Pacifica Tribune/Opinion Editorial, 7/10/13. "Golf Course decision" by Paul Slavin
And you thought the lawsuit was about endangered species, really? |
The payment in question was mandated by the language of the Endangered Species Act (ESA) which, according to one interpretation, “was meant to expand the class of parties eligible for fee awards from prevailing parties to partially prevailing parties – parties achieving some success, even if not major success.” So just how successful was Wild Equity, et al?
After years of snooping around the golf course, bemoaning the brutal regime of jack-booted golfers and threatening a legal Armageddon, the best case that Wild Equity could come up with was the complaint that course operations at Sharp Park were occasionally stranding frog eggs without a permit. To make a long story short, San Francisco applied for, and was granted the required authorization by the Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS), plaintiff’s complaint was deemed moot, and the case was dismissed. As the Judge observed in her order, little has changed on the ground as a result of plaintiffs’ complaint.
Wild
Equity Institute, et al, then filed an appeal to the verdict and a motion for
payment of attorneys’ fees and costs totaling $1,365,809. To be eligible they
had to show a “causal relationship” between the desired outcome and the
lawsuit. That is, some indication that San Francisco obtained the FWS permit
because of pressure, of whatever degree, brought by the plaintiffs’ suit. The
court decided that the lawsuit had just enough effect on the defendants to
satisfy the ESA’s minimal guidelines, and plaintiffs were thus eligible to
receive some amount of payment.
A partial breakdown of the bill presented to the court by the plaintiffs’ attorneys looks like this:
A partial breakdown of the bill presented to the court by the plaintiffs’ attorneys looks like this:
Eric Glitzenstein: 282.75 hours at
$750 per hour
Howard Crystal: 844 hours at $700 per
hour
Brent Plater: 857.7 hours at (a
modest) $550 per hour
Plus 2 junior attorneys at less than
$300 per hour and paralegals
Judge Illston has the authority, and the responsibility, to reduce fee requests she deems inflated or unwarranted, and apparently she found both in this case. She notes in her order that although “they gained their desired outcome, plaintiffs did not prevail on a single (her emphasis) substantive motion before the Court.” That spectacular failure rate “leads the Court to believe that a large majority of the time spent was excessive, redundant or otherwise unnecessary.”
The Judge was also concerned that, in a case where the issues were not particularly complex, the higher-priced attorneys spent so much time and the relatively inexpensive junior associates spent so little. The court’s ruling noted, “this grossly inefficient allocation of resources seems unwarranted by this simple ESA action."
The court also weighed the hours expended against the level of success achieved, and again the plaintiffs come up short. “At oral argument,” Judge Illston writes, “plaintiffs conceded that defendants’ FWS authorization would likely have happened eventually, but plaintiffs’ suit caused it to happen sooner. Thus, when looking at the larger picture, little seems to have been gained by plaintiffs, except this extra time.”
The $1,306,400
request for attorneys’ fees was reduced by three-quarters, to $326,600. That’s
25 cents on the dollar. Not the bonanza they had hoped for, but then, not a bad
payday for a law team that Judge Illston
apparently did not consider among the sharpest knives in the drawer.Judge Illston has the authority, and the responsibility, to reduce fee requests she deems inflated or unwarranted, and apparently she found both in this case. She notes in her order that although “they gained their desired outcome, plaintiffs did not prevail on a single (her emphasis) substantive motion before the Court.” That spectacular failure rate “leads the Court to believe that a large majority of the time spent was excessive, redundant or otherwise unnecessary.”
The Judge was also concerned that, in a case where the issues were not particularly complex, the higher-priced attorneys spent so much time and the relatively inexpensive junior associates spent so little. The court’s ruling noted, “this grossly inefficient allocation of resources seems unwarranted by this simple ESA action."
The court also weighed the hours expended against the level of success achieved, and again the plaintiffs come up short. “At oral argument,” Judge Illston writes, “plaintiffs conceded that defendants’ FWS authorization would likely have happened eventually, but plaintiffs’ suit caused it to happen sooner. Thus, when looking at the larger picture, little seems to have been gained by plaintiffs, except this extra time.”
Despite this dismal
reckoning, Plater’s Wild Equity Institute issued a stirring press release
headlined (here it comes) “Conservationists Win Lawsuit.” They did no such
thing. The lawsuit was dismissed. The press release goes on to say that the
Judge found that the conservationists “prevailed” in a lawsuit against S.F. Rec
& Parks. The quotation marks around “prevailed” indicate that this is a
direct quote from Judge Illston. I have carefully read her 9 page “Order
Granting In Part Plaintiffs’ Motion For Attorneys’ Fees And Costs” and I don’t
see anything close to that. (Perhaps Mr. Plater would advise me of the page and
line.) I’m no lawyer, but isn’t there a difference between having a motion
(partially) granted and prevailing in a lawsuit?
The press release goes on to state that the
Judge “ordered the golf course to pay $386,000 for illegally killing endangered
species.” This implies that Sharp Park was found guilty of something and was
forced to pay damages. That, again, is simply not true. (You can see why lawyer
Plater had such an unsuccessful time in court, where it’s a lot harder to get
away with stuff like that.) As clearly stated above, the Judge ordered the
payment to plaintiffs’ attorneys for (dubious) services rendered and certainly
not as a fine for “illegally killing endangered species.”
But it’s Plater’s next
line in the press release that really leaves me baffled: “We look forward to
working with the City to implement today’s order…” Does he mean to orchestrate
the transfer of $386,000 to Glitzenstein, Crystal, associates, paralegals and
himself? That’s all that “today’s order” encompasses. If he could do it in
cash, on the steps of City Hall, that might be worth some headlines. But he
continues, “..and craft a new public park at Sharp Park everyone can enjoy –
even endangered wildlife.” I’ll save my response to that for next week."
Submitted by Paul Slavin
--- Submitted by Paul Slavin
Related article - Pacifica Tribune, 7/10/13, "Judge awards attorney fees in Sharp Park Golf Course lawsuit." Note:
Permission to print the full text was received from Paul Slavin,
author. The electronic version of this article was not available on the Pacifica Tribune website at the time of this reprint posting. Note: Graphic from LifePoint.
Posted by Kathy Meeh
3 comments:
I notice Loeb and his buddy Bohner also asked for attorney fees from the city of Pacifica.
Maybe Plater is making some kind of threat of more lawsuits if SF doesn't turn the golf course into a park? What a whakadoodle.
Maybe they should tell all these carpet baggers to go pound salt.
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