Waters v. International Precious , 190 F.3d 1291 ( 1999 )


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  •                                                                        PUBLISH
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT        FILED
    _______________    U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
    ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    09/30/99
    No. 97-5074
    THOMAS K. KAHN
    _______________                    CLERK
    D. C. Docket No. 90-6863-CV-UUB
    WILLIAM WATERS, LINDA BARTHOLOMEW, individually,
    and on behalf of all those similarly situated,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    versus
    INTERNATIONAL PRECIOUS METALS CORPORATION,
    MULTIVEST, INCORPORATED, et al.,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    ______________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Florida
    ______________________________
    (September 30, 1999)
    Before TJOFLAT and BIRCH, Circuit Judges, and BRIGHT*, Senior Circuit
    Judge.
    __________________
    *Honorable Myron H. Bright, Senior U.S. Circuit Judge for the Eighth Circuit,
    sitting by designation.
    BIRCH, Circuit Judge:
    In this class action, customers of the commodity futures brokerage firm,
    MultiVest Options, Inc. (“MOI”), brought suit against the firm and its brokers,
    alleging that the defendants engaged in a scheme to defraud customers by soliciting
    and stimulating excessive trading in commodities options. James Grosfeld, as
    owner of MOI's parent company, MultiVest, Inc., is the primary defendant in the
    case, as MultiVest, Inc. is substantially insolvent.
    After seven years of extremely contentious litigation and five months of
    trial, the parties agreed to a settlement prior to the scheduled date of closing
    arguments to the jury.1 The settlement created a $40 million fund to pay claims of
    class members and the fees and expenses of the plaintiffs' attorneys. The fund was
    “reversionary,” meaning that any unclaimed amounts would revert to defendant
    Grosfeld, the sole source of funding for the settlement. Defendants now argue that
    (1) the district court's award of $13.3 million in fees to the plaintiffs' attorneys was
    an abuse of discretion, (2) they are not prohibited from challenging the fee award
    even though the settlement agreement contained a “clear sailing” provision
    whereby defendants agreed not to challenge the fee award application, (3) the
    1
    The merits of the underlying class action, notwithstanding the energy devoted to those topics
    by counsel, are not at issue in this appeal.
    2
    district court's order finding that plaintiffs' counsels' fee award is assignable is
    reversible error, and (4) that the district court's approval of plaintiffs' attorneys'
    expense request was an abuse of discretion. We address each of these issues in
    turn.
    I.    FEE AWARD
    On the eve of closing arguments, the parties reached a settlement stipulation
    and presented the agreement to the district court. In pertinent part, the settlement
    provided that defendant Grosfeld would provide the money to fund a settlement of
    $40 million with which to satisfy the claims of the plaintiff class. The fund would
    consist in part of cash payments and in part promissory notes. In addition, the
    stipulation provided that any money not claimed by the plaintiff class or used to
    pay out fees and expenses would revert to defendant Grosfeld. See R31-1371, §
    6.2(e), at 43.
    The stipulation also provided that plaintiffs' class counsel would apply for
    attorneys' fees “in an amount not to exceed 33-1/3% of the Settlement Fund plus
    their costs and expenses.” Id., § 7.1, at 54-55.2 Finally, the stipulation included a
    2
    Under the agreement, “settlement fund” is defined as “the sum of the cash and aggregate
    initial principal amount of the Master Promissory Note to be delivered to the Settlement
    Administrator pursuant to § 2.2 of this Stipulation.” R31-1371, § 1.36, at 15. Section 2.2 provides
    that: “Defendants shall cause James Grosfeld to deposit the Settlement Fund in the amount of
    $40,000,000 by delivery actually made to the Settlement Administrator, contemporaneously with
    the entry of an order by the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida
    3
    “clear-sailing” agreement which provided that “Defendants will not directly or
    indirectly oppose Plaintiff's Class Counsel of Record's application for fees and
    expenses or compensation of the Representative Plaintiffs.” Id. at 55.3 The district
    court conducted numerous hearings and conferences among the parties on the
    provisions of the settlement agreement. On January 31, 1997, the district court
    held a hearing in open court on the pending motion for preliminary approval of the
    stipulation of settlement. The court gave preliminary approval and dismissed the
    jury. The final fairness hearing was held on March 31, 1997. The district court
    approved the settlement and awarded plaintiff's class counsel $13.3 million in
    attorneys' fees. See R132-1518-94. The court postponed consideration of
    expenses and asked the plaintiffs' counsel to provide additional documentation.
    After two additional conferences on April 25 and April 28, 1997, the district court
    awarded plaintiffs' class counsel $2,400,204 in expenses. See R35-1543-2.
    We review a district court's award of attorneys' fees for abuse of discretion.
    Camden I Condominium Assoc., Inc. v. Dunkle, 
    946 F.2d 768
    , 770 (11th Cir.
    preliminarily approving this Stipulation.” 
    Id.,
     § 2.2, at 17.
    3
    Such agreements are sometimes included in class action settlements so that defendants have
    a more definite idea of their total exposure. See Weinberger v. Great N. Nekoosa Corp., 
    925 F.2d 518
    , 520 n.1 (1st Cir. 1991) (“In general, a clear sailing agreement is one where the party paying the
    fee agrees not to contest the amount to be awarded by the fee-settling court so long as the award falls
    beneath a negotiated ceiling.”).
    4
    1991). The district court “has great latitude in formulating attorney's fees awards
    subject only to the necessity of explaining its reasoning so that we can undertake
    our review.” McKenzie v. Cooper, Levins & Pastko, Inc., 
    990 F.2d 1183
    , 1184
    (11th Cir. 1993) (internal quotation omitted).
    By definition . . . under the abuse of discretion standard of review
    there will be occasions in which we affirm the district court even
    though we would have gone the other way had it been our call. That
    is how an abuse of discretion standard differs from a de novo standard
    of review. As we have stated previously, the abuse of discretion
    standard allows a range of choice for the district court, so long as that
    choice does not constitute a clear error of judgment.
    Purcell v. BankAtlantic Fin. Corp., 
    85 F.3d 1508
    , 1513 (11th Cir. 1996) (citation
    omitted).
    In considering a fee award in the class action context, the district court has a
    significant supervisory role. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(e) mandates that a
    “class action shall not be dismissed or compromised without the approval of the
    court.” See also Evans v. Jeff D., 
    475 U.S. 717
    , 726, 
    106 S. Ct. 1531
    , 1537, 
    89 L.Ed.2d 747
     (1986) (“Rule 23(e) wisely requires court approval of the terms of any
    settlement of a class action.”). Upon reviewing the voluminous record in this case,
    5
    we find no abuse of discretion by the district court and affirm the award of
    attorneys' fees.4
    On March 31, 1997, the district court presided over a fairness hearing
    concerning the proposed Settlement Agreement. At that hearing, after noting the
    objections raised by the defendants, the district court proceeded to discuss the
    attorneys' fee award with reference to Boeing Co. v. Van Gemert, 
    444 U.S. 472
    ,
    
    100 S. Ct. 748
    , 
    62 L.Ed.2d 676
     (1980) and Camden I. See R132-1518-84-85. In
    Boeing, the Supreme Court rejected petitioner's argument that the attorneys' fee
    4
    Because we find no abuse of discretion by the district court in its award of fees and
    expenses, we need not address the ramifications of the “clear sailing” agreement on the defendants'
    ability to challenge the fee award in this case. We note that clear sailing agreements have been the
    subject of some controversy in the class action arena. In Malchman v. Davis, 
    761 F.2d 893
     (2d Cir.
    1985), abrogated on other grounds, Amchem Prods., Inc. v. Windsor, 
    521 U.S. 591
    , 
    117 S. Ct. 2231
    ,
    
    138 L.Ed.2d 689
     (1997),the court upheld an attorneys' fee award from a settlement agreement that
    contained a clear sailing clause. The writing judge noted that while the district court judge should
    always be the ultimate determiner of the fee award, “where . . . the amount of the fees is important
    to the party paying them, as well as to the attorney recipient, it seems . . . that an agreement Id.
     at 905 n.5. In contrast, a concurring panel member noted that clear sailing
    agreements had “adverse effects” in that they take away the advantages of the adversarial process
    and create the likelihood that plaintiff counsel will negotiate away something of value to the class
    in order to procure the defendant's agreement not to challenge the fee award. Id. at 907-08
    (Newman, J., concurring). Significantly, the district court here made a factual finding that there had
    not been any collusion among the parties. See R132-1518-64 (“it should be noted that the settlement
    plainly is not collusive in any respect”).
    Other courts have not been as suspicious of clear sailing agreements reached after arms-
    length negotiations. See Skelton v. General Motors Corp., 
    860 F.2d 250
    , 259-60 (7th Cir. 1988)
    (noting that a settlement agreement is a contract and when a party “accepted the benefits of the
    contract . . . [h]e cannot obtain the quid of the settlement agreement and avoid the quo of foregoing
    his right to appeal.”). We are satisfied that the district court here fulfilled its Rule 23 supervisory
    function and decline to address the clear sailing agreement.
    6
    award could only be based on the portion of the common fund actually claimed by
    class members and not from the unclaimed portion of the fund. See Boeing, 
    444 U.S. at 477
    , 
    100 S. Ct. at 749
    . The Court found that “to claim their logically
    ascertainable shares of the judgment fund, absentee class members need prove only
    their membership in the injured class. Their right to share the harvest of the
    lawsuit upon proof of their identity, whether or not they exercise it, is a benefit in
    the fund created by the efforts of the class representatives and their counsel.” 
    Id. at 480
    , 
    100 S. Ct. at 750
     (emphasis added). Boeing, as in the case at bar, involved the
    defendant's potential claim on undispersed portions of the fund, causing the Court
    to note that Boeing's “latent claim against unclaimed money in the judgment fund
    may not defeat each class member's equitable obligation to share the expenses of
    litigation.” 
    Id. at 482
    , 
    100 S. Ct. at 751
    .
    In Camden I, we held that “attorney's fees awarded from a common fund
    shall be based upon a reasonable percentage of the fund established for the benefit
    of the class.” 
    946 F.2d at 774
    . We further noted that the “majority of common
    fund fee awards fall between 20% to 30% of the fund.” 
    Id.
     Finally, we directed
    district courts to view this range as a “benchmark” which “may be adjusted in
    accordance with the individual circumstances of each case,” using the factors set
    forth in Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc., 
    488 F.2d 714
     (5th Cir. 1974),
    7
    abrogated on other grounds, Blanchard v. Bergeron, 
    489 U.S. 87
    , 
    109 S. Ct. 939
    ,
    
    103 L.Ed.2d 67
     (1989). Id. at 775.5
    After determining that the benchmark in this case should be 30%, see R132-
    1518-87, the district court proceeded to consider whether the benchmark should be
    adjusted up or down based on the circumstances of the case as analyzed under the
    twelve factors outlined in Johnson. Id. at 86-93. The district court concluded that
    all factors were either neutral or required an upward adjustment in the benchmark
    percentage. Id. Following the directives of Camden I, the district court factored an
    additional upward adjustment for the time taken to reach settlement through seven
    years of litigation and five months of trial. The district court further found that the
    case served an unusual public policy by highlighting the potential for “boiler
    room” tactics in the commodities industry. Id. at 94. The district court then
    concluded that “class counsel is entitled to a small upward adjustment in the
    benchmark of 30%, and that the appropriate adjustment is to the percentage of the
    fund requested by class counsel as its fee, that is, 33 1/3%, or $13,333,333.” Id.
    5
    Johnson instructs that district court should consider twelve factors in determining attorneys'
    fee awards: (1) time and labor, (2) novelty and difficulty of the questions, (3) requisite skill, (4)
    preclusion of other employment, (5) customary fee, (6) fixed or contingent fee, (7) time limitations,
    (8) amount involved and results obtained, (9) experience, reputation and ability of attorneys, (10)
    “undesirability” of the case, (11) nature and length of professional relationship with client, and (12)
    award in similar cases. 
    488 F.2d at 717-19
    .
    8
    The defendants' primary argument seems to be that the attorneys' fee award
    was based on a percentage of the total fund rather than the actual payments made to
    class members.6 The district court, however, considered the possibility that the
    actual payout would be less than the total fund generated for the settlement and
    noted that
    after seven years the number of class members actually asserting
    claims will be significantly lower than the class membership. I can
    also anticipate that the number of class members who end up having
    approved claims, who will actually demand payment on their notes
    after five years similarly will decrease, so that the actual dollars paid
    out will be substantially less than $40 million.
    R132-1518-91-92.7
    6
    The estimated actual payment to class members is $6,485,362.15. See R35-1563-13.
    7
    Defendants' assertion to the contrary notwithstanding, the district court reiterated, in its
    denial of defendants' motion to amend the final order and judgment approving the settlement, that
    the “Court is, and was at the time the Final Judgment was entered, well aware that there is a
    distinction between the ratio of attorneys' fee to the value of the class members' recovery in a
    common fund settlement in circumstances where the entire fund is distributed to class members
    asserting claims on a pro rata basis as opposed to circumstances where, as here, the defendants were
    able to successfully negotiate for a reversion of any unclaimed portion of the fund.” R35-1544-2.
    The district court also rejected defendants' suggestions that it was “misled” by the National
    Economic Research Associates (NERA) study on class actions offered by both parties in support of
    the settlement agreement, and that the NERA Study presented attorneys' fees as a percentage of the
    actual payout rather than of the total fund. The district court responded that:
    [Defense counsel's argument] (1) conflicts with the position he took earlier in the
    case when he was seeking the Court's preliminary approval of the Stipulation of
    Settlement that the fee application specifically contemplated by the Stipulation of
    Settlement, i.e. $13,333,333 representing 33 and one third percent of the $40 million
    Settlement Fund, was reasonable and that its reasonableness was supported by his
    experience in other class actions and consistent with the conclusions contained in the
    NERA Study; (2) conflicts with the Defendants' express undertaking that they would
    not oppose Plaintiffs' fee application so long as it did not exceed 33 and one-third
    9
    Contrary to defendants' assertion, no case has held that a district court must
    consider only the actual payout in determining attorneys' fees.8 Strong v.
    BellSouth Telecommunications, Inc., 
    137 F.3d 844
     (5th Cir. 1998), does not
    mandate that a district court must consider only the actual award made to the class.
    Rather, Strong held that it was not an abuse of discretion for a district court judge
    to consider the actual award paid out to the class in determining whether a fee
    application was reasonable. 
    Id. at 852-53
    . The Fifth Circuit, in fact, noted that
    while the district court's request for information concerning the actual claims was
    “not the usual” course of action, it was not an abuse of discretion under the
    circumstances presented to the district court. 
    Id. at 853
    . Additionally, unlike the
    percent of the $40 million Settlement Fund; and (3) conflicts with the term
    “settlement value” as used in the NERA Study, the plain meaning of which is the
    gross amount of the settlement pursuant to the Final Judgment as stated in the Final
    Settlement Notice to class members. In fact, the Court's understanding of NERA's
    usage of the term “settlement value' has been confirmed to the undersigned by Todd
    S. Foster, a representative of NERA who was one of the authors of the NERA Study.
    R35-1544-4.
    8
    In Goodrich v. E.F. Hutton Group, Inc., No. 8279 (Del. Ch. Feb. 2, 1996), aff'd, 
    681 A.2d 1039
     (Del. 1996), the judge, in his discretion, chose to base the percentage of the attorney fee award
    on the actual payment to claimants. Unlike the case at bar, Goodrich did not involve a situation
    where each claimant had an “undisputed and mathematically ascertainable claim” to part of the
    judgment. 
    Id. at 1048
    . Furthermore, Goodrich emphasized that the “award of attorneys' fee in a
    common fund case is committed to the sound discretion of the trial court.” 
    Id.
     at 1050 n.12. The
    court further declined to adopt a mandatory methodology for determining attorneys' fees. 
    Id. at 1050
    . The fact that the cases cited by the defendants emphasize that attorneys' fee awards are in the
    discretion of the district court and decline to adopt a strict method of calculation, illustrate that
    whether a district court judge considers the total fund or the actual payment will vary according to
    the circumstances of each case. Here, where the district court considered both the total fund and the
    possibility that the actual payment would be substantially lower, there is no abuse of discretion.
    10
    case at bar, Strong never established a “common fund” from which money would
    be drawn. See Strong, 
    137 F.3d at 852
     (“[N]o fund was established at all in this
    case.”). In contrast, the parties here established that $40 million was the fund upon
    which the amount of the individual claimants' awards would be based. The district
    court here never made a determination that this amount was illusory. Cf. 
    id.
    (finding that common fund figure was “phantom”).
    Moreover, in Williams v. MGM-Pathe Communications Co., 
    129 F.3d 1026
    (9th Cir. 1997) (per curiam), a class action reversionary fund case, the Ninth
    Circuit held that the “district court abused its discretion by basing the fee on the
    class members' claims against the fund rather than on a percentage of the entire
    fund or on the lodestar.” 
    Id. at 1027
     (footnote omitted). The court found that the
    attorneys' fee award should have been based on a percentage of the total recovery
    fund, $4.5 million, even though the actual payout only totaled approximately
    $10,000. Interestingly, in addressing arguments similar to those presented by the
    defendants here, the court stated that “Defendants here knew, because it was in the
    settlement agreement, that the class attorneys would seek to recover fees based on
    the entire $4.5 million fund. The Defendants had some responsibility to negotiate
    11
    at the outset for a smaller settlement fund if they wished to limit the fees.” Id.9 We
    also note, as the district court recognized, that a leading commentator on class
    actions has agreed that fee awards may be based on the total available fund:
    When a lump sum has been recovered for a class, that sum represents
    the common fund benchmark on which a reasonable fee will be based.
    When, however, the defendant reserves the right to recapture any
    unclaimed portion of the common fund after class members have had
    an opportunity to make their claims against the fund, . . . the question
    arises concerning whether the benchmark common fund amount for
    fee award purposes comprises only the amount claimed by class
    members or that amount potentially available to be claimed. In
    Boeing Co. v. Van Gemert, the Supreme Court settled this question by
    ruling that class counsel are entitled to a reasonable fee based on the
    funds potentially available to be claimed, regardless of the amount
    actually claimed.
    9
    While we fully agree that the district court has an independent supervisory duty to assess
    the appropriateness of the fee award apart from any agreement reached by plaintiff and defense
    counsel, see Piambino v. Bailey, 
    610 F.2d 1306
    , 1328 (5th Cir. 1980) (“A district court is not bound
    by the agreement of the parties as to the amount of attorneys' fees.”), we note that defense counsel's
    arguments about the “exorbitant and unprecedented fee Award,” Brief for Defendants-Appellants,
    at 4, are in conflict with their earlier assertions to the district court. As the district court noted, at
    the time the settlement agreement was presented to the court, the defense counsel fully supported,
    as “well within the range of reasonable”, R132-1518-42, an award of 33 1/3% of the total settlement
    fund. The district court further noted that both parties supported “a fee award of one-third of the $40
    million settlement fund, which everyone at the time clearly understood to be approximately $13
    million,” id. at 34, and emphasized “that in these discussions both sides went to some lengths to
    convince me that a settlement fund consisting of $40 million, albeit comprised of $10 million in cash
    and the balance in notes, less a fee award of one-third of the gross amount of the settlement fund and
    reimbursement of counsel's expenses, would produce an exceptional benefit to the class members.”
    Id. at 35. Additionally, no class members opposed the amount of the attorneys' fee award. See id.
    at 63 (only class member to oppose portion of settlement stipulation at fairness hearing “was just
    angry at the reversionary clause.”).
    12
    Herbert B. Newberg and Alba Conte, Newberg on Class Actions § 14.03, at 14-14
    (3d ed. 1992).10
    In addition to the district court's careful consideration of the Johnson factors
    and awareness that the actual claims made could be less than the gross settlement
    fund, our conclusion that the award is not an abuse of discretion is supported by
    the following observations. Unlike many other class actions, the total fund amount
    of $40 million was not illusory or meaningless. Each class claimant benefitted
    from having the total amount of the fund set at $40 million because the individual
    payment was based upon a percentage of the total fund. The amount of the total
    fund determined the amount of each class member's claim, regardless of the actual
    number of claims filed. In other words, as the district court explained:
    In relationship to the plan of allocation, the stipulation of
    settlement provides that each class member will recover from
    the net settlement fund in the same proportion that his or her
    losses bore to total customer losses. Therefore, the claim of
    any class member will not reduce or increase the recovery of
    10
    See also In re Copley Pharmaceutical, Inc., 
    1 F.Supp.2d 1407
     (D. Wyo. 1998), where the
    district court approved, under Boeing, the payment of attorneys' fees from the gross settlement fund.
    “The first step in a percentage of the fund analysis is a determination of the value of the fund. While
    disputed by the parties in this case, the matter is settled by the explicit terms of the Agreement.” 
    Id. at 1412
    . The court further found that “this case involves a settlement negotiated at arms length,
    rather than a judgment. Under the terms of that settlement and its remittitur provisions, Defendant
    not only knew that class counsel would seek to recover fees based on the gross amount of the fund
    recovered (regardless of whether some part of that fund was not claimed), but also agreed to a
    mechanism and formula by which class counsel could do so. Thus Defendant cannot complain now
    that class counsel seek to do what the settlement agreement explicitly contemplates.” 
    Id. at 1416
    .
    13
    any other class member except to the extent that the Court
    orders that bonuses be paid to the class representatives.
    R132-1518-64. Defendants' counsel also noted that “each claimant's
    distribution does not depend on how many claims are submitted in this
    case.” Id. at 145. The total fund awarded in the settlement, therefore,
    substantially and directly affected the amount that each claimant would eventually
    be awarded. The fact that there were a reduced number of claimants had no effect
    at all on the amount each class member received. That amount, rather, was
    determined by the total fund accrued. Negotiating a $40 million gross settlement
    fund, therefore, created a benefit on behalf of the entire class.11
    Moreover, even if we were to accept defendants' argument about the amount
    on which attorneys' fees should be based, the reversionary nature of the settlement
    necessarily would mean that 90% of the reduction in attorneys' fees would accrue
    to the benefit of the defendant, in contrast to the mere 10% which would accrue to
    the class' interest.12 Defense counsel's claimed interest in protecting the class thus,
    11
    Defendants argue that the court should consider the policy behind the recently-enacted
    Private Securities Litigation Reform Act, (“PSLRA”), Pub. L. No. 106-67, 
    109 Stat. 737
    , 758, § 108,
    which specifies that attorneys' fee requests must be considered in light of the total benefit to
    plaintiffs. We decline to apply the policy of the PSLRA because it does not apply to actions
    commenced before and pending upon its effective date, December 22, 1995. Furthermore, it is
    likely that the PSLRA does not apply to commodities actions.
    12
    Defendants calculate that the attorneys' fees should be $3,627,526, as opposed to the $13.3
    million awarded by the district court. Brief of Defendants-Appellants, at 47 & n.17. Of the
    additional $9.7 million that would accrue to the settlement fund from this calculated reduction in
    14
    seen in this light, strains credulity. Furthermore, while we have decided in this
    circuit that a lodestar calculation is not proper in common fund cases, we may refer
    to that figure for comparison. The plaintiffs' counsels' lodestar calculation would
    bring a fee of $12,663,897. See R32-1480, at ¶ 9. The $13.3 million awarded by
    the district court then would have only a modest lodestar multiplier of 1.05%.
    Finally, the abuse of discretion standard has particular meaning in lawsuits
    that are as lengthy and contentious as the case at bar. This litigation has generated
    134 volumes of record. Forty-eight witnesses testified at the trial alone. The
    district court is in the unique position to evaluate the labors of both parties in this
    litigation. Nothing in this opinion precludes a district court judge in a different
    case from basing the attorneys' fee award on the actual class recovery, or on the
    gross settlement figure. The factors the district court considers will vary according
    to the circumstances presented in each case. When we can discern no clear error of
    judgment by the court, however, there is no abuse of discretion.
    III. EXPENSE AWARD
    The defendants also challenge the district court's award of $2,400,204 in
    expenses to the plaintiffs' class counsel. R35-1543-2. Plaintiffs' lead counsel
    attorneys' fees, only $1,000,000 would be redistributed to the 20,000 potential claimants, while $8.7
    million would revert to the defendants. Id.
    15
    originally requested an expense award of $2,586,611.60, and co-counsel,
    $77,482.97, totaling $2,664,094.57. See R132-1518-94. While observing that
    Camden I did not provide guidance for determination of expenses, the district court
    recognized that “there is a requirement . . . on the part of class counsel to establish
    that the costs are reasonable and necessary . . . to the prosecution of the case.”
    R132-1518-96. See also In re “Agent Orange” Prod. Liab. Litig., 
    611 F. Supp. 1296
    , 1314 (E.D.N.Y. 1985), modified on other grounds, 
    818 F.2d 226
     (2d Cir.
    1987) (“Upon submission of adequate documentation, plaintiffs' attorneys are
    entitled to reimbursement of those reasonable and necessary out-of-pocket
    expenses incurred in the course of activities that benefitted the class.”). The
    district court further recognized a “responsibility to scrutinize the costs for which
    reimbursement is requested in order to ensure that class counsel is not obtaining a
    secret or unintended profit.” R132-1518-97.
    After a March 31, 1997 hearing, the district court determined that lead
    counsel for the plaintiff class had failed to substantiate its cost application to the
    extent necessary for the court to make a determination as to whether the expenses
    were reasonable. From the co-counsel's costs, the district court disallowed “legal
    services” and “postal costs” and cut reproduction costs from 25¢ to 10¢ per page.
    See R132-1518-95.
    16
    At an April 25, 1997, status conference, the district court made final expense
    determinations in light of plaintiffs' counsel's supplements to the expense request,
    such as “additional computer print-outs, invoices and other documents, as well as
    affidavits explaining the law firm's billing procedures for out-of-pocket costs, and
    affidavits addressing the reasonableness of certain categories of expenses.” R35-
    1542-2-3. The record reveals that the district court conducted an exhaustive and
    detailed examination of each of plaintiff's counsel's claimed expenses. See R133-
    1535-4-16.13
    We are convinced that the district court did not “rubber stamp” the
    submissions of the plaintiffs' class counsel for expenses, but rather required more
    specific documentation for costs, considered each type of expense separately, and
    eventually disallowed over $200,000 of the request. Rarely do class action
    litigations proceed to trial. The expense request in this case reflects seven years of
    litigation and a five-month trial. We see no abuse of discretion in the district
    court's expense award.
    IV. ASSIGNABILITY OF FEE AWARD
    13
    Among many other considerations, the district court eliminated costs for local meals, cabs,
    airline ticket upgrades, and other miscellaneous travel charges, id. at 6; approved telephone charges,
    id. at 4; and disallowed lobbyist fees and charges for a jury selection psychiatrist, id. at 9.
    17
    Under the original stipulation of settlement, plaintiffs' class counsel was to
    receive the entire sum of attorneys' fees and expenses in cash. The district court
    questioned this arrangement because the plaintiff class members were only to
    receive 25% of their claim in cash and the remaining 75% in the form of
    promissory notes. Responding to the district court's concern, plaintiffs' class
    counsel agreed to accept 25% cash and 75% in deferred obligation for their fee
    award. The terms of the deferred obligation are the source of the present
    controversy.
    Defendants challenge the district court's determination that the promissory
    notes given to plaintiffs' class counsel are assignable. The stipulation of settlement
    provides that the portion of attorneys' fees “not paid in cash out of the cash portion
    of the Settlement Fund will be paid by the Settlement Administrator if, as and
    when the Settlement Administrator receives payments with respect to the Master
    Promissory Note, and the deferred portion of these fees and expenses will earn
    interest at the same rate and be paid at the same time as interest is earned and paid
    on the Master Promissory Note.” R31-1371-55-56. Exhibit A to the stipulation
    agreement, a proposed order with respect to the class action settlement, signed by
    counsel for both parties, provides that “Counsel will request that the payment of
    fees and expenses out of the Settlement Fund be made in cash to the extent
    18
    available. Any fee awarded which is not paid in cash shall be paid in the form of
    an obligation having the same terms and bearing the same interest rate as the
    Promissory Notes, as defined in the Stipulation.” R31-1371, Exh. A, at 11. The
    stipulation provided that promissory notes given to class claimants were freely
    assignable. R31-1371-20. Under the terms of the proposed order, then, the
    deferred attorney's fees would be on equal terms with the class claimants'
    promissory notes and, therefore, assignable. Defendants argue that the language in
    the proposed order is a material alteration of the language in the stipulation of
    settlement. The proposed order, however, was attached to the stipulation
    agreement as an exhibit. Under the terms of the stipulation agreement, “[a]ll of the
    Exhibits to the Stipulation . . . are fully incorporated herein by this reference.” Id.
    at 66, § 10.5.
    Furthermore, as the district court noted, “[n]owhere in the January 31, 1997
    Order or the Stipulation of Settlement is it specifically provided that the deferred
    obligation to class counsel shall not be assignable or transferable.” R33-1515-2-3.
    As a result, the more detailed language of the proposed order does not materially
    alter the silence of the stipulation of settlement. Moreover, under Florida law, in
    accordance with which the settlement agreement is to be governed, “[g]enerally, all
    contractual rights are assignable unless the contract prohibits assignment, the
    19
    contract involves obligations of a personal nature, or public policy dictates against
    assignment.” L.V. McClendon Kennels, Inc. v. Investment Corp., 
    490 So. 2d 1374
    , 1375 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1986). Since there is no language in the stipulation
    of settlement or proposed order prohibiting assignment, we find that the district
    court properly determined the notes are assignable.
    V.    CONCLUSION
    We find that district court did not abuse its discretion in awarding attorneys'
    fees and expenses to plaintiffs' class counsel. We also affirm the district court's
    order that the portion of attorneys' fee to be paid in promissory notes is assignable.
    Nothing in this opinion should be interpreted to minimize the importance of the
    active supervisory role of the district court when reviewing class action
    settlements, particularly those involving the so-called “clear sailing” agreements.
    The district court here, however, did not abuse its discretion in making an
    attorneys' fee award. The court considered, and applied, all the relevant Eleventh
    Circuit precedent. Defense counsel, having reaped the benefits of their bargain in
    settling the class action suit, cannot expect the court to renegotiate on their behalf
    the terms of an agreement concluded after arms-length negotiations.
    AFFIRMED.
    20
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 97-5074

Citation Numbers: 190 F.3d 1291

Filed Date: 9/30/1999

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/4/2019

Authorities (18)

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