailed for block billing. notes of examinations for Jon to rely on later when he drafts his closing. 11/11/20 14.00 Preparing for trial, 3.00 x $300 337.50 Patton’s counsel’s trial, continuing to 37.5% = (Smith) notes indicate he work in evening 1.125 spent 3.00 hours on her direct exam. Doc. 123 at 9. Her testimony is compensable. 37.5% adjustment for block billing. 11/13/20 3.10 Back in office 0 $300 0 Rule 37 motion is working on fed r. (Smith) not compensable. civ. p. 37(c)(2) fee motion after verdict. 11/23/20 1.90 Continuing to 0 $300 0 Rule 37 motion is work on Fed. R. (Smith) not compensable. Civ. P. 37(c)(2) motion. 12/11/20 4.00 Working on reply 0 $300 0 Rule 37 motion is on Fed. R. Civ. P. (Smith) not compensable. 37(c)(2) motion 1/6/21 2.70 Working on Joint 0 $300 0 Rule 37 motion is Status Report re (Smith) not compensable. Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(c)(2) motion 2/10/21 2.90 Go through 0 $500 0 Rule 37 motion is everything to (Goldfarb) not compensable. prepare for hearing tomorrow including reading all submissions on this issue then go through emails and deposition testimony and trial exhibits showing all the time devoted areas covered by the RFAs and read case law cited in briefs and look at addition caselaw on Rule 37 fee awards. 2/10/21 4.10 Preparing for 0 $300 0 Rule 37 motion is tomorrow’s (Smith) not compensable. hearing with Judge Borden by going through all filings in case, re-reading depositions and trial examination outlines to gauge content relevant to issues surrounding RFAs, and making notes for points to address. 2/11/21 4.50 Prepare for hearing 0 $500 0 Rule 37 motion is by continuing to (Goldfarb) not compensable. read through materials submitted for hearing and another review of case law. Arrived early and start working on preparing for hearing. Then attend hearing 2/11/21 5.00 Preparing for 0 $300 0 Rule 37 motion is today’s hearing (Smith) not compensable. beginning at 8 AM by making outline of oral presentation and documents to reference and going through remaining depositions, then participating in hearing beginning at 11:00 AM, discussing with Jon after conclusion of hearing. TOTAL FEES: 23317.83 COSTS Date Claimed Patton’s Compensable Adjusted Court’s Cost Description of Amount Cost Explanation Disbursements 7/9/18 1692.90 Depo; Bill Byrd, 1692.90 x 37.5% 634.84 The depositions of Regina Wingard, Byrd, Capps, and Chris Capps. Wingard are all compensable. 37.5% adjustment for cost allocation. 7/12/18 1,163.35 Depo; Shaconda 1163.35 x 37.5% 436.26 Patton’s deposition Patton is compensable. 37.5% adjustment for cost allocation. 8/2/18 409.20 Depo; David 409.20 x 37.5% 153.45 Barr’s deposition Barr is compensable. 37.5% adjustment for cost allocation. 10/19/20 86.00 PAYEE: Regina 86.00 x 37.5% 32.25 Wingard’s Wingard; deposition is REQUEST#: compensable. 400; DATE: 37.5% adjustment 10/19/2020. - for cost allocation. Witness Fee 10/26/20 130.00 VENDOR: Joey 130.00 x 37.5% 48.75 Wingard’s D. Investigations; deposition is INVOICE#: compensable. JRD- 37.5% adjustment 2020000904; for cost allocation. DATE: 10/26/2020 - Process Service; Regina Wingard TOTAL COSTS: 1305.55
V. CONCLUSION Without additional information on the basis of Patton’s appeal, the Magistrate Judge cannot conclude that this court has jurisdiction over the pending Rule 37 motion at this time. In the event the court finds that it has jurisdiction, either now or in the future, it is the RECOMMENDATION of the Magistrate Judge that the court GRANT in part the Motion for Attorney’s Fees and Costs (Doc. 102), and award fees in the amount of $23,317.83 and costs in the amount of $1,305.55 for a total award of $24,623.38. DONE and ORDERED on May 5, 2021. re AN. GRAY at □□ UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE