SZCZEPANSKI V. NEWCOMB MEDICAL CENTER, INC.
Case Date: 07/24/1995
Docket No: SYLLABUS
|
(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for
the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized).
(NOTE: This is a companion case to Rendine v. Pantzer also decided today.)
Argued March 13, 1995 -- Decided July 24, 1995
STEIN, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
In this case, the Court considers the extent to which a plaintiff's contingent fee agreement with her
attorney limits or affects the award of a reasonable attorney's fee.
Meryl Szczepanski was a registered nurse employed by Favorite Nurses, Inc. (Favorite), which
assigned her to work in the intensive-care unit of Newcomb Hospital, Inc. (Newcomb). In August 1987, Dr.
Elmer Mattioli approached Szczepanski from behind and inappropriately touched Szczepanski in a sexual
manner. After plaintiff displayed outrage, Mattioli responded with inappropriate movements and remarks.
Szczepanski immediately reported the incident to Newcomb. Newcomb told Szczepanski that it no
longer needed her nursing services and told Favorite not to send her to Newcomb because she had filed a
complaint against Mattioli. Favorite failed to reassign Szczepanski to any other hospital, falsely telling her
that no work was available. Moreover, in an attempt to substantiate that she had been dismissed because of
substandard performance, Newcomb falsified patient records, accused her of incompetence, and claimed that
it had fired her moments before she had reported the sexual-misconduct incident. Newcomb did not
investigate the incident and did not discipline Mattioli.
In August 1988, Szczepanski filed suit against Mattioli for sexual assault and battery and intentional
infliction of emotional distress, seeking compensatory and punitive damages and counsel fees. In February
1989, Szczepanski filed an amended complaint adding as defendants Favorite, Newcomb, Newcomb's chief
executive officer and two Newcomb supervisors. Among other things, Szczepanski charged Newcomb,
Favorite, and her supervisors with retaliatory discharge, contrary to the Law Against Discrimination (LAD).
After a month-long trial, the jury, among other things, found for Szczepanski on the retaliatory
discharge claim aganst Newcomb and Favorit. Szczepanski's total recovery was $115,441, which included
prejudgment interest.
Szczepanski's attorney made an application against Newcomb and Favorite for counsel fees pursuant
to the LAD. In her certification, counsel asserted that she had spent 676.8 hours on the litigation and had
incurred costs of $3,906.02. Counsel's certification noted that most of her recorded time sheets were no
longer available as a result of a "personnel problem" and that she had reconstructed the hours by reviewing
her files. Pursuant to her regular hourly rate of $200, counsel calculated her lodestar fee amount to be
$135,360. Counsel then requested a one-hundred-percent enhancement of that amount to reflect the
contingent nature of her compensation agreement, for a total counsel fee award of $270,720 plus costs. In
June 1993, Szczepanski's attorney submitted a supplemental certification performed since the first
certification, which increased the total for fees and costs to $278,740. The trial court found that the contingent-fee agreement between Szczepanski and her attorney served as the upper limit on any fee that it could award. The Appellate Division reversed and remanded for a reconsideration of Szczepanski's application for fees, finding that the existence of a contingency fee
arrangement does not control the fee-award outcome; rather, it is only a fact to be considered in determining
a reasonable fee award.
The Supreme Court granted Newcomb's and Favorite's petition for certification.
HELD: Although relevant, the fee payable under a contingent-fee agreement may bear little relation to the
reasonable fee award authorized by a fee-shifting statute, and should not serve as the ceiling on the
amount payable by statute.
1. The first and most important step in the process of determining a reasonable counsel fee is the
determination of the lodestar. According to the U.S. Supreme Court, federal fee-shifting statutes do not
require proportionality between counsel fee-awards and damage recoveries, although the amount of damages
awarded is a material factor in setting a reasonable fee. (pp. 7-10)
2. The terms of the contingent-fee agreement is a factor in determining a reasonable fee under federal and
state fee-shifting statutes. The U.S. Supreme Court has rejected the contention that the statutory fee may
not exceed the amount payable pursuant to the contingent-fee agreement. Reasonable counsel fees payable
to the prevailing party under fee-shifting statutes is determined independently of the provisions of the fee
agreement between the party and his or her counsel. The focus of the determination is to ascertain what fee
is reasonable, taking into account the hours expended, the lawyer's customary hourly rate, the success
achieved, the risk of non-payment and other material factors. (pp. 10-15)
3. The matter should be remanded to the Law Division for reconsideration of the counsel-fee award. New
Jersey's fee-shifting statutes will not be construed to require proportionality between the damages recovered
and counsel-fee awards even if the litigation, as in this case, vindicates no rights other than those of the
plaintiff. An overriding public interest is also served by plaintiff's successful prosecution of this retaliatory-discharge claim; her recovery of damages fulfills and vindicates the legislative purpose of preventing
employers from retaliating unjustly against employees who oppose practices or acts forbidden by the LAD.
(pp. 15-25)
4. A trial court should carefully and closely examine a lodestar-fee request to verify that the attorney's hours
were reasonably expended; the extent to which a defendant's discovery posture, or a plaintiff's posture, has
caused any excess expenses to be incurred; and what legal services reasonably competent counsel would
consider as required to vindicate the protected legal or constitutional rights. The trial court's responsibility is
heightened in cases in which the fee requested is disproportionate to the damages recovered. In such cases,
the trial court should evaluate not only the damages prospectively recoverable and actually recovered, but
also the interest to be vindicated in the context of the statutory objectives, as well as any circumstances
incidental to the litigation that directly or indirectly affected the extent of counsel's efforts. Based on that
evaluation, if the court determines that the hours expended exceeds what competent counsel reasonably
would have expended to achieve a comparable result, the court may exercise its discretion to exclude
excessive hours from the lodestar calculation.
5. Although the use of contemporaneously recorded time records is the preferred practice to verify hours
expended by counsel in connection with a counsel-fee application, fee applications for services rendered may
be supported by reconstructed time records. The trial court on remand should carefully scrutinize counsel's
calculation of hours expended to verify the reasonableness of the hours reflected by the reconstructed
records. (pp. 25-28)
Judgment of the Appellate Division is AFFIRMED and the matter is REMANDED to the Law
Division for further proceedings consistent with this opinion and with Rendine.
CHIEF JUSTICE WILENTZ and JUSTICES HANDLER, POLLOCK, O'HERN, GARIBALDI and
COLEMAN join in JUSTICE STEIN's opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
MERYL SZCZEPANSKI,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
NEWCOMB MEDICAL CENTER, INC.,
Defendants-Appellants,
and
ELMER MATTIOLI, M.D., THOMAS
Defendants.
Argued March 13, 1995 -- Decided July 24, 1995
On certification to the Superior Court,
Appellate Division, whose opinion is reported
at
276 N.J. Super. 11 (1994).
John C. Petrella argued the cause for
appellants Newcomb Medical Center, Inc.
(Genova, Burns, Trimboli & Vernoia,
attorneys).
Thomas B. Lewis argued the cause for
appellant Favorite Nurses, Inc. (Stark &
Stark, attorneys).
Arlene Gilbert Groch argued the cause for
respondent.
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
As in Rendine v. Pantzer, ___ N.J. ___ (1995), also decided
today, this appeal concerns the standards to be applied by trial
courts in awarding a reasonable counsel fee under state fee-shifting statutes. Specifically, we consider the extent to which
a plaintiff's contingent fee agreement with her attorney limits
or affects the award of a reasonable attorney's fee.
Collaterally, we address whether a reasonable attorney's fee
awarded under a state fee-shifting statute must necessarily be
proportionate to the damages recovered in the litigation.
Finally, we consider whether the submission of contemporaneous
time records is a prerequisite to the award of fees under state
fee-shifting statutes.
Because plaintiff's factual presentation is uncontested, we rely on the facts set forth in plaintiff's appellate brief. Plaintiff, Meryl Szczepanski, was a registered nurse employed by Favorite Nurses, Inc. (Favorite), which assigned her to work at the intensive-care unit of Newcomb Hospital, Inc. (Newcomb). In August 1987, defendant Dr. Elmer Mattioli approached plaintiff from behind, reached between her legs, and grabbed her anal-genital area. After plaintiff displayed outrage, Mattioli then bent over, pulled up his jacket, shook his buttocks at her, and stated, "Come on baby, do it." Plaintiff immediately reported the incident to Newcomb. Newcomb told plaintiff that it no longer needed her nursing services and told Favorite not to send her to Newcomb because she
had filed a complaint against Mattioli, a doctor of long standing
at Newcomb. Initially, Favorite refused to reassign her to
Newcomb or to any other hospital until she had decided "what she
was going to do about her complaint against [Mattioli]."
Thereafter, Favorite did not reassign plaintiff to any other
hospital, falsely telling her that no work was available.
Moreover, in an attempt to substantiate that plaintiff had been
dismissed because of substandard performance, Newcomb falsified
patient records, accused her of incompetence, and claimed that it
had fired her moments before she had reported the sexual-misconduct incident. Notably, Newcomb neither investigated the
incident nor disciplined Mattioli.
claim for tortious interference with her employment rights
against Raynor, which removed Raynor from the case. In August
1992, the trial court also dismissed plaintiff's claims against
Favorite for punitive damages.
Pursuant to her regular hourly rate of $200, she calculated
her lodestar fee amount (the product of the number of hours
reasonably expended and counsel's reasonable hourly rate, see
Rendine, supra, ___ N.J. at ___ (slip op. at 56)) to be $135,360.
Counsel then requested a one-hundred-percent enhancement of that
amount to reflect the contingent nature of her compensation
agreement, or a total counsel-fee award of $270,720 in addition
to costs. In June 1993, plaintiff's counsel submitted a
supplemental certification reflecting work expended since the
first certification, which increased the total for fees and costs
to $278,740.
court subtracted from the judgment the portion reflecting
plaintiff's recovery against Mattioli, $40,000, and required
Newcomb to pay one-third of the $60,000 award against it,
$20,000, and Favorite to pay one-third of the $10,000 award
against it, $3,333. In addition, the court required Newcomb to
pay expenses in the amount of $2,128.78, and Favorite to pay
expenses in the amount of $351.54.
We granted Newcomb's and Favorite's petition for
certification.
139 N.J. 185 (1994).
In Rendine, supra, we set forth the procedure to be followed by trial courts in determining a reasonable counsel fee under state fee-shifting statutes, explaining that the first and most important step in the process is the determination of the "lodestar": "the number of hours reasonably expended multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate." ___ N.J. at ___ (slip op. at 56). We noted a trial court's obligation to exclude from the lodestar calculation hours not reasonably expended. In that respect, we referred to the United States Supreme Court's decision in City of Riverside v. Rivera, 477 U.S. 561, 106 S. Ct. 2686, 91 L. Ed.2d 466 (1986), in which the Court's plurality opinion upheld, in a suit alleging civil-rights violations, a counsel-fee award of approximately $245,000 after a trial resulting in an award of compensatory and punitive damages of $33,350. The Court concluded in Rivera that federal fee-shifting statutes do not require proportionality between counsel fee-awards and damage recoveries, although the amount of damages awarded is a material factor in setting a reasonable counsel fee. Nevertheless, we observed that in specific cases a trial court may exclude hours from the lodestar calculation if in its view the hours expended exceed "those that competent counsel reasonably would have expended to achieve a comparable result," in the context of "the damages prospectively recoverable, the interests to be
vindicated, and the underlying statutory objectives." Rendine,
supra, ___ N.J. at ___ (slip op. at 59).
the award to account for the limited success." Id. at 436-37,
103 S. Ct. at 1941, 76 L. Ed.
2d at 52.
. . . .
. . . Civil rights tort suits are not
identical to conventional personal injury
suits; but where the civil rights suit
involves substantial stakes, settled
precedent, and no defense of immunity, the
resemblance may be close enough to give the
terms of the contingent fee arrangement
considerable evidentiary significance--a
proposition that we do not interpret Rivera
to have rejected.
Although the terms of a contingent-fee agreement is a factor in determining a reasonable fee under federal and state fee-shifting statutes, the United States Supreme Court has rejected the contention that the statutory fee may not exceed the amount payable pursuant to a contingent-fee agreement. In Blanchard, supra, 489 U.S. 87, 109 S. Ct. 939, 103 L. Ed.2d 67, the plaintiff sought damages under 42 U.S.C.A. §1983 from the St. Martin Parish Sheriff's Department and two of its officers for injuries sustained from a beating inflicted by Sheriff's Deputy Bergeron. After a jury had awarded Blanchard $5,000 in compensatory damages and $5,000 in punitive damages, he sought counsel fees and costs as the prevailing party that amounted to approximately $40,000. The district court awarded a fee of $7,500. Blanchard appealed, seeking a higher fee, but the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit reduced the fee to $4,000, citing Blanchard's forty-percent contingent-fee agreement with his counsel and concluding that that agreement "serves as a cap on the amount of attorney's fee[s] to be awarded." 831 F.2d 563, 564 (1987). Reversing, the Supreme Court held unanimously that
the legal fee provided for in a contingent-fee agreement does not
limit the statutory-fee award under § 1988:
It should also be noted that we have not
accepted the contention that fee awards in §
1983 damages cases should be modeled upon the
contingent-fee arrangements used in personal
injury litigation. "[W]e reject the notion
that a civil rights action for damages
constitutes nothing more than a private tort
suit benefiting only the individual
plaintiffs whose rights were violated.
Unlike most private tort litigants, a civil
rights plaintiff seeks to vindicate important
civil and constitutional rights that cannot
be valued solely in monetary terms."
Riverside v. Rivera,
477 U.S. 561, 574,
106 S. Ct. 2686, 2694,
91 L. Ed. 2d 466 (1986). Respondent cautions us that refusing to limit recovery to the amount of the contingency agreement will result in a "windfall" to attorneys who accept § 1983 actions. Yet the very nature of the recovery under § 1988 is designed to prevent any such "windfall." Fee awards are to be reasonable, reasonable as to billing rates and reasonable as to the number of hours spent in advancing the successful claims. Accordingly, fee awards, properly calculated, by definition will represent the reasonable worth of the services rendered in vindication of a plaintiff's civil rights claim. It is central to the awarding of attorney's fees
under § 1988 that the district court judge,
in his or her good judgment, make the
assessment of what is a reasonable fee under
the circumstances of the case. The trial
judge should not be limited by the
contractual fee agreement between plaintiff
and counsel.
[489 U.S. at 95-96, 109 S. Ct. at 945-46, 103
L. Ed.
2d at 76-77.]
As the Appellate Division noted, the only reported New
Jersey decision addressing the issue is Specialized Medical
Systems, Inc. v. Lemmerling,
252 N.J. Super. 180 (App. Div.
1991), certif. granted,
127 N.J. 565 (1992) (appeal dismissed
pursuant to consent order for settlement), in which case the
authorization for a counsel-fee award had been contractual rather
than statutory. 276 N.J. Super. at 15. Nevertheless, the
Appellate Division in Lemmerling held that "a prevailing party
can collect reasonable counsel fees even though he is not
otherwise obligated to pay them to his counsel, at least if the
attorney and client understand their retainer agreement to so
permit." 252 N.J. Super. at 187.
significant fee in the event of a large verdict but no fee at all
if the suit is unsuccessful. The statutory-fee award determines
the fee payable by the unsuccessful party to the prevailing
party. As our opinion in Rendine emphasizes, the focus of that
determination is to ascertain what fee is reasonable, taking into
account the hours expended, the lawyer's customary hourly rate,
the success achieved, the risk of nonpayment, and other material
factors. __ N.J. at ___-___ (slip op. at 56-70). Although
relevant, the fee payable under a contingent-fee agreement may
bear little relation to the reasonable fee award authorized by
statute, and in no event should the amount payable under the
contingent-fee agreement serve as a ceiling on the amount payable
by statute.
the statutory fee that the defendant must pay
to the plaintiff.
[495 U.S. at 87, 110 S. Ct. at 1682-83, 109
L. Ed.
2d at 82.]
The Court concluded that Venegas was obligated to honor the
contingent-fee agreement:
[T]here is nothing in the section to regulate
what plaintiffs may or may not promise to pay
their attorneys if they lose or if they win.
Certainly § 1988 does not on its face prevent
the plaintiff from promising an attorney a
percentage of any money judgment that may be
recovered. Nor has Venegas pointed to
anything in the legislative history that
persuades us that Congress intended § 1988 to
limit civil rights plaintiffs' freedom to
contract with their attorneys.
[Id. at 86-87, 110 S. Ct. at 1682, 109
L. Ed.
2d at 82.]
We are in accord with the Appellate Division's determination that the matter should be remanded to the Law Division for reconsideration of the counsel-fee award, 276 N.J. Super. at 19, not only because the trial court improperly viewed the contingent-fee agreement as determinative of the statutory fee, but also because the disparity between the amount of the judgment and the lodestar-fee request compels the exercise of informed discretion by the trial court in determining a reasonable statutory fee. Although the question of proportionality between the judgment and the statutory counsel fee has not been raised, we address it to provide guidance to the trial court in resolving the counsel-fee issue. As we noted in Rendine, supra, ___ N.J.
at ___ (slip op. at 58), the United States Supreme Court had
rejected "the proposition that fee awards under § 1988 should
necessarily be proportionate to the amount of damages a civil
rights plaintiff actually recovers." Rivera, supra, 477 U.S. at
574, 106 S. Ct. at 2694, 91 L. Ed.
2d at 479. In Rivera, police
officers of the City of Riverside, acting without a warrant,
disrupted a party at a private residence using tear gas and
unnecessary physical force. Eight persons who had attended the
party, four of whom had been arrested, sued the City, the police
chief, and thirty police officers under federal civil-rights
statutes seeking damages and declaratory and injunctive relief.
After the trial court had granted summary judgment in favor of a
number of the officers, the case proceeded to trial. The jury
returned thirty-seven verdicts against the city and five of the
officers, awarding the plaintiffs $33,350 in compensatory and
punitive damages. The plaintiffs also were awarded counsel fees
of $245,456.25, the district court finding reasonable both the
hours expended by counsel and the hourly rates on which the
lodestar fee was based. Id. at 565-66, 106 S. Ct. at 2689-90, 91
L. Ed.
2d at 474. The Ninth Circuit affirmed the counsel-fee
award,
679 F.2d 795 (1982), but the Supreme Court remanded the
matter for reconsideration in light of Hensley. City of
Riverside v. Rivera,
461 U.S. 952,
103 S. Ct. 2421,
77 L. Ed.2d 1310 (1983). On remand the district court made the same counsel
fee award, and the court of appeals again affirmed.
763 F.2d 1580, 1582 (9th Cir. 1985). Justice Brennan, writing for a
plurality of the Court, upheld the counsel-fee award, noting that
damages recovered were material to the reasonableness of counsel-fee awards but that federal fee-shifting statutes did not mandate
proportionality between fee awards and damages recovered. The
Court observed:
[
477 U.S. 579-80, 106 S. Ct. at 2696-97, 91
L. Ed.
2d at 482-83 (citations & footnote
omitted).] Dissenting, then Justice Rehnquist acknowledged that if litigation under federal fee-shifting statutes is "unnecessarily prolonged by the bad-faith conduct of defendants, or if the
litigation produces significant, identifiable benefits for
persons other than the plaintiffs, then . . . § 1988 should allow
a larger award of attorney's fees than would be 'reasonable'
where the only relief is the recovery of monetary damages by
individual plaintiffs." Id. at 594, 106 S. Ct. at 2704, 91
L. Ed.
2d at 492. Concluding that that instant litigation
possessed none of the characteristics warranting a fee award
disproportionate to the damages recovered, Justice Rehnquist
expressed the view that reasonable fees ordinarily must reflect
the result achieved in the litigation:
. . . . . . . If A has a claim for contract damages in the amount of $10,000 against B, and retains an attorney to prosecute the claim, it would be both extraordinary and unjustifiable, in the absence of any special arrangement, for the attorney to put in 200 hours on the case and send the client a bill for $25,000. Such a bill would be "unreasonable," regardless of whether A obtained a judgment against B for $10,000 or obtained a take-nothing judgment. And in such a case, where the prospective recovery is limited, it is exactly this "billing judgment" [that] enables the parties to achieve a settlement; any competent attorney, whether prosecuting or defending a contract action for $10,000, would realize that the case simply cannot justify a fee in excess of the potential recovery on the part of either the plaintiff's or the defendant's attorney. All of these examples illuminate the point made in Hensley that "the important factor"
in determining a "reasonable" fee is the
"results obtained." The very
"reasonableness" of the hours expended on a
case by a plaintiff's attorney necessarily
will depend, to a large extent, on the amount
that may reasonably be expected to be
recovered if the plaintiff prevails.
[Id. at 591-93, 106 S. Ct. at 2703-04, 91
L. Ed.
2d at 490-92 (citation omitted).]
Concurring in the judgment, Justice Powell agreed with the
view of the plurality that neither the Court's decisions nor the
legislative history of § 1988 supported a "rule of
proportionality" governing the award of attorney's fees in civil
rights cases. Justice Powell also noted:
[Id. at 585-86, 106 S. Ct. at 2700, 91
L. Ed.
2d at 486-87.] In a footnote, Justice Powell added: "It probably will be the rare case in which an award of private damages can be said to benefit the public interest to an extent that would justify the disproportionality between damages and fees reflected in this
case." Id. at 586 n.3, 106 S. Ct. at 2700 n.3, 91 L. Ed.
2d at
487 n.3.
at $50 per hour, and applied a 50" negative multiplier to the
resulting lodestar on the ground that "because [the plaintiff]
sought recovery for herself alone she was not . . . vindicating
interests of the public at large, and thus an award of fees is
unnecessary to achieve the purpose of the Civil Rights Act."
Cunningham I, supra, 753 F.
2d at 268. Reversing, the court of
appeals held that the trial court had had no basis for reducing
the hourly rate or disallowing hours of which it had lacked
personal knowledge. It also held that application of a negative
multiplier to the lodestar was improper, noting that "a claim
that property has been destroyed by the state without due process
of law will always present a claim unique to the plaintiff. Such
uniqueness does not, however, place it outside the ambit of the
Civil Rights Act of 1871 or the Civil Rights Attorney's Fees
Awards Act of 1976." Id. at 268-69.
disproportionality between damages and fees,
Justice Powell's opinion might be read to
suggest that disproportionality justifies a
negative multiplier.
[Id. at 53 (citations omitted).]
Nevertheless, the court of appeals reinstated its prior ruling,
noting Justice Powell's view that neither the Court's decisions
nor the statute's legislative history justified a rule of
proportionality. The Court added:
. . . Defendants did claim that because
Cunningham sought recovery for herself alone,
she was not vindicating interests of the
public at large and so should not recover any
fee. However, by whatever standards we
evaluate the public interest served by a suit
for private damages, the mere fact that a
constitutional right is singular in nature
cannot be determinative.
[Id. at 54.] Similarly, in Northeast Women's Center v. McMonagle, 889 F.2d 466 (3d Cir. 1989), cert. denied, 494 U.S. 1068, 110 S. Ct. 1788, 108 L. Ed.2d 790 (1990), the court of appeals declined to apply a rule of proportionality in affirming a district-court award of attorneys fees pursuant to the civil-RICO statute, 18 U.S.C.A. §§1961 to 1968. The plaintiff, a pregnancy-counseling center that provided abortions and other gynecological services, brought suit against forty-two persons who allegedly had harassed the center's employees and clients, alleging violations of federal antitrust and RICO statutes as well as common-law tort and trespass claims. After a jury trial, twenty-four defendants
were found liable for trespass and were assessed $42,087.95 in
compensatory damages, and twenty-seven defendants were found
liable under RICO and assessed $887 in damages, which the court
trebled to $2,661 pursuant to
18 U.S.C.A.
§1964(c). The court
also granted injunctive relief on the trespass claim. Id. at
468.
that attorneys will take such cases, and hence increase the
likelihood that the congressional policy of redressing public
interest claims will be vindicated.'" Ibid. (quoting Student
Pub. Interest Research Group v. AT & T Bell Lab.,
842 F.2d 1436,
1449 (3d Cir. 1988)).
attorney's hours were reasonably expended. ___ N.J. at ___ - ___
(slip op. at 56-59). Fee-shifting cases are not an invitation to
prolix or repetitious legal maneuvering. Courts should consider
the extent to which a defendant's discovery posture, or a
plaintiff's, has caused any excess expenses to be incurred.
Courts reviewing fee allowances should assess what legal services
reasonably competent counsel would consider as required to
vindicate the protected legal or constitutional rights. Neither
the tortoise nor the hare should be the model for compensation.
Defendants contend that the failure by plaintiff's counsel to keep and produce contemporaneous time records also supports
the trial court's decision to limit the fee award to the amount
payable under the contingent-fee agreement. The certification in
support of plaintiff's counsel-fee application includes this
assertion: The use of contemporaneously recorded time records is the preferred practice to verify hours expended by counsel in connection with a counsel-fee application. Webb v. Board of Educ., 471 U.S. 234, 238 n.6, 105 S. Ct. 1923, 1926 n.6, 85 L. Ed.2d 233, 239 n.6 (1985). Indeed, we would assume that applications for counsel fees invariably would be accompanied by contemporaneously recorded time records that fully support the calculation of hours expended by all attorneys who participated in the matter. Nevertheless, even those federal courts that mandate contemporaneous time records by decision, see qRamos v. Lamm, 713 F.2d 546, 553 (10th Cir. 1983), or by local rule, see Alberti v. Klevenhagen, 896 F.2d 927, 931 (5th Cir.), modified on other grounds, 903 F.2d 352 (5th Cir. 1990), acknowledge that fee applications for services rendered prior to the court's mandate may be supported by reconstructed time records. Ramos, supra, 713 F. 2d at 553 n.2; Alberti, supra, 896 F. 2d at 931. Although reliance on reconstructed records is strongly disfavored, we
infer from counsel's certification that contemporaneous time
records were maintained but were unavailable because of an
exceptional circumstance. We will not preclude an award of
counsel fees based on reconstructed time records; however, the
trial court on remand will scrutinize with meticulous care
counsel's calculation of hours expended to verify the
reasonableness of the hours reflected by the reconstructed
records. The trial court should exercise its discretion to
exclude from the lodestar calculation hours for which counsel's
documentary support is marginal.
We affirm the judgment of the Appellate Division and remand the matter to the Law Division for further proceedings consistent with this opinion, and with our opinion in Rendine, supra, ___ N.J. ___. Chief Justice Wilentz and Justices Handler, Pollock, O'Hern, Garibaldi and Coleman join in Justice Stein's opinion.
NO. A-117/119 SEPTEMBER TERM 1994
MERYL SZCZEPANSKI,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
NEWCOMB MEDICAL CENTER, INC.,
Defendants-Appellants,
and
ELMER MATTIOLI, M.D., THOMAS
Defendants.
DECIDED July 24, 1995
|