                                                          NOT PRECEDENTIAL

                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                     FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
                        ________________

                               No. 14-1126
                            ________________


                      M.D. STEVEN S. SIMRING,
                     United States of America, ex rel.

                                     v.

                RUTGERS, The State University of New Jersey;
      UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL; NEW JERSEY MEDICAL SCHOOL;
JAMES LAWLER; JOHN DOES 1-25, (Employees of University of Medicine and
                        Dentistry), UMDNJ-University
  Hospital and/or New Jersey Medical School; CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD
                  UNIVERSITY PHYSICIAN ASSOCIATES;
 MICHAEL SAULICH; CATHERINE GIBBONS; UNIVERSITY PHYSICIAN
                    ASSOCIATES OF NEW JERSEY INC.

                                          M.D. Steven S. Simring,
                                                      Appellant

                            ________________

                Appeal from the United States District Court
                        for the District of New Jersey
                  (D.C. Civil Action No. 3-04-cv-03530)
                District Judge: Honorable Peter G. Sheridan
                             ________________

                Submitted Under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a)
                             March 2, 2015

           Before: AMBRO, SCIRICA, and ROTH, Circuit Judges

                       (Opinion filed: July 7, 2015)
                                    ________________

                                        OPINION *
                                    ________________

AMBRO, Circuit Judge,

       There are few cases judges like less than disputes over attorneys’ fees. And the

tedium of reviewing reams of spreadsheets in the service of lining lawyers’ pockets is

exponentially greater for district and magistrate judges than for us on appeal.

Nonetheless, we must review fee applications and draft clear accounts of why a fee is

awarded or not. The District Court in this case put in yeoman’s work trying to guide the

parties to a negotiated settlement, but when the parties’ intransigence forced the Court to

rule on the fee petition, it did not include enough information in its opinion to allow for

meaningful appellate review. With regret, though we affirm in part, we also vacate in

part and remand.

       I.     Background

       This appeal results from Dr. Steven S. Simring’s False Claims Act (FCA) suit

alleging that the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (now part of

Rutgers University) engaged in a lengthy, multimillion-dollar scheme to bill taxpayers

twice for the same services. The FCA was passed during the Civil War to root out frauds

perpetrated by contractors with the Government. It allows private individuals to sue on

behalf of the United States; such Plaintiffs are called “relators,” as the law also requires


*
 This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7 does not
constitute binding precedent.


                                              2
them to transmit (or “relate”) their allegations to the Government. The United States

must decide whether to intervene in the relator’s lawsuit, lending the Government’s

substantial expertise, negotiating leverage, and investigative resources to the cause.

       When Simring filed the suit, Henry F. Furst was his lawyer. Simring informed the

U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) of his allegations, and the DOJ launched an

investigation to determine whether it would intervene. The United States’ decision to

intervene (or not) is typically the most consequential moment of an FCA case. Hence, in

representing Simring Furst devoted much of his energy to convincing the DOJ to take

part in the case. For assistance in this crucial task, he enlisted Harry Litman, a former

U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Pennsylvania and now a well-regarded lawyer

in private practice. In 2008, four years after Simring notified the DOJ of his case, the

Government decided to intervene, and in June 2009 the parties settled for $4.45 million

(this and all other large numbers in our opinion are approximate).

       The FCA entitles a prevailing relator to “reasonable attorneys’ fees.” 31 U.S.C.

§ 3730(d)(1), and after the settlement Simring promptly sought to recover fees for Furst

and Litman. When he did not immediately succeed, Simring engaged the law firm of

Stone & Magnanini. Regrettably, the litigation over Furst and Litman’s fees has lasted

six years so far, and this appeal is but the latest—and not the last—chapter.

       In December 2010, Simring petitioned the District Court for a total of $1.08

million in aggregate fees and costs to compensate Furst, Litman, and Stone & Magnanini.

The petition consisted of the lawyers’ billing records, their hourly rates, and evidence of

the rates of other lawyers in the community. Though Rutgers did not dispute Simring’s

                                             3
entitlement to fees, it argued that Furst and Litman charged too high a rate for too many

hours. In October 2012, a Magistrate Judge drafted a Report and Recommendation

(R&R) suggesting that Stone & Magnani be awarded nothing and that the other lawyers

receive in total $366,000. Simring promptly lodged objections with the District Court,

which allowed Stone & Magnanini to file a petition for work performed up to May 8,

2013. The Court then modified the recommended ruling in part to award Stone &

Magnanini $313,000 and to increase the compensation for Litman by $54,000 (the

aggregate fees awarded were thus $733,000). Simring moved for reconsideration, and

the motion was granted in part on December 16, 2013, to award $18,000 previously

denied for engaging a consultant who advised on encouraging DOJ intervention.

       On December 31, Simring petitioned for attorneys’ fees for work done between

May 8 and December 31. The District Court denied this motion. Simring appeals,

arguing that Furst and Litman remain not fully compensated for their work before May 8,

2013, and that all his lawyers were entitled to compensation for their work after that date.

We refer to the R&R, and the District Judge’s opinion insofar as it approved the R&R,

collectively as the decision of “the District Court,” and when we mean to differentiate

between the Judges’ decisions, we discuss the opinion of the District Judge or the

Magistrate Judge.

       II.    Discussion

              A.     Governing Law

       A relator must receive “reasonable” attorneys’ fees when an FCA suit results in a

settlement in which the defendant agrees to pay money. 31 U.S.C. § 3703(d). Fees are

                                             4
presumed reasonable when calculated using the “lodestar” method, by which a court

assigns a reasonable hourly rate and multiplies that rate by the reasonable number of

hours expended on the litigation. Pennsylvania v. Del. Valley Citizens’ Council for Clean

Air, 478 U.S. 546, 564 (1986). In calculating the fee, a court may assign different rates

or amounts of time to different categories of tasks. For example, a district court acts

within its discretion when it determines that it would be reasonable for an attorney to

charge less for time spent filing papers than for drafting a brief. Cf. id. at 567. The total

fee (F) is the product of the reasonable hourly rate (R) and the reasonable number of

hours (H), or, in mathematical terms, F = R x T. Where a court determines that different

hourly rates or numbers of hours are appropriate for given types of tasks, it must do a

separate calculation for each type (t) such that Ft = Rt x Ht. The reasonable fee is the sum

of each value for Ft.

       A reasonable hourly rate is the “prevailing [rate] in the community for similar

services by lawyers of reasonably comparable skill, experience and reputation.” Blum v.

Stenson, 465 U.S. 886, 896 n.11 (1984). To determine a reasonable number of hours, the

starting point is the number actually spent on the litigation, but a district court may

“exclude hours that are not reasonably expended. Hours are not reasonably expended if

they are excessive, redundant, or otherwise unnecessary.” Rode v. Dellarciprete, 892

F.2d 1177, 1183 (3d Cir. 1990) (citation omitted). Compensable time includes hours

spent on tasks “useful and of a type ordinarily necessary to secure the final result

obtained from the litigation.” Del. Valley, 478 U.S. at 561 (internal quotation marks

omitted). A court may deduct inadequately documented hours. Rode, 892 F.2d at 1183.

                                              5
              B.     The Fee Applications

                     1.     Matters on Which We Affirm

       The District Court held that Furst’s proposed billing rate of $450 per hour was

reasonable. Neither party disputes this holding.

       The Court also reduced Litman’s hourly rate from $850 per hour to $625. Simring

challenges this determination, as he contends that Litman charged his paying clients $850

per hour and that the evidence Rutgers mustered to rebut the rate was unreliable.

Although it agreed with Simring that Rutgers’ evidence in support of its proposed hourly

rate was unhelpful, the Court considered affidavits offered in connection with Furst’s

application to determine Litman’s rate. Even though they were offered in support of

Furst’s rate, to the Court they showed that a lawyer of Litman’s skill and experience in

New Jersey would reasonably have charged $625 per hour. 1

       On appeal, Simring argues that the Court erred in considering evidence offered in

support of Furst’s—not Litman’s—rate and that it should not have looked to evidence

Simring introduced to reduce the rate he was seeking. Rather, he believes the Court was

only entitled to rely on Rutgers’ evidence to dispute Litman’s rate. But the Court was

permitted to consider all the evidence in the record and draw reasonable inferences from

it regardless of its proponent. It properly “rejected the prevailing party’s evidence of


1
 The parties dispute whether the relevant community is, as Rutgers urges, New Jersey
(where the lawsuit was filed) or, as Simring contends, Washington, D.C. (where the DOJ
was encouraged to intervene). We need not choose between the two because the District
Court viewed New Jersey as the proper forum and Simring concedes that the issue “is
ultimately immaterial.” Reply Br. at 18.

                                              6
rates” when that evidence failed to persuade. Loughner v. Univ. of Pittsburgh, 260 F.3d

173, 180 (3d Cir. 2001). Perceiving no abuse of discretion in the determination that $625

was a reasonable hourly rate, we affirm that reduction.

       Finally, Simring claims the District Court erred in using rates in effect at the time

the fee petitions were filed instead of when the fees were ordered. We have held,

however, that “[w]hen attorney’s fees are awarded, the current market rate must be used,”

and that “the current market rate is the rate at the time of the fee petition,” Lanni v. New

Jersey, 259 F.3d 146, 149 (3d Cir. 2001), notwithstanding the delay between the time of

the petition and the time of the final award (at least two years in Lanni, given the date of

our mandate). We therefore affirm the District Court’s choice of date for calculating

Furst and Litman’s rates.

                     2.      Matters on Which We Vacate

       Simring engaged three law firms in this litigation. He presented different billing

records for each firm involved; each sought compensation for different work at different

hourly rates. Those billing records should be analyzed separately except where efforts

were duplicative. For the most part, the District Court analyzed the lawyers’ hourly rates

separately, but, when discussing why the hours Furst and Litman spent on certain tasks

needed to be reduced, it analyzed those lawyers’ bills together.

       The most significant problem with the approach of not differentiating between the

submitted billing records is that Furst and Litman had different billing methods: Furst

“task billed,” meaning that he recorded the amount of time he spent on each discrete task

separately, while Litman “block billed,” that is, he listed all of his tasks performed on a

                                              7
given day and then recorded the total amount of time per day he spent on Simring’s case.

Block billing makes it more difficult for courts to review hours expended because we do

not know how many hours a lawyer spent on a discrete task. For reasons that are not

clear, the Magistrate Judge wrote her R&R as if both attorneys block billed and noted that

this approach made it difficult to discern which tasks were compensable and which were

not; the District Judge did not disturb this misreading of Furst’s records. On remand, the

Court should clarify what specific entries of each lawyer are unreasonable. To the extent

block billing poses problems for its review, those problems are relevant only to the

petition for Litman’s fees, as Furst did not block bill. 2

                             a.      Administrative Tasks

        The Magistrate Judge recommended that Furst and Litman’s rates be reduced to

$95 per hour for “simple legal and/or administrative tasks that could have been

performed by an associate, paraprofessional, or secretary.” Mag. Op. at 23. She cited

three examples of these tasks, but did not inform the parties which specific time entries

she recommended compensating at $95 per hour. This decision makes us unable to

determine whether the rate was appropriately reduced. We also note that grouping

“simple legal and/or administrative tasks” may well have conflated substantially different

functions: a simple legal task often requires at a minimum three years of legal education

followed by admission to the bar even to be allowed by law to perform it; a simple

2
 We note that, should the Court deem it advisable, it would act within its discretion if it
ordered Litman to “re-format and re-submit [his] billing records” to make them more
easily reviewable. Gonzalez v. City of Maywood, 729 F.3d 1196, 1204 (9th Cir. 2013).


                                               8
administrative task typically does not. Similarly, a task that must be performed by an

associate generally ought to be compensated at a higher rate than a task that can be

performed by a paralegal. But we do not actually know what tasks the District Court

considered to be worthy of this fee reduction nor how many hours they accounted for.

                            b.      Reduced Billing Categories

       The Magistrate Judge further recommended several reductions to the number of

hours contained in both lawyers’ billing records. Specifically, she did so for: “vaguely

described time”; “review and discussion of newspaper articles detailing breaking and

entering at UMDNJ’s offices”; “communicating and meeting with state deputy

attorney[s] general[]”; “negotiating and recovering Dr. Simring’s share from the

[G]overnment”; “searching for and communicating with expert witnesses who were never

ultimately retained”; hours spent when “counsel reviewed materials, performed legal

research, conferred with one another, and drafted a Second Amended Complaint”; “time

spent . . . retaining Mr. Litman’s firm, including but not limited to[] running a potential

conflicts check[] and the possibility of retaining other counsel”; and fees for seeking fees.

Mag. Op. 25–30. With the exception of the recommended reduction for fees-on-fees, the

District Judge agreed with the Magistrate Judge.

       However, neither Judge recorded how many hours these categories represented or

which billing entries they matched. The closest the Magistrate Judge got was the citation,

“See Furst and Litman Billing Records,” Mag. Op. at 29, which is not a helpful indication

of the source of her information. We cannot review the reasonableness of these

deductions without knowing what they were.

                                              9
       In addition to the vagueness of the reductions for the number of hours spent on

these tasks, Simring makes well-taken objections to the District Court’s decision that any

hours spent on three specific categories of tasks were per se unreasonable:

communicating with the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office; preparing for possible

expert testimony; and preparation of a second amended complaint.

       The Court disallowed time spent communicating with the State Attorney General’s

office because “the Attorney General of New Jersey never intervened or otherwise

formally joined in this action.” Mag. Op. at 26. Similarly, the Magistrate Judge cited

that there was “no discovery in this case,” and that the experts Simring’s counsel

communicated with were not ultimately retained, as the reasons why the hours spent

developing an expert case were not reasonable. Id. at 27. The District Court also held

that time spent drafting a second amended complaint was wasted simply for the reason

that the document was not filed.

       The error in these reductions is that they assume it is always a waste of time to

pursue a litigation strategy that does not produce a tangible result before the Court. And

although the District Judge recognized the Magistrate Judge’s overstated focus on in-

court and court-supervised advocacy, he did not disturb the Magistrate Judge’s reduction

of hours for these tasks. Whether the New Jersey Attorney General formally joined the

action, whether an expert was retained, and whether a second amended complaint was

filed, do not answer whether making those preparations was “useful and of a type

ordinarily necessary” to the result Simring got. Del. Valley, 478 U.S. at 561. In many

cases, diligent lawyers will pursue many lines of inquiry both in factual investigation and

                                             10
legal research that may not end up formally becoming a part of a court’s record. But

background work cannot categorically be deemed time wasted. To be sure, if Furst and

Litman performed these tasks to pad their bills (at a time when it was unclear whether

they would receive anything), the hours spent on them would be unreasonable. But if a

reasonable FCA attorney in building her case would have consulted experts or state

officials or would have drafted an amended complaint at the time Furst and Litman did

so, then the requested fees can be awarded. Cf. Planned Parenthood v. Attorney Gen. of

State of New Jersey, 297 F.3d 253, 270–71 (3d Cir. 2002) (awarding fees for time spent

preparing expert who did not testify).

                            c.       Litman’s Legal Research

       We also vacate the reduction in Litman’s hourly rate for any day on which he did

any legal research. As already noted, Litman block billed, obfuscating exactly how much

time he spent on any given task. To address this lack of clarity, on any day in which one

of the tasks Litman performed was listed as “legal research,” the District Court reduced

his hourly rate from $625 to $450.

       Many Courts of Appeal have endorsed applications of across-the-board reductions

in hourly rates due to the vagaries of block billing. See McAfee v. Boczar, 738 F.3d 81,

90 (4th Cir. 2013); Torres-Rivera v. O’Neill-Cancel, 524 F.3d 331, 340 (1st Cir. 2008);

Welch v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 480 F.3d 942, 948 (9th Cir. 2007); Robinson v. City of

Edmond, 160 F.3d 1275, 1281 (10th Cir. 1998). We need not determine whether we

agree with this approach, as we vacate on the ground that the District Court’s decision to

apply a 39% reduction to Litman’s hourly rate to all days when he conducted legal

                                             11
research is arbitrary. Legal research is an essential part of a lawyer’s job and should not

always be deemed “associate level” work. Mag. Op. at 13. Nor does any amount of legal

research on a given day so infect a lawyer with indolence that the value of all the work

done on the whole day should be reduced by more than a third. We do not decide that

Litman is entitled to compensation for every hour he claims; we only hold that more

reasoning must accompany the ultimate decision.

                             d.     Fees-on-Fees

       We further vacate the decision not to award fees-on-fees to Furst and Litman for

the time spent litigating the fee petition before engaging Stone & Magnanini. The only

reasoning offered was that it was “unfair” to bill Rutgers for so many lawyers. Dist. Op.

at 5. But the principal question is whether the product of the relevant hourly rates and the

amount of time spent by all the lawyers and paraprofessionals involved is reasonable. If

the decision to bring in a third law firm resulted in a duplication of efforts, that would be

a reasonable ground to disallow a portion of the requested fees. Again, we do not

necessarily quarrel with the result the District Court reached, but we simply do not have

enough information to gauge whether that result reflected a reasonable rate charged for a

reasonable number of hours.

                             e.     Supplemental Fee Petition

       The District Court denied Simring’s petition for fees incurred between May 8 and

December 31, 2013. The only reasoning in the Court’s Order is that “Relator has already

been more than reasonably compensated for the time spent by his lawyers.” As we have

held before, “if the district court’s fee-award opinion is so terse, vague, or conclusory that

                                             12
we have no basis to review it, we must vacate the fee-award order and remand for further

proceedings.” Gunter v. Ridgewood Energy Corp., 223 F.3d 190, 196 (3d Cir. 2000). It

may be that the lawyers’ work between May and December of 2013 was entirely

noncompensable, but before we decide we would benefit from the District Court’s

analysis of whether the work performed was “useful and of a type ordinarily necessary to

secure the final result obtained from the litigation.” Del. Valley, 478 U.S. at 561.

       III.   Conclusion

       We affirm much of the District Court’s decision, though we vacate the fee award

in part and remand for further proceedings. As we do not know how the Court evaluated

the time entries submitted, we are unable to review whether the reductions it made

resulted in reasonable rates and hours, the two ingredients that yield a lodestar fee. Thus

we vacate in part and remand.




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