United Transportation Union Local 1745 v. City of Albuquerque , 352 F. App'x 227 ( 2009 )


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  •                                                          FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    Tenth Circuit
    August 21, 2009
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    Elisabeth A. Shumaker
    Clerk of Court
    FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED TRANSPORTATION
    UNION LOCAL 1745; ROBERT C.
    GUTIERREZ, Chairman; JOHN D.
    HUNTER, President; JOHN BARNES;
    ANTHONY CHAVEZ; DAVID
    LOVATO; DOROTHEA MONTANO;                     No. 08-2103
    JACOB ROMERO; DALE J              (D.C. Nos. 1:96-cv-00716-WFD-ACT
    PADILLA; LEROY SAAVEDRA;             & 1:99-CV-00208-WFD-ACT)
    PATRICIA SANDOVAL;                              (D. N.M.)
    MOTORCOACH OPERATORS;
    ERLINDA ANTILLON; JOHN
    ARMIJO; ANGELO BACA; PETER
    BACA; JOHN ROBERT BAZAN;
    JOHN BOTTYLISO; JOHN
    BOULDIN; CAROL C BRADY;
    SHELLY ALEXIS BURLINGAME;
    SAMUEL CASTILLO; AUGUST C
    CHAVEZ; DENNIS CHAVEZ;
    VICTOR T CHAVEZ; SANDRA
    CLARK LUCERO; FRANK M
    CONCINI; RICHARD L
    DEBEULIEU; RAYMOND L.
    DIMAS; RICHARD DUBRIEL;
    ORLANDO S. DURAN; CHARLES
    FERNANDEZ; ERIC GANDY; EARL
    GARCIA; ERNESTINE GARCIA;
    FREDERICK GARCIA; GENE R.
    GARCIA; JOHNNY GARCIA;
    JOSEPH R. GARCIA; MANUEL
    GARCIA; PETE GARCIA; ROSIE I.
    GARDUNO; RUBEN R. GAYTAN;
    JOHN E. GINAN; JOHNNY
    GONZALES; JOHNNY B.
    GONZALES; GAYLENE S. GRIEGO;
    JAMES HERNANDEZ; DAVID A.
    HERRERA; MARY HERRERA;
    TIM HERRERA; PHILIP L.
    HOWARD; PRECILLA M.
    JARAMILLO; FRANK J. LA VIERA;
    JOSEPH LINTON; ISAAC LOPEZ;
    ELMER D. LUCERO; LEO A.
    LUCERO; DIANA M. MARQUEZ;
    CHARLIE MARTINEZ; FRANK
    MC AFREE; MARK MCDONOUGH;
    JAUN A. MEJIAS; GLENN MILLER,
    JR.; ANTHONY DON MILLET;
    ISMAEL F. MONTANEZ; ALEX S.
    MONTOYA; SADIE C. MONTOYA;
    JOSE R MORA, JR.; JEFF
    NICKELSON; DOUGLAS M.
    NUANEZ; PETE NUNEZ; CHARLES
    OSMAN; EDWARD T. OTERO;
    JOANN A. OTERO; RONALD
    OTERO; ATANACIO M. PACHECO;
    PAUL PADILLA; CYNTHIA S
    PEREA; JOE A. RODARTE; DAVID
    A. SANCHEZ; TRINNIE SANCHEZ;
    ANTONIO SILVA; ANTHONY
    SIMOES; ANSELUP G. SMITH;
    SHIRLEY STACY; MICHAEL
    TEGADO; LOUIS TEITELRIS; JEFF
    VALENCIA; VICTOR VEGA; STEVE
    W. WRIGHT; BEN D. ABEYTA;
    RICHARD T. ADAMS; ERIC AMES;
    PRISCILLA ARCHULETA; LARRY
    BACA; BETTY JO BROOKS;
    AUGUSTINE E. CHAVEZ; H.
    ANTHONY CHAVEZ; MARY LOU
    GRIEGO; DON E. MAXEY; RUEBEN
    MONTOYA; JOSEPH A. ORTIZ;
    CHERYL I. PARRETT; RUMALDO
    RAMIREZ; ALEX RUIZ; JERRY
    SANCHEZ; JESUS SANTIAGO;
    ALDRINA SISNEROS; VICTOR D.
    SOLTERO; MARGARITA D.
    TREVINO; JUAN J. ARMIJO;
    OLYMPIA J. ESQUIVEL; GILBERT
    -2-
    A. GARCIA; LAWRENCE H.
    JOHNSON; MARY M. SCHALL;
    MICHAEL TOYA; ERNEST M.
    VARGAS; ROBERT M. WHALEN;
    JOHNNY AGUILAR; EDWARD R.
    CHAVEZ; ROY W. FREITAG;
    WILLIE D. GILES; LAWRENCE B.
    GOMEZ; MICKEY GRIEGO;
    DANIEL MAEZ; ANGELO M.
    REYES; BUDDY L. RIVERA;
    JUAN SILVA; EDWARD L.
    TAYLOR; ORLANDO TORRES;
    DENNIS ZAMORA; JOHNNY
    MONTOYA; EPIMENIO MARTINEZ;
    EUGENE PEREA; NICK RAMIREZ;
    MEREWYN B. SLAG; ANDY
    TORRES; SCOTT S SWANSON;
    ROGER A. TAPIA; DELVIN
    VILLAVICENCIO; HUGH ZEMEK;
    MAX ARAGON; LEROY J.
    ARCHULETA; JESSICA
    BACHICHA; TODD BARTLETT;
    GEORGE E. BOOKER; NICK D.
    CANDELARIA; CURTIS CHAVEZ;
    DION R. CONEY; TONY CORRIZ;
    PHILLIP J. GALLEGOS; LUIS
    GARCIA; ANGEL M. GOMEZ, III;
    ROBERT HERNANDEZ; MIKE
    GOMEZ; MICHAEL A. SANCHEZ;
    LAWRENCE J. PACHECO; DANIEL
    R. OTERO; SAM ORTIZ; PAUL
    MARTINEZ; LEROY A. ORTEGA,
    Plaintiffs,
    v.
    -3-
    CITY OF ALBUQUERQUE; MARTIN
    CHAVEZ, Mayor; LAWRENCE
    RAEL, Chief Administrative Officer,
    Defendants-Appellees,
    PAUL LIVINGSTON,
    Attorney-Appellant.
    ORDER AND JUDGMENT *
    Before O’BRIEN, McCONNELL, and TYMKOVICH, Circuit Judges.
    This appeal involves a dispute over payment for transcripts of proceedings
    in this case. A court reporter prepared the transcripts and delivered the originals
    to defendant City of Albuquerque, which paid the reporter for them. An attorney
    obtained copies of the transcripts through a public-records request. The district
    court decided the reporter was entitled to be paid for the copies obtained from the
    City of Albuquerque. It erred.
    *
    Only Attorney-Appellant Livingston has actively participated in this
    appeal. After examining his brief and the appellate record, this panel has
    determined unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist the
    determination of this appeal. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(a)(2); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G).
    The case is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument. This order and
    judgment is not binding precedent, except under the doctrines of law of the case,
    res judicata, and collateral estoppel. It may be cited, however, for its persuasive
    value consistent with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th Cir. R. 32.1.
    -4-
    A thorough recitation of the complex procedural history of this case would
    serve more to obscure than to inform our discussion of the insular matter before
    us. We will therefore narrowly focus on only those facts immediately relevant to
    our disposition. The appellant, attorney Paul Livingston, represented plaintiffs in
    an action against the City of Albuquerque, Mayor Martin Chavez, and Chief
    Administrative Officer Lawrence Rael for unpaid overtime under the Fair Labor
    Standards Act (FLSA). The district court appointed a Special Master to conduct
    hearings, for which Jennifer Bean served as court reporter. After the City ordered
    and paid for original hearing transcripts prepared by Ms. Bean, plaintiffs asked
    the Special Master to direct the City to file copies with the court clerk, so that
    plaintiffs could access them without having to obtain copies from Ms. Bean at
    higher cost. When the Special Master refused, plaintiffs used New Mexico’s
    Inspection of Public Records Act, N.M. Stat. § 14-2-1 to 14-2-12, to obtain copies
    directly from the City.
    Ms. Bean and the City complained to the district court, which ordered
    plaintiffs to “pay reasonable court reporter’s fees for any copies of transcripts that
    they desire the use of.” Aplt. App. at 18. The court also imposed a lien “on any
    subsequent recovery by Plaintiffs for damages and/or attorney’s fees [available in
    FLSA actions under 
    29 U.S.C. § 216
    (b)],” to secure payment of any reasonable
    fee owed to Ms. Bean pursuant to its order. 
    Id. at 11
    .
    -5-
    At that point, the amount of the reporter’s fee (and hence the lien securing
    it) was left open-ended in two respects: (1) the fee had to be “reasonable,” and
    (2) it applied only to “copies of the transcripts that [plaintiffs] desired use of” in
    the course of the litigation against the City. Thus, when the lien was imposed to
    cover the reporter’s fee, it was not known what transcripts would be involved or
    what the court would approve as a reasonable fee for them. This is an important
    procedural point, in that orders imposing liability for fees, sanctions, and the like
    are not final until the amount of the liability is determined. See, e.g., Am. Soda,
    LLP v. U.S. Filter Wastewater Group, Inc., 
    428 F.3d 921
    , 924-25 (10th Cir.
    2005); Turnbull v. Wilcken, 
    893 F.2d 256
    , 258 (10th Cir. 1990).
    The parties eventually settled the FLSA suit, but left the issue of attorney
    fees for further negotiation. Ms. Bean did not seek to enforce her lien against the
    proceeds plaintiffs obtained in settlement of their FLSA claims. The amount of
    the fee owed to her (and hence the value of the lien) remained undetermined.
    Later, the attorney fee claim was settled for $175,000—made payable
    directly to Mr. Livingston rather than to plaintiffs. Ms. Bean sought to enforce
    her lien against that award. The City was directed to deposit a portion of the
    proceeds into the court registry, and both Bean and Livingston moved for release
    of the funds to them. The court ultimately ordered payment of $4,159.02 to Bean.
    Livingston then commenced this appeal, challenging Bean’s entitlement to a fee
    for transcript copies she did not prepare.
    -6-
    Livingston’s Standing to Appeal
    “Counsel have standing to appeal from orders issued directly against them,
    but not from orders applicable only to their clients.” Uselton v. Commercial
    Lovelace Motor Freight, Inc., 
    9 F.3d 849
    , 854 (10th Cir. 1993) (citation omitted).
    In FLSA actions, this court has held that “[a]n order awarding or denying attorney
    fees is an order applicable to the client, not the client’s counsel.” Weeks v. Indep.
    Sch. Dist. No. I-89, 
    230 F.3d 1201
    , 1213 (10th Cir. 2000); see also Bennett v.
    Coors Brewing Co., 
    189 F.3d 12121
    , 1238 (10th Cir. 1999) (noting § 216(b)
    “expressly provides for a plaintiff to recover attorneys’ fees). Thus, as a general
    matter, counsel lacks standing to appeal orders regarding such fees. Weeks,
    
    230 F.3d at 1213
    , see also Manning v. Astrue, 
    510 F.3d 1246
    , 1252 (10th Cir.
    2007) (noting only client has standing to apply for fees under EAJS). But, after a
    party asserts and secures the right to a fee award, he may assign the right to
    counsel, Pony v. County of Los Angeles, 
    433 F.3d 1138
    , 1144 (9th Cir. 2006)
    (discussing Venegas v. Mitchell, 
    495 U.S. 82
    , 87-88 (1990)); see also Manning,
    
    510 F.3d at 1252
    , who then acquires a legally cognizable interest in collecting the
    proceeds.
    By the time Ms. Bean’s claim was finally resolved and ordered paid out of
    the attorney-fee award from the City, that award had become the property of
    Mr. Livingston. Undeniably, the order requiring satisfaction of Bean’s fee out of
    the sum directly payable to Livingston was an order issued directly against him,
    -7-
    from which he has standing to appeal. Moreover, under the familiar “merger
    rule,” under which prior interlocutory rulings merge into an appeal from the final
    order in which they culminate, see Med. Supply Chain, Inc. v. Neoforma, Inc.,
    
    508 F.3d 572
    , 575 (10th Cir. 2007); Steinert v. Winn Group, Inc., 
    440 F.3d 1214
    ,
    1221 n.10 (10th Cir. 2006), Livingston’s appeal from the final disposition of
    Bean’s claim encompassed the earlier orders holding Bean would be entitled to a
    reporter’s fee and securing that obligation by imposing a lien on any future award
    of damages or attorney fees obtained in the case. It is therefore proper to
    consider Livingston’s objections to these antecedent rulings.
    Merits of Livingston’s Appeal
    We have found no authority to justify requiring plaintiffs, and derivatively
    their attorney, Mr. Livingston, to pay a fee to a court reporter for a transcript
    copy the reporter did not make but, rather, that they legally obtained from another
    source by independent means. On the contrary, both broad principle and
    particular holdings undermine the notion that court reporters may demand a
    “missed fee” whenever someone obtains a copy of a transcript that can be traced
    back to an original transcript the reporter had made—and was paid for
    making—for someone else.
    In broad terms, Ms. Bean’s fee claim rests on the tacit premise that court
    reporters in some legal sense own the content of the transcripts they prepare, such
    that they are entitled to remuneration whenever a copy of a transcript is made
    -8-
    (even if they played no role in making the copy). To accept this premise would
    effectively give court reporters a “copyright” in a mere transcription of others’
    statements, contrary to black letter copyright law. See 2 William F. Patry, Patry
    on Copyright, Ch. 4 Noncopyrightable Material, § 4.88 (Updated Sept. 2008)
    (court reporters are not “authors of what they transcribe and therefore cannot be
    copyright owners of the transcript of court proceedings”).
    And there is a line of cases holding that transcripts independently accessed
    (such as by simply requesting the case file from the court clerk 1) may be viewed
    and copied as an alternative to purchasing a copy from the court reporter. See
    Kinan v. City of Boston, 
    112 F.R.D. 206
    , 208 (D. Mass. 1986); Hawley v. Hall,
    
    131 F.R.D. 578
    , 583 (D. Nev. 1990); C.P.C. P’ship Bardot Plastics, Inc. v.
    P.T.R., Inc., 
    96 F.R.D. 184
    , 185 (E.D. Pa. 1982); see also Stanley v. Henderson,
    
    590 F.2d 752
    , 753 (8th Cir. 1979) (noting counsel may obtain copies of appeal
    transcript from clerk); Schroer v. United States, 
    250 F.R.D. 531
    , 535-37 (D. Colo.
    2008) (rejecting, under post-2000 Rules (see supra note 1), party’s effort to
    require immediate filing of transcript with clerk to enable informal copying, not
    because copying is improper but because party failed to justify burdening the
    1
    Prior to the amendment of Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 5(d) and 30(f)
    in 2000, transcripts were filed with the court clerk as a matter of course unless the
    court ordered otherwise. The default procedure under the amended version of the
    rules was for the reporter to give original transcripts to the ordering party who
    filed them with the court only if and when they were used at trial or in support of
    pretrial motions. See generally Schroer, 250 F.R.D. at 534 n.1, 535.
    -9-
    court with filing of as-yet-unused transcripts). These cases undercut Ms. Bean’s
    claim to compensation for transcript copies independently obtained from the City
    under New Mexico’s Inspection of Public Records Act. 2 And if she was not
    entitled to compensation, she was not entitled to a lien on plaintiffs’ (ultimately
    Livingston’s) attorney fee recovery to secure payment of such compensation. 3
    Accordingly, the district court’s order directing distribution of registry
    funds to Ms. Bean is REVERSED and the matter is REMANDED for further
    proceedings consistent with this order and judgment.
    Entered for the Court
    Terrence L. O’Brien
    Circuit Judge
    2
    We emphasize the independent means by which plaintiffs obtained the
    transcript copies here, because the same authorities cited above sanctioning such
    means also hold that a party cannot compel an opposing party to produce copies
    through discovery in the same case in which the transcripts were made.
    3
    Reporters retain considerable institutional advantages as to transcripts.
    They are assured payment of a fairly lucrative fee for the originals requested by
    an ordering party under 
    28 U.S.C. § 753
    (f). Copies they prepare and certify are
    also official records of the proceeding, 
    id.,
     § 753(b), and thus valuable as the
    “best evidence” of what transpired, City of Pittsburgh v. Simmons, 
    729 F.2d 953
    ,
    955-56 (3d Cir. 1984). And recently the Judicial Conference of the United States
    issued a policy that prohibits for a period of 90 days any copying or downloading
    (from a court’s PACER system) of transcripts filed with the clerk, Report of the
    Proceedings of the Judicial Conference of the United States, Sept. 18, 2007, at
    11-12, available at www.uscourts.gov/judconfindex.html, which affords reporters
    a captured market of those in need of transcripts in shorter time frames.
    -10-
    United Transp. v. City of Albuquerque, No. 08-2103
    McCONNELL, J., concurring.
    I concur in the judgment on the ground that the appellee Jennifer Bean, did
    not file an appellate brief, and therefore waives any arguments she might have in
    response to appellant Paul Livingston’s claims. Mr. Livingston makes a facially
    plausible case that the district court lacked authority to enter the order requiring
    him to pay for the transcripts. Ms. Bean offers nothing to counter that case.
    This decision should not, however, be interpreted as precedent (even of the
    purely persuasive unpublished sort) that parties can avoid payment for reporter
    transcripts in cases involving a governmental party simply by requesting those
    transcripts under a public records act. There has been no adversary presentation
    of argument on that issue.