State bill to reduce lawyer fees fails
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Paul Clinton
CORONA DEL MAR -- Even with the help of a retired Newport Beach
attorney, Assemblyman John Campbell (R-Irvine) wasn’t able to limit fees
lawyers can receive in class-action suits.
The legislation, known as Assembly Bill 456, died in committee
Wednesday. The bill would have imposed a fee cap of either $1,000 per
hour or 15% of the final settlement, whichever amount is less.
“We didn’t get it because the trial lawyers are a very strong lobby,
and they didn’t want it,” a somewhat dejected Campbell said Wednesday. “A
thousand an hour is clearly not enough.”
Campbell’s bill was defeated by a 5-2 vote in the Assembly’s Judiciary
Committee on Wednesday. Assemblywoman Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa
Barbara) said the bill was “very poor policy” because it would have
scared lawyers away from cases that right a social wrong.
“Why would you stick your neck out unless there was a potential
positive impact,” Jackson said. “We need people to represent people who
can’t afford counsel.”
Campbell had enlisted retired personal-injury lawyer Tim Cook, who
lives in Corona del Mar, to help him craft the bill. Both men, who are
friends, were spurred into action by a series of class-action suits where
attorneys reaped staggering awards for their work.
The latest case, and touchstone for the bill, came when attorneys from
the San Diego law firm Milberg, Weiss, Berhad, Hynes & Lerach charged the
state a whopping $88.5 million -- or $8,800 per hour -- in the smog
refund case.
“A guy getting $8,800 an hour is insane,” Cook said from his home
office in Corona del Mar. “The public perceives lawyers as greedy. But
when lawyers do something like asking for $8,800 an hour, that perception
is justified.”
Cook and Campbell weren’t the only ones appalled by the case.
Sacramento Superior Court Judge Joe Gray tossed out the award April 17.
State Controller Kathleen Connell had refused to write the firm a check.
The firm has appealed Gray’s ruling.
Campbell also cited the award anti-tobacco lawyers received in their
public-health suit against cigarette manufacturers. On March 6, the
National Tobacco Fee Arbitration Panel awarded attorneys $637.5 million,
a 5% slice of the total award to California counties and cities. Newport
Beach-based Calcagnie & Robinson shared that award with a handful of
other firms.
However, Campbell’s bill that failed Wednesday would have applied only
to suits against governmental agencies and nonprofit groups. California
taxpayers, who received $321 million in refunds on the smog-impact fee
case, would shoulder the cost of the awards in that case.
Assemblyman Tom Harman (R-Huntington Beach), also an attorney, joined
four Democrats in opposing Campbell’s bill.
The Western Center on Law and Poverty also opposed Campbell’s bill,
notifying the assemblyman in a March 21 letter.
Public interest lawsuits -- including civil rights and discrimination
cases -- would have suffered had Campbell’s bill become law, said group
attorney Casey McKeever. Lawyers would be less likely to take them on,
McKeever said.
“Fifteen percent of zero is zero,” McKeever said. “It may take a lot
of time and energy to enforce some rights. It may not be a
multimillion-dollar recovery.”
Campbell said he would contemplate reintroducing an amended version of
the bill next year.
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