United States v. Terrance Bailey

581 F.2d 984, 189 U.S. App. D.C. 206, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 10167
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJuly 14, 1978
Docket75-1595
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 581 F.2d 984 (United States v. Terrance Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Terrance Bailey, 581 F.2d 984, 189 U.S. App. D.C. 206, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 10167 (D.C. Cir. 1978).

Opinion

*986 SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Circuit Judge:

Counsel appointed by the court to represent an indigent on an appeal from a felony conviction 1 seeks compensation exceeding the $1,000 limitation imposed generally by the Criminal Justice Act of 1964. 2 By the terms of the Act, compensation above $1,000 is allowable if the court certifies that it is “necessary to provide fair compensation” for “extended or complex representation” and the chief judge of the circuit approves the payment. 3 In this instance, counsel seeks $1,750, representing 3.25 in-court and 82.42 out-of-court attorney-hours computed at the statutory rates, 4 and the application does not on its face bring the claim clearly within nor leave it manifestly outside the exception for excess compensation. 5 To boot, since the governing criteria are hardly self-explanatory and no refining judicial opinion is in sight, 6 some exploration into their meaning is essential. So, to enable me to determine whether I should certify this application for consideration by the Chief Judge, I must endeavor to ascertain much more definitely the contours of the statutory standard.

I

Under the Act as originally passed, the general limit on compensation for felony appeals was $500, and excess compensation could be awarded only in “extraordinary circumstances” for trials involving “protracted representation.” 7 That ceiling remained in vogue for six years, during which it precipitated some reported judicial efforts toward interpretation and application. 8 When, in 1969, Congress took a second look at the matter of compensating court-appointed counsel, it relied heavily on a study by Professor Dallin H. Oaks noting that “[m]ost judges have been quite closefisted in the administration of [the excess-compensation] provision. . . . ” 9 The author of the study was primarily concerned with unfair discrimination between similarly-situated attorneys seeking above-limit compensation; 10 he perceived that the strictness with which the standard was actually being applied varied dramatically *987 from district to district, and indeed from judge to judge within single districts. 11 Notwithstanding the context in which Professor Oaks’ observation on “closefisted[ness]” was made, the committees of both Houses interpreted it as a finding that “the original language [of the excess-compensation exception] has been given too restricted an interpretation.” 12 In 1970, then, Congress raised the general limit to $1,000, included appeals within the category of representation that could warrant excess compensation and rephrased the exception in an effort to ease the eligibility requirements. 13

Professor Oaks also believed that an increase of the general limit to $1,000 would minimize the rephrasing problem by eliminating the need for all but a few excess-compensation applications. 14 That prediction has not withstood the test of time, and judges are increasingly called upon to determine whether the “extended or complex representation” criterion has been met. 15 Professor Oaks had little hope that the new language would succeed in ending the problem of discrimination, 16 and it can fairly be said that the amended Act leaves the prerequisites for excess compensation as “essentially standardless” as its predecessor did. 17 Adding further to the dilemma, the legislative history 18 does not eliminate the ambiguities to which excess-compensation claimants have thus fallen heir.

II

Reverting to the statutory language, two preconditions to excess compensation emerge. First, the claim must be for “representation” either “extended or complex” in character. 19 “[Representation” obviously means the time and energy expended by counsel in the client’s behalf, the totality of which is a potential factor. Common sense confines its value, however, to reasonably competent and productive effort, and excludes bumbling and wasteful activity from the count. “[E]xtended” representation is of a piece with “protracted” representation under the old standard, 20 each connoting a temporal element — a substantial investment of time. “[C]omplex” representation refers to the intricacies of the case and their corresponding call on counsel’s intellectual resources. An appeal presenting thorny issues summoning a high degree of expertise may justify excess compensation though a more pedestrian case demanding the same number of attorney-hours might not.

Very importantly, insofar as the first requirement is concerned, the representation may be either “extended or complex”; it need not be both. The statutory language thus accommodates legal service of long duration in the simpler case as well as shorter-term service in complicated litigation. It should be noted, however, that— especially in appellate work — the drain on counsel’s time may and normally will bear a direct relationship to the perplexities of the case, and that resultantly complexity may become the more urgent and useful inquiry.

The second prerequisite to an award of excess compensation is that it be “necessary to provide fair compensation.” 21 That condition has been in the Act from its very *988 beginning, 22 but the 1970 revision gave it quite a different cast. In original form the Act confined excess compensation to cases involving “extraordinary circumstances,” 23 an element no longer essential. And while in such circumstances “protracted representation” was compensable, representation that was “complex” but not “extended” did not qualify — another consideration Congress changed. 24 As has been stated, moreover, the overall congressional endeavor was to liberalize compensation awards and thereby “to alleviate the burden of representing indigents accused of crime.” 25 The Act in its current version thus sets a lower threshold for excess-compensation eligibility than its forerunner indulged. 26

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Bluebook (online)
581 F.2d 984, 189 U.S. App. D.C. 206, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 10167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-terrance-bailey-cadc-1978.