George Paeth v. Worth Township , 483 F. App'x 956 ( 2012 )


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  •                 NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 12a0596n.06
    Nos. 10-2548, 10-2612
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    FILED
    Jun 08, 2012
    GEORGE T. PAETH; MARGARET C. PAETH,                       )
    LEONARD GREEN, Clerk
    )
    Plaintiffs-Appellees Cross-Appellants,             )
    )
    v.                                         )        ON APPEAL FROM THE
    )        UNITED STATES DISTRICT
    WORTH TOWNSHIP, a Michigan municipal                      )        COURT FOR THE EASTERN
    corporation,                                              )        DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
    )
    Defendant-Appellant Cross-Appellee,                )
    )
    BARBARA CUTCHER, Building and Zoning Official             )
    for Worth Township, in her official capacity,             )
    )
    Defendant.                                         )
    )
    BEFORE: GUY, COLE, and ROGERS, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM. George and Margaret Paeth faced many hurdles from Worth Township in
    trying to renovate their home. Eventually, they took the Township to court, where a jury awarded
    them $600,000 on First Amendment retaliation and procedural due process claims. The Paeths did
    not establish a procedural due process violation, because the process they were afforded was
    constitutionally sufficient.   There was, however, sufficient evidence to support their First
    Amendment retaliation claim, and the damages awarded on the First Amendment claim were not
    excessive. Finally, the district court’s partially reduced grant of attorneys fees was not an abuse of
    discretion.
    1
    Nos. 10-2548, 10-2612
    Paeth, et al. v. Worth Township, et al.
    I.
    In 1998, George and Margaret Paeth purchased a house in Worth Township. Though they
    had originally planned to renovate and resell it, they instead decided to prepare it for their own
    habitation. Their renovation plans included adding enclosed areas to the first floor and replacing the
    roof. The plans meant that the house’s footprint would expand slightly on the northeast and
    northwest corners. The northwest corner already did not conform with a five-foot setback
    requirement in place for the site.
    The Paeths applied for a land use permit, which necessitated a survey of the property that
    revealed the nonconforming northwest corner. The Paeths claim that they notified Barbara Cutcher,
    Worth Township’s zoning administrator, who said that the nonconformity would not be a problem
    and that they could continue their development plans. The Paeths obtained a land use permit from
    the Township on April 27, 1999, and then a building permit from the county’s building department
    on June 17, 1999. The county’s building department inspected and approved the house’s foundation,
    and the house was then framed.
    In 2002, the Township formed its own building department, which assumed the
    responsibilities that had previously rested on the county. Cutcher became the Township’s zoning
    and building administrator. Soon after, she declared that the county inspector had informed her that
    the Paeths’ building permit had expired in 2002. The Paeths disagreed, but obtained a new building
    permit from the Township on July 7, 2003.
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    Paeth, et al. v. Worth Township, et al.
    In June 2004, Cutcher notified the Paeths that their house did not comply with the
    Township’s setback ordinance, which by then was eight feet, not five, and told them to contact
    zoning administrator Lynn Laughlin as “[t]his is a serious problem.” Cutcher’s letter also extended
    the Paeths’ permit into July 2004. Cutcher later testified that former Township supervisor Janice
    Putz had instructed her to write the letter, though Cutcher agreed that the contents were accurate and
    the letter should have been sent.
    On June 22, 2004, the Paeths submitted a variance application, prompting Laughlin to request
    another property survey. The new survey showed that the 1999 survey significantly underestimated
    the distance between the house and property line; the Township claims that this meant Cutcher relied
    on inaccurate information when she approved the land use permit. After some additional filings by
    the Paeths explaining their reliance on representations made by Township officials, the Zoning Board
    of Appeals (ZBA) held a hearing on the variance request on May 18, 2005. The ZBA voted
    unanimously to deny the variance, meaning that the Paeths would have to bring their house back into
    compliance by removing the problematic portions.
    The Paeths appealed the ZBA’s decision to the county’s circuit court, which found that the
    ZBA had applied the wrong standard to the request and so remanded for further proceedings. The
    ZBA upheld its denial of the request on May 24, 2006; the Paeths never received notice of the
    hearing, which was required by law. It appears that the letter sent notifying them had the wrong
    address. The Paeths again appealed, this time to the state circuit court, and they obtained a third
    heading. The ZBA again denied the variance request on November 13, 2006, at which point the
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    Nos. 10-2548, 10-2612
    Paeth, et al. v. Worth Township, et al.
    Paeths again appealed to the circuit court. This time, the circuit court reversed the decision of the
    ZBA and granted the variance. The Township unsuccessfully appealed to the Michigan Court of
    Appeals, which dismissed the claim for lack of jurisdiction on July 13, 2007.
    On November 5, 2007, Cutcher posted a stop work order on the Paeths’ property. She
    insisted that the Paeths needed to obtain a new permit to continue work, and provided an application
    for one. The Paeths received no notice of a hearing before the order was posted, a requirement under
    Mich. Comp. Laws § 125.1512(3): “If construction is being undertaken contrary to a building permit,
    . . . the enforcing agency shall give written notice to the holder of the building permit . . . notifying
    him of the violation of this act . . . and to appear and show cause why the construction should not
    be stopped.” Cutcher testified that she posted the order on instruction from Marcy Bartnicziak, the
    Township Clerk, and against her better judgment. A number of Township officials corroborated
    Cutcher’s account that she did not want to post the order, but also testified that they did nothing to
    stop her from doing so.
    Cutcher testified that had the Paeths requested a new permit, the matter could have been
    resolved in a day or two. Instead, the Paeths contacted the State of Michigan Office of Local
    Government and Consumer Services to confirm that their 2003 permit was still valid. After some
    confusion, the office issued a letter on May 22, 2008, stating that the Paeths could begin working
    “upon meeting the conditions set forth within the letter for code compliance.” Cutcher wrote to the
    Paeths on May 24, 2008, confirming the Paeths had a valid permit, but also demanding that they
    contact her before beginning work so that she could inspect the property for code compliance. The
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    Nos. 10-2548, 10-2612
    Paeth, et al. v. Worth Township, et al.
    Paeths did not contact her. The stop work order was not removed from the property until October,
    pursuant to a district court order.
    On September 11, 2008, the Paeths sued Cutcher and Worth Township on four counts, all
    brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983: (1) violation of their First Amendment rights when Cutcher and
    the Township retaliated against them for appealing the ZBA’s variance decision; (2) violation of the
    Equal Protection Clause; (3) violation of substantive and procedural due process because of the
    issuance of the stop work order without notice or an opportunity to respond; and (4) a request for
    mandamus and superintending control. Count Four was rendered moot, and both sides moved for
    summary judgment.
    The district court found in favor of the Township on Count 2 and the substantive due process
    prong of Count 3, and the Paeths have not appealed those decisions. On Count 1, the district court
    found that there was enough conflicting evidence regarding the Township’s motives to send the issue
    to trial. The district court found that the Paeths had established a procedural due process violation
    as a matter of law and so granted summary judgment in their favor on the second prong of Count 3.
    It found that the Paeths had a property interest in continuing construction on their home. The district
    court rejected the Township’s argument that the building permit conferring that interest had been
    invalidated by the Paeths’ suspending work under 2003 Mich. Residential Code R105.5, because that
    suspension was caused by the case’s litigation, and so the permit remained valid. The district court
    concluded that the ZBA’s stop work order deprived the Paeths of that right without prior notice
    contrary to state law.
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    Nos. 10-2548, 10-2612
    Paeth, et al. v. Worth Township, et al.
    The district court also found that Cutcher was not entitled to qualified immunity, and that the
    Township was eligible for municipal liability. The district court found that the ZBA is a final
    decision-making body, and so its decision to deny the Paeths a variance constituted the official policy
    of the Township, thus making it liable. As for Cutcher’s posting of the stop work order, the district
    court found that though Cutcher was not the final authority, evidence that higher-up board officials
    approved was enough for a fact finder to conclude “that the action represented the official position
    of the township.”
    The trial on Count 1 lasted five days. At the conclusion of trial, the Township moved for
    judgment as a matter of law, arguing that the Paeths had not presented sufficient evidence to prove
    the second and third elements of a First Amendment claim, namely, the presence of an adverse action
    and a causal link to protected conduct. The district court denied the motion, and the jury found for
    the Paeths. The jury awarded the Paeths $600,000 in damages—$275,000 on their First Amendment
    retaliation claim and $325,000 on their procedural due process claim. Worth Township moved for
    a new trial, or in the alternative remittitur, which the district court denied. The district court held
    that the damages were not excessive, the trial was not unfair, and the verdict was not against the
    weight of the evidence.
    The district court granted in part the Paeths’ motion for attorneys fees. The Paeths had
    requested $342,294.00, and were granted $201,097.79. The decrease resulted from three factors.
    First, the district court decreased the hourly rates for each of the three attorneys on the case. Second,
    the district court decreased the number of hours billed. Finally, the district court refused to include
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    Nos. 10-2548, 10-2612
    Paeth, et al. v. Worth Township, et al.
    the hours billed by a law student filling the role of a clerk or paralegal. To the original lodestar
    amount calculated as $191,521.70, the district court added 5%, or $9,576.09, because counsel had
    been compelled to shoulder the expenses for the span of the litigation, as the Paeths had been unable
    to pay their fees.
    The Township timely appealed on a number of grounds detailed below, and the Paeths cross
    appealed the grant of attorneys fees.
    II.
    A. Grant of summary judgment on procedural due process violation
    We need not determine whether the Paeths had a property interest in continuing construction
    on their home, because even if they did, they received sufficient process when the stop work order
    was issued.1 What process is due under the Constitution is not equivalent to the procedures outlined
    by statutes or ordinances, and so a violation of them does not automatically point to a due-process
    violation. See Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill, 
    470 U.S. 532
    , 541-42 (1985), DePiero v. City
    of Macedonia, 
    180 F.3d 770
    , 788 (6th Cir. 1999); see also Chandler v. Village of Chagrin Falls, 296
    F. App’x 463, 470-72 (6th Cir. 2008). Rather, there is a federal constitutional framework that needs
    to be followed in determining whether there is a federal procedural due process violation. Assuming
    1
    Our reasoning for reversing the judgment of the district court was not presented in the same
    terms to the court below, although it appears in Worth Township’s brief on appeal. This issue is still
    properly before the court, however, because Worth Township did challenge the Paeths’ procedural
    due process claim below, albeit with some different reasoning. Changing the framing of the
    argument does not change its crux: that the Paeths did not satisfy the elements of a procedural due
    process claim. See Chandler v. Village of Chagrin Falls, 296 F. App’x 463, 467-68 (6th Cir. 2008).
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    Nos. 10-2548, 10-2612
    Paeth, et al. v. Worth Township, et al.
    that there is a property interest protected by state law, there are three factors to be weighed, as set
    forth definitively by the Supreme Court in Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
    , 335 (1976):
    [I]dentification of the specific dictates of due process generally requires consideration
    of three distinct factors: First, the private interest that will be affected by the official
    action; second, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such interest through the
    procedures used, and the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute procedural
    safeguards; and finally, the Government’s interest, including the function involved
    and the fiscal and administrative burdens that the additional or substitute procedural
    requirement would entail.
    Under these factors, the Paeths’ constitutional rights were not violated by the posting of the stop
    work order without notice. Even assuming the Paeths had a valid permit and an attendant property
    interest in continuing construction on their home, that interest was not an extremely weighty one.
    At most, the Paeths were engaging in part-time construction at the time the stop work order was
    issued. The order came with instructions for how to apply for a new permit, a process that could
    have taken less than a day and that involved affording the Paeths an opportunity to be heard. Had
    the Paeths performed these steps, they would have been briefly inconvenienced by the stop work
    order, but the issue would have been resolved quickly. In fact, the Paeths encountered a similar
    situation back in 2003, when they did apply for and receive a new permit. The idea that their choice
    to ignore the proffered procedure this time can create a federal cause of action resulting in $325,000
    in damages makes little sense. See Herwins v. City of Revere, 
    163 F.3d 15
    , 20 (1st Cir. 1998), where
    the First Circuit reversed a grant of summary judgment on similar grounds.
    In addition, the Township’s interest in prompt posting of the order was not insignificant. No
    work had been done on the property for several years, and no inspections had taken place. Whether
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    Nos. 10-2548, 10-2612
    Paeth, et al. v. Worth Township, et al.
    or not this inactivity invalidated the building permit, it does raise the probability that the conditions
    of the house had changed in such a way that it could have rendered further work dangerous to those
    involved or to the surrounding environment. There was also evidence that the house was not
    compliant with various provisions of the building code, evidence that came to light only after the
    original permit was issued. The Township therefore had an interest in preventing any further work
    from taking place until such concerns could be addressed, and the fact that the stop work order may
    have also been posted with a retaliatory motive does not negate these concerns. Temporary
    inconvenience does not hold up against such concerns, and so the Paeths received sufficient process
    such that no constitutional deprivation occurred.
    In 3883 Connecticut LLC v. District of Columbia, 
    336 F.3d 1068
    (D.C. Cir. 2003), the D.C.
    Circuit confronted a situation remarkably similar to the one in this case. There, a local building
    administration issued a stop work order without notice. The court found that though there was a
    property interest in the building permits at issue, there was no due process violation “because the
    procedures available to [the plaintiff] to challenge the SWO afforded it due process.” 
    Id. at 1073.
    These procedures consisted of the right to “an expeditious appeal process with three levels of
    review.” 
    Id. The court
    analyzed the procedures under Eldridge and concluded that despite the fact
    that a permit holder “has a substantial interest in the continued effect of the permit and in proceeding
    with a project without delay,” this interest must be balanced against the municipality’s “significant
    interest in maintaining its capability to act swiftly to bring an immediate halt to construction work
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    Nos. 10-2548, 10-2612
    Paeth, et al. v. Worth Township, et al.
    that poses a threat to public health and safety or to the environment.” 
    Id. at 1074.
    Under these
    circumstances, the court held, a speedy post-deprivation review satisfied due process requirements.
    A balancing of the Mathews v. Eldridge factors leads inescapably to the conclusion that there
    was no procedural due process violation in this case. For this reason, the damages awarded by the
    jury, after being instructed that there was a due process violation, must be vacated.
    B. First Amendment retaliation claim
    1. Sufficiency of evidence
    There was however sufficient evidence for the jury to conclude that the Paeths had satisfied
    the elements of their First Amendment retaliation claim. The district court was therefore correct to
    deny the Township’s motion for judgment as a matter of law. Of the three-part showing necessary
    for a retaliation claim, the Township disputes the second and third elements—adverse action and a
    causal connection between the action and protected conduct—with regard to two actions by the
    Township: the issuance of the stop work order, and the failure to provide notice regarding the
    variance hearing. The Township’s argument on these points is unconvincing.
    Both the Township’s issuance of the stop work order and its failure to provide notice on the
    variance hearing were adverse actions that satisfied the second element of a retaliation showing.
    Such actions would “deter a person of ordinary firmness from continuing to engage in [protected]
    conduct.” Thaddeus-X v. Blatter, 
    175 F.3d 378
    , 394 (6th Cir. 1999). The order was the latest action
    in a line of continuing interference with the Paeths’ construction plans. It was publicly humiliating
    and rendered continuing work illegal, as George Paeth, well versed in the building laws, would
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    Paeth, et al. v. Worth Township, et al.
    know. The fact that the ZBA hearing was held with no notice was an adverse action precisely
    because notice was required under law. From the Paeths’ perspective, whenever they tried to make
    use of legal means to have their claims adjudicated, the Township responded by moving outside the
    law. Lack of notice could dissuade them from continuing to seek adjudication, because they were
    being denied access to that adjudication. The level of deterrence necessary for a First Amendment
    claim shifts according to the circumstances of the case. See Fritz v. Charter Tp. of Comstock, 
    592 F.3d 718
    , 724 (6th Cir. 2010). Here, there is enough that the jury could find it satisfied.
    The Paeths also offered enough evidence to support the inference of a causal connection
    between these adverse actions and the Paeths’ protected act of appealing the ZBA’s decisions to the
    circuit court. With regard to the issuance of the stop work order, this evidence included testimony
    from Cutcher that she was instructed to issue the order because the Township was not going to
    appeal the Michigan court’s decision against it and that she did not think the action was right, and
    an excerpt from Cutcher’s notebook with similar content. There was also testimony from ZBA
    member Thomas Gilbert that Bartniczak had a history of using her position to make things difficult
    out of spite for others and “would go to great lengths to get her way.” There must be a very high
    showing before a jury’s verdict will be discarded and judgment declared as a matter of law. Here,
    the jury could conclude that the posting of the stop work order was retaliatory.
    The evidence regarding the lack of notice is somewhat weaker, but still enough to support
    the jury’s verdict. The intentionality of the act is in dispute, as the lack of notice resulted from a
    miswritten address on the envelope sent to the Paeths informing them of the hearing (7344
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    Nos. 10-2548, 10-2612
    Paeth, et al. v. Worth Township, et al.
    Maplewood instead of 7433) and the late date on which the letter was sent, seven days before the
    hearing. However, no member of the Board followed up on the lack of notice, which was supposed
    to involve newspaper publication and notice to neighbors as well. The failure to provide these other
    forms of notice is harder to attribute to accident or oversight. The jury was also informed that after
    the Paeths won their first appeal in January 2006, the next step should have been prompt further
    proceedings. Instead, five months later, a hearing without notice was conducted. One could draw
    an inference of a causal connection not only because of the temporal proximity of the actions, but
    also their related content. There was enough evidence that a juror could infer that the failure to
    provide notice was intentional, and done in retaliation for the Paeths’ appeal.
    2. Municipal liability
    Municipal liability could attach to the ZBA’s decision to deny the Paeths a variance. The
    ZBA is a policymaking body within the Township, because its decisions are not reviewed by any
    superior officials. See Adair v. Charter Country of Wayne, 
    452 F.3d 482
    , 493 (6th Cir. 2006)
    (reciting standard). Its decision to deny the Paeths a variance falls under the definition offered in
    Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs. of City of New York, 
    436 U.S. 658
    , 690 (1978), of municipal policy:
    “a policy statement, ordinance, regulation, or decision officially adopted and promulgated by [a local
    governing] body’s officers.” This is not a situation where a single officer made a decision absent
    the knowledge or approval of her peers. The ZBA acted as a unit. It was composed of municipal
    officers, and its decision represented the official policy of the Township as regarded the Paeths’
    request. So long as “a deliberate choice to follow a course of action is made from among various
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    Paeth, et al. v. Worth Township, et al.
    alternatives by the official or officials responsible for establishing final policy with respect to the
    subject matter in question,” municipal liability can attach. Pembaur v. City of Cincinnati, 
    475 U.S. 469
    , 483 (1986). Here, that requirement has been satisfied.
    The stop work order issued by Cutcher is a closer question, but there was enough evidence
    offered that municipal liability might attach such that the question could withstand summary
    judgment. Testimony was offered that Cutcher was operating under the instructions of Bartniczak,
    a member of the Township Board, and with the knowledge of another member of the Board,
    Jonathan Rundels, who did nothing to stop the action. Township Board members are officials high
    enough in the municipality that their actions, like those of the officers in Ford, “may fairly be said
    to represent official policy.” Ford v. County of Grand Traverse, 
    535 F.3d 483
    , 495 (6th Cir. 2008)
    (internal citation omitted). The circumstances of this case allow a reasonable juror to conclude that
    the Board was in tacit agreement that if Bartniczak wanted to retaliate against the Paeths through
    official channels, no one would stand in her way. If the stop work order was posted with the
    knowledge of at least two Board members, a reasonable fact finder could conclude that it represented
    official Township policy.
    C. Denial of motion for new trial or remittitur
    The district court did not abuse its discretion when it denied Worth Township’s motion for
    a new trial or for remittitur, because the damages awarded were not inordinately excessive. As the
    district court pointed out, in addition to roughly $67,000 of chronicled costs for insurance, mortgage,
    taxes, and legal fees, the Paeths also testified that they endured much more: time off from work to
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    Paeth, et al. v. Worth Township, et al.
    deal with both the Township’s administrative processes and the circuit court litigation; the inability
    to procure additional financing; the need to exhaust their personal savings and cash in their life
    insurance policy and retirement plans; the paralysis of not being able to live in their home, but also
    not to sell it or buy another property; personal humiliation and reputational harm from the
    community continuing to believe that they flagrantly violated the law; marital strain from living in
    close quarters and the inability to resolve the housing issues; and the constant and crippling
    uncertainty about what would happen on a daily basis for years. The jury’s assigning of roughly
    $210,000 for these factors is high, and it is possible that another district court may have found the
    amount too high if a narrow focus were kept on the actual violative acts, but it was not an abuse of
    discretion on the part of the district court to accept it in this case.
    A district court examining the record could reasonably conclude that the verdict was not
    clearly excessive; district courts are instructed only to remit if the verdict “resulted from passion,
    bias, or prejudice; or is so excessive or inadequate to shock the conscience of the court” Sykes v.
    Anderson, 
    625 F.3d 294
    , 322 (6th Cir. 2010). We in turn offer an additional layer of deference to
    the jury award since we will only reverse if we find that the district court’s assessment was an abuse
    of discretion. The Township’s argument is that the testimony of George and Margaret Paeth was
    insufficient to account for the damages awarded. Under our deferential scope of review, this
    argument is unavailing, and the cases cited to the contrary do not counsel otherwise. In Rogers v.
    Fisher Body Division, 
    739 F.2d 1102
    , 1106-07 (6th Cir. 1984), this court overturned the verdict
    because it concluded that the jury had not received adequate guidance in calculating the damages.
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    In Davis v. Mansfield Metropolitan Housing Authority, 
    751 F.2d 180
    , 186 (6th Cir. 1984), there was
    a higher standard of proof mandated by statute before damages could be issued. In Sykes, this court
    expressed no opinion on the appropriateness of the damages, and instead remanded the case because
    the district court failed to explain its reasons for denying the 
    motion. 625 F.3d at 323
    . The district
    court did so, and its judgment was affirmed. Sykes v. Anderson, 419 F. App’x 615, 617 (6th Cir.
    2011). Here, the district court provided ample explanation.
    D. Cross appeal on attorneys fees
    The district court also did not abuse its discretion when it awarded only a portion of the
    attorneys fees requested by the Paeths. The district court laid out its reasoning clearly, applied
    proper legal standards, and made mathematically sound calculations. The Paeths’ arguments to the
    contrary amount to nothing more than disagreement with the district court’s conclusions, which does
    not merit reversal.
    The district court acted within its discretion when it decreased the hourly rates for each of
    the three attorneys on the case, as well as the hours billed. The district court explained that it
    calculated reasonable rates for each of the attorneys by referring to the prevailing market rates in the
    area, a practice recommended by Blum v. Stenson, 
    465 U.S. 886
    , 895 (1984). The district court also
    offered adequate explanation for why it reduced the hours worked, explaining that it found some of
    the hours billed excessive, redundant, or unnecessary, all factors that allow a district court to find
    hours not to be reasonable. The Paeths sought the fees, and so the burden of proof was on them to
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    Paeth, et al. v. Worth Township, et al.
    substantiate the hours worked and rate claimed. Hensley v. Eckerhart, 
    461 U.S. 424
    , 433 (1983).
    The district court determined that they had not, and so lowered the rates accordingly.
    It was also not an abuse of discretion for the district court to decline to assess separately the
    hours worked by a law student. The district court acknowledged that the law student did engage in
    legal research and drafting, but noted that “the majority of his time was devoted to clerical and
    delivery tasks.” The district court relied on Missouri v. Jenkins, 
    491 U.S. 274
    , 288 n.10 (1989), to
    conclude that any work done by the law student that could be billed was already taken into account
    in the attorneys’ rates, who presumably reviewed it. The Paeths had offered no documentation to
    support their request that the student’s work be covered, nor did they explain why it should be billed
    at $110 per hour beyond saying that such a practice was customary. It was within the district court’s
    discretion to decline that request.
    III.
    We reverse the grant of summary judgment on the procedural due process violation and
    vacate the award of damages for that violation. We affirm the judgment of the district court with
    regard to the First Amendment violation, the award of damages for that violation, and the award of
    attorneys fees.
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    Paeth, et al. v. Worth Township, et al.
    ROGERS, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
    I concur with the majority’s opinion except to the extent that it affirms the damages granted
    to the Paeths. The district court should have granted Worth Township’s motion for a new trial or
    for remittitur, because the damages awarded were grossly excessive. The proven unlawful actions
    by Worth Township consisted of two things: the failure to provide notice for the second variance
    hearing, and the posting of the stop work order without notice. The consequences of these actions
    lasted at most a few months, and the latter could have been resolved much more quickly had the
    Paeths simply reapplied for their building permit. Damages in both instances seem to involve
    preventing the Paeths from continuing construction and compelling them to file another appeal with
    the circuit court. There is no way that $275,000 worth of damages could be shown on the record.
    The jury’s assigned damages cannot be justified when looking only at what resulted from the
    activity at issue here, as opposed to the decade-long saga outlined in the briefs and to the jury. When
    George and Margaret Paeth testified about the financial and emotional strain they underwent, these
    injuries resulted only in small part from the proven unlawful activity. Nowhere is there mention of
    how any of the damages they mention relate to these two particular acts. Nor, as the Township
    points out, do the damages they claim for the decade have many fixed amounts attached to them.
    Perhaps if the entire tale were under consideration such an award could have been reasonable, but
    the district court’s instructions make it clear that the jury should only have looked to the proven
    unlawful activity of the Township; the jury does not seem to have listened. District courts are
    instructed only to remit if the verdict “resulted from passion, bias, or prejudice; or is so excessive
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    Paeth, et al. v. Worth Township, et al.
    or inadequate to shock the conscience of the court” Sykes v. Anderson, 
    625 F.3d 294
    , 322 (6th Cir.
    2010). This is an instance of a damages award that likely resulted from passion, and the amount
    should have shocked the conscience of the court. I would remand for the district court to enter a
    remittitur in the largest amount that the district court determines could reasonably be found as a
    result of the particular actions found by the jury to be First Amendment violations.
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