Remember that legal ethics hypo about the lawyer who while traveling on behalf of one client does work for another client? The ethics conundrum concerns whether the lawyer can bill that time to both clients, and, of course, the answer is no. Today, in a different billing twist, the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit ruled that a lawyer cant bill at the full hourly-rate for travel time not spent working.
Heres what happened: Tax firm Caplin & Drysdale was appointed national counsel for the asbestos claimants committee in the bankruptcy of Bab**** & Wilcox, a maker of boilers and generators. The firm sought about $6.3 million in fees and costs for it services, and charged its full hourly-rate for travel time. The bankruptcy trustee objected to paying the full hourly rate for travel time not spent working, and the bankruptcy judge agreed, awarding attorneys fees at 50% for those hours trimming $135,685.80 from Caplin & Drysdales tab. The district and appellate courts agreed.
Heres the Fifth Circuit decision, and
heres an NLJ story.
While the 3-judge panel cited other bankruptcy cases that have allowed an award of a full hourly rate for travel time, the court held that Caplin did not carry the burden of demonstrating that comparably skilled practitioners charged the full hourly rate for travel time.
The Law Blog reached out to the Caplin & Drysdale partner who handled the Bab**** matter
Elihu Inselbuch but, as luck would have it, hes traveling today.
LBers: In interpreting the statute that allows courts to award attorneys fees in bankruptcy cases, courts have held that on average the gain to the estate of employing able, experienced expert counsel would outweigh the expense to the estate of doing so . . . .
Whats the right outcome here?