City of Alexandria v. Cleco Corporation ( 2014 )


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  •      Case: 12-30823   Document: 00512500917     Page: 1   Date Filed: 01/15/2014
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    No. 12-30823                          FILED
    January 15, 2014
    Lyle W. Cayce
    CITY OF ALEXANDRIA,                                                   Clerk
    Plaintiff - Intervenor Defendant - Third Party Plaintiff - Appellee
    Cross-Appellant
    v.
    BRIDGETT BROWN,
    Intervenor Plaintiff - Appellant
    v.
    C L E C O CORPORATION; ET AL,
    Defendants
    JACQUES ROY; CHARLES E. JOHNSON, JR.,
    Intervenor Defendants - Appellees
    H. CRAIG DAVIDSON, JR.,
    Third Party Defendant – Appellant Cross-Appellee
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Louisiana
    Case: 12-30823      Document: 00512500917        Page: 2     Date Filed: 01/15/2014
    No. 12-30823
    Before STEWART, Chief Judge, and DeMOSS and CLEMENT, Circuit Judges.
    EDITH BROWN CLEMENT, Circuit Judge:
    Attorneys Bridgett Brown and H. Craig Davidson appeal, and the City
    of Alexandria, Louisiana cross-appeals, the district court’s determination of the
    fees owed by the City to Brown and Davidson for representing the City. For
    the following reasons, we AFFIRM the district court.
    Facts and Proceedings
    In 2004, the City of Alexandria, suspecting that it was being overcharged
    for power, hired Energy Management Services (“EMS”) to audit the City’s
    energy contracts. At that time, the City purchased electricity through three
    suppliers: the Cleco Corporation, the Louisiana Energy and Power Authority,
    and the Southwestern Power Association. The City also possesses its own
    power plant—D.G. Hunter—which, though old and inefficient, the City would
    run when cost effective. The City’s initial contract with EMS promised EMS
    50% of whatever recovery the City obtained from overcharging energy
    suppliers.
    But when EMS tried to obtain records from Cleco in order to perform the
    audit, Cleco had EMS thrown off its property. At that point, the City realized
    that it needed to hire a team of lawyers to obtain the necessary records from
    Cleco, and if necessary, pursue its claims. The City wanted to hire its lawyers
    on a contingency basis out of fear of the costs of protracted litigation. 1
    A. The City Hires a Legal Team
    The City’s first hire was Bridgett Brown. Brown practices in Alexandria.
    She devotes half her practice to criminal defense and the other half to
    1  The costs of hiring the legal team on a contingency ultimately resulted in EMS
    having to lower its contingency fee from 50% of any recovery to 20% of any recovery so that
    the City’s total contingency fee to all parties would not exceed 50%.
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    miscellaneous civil cases. Brown knew then-City Attorney Kelvin Sanders
    well, having shared office space and split fees with him on personal injury,
    criminal, and family law cases. City Attorney Sanders testified that he hired
    Brown because he “trust[ed] her instincts as a lawyer,” as well as for her trial
    attorney skills, knowledge of local juries, and her contacts with the City
    Council. City Attorney Sanders also testified that Brown helped investigate
    the City’s claims against Cleco, vet candidates to join the litigation team, and
    keep the City Council informed as to the status of the lawsuit. There was a
    lot, however, that Brown did not bring to the table: she had minimal experience
    in commercial litigation, and “knew nothing,” as the district court noted, “about
    the complexities of utilities litigation, regulations or rules of the Federal
    Energy Regulatory Commission, or any of the other technical matters.”
    Notwithstanding Brown’s lack of experience in utilities litigation, her
    employment contract was authorized by the City Council—as the City Charter
    requires—in July 2005. Brown’s contingency contract gave her a 10% share of
    any recovery.
    After hiring Brown, City Attorney Sanders began looking for experts in
    energy law to lead the City’s litigation effort. Sanders’s search initially led him
    to H. Craig Davidson. At the time he was approached by Sanders in August
    2004, Davidson had just opened his own solo practice in Baton Rouge. And
    though Davidson’s new solo practice was a general practice firm that handled
    a wide variety of issues from transactional work to litigation, before going out
    on his own, Davidson had previously done extensive energy work as an
    associate for Baton Rouge attorney John Sharp. While working as an associate
    for Sharp on utility matters, Davidson was billed out at $350 an hour.
    Davidson, in turn, recommended that the City hire Sharp. Though now
    disbarred, Sharp was at the time a very successful Louisiana energy lawyer
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    with a busy practice, and had experience in representing electrical
    cooperatives against Cleco.
    The City hired Sharp and Davidson in a single contract even though they
    worked for different firms. The intent behind doing so is disputed by the
    parties; the City claims that the Sharp/Davidson contract was a joint obligation
    and/or venture, but Sharp and Davidson claim that the joint contract simply
    was done as a convenience to the City, and that the true intent behind the
    contract was to hire Sharp and Davidson separately to 10% contingencies.
    What is undisputed is that the contract was concluded in haste, the contract
    refers to Sharp and Davidson collectively as “Attorney,” the contract awards
    Sharp and Davidson a 20% contingency, and the contract was authorized by
    the City Council in July 2005.
    The City’s last hire was Phillip Hunter, an Alexandria-based plaintiff’s
    attorney. City Attorney Sanders claims that he hired Hunter for his contacts
    with city officials, as well as his trial skills. Hunter subsequently resigned
    from the representation, and raises no claim to attorney fees now.
    B. The City Files Suit
    Cleco did not take the City’s decision to hire a litigation team lying down.
    The company mounted an aggressive effort to persuade the City not to file suit.
    Cleco also sued EMS, as well as two EMS employees (David Pugh and Sam
    Sansing) in Louisiana state court. Cleco claimed that EMS, Sansing, and Pugh
    violated non-disclosure agreements with Cleco by providing information
    regarding Cleco overcharges to the City (Pugh and Sansing were former Cleco
    employees). EMS, Sansing, and Pugh then counterclaimed. Then Alexandria
    attorney—and now current mayor of Alexandria—Jacques Roy, as well as his
    father, represented Sam Sansing in the Cleco v. EMS litigation.
    While Roy’s representation of Sansing in the Cleco v. EMS state court
    litigation would eventually become the subject of controversy, in the short run,
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    No. 12-30823
    Cleco’s efforts to block the City’s planned litigation were unsuccessful. The
    City filed suit against Cleco in Louisiana state court in June 2005, and Cleco
    removed the case to the Western District of Louisiana later that month.
    Sharp and Davidson drafted the petition. Brown reviewed the petition
    but did not, according to her testimony at trial, add “any document, section,
    sentence, comma, period, or word” to the petition. Instead, she claims that her
    major contribution was helping to convince the City to file suit, though
    Davidson undoubtedly also played an important part in doing so. All four
    attorneys signed the petition.
    After the suit was filed, each attorney on the litigation team played a
    different role. Sharp acted as lead counsel, and had the “final word on all
    pleading and litigation strategies.” Davidson acted as the senior associate. He
    facilitated communications, managed correspondence, and participated in the
    mediation process. Brown’s role is much less clear. She did not principally
    draft any letter, interrogatory, or request for production during her time on the
    case. Brown nonetheless claimed in her lodestar submissions to the district
    court that she spent 1,650 hours (approximately 12-15 hours a week) on the
    case.    She claims that her primary duties were to keep the City Council
    informed, and to discuss the case with Davidson and City Attorney Sanders.
    She also claims credit for participating in the selection of a consultant and an
    auditor to quantify the City’s losses.
    C. A New Mayor Is Elected
    While representing Sam Sansing—but not EMS or its principal David
    Pugh—against Cleco in the Cleco v. EMS state court litigation, Jacques Roy
    also ran for Mayor of Alexandria. Roy won the election, and was sworn into
    office in December 2006. As he was not a neophyte to litigation with Cleco,
    Roy took an active role in the litigation, as did the new city attorney, Charles
    Johnson. The transition between administrations did not go as smoothly for
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    Bridgett Brown, though the City’s and Brown’s accounts of what happened
    vary substantially.
    City Attorney Johnson alleges that shortly after taking office Brown
    called his office and engaged in a profanity-laced rant about how he needed to
    get the “M-F white boys” Sharp and Davidson under control because Sharp and
    Davidson were not communicating with her regarding the status of the case.
    Johnson also reports that he was told by Sharp that Brown had directed a
    racial epithet towards former City Attorney Sanders at an earlier lawyers’
    meeting. For his part, City Attorney Saunders testified during the trial that
    “[s]he may have” directed a racial epithet towards him, and that “she’s a
    colorful person.” 2
    Though the other members of the Cleco litigation team did not report
    that they considered Brown’s language to be a major disruption, Ms. Brown’s
    other efforts to have Mayor Roy removed from the case were. Brown felt that
    the Mayor’s representation of Sam Sansing in the state court Cleco v. EMS
    litigation meant that the Mayor had an ethical conflict barring his
    participation in the City of Alexandria v. Cleco suit. Brown informed the City
    Council of the conflict, and reportedly told the Mayor in no uncertain terms
    that he should recuse himself. Mayor Roy alleges that when doing so, Brown
    also told him that (1) “she ran the city,” (2) he was a placeholder as Mayor, and
    (3) “some other comments which I wouldn’t want to say in a federal courtroom.”
    City Attorney Johnson testified that Brown told Mayor Roy, “F-U, white boy.
    I do not work for you. I work for the council. That seat you’re in now, you’re
    just keeping it warm.” The Mayor also alleges that Brown told him that he
    2 Brown, City Attorney Johnson, and former City Attorney Sanders are black.
    Davidson, Mayor Roy, and Sharp are white.
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    could not go on a trip to Orlando to meet with the City’s outside experts in the
    case.
    Shortly after that incident, Johnson claims that he terminated Brown’s
    contract without being directed to do so by the Mayor. Johnson terminated
    Brown via letter. Johnson’s letter indicated that the firing was for cause
    because Brown’s conduct violated Louisiana Rule of Profession Conduct 1.8(b)
    because she used “information relating to representation of a client to the
    disadvantage of the client.” Johnson claims that he did not refer to the racial
    slurs or insubordination because the termination letter was a public document
    and did not want to “place over my signature something of that nature.”
    Brown alleges that she was fired not for her insubordination, but rather
    because the mayor had a financial interest in the case and he wanted to try to
    divert her contingency fee to EMS. To support her story, Brown points to an
    affidavit from one of the Mayor’s supporters indicating that the Mayor
    mentioned to him that he would “get my money out of the Cleco case, either
    through my dad or something,” as well as testimony from herself indicating
    that the Mayor approached her in order to persuade her into giving up her
    contingency contract. Brown claims that the Mayor tried to persuade her to
    quit so that her share of any contingency proceeds could be diverted to EMS.
    Brown alleges that in return the Mayor offered to put her on future cases. 3
    Brown suggests that her concerns regarding the Mayor’s conflict of interest
    increased when, after taking office, the Mayor took actions to limit the flow of
    information regarding the case to the City Council, at which point she believed
    that she was ethically obligated to inform the City Council of the issue. Brown
    alleges that the Mayor ordered City Attorney Johnson to fire her in retaliation
    After Brown was fired, the Mayor did not transfer her share of the contingency
    3
    proceeds to EMS.
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    for informing the City Council of the conflict, and therefore her firing was
    without cause.
    After being fired, Brown intervened in the suit to protect her fee, and
    thereafter amended her intervention twice to first add, and then clarify, claims
    of defamation; tortious interference of contract; and damages caused by harm
    to her business reputation, emotional distress, and aggravation of preexisting
    medical conditions. The court stayed Brown’s claims during the pendency of
    the Cleco litigation.
    D. Mediation
    Around the time of Brown’s firing in February 2007 (the record is
    ambiguous as to the exact series of events), KPMG, the impartial court-
    appointed auditor, issued a draft report to the parties calculating the impact
    of Cleco’s overcharges to the City. The KPMG report helped to kickstart
    negotiations. And after a year and a series of mediations, the City and Cleco
    signed a memorandum of understanding (“MOU”) in May 2008. The MOU set
    out a global framework for settling the case, and indicated that Cleco would
    provide the City with approximately $60 million in settlement. But
    transitioning from the 2008 MOU to the 2010 settlement agreement proved to
    be a difficult problem. And during that transition, the City hired an additional
    law firm, fired Sharp, and told Davidson to stand down.
    In the Spring of 2008, the City hired Breazeale, Sachse and Wilson, LLP
    to act as lead litigation counsel should the case ever be tried. The City’s plan
    was to have Sharp and Davidson continue to mediate, while having Breazeale,
    Sachse prepare to litigate should settlement talks fail. But that plan fell
    through shortly thereafter when Davidson discovered in August 2008 that the
    Louisiana Bar Disciplinary Counsel had recommended Sharp’s disbarment for
    settling a personal injury case off-the-books, and then keeping the proceeds of
    the settlement from his partners until he was caught. Davidson called City
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    Attorney Johnson and informed him of the development. Shortly thereafter,
    the City faxed Sharp a termination letter.
    Sharp’s disbarment also presaged the end of Davidson’s active
    participation in the case. After terminating Sharp, City Attorney Johnson told
    Davidson to stand down. City Attorney Johnson did not think that Davidson
    could try the case alone as lead trial counsel, an assessment that was seconded
    by Davidson at trial. Johnson testified that he merely told Davidson to stand
    down on the case because Johnson did not want to humiliate Davidson by
    terminating him. Both the Mayor and City Attorney Johnson testified that
    they thought Davidson did good work on the case. Mayor Roy, in particular,
    testified that Davidson “especially over time, brought value, especially to me,
    in his representation.”
    After being told to stand down in August 2008, Davidson ceased
    performing significant substantive legal work on the case. But he was not
    required to withdraw from the case, and he did continue to perform a few tasks.
    For example, he received and responded to emails from the City Attorney, had
    phone conversations with the City’s new counsel, helped to respond to a set of
    interrogatories, and, without being asked to do so, reviewed case documents.
    E. Settlement
    With the original contingency counsel removed, and with new hourly
    counsel continuing to press the case, Cleco and the City struggled to transform
    the 2008 MOU into a workable settlement agreement. The parties dispute on
    appeal the source of the delay, and their contributions to the ultimate
    settlement.
    Brown and Davidson argue that though there were details to be
    hammered out, the case was more or less settled within the value of the MOU.
    As such, they suggest that when they left active participation in the case, they
    had already delivered to the City almost all the value it would obtain in the
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    litigation. The City, by contrast, claims that there were significant problems
    with the proposed settlement that substantially decreased its value for the
    City.
    The first problem arose from the details of a proposed power supply
    agreement between the City and Cleco. To settle the case, the City and Cleco
    had to negotiate a new power supply agreement (“PSA”). John Sharp, still on
    the case at that point, drafted the first proposed PSA. But the City objected to
    many of the elements of the deal that Cleco wanted to include. In particular,
    Cleco wanted to provide the City with a lump sum payment of $29 million in
    exchange for the City granting Cleco the right to the capacity of City’s D.G.
    Hunter power plant. Cleco desired to do so because doing so would (1) allow
    Cleco to avoid treating the payment to the City as a litigation settlement on its
    10-K Report, and (2) D.G. Hunter’s excess capacity would allow Cleco to sell a
    greater amount of power from its more efficient power plants (power providers
    have to keep a capacity reserve for emergencies). Cleco’s demand, however,
    worried John Adranga, a Washington D.C.-based energy-law specialist hired
    by the City to assist in the ongoing negotiations, because Cleco was insisting
    on a default provision that would allow Cleco to recoup the entire $29 million
    lump sum if the City defaulted in the first thirteen years of the deal. Likewise,
    the City’s challenge rights under the deal were sharply limited, and could have
    resulted in the City having to pay hundreds of millions of dollars to Cleco with
    little to no ability to challenge the charges.
    The second problem with the early settlement framework arose from the
    ongoing economic crisis in the United States. Like everything else during the
    period, the commodities markets went into flux and declined.             In turn,
    changing commodity prices decreased energy prices which decreased the value
    of the settlement for the City because the lower energy prices decreased the
    value of the power supply agreement to the City. The value of the proposed
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    power supply agreement for the City would decrease from around $60 million
    in Spring 2008 to $42 million in Spring 2009.
    The City and Cleco were unable the bridge the gaps between their
    negotiating positions, and in 2009 the City filed a motion to reopen the case
    (the case was administratively closed during settlement discussions). The
    parties proceeded to discovery, and, with the trial date fast approaching,
    settled the case in February 2010.      The final settlement—which differed
    markedly in many ways from the original power supply agreement that was
    discussed—had a settlement value of $50.7 million for the City. As such, even
    though the 2008 MOU played little to no role in the final settlement agreement,
    the value of the ultimate settlement to the City was within the value that Cleco
    agreed to pay in the 2008 MOU.
    F. The Attorney’s Fee Dispute
    The settlement of the Cleco litigation brought the simmering fees
    disputes between the City and its contingency counsel back to the forefront.
    Brown’s claims had already been filed, and when the Cleco litigation settled
    Sharp and Davidson demanded their full contingency fee from the City.
    The City, rather than pay that fee, filed a third party complaint and a
    request for a declaratory judgment against Sharp and Davidson. The City’s
    declaratory judgment action claimed the Sharp/Davidson contingency contract
    was void and/or unenforceable, and that Davidson and Sharp could recover
    only on the basis of quantum meruit and not the contracted-for contingency
    fee. In response to the City’s complaint, Davidson counterclaimed for his fee,
    and Sharp filed a third-party complaint.
    As such, the court was tasked with resolving:
    • Brown’s claims for her fees; tortious interference; defamation; and
    damages caused by harm to her business reputation, emotional
    distress, and aggravation of preexisting medical conditions.
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    • Sharp’s claim for his fees.
    • Davidson’s claim for his fees.
    • The City’s declaratory judgment claim that the Sharp/Davidson
    contract was unenforceable and/or void.
    The district court started by dismissing Brown’s tortious interference
    and defamation claims. Finding that Brown’s pleadings failed to state a claim
    of tortious interference, the court declined to exercise supplemental
    jurisdiction over her remaining tort claims. Brown does not appeal the district
    court’s dismissal of her tort claims.
    After the court granted the motion to dismiss Brown’s tort claims, the
    City moved for partial summary judgment that City Attorney Johnson both
    had the authority to, and did, terminate Brown. The court granted the City’s
    motion, and did so before allowing Brown to obtain discovery. The court found
    that City Attorney Johnson’s termination letter to Brown clearly and
    unarguably constituted a termination of Brown’s contract. Second, the court
    determined that Mayor Roy’s potential financial interest in the case, as well as
    the potential that Mayor Roy ordered Brown’s termination, went to the
    question of whether Brown was fired for cause—not whether Brown was fired.
    The district court accordingly reserved the question of whether Brown was
    fired for cause for trial. Finally, the court determined that under the Charter
    and the terms of the ordinance passed by the City Council authorizing Brown’s
    hiring, the City Attorney had the power to fire Brown.
    After discovery, the court held a six-day bench trial on Sharp’s, Brown’s,
    and Davidson’s claims for fees. In its post-order, the Court awarded Brown $0,
    Sharp $700,000, and Davidson $1,300,000.
    The district court’s order took a harsh view of Brown’s participation in
    the case, and awarded her no fees. The court first determined that Brown was
    “clearly” discharged for cause:
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    Ms. Brown’s discharge resulted from her having taken
    positions directly adverse to the mayor, her use of
    personal attacks on him, and her attempts to play
    politics with the council in ways that were directly
    adverse to the administration. She was not able to
    maintain that divided loyalty and responsibility
    required of a lawyer in a municipal representation.
    The court then went on to find that “[w]hat ‘work’ she did was essentially
    non-productive, and certainly did not contribute anything of substantial value
    even while she was employed.” In so finding, the court rejected Brown’s claims
    that she had worked approximately 1,650 hours (approximately 12-15 hours a
    week) on the Cleco litigation. The court noted that Brown’s calculation of her
    hours worked “was not constructed from any kind of contemporaneous time
    entries and is essentially worthless.” Indeed, the only thing that the court
    apparently credited her for doing in the nearly two years that she was on the
    case was being “mildly helpful in convincing members of the administration
    and council that the suit had merit, at least enough to file it.” But even then
    the court sharply qualified its view of her services, noting that “the degree and
    level of her actual involvement in” convincing the City Council to authorize the
    suit “remains quite unclear.” Having determined that Brown was fired for
    cause and could not show that she had performed any useful work for the City,
    the court held that “[h]er representation, then, had a zero value for awarding
    attorney’s fees which would be payable from the public fisc.”
    Next the court awarded Sharp $700,000. Rejecting enforcement of the
    contingency contract, the court instead calculated Sharp’s award on the basis
    of quantum meruit. The court justified its choice of quantum meruit analysis
    by explaining that Sharp’s
    own misconduct and disbarment also acted as an
    impediment to his completion of the case and required
    the city to retain new counsel, rework the entire case
    strategy and progress, and incur very substantial
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    attorney’s fees with replacement counsel. In our view
    the only way to compare apples to apples here is to
    consider all the factors in making a quantum meruit
    calculation.
    In then calculating the quantum meruit award due Sharp, the court noted the
    maximum value of Sharp’s contingency contract ($5.07 million), the amount of
    Sharp’s proposed lodestar calculation ($1,124,700), and the amount that the
    City   paid   Sharp’s    replacement   to   litigate   the   case   to    settlement
    ($1,522,691.15). The court then considered those amounts in light of “all the
    factors” relating to the value of Sharp’s representation, including the factors
    set out in Louisiana Rule of Professional Conduct Rule 1.5(a). As a positive
    factor supporting a higher monetary award, the court highlighted that Sharp’s
    representation “did have value” for the City because Sharp succeeded in
    “getting the case to a point, even though not a final point” for the City. But the
    Court also noted that multiple points in the record (Sharp’s disbarment,
    “attitude,” and “lack of deference to the City’s strategy”) supported a lower
    award. The court found Sharp’s behavior during the settlement talks, wherein
    he “began to think he was in charge of whether the City would settle or not,”
    to “have been a particularly negative factor” in determining the amount owed.
    The court then balanced the positive and negative factors and decided that the
    City owed Sharp $700,000.
    Finally, the court determined that Davidson deserved a higher fee than
    either Brown or Sharp, and awarded Davidson $1.3 million.                A threshold
    question that the court had to address was the continuing validity of the
    contingency contract. Rather than signing separate contingency fee contracts,
    Davidson and Sharp signed a joint contingency fee contract that provided for
    a 20% fee with no indication as to how the fee was supposed to be split between
    Davidson and Sharp. The City accordingly challenged the continuing validity
    of Davidson’s contingency contract in light of Sharp’s disbarment, arguing that
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    Sharp’s disbarment made Davidson’s and Sharp’s joint, indivisible obligation
    to act as lead counsel in the litigation impossible, and further that the
    contingency contract represented a joint venture that terminated when the
    City terminated Sharp. The City also argued that the agreement violated
    Louisiana Rule of Professional Conduct 1.5(e), which provides that a “division
    of fee between lawyers who are not in the same firm may be made only if . . . the
    client agrees in writing to the representation by all of the lawyers involved,
    and is advised in writing as to the share of the fee.”
    The district court rejected the City’s joint obligation arguments, finding
    that the City’s behavior was inconsistent with characterizing the contract as a
    joint obligation or venture because the City did not formally terminate
    Davidson even after firing Sharp. Instead, the district court determined that
    the joint fee, when combined with Sharp’s withdrawal, meant that Davidson
    could not enforce the contingency contract:
    Mr. Sharp’s and Mr. Davidson’s contract was twenty
    percent (20%) for two lawyers without any clause
    dealing with the eventuality that one of them would be
    lost. . . . [T]hose anomalies are sufficient under the law
    to turn Mr. Davidson’s calculated fee into a quantum
    meruit calculation as well, rather than a strictly
    enforced contingency fee award. To rule otherwise
    would require us to attempt a fictional contract
    reformation or to attempt to divide it to some
    percentage of shared money. This is so, because Mr.
    Sharp is not entitled to a contingency fee and there is
    no severability provision in the contract.
    The court did not address the City’s arguments with respect to Rule 1.5(e).
    When applying quantum meruit analysis, the court found Davidson’s
    claim to be “entirely different” from Sharp’s and Brown’s because “Davidson
    was never discharged,” “brought good skills to the representation,”
    “participated fully in the mediation process,” and “poured numerous hours into
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    the case.” And no one at the bench trial, noted the court, “had anything bad to
    say about him.”
    Moreover, even though the court did not enforce the contingency
    contract, the court nonetheless increased Davidson’s quantum meruit award
    beyond Davidson’s base lodestar calculation.          Davidson’s base lodestar
    calculation, which was arrived at by multiplying his claimed hours worked by
    an hourly rate of $350, and then increasing that figure by 20% to reflect
    underbilling, was only $1,026,375. But the court ultimately awarded Davidson
    $1,300,000—a nearly $275,000 premium over the lodestar amount—because of
    the “preclusion of other employment by Mr. Davidson during the time he was
    involved in the litigation, the amount at issue, the novelty and difficulty of the
    questions presented, and the nature and length of the professional relationship
    between . . . Davidson and the City.” As such, by considering the amount at
    issue, and then accordingly increasing the award beyond the amount that
    Davidson claimed he was due based upon his billable hours and rate, the court
    gave Davidson part of the benefit of his contingency contract even though the
    court did not enforce the contract in full.
    Brown, Sharp, and Davidson all appealed the fee awards, and the City
    cross-appealed as to Sharp and Davidson. Sharp and the City have since
    settled, leaving only Brown’s and Davidson’s appeals, and the City’s cross-
    appeal as to Davidson remaining.
    Standard of Review
    This court reviews a grant of summary judgment de novo. Summary
    judgment is appropriate when the pleadings, the discovery and disclosure
    materials on file, and any affidavits show that there is no genuine issue as to
    any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
    Pustejovsky v. Pliva, Inc., 
    623 F.3d 271
    , 275-76 (5th Cir. 2010). No genuine
    16
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    No. 12-30823
    issue of fact exists if the record taken as a whole could not lead a rational trier
    of fact to find for the non-moving party. Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith
    Radio Corp., 
    475 U.S. 574
    , 587 (1986). The court views the facts in the light
    most favorable to the non-moving party. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 255 (1986). Summary judgment may be affirmed on any basis raised
    below and supported by the record. QBE Ins. Corp. v. Brown & Mitchell, Inc.,
    
    591 F.3d 439
    , 443 (5th Cir. 2009).
    With respect to the district court’s post-trial order, this court reviews the
    district court’s legal determinations de novo and its factual findings—provided
    that the district court applied the proper legal standard—for clear error. Arete
    Partners, L.P. v. Gunnerman, 
    594 F.3d 390
    , 394 (5th Cir. 2010).        Should the
    district court apply the wrong legal standard in making its factual findings,
    this court then reviews the district court’s factual findings de novo. Shafer v.
    Army & Air Force Exch. Serv., 
    376 F.3d 386
    , 396 (5th Cir. 2004). To determine
    whether a factual finding is clearly erroneous, this Court looks to see if the
    finding “is without substantial evidence to support it, the court misinterpreted
    the effect of the evidence, or this court is convinced that the finding[] [is]
    against the preponderance of credible testimony.” Bd. of Trs. New Orleans
    Emp’rs Int’l Longshoremen’s Assoc., AFL-CIO Pension Fund v. Gabriel, Roeder,
    Smith & Co., 
    529 F.3d 506
    , 509 (5th Cir. 2008). “Reversal for clear error is
    warranted only if the court has a definite and firm conviction that a mistake
    has been committed.” 
    Id. When reviewing
    issues of state law, federal courts look to the law of that
    state’s highest court. See In re Katrina Canal Breaches Litig., 
    495 F.3d 191
    ,
    206 (5th Cir. 2007).    In the absence of a final decision by the Louisiana
    Supreme Court, this court “must make an Erie guess and determine . . . how
    that court would resolve the issue if presented with the same case.” 
    Id. In making
    an Erie guess, this court “defer[s] to intermediate state appellate court
    17
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    No. 12-30823
    decisions, unless convinced by other persuasive data that the highest court of
    the state would decide otherwise.” Mem’l Hermann Healthcare Sys. Inc. v.
    Eurocopter Deutschland, GMBH, 
    524 F.3d 676
    , 678 (5th Cir. 2008) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    Discussion
    A. Bridgett Brown
    Brown advances two dominant issues of law on appeal: first, she argues
    that City Attorney Johnson lacked the authority under the Alexandria City
    Charter to fire her and therefore her contract was never terminated and she is
    owed her full fee; and second, she argues that even if she was terminated, the
    district court applied the wrong legal framework under Louisiana law to
    determine what she was owed on her terminated contract. Neither issue
    matters if Brown’s representation was of zero value to the client.
    First, Brown argues the she was never legally terminated by the City.
    But under Louisiana law, a lawyer cannot use contractual liability to
    circumvent the requirement that a lawyer can only charge a reasonable fee for
    services rendered. See, e.g., City of Baton Rouge v. Stauffer Chem. Co., 
    500 So. 2d
    397, 401 (La. 1987). As such, a lawyer cannot collect on the full value of a
    contingency contract without having provided substantially all of the services
    envisioned under the original contract. See, e.g., Saucier v. Hayes Dairy Prods.,
    Inc., 
    373 So. 2d 102
    , 116 (La. 1978) (“[P]ermitting a lawyer to reap in full
    measure the contracted-for fee provided in a contingency fee contract without
    providing all or substantially all of the legal services contemplated by the
    contract clearly violates the strictures of [the Rules of Professional
    Responsibility].”); see also Cent. Progressive Bank v. Bradley, 
    502 So. 2d 1017
    ,
    1017 (La. 1987). Because it is undisputed that Brown stopped working on the
    case after being terminated in 2007, Brown cannot collect the full value of her
    18
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    No. 12-30823
    fee even if she has a valid contract. 4 She can, instead, collect only a reasonable
    fee for the work she did. And if the district court properly determined that her
    representation did not advance her client’s case, then she cannot collect a fee
    even if she has a technically valid fee contract and was fired without cause.
    Second, Brown argues that the district court erred when it applied
    quantum meruit analysis rather than Saucier analysis when determining the
    fee owed Brown for the value of the work performed. But Brown overlooks that
    the Saucier framework and quantum meruit analysis apply essentially the
    same factors to determine the contributions a lawyer made to a particular case.
    Cf. O’Rourke v. Cairns, 
    683 So. 2d 697
    , 702 (La. 1996) (“[T]he Saucier factors
    are, to a degree, the same factors used in making a quantum meruit
    award . . . .”). Under both Saucier analysis and quantum meruit analysis, a
    court is supposed to use the factors articulated by Louisiana Rule of
    Professional Conduct 1.5(a) to determine the contribution that a lawyer made
    to his client’s case. See 
    id. at 702
    & n.12 (Saucier); State Dep’t of Transp. &
    Dev. v. Williamson, 
    597 So. 2d 439
    , 442 & n.9 (La. 1992) (quantum meruit).
    That is why, for example, this court has previously indicated that a district
    court committed harmless error when it erroneously characterized an award
    as quantum meruit because the district court considered the Saucier factors
    when making its quantum meruit determination. See In re Calm C’s Inc., 179
    F. App’x 911, 914 (5th Cir. 2006) (per curiam) (unpublished). And if both the
    Saucier framework and quantum meruit rely on the same factors to determine
    4 Brown tries to claim at points that since the value of the case (≈$60 million) was
    essentially set at the time she was fired, the successor counsel did not substantially advance
    the case and therefore she is owed most, if not all, of her contingency fee. But Brown’s claims
    here are factually untenable under any standard of review. Not only did her contribution to
    the representation do very little, if anything, to advance the case, but also the factual record
    clearly establishes that when Brown left the case there was still substantial work to be done
    before the City could realize the settlement value.
    19
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    an attorney’s contribution to a particular case, then the district court’s
    determination that, under the factors set out by Rule 1.5(a), Brown’s work had
    no productive value to her client prevents recovery under either Saucier or
    quantum meruit.
    The district court’s determination that Brown’s legal representation had
    no value for her client presents Brown with a threshold issue that she needs to
    address before she can successfully raise her legal challenges. If Brown cannot
    show that the district court erred when it determined that her representation
    had no productive value to her client, then she cannot recover even if she
    prevails on her main legal challenges to the district court’s orders. To evaluate
    Brown’s challenge to the district court’s factual findings we have to determine
    (1) the standard of review for challenging the district court’s determination
    that her work had no net value, and (2) whether under that level of review,
    Brown’s claim succeeds.
    Factual findings by the district court are typically reviewed for clear
    error. Brown tries to do an end-run around the high barrier presented by clear
    error review by alleging that the district court’s factual findings should be
    reviewed de novo because the district court applied the wrong legal standard
    when making its factual findings. But her attempted end-run fails because she
    does not successfully allege that the district court considered the wrong
    substantive factors in calculating the value of her representation.        Under
    either quantum meruit or Saucier analysis, Brown’s contribution to the case is
    determined by reference to the factors set out by Rule 1.5(a). Though Brown
    tries to argue that the district court erroneously considered that the fees were
    being paid by a municipality, it is apparent that the district court’s decision
    was based on the sheer lack of evidence supporting Brown’s claim for attorney
    fees rather than the fact that public funds were involved. Because Brown
    highlights no legal error with the district court’s application of the factors set
    20
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    out by Rule 1.5(a) to determine whether Brown’s work has any value, we
    review the district court’s determination that Brown’s work had no value for
    clear error.
    To prevail on a clear error challenge to the district court’s findings of
    fact, Brown needs to show that (1) the district court’s findings regarding Brown
    are “without substantial evidence to support” them, (2) the district court
    “misinterpreted the effect of the evidence,” or (3) the district court’s
    determinations were “against the preponderance of credible testimony.” Bd. of
    Trs. New Orleans Emp’rs Int’l Longshoremen’s 
    Assoc., 529 F.3d at 509
    .
    Moreover, as a practical matter, this clear error challenge is an uphill battle
    for Brown because of the combination of (1) the lack of any work product
    demonstrating Brown’s contribution to a case, and (2) the presence of co-
    counsel who apparently did nearly all, if not all, of the work. We acknowledge
    Brown’s point that she was neither hired for, nor expected to, draft briefs,
    prepare interrogatories, and engage in discovery correspondence, but
    nonetheless note that such written work offers courts tangible evidence of an
    attorney’s contribution. Without concrete evidence of her contributions, Brown
    is forced to primarily rely on testimony from her political friends and allies to
    substantiate her contributions. And when the district court decides not to
    credit such testimony of her contributions, and instead chooses to accept the
    City’s version of events, Brown is left with little evidence on which she can
    make a showing of clear error by the district court.
    Brown tries to make that showing by highlighting various contributions
    that she alleges she made, such as helping to assemble the legal team,
    convincing the City to file suit, intervening to keep the case from being
    dismissed, researching potential auditors, and otherwise performing the task
    of local counsel. But we struggle with the extreme divergence between the
    hours that Brown claims to have worked on the case, and the near complete
    21
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    No. 12-30823
    lack of any evidence demonstrating any contribution she made during her
    representation of the City. Sixteen hundred billable hours approaches the
    work done by many attorneys for an entire year, and the record here does not
    even come close to substantiating such an effort on Brown’s part. And her
    continued efforts to claim having performed such work cannot help but to call
    into question the veracity of all of her claims.
    We conclude that the district court that has overseen this case for nearly
    a decade did not clearly err when determining that Brown’s representation
    made no positive contribution to the City’s litigation effort. In many instances
    where she claims credit for advancing the case, the record is equally
    susceptible to being read to credit someone else on the litigation team. City
    Attorney Sanders hired the legal team, Davidson convinced the City Council
    to file suit and interfaced with local officials, and Sharp researched the
    auditors. And unfortunately for Brown, with respect to her claimed abilities
    to be a liaison with the City Council, we cannot look past the district court’s
    findings—and the ample record evidence that supports them—that she
    actually increased tensions between the administration and the Council, both
    of whom were her clients, by “play[ing] politics . . . in ways that were directly
    adverse to the administration.” 5 As Rule 1.5(a)(4) indicates that a court should
    examine “the results obtained” through the lawyer’s representation, and Rule
    1.5(a)(6) indicates that a court should consider               “the nature . . . of the
    professional relationship with the client,” we believe that, absent a clear
    contribution by her to the representation, Brown cannot claim credit for
    5Even if Brown believed that the Mayor had a conflict of interest, that belief does not
    excuse unprofessional behavior in reporting a conflict of interest.
    22
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    advancing her client’s case when her representation was, at least in significant
    part, intentionally counterproductive. 6
    The district court’s finding that Brown’s representation of the City had
    no value presents Brown with a bar to recovery that she cannot overcome.
    Legal contracts are unique: a lawyer cannot be paid for work that she does not
    perform, and any payment for the work that the lawyer performs must be
    reasonable. The district court’s post-trial finding that Brown’s legal work
    brought the city no value was not clearly erroneous. Regardless of what Brown
    might have been able to sue for had she not been suing on a contract for legal
    services, because her performance under the contract was determined to have
    no value, she can recover no fee. We affirm the court’s denial of attorney fees.
    B. H. Craig Davidson
    Davidson’s appeal and the City’s cross-appeal take sharply different
    views of the district court’s fee award. Davidson argues that he performed
    under a valid contingency contract, and he faults the district court for not
    awarding him his full contingency fee; the City argues that the district court
    properly refused to enforce the contingency contract, but faults the district
    court for awarding what it suggests is an excessive quantum meruit award.
    Though we apply slightly different reasoning than the district court in
    determining that the Sharp/Davidson contingency contract is unenforceable,
    6  Davidson’s time sheets likely are Brown’s best evidence regarding her potential
    contributions to the case. But Davidson’s timesheets are insufficient to show that the district
    court clearly erred in determining that Brown’s representation had no value. First, as the
    district court noted, Davidson’s records were “likely not from contemporary time records,”
    and therefore only “helpful to some degree” in determining fees. Second, Davidson’s records
    are not broken out by task and give little indication as to the time Brown spent working on
    the case or any contribution that Brown made during that time. Though we agree that
    Davidson’s time records suggest that Brown spent at least some de minimis amount of time
    working on the case, they do not substantiate that Brown made a positive, productive
    contribution to the representation particularly given the substantial evidence as to her
    counterproductive behavior while representing the City.
    23
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    we ultimately agree with, and therefore affirm, the district court’s quantum
    meruit award of $1.3 million to Davidson.
    1. Davidson Cannot Recover the Contracted-for Contingency Fee
    In an attempt to establish that the Sharp/Davidson contract was not
    enforceable, the City argues that Sharp and Davidson were the joint obligors
    of a single, indivisible object: acting as lead counsel in the City’s claims against
    Cleco. The City accordingly suggests that Sharp’s disbarment also terminated
    the contract as to Davidson both because (1) performance under the original
    contract became impossible and (2) the Sharp/Davidson joint venture to act as
    lead counsel was terminated as a matter of law when the joint venture’s
    partnership had been reduced to one. Davidson counters by pointing out that
    (1) Brown’s contract also contained a provision that she was lead counsel, (2)
    the City kept Davidson on the case even after Sharp was terminated, and (3)
    the City retained Breazeale, Sachse and Wilson, LLP to act as lead litigation
    counsel even before either Sharp was fired and Davidson was told to stand
    down. The district court agreed with Davidson that the contract was neither
    a joint obligation nor a joint venture. The court indicated that the City’s
    argument:
    must fall because the city never dismissed or
    discharged Mr. Davidson when it dismissed Mr.
    Sharp. Indeed, the evidence is that Mr. Davidson was
    specifically told the City had no complaint with him
    and might be calling on him again, even though it did
    not. Even at trial no one had anything bad to say about
    Mr. Davidson. We do not interpret the contract in its
    reformed fee formation to be a joint venture contract,
    particularly in terms of its context. The exception
    proves the rule here – Mrs. Brown’s contract was for
    one lawyer at a ten percent (10%) contingency. Mr.
    Sharp and Mr. Davidson’s contract was twenty percent
    (20%) for two lawyers without any clause dealing with
    the eventuality that one of them would be lost.
    24
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    No. 12-30823
    The district court applied the incorrect legal framework to determine
    whether the Sharp/Davidson contract set out a joint obligation. The district
    court began its analysis with the City’s decision not to terminate Davidson
    after Sharp was fired, and found that the City’s behavior was determinative of
    the entire analysis. But instead of starting with the City’s reaction after
    Sharp’s termination, the district court’s analysis should have begun with the
    text of the contract. “[T]he classification of an obligation as several or joint
    depends upon the parties’ intentions and understanding, as revealed by the
    language of their contract and the subject matter to which it refers.” Berlier v.
    A.P. Green Indus., Inc., 
    815 So. 2d 39
    , 47-48 (La. 2002) (emphasis added). A
    court’s determination as to whether a contract is several or joint should be
    guided by “the rules for the interpretation of contracts,” 7 which in Louisiana
    requires that “[w]hen the words of a contract are clear and explicit and lead to
    no absurd consequences, no further interpretation may be made in search of
    the parties’ intent.” La. Civ. Code. Ann. art. 2046. Because the district court
    applied the improper legal framework in determining the parties’ intent with
    respect to the Sharp/Davidson contract, and placed primary emphasis on a
    factor that the court could only consider if the contract was ambiguous, we
    review the court’s determinations that the contract did not set out a joint,
    indivisible obligation de novo. 
    Shafer, 376 F.3d at 396
    .
    To determine whether the Sharp/Davidson contract created a joint
    obligation, we look to see “if through the” contract, Sharp and Davidson
    “promise[d] to render together one service to” the City. 
    5 La. Civ
    . L. Treatise,
    Law of Obligations § 7.21 (Westlaw 2d ed. 2013). “When different obligors owe
    together just one performance to one obligee, but neither is bound for the
    7  Shell Petroleum Corp. v. Calcasieu Real Estate & Oil Co., 
    170 So. 785
    , 788-89
    (La. 1936).
    25
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    whole, the obligation is joint for the obligors.” La. Civ. Code. Ann. art. 1788.
    The text of the Sharp/Davidson contract unambiguously sets out a joint
    obligation. The contract refers to both attorneys as a singular entity, assigns
    them a single, joint task of “tak[ing] the lead role and controll[ing] all
    proceedings related to the Claims,” and provides for a joint recovery of 20%
    without any clause dealing with the eventuality that Sharp or Davidson would
    be unable to complete the representation. 8 As in Nabors v. Producers’ Oil Co.,
    where the Louisiana Supreme Court determined that a contract set out a joint
    obligation:
    the contract did not state the amount paid to each of
    [Sharp and Davidson], nor state the [performance
    owed] by each of them. They joined in one contract to
    do the same thing, in consideration for advantages to
    be derived for the common benefit of all of them. The
    language of the instrument leaves no doubt that their
    contract was joint and not severable. For example, the
    contract declares that the [attorneys] are to be
    hereinafter [collectively referred to as “Attorney”].
    
    74 So. 527
    , 532 (La. 1917) (internal quotation marks omitted). Because we
    believe that the text of the contract unambiguously sets out the intent to create
    a joint obligation, “no further interpretation may be made in search of the
    parties’ intent.” La. Civ. Code. Ann. art. 2046. We accordingly do not address
    Davidson’s arguments regarding the City’s performance.
    8   Though Davidson does point out that the contract has a severability clause
    indicating that “[s]hould any term, provision, or part of this Agreement be found to be
    unenforceable or contrary to law, then the remainder shall be given full force and effect
    without the offending portions, or with such offending portions rewritten so as to give full
    effect to the parties’ intent and cause for entering into the agreement,” we believe that the
    clause concerns how the agreement should be interpreted should a provision be found to be
    contrary to law or unenforceable—not what constitutes performance under the contract by
    the attorneys should one of the attorneys be unwilling or unable to complete the
    representation.
    26
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    “[T]o determine the effect of a joint obligation on the obligors, it is
    necessary to determine whether the joint obligation is divisible or indivisible.”
    
    Berlier, 815 So. 2d at 47
    . “If the joint obligation is divisible, neither obligor is
    bound for the whole performance; rather, each joint obligor is bound to perform
    only his portion. On the other hand, if the joint obligation is indivisible, the
    joint obligors are subject to the rules governing solidary obligors.” 
    Id. (internal citation
    omitted).    The divisibility of a joint obligation “depends on the
    divisibility of the object of the performance.” 
    Id. at 48.
    “An obligation is
    divisible when the object of the performance is susceptible of division.” La. Civ.
    Code. Ann. art. 1815. “An obligation is indivisible when the object of the
    performance, because of its nature or because of the intent of the parties, is not
    susceptible of division.” 
    Id. We believe
    that the intent of the parties makes
    the Sharp/Davidson contract indivisible.       The text of the Sharp/Davidson
    contingency contract makes the 20% fee for acting as the Attorney taking “the
    lead role” and controlling “all proceedings related to the Claims” contingent
    upon recovery through either a settlement or award. Accordingly, the parties
    agreed that Sharp and Davidson’s obligation under the contract was to
    complete the entire representation and prevail before payment was due. As
    the Sharp/Davidson contract does not contemplate partial performance of the
    obligation by Sharp and Davidson, we believe it sets out an indivisible
    obligation.
    In turn, our determination that the Sharp/Davidson contract sets out a
    joint, indivisible obligation means that, though we reach the result through a
    slightly different path, the district court properly declined to enforce the
    Sharp/Davidson contingency contract.         When “a party sues on a certain
    contract to recover compensation due on its performance, he must show
    performance on his part, or a legal excuse.” Stockstill v. Byrd, 
    132 La. 404
    , 407
    (1913).       Moreover, “the apportionment of acts of performance and
    27
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    counterperformance within the framework of a single contract depends on
    whether the object of the performance that each party promised to render to
    the other is susceptible of division, which may very well depend on the
    intention of the parties, as clearly stated in the Louisiana Civil Code.” 
    5 La. Civ
    . L. Treatise, Law of Obligations § 9.51. In the Sharp/Davidson contract,
    Sharp and Davidson promised to provide the services of two attorneys to the
    City in exchange for 20% of the recovery at the end of the litigation. But
    Sharp’s disbarment put Sharp and Davidson “into a different position
    altogether from that contemplated by the terms of the contract.” 
    Stockstill, 132 La. at 409
    .     Sharp’s disbarment “rendered the contract impossible of
    performance” because Sharp and Davidson could no longer provide the services
    of two attorneys to the City. 
    Id. Regardless of
    whether Davidson continued
    minimal work on the case after Sharp’s disbarment, Sharp and Davidson were
    in default on their joint, indivisible obligation set out by the contingency
    contract, and could no longer claim the contracted-for contingency fee from the
    City. 
    Id. We appreciate
    Davidson’s points that he was not responsible for the
    breach, was only sidelined after the breach, and was well-liked by all involved.
    Nonetheless, he drafted the contract creating the joint, indivisible obligation,
    and the value of his representation fell precipitously with Sharp’s disbarment.
    It was Sharp who had the skills and experience to be lead counsel, and the
    City’s replacement lawyers (to which the City had to transition the entire case,
    and not just the litigation portion) had their own set of senior associates,
    thereby removing any need for Davidson to continue substantial participation
    in the case. In such a situation, where there was only partial performance of
    a joint, indivisible obligation before default, we believe that Davidson’s
    recovery must be in quantum meruit. Cf. 
    5 La. Civ
    . L. Treatise, Law of
    Obligations § 16.63 (“[I]f a contract is dissolved because of a fortuitous event
    28
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    that occurred after an obligor has performed in part, the obligee is bound, but
    only to the extent that he was enriched by the obligor’s partial performance.”). 9
    2. The District Court’s Quantum Meruit Award Was Proper and
    Reasonable
    Both the City and Davidson challenge the district court’s quantum
    meruit award of $1.3 million. Davidson argues that (1) the district court
    improperly applied federal, rather than, state law in determining the award,
    (2) the award was too low because the district court took account of the fact
    that the award was being paid for with public funds, and (3) the court should
    have awarded attorneys’ fees and prejudgment interest. The City counters
    that the district court’s quantum meruit award was too high. We reject both
    parties’ challenges.
    First, Davidson fails to explain how the district court actually applied
    federal, rather than state, law. Though the district court did refer to both the
    federal and state methods of calculating fees, the court’s use of the lodestar
    calculations was just a helpful starting point in determining a quantum meruit
    award under Louisiana law.
    Second, Davidson argues that the district court erred in considering that
    the award would be paid for with public funds. Our review of the record
    satisfies us that the district court analyzed each of the applicable factors in
    Rule 1.5(a). Even if the district court’s consideration of public funds under
    Rule 1.5(a) was improper, we cannot say that we would have awarded
    Davidson a different amount under quantum meruit based on the record before
    us. See Melendreras v. Blanchard, 
    598 So. 2d 1226
    , 1228 (La. App. 4th Cir.
    1992) (“The trial court is vested with much discretion in determining proper
    9 In light of our determination that the Sharp/Davidson contract sets out a joint,
    indivisible obligation that was not performed, we do not address the City’s other challenges
    to the contract.
    29
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    attorney fees in quantum meruit and [we] will not disturb that determination
    absent manifest error.” (emphasis added)); see also Rook v. Xerox Corp., 55 F.
    App’x 716, at *4 (5th Cir. 2002) (per curiam) (unpublished) (“[A]n appellate
    court may affirm even though the district court relied on the wrong reason in
    reaching its result.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    Third, Davidson’s argument that the district court erred in failing to
    award prejudgment interest and attorneys’ fees presupposes that Davidson is
    enforcing a valid contract. But because Sharp and Davidson did not perform
    the joint, indivisible obligation under the contingency contract, and Davidson
    is entitled only to a quantum meruit award, Davidson can neither invoke his
    contractual right to attorney’s fees, nor, because legal interest in a quantum
    meruit suit is due only from the date of final judgment, 10 raise a claim for
    prejudgment interest. Accordingly, the district court did not err when refusing
    to award Davidson prejudgment interest and attorneys’ fees.
    Finally, the City does not demonstrate that the district court’s quantum
    meruit award was excessive. The Louisiana Supreme Court has indicated that
    a court should consider the following factors derived from Rule 1.5(a) when
    determining a quantum meruit award:
    (1) the ultimate result obtained; (2) the responsibility
    incurred; (3) the importance of the litigation; (4)
    amount of money involved; (5) extent and character of
    the work performed; (6) legal knowledge, attainment,
    and skill of the attorneys; (7) number of appearances
    made; (8) intricacies of the facts involved; (9) diligence
    and skill of counsel; and (10) the court’s own
    knowledge.
    10 See, e.g., McCarty Corp. v. Pullman-Kellogg, Div. of Pullman, Inc., 
    751 F.2d 750
    ,
    762 (5th Cir. 1985).
    30
    Case: 12-30823    Document: 00512500917       Page: 31   Date Filed: 01/15/2014
    No. 12-30823
    
    Williamson, 597 So. 2d at 442
    .       The City argues that the district court’s
    calculation is excessive in light of Davidson’s lack of experience in utility cases,
    Davidson’s arbitrary 20% increase in his lodestar calculation to account for
    unbilled hours, the fact that Davidson’s award was greater than lead counsel
    Sharp’s, the fact that Davidson’s award results in an effective hourly rate of
    $443 an hour, and the fact that Davidson ceased performing a significant role
    in the case after August 2008. But Davidson had utility experience when he
    was hired, and had been billed out at $350 an hour doing that work.          Given
    these facts, the district court could fairly award Davidson a quantum meruit
    award that had an effective hourly rate that was higher than his past hourly
    rates given that Davidson was working on contingency, and therefore was not
    only providing the City with legal services but also bearing the risk of loss for
    the City.
    Conclusion
    We AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
    31