Tenants of 710 Jefferson Street, NW v. District of Columbia Housing Commission and Steven Loney

123 A.3d 170, 2015 D.C. App. LEXIS 376, 2015 WL 4965919
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 20, 2015
Docket13-AA-199
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 123 A.3d 170 (Tenants of 710 Jefferson Street, NW v. District of Columbia Housing Commission and Steven Loney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tenants of 710 Jefferson Street, NW v. District of Columbia Housing Commission and Steven Loney, 123 A.3d 170, 2015 D.C. App. LEXIS 376, 2015 WL 4965919 (D.C. 2015).

Opinions

RUIZ, Senior Judge:

This is the second time this case comes before the court on a petition for review of a decision of the District of Columbia Rental Housing Commission (“the Commission”). .In the first appeal we upheld the Commission’s decision denying a substantial rehabilitation petition filed by Steven Loney, the owner of a fourteen-unit residential building at 710 Jefferson Street, Northwest (“the Landlord”), that was opposed by the tenants of the building (“the Tenants”). Loney v. District of Columbia Rental Hous. Comm’n, 11 A.3d 753 (D.C.2010), en banc reh’g denied Feb. 17, 2011. However, we reversed the Commission’s calculation' of attorney’s fees for work performed by The Legal Aid Society of the District of Columbia (“Legal Aid”) in its successful representation of the Tenants in the administrative proceedings and remanded the case for further consideration of the attorney’s fees award. See id. at 759-61.- The Tenants subsequently filed a motion in this court requesting fees for Legal Aid’s work on the first appeal and on the response to the Landlord’s en banc petition, which we referred to .the Commission for an initial recommendation. The petition for review we now consider is brought by the Tenants who contest the Commission’s reduction of the attorney’s fees requested for Legal Aid’s work done in the first appeal before the court and on remand before the Commission following that appeal.

The Commission discounted the proposed hourly rates, which were based on the Laffey ■ Matrix, by about twenty percent and also reduced Legal Aid’s hours-expended calculation. Wfe conclude that the Commission erred in lowering the Laf-fey-derived rates, and that it abused its discretion in shaving the hours Legal Aid reasonably expended in representing the Tenants. Accordingly, we reverse the Commission’s fee award for Legal Aid’s representation in the remand proceeding and do not adopt the Commission’s recommendation for fees for Legal Ad’s, representation of the Tenants before the court. Tenants are awarded attorney’s fees in the [175]*175amount of $30,798.80 for work performed by Legal Aid in connection with the first appeal and subsequent remand.

I. BACKGROUND

The facts and procedural background of the underlying administrative case are set out in our opinion in the first appeal, Lo-ney, 11 A.3d 753, so we provide only the facts and procedural history relevant to the issues concerning attorney’s fees that are now before us. On August 6, 2004, the Landlord filed a substantial rehabilitation petition for his 14-unit apartment building, which would have allowed an increase in the rent charged to the Tenants. After a hearing examiner of the Housing Regulation Administration, Rental Accommodations and Conversion Division (the “RACD”) granted the petition on July 28, 2005, the Tenants appealed. The Commission reversed the hearing examiner’s decision on September 3, 2008, denied the landlord’s petition, and awarded attorney’s fees to the Tenants. Landlord petitioned for review by this court of the Commission’s order denying Landlord’s substantial rehabilitation petition, and the Tenants cross-petitioned, challenging the amount of the Commission’s attorney’s fee award.

On September 23, 2010, we affirmed the Commission’s order denying the Landlord’s substantial rehabilitation petition but reversed and remanded its decision on the attorney’s fee award. We concluded that, contrary to the Commission’s order, the Commission had jurisdiction to award attorney’s fees for work performed before the hearing examiner. See id. at 759-60. Additionally, we held that the Commission abused its discretion in rejecting the proposed hourly rate of $225, based on the Laffey Matrix,1 and adopting, instead, the $125 fee' provided in the Equal Access to Justice Act (“EAJA”) applicable to certain civil actions brought by or against the- United States Government, 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(2)(A). • See id. at 760. Because the Landlord did not contest the Tenants’ proposed hourly rate or submit alternative hourly rates,, and because the Commission’s . only rationale for sua sponte applying EAJA rates was that it “has traditionally used” those rates “without any consideration of the Frazier [v. Franklin Inv. Co., 468 A.2d 1338, 1341 n. 2 (D.C.1983) ] factors,” we concluded that “rejection- of the [Tenants’ proposed rate[s] constituted an abuse of discretion.” Loney, 11 A.3d at 760.

Accordingly, we “remand[ed] for further consideration of the [Tenants’ proposed hourly rate for attorney’s fees ... and to provide the [Tjenants with an opportunity in which to present their claim for attorney’s fees for work performed before the hearing examiner.” Id. at 760-61. We noted that the Tenants “could provide more evidence to support the Laffey Matrix as the appropriate rate — for example, expert testimony or affidavits regarding rates charged by attorneys for similar work in the District of Columbia.” Id. at 761 n. 5.

Following the issuance of our opinion in Loney, the Tenants filed a motion in this court requesting attorney’s fees for legal work performed by Legal Aid on the first appeal (briefing and oral argument), which it supplemented with the additional fees associated with responding to the Landlord’s petition for' rehearing en banc. The Landlord opposed the request. On April 20, 2011, we issued an order refer[176]*176ring the Tenants’ request for fees to the Commission “for calculation of the reasonable number of hours and hourly rate the agency recommends be awarded.”2

On remand before the Commission, the Tenants requested $28,350 for Legal Aid’s representation before the RACD and the Commission during the administrative proceedings, and presented the request for $27,752.75 that had been submitted to the court for work performed in connection with the first appeal to this court.3 In a supplemental motion, the Tenants requested an additional $6,033.75 for work done by Legal Aid before the Commission pursuant to this court’s remand.

In support of their fee requests, the Tenants submitted an affidavit from Julie Becker, the lead attorney in the appeal, which set out the education and professional experience of the Legal Aid attorneys involved in the case and detailed billing entries for work done on appeal and on remand, broken down by stage of the litigation (appeal, response to petition for rehearing, remand before Commission), attorney, date, time expended and description of the work performed.4 As Legal Aid represents indigent clients and does not have established billing rates, the Tenants proposed that in calculating the attorney’s fee award, the hourly rate should be based on the Laffey Matrix.5 The Tenants provided six affidavits from attorneys who practice in the District of Columbia who attested to the reasonableness of the Laffey rates for work performed by Legal Aid in this case.6

[177]*177On June 6, 2012, the Commission issued an order in which it approved an award of $22,162.50 for work done in the administrative proceedings prior to the 2010 petition for judicial review that led to the first appeal.7

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 A.3d 170, 2015 D.C. App. LEXIS 376, 2015 WL 4965919, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tenants-of-710-jefferson-street-nw-v-district-of-columbia-housing-dc-2015.