IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MONTANA BILLINGS DIVISION
ARIANE ROWLAND and JAMIE SCHULZE, CV 20-59-BLG-SPW Plaintiff, ORDER vs. WATCH TOWER BIBLE AND TRACT SOCIETY OF NEW YORK, INC., WATCH TOWER BIBLE AND TRACT SOCIETY OF PENNSYLVANIA, Defendants. Before the Court is Plaintiffs Ariane Rowland and Jamie Schulze’s Affidavit/Declaration of Supporting Documents of Costs, Expenses, and Attorney Fees (Doc. 123) filed pursuant to the Court’s grant of Plaintiff's Motion for Sanctions (Doc. 120, “Order”). Plaintiffs request $190,723.11 for costs, expenses, and attorneys’ fees. Defendant Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania (“WTPA”) objects to some of the hours Plaintiffs’ attorneys expended as excessive, redundant, or otherwise unnecessary. (Doc. 139). WITPA also asks the Court to stay the payment of sanctions pending appeal. (Jd.). Plaintiffs did not file a reply brief.
For the following reasons, the Court grants Plaintiffs’ counsel $154,448.11 and denies WIPA’s request to stay payment. IL Background The Court outlined the facts of this case in the Order. (Doc. 120 at 1-3). The Court adopts the Order’s relevant background and recites only those additional
facts necessary to analyzing Plaintiffs’ fee request. The Court granted Plaintiffs’ Motion for Sanctions as to Philip Brumley, WTPA’s General Counsel, and denied it as to Joel Taylor, Associate General
Counsel for Defendant Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York. The
Court ordered Plaintiffs to “submit a financial affidavit of all costs, expenses, and
attorneys’ fees directly resulting from their efforts to respond to WTPA’s motion
to dismiss and conducting jurisdictional discovery in response to WTPA’s motion
to dismiss and Brumley’s affidavit.” (/d. at 14-15). Brumley timely objected. Il. Standard for Attorneys’ Fees! Reasonable attorneys’ fees are generally calculated with the lodestar method. The lodestar figure is the number of hours reasonably expended on a case
multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate. Kelly v. Wengler, 822 F.3d 1085, 1099 (9th Cir. 2016). “A reasonable hourly rate is ordinarily the ‘prevailing market rate [ ] in
! WTPA does not challenge the $14,363.11 request for costs and expenses. As such, the Court only will discuss it in the final award calculation.
the relevant community.’” Jd. (quoting Perdue v. Kenny A. ex rel. Winn, 559 U.S.
542, 551 (2010)). The lodestar figure “roughly approximates the fee that the
prevailing attorney would have received if he or she had been representing a
paying client who was billed by the hour in a comparable case.” Perdue, 559 U.S.
at 551 (emphasis omitted). It is therefore a presumptively reasonable fee.
Gonzalez v. City of Maywood, 729 F.3d 1196, 1202 (9th Cir. 2013), The Court can
increase or decrease the lodestar figure, based on factors not subsumed in the
calculation. Kelly, 822 F.3d at 1099 (citations omitted). The party seeking attorneys’ fees carries “the burden of documenting the
appropriate hours expended in the litigation, and [is] required to submit evidence in
support of those hours worked.” United Steelworkers of Am. v. Ret. Income Plan for Hourly-Rated Emps. of Asarco, Inc., 512 F.3d 555, 565 (9th Cir. 2008) (internal quotations and citations omitted). Counsel, however, “are not required to
record in great detail how each minute of [their] time was expended ... [but] only keep records in sufficient detail that a neutral judge can make a fair evaluation of the time expended, the nature and need for the service, and the reasonableness of fees to be allowed.” Jd. (internal quotations and citations omitted). “[E]xcessive, redundant, or otherwise unnecessary” hours must be excluded from the request and award. McCown v. City of Fontana, 565 F.3d 1097, 1102 (9th Cir. 2009).
If a party demonstrates that their request is reasonable, the opposing party has the “burden of providing specific evidence to challenge the accuracy and
reasonableness of the hours charged.” McGrath v. County of Nevada, 67 F.3d 248,
255 (9th Cir. 1995), When ruling, the awarding court must explain its
determination of the lodestar amount “with sufficient specificity to permit an
appellate court to determine whether the district court abused its discretion in the
way the analysis was undertaken.” McCown, 565 F.3d at 1102.
Il. Analysis A. Reasonableness of Attorneys’ Fee Request 1. Meeting Time The Court first will address WTPA’s argument that the hours Plaintiffs’ counsel spent in meetings are duplicative and excessive. (Doc. 139 at 23), WTPA contends that no more than 10 hours of meeting time is reasonable. (/d.). “Participation of more than one attorney does not necessarily amount to
unnecessary duplication of effort.” Democratic Party of Wash. State v. Reed, 388
F.3d 1281, 1286 (9th Cir. 2004). Rather, “‘[a]n award for time spent by two or
more attorneys is proper as long as it reflects the distinct contribution of each
lawyer to the case and the customary practice of multiple-lawyer litigation.” Mardirossian v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 457 F. Supp. 2d 1038, 1050 (C.D. Cal. 2006) (quoting Johnson v. Univ. Coll., 706 F.2d 1205, 1208 (11th Cir. 1983)).
A “good faith effort to exclude from a fee request hours that are excessive, redundant, or otherwise unnecessary” requires exclusion of duplicated effort
among timekeepers. See Hensley v. Eckerhart, 461 U.S. 424, 434 (1983) (an attorney's duty to exercise “billing judgment [mandates that] [h]ours ... not
properly billed to one's client also are not properly billed to one's adversary pursuant to statutory authority”) (emphasis original) (citations and internal
quotation marks omitted). Thus, when reviewing fee petitions in which multiple attorneys billed hours, the Court should carefully review the requested hours to determine if there was
duplication of efforts, while considering, for example, the complexity of the case.
See Democratic Party of Wash. State, 388 F.3d at 1286-87; see also Walker v. U.S.
Dep't of Hous. & Urban Dev., 99 F.3d 761, 768 (Sth Cir. 1996) (“If more than one
attorney is involved, the possibility of duplication of effort along with the proper utilization of time should be scrutinized.”). Billing for multiple attorneys attending intra-firm meetings can be
duplicative. Strand v. Auto. Machinists Pension Trust, Civil No. 06-1193-PK, 2007 WL 2029068, at *6 (D. Or. July 11, 2007) (“Good billing judgment requires that time spent in conference among multiple attorneys be billed to only one of
those attorneys.”). It is appropriate to exclude those hours billed by the attorney(s) with the lowest rates. Id.
The Court agrees with Strand that the meeting time here should be billed per conference, not per attorney. Plaintiffs did not provide any argument why the
complexity of the issues discussed at the meetings or any other factor necessitated four attorneys and a paralegal, and thus have not met their burden to show the
reasonableness of billing for each attorney’s meeting time. As such, the Court will
allow a single recovery of 20.8 hours—the time Plaintiffs’ attorneys spent in intra-
firm meetings*—at $300/hour—the highest billing rate—for a total of $6,240. 2. Robert Stepans WTPA disputes Robert Stepans’ fee request for two reasons: (1) his time is
generally not compensable because his work involved passive review of other
attorneys’ work, and a fourth billing attorney was not necessary for such tasks, and
(2) his time logged for reviewing documents was block billed, not specific enough in terms of the documents reviewed, and thus too suspect for the Court to award compensation. (Doc. 139 at 15-16). Excluding meeting time, Stepans logged 10 hours for document review, 23.2
hours for travel, and 2.6 hours for court time. (Doc. 123-3 at 7-8). Of the 10 hours listed for document review, 8.6 were between July 13, 2020, and March 20, 2021,
2 This excludes time spent meeting with third parties (e.g. meeting with consultant, Doc. 123-4 at 11, line 20 and calls with defense counsel, Doc. 123-2 at 11, line 64). The Court allows for recovery per attorney for such meetings. Additionally, the Court excludes the 3.8 hours billed by Matthew Merrill for meetings that no other attorneys nor the paralegal had on their time entries. (Doc. 123-5 at lines 15, 18, 25, 34, 46, 47, 50, and 54).
for discovery document review, and 1.4 were dedicated to reviewing this Court’s
orders. (Id.). Stepans attached a list of the documents he reviewed and their Bates
numbers. (/d. at 10). None of the Bates numbers in Stepans’ list match those in
the other attorneys’ lists. As for Stepans’ travel and court time, Stepans argued for
Plaintiffs at the April 5, 2022, hearing. (Doc. 119). The record is not clear if he
argued at the June 23, 2021, hearing, however he did attend. Stepan logged 11.6
hours of travel time and 1.3 hours of court time for each hearing. Given that Stepans reviewed documents that no other attorney reviewed and
argued a motion for his clients, Stepans’ role in the jurisdictional issues was not
passive or limited to observing other attorneys. WTPA does not point to any specific entry in Stepans’ log that would provide for the opposite conclusion. The
Court also disagrees with WTPA’s bare assertion that the jurisdictional issue was
not so complex so as to require multiple attorneys. Plaintiffs’ work on the jurisdictional dispute—excluding the related sanctions issue—lasted for 17 months
and required review of thousands of documents. That is hardly straightforward, particularly since WTPA’s unreasonable and vexatious actions fueled the dispute. As for WTPA’s contention that Stepans’ block billing for document review is insufficiently specific, the Court disagrees. First, 8.6 hours over eight months is
very little time, about one hour per month. Second, Stepans provided a list of the
documents he reviewed and their Bates numbers. (Doc. 123-3 at 10). Because
Stepans only logged one entry for discovery document review, the 8.6 hours must
have been dedicated to reviewing the documents listed. This is defined enough to
allow for recovery. Accordingly, the Court allows for recovery of the time billed by Stepans (except meeting time). The Court will decrease his travel time for the hearings to
match that of Ryan Shaffer (10 hours per hearing), since presumably both attorneys drove from Missoula and had similar (if not identical, if they were carpooling) travel times. Plaintiffs’ counsel thus can recover 15.6 hours at $300/hour and 20
hours at $150/hour (for travel), for a total of $7,680 for Stepans’ fees.
3. Matthew Merrill WTPA objects to the hours expended by Matthew Merrill for two reasons:
(1) Merrill billed for time when he was not an attorney of record on the case, and (2) his blocked billed entries for document review are duplicative of work logged by other attorneys. (Doc. 129 at 17-18). The Court disagrees with both objections. As to the argument that Merrill cannot recover because he was not an
attorney of record, WTPA does not provide nor could the Court find a case that
supports such a rule. In fact, WIPA’s argument is undercut by the fact that a
paralegal—who can never be an attorney of record—can nonetheless recover for
legal work performed on the case. It is a regular practice for non-attorneys-of- record to recover their fees.
As to WTPA’s block billing argument, the record does not demonstrate that
Merrill’s work was duplicative of other attorneys’ work. First, none of the Bates
numbers on Merrill’s document log match those on other attorneys’ logs. Second, the fact that Stepans and Merrill block billed for review of the same broad category of documents over the same seven-month period does not support an inference that
their work was identical. (Cf Doc. 123-3 at 7 and Doc. 123-5 at 7). Had WIPA
provided any support for such an assertion, the Court would be willing to entertain it. However, WTPA pointed to no specific evidence to support such an objection and thus failed to meet its burden. See McGrath, 67 F.3d at 255.
For these reasons, the Court awards Merrill’s request for 67.2 hours at $300
an hour, for a total recovery of $20,160. 4. Document Review Time WTPA next objects generally to the hours spent reviewing documents as “srossly unreasonable” and unreliable. (Doc. 139 at 18). WTPA points out that the four attorneys seeking fees for document review have identical entries for document review: “Review of Jehovah’s Witness documents obtained from Defendants and Third Parties re: WIPA’s role in the church and contacts with Montana.” (See Doc. 123-2 at 9; Doc. 123-3 at 7; Doc. 123-4 at 10; Doc. 123-5 at
7). James Murnion is the only attorney who specified in his entries the Bates numbers for the documents he reviewed. (Doc. 123-4 at 10). WTPA argues that
the lack of specificity of the attorneys’ entries in terms of the time allotments and
the specific documents reviewed should be looked at with skepticism. (Doc. 139 at
19). WTPA again asks the Court to infer, without providing specific evidence, that
the documents reviewed by each attorney were the same, presumably because they
are described in the time entries the same way. As to Murnion, WTPA contends that many of the documents he reviewed
were produced by Plaintiffs and reviewed for preparing their complaint, so his time
is not recoverable. (Id. at 19-20). WTPA also argues that Murnion should not
recover fees for 41.6 hours of reviewing documents “flagged in the document
management spreadsheet as potentially PJ relevant” because the description is too
vague. (/d. at 20 (citing Doc. 123-4 at 13)). The Court disagrees with WTPA on each of these points. First, each
attorney provided a list of the documents they each reviewed and their Bates numbers. (Doc. 123-2 at 15-16; Doc. 123-3 at 10; Doc. 123-4 at 15-22; Doc. 123-
5 at 12-16). The lists are specific enough to overcome the skepticism with which
the Court must review block billed entries and for the Court to conclude that the
attorneys did not bill to review any of same documents. Second, WTPA did not
cite nor could the Court find a rule that categorically prohibits a party from billing for time spent reviewing their own documents, or billing for re-reviewing documents when the related issue is different from the issue presented when the
document was originally reviewed. The Court does not expect any attorney to
commit to memory the contents of every document after reading it once, let alone
apply the contents of a document to a new context. Accordingly, the Court rejects WIPA’s objections to time billed by Plaintiffs’ attorneys for document review. 5. Tasks Unrelated to Jurisdictional Dispute The Court can only award fees for time “reasonably incurred because of”
conduct that “multiplies the proceedings in any case unreasonably and vexatiously.” 28 U.S.C. § 1927. In determining the scope of allowable sanctions
under § 1927, the Court applies a but-for test. Redding v. Prosight Specialty Mgmt. Co., Inc., CV 12-98-H-CCL, 2017 WL 5526353, at *3 (D. Mont. Nov. 17, 2017). Any sanctions must be compensatory rather than punitive. Goodyear Tire
& Rubber Co. v. Haeger, 581 U.S. 101, 108 (2017). Here, the Court limited its award to “all costs, expenses, and attorney’s fees
directly resulting from their efforts to respond to WTPA’s motion to dismiss and conducting jurisdictional discovery in response to WTPA’s motion to dismiss and Brumley’s affidavit.” (Doc. 120 at 14). H Hf Hf
a. Hardin Congregation Subpoena and Motion to Compel WTPA argues that all hours spent on Plaintiffs’ subpoena and subsequent Motion to Compel (Doc. 48) concern clergy-penitent privilege, not jurisdiction. (Doc. 139 at 22). WTPA’s understanding of the subpoena of and Motion to Compel the
Hardin Congregation is overly narrow and ignores the larger context in which
those filings existed. It is true that the legal issue disputed in the Motion to
Compel was clergy-penitent privilege. However, the documents requested in the
subpoena and the documents Plaintiffs sought to compel production of directly informed the jurisdictional issue. The Court need not look further than the title of
the scheduling order in which the Court allowed for a third-party subpoena of the
Hardin Congregation: Joint Jurisdictional Discovery Plan. (Doc. 34) (emphasis added). Plaintiffs’ motion to compel further supports this conclusion. (Doc. 48). Thus, the time Plaintiffs’ counsel spent on the subpoena of the Hardin Congregation and the subsequent motion to compel are within the scope of
recoverable fees outlined by the Order. b. Obtaining Sanctions WTPA next argues that the time Plaintiffs’ counsel spent pursuing sanctions
should be excluded as beyond the scope of the Order. The Court disagrees. The
Order defined the scope of recoverable fees as those “directly resulting from their
efforts to respond to WTPA’s motion to dismiss and conducting jurisdictional discovery in response to WIPA’s motion to dismiss and Brumley’s affidavit.”
(Doc. 120 at 14). Plaintiffs’ Motion for Sanctions was a direct result of their
efforts to respond to WTPA’s motion to dismiss: Had WTPA not filed its motion
to dismiss based on their jurisdictional arguments, Plaintiffs would not have
requested sanctions. Ninth Circuit caselaw supports an award for hours spent obtaining sanctions.
In Blixseth, the Ninth Circuit explained that § 1927 “permits recovery of fees
‘incurred because of [the sanctionable] conduct,’ and that were there no
sanctionable conduct, there would have been no proceeding to impose sanctions, and no fees incurred in that proceeding.” Blixseth v. Yellowstone Mountain Club, LLC, 854 F.3d 626, 631 (9th Cir. 2017) (quoting Norelus v. Denny’s Inc., 628 F.3d
1270, 1297-1302 (11th Cir. 2010)). “[E]xcluding the costs of obtaining the sanctions award would not fully compensate the harmed party for the wrongful conduct it has suffered.” Jd. (citing Norelus, 628 F.3d at 1298; Haynes v. City and
Cty. Of San Francisco, 688 F.3d 984, 987-88 (9th Cir. 2012)). Based on the Order and Ninth Circuit caselaw, the Court declines to exclude
the hours billed for obtaining sanctions from the fee request.
6. Response Brief to WIPA’s Motion to Dismiss
WTPA next contends that the hours billed by Shaffer and Murnion for
drafting the response brief to the motion to dismiss are suspect and excessive. (Doc. 139 at 23). WTPA argues the claimed hours are suspect because the time is
blocked billed and the brief “was never filed.” (Jd.). Additionally, WTPA asserts
that billing 65.5 hours for work by two attorneys (28 hours billed by Shaffer and
35.5 hours by Murnion) in a single day for a response brief is both literally impossible and generally excessive. (/d.). As to WIPA’s first argument, the Court disagrees that it should disregard
any hours billed for drafting the response brief because it “was never filed.”
Plaintiffs filed their response brief to the motion to dismiss on November 5, 2021.
(Doc. 86). Thus, the Court can only assume that WTPA takes issue with the fact
that it had withdrawn its motion to dismiss before Plaintiffs filed their response brief. Importantly, though, WTPA filed its notice of withdrawal the same day Plaintiffs filed their response brief. (Doc. 84). WTPA’s withdrawal also came 17
months after it filed the motion, after extensive discovery disputes over the
jurisdictional argument with which WTPA sought to dispose of the case, and after
repeated requests by Plaintiffs to withdraw the motion. (See Doc. 85). Plaintiffs acknowledged in a notice to the Court that WITPA withdrew its motion but
explained that they still intended to file their response brief to “make a record as to
how WTPA attempted to mislead this Court.” (dd. at 3). Though the Court never considered Plaintiffs’ response brief, the Court
understands Plaintiffs’ reasons for still filing their brief, since Brumley’s sanctionable conduct permitted WTPA to move to dismiss and multiplied the
proceedings for 17 months through jurisdictional discovery and motions to compel. (Doc. 120 at 13). The Court declines to exclude the hours spent on the response brief for that reason. However, the Court agrees with WTPA that the hours billed are suspect and
excessive. Both Shaffer and Murnion claimed to have worked on the response brief on November 5, 2021, for more hours than are in a day. Had they provided the Court with a date range on which they worked on the brief, the Court would likely look at the hours with less suspicion. Even assuming Shaffer and Murnion worked on the response brief over a longer period, Plaintiffs do not justify why 65.6 hours was necessary. The hours also are block billed, so the Court cannot scrutinize the specific hours spent on the brief. Thus, the Court finds it appropriate to reduce the hours Shaffer and Murnion
billed for drafting their response to WTPA’s motion to dismiss. WTPA did not suggest a reasonable number of hours that the attorneys should have spent on the response, or a means by which the Court should reduce
the hours. And since Shaffer and Murnion block billed these hours, the Court
cannot cut specific hours. Because of the lack of guidance provided by the parties and the ambiguity of the time entries, the Court will make “across-the-board
percentage cuts” to hours claimed by Shaffer and Murnion. Gates v. Deukmejian, 987 F.2d 1392, 1399 (9th Cir. 1992). The Court may employ this “meat-axe approach,” so long as it articulates its reasoning for selecting specific percentage deductions. Id. The Court recognizes that the jurisdictional issue was complicated, and Plaintiffs’ counsel were obstructed from obtaining the information necessary to timely resolve the motion to dismiss. Thus, the Court finds that hours in excess of
a simpler case are justified. At the same time, the Court agrees with WIPA’s assertion that 65.6 hours is grossly excessive. Given these competing factors, the
Court finds that a 25% cut to the hours billed by Shaffer and Murnion for drafting the response brief is appropriate. Thus, Shaffer and Murnion can recover for 20.25 and 22.5 hours, respectively, for their time spent on the response brief. 7. Paralegal Fees Fees for work done by paralegals are compensable, so long as the work performed is work otherwise performed by a lawyer and billed at a higher rate.
See Missouri v. Jenkins by Agyei, 491 U.S. 274, n.10 (1989). Such work includes factual investigation, assisting with discovery, checking legal citations, and
drafting correspondence. Jd. “Purely clerical or secretarial tasks should not be
billed at a paralegal rate, regardless of who performs them.” Jd. Courts have ruled on whether the individual tasks billed by Jessica Yuhas
are clerical or work of an attorney. As stated in Jenkins, checking legal citations is
not clerical. Jd. See also eMove Inc. v. SMD Software Inc., No. CV-10-02052-
PHX-JRG, 2012 WL 4856276, at *7 (D. Ariz. Oct. 11, 2012) (collecting cases holding that cite-checking is not a clerical or secretarial task). Assembling, photocopying, and mailing exhibits and pleadings is clerical, as is proofreading, filing, Bates numbering, and calendaring. eMove, 2012 WL 4856276, at *7; Hopi Tribe v. United States, 55 Fed. Cl. 81, 99 (Fed. Cl. 2002). Here, Yuhas billed 50 hours for Bates numbering and organizing incoming documents; 40.2 hours for proofreading, checking citations, creating and organizing exhibits, creating duplicate filings for the companion cases, and converting documents to .pdf for filing; and 19.6 hours for filing pleadings, facilitating service of documents, and mailing letters. (Doc. 123-6 at 8-11).> All these tasks except checking citations are clerical. Accordingly, the Court excludes from the fee award Yuhas’ 50 hours for Bates numbering and organizing incoming documents, and 19.6 hours for filing
3 Yuhas also billed 23.4 hours for meeting time. (Doc. 123-6 at 11). As the Court already has discussed, she may recover for the 5.5 hours spent meeting with a third-party consultant, but none of the remaining hours for intra-firm meetings. 17
pleadings, facilitating service of documents, and mailing letters. As for the 40.2
remaining hours, neither party suggests how the Court should decrease the hours
requested. Nor does Yuhas specify in her time entries when she was cite-checking. As such, the Court will apply a percentage reduction. Checking citations is only one of five tasks included in the 40.2 hours
requested for Yuhas’ time. However, the Court recognizes that, proportional to the
other tasks listed, checking citations likely takes a significant amount of.
Balancing these factors, the Court finds that a 50% reduction to the 40.2 hours is
appropriate. Thus, Yuhas may recover 5.5 hours for meeting time and 20.1 hours
for checking citations, for a total of 25.6 hours at $75/hour, or $1,920. 8. Computation of Final Award Applying the cuts the Court has found to be appropriate, the reimbursable hours, excluding travel, are:
e Shaffer: 165.85 hours, at $300/hour, for a total of $49,755 e Stepans: 15.6 hours, at $300/hour, for a total of $4,680 e Murnion: 236.65 hours, at $200/hour, for a total of $47,330 □ Merill: 67.2 hours, at $300/hour, for a total of $20,160 e Yuhas: 25.6 hours, at $75/hour, for a total of $1,920 e Intra-Firm Meetings: 20.8 hours, at $300/hour, for a total of $6,240 The reimbursable travel hours are:
e Shaffer: 40 hours, at $150/hour, for a total of $6,000 e Stepans: 20 hours, at $150/hour, for a total of $3,000 e Murnion: 10 hours, at $100/hour, for a total of $1,000
Each person may recover as follows:
e Shaffer: $55,755 e Stepans: $7,680 e Murnion: $48,330 e Merrill: $20,160 e Yuhas: $1,920 e Intra-Firm Meetings: $6,250 WTPA therefore owes Plaintiffs’ counsel $140,085 in attorneys’ fees.
Combined with the $14,363.11 request for costs and expenses, WIPA owes
Plaintiffs’ counsel $154,448.11 in sanctions. This award covers the total amount
owed by WTPA for its conduct in this case and in the companion case, Caekaert v.
Watchtower Tract and Bible Society of New York, CV 20-52-BLG-SPW. B. Staying Order of Payment WTPA lastly requests that the Court stay any order of payment pending its
appeal of the Court’s imposition of sanctions. (Doc. 139 at 25-32). In deciding whether to stay a sanctions order pending appeal, the Court considers four factors:
“(1) whether the stay applicant has made a strong showing that he is likely to succeed on the merits; (2) whether the applicant will be irreparably injured absent a
stay; (3) whether issuance of the stay will substantially injure the other parties interested in the proceeding; and (4) where the public interest lies.” Hilton v. Braunskill, 481 U.S. 770, 776 (1987). The moving party need not show it is “more likely than not” that he will succeed on the merits, only that substantial or serious
legal questions exist for appeal. W. Sec. Bank v. Schneider Ltd. P’ship, No. CV
15-10-BLG-SPW-CSO, 2015 WL 9641678, at *2 (D. Mont. Dec. 21, 2015). Here, WTPA argues that serious legal questions exist as to whether Brumley qualifies as a sanctionable attorney under 28 U.S.C. § 1927. Section 1927 states:
Any attorney or other person admitted to conduct cases in any court of the United States or any Territory thereof who so multiplies the proceedings in any case unreasonably and vexatiously may be required by the court to satisfy personally the excess costs, expenses, and attorneys’ fees reasonably incurred because of such conduct. WTPA argues that Ninth Circuit law implies, and out of circuit district and appeals courts have held, that in-house counsel who is not an attorney of record in the case
is not considered an attorney under § 1927. (Doc. 139 at 26-31). WTPA also
argues that requiring immediate payment would impose financial hardship on Brumley and irreparably harm his reputation, while granting a stay would not
injure Plaintiffs or impact the public interest. (Jd. at 31-32). As for the first factor, the Court need not address the substance of WTPA’s
argument because WTPA did not raise this issue in its response brief to Plaintiffs’ Motion for Sanctions when it was appropriate to do so and thus has waived the
argument. If WIPA argues it on appeal, the Ninth Circuit likely will disregard it
as raised for the first time on appeal. Raich v. Gonzalez, 500 F.3d 850 (9th Cir.
2007). Further, an interlocutory appeal would fail because an order of sanctions is
not an immediately appealable issue. See Beck v. Test Masters Edu. Servs., Inc.,
937 F. Supp. 2d 85, 87 (D.D.C. 2013) (denying motion to stay payment of
sanctions because an order for sanctions is not an appealable issue, thus the party had not shown a likelihood of success on the merits). This factor thus weighs heavily against granting a stay. As to the financial injury to Brumley, “[i]t is elementary that, in most
circumstances, a payment of money causes no irreparable harm.” Jd. (citing Wis.
Gas Co. v. FERC, 758 F.2d 669, 674 (D.C. Cir. 1985) (per curiam)). “The key word in this consideration is irreparable,” and money is almost always recoverable. Id.; Wis. Gas Co., 758 F.2d at 674. In contrast, harm to Brumley’s reputation is irreparable. Thus, the Court gives some weight to this factor.
As to the third factor, the fact that Plaintiffs’ counsel “would have to wait
years until an appeal is resolved to collect its reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs” constitutes an injury, particularly here where the Motion for Sanctions was filed
almost a year and a half ago and the Order on the motion was filed seven months
ago. Metal Jeans, Inc. v. Metal Sport, Inc., No. CV 15-08987-DDP (RAOx), 2019
WL 1427104, at *2 (C.D. Cal. Jan. 15, 2019). This factor weighs against a stay. Lastly, as to the public interest, the Court disagrees with WTPA that the
public interest is unaffected. The public interest can be general and lie in the
timely resolution of disputes and the consistent enforcement of court orders.
Stargaze Mgmt. v. George Smith Partners, Inc., No. CV-15-02755-R, 2015 WL
12656917, at *1 (C.D. Cal. Nov. 6, 2015). This factor weighs against a stay. Considering the weight of the factors together, and in particular the heavy weight of the first factor against a stay, it is clear that stay is inappropriate. The
only support for a stay is the harm to Brumley’s reputation, which is not enough to
overcome the weight of the other factors. As such, the Court denies WTPA’s
request to stay payment of sanctions. IV. Conclusion For these reasons, Plaintiffs’ attorneys are awarded $154,448.11 for
WTPA’s sanctioned conduct in this case and in the companion case, Caekaert v.
Watchtower Tract and Bible Society of New York, CV 20-52-BLG-SPW. The
Court denies WTPA’s request to stay payment of this sanction pending appeal. DATED the SV bay of April, 2023. Losec Liew USAN P. WATTERS UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE