Calif. anti-Microsoft lawyers want $294 million payday

Plaintiff’s lawyers who pressed and then settled a class action against Microsoft supposedly on behalf of 14 million California consumers now want fees and costs to a tune approaching $300 million, but Microsoft has been fighting the request as excessive. Lead counsel Townsend and Townsend and Crew “is requesting at least $97 million in fees […]

Plaintiff’s lawyers who pressed and then settled a class action against Microsoft supposedly on behalf of 14 million California consumers now want fees and costs to a tune approaching $300 million, but Microsoft has been fighting the request as excessive. Lead counsel Townsend and Townsend and Crew “is requesting at least $97 million in fees and costs for itself and another $197 million for 34 other firms that worked on the case,” which resulted in an all-voucher settlement valued (or so it seems) at $1.1 billion. But lawyers for the software giant say the firm “piggybacked on the U.S. government’s antitrust case and other private litigation”. Microsoft says Townsend partner Eugene Crew would get $3,019 for each of the 6,198 hours he says he spent on the case; collectively, the lawyers are seeking high hourly fees for each of the 209,000 hours they claim to have spent on the case, many of which were in fact assigned to paralegals and other underlings. (Brenda Sandburg, “Microsoft Says Class Fee Request Doesn’t Compute”, The Recorder, Feb. 23). As usual in this sort of case, the lawyers have brought in a parade of law profs and other eminences to testify to the total reasonableness of their fee request –why, they were a bargain! But Larry Schonbrun, the Berkeley, Calif. sole practitioner who has made himself into a chief thorn in the side of the class action business (see Oct. 12)(more), is objecting: “In a filing on behalf of two class members, Schonbrun said a final fee award should not be decided until the court knows how many class members redeem their vouchers.” (Brenda Sandburg, “Show Me the Money”, The Recorder, Jan. 20). David Giacalone (Feb. 22) headlines his item on the story: “Putting the Piggy in Piggyback”. Instant update: hearing to review the settlement begins in San Francisco courtroom of Superior Court Judge Paul Alvarado (Brenda Sandburg, “Microsoft Settlement Getting Another Look”, The Recorder, Mar. 31). More coverage: see May 12. Update Sept. 23: judge slashes request to $112 million.

2 Comments

  • Got to love those lawyers

  • Six Pix from SoCal

    Six sites that drew my attention today: LeanWRITE has seen the light Overlawyered covers the lawyers seeking millions of dollars in attorney’s fees for their work in the Microsoft class action suits. Insults Unpunished covers today’s atrocities against…