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In re Wells Fargo & Co. S'holder Derivative Litig.

United States District Court, N.D. California.
Mar 4, 2021
523 F. Supp. 3d 1108 (N.D. Cal. 2021)

Opinion

Lead Case No. 16-cv-05541-JST

2021-03-04

IN RE WELLS FARGO & COMPANY SHAREHOLDER DERIVATIVE LITIGATION This Document Relates to: All Actions


ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART MOTION FOR ATTORNEY'S FEES AND DENYING MOTION FOR SANCTIONS

Re: ECF No. 318, 329

JON S. TIGAR, United States District Judge

Before the Court are Objectors Kevin Fisher and John Cashman's joint motion for attorney's fees, ECF No. 318, and Co-Lead Plaintiffs' motion for sanctions against Fisher and his counsel, ECF No. 329. The Court will grant the motion for fees as to Cashman and deny it as to Fisher and will deny the motion for sanctions.

I. BACKGROUND

This is a shareholder derivative action on behalf of nominal Defendant Wells Fargo & Co. against the company's officers, directors, and senior management ("Individual Defendants"). Consolidated Amended Verified Stockholder Derivative Complaint ("Compl."), ECF No. 83 ¶ 64. The substance of Plaintiffs' claims is set forth in greater detail in the Court's prior orders on Defendants' motions to dismiss. See ECF No. 129 at 1-9; ECF No. 174 at 2-4. In short, Plaintiffs allege that, "[f]rom at least January 1, 2011 to the [time the Complaint was filed] (‘the Relevant Period’), Defendants knew or consciously disregarded that Wells Fargo employees were illicitly creating millions of deposit and credit card accounts for their customers, without those customers' knowledge or consent." Compl. ¶ 1. Plaintiffs sought to hold Individual Defendants accountable for these failures under various securities laws and common-law duties.

On April 7, 2020, the Court granted final approval of a settlement and awarded attorney's fees to Co-Lead Counsel. ECF No. 312; see also ECF No. 314 (final judgment and order of dismissal). The settlement provides that the Individual Defendants' insurers pay $240 million to Wells Fargo. ECF No. 312 at 3. The settlement also identifies various Wells Fargo reforms that the parties attribute to the litigation in this case, including $122.5 million in clawbacks from certain Individual Defendants and $20 million in corporate governance reforms. Id. The Court found the settlement fair, reasonable, and adequate under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23.1(c). Id. at 8. As for attorney's fees, the Court awarded $52.8 million to Co-Lead Counsel, a reduction of $15.2 million from the $68 million they had requested. Id. at 28.

The procedural history of this case is described in greater detail in the Court's final approval order. Id. at 2-3. For the purposes of this motion, it suffices to say that Cashman filed an objection to Co-Lead Counsel's motion for attorney's fees on July 11, 2019, ECF No. 281, and Fisher filed an objection on July 12, 2019, ECF No. 284. Cashman also filed a response to the Court's October 24, 2019 order to show cause why it should not appoint an expert witness to determine the appropriate hourly rate for contract attorney services in order to calculate Co-Lead Counsel's lodestar. ECF No. 305. On May 4, 2020, Fisher and Cashman filed the instant motion for attorney's fees. ECF No. 318. Cashman also seeks an incentive award of $1,000. Id. at 13. Co-Lead Plaintiffs opposed these motions, ECF No. 322; Nominal Defendant Wells Fargo filed a non-opposition and consent, ECF No. 326; and Fisher and Cashman filed separate replies, ECF Nos. 325, 327. On June 12, 2020, Co-Lead Plaintiffs filed a motion for sanctions against Fisher and his counsel. ECF No. 329. Fisher and Cashman filed separate oppositions, ECF Nos. 330, 331, and Co-Lead Plaintiffs filed a reply, ECF No. 332. The Court took the motions under submission without a hearing.

On July 15, 2020, Co-Lead Plaintiffs filed a motion to submit additional facts and argument in support of sanctions against Fisher and his counsel. ECF No. 333. Wells Fargo and Fisher each filed a response. ECF Nos. 338, 339. Co-Lead Plaintiffs filed a reply on August 5, 2020. ECF No. 341. On August 7, 2020, Co-Lead Plaintiffs filed a statement of recent decision regarding Pearson v. Target Corp. , 968 F.3d 827 (7th Cir. 2020). ECF No. 342.

II. JURISDICTION

This Court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1367, as well as 15 U.S.C. § 78aa.

III. LEGAL STANDARD

Objectors to a class or derivative action settlement are entitled to attorney's fees from the settlement fund where their objections "result in an increase to the common fund" or otherwise "substantially benefit the class members." Rodriguez v. Disner , 688 F.3d 645, 658 (9th Cir. 2012) (quoting Vizcaino v. Microsoft Corp. , 290 F.3d 1043, 1051 (9th Cir. 2002) ). A court may "deny fees to objectors whose work is duplicative, or who merely echo each others' arguments and confer no unique benefit to the class." Id. at 658-59.

Courts may use either the common fund or lodestar approach when awarding attorney's fees in a shareholder derivative suit. See In re Oracle Sec. Litig. , 852 F. Supp. 1437, 1449 (N.D. Cal. 1994).

Disgorgement is an equitable remedy and a district court has "broad discretion" in deciding whether to employ it. S.E.C. v. Clark , 915 F.2d 439, 454 (9th Cir. 1990). See also Consumer Fin. Prot. Bureau v. Gordon , 819 F.3d 1179, 1195 (9th Cir. 2016) ("Disgorgement is a remedy in which a court orders a wrongdoer to turn over all profits obtained by violating the law" and "[a] district court has ‘broad equity powers to order’ " it. (citation omitted)).

IV. DISCUSSION

Fisher and Cashman argue that they provided a substantial benefit to Wells Fargo in the form of the $15.2 million reduction in fees awarded to Co-Lead Counsel, asserting that the reduction resulted from the Court's "adopt[ion of] the Objectors' theories and arguments." ECF No. 318 at 3. Fisher and Cashman contend that they "independently developed and submitted similar arguments to this Court in their respective Objections" and that they had no prior association with each other before the instant motion for fees, which they have filed jointly for the sake of efficiency. Id. They seek a lump sum of $500,000 in attorney's fees, though they provide independent lodestar calculations. Id. at 12-13. Cashman also seeks an incentive award of $1,000. Id. at 13.

Co-Lead Plaintiffs argue that Objectors are not entitled to any fees because their arguments were either unsuccessful or had already been raised by the Court and thus resulted in no additional benefit to Wells Fargo. ECF No. 322 at 5. Co-Lead Plaintiffs also contend that Objectors have not provided sufficient support to demonstrate that their requested fee award of $500,000 is reasonable. Id. at 21.

In addition, Co-Lead Plaintiffs argue that the Court should not award fees to Fisher and his counsel because they "are engaged in a scheme to extort the Bank for a hefty payday in connection with" Fisher's appeal of the settlement in a similar derivative action against Wells Fargo in California state court. Id. at 6. The settlement in the instant case is contingent upon the finalization of the state court settlement. See ECF No. 270-1 at 20. Co-Lead Plaintiffs allege that Fisher filed a "frivolous appeal" of the state court settlement in order to pressure Wells Fargo into paying him to drop the appeal and allow the settlement in the instant case to move forward. ECF No. 322 at 19. Co-Lead Plaintiffs' motion for sanctions asks the court to order disgorgement of the $1.75 million that Wells Fargo has agreed to pay Fisher in exchange for dropping his appeal of the state court settlement. ECF No. 329 at 16.

A. Substantial Benefit

Objectors argue that they saved Wells Fargo $15.2 million in attorney's fees that otherwise would have been awarded to Co-Lead Counsel. ECF No. 318 at 6. Specifically, objectors take credit for (1) the exclusion of $20 million in corporate governance reforms from the value of the common fund, id. at 6-7; (2) the exclusion of $60 million in clawbacks from the value of the common fund, id. at 8-9; (3) the reduction of lodestar billing rates for contract attorneys, id. at 11; ECF No. 325 at 12-13, and (4) the departure from the Ninth Circuit common fund benchmark of 25 percent, ECF No. 318 at 11.

Objectors did, in fact, make objections regarding all these issues. However, in its order granting preliminary approval of the settlement, the Court had already flagged its concerns about how to value the corporate governance reforms and clawbacks in the common fund. See ECF No. 274 at 10 (expressing concern over "what value to assign to the remedial actions taken by Wells Fargo" and noting other causative factors). And well before any filing by these objectors, this Court already had a longstanding, publicly-expressed interest in the appropriate determination of contract attorneys' hourly rates for lodestar purposes. See In re: Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) Antitrust Litig. , MDL No. 1917, Case No. C-07-5944 JST, 2016 WL 4126533, at *8 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 3, 2016) (expressing concern about "the proper treatment of contract attorney costs in the calculation of a lodestar"). Nor is there anything novel about the undersigned awarding attorney's fees of less than 25 percent when the common fund is very large, as it is here, see, e.g., Hefler v. Wells Fargo & Co. , No. 16-cv-05479-JST, 2018 WL 6619983, at *13 (N.D. Cal. Dec. 18, 2018) (20 percent fee request was "within the median range of 19-22.3 percent in fees awarded in cases with large settlements over $100 million"); Rodman v. Safeway Inc. , No. 11-cv-03003-JST, 2018 WL 4030558, at *5 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 23, 2018), a fact the Court brought to Co-Lead Counsel's attention in the preliminary approval order, see ECF No. 274 at 12 n.8.

Accordingly, while Fisher's and Cashman's objections might have been in aid of the Court's conclusions, they were not responsible for them. See id. at 10 (flagging concerns about how to value Wells Fargo's remedial actions but withholding a conclusion "[p]ending any objection from shareholders and further information from the parties"). The Court's citations to Fisher and Cashman's objections in its final approval order was not proof of causation. It was simply a notation that Objectors shared the Court's concerns.

Objectors justify their requested fee award in large part on the $15.2 million that their objections allegedly saved Wells Fargo in attorney's fees. See ECF No. 318 at 4 (stating that "the Objectors ... are seeking just $500,000, which is only 3.15% of the $15.2 million in decreased attorney fees and costs that have been ordered by this Court"). But because the Court had already identified the concerns Fisher and Cashman expressed in their objections, it cannot be the case that Objectors saved Wells Fargo the entire $15.2 million in attorney's fees that the Court subtracted from Co-Lead Counsel's requested award. There thus is no support for the $500,000 in fees Objectors request.

This does not mean, however, that Objectors are not entitled to any compensation whatsoever for their work. See ECF No. 322 at 10. As noted above, the objections were in aid of the Court's order, and they did provide some assistance in properly valuing the common fund and calculating the appropriate lodestar. To that extent, Objectors provided a benefit to the bank and are entitled to some amount in attorney's fees. But neither Objectors nor Co-Lead Counsel provide any proposed attorney's fees figure between $500,000 and zero. The Court therefore proceeds to address the appropriate amount below.

B. State Court Settlement

Much of Co-Lead Plaintiffs' opposition to Objectors' fee request, and all of their sanctions motion, is devoted to what they describe as an "objector blackmail" scheme implemented by Fisher and his counsel. ECF No. 329 at 7. Objector blackmail is a well-known class and derivative action phenomenon whereby objectors "use an appeal [of a class action or derivative settlement] as a means of leveraging compensation for themselves or their counsel." Vaughn v. Am. Honda Motor Co., Inc. , 507 F.3d 295, 300 (5th Cir. 2007) ; Brian T. Fitzpatrick, The End of Objector Blackmail? , 62 Vand. L. Rev. 1623, 1624 (2009) ("objector ‘blackmail’ is simply a specific application of the general concern with legal regimes that permit one or more individuals to ‘hold out’ and disrupt collective action," in this case by "fil[ing] wholly frivolous objections and appeals for no other reason than to induce ... side payments from class counsel"). Partly to prevent this dynamic, Rule 23(e)(5) requires court approval of a payment made in connection with an objection, including for "forgoing, dismissing, or abandoning an appeal from a judgment approving the proposal." Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(5)(B)(ii) ; see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(5)(B) advisory committee's note to 2018 amendment ("At least in some instances, it seems that objectors – or their counsel – have sought to obtain consideration for withdrawing their objections or dismissing appeals from judgments approving class settlements. And class counsel sometimes may feel that avoiding the delay produced by an appeal justifies providing payment or other consideration to these objectors.").

Co-Lead Plaintiffs' blackmail allegations arise from consolidated Wells Fargo shareholder derivative cases in San Francisco and San Mateo County Superior Courts ("the California Derivative Litigation"). See Wells Fargo Derivative Cases , No. CJC-18-004966 (S.F. Cnty. Super. Ct.) (including In re Wells Fargo & Co. Derivative Litig. , No. CGC-16-554407 (S.F. Cnty. Super. Ct.); Herron v. Stumpf, et al. , No. 18-CIV-00466 (San Mateo Cnty. Super. Ct.)). The settlement in the instant case is contingent upon the dismissal with prejudice of the California Derivative Litigation. See ECF No. 270-1 at 20. On July 12, 2019, the San Francisco court granted preliminary approval of a settlement in the California Derivative Litigation. ECF No. 322-1 ¶ 6. On September 10, 2019, lead plaintiffs in that litigation, who are also represented by Co-Lead Counsel, filed a motion for final approval of the settlement and a motion for attorney's fees. Id. ¶ 7.

On October 21, 2019, Fisher filed objections to both motions. Id. ¶ 8; ECF No. 329-2. The parties dispute whether Fisher waived his objection to the settlement at the final approval hearing, which was not recorded. See ECF No. 322-1 ¶ 10; ECF No. 327-1 ¶ 12. The court granted final approval and awarded fees on January 15, 2020. ECF No. 322-1 ¶ 13. On March 10, 2020, Fisher appealed both orders. Id. ¶ 14; ECF No. 327-1 ¶¶ 20. On May 29, 2020, Fisher and Wells Fargo reached a settlement agreement by which Fisher agreed to dismiss his appeal of the state court settlement in exchange for $1.75 million and an agreement that Wells Fargo would not oppose his fee motion in the instant case. ECF No. 327-7 at 4-6.

Co-Lead Plaintiffs claim that Fisher's appeal of the state settlement was frivolous because he waived his objection at the final approval hearing and did not have standing to appeal. ECF No. 322 at 19-20. They argue that he filed his appeal in order to hold up not just the state settlement but the federal one, exploiting Wells Fargo's desire for finality and distribution of both the state and federal settlement amounts. Id. at 19. Fisher counters that he did have standing to appeal and that Wells Fargo, which was represented by sophisticated counsel, was not extorted by the arrangement. ECF No. 327 at 12-14. Cashman attempts to distance himself from the allegations against Fisher by filing a separate reply and noting that his attorney "has consistently opposed the tactic of ‘objector blackmail’ and does so again here." ECF No. 325 at 5 n.1.

The Court observes that the "separate" replies contain multiple nearly identical passages. Compare, e.g. , ECF No. 325 at 7 (emphasis in original):

Plaintiffs are not satisfied with Ninth Circuit law, so they insert commentary into this quotation, emphasizing their interjected words "i.e. cause." Opp. 6. But Rodriguez II does not support Plaintiffs' theory that causation is especially difficult to prove. To the contrary, the Ninth Circuit reversed and remanded a district court that denied attorneys' fees on the theory that the district court relied on "its own analysis of the case law." Id. at 660. The opinion stands for the unremarkable proposition that a court commits legal error when it denies an objector attorneys' fees for a benefit created by issues not previously raised by the district court.

Plaintiffs argue that the Objectors are not entitled to a fee unless they raise a wholly new issue that the district court was unaware of, but Rodriguez II cannot be read so narrowly. Rodriguez II instead affirmed the rejection of attorneys' fees to several "me too" objectors "capitalizing on arguments already made by the Schneider Objectors regarding why class counsel's fees should be reduced." Id. at 659. Thus, "where objectors do not add any new legal argument or expertise, and do not participate constructively in the litigation or confer a benefit on the class, they are not entitled to an award premised on equitable principles." Id. But this does not describe Cashman, who constructively participated in the litigation.

with ECF No. 327 at 5-6 (emphasis in original):
Plaintiffs, however, are not satisfied with Ninth Circuit law, so they insert commentary into this quotation, emphasizing their interjected words "i.e. cause." ECF No. 322 at 6. But Rodriguez II does not support Plaintiffs' theory that causation is especially difficult to prove. To the contrary, the Ninth Circuit reversed and remanded a district court that denied attorneys' fees on the theory that the district court relied on "its own analysis of the case law." Id. at 660. The opinion stands for the unremarkable proposition that a court commits legal error when it denies an objector attorneys' fees for a benefit caused by issues not previously raised by the district court.

Further, Plaintiffs argue that the Objectors are not entitled to a fee unless they raise a wholly new issues that the district court was unaware of, yet Rodriguez II stands for no such proposition. Rather, Rodriguez II affirmed the court's refusal to grant attorneys' fees to several "me too" objectors "capitalizing on arguments already made by the Schneider Objectors regarding why class counsel's fees should be reduced." Id. at 659. Thus, "where objectors do not add any new legal argument or expertise, and do not participate constructively in the litigation or confer a benefit on the class, they are not entitled to an award premised on equitable principles." Id. Unlike those objectors in Rodriguez II , Fisher and Cashman are not objectors who did not "add any new legal argument or expertise" but instead they constructively participated in the litigation and aided this Court.

Thus, it is not clear how much "distance" Cashman actually created.

Fisher notes that the objections he raised to the state court settlement were similar to those he raised in this case. ECF No. 327 at 14. As in this case, he takes sole credit for the reduction in fees awarded by the state court to lead plaintiffs' counsel–$3.5 million, or 43 percent, of the requested $8.25 million. Id. ("This reduction of approximately $3.5 million in attorneys' fees is a direct monetary benefit to Wells Fargo and was based solely on Fisher's two separate California Action objections in which he was the lone objector."). Fisher cites no portion of the state court's approval orders crediting him for this reduction, however, and the Court's own review of those orders does not support Fisher's assertion. The state court awarded less than lead plaintiffs' requested amount by reducing their attorneys' billable hours, applying a blended hourly rate, and not using a multiplier. ECF No. 327-5 at 3. While Fisher takes credit for the court's reduction of certain billing rates, see ECF No. 327-1 ¶ 18, the court had already noted its concern about inflated rates, ECF No. 322-6 at 8-9. Likewise, while the court noted that it "len[t] credence to Fisher's arguments against the award of a multiplier," ECF No. 327-5 at 11 n.13, it had already signaled that it was unlikely to use one, see ECF No. 322-6 at 9 & n.11.

Regardless, Fisher contends that his $1.75 million payment from Wells Fargo constitutes compensation for whatever benefit his work provided the bank. See ECF No. 327 at 14-15 ("Wells Fargo and Objector represent and acknowledge that the Payment to Objector reflects a portion of the savings achieved for Wells Fargo in the form of the reduction in fees awarded to plaintiffs' counsel in the State Action after Objector filed his Objections.") (quoting Fisher's settlement agreement with Wells Fargo in the California Shareholder Litigation, ECF No. 327-7 at 3). This explanation is unsatisfying. It seems much more likely that the payment reflected whatever benefit Fisher conferred in the state court litigation and a premium on the ability to unlock hundreds of millions of dollars in state and federal settlement funds. See Pearson , 968 F.3d at 836 ("the value to defendants in paying off [the objector] lay in finally being rid of the Pearson litigation as a whole"). Additionally, by seeking this payment in the state rather than federal litigation, Fisher appears to have attempted to avoid the scrutiny of Rule 23(e)(5).

However, the Court is not convinced that, even if there was bad faith here, disgorgement of a settlement payment reached by two sophisticated, represented parties in a separate lawsuit would be an appropriate or even permissible remedy. Co-Lead Plaintiffs invoke the Court's "inherent power to levy sanctions, including attorneys' fees, for ‘willful disobedience of a court order ... or when the losing party has acted in bad faith, vexatiously, wantonly, or for oppressive reasons....’ " Fink v. Gomez , 239 F.3d 989, 991 (9th Cir. 2001) (quoting Roadway Express, Inc. v. Piper , 447 U.S. 752, 766, 100 S.Ct. 2455, 65 L.Ed.2d 488 (1980) ); see also ECF No. 329 at 16-17. However, the only authority they cite for the proposition that "[d]isgorgement is an appropriate equitable remedy" in this context is Porter v. Warner Holding Co. , 328 U.S. 395, 398-99, 66 S.Ct. 1086, 90 L.Ed. 1332 (1946), which held that district courts exercising their equitable powers under the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942 were empowered to order disgorgement of rents charged in excess of the maximums set by the statute.

Following the conclusion of briefing on this motion, Co-Lead Plaintiffs filed a statement of recent decision calling the Court's attention to Pearson v. Target Corp. , 968 F.3d 827 (7th Cir. 2020). ECF No. 342. In that case, "plaintiffs filed a putative class action in federal district court in Illinois alleging that defendants had made false claims about certain dietary supplements they manufactured and distributed." Pearson , 968 F.3d at 830. After certain procedural events not relevant here, the parties negotiated and submitted to the district court for approval a settlement of plaintiffs' claims. Id. "The agreement provided for a common fund of $7.5 million and a permanent injunction against certain labeling statements." Id. Three class members – Randy Nunez, Steven Buckley, and Patrick Sweeney – objected to the settlement. Id. Nunez had previously filed his own separate case in district court in California. Id. The Pearson district court approved the proposed settlement, and the objectors appealed, but all three dismissed their appeals before briefing began. Id. The dismissals struck a fourth class member, Theodore Frank, as suspicious. Id. at 830-31. It eventually came to light that the objectors had "received side payments in exchange for dismissing their appeals – $60,000 each to Nunez and Buckley and $10,000 to Sweeney, totaling $130,000 – while the class had received nothing." Id. at 831. Frank moved for an order requiring objectors to disgorge these payments, and the district court denied the motion. Id. As to Nunez and Buckley, the court "concluded that ‘the record failed to confirm suspicions of blackmail or other wrongdoing’ " because their counsel asserted that the objections had been made in good faith. Id. As to Sweeney, while the court had its suspicions about the basis for the payment, it "found the question ultimately irrelevant because there was no basis to conclude that the side settlements harmed the class by taking money that had been earmarked for it." Id. (quotation marks omitted).

As noted above, Frank is also counsel for objector Cashman in this case.

The Seventh Circuit reversed. Basing its decision "on long-established principles of equity," id. , it found that objectors had taken on a fiduciary duty to other class members – a duty they breached when they "sacrificed [the class's] interests to their own advantage by selling their appeals without benefit to the class," id. at 833 (alterations and quotation marks omitted). It held that regardless of whether the objections had merit, the payments were inappropriate:

Either those objections had enough merit to stand a genuine chance of improving the entire class's recovery, or they did not. If they did, the objectors sold off that genuine chance, which was the property of the entire class, for their own, strictly private, advantage. If they did not, the objectors' settlements of meritless claims traded only on the strength of the underlying litigation,

also the property of the entire class, to leverage defendants' and class counsel's desire to bring it to a close. Either way, the money the objectors received in excess of their interests as class members was not paid for anything they owned, and thus belongs in equity to the class.

Id. at 834 (citations and quotation omitted). Accordingly, the Pearson court held, the district court had erred in denying Franks's motion.

Pearson is an elegant, well-reasoned contribution to the class-action jurisprudence, but there is an important factual difference between that case and this one: the payments made in Pearson were made for the withdrawal of objections in that case, while the payment at issue here was made for the withdrawal of an objection in the state case – a case that is pending before another court. While Pearson is persuasive authority that a district court may order disgorgement of side payments received in a case pending before it, Co-Lead Plaintiffs have not cited any authority that would allow this Court to order disgorgement of monies received in a case pending before another court. Indeed, to the extent Pearson addresses the question at all, it supports not ordering disgorgement. The Pearson court noted that if Nunez had taken a payment to settle his separate California case, he could have "avoid[ed] ... scrutiny," id. at 835, suggesting that in that instance the court would not have ordered disgorgement.

This leaves the Court with no authority to grant Co-Lead Counsel's requested relief. The court agrees with Pearson that side payments received for the purpose of withdrawing objections frequently amount to constructive fraud. Id. at 832. It seems likely that that is what happened here. But without any on-point authority, the Court will not interfere with a finalized settlement in another court, no matter how compelling the equities. The motion for sanctions is thus denied.

The Court also wonders how it would react if a court in another jurisdiction ordered relief based on the specifics of a settlement reached in one of the Court's own cases.

Co-Lead Plaintiffs' motion to submit additional facts and argument on this motion, see ECF No. 333, is also denied.
--------

Given Fisher's acknowledgement that his objections to the settlement in the California Shareholder Litigation were similar to those he raised in this case, however, and the Court's finding that these objections merely supported a conclusion it would otherwise have reached, the Court finds that Fisher's $1.75 million payment from Wells Fargo has more than amply compensated him for any benefit he may have provided the bank via his objections to these settlements. Accordingly, the Court awards Fisher no attorney's fees for his objections in this case. It finds that this approach serves Rule 23(e)(5)'s goal of ensuring that objector payments do not "perpetuate[ ] a system that can encourage objections advanced for improper purposes." See Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(5)(B) advisory committee's note to 2018 amendment.

C. Amount in Fees for Cashman

Cashman seeks $242,243.58 in fees, with a claimed lodestar of $98,473 and a multiplier of 2.46. ECF No. 318 at 12-13. He contends that this amount, which is 1.64 percent of the $15.2 million benefit he and Fisher claim to have obtained for the class, ECF No. 325 at 15, is appropriate as "a small fraction of the 25% benchmark and the 22% awarded class counsel." ECF No. 318 at 13. As the Court has already found that Cashman cannot take credit for the $15.2 million reduction in attorney's fees, it rejects this framing. It will instead award a lodestar payment. See In re Oracle Sec. Litig. , 852 F. Supp. at 1449 (courts have discretion to use either the common fund or the lodestar approach when awarding fees in shareholder derivative suit).

Co-Lead Plaintiffs contest Cashman's $98,473 lodestar, noting that Cashman's attorney, Theodore H. Frank, failed to keep contemporaneous time records or discount time spent pursuing arguments that were duplicative or unsuccessful, and arguing that the rate he seeks is inflated. ECF No. 322 at 23-28. The Court rejects the latter argument, noting that the rates Cashman seeks for his attorneys ($899 for Frank, $747 for another attorney, and $661 for two more junior attorneys, see ECF No. 325-1 ¶¶ 26-27) are in line with the rates the Court approved for Co-Lead Counsel (up to $1,075 for partners or "of counsel" attorneys and up to $660 for associates, see ECF No. 312 at 20). As for the contemporaneous record argument, the Court stated the following in awarding fees to Co-Lead Counsel, who themselves had not provided contemporaneous records:

The Court agrees with Co-Lead Counsel that contemporaneous time records are not always required. "California courts have ... approved fee awards based on declarations describing the hours worked on various tasks, without providing underlying time records of the hours worked and the type of work performed." Ridgeway v. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. , 269 F. Supp. 3d 975, 987 (N.D. Cal. 2017) (citing Lunada Biomedical v. Nunez , 230 Cal. App. 4th 459, 487-88 (2014) ); see also City of Colton v. Singletary , 206 Cal. App. 4th 751, 785 (2012) ; Chavez v. Netflix, Inc. , 162 Cal. App. 4th 43, 64 (2008). The same is true in the Ninth Circuit. See Fischer v. SJB-P.D. Inc. , 214 F.3d 1115, 1121 (9th Cir. 2000). And this district's local rules require only that the motion include "[a] statement of the services rendered by each person for whose services fees are claimed together with a summary of the time spent by each person, and a statement describing the manner in which time records were maintained," while providing the Court with discretion to require additional documentation. Civil L.R. 54-5(b)(2).

Id. at 26-27.

Frank has provided a declaration in which he briefly summarizes the work that he and his colleagues performed on the case. See ECF No. 318-2 ¶ 16 (estimating that Frank spent more than 25.1 hours editing the objections and his declaration, preparing for and attending the fairness hearing, researching and drafting a response to the order to show cause, and monitoring filings); id. ¶ 17 (estimating that Anna St. John spent 2.6 hours editing the objections); id. ¶ 18 (estimating that Frank Bednarz spent 56.4 hours "reviewing the fee application and settlement and related litigation, researching and drafting sections of the objection and declaration, and consulting on case strategy, editing filings, and helping Mr. Frank prepare for the fairness hearing"); id. ¶ 19 (estimating that Adam Schulman spent 55.5 hours "researching and drafting sections of the objection and consulting on case strategy, editing filings, [and] helping Mr. Frank prepare for the fairness hearing and argument in the Ninth Circuit"). While this declaration provides the bare minimum amount of detail required to support a fee award in the Ninth Circuit, see Fischer , 214 F.3d at 1121, it does not allow the Court to determine whether Cashman's counsel have excluded time spent on objections that were not ultimately successful, see Hensley v. Eckerhart , 461 U.S. 424, 440, 103 S.Ct. 1933, 76 L.Ed.2d 40 (1983) ("[W]here the plaintiff achieved only limited success, the district court should award only that amount of fees that is reasonable in relation to the results obtained."). However, the Court is mindful that "the determination of fees ‘should not result in a second major litigation’ " and seeks "to do rough justice, not to achieve auditing perfection." Fox v. Vice , 563 U.S. 826, 838, 131 S.Ct. 2205, 180 L.Ed.2d 45 (2011) (quoting Hensley , 461 U.S. at 437, 103 S.Ct. 1933 ). Cashman's objections aided the Court in its decision to reduce the fee award to Co-Lead Counsel by more than $15 million. In light of this figure, the Court finds that Cashman's requested lodestar of $98,473 provides reasonable compensation for the benefit he provided.

The Court denies the requested incentive award, however, finding unpersuasive Cashman's argument that he "exposed himself to the risk of private investigation and harassing discovery" – not that such discovery ever occurred – and that he refrained from engaging in the kind of objector blackmail he condemns in the context of the allegations against Fisher. See ECF No. 318 at 13.

CONCLUSION

For the foregoing reasons, Objectors' motion for attorney's fees is GRANTED as to Cashman and denied as to Fisher. Cashman is awarded $98,473 in fees, with no incentive payment. Co-Lead Plaintiffs' motion for sanctions is DENIED.

IT IS SO ORDERED.


Summaries of

In re Wells Fargo & Co. S'holder Derivative Litig.

United States District Court, N.D. California.
Mar 4, 2021
523 F. Supp. 3d 1108 (N.D. Cal. 2021)
Case details for

In re Wells Fargo & Co. S'holder Derivative Litig.

Case Details

Full title:IN RE WELLS FARGO & COMPANY SHAREHOLDER DERIVATIVE LITIGATION This…

Court:United States District Court, N.D. California.

Date published: Mar 4, 2021

Citations

523 F. Supp. 3d 1108 (N.D. Cal. 2021)

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