No. 13-1687

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UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

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EQUAL EMPLOYMENT                         

OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION,   

                                                                  

          Plaintiff-Appellant,                                    

                                                                    

          v.                                                      

                                                                            

PROPAK LOGISTICS, INC.,

 

          Defendant-Appellee.                                  

 

 

United States District Court for the

 Western District of North Carolina

Civil Action No. 1:09-cv-00311-MR-DLH

__________________________________________________________________

 

APPELLANT EEOC’s OPPOSITION

TO PROPAK’S MOTION FOR

APPELLATE ATTORNEYS’ FEES AND EXPENSES

__________________________________________________________________

                                               

At this Court’s direction, and in opposition to Propak’s motion for reimbursement of its appellate attorneys’ fees and expenses, Appellant Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) hereby states:

1.       After dismissing EEOC’s lawsuit based on laches, the district court awarded Propak $189,113.50 in attorneys’ fees.  EEOC v. Propak Logistics, Inc., 2013 WL 1232959 (W.D.N.C. Mar. 27, 2013).  The district court stated that “events that occurred during the EEOC’s administrative investigation precluded the EEOC from obtaining either injunctive or monetary judicial relief,” and this Court affirmed on that basis.  EEOC v. Propak Logistics, Inc., 746 F.3d 145, 147 (4th Cir. 2014).  Propak now asks this Court to award appellate fees and expenses of $156,731.54—almost as much as Propak sought below for the three years it litigated this case in district court.  EEOC respectfully urges this Court to deny Propak’s application because, although this Court ultimately rejected EEOC’s arguments on appeal, those arguments were not “frivolous, unreasonable, or without foundation” under Christiansburg Garment Co. v. EEOC, 434 U.S. 412 (1978), the standard that Propak agrees applies to this fee application.  See Propak motion at ¶¶ 4-8, 12.

2.       Propak claims that its application for appellate fees satisfies this standard on two grounds:  that EEOC’s appeal was unreasonable from the outset, and that EEOC unreasonably multiplied the appellate proceedings by moving to supplement the record on appeal.  Fees are not warranted under either basis.  

3.       At the outset, EEOC emphasizes that its appeal involved only the district court’s fee award.  EEOC initially appealed the district court’s dismissal order based on laches.  Prior to briefing, however, and after careful consideration of the substance of the district court’s order and the implications of appeal, EEOC moved to dismiss the appeal voluntarily.  EEOC acted based on two prudential considerations—the growing length of time that had elapsed since the underlying discrimination alleged in this case, which would undermine the EEOC’s ability to obtain victim-specific relief, and the fact that it had become apparent Propak would not resume operations at the Shelby, North Carolina, site, which undermined the basis for the EEOC’s claim for injunctive relief. 

4.       After this Court granted EEOC’s motion for voluntary dismissal, the district court awarded Propak fees.  EEOC v. Propak Logistics, Inc., 2013 WL 1232959, at *1-2 (W.D.N.C. March 27, 2013).  EEOC then appealed the fee award because (a) it presented the different, and very important, question of whether that award was proper under Christiansburg’s narrow grounds for awarding fees to a prevailing Title VII defendant, and (b) EEOC believes it has a responsibility to protect the federal fisc from fee awards that fall outside Christiansburg’s narrow standard.  But as is evident from EEOC’s prior, voluntary dismissal of its appeal from the laches ruling, EEOC made an effort to be reasonable and measured in what EEOC presented to this Court for review. 

5.       This Court disagreed with EEOC that the district court abused its discretion in awarding fees, concluding that EEOC “acted unreasonably in filing the complaint because ‘by the time the EEOC determined to bring this action it was abundantly clear that a lawsuit would be moot and thus it was unreasonable to have filed it.’”  Propak, 746 F.3d at 150 (quoting 2013 WL 1232959, at *4).   But in affirming on that basis, this Court acknowledged that much of the district court’s nineteen-page order awarding fees discussed the same laches-related factors on which the district court had granted summary judgment.  Propak, 746 F.3d at 152. 

6.       Christiansburg would not justify a fee award for this appeal because the EEOC reasonably believed that it had sound arguments (a) that the district court erroneously based its fee award on irrelevant laches factors and (b) that the district court had no factual basis for its conclusion that EEOC’s lawsuit was moot at its inception.

7.       The district court’s extensive discussion of laches-related factors in its decision awarding fees is what led EEOC to argue on appeal (as this Court noted) “that the district court improperly based its decision awarding attorneys’ fees on the court’s earlier laches ruling” and improperly “engaged in ‘hindsight logic’ in explaining its award of attorneys’ fees by referencing its earlier laches holding and the prejudicial delay caused by the EEOC.”  Propak, 746 F.3d at 152.  Although this Court rejected EEOC’s argument, EEOC submits that it was not unreasonable for EEOC to have appealed on this basis, given the district court’s extensive reiteration of the laches considerations in its decision awarding fees.

8.       The arguments Propak made to the district court in support of a fee award also led EEOC to believe that the thrust of the court’s rationale for awarding fees was based on its assessment of the laches issue.  See R.46-2 (JA-517-525).

9.       Propak’s fee application emphasized that the findings in the court’s laches decision of unreasonable delay and resulting prejudice justified the imposition of fees under ChristiansburgSee R.46-2 at 1-2 (referring to “Propak’s successful laches defense”); 5 (“The very nature of a successful laches defense . . . supports Propak’s motion for fees”); 7 (chastising EEOC for proceeding when “EEOC was aware that Propak was relying upon a laches defense”); 8 (“EEOC should have been aware that this litigation was unreasonable from the outset . . . .  Nevertheless, the EEOC . . . oppos[ed] Propak’s motion to dismiss based on laches even though the material facts had been established”); and id. (stating that EEOC’s litigation was unreasonable because discovery revealed managers no longer worked for Propak; the Shelby facility was closed; Propak business records were lost; Propak lacked any knowledge of current location of past managers; and former managers would not likely recall events from 2002 through 2004).  See also Propak Reply Brief (R.51 at 3-8) (JA-542-547) (reiterating, in support of fee application, the same laches-related facts); id. at 4 (JA-543) (stating:  “Nowhere in its Response does the EEOC deny knowledge of the facts this Court found to support Propak’s laches defense.”).

10.     Propak mentioned the “mootness of the relief sought” in its fee application below, but only in reference to Propak’s closure of the Shelby site.  See, e.g., R.46-2 at 7 (JA-523).  Propak’s reply asserted that “the EEOC knew that even it had difficulty contacting witnesses,” R.51 at 4 (JA-543), but the context indicates Propak was referring to EEOC’s efforts to locate Propak’s former managers, not EEOC claimants. 

11.     Accordingly, EEOC’s district court response focused on laches arguments and not on whether EEOC had identified claimants before filing suit.  See, e.g., R.49 at 5 (JA-531); 12 (JA-538) (“A dismissal based on laches is not, by itself, grounds for an award of attorneys’ fees.”) (citation omitted).[1] 

12.     Given Propak’s focus on laches in its application for fees below and the district court’s extensive discussion of laches factors in its fee award, the EEOC reasonably believed that it was appropriate to appeal the district court’s fee award to the extent it was based on the laches ruling.  EEOC’s appeal on this basis was not “frivolous,” “unreasonable,” or lacking foundation, as required by Christiansburg for an award of appellate fees.

13.     EEOC also addressed, on appeal, the district court’s statements that EEOC’s lawsuit was unreasonable because EEOC filed suit without having identified any claimants who were entitled to monetary relief.  The district court’s finding on this point was somewhat unclear.  The court’s comment that by the time EEOC filed suit “it was abundantly clear that a lawsuit would be moot” came at the end of a lengthy discussion of the factors on which the court had relied in dismissing EEOC’s lawsuit based on laches.  In this context, EEOC did not understand the court’s comment to signal that its rationale for awarding fees was wholly separate from the court’s previous laches determination.  EEOC nevertheless argued on appeal that to the extent the district court awarded fees based on the court’s belief that EEOC “could not locate purported victims,” see 2013 WL 1232959, at *4, the record does not support such a conclusion and the district court was simply wrong as a matter of fact.  EEOC Opening Brief at 41-44 & n.9; EEOC Reply Brief at 28. 

14.     This Court disagreed, stating that the district court had made a factual finding to this effect, and that finding was not clearly erroneous because EEOC had provided no evidence that the prospective claimants EEOC identified and interviewed actually fell within EEOC’s definition of the target class.[2]  746 F.3d at 152-53.  Although this Court rejected EEOC’s appellate arguments on this point, EEOC had a reasonable basis for challenging this basis for the district court’s fee award.

15.     EEOC reasonably believed that the district court’s finding was clearly erroneous because nothing in the record supported the court’s conclusion.  The district court stated that “[b]y the time this action was filed, . . . [t]he purported class of individuals allegedly discriminated against had last existed in 2004 and it was uncertain that those individuals could even be identified.”  2013 WL 1232959, at *4 (emphasis added).  The court cited as support two pages in its prior laches decision, R.41 at 13-14 (JA-424-425), but those pages make no mention of EEOC claimants.  See R.41 at 13-14 (JA-424-425)).   The pages refer only to “past employees who had worked in the Shelby facility in 2002 through 2004.”  See R.41 at 14-15 (JA-425-426).  Past employees, however, obviously do not refer to EEOC’s claimants, as EEOC’s hiring claim was brought on behalf of individuals whom Propak never hired.[3]   

16.     The district court, in its fee decision, also stated that “[t]he EEOC knew by November 2007 that it could not locate purported victims and witnesses” and, in response to EEOC’s argument that monetary damages were still available even though the Shelby facility had closed, that “this argument overlooks the fact that the class of victims could not be identified.”  See id. at *4 & n.3 (citing EEOC’s memorandum in opposition to fees).  The district court cited no record support for either of these two statements concerning EEOC’s identification of victims, and EEOC believed the statements to be untrue. 

17.     Propak also seeks fees on the ground that EEOC unnecessarily multiplied the appellate proceedings by moving for judicial notice and to supplement the record.[4]  Under Christiansburg, however, a court may award fees to a prevailing Title VII defendant only when it finds that the plaintiff’s claim is unreasonable.  See Christiansburg, 434 U.S. at 422.  Title VII therefore constrains a court’s discretion to award fees.  Questions surrounding EEOC’s conduct in filing motions do not implicate the reasonableness of EEOC’s claim or appeal, although courts of course have other remedies to address improper motions.  Greenberg v. Hilton Int’l Co., 870 F.2d 926, 940 (2d Cir. 1989) (“Unlike Rule 11, which imposes sanctions for discrete filings, [42 U.S.C.] Section 2000e-5(k) comes into play only after the Title VII claim has been disposed of and requires the court to assess the strength or weakness of that claim viewing the case as a whole.”) (emphasis added), vacated on other grounds, 875 F.2d 39 (2d Cir. 1989). 

18.     Even if EEOC’s motions were properly part of the fee consideration, this Court granted EEOC’s motion for judicial notice, so that motion should not warrant any fee award.  This Court denied EEOC’s motion to supplement the record, deeming the proffered supplemental documents unnecessary.  Because this Court affirmed fees based on the absence of identified claimants and not based on laches, the EEOC agrees that the proffered documents proved to be unnecessary.  Had this Court addressed the laches issue, however, the proffered documents would have clarified an important flaw in the district court’s prejudice determination.  The EEOC’s unsuccessful motion thus should not render the EEOC’s appeal unreasonable. 

19.   EEOC also objects to specific items for which Propak seeks reimbursement, especially given that Propak’s appellate counsel, John Cole, is an experienced labor and employment lawyer who represented Propak below and, therefore, was familiar with the record in this case and the relevant legal principles. 

20.     The starting point for determining a reasonable attorneys’ fee “is the number of hours reasonably expended on the litigation multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate.”  Hensley v. Eckerhart, 461 U.S. 424, 433 (1983) (emphasis added).  The “burden is on the party seeking the fee award to establish the reasonableness of the hours spent.”  Spell v. McDaniel, 852 F.2d 762, 768 (4th Cir. 1988).  Where documentation of hours worked is inadequate or the hours expended are unreasonable, a court should reduce the fee award accordingly.  Hensley, 461 U.S. at 433-34 (court may exclude from fee calculation “hours that were not ‘reasonably expended’”).

21.     EEOC objects, as excessive on its face, to Propak’s claim of a total of $109,247.50 as the cost of preparing Propak’s brief and preparing for oral argument.  Based on Exhibit B attached to Propak’s motion for appellate fees, Propak claims the following legal fees associated with this appeal: 

·        $57,138.00 for preparation of Propak’s brief, consisting of 114.50 hours of Attorney Cole's time ($40,647.50) and 76.70 hours of Associate Schulz's time (16,490.50);

·        $49,361.50 for preparation for oral argument, consisting of 111.70 hours of Attorney Coles's time ($41,144.00), 27.30 hours of two associates' time ($6,222.50) and 13.30 hours of paralegal time ($1,995.00); and

·        Westlaw research costs of $2,748. 

Propak seeks, in addition, other itemized costs, bringing the total appellate fees for which it seeks reimbursement to $156,731.54.  In the context of the district court’s award of $189,113.50 for legal work performed while this case was pending for three years before the district court, it is hard to understand how Propak’s request for over $150,000 in appellate fees could be reasonable.

22.     EEOC also objects to Propak’s claim for over $150,000 in appellate fees as reflecting duplication of legal work that necessarily was performed when Propak addressed the same issues in district court and, therefore, for which Propak was already compensated in the district court’s fee award.  “The novelty and difficulty of the questions raised” in the appeal and the nature and length of the attorney’s professional relationship with the client are among the twelve factors this Court considers in determining whether hours claimed are justified.  Rum Creek Coal Sales, Inc. v. Caperton, 31 F.3d 169, 175 (4th Cir. 1994).  Propak argues that it was forced to address new laches issues in its Response Brief and to prepare to address those issues at oral argument.  However, although EEOC raised two new laches-related legal issues in its brief, most of EEOC’s brief addressed the same facts and laches arguments that Propak had already briefed below.  See Spell, 852 F.2d at 768-69 (disallowing hours spent addressing issues previously addressed at trial level). 

23.     Nor is this the type of case in which it would be difficult to separate out the hours worked on a “claim-by-claim” basis, as might be the case where various legal issues involve a common core of facts or related legal theories.  See Knussman v. Maryland, 73 Fed.Appx. 608, 614 (4th Cir. 2003).  Here, EEOC’s only new issues on appeal were purely legal issues, and they comprised a relatively small portion of EEOC’s opening and reply briefs.  EEOC’s 57-page opening brief devoted five pages to one new issue (Point A) and six pages to the other (Point C).  The EEOC devoted only two-and-a-half pages (in Point B) of its 30-page reply brief responding to Propak’s arguments concerning the first of those two issues.  

24.     Moreover, Propak’s documentation offers this Court no means of isolating and subtracting from Propak’s application the costs related to a duplication of the research and brief-drafting arguments below, because neither the log of attorney time nor the log of Westlaw research offers any such specification.  EEOC submits that Propak’s fee application should be denied in its entirety or, alternatively, reduced substantially because Propak’s documentation does not permit this Court to determine what hours Propak’s counsel expended on the two, narrow legal issues that EEOC raised for the first time on appeal and what hours were expended duplicating research and drafting arguments addressed in the district court.

25.     This Court conducted oral argument four months after Propak filed its brief.  Nevertheless, Mr. Cole represents that he spent almost the same amount of time preparing for oral argument (106.7 hours) as he spent drafting the brief (112.30 hours).  EEOC submits that these hours are excessive on their face and fall “outside the realm of a reasonable exercise of billing judgment.”  See Spell, 852 F.2d at 768.

26.     EEOC also objects, as excessive, to Propak’s claim for $7,625.00 for 23.50 hours of attorney/paralegal time (19.50 of those hours by Attorney Cole, representing $6,922.50 of these costs) relating to the Joint Appendix that EEOC prepared and filed.  This appeal did not have a complex record below, and the Joint Appendix consisted of only one volume of less than 600 pages.  EEOC originally proposed to include all laches-related and fee-related motions and each party’s supporting documentation, but to exclude the parties’ briefs and any unpublished, electronically-available judicial decisions.  Propak asked to include all briefs and unpublished decisions, and EEOC prepared a Joint Appendix that incorporated these items.  EEOC objects, as excessive, to Propak’s request for reimbursement of 19.50 hours of attorney Cole's time to accomplish this straightforward result.  See Hensley, 461 U.S. at 434 (court should exclude from fee request “hours that are excessive, redundant, or otherwise unnecessary”).  

27.     EEOC also objects to Propak’s claim for 5 hours of attorney time (totaling $1,607.00) for reviewing and considering whether to respond to EEOC’s motion to suspend this appeal during the federal government’s shut-down last October.  The motion was necessitated by the fact that all government employees other than those designated as “essential” were required to cease performing their government jobs until Congress approved government funding.  EEOC’s request for this Court to suspend the appeal until the government re-opened was a straightforward request dictated by an extraordinary event that affected all aspects of the federal government.  It should not serve as a basis for any award of appellate fees.

28.     Finally, EEOC objects to Propak’s claim for $2,284 related to circuit-ordered mediation, consisting of  1.10 hours of paralegal time (at $140 per hour) and 6.0 hours of Attorney Cole’s time (at $355 per hour).[5]  The Fourth Circuit Mediator assigned to this appeal, Edward G. Smith, confirmed that this Court’s rules prohibit us from discussing any aspect of the mediation in this response to Propak’s fee application.  Because we cannot address the mediation, we request that the Propak be awarded no fees for mediation.   

          WHEREFORE the EEOC respectfully urges this Court to deny Propak’s motion for appellate attorneys’ fees and expenses or, in the alternative, to reduce the amount awarded by eliminating fees that are unsubstantiated or unjustified. 

                                                          Respectfully submitted,

P. DAVID LOPEZ

General Counsel

 

CAROLYN L. WHEELER

Acting Associate General Counsel

 

                                                          JENNIFER S. GOLDSTEIN

                                                          Acting Assistant General Counsel

 

                                                            /s/ Susan R. Oxford      

 

                                                          SUSAN R. OXFORD

Attorney, EEOC

131 M Street, N.E.

Washington, DC 20507

Tel:  (202) 663-4791; Fax: (202) 663-7090

susan.oxford@eeoc.gov


CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

I, Susan R. Oxford, hereby certify that on May 16, 2014, I filed electronically with this Court, using the Court’s electronic case filing system, this opposition to Propak’s motion for fees.  On the same date, using the Court’s electronic case filing system, I served a copy of this motion on counsel for Propak Logistics, John D. Cole, Esq., of Nexsen Pruet, PLLC, The Carillon Building, 227 West Trade Street, Suite 1550, Charlotte, North Carolina 28202.

 

 

                                                                   /s/   Susan R. Oxford

 

Susan R. Oxford

Attorney

EEOC, Office of General Counsel

131 M Street, N.E.

Washington, D.C. 20507

(202) 663-4791

susan.oxford@eeoc.gov

 



[1]  EEOC informed the district court that before filing suit EEOC “had identified and was in touch with several persons whom it believes were denied hire because of discrimination as alleged in the EEOC’s Complaint,” R.49 at 9 (JA-535), but EEOC did not offer evidence on this point because Propak had not argued EEOC’s lack of claimants as a basis for seeking fees. 

[2]  Although there was no such evidence, that had not been Propak’s focus either in seeking dismissal on laches grounds or in seeking fees.

[3]  The district court also stated that when EEOC filed suit, “the class of individuals purportedly injured had not existed for five years” and  that when “EEOC brought this action in August 2009, it was clear that . . . the class no longer existed.”  2013 WL 1232959, at *4.  Those statements, however, did not address whether EEOC had identified and could still locate these individuals. 

[4]  This Court granted EEOC’s motion for judicial notice but denied EEOC’s motion to supplement the record, finding the proffered supplemental documents unnecessary given the basis on which this Court affirmed fees. 

[5]  To the extent some of the time claimed for mediation is included within a block of time in which other work was also performed, EEOC objects to Propak’s failure to provide billing records with sufficient detail to permit a proper determination.