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In-House Counsel Can Recover Fees in Massachusetts

June 10, 2014 | Posted in : Billing Practices, Defense Fees / Costs, Fee Award Factors, Fee Entitlement / Recoverability, Fee Issues on Appeal, Fee Jurisprudence, Fee Shifting, Prevailing Party Issues

A recent post, “Prevailing Party Can Recover Legal Fees for In-House Lawyer,” by Stan Martin of Duane Morris in Boston, writes about the recent ruling in Holland v. Jachmann, Mass App. Ct. No. 13-P-0280.

The “American Rule” is that parties pay their own legal fees for a dispute.  Fees can be shifted by contract or by statute, but fee-shifting remains in the minority in U.S. lawsuits.  When legal fees are recoverable, the court (judge) normally evaluates and determines the amount of legal fees to be awarded to a successful party, based on detailed billing information submitted by outside counsel.

But what is the outcome if the prevailing party relied primarily on its in-house counsel, who was on the company payroll all the time and never submitted any bills?  The Massachusetts Appeals Court has held that reasonable fees attributable to the in-house attorney’s effort are recoverable.

The underlying dispute included a particularly nasty set of actions by the losing party, and the court decided that the defendant has acted in an “unfair and deceptive” manner, violating the Massachusetts fair trade practice statute.  The other side was entitled to recover its legal fees.  But most of the work had been done by an in-house attorney who had not billed the company for his effort, and so the losing party argued that legal fees had not been “incurred” for the in-house attorney’s effort.

The trial court had awarded attorneys’ fees “on principles of fairness, the public policy served by fee awards, and case law upholding statutorily mandated fee awards even in the absence of billing.”  The Appeals Court agreed, and noted that “having in-house counsel engaged in the present suit had concrete financial impact on [prevailing party], which we conclude ‘incurred’ a cost.”  Also, there is a deterrent purpose in awarding attorneys’ fees, and the losing party should not benefit simply because the prevailing party chose to use in-house instead of outside counsel.