Holben v. Pepsi Bottling Venture, LLC ( 2020 )


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  •                               SUPERIOR COURT
    of the
    STATE OF DELAWARE
    Jeffrey J Clark                                               Kent County Courthouse
    Judge                                                            38 The Green
    Dover, DE 19901
    Telephone (302)735-2111
    February 5, 2020
    Candace E. Holmes, Esquire                             Robert S. Hunt, Esquire
    Walt F. Schmittinger, Esquire                          Franklin & Prokopik
    Schmittinger & Rodriguez, P. A.                        500 Creek View Road
    414 South State Street                                 Suite 502
    Dover, DE 19901                                        Newark, DE 19711
    Submitted: January 17, 2020
    Decided: February 5, 2020
    RE:        Teresa Holben v. Pepsi Bottling Venture, LLC
    K18A-05-003 JJC
    Counsel:
    This letter provides the Court’s reasoning and decision regarding Appellant
    Teresa Holben’s application for a reasonable attorneys’ fee pursuant to 
    19 Del. C
    . §
    2350(f). Because Ms. Holben seeks an appellate attorneys’ fee for three separate
    segments of Superior Court litigation, the procedural history and Ms. Holben’s
    degree of success in each of these three appellate segments are important. For the
    reasons set forth herein, Ms. Holben’s application is granted, in part.
    PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In 2018, Ms. Holben appealed an adverse Industrial Accident Board
    (hereinafter “IAB” or the “Board”) decision. She challenged the amount of partial
    disability benefits the Board awarded her as a result of a work injury. She also
    appealed the IAB’s denial of a reasonable attorneys’ fee.
    In the Court’s December 2018 Opinion, it affirmed the IAB’s decision
    regarding the amount of disability benefits due. It reversed the IAB’s decision, in
    part, however, because the Board did not award a reasonable attorneys’ fee as a result
    of Ms. Holben’s successful recovery of medical witness fees. The Court then
    remanded the matter to the IAB to consider the appropriate amount due. When doing
    so, the Court retained jurisdiction and declined to consider Ms. Holben’s application
    for an attorneys’ fee for litigation in this Court until it enters final judgment, post-
    remand.1
    Thereafter, the Board awarded Ms. Holben a $500 fee for prosecuting what
    became the single successful issue before the Board. Both parties filed appeals of
    that decision, notwithstanding the Court’s retention of jurisdiction. In any event, the
    Court considers both parties’ issues to be properly raised.               In their appeals, Ms.
    Holben and Pepsi both challenged the IAB’s post-remand decision regarding the
    amount of the fee due. Pepsi also independently sought reconsideration of whether
    any attorneys’ fee was due.
    More specifically, Ms. Holben argued that the Board abused its discretion by
    not properly considering the factors set forth in General Motors v. Cox.2 She also
    argued that the Board did not base her attorneys’ fee award on her total recovery,
    including her disability benefits.
    1
    Pepsi Bottling Ventures, LLC v. Holben, No. 16, 2019, at *4 (Del. Feb. 1, 2019).
    2
    
    304 A.2d 55
    (Del. 1973).
    2
    At that point, for the first time, Pepsi cited what it alleged to be mandatory
    authority that it did not provide in the first instance. Pepsi argued that this authority
    required the Court to reverse its December 2018 decision regarding the attorneys’
    fee. In the alternative, Pepsi argued that when applying the Court’s December 2018
    decision and the Worker’s Compensation Act attorneys’ fee provision, the Board
    erred when awarding $500 in fees because that exceeded thirty percent of the amount
    awarded for success on the issue.3
    Thereafter, on November 4, 2019, the Court issued its post-remand decision.
    In it, the Court denied Pepsi’s request to reconsider the December 2018 decision.4
    In that respect, Ms. Holben prevailed. However, the Court also reduced the IAB’s
    $500 fee award.        Based upon the IAB’s reasoning, the maximum statutorily
    permitted fee award was $450. In that respect, Pepsi prevailed.
    POSITIONS OF THE PARTIES
    Ms. Holben now seeks an attorneys’ fee for three distinct segments of the
    Superior Court litigation. First, she seeks a $10,025 fee for prosecuting her partially
    successful appeal of the IAB’s original decision. She concedes that this amount
    includes a fee incurred for time spent (1) unsuccessfully seeking reversal of the
    IAB’s decision regarding the amount of disability benefits that she was due, and (2)
    for successfully litigating the attorneys’ fee issue. Second, she seeks an $8,650 fee
    for post-remand briefing. That briefing included her successful defense regarding
    whether any attorneys’ fee was required at the Board level. It also included her
    attempt to win a much larger attorneys’ fee anchored to the entire compensation due
    her. Third, she seeks an additional $3,573 attorneys’ fee for prosecuting her
    application for attorneys’ fees for the first two litigation segments.
    3
    See 
    19 Del. C
    . § 2320(10)a (limiting a “reasonable attorneys' fee in an amount not to exceed 30
    percent of the award or 10 times the average weekly wage in Delaware as announced by the
    Secretary of Labor at the time of the award, whichever is smaller”).
    4
    Holben v. Pepsi Bottling Ventures, LLC, 
    2019 WL 5692687
    , at *8 (Del. Super. Nov. 4, 2019).
    3
    Pepsi does not challenge the amount of time Ms. Holben submits or the
    reasonableness of the hourly rates. Rather, Pepsi challenges the fee sought for the
    first segment by arguing that Ms. Holben did not specifically raise the issue of an
    attorneys’ fee for recovering medical witness fees at the initial IAB hearing. Pepsi
    challenges the second segment of fees (post-remand) by arguing that it enjoyed the
    most success because the Court denied Ms. Holben’s request to significantly
    increase the IAB’s fee award and in fact decreased it by $50. Lastly, Pepsi contests
    the fee sought for the third segment. It argues that, because attorneys’ fees for the
    first and second segments should not be awarded, the Court should not award an
    attorneys’ fee for work performed to seek their recovery. With regard to the
    application of the Cox factors, Pepsi focuses mainly on the factor that addresses the
    relationship between the size of the recovery ($1,500) and the appropriate fee.
    STANDARD
    Two relevant standards apply in the matter: the standard for whether any fee
    is awardable and the standard applicable to determining the amount.
    Section 2350(f) of Title 19 of the Delaware Code provides that:
    [t]he Superior Court may in its discretion award a reasonable fee to
    claimant's attorney for services on an appeal from the Board to the
    Superior Court and from the Superior Court to the Supreme Court
    where the claimant’s position in the hearing before the Board is
    affirmed on appeal.5
    Although the Delaware Supreme Court held in one instance that fees should
    be assessed based upon general success,6 it nevertheless acknowledged that an “issue
    allocation may sometimes prove to be an appropriate factor for measuring
    compensability in certain cases.”7 The Supreme Court later affirmed the Superior
    5
    
    19 Del. C
    . § 2350(f).
    6
    Digiacomo v. Bd. of Pub. Educ. in Wilmington, 
    507 A.2d 542
    , 546 (Del. 1986). Notably, the
    Delaware Supreme Court decided Digiacomo prior to the 1994 amendment of 
    19 Del. C
    . § 2350(f).
    7
    
    Id. 4 Court’s
    use of an issue-based analysis in Pollard v. Placers, Inc.,8 finding that the
    Superior Court did not abuse its discretion by limiting its fee award for time spent
    on the successful portions of an appeal.9                 In Pollard, the Supreme Court
    distinguished its prior holding by recognizing (1) that the claimant, not the employer,
    appealed, and (2) that the claimant lacked success on an issue that would have
    substantially affected the award.10
    In at least one Superior Court decision, Warren v. Amstead Indus.,11 the phrase
    “affirmed on appeal” was not interpreted as a term of art, but rather to represent that
    the claimant prevailed on appeal regarding its position before the Board. It held that
    the claimant need not have won the issue in the first instance in order to be
    “affirmed” on appeal.12 Rather, it recognized that when the Superior Court reverses
    the Board following a claimant’s appeal and the reason for the reversal is grounded
    in the claimant’s position, the claimant’s position is affirmed.13                  The Warren
    decision correctly recognized the General Assembly’s intent to permit a claimant to
    recover a fee when it is the claimant who files the appeal.14
    Regarding the appropriate amount, the Court’s discretion is framed by the
    factors outlined in General Motors Corp. v. Cox.15 These factors provide to the
    parties justification for the decision, and to the reviewing courts, the ability to “fulfill
    the appellate function.”16 The Cox factors include:
    8
    
    703 A.2d 1211
    (Del. 1997).
    9
    
    Id. at 1212–13.
    10
    
    Id. at 1213.
    11
    
    2019 WL 2374047
    , at *1 (Del. Super. June 4, 2019).
    12
    
    Id. 13 Id.
    14
    See Murtha v. Cont'l Opticians, Inc., 
    729 A.2d 312
    , 318 (Del. Super. July 23, 1997) (stating that
    “under the current statutory scheme, the employee may appeal an unfavorable Board ruling and
    has control in forming the appellate issues. The justification of focusing solely on the success of
    defending the appeal is weakened by the change in the statute that allows the claimant to bring the
    appeal”).
    
    15 304 A.2d at 57
    .
    16
    
    Id. at 57–58.
                                                     5
    (1) [t]he time and labor required, the novelty and difficulty of the
    questions involved, and the skill requisite to perform the legal service
    properly[;] (2) [t]he likelihood, if apparent to the client, that the
    acceptance of the particular employment will preclude other
    employment by the lawyer[;](3) [t]he fees customarily charged in the
    locality for similar legal services[;] (4) [t]he amount involved and the
    results obtained[;] (5) [t]he time limitations imposed by the client or by
    the circumstances.[;](6) [t]he nature and length of the professional
    relationship with the client[;] (7) [t]he experience, reputation, and
    ability of the lawyer or lawyers performing the services [;and] (8)
    [w]hether the fee is fixed or contingent.”17
    Also, two additional factors must be considered: “the factor of the employer's ability
    to pay [; and] the requirement of an affidavit of the employee's attorney as to the fees
    and expenses, if any, received or to be received from any other source.”18
    AN ATTORNEYS’ FEE IS DUE UNDER THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF
    THIS CASE
    At the outset, the Superior Court’s decision to award an attorneys’ fee for
    appellate work is discretionary. The threshold issue is whether Ms. Holben is
    entitled to any fees because her “position in the hearing before the Board [was]
    affirmed on appeal.”19 Each litigation segment will be addressed separately.
    17
    
    Id. at 57.
    18
    Id.
    19
    
    19 Del. C
    . § 2350(f). See also 
    Murtha, 729 A.2d at 318
    (finding that a claimant’s “position” is
    not a term of art that permits the availability of attorneys’ fees to remain dependent on success in
    front of the Board, but instead a term referencing the claimant’s arguments that must be presented
    in front of the Board in order for the court to “affirm”); Veid v. Bensalem Steel Erectors, 
    2000 WL 33113801
    , at *1 (Del. Super. Dec. 28, 2000) (summarizing Murtha’s explanation of the legislative
    intent in amending 
    19 Del. C
    . § 2350(f) with the language “the claimant's position in the hearing
    before the Board is affirmed on appeal” as to permit “a right for a claimant to seek an attorney’s
    fee for the time expended at the appellate level when a claimant appeals an unfavorable or
    erroneous Board decision and claimant's position before the Board is affirmed on appeal”).
    6
    With regard to the first segment, Ms. Holben must have first raised the issue
    before the IAB in order for her position to be affirmed on appeal.20 Here, she claimed
    medical witness fees and a reasonable attorneys’ fee before the IAB. The IAB
    denied her any attorneys’ fee. She did not specifically address whether a medical
    witness fee warranted attorneys’ fees at the initial IAB hearing. She did, however,
    seek an attorneys’ fee based on what she argued should have been a full recovery.
    Under the circumstances of this case, to seek the whole was to also seek the part.
    Ms. Holben correctly argues that she was under no obligation to anticipate the
    Board’s legal error. When a party seeks an attorneys’ fee based upon his or her
    entire claim, he or she has fairly raised the issue of any portion of an attorneys’ fee
    that the Board erroneously denied.
    With regard to the second segment, Ms. Holben’s position before the Board
    was affirmed, in part, and not affirmed, in part. After the IAB’s remand decision,
    Ms. Holben sought fees based upon her total award. She did not prevail with regard
    to the amount. A significant part of the briefing in the second segment of litigation,
    however, focused on the issue of whether attorneys’ fees were available at all. On
    that, Ms. Holben prevailed. In summary, Ms. Holben successfully defended her
    claim for an attorneys’ fee but lost regarding the amount. On balance, for the second
    segment, a fee is appropriate under the circumstances of this case.
    Finally, with regard to the third segment, a fee is also appropriate for seeking
    a fee over Pepsi’s opposition. Because she is due a fee for the first two segments, a
    fee for prosecuting her right to a fee is also appropriate.
    20
    Elliott v. State, 
    2012 WL 7760033
    , at *2 (Del. Super. Dec. 24, 2012) (quoting 
    Murtha, 729 A.2d at 318
    ) (explaining that because “a claimant may now frame the appellate issues, it is axiomatic
    that claimant raise issues before the Board before presenting the issues at the appellate level” and
    that it is “essential to the appellate process that claimants thoroughly present their case before the
    Board including discussing all relevant evidence and positing all legal arguments”).
    7
    THE APPROPRIATE AMOUNT
    With regard to the appropriate amount, after considering the arguments of the
    parties and the record in this case, the Court has fully considered each of the Cox
    factors.21 After weighing each of the factors, the Court places particular weight upon
    four: the amount and result obtained, whether the fee is fixed or contingent, the time
    and labor required, and the novelty and difficulty of the questions involved.
    First, with regard to all three segments, Ms. Holben recovered medical witness
    fees in this case in the amount of $1,500. The amount of the award is properly
    considered when determining the appropriate amount of a reasonable attorneys’ fee.
    In total, for the three segments of appellate litigation, Ms. Holben seeks $22,248.
    There is a disconnect between the amount recovered for medical witness fees and
    the amount Ms. Holben seeks for attorneys’ fees. This factor weighs against a large
    award of fees for all three segments.
    Second, with regard to all three segments, the portion of the first Cox factor
    that includes consideration of the novelty and difficulty of the question involved
    justifies a larger fee award than one based solely upon the size of the $1,500 award.
    In this case, given the change in the statutory attorneys’ fee provision that abrogated
    prior case law, and that Pepsi sought reargument on the issue necessitating
    considerable additional effort in the second litigation segment, this factor weighs in
    favor of a larger award of fees as to all three segments.
    While focusing on the second segment of litigation, Ms. Holben seeks fees
    exceeding her hourly rate submission. Pepsi argues that this is because Ms. Holben
    is asserting the right to her contingent attorneys’ fee based upon her total recovery.
    At the hearing, Ms. Holben did not contest this and offered no contrary justification.
    21
    See Short v. Reed Trucking Co., 
    2012 WL 1415595
    , at *2 (Del. Super. Feb. 14, 2012)
    (explaining, on review of the Board’s decision, that if the decision stated expressly that each of the
    Cox factors were considered, it is not a requirement for an “analysis on each Cox factor so long as
    the record reflects, as it does here, that those factors were in fact considered in reaching a
    conclusion”) (emphasis added), aff’d 
    72 A.3d 502
    (Del. 2013).
    8
    Here, Ms. Holben’s relevant award was $1,500 in medical witness fees. Where the
    relevant award itself was $1,500, an additur based on the contingent nature of the
    fee agreement is inappropriate. This factor weighs against a larger award for the
    second segment.
    Finally, the factor addressing the time and labor required is significant. Its
    application varies by litigation segment and includes an examination of the work
    Ms. Holben’s attorneys performed at each stage.
    In the first segment, only a small portion of Ms. Holben’s briefing addressed
    the attorneys’ fee due because she successfully recovered medical witness fees. At
    the hearing regarding an attorneys’ fee, Ms. Holben acknowledged that, with regard
    to the first segment she could not apportion the work spent between the
    compensation due issue and the attorneys’ fee issue. The large majority of Ms.
    Holben’s efforts on appeal in the first segment focused on the compensation due.
    Accordingly, this factor weighs against a larger award for the first segment.
    In the second segment, a roughly equal portion of Ms. Holben’s efforts was
    dedicated to defending the right to any fee versus seeking a particular amount. On
    the other hand, Ms. Holben did not articulate a sufficient basis to apportion the two
    in this case. On balance, the factor regarding time and labor required in the second
    segment weighs against a full award of fees for the second segment.
    Finally, the time and labor her attorney spent in the third segment was
    necessary, given Pepsi’s opposition. On the other hand, Pepsi justifiably opposed
    the amount of the fee she sought. This factor weighs neutrally.
    After considering these factors, together with the other Cox factors, the Court
    awards the following:
    1. $1,500 for the first litigation segment involving Ms. Holben’s initial appeal;
    9
    2. $3,000 for the second segment, which included Ms. Holben’s successful
    defense of the Court’s initial decision, while considering Pepsi’s success
    regarding the amount of fees due; and
    3. $750 for work performed in prosecuting her claim for a fee due for the first
    and second segment, given Pepsi’s opposition.
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons set forth in the Court’s December 13, 2018 Opinion, the
    Court’s November 4, 2019 Memorandum Opinion and Order, and this Order, final
    judgment is hereby entered in favor of Ms. Holben as follows:
    1. Partial disability benefits, as of July 25, 2017, payable to her at the rate of
    $132.86 per week;
    2. Medical witness fees in the amount of $1,500;
    3. Reasonable attorneys’ fees in the amount of $450, pursuant to 
    19 Del. C
    .
    § 2320(10) for work performed before the IAB in the amount of $450; and
    4. $5,250 for the affirmance of Ms. Holben’s position on appeal as permitted
    by 
    19 Del. C
    . § 2350(f).
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    Very truly yours,
    /s/ Jeffrey J Clark
    Judge
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: K18A-05-003 JJC

Judges: Clark J.

Filed Date: 2/5/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/5/2020