Davis v. Klenk, 3:12-cv-115-DPM

Decision Date15 November 2012
Docket NumberNo. 3:12-cv-115-DPM,3:12-cv-115-DPM
PartiesCHAD DAVIS PLAINTIFF v. JAMES KLENK, III, individually and d/b/a 1-55 AUTO PARTS DEFENDANT
CourtU.S. District Court — Eastern District of Arkansas
ORDER

1. The parties settled this case by stipulation, Document No. 11, agreeing on what Plaintiff Davis would receive ($2,500.00), opening a one-month window for further talks aimed at reaching agreement on attorney's fees and costs, and agreeing that the fee/cost issue would, if unresolved, be presented to the Court. The parties have been unable to agree on attorney's fees and costs. Davis's lawyers seek $10,555.00 in fees and $511.62 in costs; Defendant Klenk responds that only a very small fee is justified in the circumstances.

2. The Court rejects Klenk's argument that the stipulation mooted the case or deprived this Court of subject matter jurisdiction. The parties, through counsel, made a contract to resolve this still-pending case, and part of that contract is the Court deciding the fee/costs issue if it was not compromised after further negotiations. The Court will honor the parties'agreement about how to end this seemingly little case. Compare Richard S. Arnold, Mr. Justice Brennan and The Little Case, 32 LOY. L.A. L. REV. 663 (1999).

3. While the biblical reference is appreciated, Document No. 16, at 11-12, this Court is no Solomon. Several points are clear nonetheless.

First, Davis is not the prevailing party under the FLSA fee provision. Klenk decided to liquidate a small claim by paying it promptly rather than litigating it expensively. This Court has not adjudged Klenk in violation of the Act; the parties' settlement agreement pretermitted adjudication.

Second, the parties' settlement agreement is governed by Arkansas and federal law. FLSA provides the background. But this is a contract between Arkansawyers made in Arkansas about an employment dispute that arose here, albeit under federal law.

Third, the implied term of the parties' agreement about fees and costs is reasonableness considering all the material circumstances. Where the parties did not provide sufficient detail about any measurable thing, such as a time or an amount, the law always supplies this term because that is what ordinary folks would have agreed. RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 204. Reasonableness is the general Arkansas rule on fees. E.g., WarnerHoldings, Ltd. v. Abrego, 285 Ark. 434,438-39,688 S.W.2d 724, 727 (1985); see also, Chrisco v. Sun Industries, Inc., 304 Ark. 227, 229-30, 800 S.W.2d 717, 718-19 (1990) (specific factors to consider).

Fourth, the parties' use of the phrase "if any" in describing the fee/cost issue is a qualification. It is equivalent to the statutory "may" about fees in contract cases in general. ARK. CODE ANN. § 16-22-308; Chrisco, 304 Ark. at 229, 800 S.W.2d at 718. The Court concludes that some fees/costs award is appropriate and justified here. The case achieved FLSA's laudable purposes; counsel who made this happen deserve to be paid for their work.

Fifth, all the costs incurred save one are reasonable. The filing fee, the process server, copies, and postage are all fine. The $50 courier fee related to service is unexplained. The Court is unfamiliar with this kind of add-on by process servers. It seems unnecessary. If the fee was either for sending someone with the suit papers in hand to a process server in northeast Arkansas, or sending a central Arkansas process server to one corner of the State, it was unnecessary. The Court therefore awards $461.62 in reasonable costs pursuant to the parties' agreement. By the way, counsel's choice to file suit promptly to bring matters to a head, rather than making a telephone callas Klenk suggests, was a reasonable tactical decision. How to call plays for the best offense possible is counsel's choice.

Sixth, the $10,555.00 in requested attorney's fees are unreasonable. What follows is, by necessity given the amount of the requested fee, critical, though the Court hopes counsel will take these judgments constructively. This case started, as Klenk notes, with an essentially form complaint, which is the product of counsel's expertise and experience. The time billed for tailoring the form is too much. Another example: while counsel may prefer to do his own...

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