Kitchen, Delores v. TTX Company ( 2002 )


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  • In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    Nos. 01-1953, 01-2396, 01-1936 & 01-2494
    Delores Kitchen, Rose Carey, Sondra
    Caple, Yvette Ruth, Theodora Alexander,
    Marion Washington, Gayle Allen, Cheryl
    Carter, Dorothy Tatem, Martha Baylor,
    and Deborah Brown,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    Cross-Appellants,
    v.
    TTX Company,
    Defendant-Appellant,
    Cross-Appellee.
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 97 CV 5271--Wayne Andersen, Judge.
    Argued February 14, 2002--Decided March 20, 2002
    Before Flaum, Chief Judge, and Bauer and
    Evans, Circuit Judges.
    Flaum, Chief Judge. The appellees
    ("plaintiffs") filed suit against the
    appellant ("TTX") alleging employment
    discrimination. After contentious
    litigation, the plaintiffs accepted
    separate Rule 68 offers of judgment to
    settle their claims against TTX. The
    parties, however, were unable to resolve
    the amount of attorneys’ fees and costs
    to be awarded to plaintiffs’ counsel. The
    district court, after conducting several
    days of hearings, awarded the plaintiffs
    over $1.1 million in attorneys’ fees and
    costs. Pursuant to a second fee petition,
    the plaintiffs were awarded an additional
    sum of $70,005.50 in fees and costs. TTX
    has filed the instant appeal contesting
    the propriety of the district court’s
    award. For the reasons stated below, we
    affirm in part and vacate and remand in
    part the decisions of the district court.
    I.   BACKGROUND
    In late 1997, three African-American
    females filed suit against TTX
    Corporation alleging race and sex
    discrimination, retaliation and
    intentional infliction of emotional
    distress./1 The gravamen of the
    plaintiffs’ complaint was that TTX
    employed discriminatory practices in the
    training and promotions of employees. On
    December 2, 1997, the plaintiffs filed an
    amended complaint joining eight
    additional African-American females to
    their action, bringing the total number
    of plaintiffs to eleven. As in the
    initial complaint, the claims concerned
    race and sex discrimination, retaliation,
    and the intentional infliction of
    emotional distress.
    The majority of discovery in this matter
    was conducted between January and
    September of 1998. In October, TTX filed
    a motion for summary judgment against one
    of the plaintiffs, Yvette Ruth. This
    motion was granted in part and denied in
    part by the district court. In June of
    1999, TTX filed summary judgment motions
    against the remaining ten plaintiffs. The
    district court never issued a ruling with
    respect to those motions.
    In August of 1999, the plaintiffs
    submitted a settlement demand to TTX. The
    plaintiffs demanded a lump-sum payment of
    $4.7 million. The plaintiffs did not
    disclose how this amount would be divided
    and did not specify whether the
    settlement demand included attorneys’
    fees. TTX rejected this overture and
    countered with settlement offers for each
    of the individual plaintiffs. In
    addition, TTX provided that attorneys’
    fees paid pursuant to any settlement
    could not exceed $200,000. The plaintiffs
    rejected TTX’s counteroffer and the case
    was scheduled for trial on May 21, 2000.
    Approximately three months prior to the
    commencement of the trial, the plaintiffs
    made several different settlement demands
    to TTX. First, on February 3, 2000, the
    plaintiffs demanded a $1.75 million lump-
    sum settlement payment, as well as other
    non-monetary provisions (e.g., the
    bridging of pensions and the extension of
    COBRA benefits for certain plaintiffs).
    The plaintiffs did not specify whether
    the February 3rd offer included the
    payment of attorneys’ fees. TTX rejected
    the plaintiffs’ demand and responded with
    a counteroffer that stipulated, inter
    alia, that attorneys’ fees paid pursuant
    to any settlement should be capped at
    $400,000.
    On February 9, 2000, the plaintiffs
    rejected TTX’s counteroffer and responded
    with another settlement demand. In the
    February 9th demand, the plaintiffs
    requested a lump-sum payment of $1.4
    million, the bridging of pension benefits
    and the extension of COBRA benefits for
    certain plaintiffs. The plaintiffs
    refused, however, to cap the attorneys’
    fees payable under any settlement. TTX
    again rejected the plaintiffs’ demand.
    On February 18, 2000, the plaintiffs
    once more presented TTX with a settlement
    demand. In this offer, the plaintiffs
    lowered their lump-sum settlement figure
    to $1.25 million, with similar pension
    bridging and extension of COBRA benefits
    for certain plaintiffs. The plaintiffs
    also sought $1.4 million in attorneys’
    fees and $81,000 in costs. TTX rejected
    the plaintiffs’ last offer and instead,
    on March 2, 2000, presented separate Rule
    68 offers of judgment to each of the
    eleven plaintiffs./2 The offers of
    judgment ranged from $20,000 to $160,000
    in value, with the lump-sum amount coming
    to $610,000, including pension bridges
    and extensions of COBRA benefits. The
    plaintiffs accepted their respective
    offers of judgment. While their
    acceptance of TTX’s offers of judgment
    terminated the plaintiffs’ claims, the
    issue of attorneys’ fees and costs
    remained unresolved.
    Shortly after the acceptance of the
    various offers of judgment, the
    plaintiffs presented their petition for
    attorneys’ fees and costs to the district
    court. In their petition, the plaintiffs
    requested over $1.3 million in fees and
    over $54,000 in costs. The district court
    scheduled and then conducted four days of
    hearings pursuant to the plaintiffs’
    petition. At the conclusion of these
    hearings, the district court made several
    determinations. First, the district court
    concluded that, although some of the
    plaintiffs had settled for less money
    than had been offered initially by TTX,
    all of the plaintiffs were substantially
    compensated and that the settlements they
    received were not for "nuisance value."
    After making this conclusion, the
    district court determined the hours
    reasonably expended by the plaintiffs’
    attorneys on the litigation and then
    multiplied that figure by a reasonable
    hourly rate./3 In addition, the
    district court undertook an extensive
    examination of the costs incurred by the
    plaintiffs. After conducting these
    inquiries, thedistrict court concluded
    that plaintiffs were entitled to receive
    $1,096,412.60 in attorneys’ fees and
    $51,357.66 in costs and expenses.
    Subsequent to the district court’s
    decision, the plaintiffs filed an
    additional petition to recoup the
    attorneys’ fees and costs that were
    generated in preparation for the hearings
    on the first petition. The district court
    entered judgment against TTX in the
    amount of $70,005.50.
    TTX now appeals the awards of fees and
    costs granted by the district court.
    According to TTX, the district court com
    mitted legal error in awarding the
    plaintiffs the abovementioned fees and
    costs and that the district court abused
    its discretion in determining the hourly
    rates to be paid to certain plaintiffs’
    counsel. The plaintiffs have also filed a
    cross-appeal contesting the lodestar rate
    determined by the district court.
    II.   DISCUSSION
    Because an award of attorneys’ fees
    "generally is fact based," we review such
    awards for abuse of discretion. Dunning
    v. Simmons Airlines, 
    62 F.3d 863
    , 872
    (7th Cir. 1995).
    A plaintiff who has accepted an offer of
    judgment presented by a defendant can, in
    certain circumstances, recoup his fees,
    if that plaintiff is a prevailing party
    and his recovery is not insubstantial.
    See, e.g., Fletcher v. City of Fort
    Wayne, 
    162 F.3d 975
    , 977 (7th Cir. 1998).
    In other words, a plaintiff who recovers
    a pittance (or whose relief amounts to a
    pittance) is not entitled to recover the
    entirety of his attorneys’ fees merely
    because he was technically the victor in
    a particular cause of action. See Hensley
    v. Eckerhart, 
    461 U.S. 424
    (1983).
    In its appeal, TTX does not dispute that
    the plaintiffs were technically
    prevailing parties. See 
    Fletcher, 162 F.3d at 976
    ("[a] plaintiff who recovers
    minimal damages technically prevails . .
    . ."). Rather, TTX claims that the
    district court’s award of fees and costs,
    when viewed in tandem with the settlement
    received, unjustifiably compensates the
    plaintiffs’ attorneys for a de minimis or
    nuisance value victory./4 We have
    reviewed the district court’s
    determinations and cannot conclude that
    it abused its discretion in determining
    that the plaintiffs received substantial
    compensation for their claims and,
    therefore, were entitled to recoup
    reasonable attorneys’ fees.
    The district court conducted four days
    of hearings on the issue of attorneys’
    fees. During the course of these
    hearings, the district court allowed for
    ample testimony and briefing. After
    examining the value of the settlements
    received by the plaintiffs, the district
    court determined that they were more than
    nuisance value, in part, because "they
    were well above the costs of defense at
    the time they were made," and "the
    defendant included some anticipated risk
    of loss when setting the amount of the
    offers." Kitchen, et al. v. TTX Corp., 97
    CV 5271, slip op. at 4 (N.D. Ill. January
    16, 2001). Furthermore, the district
    court concluded that the "final offers of
    judgment made by TTX included substantial
    concessions by TTX" with respect to
    demands for plaintiff confidentiality and
    the cessation of other claims. 
    Id. This court
    has stated that a "compromise
    for less than the costs of defense is a
    good working definition of a nuisance-
    value settlement . . . ." 
    Fletcher, 162 F.3d at 976
    . In light of the district
    court’s finding that the offers extended
    by TTX exceeded the anticipated costs of
    defense (as well as its findings
    regarding other concessions made by TTX),
    we find that the district court did not
    abuse its discretion in determining that
    the plaintiffs had made a substantial
    recovery in accepting TTX’s offers of
    judgment.
    TTX also asserts that the district court
    abused its discretion in determining the
    hours reasonably expended by the
    plaintiffs’ counsel and the lodestar rate
    with respect to attorneys Gregory Gorman
    and Catherine Caporusso. Similarly, the
    plaintiffs have filed a cross-appeal,
    disputing the lodestar rate set by the
    district court for attorneys Gorman and
    Caporusso. As with the district court’s
    findings on the success of the
    plaintiffs’ claims, we do not find that
    the district court abused its discretion
    in its assessment of the hours expended
    by plaintiffs’ counsel or in the
    calculation of the lodestar rate. With
    regard to the hours worked by plaintiffs’
    counsel, the district court engaged in a
    thorough examination of the time slips
    generated and the necessity of each task.
    Similarly, in calculating the lodestar
    for Mr. Gorman and Ms. Caporusso, the
    district court examined the experience
    level of each attorney and their
    comparative market values to determine
    the respective hourly rates of $240 and
    $185 per hour. See McNabola v. Chicago
    Transit Authority, 
    10 F.3d 501
    , 519 (7th
    Cir. 1993) (market rate or value is "the
    rate that lawyers of similar ability and
    experience in the community normally
    charge their paying clients for the type
    of work in question."). In light of the
    time and care that the district court
    took to make these findings, it is clear
    that it acted within the bounds of its
    discretion.
    Lastly, the district court awarded
    several thousand dollars in costs and
    expenses to the plaintiffs./5 Upon
    reviewing the district court’s opinions,
    as well as the record below, it is
    unclear whether the plaintiffs were
    awarded costs for work performed by
    unpaid interns working in the offices of
    plaintiffs’ attorneys. We would consider
    it highly unusual for a district court to
    order a defendant to pay for work that
    was performed at no cost to a plaintiff
    or to his attorneys. Therefore, we vacate
    the district court’s award of costs and
    remand this matter to this district court
    to determine the amount of costs that
    were generated by unpaid interns. If, on
    remand, the district court determines
    that such costs should be awarded, it
    should supply some reasoning justifying
    that conclusion.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we Affirm in
    part and Remand in part the decisions of
    the district court.
    FOOTNOTES
    /1 One plaintiff, Sondra Caple, also asserted a
    claim for sexual harassment.
    /2 An offer of judgment made pursuant to Federal
    Rule of Civil Procedure 68 allows a defendant in
    an action to make a settlement offer to a plain-
    tiff and "if the judgment finally obtained by
    [the plaintiff] is not more favorable than the
    offer, the [plaintiff] must pay the costs in-
    curred after the making of the offer." Fed.R.
    Civ.P. 68.
    /3 The district court determined that the plain-
    tiffs’ attorneys, H. Candace Gorman, Gregory
    Gorman and Catherine Caporusso, should be compen-
    sated for 1560 hours, 1223.22, and 1712 hours of
    work respectively. The district court also deter-
    mined that H. Candace Gorman was entitled to an
    hourly rate of $295, and that Gregory Gorman and
    Catherine Caporusso were entitled to hourly rates
    of $240 and $185 respectively.
    /4 In the words of TTX, "[a] jackpot fee award for
    achieving only limited success is insupportable."
    Appellant’s Br. at 31.
    /5 On January 16, 2001, the district court awarded
    $51,357.60 in costs and expenses. On May 23,
    2001, the district court awarded the plaintiffs
    $701.10 "in costs for copying, transcripts and a
    trial exhibit." Kitchen, et al. v. TTX Corp., 97
    CV 5271, slip op. at 4 (N.D. Ill. May 23, 2001).
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 01-1953, 01-2396, 01-1936 & 01-2494

Judges: Flaum, Bauer, Evans

Filed Date: 3/20/2002

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024