Whispell v. United States ( 2018 )


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  •        In the United States Court of Federal Claims
    No. 09-315L
    (E-Filed: August 1, 2018)1
    )
    WHISPELL FOREIGN CARS, INC., et al.,                   )
    )    Attorneys’ Fees; RCFC 54(d);
    Plaintiffs,                       )    Uniform Relocation Assistance
    )    and Real Property Acquisition
    v.                                                     )    Policies Act, 42 U.S.C. § 4654
    )    (2012).
    THE UNITED STATES,                                     )
    )
    Defendant.                        )
    )
    Mark F. (Thor) Hearne, II, Clayton, MO, for plaintiffs. Lindsay S.C. Brinton, Meghan S.
    Largent, Stephen S. Davis, and Abram J. Pafford, of counsel.
    Taylor Ferrell, Trial Attorney, with whom was Jeffrey H. Wood, Acting Assistant
    Attorney General, Environment and Natural Resources Division, United States
    Department of Justice, Washington, DC, for defendant.
    OPINION
    CAMPBELL-SMITH, J.
    Before the court is plaintiffs’ motion for attorneys’ fees and litigation costs,
    pursuant to the Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies
    Act (URA), 42 U.S.C. § 4654(c) (2012) and Rule 54(d)(2) of the Rules of the United
    States Court of Federal Claims (RCFC). See ECF No. 229. Plaintiffs seek attorneys’
    fees and costs following the settlement, in their favor, of certain takings claims related to
    1
    This opinion was issued under seal on July 18, 2018. The parties were invited to
    identify source selection, proprietary or confidential material subject to deletion on the
    basis that the material was protected/privileged. No redactions were proposed by the
    parties. Thus, the sealed and public versions of this opinion are identical, except for the
    publication date and this footnote.
    property in Pinellas, Florida. See ECF No. 13-1 (second amended complaint).
    Defendant filed, by leave of court, a corrected response brief and supporting exhibits in
    response to plaintiffs’ motion, as three separate docket entries, ECF No. 251
    (defendant’s corrected response); ECF No. 248 (corrected exhibit 1, filed under seal);
    ECF No. 275 (exhibits 2 through 4). And plaintiffs filed a reply brief, ECF No. 262.
    Following its review of the parties’ submissions, the court directed the parties to file
    supplemental briefs. See ECF No. 274 (January 30, 2018 order).
    Thereafter, plaintiffs erroneously filed their supplemental brief as a supplemental
    motion for attorneys’ fees, ECF No. 278, and defendant filed its supplemental brief as a
    response thereto, ECF No. 279.2 Plaintiffs then filed a sur-reply in support of their
    supplemental brief. See ECF No. 280. And finally, defendant filed a sur-reply brief. See
    ECF No. 281. Additionally, during the course of the briefing schedule, plaintiffs filed
    three notices of additional authority relating to plaintiffs’ motion for attorneys’ fees. See
    ECF No. 235 (first notice); ECF No. 271 (second notice); ECF No. 282 (third notice).
    Defendant filed a notice of supplemental authority, see ECF No. 283, and plaintiffs filed
    a response, see ECF No. 284. Plaintiffs’ motion is fully briefed and ripe for ruling by the
    court, without oral argument. For the reasons set forth below, plaintiffs’ motion for
    attorneys’ fees and litigation costs is GRANTED, in part and DENIED, in part.
    I.     Background
    In May 2009, plaintiffs filed this rails-to-trails lawsuit as a putative class action,
    alleging that defendant violated their rights—and the rights of those similarly situated—
    as guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, by taking
    property without providing just compensation in return. See ECF No. 1. Plaintiffs filed
    two amended complaints, which eliminated the class action, but joined a number of
    plaintiffs. See ECF Nos. 11 (order granting motion for leave to file and accepting first
    amended complaint, as filed); 10-1 (first amended complaint); and, ECF Nos. 14 (order
    granting motion for leave to file second amended complaint); 13-1 (second amended
    complaint). On summary judgment, the court dismissed the claims in the second
    amended complaint made by all but three of those plaintiffs. See ECF No. 67 (February
    7, 2011 opinion); ECF No. 82 (June 7, 2011 opinion on reconsideration).
    2
    Plaintiffs’ counsel filed plaintiffs’ supplemental brief as a supplemental motion,
    see ECF No. 278, whereas it should have been filed as a supplemental brief per the
    court’s January 30, 2018 order, see ECF No. 274. Since plaintiffs’ brief was filed as a
    motion, it is now a pending motion on the docket in this matter. The clerk’s office is
    directed to TERMINATE this motion and edit the docket entry, ECF No. 278, to
    properly reflect that this filing is plaintiffs’ supplemental brief, not a motion.
    2
    The parties then filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the remaining
    claims. See ECF Nos. 105, 112 (defendant’s motions for summary judgment); ECF No.
    116 (plaintiffs’ cross-motion for summary judgment). The court ruled that defendant was
    liable for the claims made by one plaintiff, see ECF No. 154 (June 5, 2012 opinion
    determining that defendant was liable for the claim made by Mr. Lawrence C. Alton), but
    did not resolve liability on summary judgment as to the others, see ECF No. 164 (August
    30, 2012 opinion denying motion for summary judgment as to liability for claims made
    by the Abrams Family and Bama Sea Products, Inc.). On September 13, 2013, the parties
    informed the court that they had reached a negotiated settlement of the pending claims,
    for an amount of $130,000, plus interest. See ECF No. 188 (joint status report). Since
    that time, the parties have been litigating the attorneys’ fees award, though the case was
    stayed for a period of approximately twenty months, to await a potentially relevant
    decision expected from the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. See
    ECF No. 218 (order granting stay); ECF No. 219 (order lifting stay).
    When this litigation began, plaintiffs’ counsel worked in the St. Louis, Missouri
    office of Lathrop and Gage, a Missouri law firm that also maintained an office in
    Washington, D.C. See ECF No. 229-3 at 2 (Decl. of Mark F. (Thor) Hearne, II). After
    the initial stage of litigation was underway, in February 2010, plaintiffs’ counsel joined
    Arent Fox, a Washington, D.C.-based law firm with an office in St. Louis, Missouri. See
    
    id. The parties
    disagree as to whether Washington, D.C. market rates or St. Louis market
    rates should be used in the court’s fees calculation.
    Plaintiffs filed the motion that is presently before the court on October 11, 2016.
    See ECF No. 229. In their motion, plaintiffs ask the court to award $998,402 in
    attorneys’ fees and $10,860 in litigation costs. See ECF No. 229-1 at 33. That figure has
    now grown to $1,118,299 in fees, and $14,362 in costs, during the course of litigating the
    issue of attorneys’ fees. See ECF No. 262 at 8. Plaintiffs allege that their request, based
    on Washington, D.C. market rates, or the equivalent thereof, is a “fair, just and
    reasonable amount,” and should not be adjusted. See ECF No. 229-1 at 12.
    In support of this assertion and the fees requested, plaintiffs initially submitted:
    (1) billing entries from the law firms Lathrop Gage and Arent Fox, LLP, see ECF No.
    229-2; (2) the declaration of plaintiffs’ lead counsel, Mark F. (Thor) Hearne, II, see ECF
    No. 229-3; (3) the declaration of Elizabeth Munno, chief financial officer, Arent Fox,
    LLP, see ECF No. 229-4; (4) the declaration of Dr. Michael Kavanaugh, an economist,
    see ECF No. 229-5; (5) the declaration of Dr. Laura A. Malowane, an economist, made in
    connection with Biery v. United States, Consolidated Case Nos. 07-693L and 07-675L,
    ECF No. 229-6; (6) the supplemental declaration of Dr. Malowane, made in connection
    with Biery v. United States, Consolidated Case Nos. 07-693L and 07-675L, ECF No.
    3
    229-7; (7) two surveys of attorney billing rates, ECF No. 229-8; (8) a portion of a hearing
    transcript from Biery v. United States, Consolidated Case Nos. 07-693L and 07-675L,
    ECF No. 229-9; and (9) a memorandum and order filed in the United States District
    Court for the Eastern District of Virginia in Vienna Metro, LLC v. Pulte Home
    Corporation, Case No. 1:10-cv-00502 (2011), ECF No. 229-10.
    In response, defendant argues that the court should reduce plaintiffs’ request on
    three bases: (1) plaintiffs’ success in the case was “minimal,” since only three of the
    original fourteen plaintiffs recovered, ECF No. 251 at 19; (2) a portion of the fees
    charged were “unreasonable” in violation of the URA, such as fees charged for
    administrative tasks, 
    id. at 27;
    and (3) “plaintiffs’ requested rates of compensation are
    excessive,” 
    id. at 32.
    Defendant’s corrected response, ECF No. 251, was supported by an
    exhibit filed under seal, see ECF No. 248, which addressed the specific billing entries
    submitted by plaintiffs. But defendant’s corrected response did not include the
    documents referred to therein as Exhibits 2, 3, and 4.3
    Along with their reply to defendant’s opposition, ECF No. 262, plaintiffs
    submitted: (1) billing entries for additional fees and expenses, ECF No. 262-1; (2) a
    hearing transcript from Campbell v. United States, Case No. 13-324L, ECF No. 262-2;
    (3) a summary of defendant’s time and expenses, ECF No. 262-3; (4) a supplemental
    declaration from Mr. Hearne, plaintiffs’ counsel, ECF No. 262-4; (5) a table comparing
    the government’s proposed St. Louis rates and Washington, D.C. rates, ECF No. 262-5;
    (6) the declaration of Catherine L. Hanaway, a partner at Husch Blackwell, a law firm in
    St. Louis, ECF No. 262-6; (7) a table comparing the government’s proposed rates in other
    cases, ECF No. 262-7; (8) DOJ’s locality pay table, ECF No. 262-8; (9) the declaration of
    Hugh Culverhouse, an attorney in Florida, originally filed in a different case, ECF No.
    262-9; (10) a table comparing Washington, D.C. market rates with rates calculated
    according to the Laffey matrix, ECF No. 262-10; and (11) the U.S. Attorney’s fees matrix
    from 2015-2017, ECF No. 262-11.
    After reviewing the parties’ initial submissions relating to plaintiffs’ motion for
    attorneys’ fees and costs, the court found that “neither plaintiffs nor defendant ha[d]
    3
    This paragraph refers to arguments made in, and exhibits filed with, defendant’s
    corrected response to plaintiffs’ motion for attorneys’ fees, ECF No. 251. Defendant
    moved the court for leave to file a corrected response, see ECF No. 249, a motion the
    court granted, see ECF No. 250. In filing its corrected response, several exhibits were
    omitted. The court addressed this filing error in its order of January 30, 2018, within
    which it directed defendant to file the government’s exhibits 2, 3, and 4 as a separate
    docket entry in this matter. See ECF No. 274 (scheduling order); ECF No. 275 (notice of
    filing of exhibits 2, 3, and 4).
    4
    provided the court with sufficient evidence to resolve the issue” of whether Washington,
    D.C. or St. Louis rates apply and directed the parties to file supplemental briefs. See ECF
    No. 274 at 1 (scheduling order). Specifically, the parties failed to submit evidence to
    establish the prevailing rates in either market in order to allow the court to make a
    comparison of those rates. As the court explained:
    Plaintiffs have offered no numbers that purport to represent relevant St. Louis
    market rates, much less the actual St. Louis rates charged by either of the firms
    at issue. The only evidence in the record from plaintiffs that provides any
    basis for comparison between the two markets is a statement in the declaration
    made by Ms. Elizabeth Munno, the Chief Financial Officer for Arent Fox.
    She states that the firm charges a rate “approximately fifteen percent lower
    for an associate in St. Louis compared to a similarly experienced associate in
    Los Angeles, New York or Washington, D.C.” See Decl. of Ms. Elizabeth
    Munno, ECF No. 229-4 at 3. Ms. Munno makes no representations about
    comparable partner compensation, and she provides no basis for concluding
    that the fifteen percent differential that she cites is specifically applicable to
    the type of legal work involved with this case. Furthermore, even assuming
    that Arent Fox’s St. Louis billing rates are fifteen percent lower than the rates
    sought in this case, plaintiffs have provided no evidence of whether that rate
    is representative of the St. Louis market.
    
    Id. at 2.
    The court also noted in its order that while defendant had apparently attempted
    to file relevant data on St. Louis market rates with its original response brief, ECF No.
    244 (see exhibits thereto), its corrected response brief, ECF No. 251, omitted these
    exhibits.
    Since the time of the court’s ruling, both parties have made additional
    submissions. First, defendant corrected its omission of exhibits 2 through 4 to its
    corrected response brief, ECF No. 251, to include the following exhibits: (1) a 2014
    opinion issued in Adkins v. United States, Case Nos. 09-503L, 09-241L, & 09-158L,
    ECF No. 275-1; (2) a series of surveys of St. Louis, Missouri attorney billing rates
    published in Missouri Lawyers Weekly, in August 2017, September 2016, September
    2015, June 2014, June 2013, August 2012, March 2011, March 2010, and March 2009,
    see ECF No. 275-2; and (3) biographies of the plaintiffs’ attorneys, see ECF No. 275-3.
    Plaintiffs then filed their supplemental brief, ECF No. 278, including three
    additional declarations: (1) a supplemental declaration of Mr. Hearne, plaintiffs’ counsel,
    ECF No. 278-1; (2) the declaration of Stephen S. Davis, an attorney with Arent Fox
    5
    practicing in St. Louis, Missouri, ECF No. 278-2; and (3) the declaration of Aaron
    Williams, a Certified Personnel Consultant in Missouri, ECF No. 278-3.
    II.    Legal Standards
    As a general rule, plaintiffs may not recover attorneys’ fees from the United
    States. See Ruckelshaus v. Sierra Club, 
    463 U.S. 680
    , 685 (1983). In this case, however,
    plaintiffs are eligible to request attorneys’ fees and costs pursuant to the URA, which
    creates an exception to the general rule, and provides, in relevant part:
    The court rendering a judgment for the plaintiff in a proceeding brought
    under section 1346(a)(2) or 1491 of Title 28, awarding compensation for the
    taking of property by a Federal agency . . . shall determine and award or allow
    to such plaintiff, as a part of such judgment . . . such sum as will in the opinion
    of the court . . . reimburse such plaintiff for his reasonable costs,
    disbursements, and expenses, including reasonable attorney, appraisal, and
    engineering fees, actually incurred because of such proceeding.
    42 U.S.C. § 4654(c). “In determining the amount of reasonable attorneys’ fees under
    federal fee-shifting statutes, the Supreme Court has consistently upheld the lodestar
    calculation as the ‘guiding light of [its] fee-shifting jurisprudence.’” Bywaters v. United
    States, 
    670 F.3d 1221
    , 1228-29 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (alteration in original) (quoting Perdue v.
    Kenny A. ex rel. Winn, 
    559 U.S. 542
    , 551 (2010)). In making the lodestar calculation,
    the court multiplies the number of hours reasonably expended in the litigation by a
    reasonable hourly rate. 
    Id. at 1225-26.
    Plaintiffs “bear[ ] the burden of establishing
    entitlement to an award and documenting the appropriate hours expended and hourly
    rates.” Hensley v. Eckerhart, 
    461 U.S. 424
    , 437 (1983).
    This formula is deceptively simple. In order to perform the proper calculation, the
    court must first review the hours billed and determine whether the work is properly
    charged to the client. Administrative tasks, for instance, are not compensable. See Hopi
    Tribe v. United States, 
    55 Fed. Cl. 81
    , 100 (2002). The court then must decide whether
    plaintiffs have applied the appropriate hourly rate, which is set “according to the
    prevailing market rates in the relevant community.” Blum v. Stenson, 
    465 U.S. 886
    , 895
    (1984).
    In order to identify the relevant community, the Federal Circuit applies the forum
    rule. See Avera v. Sec’y of Dept. of Health and Human Servs., 
    515 F.3d 1343
    , 1348-49
    (Fed. Cir. 2008). Under the forum rule, the relevant community is defined by the
    geographic location of the trial court. See 
    Bywaters, 670 F.3d at 1233
    (citing Avera, 
    515 6 F.3d at 1348
    ). The forum for cases before the United States Court of Federal Claims is
    Washington, D.C. See 
    Avera, 515 F.3d at 1348
    ; Biery v. United States, Nos. 07-693L &
    07-675L, 
    2012 WL 5914260
    , at *6 (Fed. Cl. Nov. 27, 2012).
    The court may, however, apply an exception to the forum rule when “the bulk of
    [an attorney’s] work is done outside the jurisdiction of the court and where there is a very
    significant difference in compensation favoring D.C.” 
    Avera, 515 F.3d at 1349
    (quoting
    Davis Cty. Solid Waste Mgmt. & Energy Recovery Special Serv. Dist. v. EPA, 
    169 F.3d 755
    , 758 (D.C. Cir. 1999) (per curiam) (emphasis in original). In recognizing this so-
    called Davis County exception to the forum rule, the Federal Circuit intended to prevent a
    windfall to attorneys and “prevent the occasional erratic result where the successful
    petitioner is vastly overcompensated.” See 
    id. (quoting Davis
    Cty., 169 F.3d at 758
    ).
    The Federal Circuit has applied the Davis County exception in the context of
    compensation sought pursuant to the URA. See 
    Bywaters, 670 F.3d at 1224
    , 1232-34.
    III.   Analysis
    A.     Compensable Hours
    Defendant contends that plaintiffs’ requested fee award should be reduced for
    several reasons. First, defendant argues that plaintiffs achieved minimal success, and
    therefore, should not recover the full amount of fees requested. See ECF No. 251 at 19-
    26. In addition, defendant argues that plaintiffs’ request includes fees in four non-
    compensable categories of work: (1) work related to the solicitation of prospective
    clients; (2) administrative work; (3) vague and unexplained timesheet entries; and (4)
    excessive hours, specifically those dedicated to briefing the request for attorneys’ fees.
    See ECF No. 251 at 27-32. The court will address each issue in turn.
    1.      Reductions to Plaintiffs’ Award Due to the Level of Success
    Defendant divides this case into four procedural phases and argues that after
    determining the level of success in each phase, the court should reduce any fee recovery
    for the unsuccessful portion of the plaintiffs’ efforts. See ECF No. 251 at 19-26. As an
    initial matter, plaintiffs’ object to the structure of defendant’s argument, claiming that
    dividing the case into “discrete phases” violates Supreme Court precedent. ECF No. 262
    at 10. Plaintiffs do not cite any authority for this assertion, but it appears that they intend
    to refer to the Court’s opinion in Hensley v. Eckerhart, 
    461 U.S. 424
    , 435 (1983), in
    which the Court observed:
    In [some] cases the plaintiff’s claims for relief will involve a common core
    of facts or will be based on related legal theories. Much of counsel’s time
    7
    will be devoted generally to the litigation as a whole, making it difficult to
    divide the hours expended on a claim-by-claim basis. Such a lawsuit cannot
    be viewed as a series of discrete claims. Instead the [trial] court should focus
    on the significance of the overall relief obtained by the plaintiff in relation to
    the hours reasonably expended on the litigation.
    In the court’s view, the analytical framework suggested by defendant does not violate this
    guidance. Defendant’s division of the case into time periods simply provides the court
    with a way to structure a discussion of whether plaintiffs’ counsel should be compensated
    for unsuccessful portions of the case. It does not divide the suit itself into discrete claims.
    Rather, the approach proposed by defendant has been employed previously and
    effectively by this court. See Gregory v. United States, 
    110 Fed. Cl. 400
    , 404 (2013)
    (dividing the case into five time periods for the purpose of analyzing appropriate
    reductions to hours billed).
    It is indisputable that plaintiffs achieved less than they set out to achieve when this
    lawsuit began. Following dismissal of most of the claims on summary judgment, see
    ECF No. 67, only three of fourteen plaintiffs ultimately recovered, see ECF No. 188
    (joint status report).4 That said, it does not automatically follow that plaintiffs’ fee
    request should be reduced in direct proportion to that measure of success. As this court
    has previously noted, rails-to-trails cases involve both uniquely interrelated claims, and
    serve the special purpose of “vindicating constitutionally protected property rights.”
    
    Gregory, 110 Fed. Cl. at 404
    (quoting 
    Bywaters, 684 F.3d at 1296
    ). With these concepts
    in mind, the court reduces the requested fee award as detailed below.
    a.      First Litigation Period: April 2009 to March 2010
    Plaintiffs filed their original complaint on May 18, 2009. See ECF No. 1.
    Plaintiffs’ counsel has submitted billing records beginning in April 2009, reflecting work
    done in advance of that initial filing. See ECF No. 230 at 2. Plaintiffs’ first amended
    complaint was filed by leave of court on October 28, 2009, see ECF No. 10 (amended
    complaint); ECF No. 11 (order granting motion for leave to file and accepting first
    amended complaint, as filed), and a second amended complaint was filed by leave of the
    court on December 14, 2009, see ECF No. 13 (second amended complaint); ECF No. 14
    (order granting motion for leave to file and accepting second amended complaint, as
    4
    Defendant contends that there were sixteen plaintiffs in this case, but states that for
    purposes of this motion, it adopts plaintiffs’ position that there were fourteen. See ECF
    No. 251 at 9 n.3. The court will likewise conform its discussion to the parties’
    accounting, as it has no material impact on the outcome in these circumstances.
    8
    filed). During this time, the parties also exchanged initial disclosures. See ECF No. 251
    at 9.
    Defendant contends that “[d]uring this period, more than 80 percent of Counsels’
    work was dedicated to the pursuit of non-meritorious claims (i.e.[,] claims that were
    ultimately dismissed) and/or on the solicitation of additional clients.” ECF No. 251 at
    22-23. Defendant concedes, however, that “at least some of the work on behalf of the
    unsuccessful Plaintiffs can be traceable to the later success of the three settling
    Plaintiffs.” 
    Id. at 23.
    In defendant’s estimation, a fifty percent reduction in the fee
    request is appropriate for this time period. 
    Id. Plaintiffs offer
    no specific refutation of
    defendant’s position. See generally ECF No. 262.
    Taking all of the available facts and argument together, the court concludes as
    follows. Particularly in the beginning stage of a case, attorneys must devote considerable
    time both to the development and presentation of the legal theory underlying a claim, and
    to the gathering of facts that are material to that claim. Here, the initial development and
    presentation of plaintiffs’ legal theories represent an aspect of this litigation in which the
    plaintiffs’ claims are most interconnected. The claims of various plaintiffs, however,
    more clearly diverge with regard to fact gathering. In order to give plaintiffs’ counsel full
    credit for the legal work, and partial credit for the fact-gathering work on successful
    claims, the court, in its discretion, hereby reduces by thirty percent the number of hours
    billed for each timekeeper during this period.
    b.     Second Litigation Period: March 2010 to September 2011
    During the second period of time delineated by defendant, the parties litigated
    cross-motions for summary judgment, which addressed all claims made in this case, and
    a subsequent motion for reconsideration. See ECF No. 29 (plaintiffs’ motion for partial
    summary judgment); ECF No. 38 (defendant’s cross-motion for summary judgment);
    ECF No. 67 (February 7, 2011 opinion granting in-part and denying in-part the parties’
    motions for summary judgment); ECF No. 69 (defendant’s motion for reconsideration);
    ECF No. 99 (August 29, 2011 opinion granting in-part and denying in-part defendant’s
    motion for reconsideration). The end result of the motion practice during this period was
    that the court dismissed the claims of all but three plaintiffs on summary judgment. ECF
    No. 99 at 27-28.
    Given plaintiffs’ marginal rate of success during this period of time, a significant
    reduction is appropriate. In the court’s view, however, the eighty percent reduction
    requested by defendant is excessive. It is true that plaintiffs had approximately a twenty
    percent success rate if that rate is calculated based on the number of plaintiffs whose
    9
    claims survived the motions for summary judgment. But, this calculation fails to account
    for legal work from which both the successful and unsuccessful plaintiffs benefitted. In
    order to appropriately credit plaintiffs’ counsel for work that commonly applied to all
    plaintiffs’ claims, the court, in its discretion, hereby reduces by fifty percent the number
    of hours billed for each timekeeper during this period.
    c.     Third Litigation Period: September 2011 to August 2013
    The third time period encompasses the parties’ efforts to assess and settle the
    claims made by the ultimately successful plaintiffs. As such, defendant seeks no
    reduction in fees for lack of success, and the court will not impose a reduction of its own
    accord.
    d.     Fourth Litigation Period: September 2013 to the Present
    The final time period involves plaintiffs’ efforts to recover attorneys’ fees.
    Defendant’s argument for reducing fees billed as part of this effort primarily rests on the
    assertion that plaintiffs’ counsel should not recover for making arguments contrary to
    opinions previously issued by the Federal Circuit. Specifically, defendant argues that
    plaintiffs should not recover for hours billed to an unsuccessful motion to compel in
    addition to their motion seeking attorneys’ fees,5 or for hours billed for developing
    arguments for the recovery of attorneys’ fees that previously have been rejected by the
    Federal Circuit. See ECF No. 251 at 25-26. The court hereby declines to reduce the
    requested fees during the fourth time period on the basis that plaintiffs’ efforts were not
    entirely successful, but will revisit the issue of whether the total hours are excessive
    below.
    2.     Additional Reductions for Non-Compensable Categories of Work
    In addition to the above reductions on the basis of plaintiffs’ level of success, the
    court finds that the following reductions for non-compensable categories of work are
    appropriate.
    5
    Defendant states that plaintiffs filed two unsuccessful motions to compel, but the
    court docket only reflects one motion to compel in this case, ECF No. 226 (plaintiffs’
    motion to compel); ECF No. 239 (opinion denying motion to compel).
    10
    a.     Plaintiffs May Not Recover for Work Related to Soliciting
    Clients
    One of the cardinal rules in seeking an award of attorneys’ fees under a fee-
    shifting statute is that “[h]ours that are not properly billed to one’s client also are not
    properly billed to one’s adversary pursuant to statutory authority.” 
    Hensley, 461 U.S. at 434
    (quoting Copeland v. Marshall, 
    641 F.2d 880
    , 891 (1980) (en banc) (emphasis in
    original). Defendant argues that plaintiffs’ attempt to recover “for work in soliciting
    clients, rather than performing work on behalf of a retained client,” violates this rule.
    ECF No. 251 at 27. The court agrees. Plaintiffs may not recover fees for hours billed for
    business development as opposed to client representation. Upon review of the entries
    designated as client development entries in Exhibit 1 to defendant’s response, see ECF
    No. 248, the court finds that a reduction is warranted, but disagrees on the designation as
    to a small number of entries. Accordingly, the court hereby disallows plaintiffs’ request
    for reimbursement of time spent soliciting clients as requested by defendant, with the
    exception of fifteen hours billed for Mr. Hearne, plaintiffs’ counsel.
    b.     Plaintiffs May Not Recover for Administrative Work
    Defendant argues that plaintiffs “seek reimbursement for 76 hours of
    administrative or secretarial work that is not recoverable under the URA.” ECF No. 251
    at 29. Defendant is correct that plaintiffs cannot recover fees for tasks properly
    categorized as administrative. See Hopi 
    Tribe, 55 Fed. Cl. at 100
    . Upon review of the
    time entries in Exhibit 1 to defendant’s response, see ECF No. 248, the court agrees with
    most of defendant’s designations of administrative work, and will reduce the
    compensable hours accordingly. The court hereby disallows the hours as requested by
    defendant, with the exception of two hours billed for David Yearwood, and 3.2 hours
    billed for Alexandrea Barney.
    c.     Plaintiffs’ Request Must Be Discounted for Vague Time
    Entries
    Defendant objects to plaintiffs’ request for fees related to two specific attorneys on
    the basis that their billing entries are too vague to allow the court to determine whether
    the work performed was reasonable. First, defendant argues that the billing entries
    recorded by Joseph Cavinato, prior to November 2011, lack the requisite specificity for
    reimbursement. See ECF No. 251 at 28-29 & n.14 (stating that defendant “does not
    contest the sufficiency of Mr. Cavinato’s billing descriptions after November 2011”).
    Additionally, defendant contends that the billing entries recorded by Debra Albin-Riley
    suffer from the same deficiency. See 
    id. at 28-29.
    Specifically, defendant asks the court
    11
    to reduce the fees requested for hours billed for Mr. Cavinato by twenty-five percent, and
    for hours billed for Ms. Albin-Riley by fifty percent.
    Defendant is correct that the court has the discretion to reduce hours billed on the
    basis of vague time entries. See Biery v. United States, Case Nos. 07-693L and
    07-675L, 
    2014 WL 12540517
    , at *3 (Fed. Cl. Jan. 24, 2014) (reducing fee award for
    hours billed by the same two attorneys at issue in this case by fifty percent due to vague
    billing entries). See also Avogoustis v. Shinseki, 
    639 F.3d 1340
    , 1344-45 (Fed. Cir.
    2011) (affirming deduction of hours for entries that simply stated “draft client
    correspondence” as too vague); Greenhill v. United States, 
    96 Fed. Cl. 771
    , 781 (2011)
    (deducting hours associated with vague time entries). Upon review of the entries
    designated as vague in Exhibit 1 to defendant’s response, see ECF No. 248, the court
    finds that a reduction is warranted, but also finds that defendant overstates the problem.
    Accordingly, the court hereby reduces the hours billed for Mr. Cavinato, prior to
    November 2011, by ten percent, rather than the twenty-five percent requested by
    defendant. In addition, the court reduces the hours billed for Ms. Albin-Riley by twenty-
    five percent, rather than the fifty percent requested by defendant.
    d.     Plaintiffs’ Request Must Be Discounted for Excessive Work
    Related to Attorneys’ Fees
    Finally, defendant argues that plaintiffs’ total hours are excessive, particularly
    with regard to their effort to recover attorneys’ fees. See ECF No. 251 at 30-32.
    Defendant totals plaintiffs’ fee request related to time spent preparing their RCFC 54(d)
    attorneys’ fees motion at approximately $150,000. See 
    id. Since that
    time, plaintiffs
    have revised their request to include an additional $120,000 in fees. See ECF No. 262-1.
    These additional fees were evidently also incurred in the pursuit of a fee recovery, as the
    present motion for attorneys’ fees was the only issue pending in this litigation during that
    time period. Plaintiffs’ total fee request is $1,118,299. See ECF No. 262 at 8. In other
    words, nearly twenty-five percent of the work for which plaintiffs seek reimbursement
    was work done on the fee petition. And plaintiffs’ recovery of fees for work preparing
    the fee petition, at $270,000, would be more than twice the $130,000 that plaintiffs
    recovered in this matter.
    This court has recognized that “courts will typically award some fees for work
    necessary to prepare a fee petition.” Biery, 
    2014 WL 12540517
    , at *4 (citing 
    Gregory, 110 Fed. Cl. at 406
    (finding that 10.3 hours billed for preparing a fee petition was
    reasonable)). In Biery, the court concluded that eighty hours, as opposed to the 700 hours
    requested by plaintiffs, was reasonable, compensable time for so-called “fees on fees”
    work. 
    Id. (allowing plaintiffs
    to recover for twenty hours of paralegal time, thirty hours
    12
    of associate time, and thirty hours of partner time). See also Campbell v. United States,
    No. 13-324L, 
    2018 WL 2253042
    , at *5 (Fed. Cl. May 17, 2018) (disallowing 400 of the
    640 hours requested for fees-on-fees recovery, when that portion of the fee recovery
    would have been three times plaintiffs’ recovery); Lost Tree Vill. Corp. v. United States,
    
    135 Fed. Cl. 92
    , 98 (2017) (allowing reimbursement for 192.7 hours of work on fee
    petition in light of the unusually complex and extended nature of the litigation).
    Here, plaintiffs have offered no explanation for the excessive proportion of time
    spent on attempting to recover fees beyond general statements, such as: “[The] time the
    owners[’] counsel devoted to this litigation was reasonable, appropriate and necessary.”
    ECF No. 262 at 14. This statement simply does not assist the court in its difficult line-
    drawing task.
    Based on the available data, the court finds that Biery provides the best factual
    comparison to the case at bar for evaluating a fees-on-fees award. Biery was a rails-to-
    trails case, litigated by the same plaintiffs’ attorneys seeking fees in this matter. And like
    the present case, Biery initially involved thirteen plaintiffs, a number of whose claims
    were dismissed on summary judgment. See Biery, 
    2014 WL 12540517
    , at *1. Campbell
    was also a rails-to-trails case litigated by the current team of plaintiffs’ attorneys, but that
    case was much larger, involving claims from seventy-six plaintiffs. See Campbell, 
    2018 WL 2253042
    , at *1. As an additional point of comparison, the Biery litigation spanned
    nearly seven years, and the present case has spanned almost nine years. Finally, the court
    recognizes that plaintiffs’ billing entries reflect time spent attempting to settle a fee award
    with defendant, an issue not considered by the court in Biery.
    The court in Biery allowed plaintiffs to recover for eighty hours of work on their
    fee petition—twenty hours of paralegal time, thirty hours of associate time, and thirty
    hours of partner time. See Biery, 
    2014 WL 12540517
    , at *4. Defendant urges the court
    to adopt the same measure in this instance. See ECF No. 251 at 31-32. While the court
    agrees that Biery provides a useful starting point, the longer life of this case and the work
    toward settlement—not addressed in Biery—justify a more generous allowance. The
    court hereby concludes that 125 hours of work on plaintiffs’ fee petition is reasonable in
    this case, divided as follows—twenty-five hours of paralegal time, sixty hours of
    associate time, and forty hours of partner time.
    B.     Relevant Community
    As noted above, in order to calculate the proper award of attorneys’ fees, the court
    must identify “the prevailing market rates in the relevant community.” 
    Blum, 465 U.S. at 895
    . The relevant community is, as a general rule, the geographic location of the court.
    13
    See 
    Bywaters, 670 F.3d at 1233
    (citing 
    Avera, 515 F.3d at 1348
    ). Plaintiffs contend that
    the court should apply this so-called forum rule, and calculate fees based on Washington,
    D.C. market rates. See ECF No. 229-1 at 11-12; ECF No. 262 at 14-15.
    Defendant argues, however, that the court should apply the exception to this rule,
    established in Davis County Solid Waste Management & Energy Recovery Special
    Service District v. Environmental Protection Agency, 
    169 F.3d 755
    , 758 (D.C. Cir.
    1999). See ECF No. 251 at 32-41. The Davis County exception to the forum rule allows
    the court to apply lower rates “where the bulk of [an attorney’s] work is done outside the
    jurisdiction of the court and where there is a very significant difference in compensation
    favoring D.C.” 
    Avera 515 F.3d at 1349
    (quoting Davis 
    County, 169 F.3d at 758
    )
    (emphasis in original).
    Thus, in order to determine whether the Davis County exception applies in this
    case, the court must determine: (1) where the bulk of the work on this case was
    performed; and, (2) whether there is a very significant difference in market rates between
    the location from which the work was performed, and the market rates in Washington,
    D.C.
    1.     The Bulk of the Work Was Performed in St. Louis
    Plaintiffs do not contend that most of the legal work in this case was performed in
    Washington, D.C. In his most recent declaration, Mr. Hearne states that Meghan Largent
    and Lindsay Brinton, two attorneys whose names appear most frequently in the billing
    records submitted by plaintiffs, live in St. Louis. See ECF No. 278-1 at 2; ECF Nos. 230,
    262-1 (billing records for plaintiffs). He also represents that he has offices in both St.
    Louis and Washington, D.C., and performs some work from Arent Fox’s offices in Los
    Angeles, San Francisco, and New York.6 See 
    id. He does
    not, however, represent that
    any of the attorneys who have billed time to this case were located in Washington, D.C.
    As such, the court finds it can reasonably infer that the bulk of the work on this case was
    performed in St. Louis, for purposes of applying the Davis County exception.
    2.     There Is a Very Significant Difference between St. Louis and
    Washington, D.C. Market Rates
    Plaintiffs have submitted hundreds—if not thousands—of pages of argument,
    declarations, and billing statements in support of their fees request. See ECF Nos. 229,
    229-1, 229-2, 229-3, 229-4, 229-5, 229-6, 229-7, 229-8, 229-9, 229-10 (plaintiffs’ motion
    6
    The court also notes that Mr. Hearne’s official address as reflected in court records
    is in Clayton, Missouri. See CM/ECF Docket, Case No. 09-315L.
    14
    market rate should apply to work done at Arent Fox.7 See ECF No. 229-1 at 11.
    Although an updated chart was not filed, it appears that plaintiffs have increased these
    rates in the supplemental billing entries filed with its reply brief. See, e.g., ECF No. 262-
    1 at 6 (reflecting an hourly billing rate of $859 for Mr. Hearne); ECF No. 262-1 at 7
    (reflecting an hourly billing rate of $580 for Ms. Brinton).
    In response to the court’s directive to provide additional information to establish
    St. Louis market rates for comparison, ECF No. 274, plaintiff filed three declarations.
    See ECF No. 278. The first, from plaintiffs’ counsel, Mr. Hearne, adds no new facts in
    support of plaintiffs’ fee petition. The only statement included in the declaration that
    comments substantively on the issues before the court is Mr. Hearne’s contention that
    “the government’s proposed rate structure for ‘St. Louis rates’ bears absolutely no
    relation to the actual market for legal services in St. Louis or Washington DC.” ECF No.
    278-1 at 6. Likewise, a declaration from Stephen S. Davis, an attorney with Arent Fox,
    provides little assistance to the court. After summarizing his professional experience,
    Mr. Davis states:
    The “St. Louis” hourly rates proposed by the government for federal
    litigation in the Eastern District of Missouri are much lower than the hourly
    rates a St. Louis-based law firm with resources similar to Arent Fox would
    charge for work by attorneys with complex federal litigation experience, such
    as that possessed by the attorneys in this litigation.
    ECF No. 278-2 at 2-3. While the court does not have any reason to view either Mr.
    Hearne’s or Mr. Davis’s statement as disingenuous, neither declaration affirmatively
    establishes what plaintiffs’ believe are reasonable St. Louis billing rates.
    The third declaration, from Aaron Williams, C.P.C., “a nationwide attorney search
    and legal management consultant,” does provide the court with some actual numbers. He
    includes the following chart to illustrate his opinion of appropriate St. Louis billable hour
    rates:
    7
    The Laffey matrix is a schedule of hourly rates for legal services in the
    Washington, D.C. area originally established in Laffey v. Northwest Airlines, 572 F.
    Supp. 354, 371 (D.D.C. 1983), aff’d in part, rev’d in part on other grounds, Laffey v. Nw.
    Airlines, 
    746 F.2d 4
    (D.C. Cir. 1984), overruled in part on other grounds en banc, Save
    Our Cumberland Mountains, Inc. v. Hodel, 
    857 F.2d 1516
    (D.C. Cir. 1988). Plaintiffs
    offer calculations based on an updated version of the Laffey matrix “to approximate [fees
    earned by attorneys at Lathrop and Gage] for the Washington, D.C. market.” See ECF
    No. 229-1 at 11.
    16
    See, e.g., Bratcher v. United States, 
    136 Fed. Cl. 786
    , 799-800 (Mar. 9, 2018) (adopting a
    partner rate of $475, a counsel rate of $375, and an associate rate of $275, a paralegal rate
    of $150, and collecting numerous cases in support).
    That said, the court takes issue with defendant’s proposed rates in one respect.
    While the court believes that the surveys underlying defendant’s proposed rates are more
    reliable than the survey underlying plaintiffs’ proposed rates, defendant offers no clear
    reason for assigning each attorney an hourly rate that is marginally lower than the
    average hourly rate in the corresponding survey years. For example, according to the
    Missouri Lawyers Weekly survey published in August 2017 (compiling information from
    the preceding twelve months), the average hourly compensation for a partner in St. Louis
    was $504, see ECF No. 275-2 at 7, and the survey published the previous year, in
    September 2016 (compiling information from work performed in 2015 and 2016), the
    average hourly compensation for a partner in St. Louis was $459, see 
    id. at 18,
    but
    defendant proposes a rate of $426 for Mr. Hearne. It appears that defendant relies on
    some combination of persuasive authority from this court and from other jurisdictions in
    arriving at these figures, see ECF No. 251 at 39, but the evidence submitted in the present
    proceeding is a superior basis for the court’s decision.
    The court concludes that the average St. Louis hourly rates for attorneys, as
    presented in the Missouri Lawyers Weekly surveys, provide a reasonably reliable basis
    for establishing appropriate rates in this case. The court, therefore, must compare the
    market rates for Washington, D.C. proposed by plaintiffs and the market rates evidenced
    by the Missouri Lawyers Weekly surveys. In the billing statements filed with plaintiffs’
    opening brief, Mr. Hearne recorded an hourly rate of $826. See ECF No. 230 at 2 (listing
    a billing entry for 0.5 hours, for a total fee of $413). In the supplemental billing
    statements filed with plaintiffs’ reply brief, Mr. Hearne recorded an hourly billing rate of
    $859. See ECF No. 262-1 at 6. The most recent hourly rate for average partner
    compensation, found in the August 2017 survey, is $504. See ECF No. 275-2 at 7. Mr.
    Hearne’s hourly rate of $826 is a 64% increase of the average $504, while his hourly rate
    of $859 is more than a 70% increase of the average $504. In the court’s view, either
    calculation represents a “very significant” difference in hourly rates. 
    Avera 515 F.3d at 1349
    (quoting Davis 
    County, 169 F.3d at 758
    ). As a result, the court hereby finds that St.
    Louis market rates should apply to plaintiffs’ recovery in this case.8
    8
    After reviewing the parties’ submissions on this issue, the court notes that
    defendant’s Exhibit 1, ECF No. 248, does not consistently apply a proposed St. Louis rate
    for each individual recording billing entries. Despite the fact that defendant strenuously
    argues that St. Louis rates should apply to plaintiffs’ attorneys in the text of its brief, see,
    e.g., ECF No. 251 at 37, the chart provided in the exhibit substitutes a proposed Laffey
    rate for ten attorneys, without adequate explanation. See, e.g., ECF No. 248 at 16
    19
    3.     Plaintiffs’ Recovery Must Be Based on Historical Rates
    The court also notes that the parties disagree as to whether attorney compensation
    should be awarded based on historical rates or current rates. Plaintiffs argue that, despite
    the fact that this case has been on-going for nearly a decade, all work should be
    compensated on the basis of current billing rates. See ECF No. 229-1 at 28-30.
    Defendant argues that binding precedent requires the court to award fees based on
    historical rates. See ECF No. 251 at 41-44.
    In Biery v. United States, the Federal Circuit held that attorneys’ fees awarded
    pursuant to the URA should be calculated based on historical rates because “under the
    no-interest rule, recovery of interest on an award of attorney fees is barred unless an
    award of interest is expressly and unambiguously authorized by statute.” 
    818 F.3d 704
    ,
    714 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (citing Shaw v. Library of Congress, 
    478 U.S. 310
    , 322 (1986)).
    Plaintiffs contend that this court should not adhere to this precedential opinion on the
    basis of two decisions issued by the Supreme Court of the United States, both of which
    pre-date the Federal Circuit’s decision in Biery. See ECF No. 229-1 at 28-30 (discussing
    Missouri v. Jenkins, 
    491 U.S. 274
    (1989) and Perdue v. Kenny A. ex rel. Winn, 
    559 U.S. 542
    (2010)). Not only were these cases available to the Federal Circuit at the time it
    decided Biery, neither Jenkins nor Perdue involved the URA.
    In their opening brief, plaintiffs stated their intention to take this issue to the
    Federal Circuit or the Supreme Court if this court failed to adopt their view that current
    rates should apply:
    (assigning Ms. Albin-Riley and Mr. Makin Laffey rates rather than St. Louis rates). The
    key provided at the beginning of the chart states that the “Proposed Reimbursement”
    column “[i]dentifies reimbursement owed Plaintiffs, applying St. Louis rates where
    applicable and Laffey rates where St. Louis rates are not applicable.” See 
    id. at 2.
    Defendant fails, however, to explain this hybrid approach to assigning the appropriate
    hourly rate, and it is contrary to the court’s present understanding of when the Laffey
    matrix rates are relevant to a fee award. See, e.g., 
    Bratcher, 136 Fed. Cl. at 798
    & n.11
    (explaining that the Laffey matrix may be used in the event that Washington, D.C. rates
    are applied, but applying St. Louis rates in calculating fee award); see also ECF No. 229-
    1 (plaintiffs explaining that “the Laffey Matrix can be used to approximate [St. Louis]
    fees for the Washington, D.C. market”); ECF No. 251 (defendant noting that “[b]oth
    parties agree that, if D.C. rates apply, the Court should generally derive rates from the
    Laffey matrix”). As such, the court will disregard this calculation included in
    defendant’s chart.
    20
    We acknowledge this Court is bound by the Federal Circuit’s decisions. To
    the extent this Court reads Biery to preclude calculating the lodestar fee using
    current hourly rates, the Federal Circuit’s holding is contrary to the Supreme
    Court’s holdings. Should this Court adopt this view, we preserve this issue
    for review by the Federal Circuit en banc or by the Supreme Court.
    ECF No. 229-1 at 29 n.36. This court is, indeed, bound by the rulings of the Federal
    Circuit, but welcomes any clarity or further development in the law that may be provided
    by subsequent appeals filed by plaintiffs.
    For the foregoing reasons, the court concludes that the attorney billing rates shall
    be calculated based on the average hourly rates as reflected in the Missouri Lawyers
    Weekly surveys, and shall be awarded historically. The court recognizes that the
    categories of “partner” and “associate” used in the surveys do not account for “counsel,”
    the designation used by plaintiffs’ firm that is apparently a middle ground between the
    associate and partner designations. The court also lacks the information to assign
    appropriate designations to all relevant professionals for the years at issue, and notes that
    the billing records include professionals not included in defendant’s chart of timekeepers.
    Therefore, the court directs the parties to CONFER and FILE a joint proposal setting
    forth, by year, the hourly rates for each timekeeper included on the billing statements,
    which incorporates the average hourly rates for partners and associates reflected in the
    Missouri Lawyers Weekly surveys, and which reflects an agreed upon hourly rate for
    individuals serving in counsel positions.
    C.     Costs
    Plaintiffs seek to recover $14,362 in litigation costs. See ECF No. 262 at 8.
    Based on the descriptions of these costs provided by plaintiffs, they cover expenses for
    matters such as court filings and transcripts, postage and delivery services, photocopy
    services, telephone calls, electronic research, case-related travel expenses, and expert
    fees. See ECF No. 230 at 66-68; ECF No. 262-1 at 9. Defendant does not contest
    plaintiffs’ requested litigation costs. In the court’s view, plaintiffs have demonstrated
    both that the costs were actually incurred, as required by the URA, and that $14,362 is a
    reasonable sum to have spent on the costs included on plaintiffs’ ledger throughout the
    course of nine years of litigation. As such, the court hereby awards plaintiffs’ costs in the
    amount of $14,362.
    IV.    Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, plaintiffs’ motion for attorneys’ fees and costs, ECF
    No. 229, is hereby GRANTED, in part, and DENIED, in part as follows:
    21
    (A)   As to the number of compensable hours:
    (1)   Plaintiffs’ fee request shall be reduced based on the level of success
    divided into four procedural categories, as follows:
    (a)    First litigation period, from April 2009 to March 2010, the
    court hereby reduces by thirty percent the number of hours
    billed for each timekeeper during this period;
    (b)    Second litigation period, from March 2010 to September
    2011, the court hereby reduces by fifty percent the number
    of hours billed for each timekeeper during this period;
    (c)    Third litigation period, from September 2011 to August 2013,
    the court hereby imposes no reduction to plaintiffs’ fees
    request for this time period;
    (d)    Fourth litigation period, from September 2013 to present, the
    court hereby imposes no reduction to plaintiffs’ fees request
    for this time period.
    (2)   Plaintiffs’ fee request also shall be reduced based on non-
    compensable categories of work, as follows:
    (a)    The court hereby reduces plaintiffs’ fee request for
    reimbursement of time spent soliciting clients, as identified
    by defendant, with the exception of fifteen hours billed for
    Mark F. (Thor) Hearne, II.
    (b)    The court hereby reduces plaintiffs’ fee request for
    reimbursement of administrative or secretarial hours, as
    identified by defendant, with the exception of two hours
    billed for David Yearwood, and 3.2 hours billed for
    Alexandrea Barney.
    (c)    The records supporting plaintiffs’ fee request include a
    number of vague time entries, and as such, the court hereby
    reduces the hours billed for Joseph Cavinato, prior to
    22
    November 2011, by ten percent; and reduces the hours
    billed for Debra Albin-Riley by twenty-five percent.
    (d)    The court hereby reduces plaintiffs’ fee request due to
    excessive work related to their attorneys’ fees petition, and
    only the following hours shall be permitted: 125 total hours,
    divided as follows—twenty-five hours of paralegal time,
    sixty hours of associate time, and forty hours of partner
    time.
    (3)    The court notes that plaintiffs submitted additional billing records
    attached to their reply brief, ECF No. 262, to which defendant did
    not have an opportunity to specifically respond. The parties are
    instructed to cooperate to ensure that the conclusions expressed in
    this opinion are appropriately applied thereto.
    (B)    As to the relevant community:
    All hours shall be compensated at historical St. Louis market rates,
    appropriate to the level of experience for each timekeeper, as established by
    the yearly Missouri Lawyer Weekly surveys submitted by defendant for
    partner, associate, and paralegal rates, and at an agreed-upon, appropriately
    commensurate rate for attorneys designated as “counsel.”
    (C)    As to litigation costs:
    Plaintiffs’ request for litigation costs, in the amount of $14,362, is
    GRANTED, as reasonable and compensable.
    The parties are instructed to CONFER and FILE a joint proposal for the award
    of fees and costs based on the guidance and legal conclusions contained in this opinion,
    on or before August 24, 2018. The proposal shall: (1) demonstrate compliance with the
    various reductions that the court has directed the parties to make to plaintiffs’ fee
    petition; (2) state the rates, by year, applied for each timekeeper; and (3) state the total
    number of hours billed for each timekeeper.9
    Plaintiffs’ supplemental brief was erroneously filed as a supplemental motion,
    ECF No. 278. The clerk’s office is directed to TERMINATE this motion and edit the
    9
    Filing the joint proposal as directed by this court does not waive any right
    plaintiffs may have to pursue a revision of these fees on appeal.
    23
    docket entry, ECF No. 278, to properly reflect that this filing is plaintiffs’ supplemental
    brief, not a motion.
    In addition, on or before August 3, 2018, the parties shall CONFER and FILE a
    joint proposed redacted version of this opinion, with any protectable information
    blacked out.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    s/Patricia E. Campbell-Smith
    PATRICIA E. CAMPBELL-SMITH
    Judge
    24