Rappaport v. State Farm Lloyds

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 29, 2001
Docket00-10745
StatusUnpublished

This text of Rappaport v. State Farm Lloyds (Rappaport v. State Farm Lloyds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rappaport v. State Farm Lloyds, (5th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

__________________________

No. 00-10745 __________________________

MARK RAPPAPORT and TRACEY RAPPAPORT, Plaintiffs-Appellants,

versus

STATE FARM LLOYDS, Defendant-Appellee.

___________________________________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court For the Northern District of Texas (No. 3:97-CV-2747-L) ___________________________________________________ October 26, 2001

Before GARWOOD and WIENER, Circuit Judges, and VANCE,* District

Judge.

PER CURIAM**:

Plaintiffs-Appellants Mark and Tracey Rappaport appeal from

the district court’s award of attorney’s fees in their suit against

State Farm Lloyds for payment of an insurance claim. We conclude

that the district court neither abused its discretion nor clearly

erred in awarding fees, and we therefore affirm.

* District Judge of the Eastern District of Louisiana, sitting by designation. ** Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the Court has determined that this opinion should not be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR. R. 47.5.4. I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In October 1997, the Rappaports, residents of Dallas County,

Texas, sued their insurer, State Farm Lloyds, in Dallas County

District Court; they alleged contractual claims, including breach

of contract and violations of Article 21.55 of the Texas Insurance

Code, and a series of extracontractual claims, including fraud,

civil conspiracy, and breach of the duty of good faith and fair

dealing. The suit arose out of State Farm’s refusal to pay the

Rappaports’ claim under their homeowner’s policy contract for hail

damage to the roof of their house. Relying on the Rappaports’

demand for damages totaling $200,000 (including mental anguish and

treble damages for the insurance proceeds) and on diversity of the

parties, State Farm removed to the United States District Court for

the Northern District of Texas.

Discovery proceeded under the supervision of District Judge

Solis until August 1998, when the case was reassigned to District

Judge Lindsay. In 1999 the court granted State Farm’s motion for

summary judgment dismissing the Rappaports’ extracontractual

claims, and the Rappaports have not appealed this ruling. The

breach-of-contract and Article 21.55 claims went to trial before a

jury.

The sole question put to the jury was: “Did the hail damage

that led to the need to replace the Rappaports’ roof occur during

[the insurance coverage period]?” The jury checked the box,

“Plaintiffs did so prove.” The district court entered final

2 judgment in September 1999, ordering that the Rappaports recover

$8,900 in actual damages to their roof, plus interest and costs.

This litigation then entered its second phase, which focused

solely on attorney’s fees. After the jury verdict, the district

court cautioned the Rappaports that:

Plaintiffs are further directed to submit fees only for time spent pursuing the claim [sic] upon which they ultimately prevailed at trial. No fees will be awarded for time spent on claims and other matters upon which Plaintiffs were unsuccessful.

In issuing this caution, the trial court required the Rappaports ——

actually, their counsel —— to segregate the legal expenses

involving the Rappaports’ successful claims from those involving

their extracontractual claims, which had been dismissed on summary

judgment. Nevertheless, the Rappaports’ first application for fees

failed to segregate the fees as directed, contested the legality of

the segregation requirement, and asserted a claim for $71,430 in

attorney’s fees for the entire case.

The court responded by stating that in its view, applicable

law permitted the fee claims to be segregated, and again

unequivocally ordered the Rappaports to do so:

Plaintiffs are hereby ordered to file an amended fee application that segregates fees incurred in prosecuting their successful claims for breach of contract and under Texas Insurance code article 21.55. If Plaintiffs fail to segregate their fees as ordered by the court, the court will segregate the fees and further will take any action it deems appropriate for failure to comply with a lawful court order. Plaintiffs’ counsel is

3 warned not to play games with the court or fail to comply with its lawful orders.

Despite this express order and warning to counsel, the Rappaports’

first amended application for fees continued to contest the

segregation requirement; however, it did segregate the time spent

drafting the summary-judgment pleadings and did reduce all other

expenses prior to summary judgment by 20 percent, describing this

as a “good faith generous estimate of the time that might be

reasonably allocated to the unsuccessful claims.” No other

segregation was attempted. The overall claim for fees dropped to

$63,786 —— a reduction of about 11 percent.

The court thereupon attempted its own segregation analysis,

but was frustrated in this effort because it found the records of

the Rappaports’ lawyer, Mark Ticer, to be “sketchy and vague in

many instances and...[lacking] sufficient explanatory detail for

the court to determine which hours were expended on the contracts

and Art. 21.55 claims.” Describing the allocation of time among

the claims as “totally inadequate,” the court stated that it was

“impossible [emphasis original] for the court to determine the

amount of time that was reasonably expended on Plaintiffs’

successful contract claim” before the summary-judgment dismissal of

the extracontractual claims. Consequently, the district court

denied all fees for time expended before its summary-judgment

ruling, finding the Rappaports’ failure to segregate “really

unexplainable and inexcusable.” The court also denied as

4 unreasonable some fees related to the successful contract claims,

including $8,050 billed by co-counsel, terming that legal service

“not necessary for the prosecution of this action.” In the end,

the court awarded the Rappaports $18,460 in attorney’s fees.

The Rappaports moved to amend or reconsider this judgment and

submitted a brief that, while preserving the segregation issue for

appeal, did segregate some of the contractual-claim and

extracontractual-claim fees from the generality of the case. This

segregation reduced the total attorney’s fees request to $57,744

—— an additional reduction of $6,042, or approximately 10 percent

of the revised request. On reconsideration, the district court

allowed fifty more hours of Ticer’s time that the court now

understood to be related to the contractual claims, resulting in an

increase of $10,940 in fees awarded, for a total of $29,400. The

court viewed this award as reasonable both for the contract claims

taken as a whole and in light of the actual damages found in the

case; therefore, it stated, “this court will not further expend

scarce judicial resources on the attorney’s fees dispute.” This

timely appeal followed.

II. ANALYSIS

5 We review a district court’s award or denial of attorney’s

fees for abuse of discretion.1 We review the court’s findings of

fact supporting the award, such as its determination of reasonable

hours, for clear error.2

As this is a diversity case, the district court looked to

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