Shelly Cook v. Greenleaf Twp., Mich.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 15, 2021
Docket20-1985
StatusUnpublished

This text of Shelly Cook v. Greenleaf Twp., Mich. (Shelly Cook v. Greenleaf Twp., Mich.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shelly Cook v. Greenleaf Twp., Mich., (6th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 21a0290n.06

No. 20-1985

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED SHELLY COOK; CHRISTINA GIBBARD, ) Jun 15, 2021 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk Plaintiffs-Appellees, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED v. ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR ) THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF GREENLEAF TOWNSHIP, MICHIGAN; ) MICHIGAN JUDY KELLER; RANDALL SCHUETTE; ) KEN BROWN; ROSIE QUINN, ) ) Defendants-Appellants. )

BEFORE: ROGERS, WHITE, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.

MURPHY, Circuit Judge. The district court required a rural township’s officials to pay

over $137,000 in attorney’s fees after Christina Gibbard won a mere $500 on claims under

Michigan’s Open Meetings Act. The officials now challenge this attorney’s fees award, arguing

both that it includes fees for work unrelated to the Open Meetings Act and that it is clearly

excessive as compared to Gibbard’s limited success in this suit. On appeal, however, these

township officials simply assert that the attorney’s fees must have included unrelated work without

challenging any specific billing entry or citing any supporting facts. Their conclusory argument

does not suffice under our deferential clear-error standard of review. And while the fees may be

gargantuan in relation to the small amount that Gibbard recovered, the Open Meetings Act itself

caps a plaintiff’s damages at $500. So the statute requires courts to grant an award of “actual” (not No. 20-1985, Cook, et al. v. Greenleaf Twp., Mich., et al.

“reasonable”) attorney’s fees in order to ensure that attorneys will accept these types of cases

despite the small potential recovery. We thus must affirm the award.

I

This case stems from a contentious township board meeting in Greenleaf Township,

Michigan. For years Christina Gibbard and Shelly Cook attended nearly every board meeting. On

October 18, 2016, the board held a special meeting to consider settling a suit by the township’s

former supervisor. State law required a majority of the board to authorize this meeting in writing.

Gibbard questioned the township clerk, Judy Keller, about whether a majority had done so.

After the meeting, Keller told Gibbard to accompany her to her office purportedly to

retrieve a document showing that the board had properly called the meeting. When they got there,

Keller started berating Gibbard instead. Gibbard began recording her. The recording showed

Keller get close to Gibbard at one point; Gibbard alleged that Keller made physical contact.

Gibbard decided to leave without the document. As she left, the township treasurer sought to

forcibly turn off her camera. Keller also noticed that Gibbard had been recording her. She ran

toward Gibbard to grab the camera. Gibbard thought that Keller was going to tackle her, but a

man stepped between them.

Hearing the ruckus, Cook arrived on the scene in time to see Keller rushing Gibbard. Cook

claims to have watched Keller’s husband then grab Gibbard’s hand to pry away her camera. Cook

began to record the encounter too. As Keller’s husband confronted Gibbard, Keller quickly

approached Cook, told her to “shut that damn camera off,” and tried to slap it away.

Gibbard and Cook sued Greenleaf Township, several township officials (Keller, Randall

Schuette, Ken Brown, and Rosie Quinn), and Keller’s husband. Gibbard and Cook brought federal

claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the township officials, alleging that their actions violated

2 No. 20-1985, Cook, et al. v. Greenleaf Twp., Mich., et al.

the First Amendment. Gibbard and Cook also brought various state-law claims. They alleged,

among other things, that Keller and her husband had committed both a common-law assault and a

common-law battery. They also alleged that Keller and Schuette had violated Michigan’s Open

Meetings Act.

Several of the claims survived summary judgment, so the case proceeded to trial. The jury

delivered a mixed verdict. It rejected Gibbard’s and Cook’s federal constitutional claims and their

common-law assault claims. It also rejected Cook’s claims under the Open Meetings Act. Yet the

jury found for Gibbard on her Open Meetings Act claims against Keller and Schuette and awarded

her $250 in damages from each defendant. It also found in favor of Gibbard and Cook on their

battery claims against Keller and her husband. It awarded Gibbard $750 in damages and Cook

$1,000 in damages from each of these two defendants.

The Open Meetings Act allowed Gibbard to recover her attorney’s fees from Keller and

Schuette. She initially sought $142,695.50. The district court partially granted her motion. It

rejected Keller and Schuette’s argument that the attorney’s fees had to be proportional to the $500

in damages that Gibbard recovered, holding that her attorneys were entitled to full payment under

Michigan law. But the court recognized that the attorneys could seek to recover only for the time

spent on Gibbard’s successful Open Meetings Act claims, not for time on unrelated claims. It

ordered the parties to confer in the hope that they would reach an agreement on the fees that were

unrelated to Gibbard’s Open Meetings Act claims.

The parties could not agree. Gibbard renewed her fees motion. Although subtracting about

30 hours of work as unrelated to her Open Meetings Act claims, Gibbard now sought payment for

the time spent on this attorney’s fees dispute. She thus requested even more: $143,799.50. Keller

and Schuette’s response did not challenge any specific billing entry. The district court gave them

3 No. 20-1985, Cook, et al. v. Greenleaf Twp., Mich., et al.

a second chance to raise such a challenge by ordering supplemental briefing and allowing them to

request an evidentiary hearing. Keller and Schuette’s supplemental brief switched tactics by

objecting to nearly every billing line on the same grounds: that they were either vague or related

to more than Gibbard’s Open Meetings Act claims. Gibbard replied with declarations from her

attorneys asserting that they spent nearly all of their time on the “common core of facts” relating

to all claims, including the Open Meetings Act claims. The parties waived the proposed

evidentiary hearing.

The district court granted Gibbard’s renewed motion in part. It held that Gibbard could

not seek payment for the time spent on the attorney’s fees dispute because the defects in Gibbard’s

original motion had caused the dispute. But it held that all of Cook’s and Gibbard’s claims were

“directly related” to the same confrontation after the October 18 board meeting. Op., R.121,

PageID#2921. So it found that “virtually all of the time devoted to the matter” related to Gibbard’s

Open Meetings Act claims. Id. The court awarded Gibbard $137,724.50 in fees. The township

defendants appeal this award.

II

A

Under Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64 (1938), federal courts generally must follow

state substantive law and federal procedural law when resolving state claims falling within their

jurisdiction. See, e.g., Degussa Admixtures, Inc. v. Burnett, 277 F. App’x 530, 532 (6th Cir. 2008);

Mayer v. Gary Partners & Co., 29 F.3d 330, 332–35 (7th Cir. 1994).

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