Court Opinion

ID: 4806
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2010-04-25 04:59:25+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:13:01.468466
License: Public Domain

The LUBRIZOL CORP., Plaintiff–Appellant,

                                     v.

 EXXON CORP., Charles R. Evans, Richard D. Lower, and GATES Data
Center, Defendants–Appellees.

                                No. 91–2514.

                   United States Court of Appeals,

                               Fifth Circuit.

                               April 15, 1992.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern
District of Texas.

Before POLITZ, Chief Judge, KING, and EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit
Judges.

     PER CURIAM:

     The Lubrizol Corporation ("Lubrizol") commenced this action

for fraud against the Exxon Corporation ("Exxon"), two Exxon

employees ("Evans" and "Lower"), and an entity called GATES Data

Center on the grounds that defendants had mishandled confidential

Lubrizol information. Exxon counterclaimed for litigation expenses

incurred because of Lubrizol's breach of a covenant not to sue

entered into as part of a settlement agreement. The district court

granted judgment in favor of defendants as to Lubrizol's claims.

Those claims were separately appealed, and we affirmed the district

court's summary judgment on them.

     As for Exxon's counterclaim, the district court, ruling that

Lubrizol's breach of the parties' covenant not to sue was obvious,

granted judgment in Exxon's favor.        As a sanction for Lubrizol's

failure   to   comply   with   the   district    court's   order   directing

Lubrizol to submit specific attorney's fees information, the court
accepted Exxon's proof of its attorney's fees and awarded Exxon

judgment for $2,424,462.04.         Lubrizol now appeals that judgment.

     Finding that Lubrizol's breach was obvious and that the

district court has broad discretion to sanction Lubrizol, we

affirm.

                                       I

     This case is the postscript to one we have heard before.1          The

following is a summary of the facts and procedural background

relevant to this appeal.

     This action arises out of a lawsuit—the so-called "computer

dispute"—Lubrizol instituted in 1982 against Exxon in the United

States District Court for the District of New Jersey.              During

discovery in the New Jersey suit, the parties stipulated to a

protective order requiring identification of all individuals having

access    to   the   confidential   information   exchanged   between   the

parties.       That order also specified the locations where this

information was to be housed and designated that the Exxon law

department would have exclusive control over the computer system

     1
      For a full narration of the facts, see Lubrizol Corp. v.
Exxon Corp., 871 F.2d 1279 (5th Cir.1989). In that opinion
authored by Judge Edith H. Jones, the court firmly rejected
Lubrizol's argument that the covenant not to sue did not embrace
its fraud claims. The court held that the settlement agreement
"is unambiguous insofar as it released any claim that Lubrizol
might have brought against Exxon resulting from the computer
dispute." 871 F.2d at 1286. Also, the court was highly critical
of Lubrizol's arguments to the contrary, saying they were "too
contradictory ... to be credited" and had an "air of unreality"
that was "too thin." Id. at 1284 n. 7, 1286.
storing the confidential information.               Asserting that Exxon had

violated this protective order, Lubrizol moved for sanctions.                      In

September 1984, the parties signed a settlement agreement that

disposed of all claims in the New Jersey case and provided for the

entry of a stipulation of dismissal with prejudice.

     Lubrizol then filed a complaint in the United States District

Court for the Southern District of Texas against defendants Exxon,

Lower, and Evans, seeking some $200,000 in compensatory damages

allegedly    caused   by    fraud    and   violations       of   the    New    Jersey

protective order.      After two years of hotly contested discovery,

Lubrizol asserted that, because Exxon had deliberately destroyed

evidence,    it   could    prove    only   about    $40,000      in    compensatory

damages.      Exxon   counterclaimed       for     breach   of    the    settlement

agreement, violation of the New Jersey protective order, and fraud;

Lower and Evans counterclaimed for defamation.                   Ultimately, the

district court granted Exxon's motion for summary judgment, which

Lubrizol appealed to this court.           See generally Lubrizol, 871 F.2d

at 1279.

     In     considering     Lubrizol's      first    appeal,      we    held     that

Lubrizol's fraud claims had been made in the earlier New Jersey

federal case in the form of motions for sanctions concerning the

computer dispute.          Following that decision, and with Exxon's

counterclaim for breach of the covenant not to sue still pending,

Lubrizol—without prior notice to the district court, this court, or

to Exxon—filed a new lawsuit in the New Jersey federal district
court seeking reformation of the settlement agreement between

Lubrizol and Exxon to exclude settlement of the computer dispute.

Exxon filed a motion to dismiss the New Jersey action, which was

granted on January 29, 1990.        Lubrizol then appealed to the Third

Circuit, which affirmed that dismissal.           See Lubrizol Corp. v.

Exxon Corp., 929 F.2d 960 (3rd Cir.1991).

     Meanwhile, back in the Texas action, Exxon filed a motion for

summary   judgment    on   its   counterclaim   for   litigation   expenses

incurred because of Lubrizol's breach of the covenant not to sue—a

covenant entered into as part of the settlement agreement resolving

Lubrizol's original New Jersey action.          Exxon argued that, since

Lubrizol breached the settlement agreement by reasserting claims

that the United States District Court for the Southern District of

Texas and this court found were clearly and unambiguously covered

by Lubrizol's covenant not to sue, Lubrizol's breach was obvious as

a matter of law.     Lubrizol filed a counter motion, arguing that its

breach was not obvious and that it had acted in good faith as a

matter of law.       In November 1990, the district court granted

Exxon's motion and denied Lubrizol's.2

     During a December 1990 conference, Exxon and Lubrizol agreed

     2
      Lubrizol then filed a motion for reconsideration, or, in
the alternative, for certification under section 1292(b) of Title
28 for an interlocutory appeal. In its motion for
reconsideration, Lubrizol argued for the first time that Exxon
should be estopped from claiming the breach was an obvious one
because of statements made by Exxon that allegedly led Lubrizol
to believe that the computer dispute had not been settled. The
district court denied this motion on that grounds that Lubrizol's
assertion of estoppel was untimely.
to submit affidavits to support and contest Exxon's litigation

expenses.   Exxon filed two affidavits to prove total litigation

expenses of $2,424,462.04, which was accompanied by two volumes of

supporting documentation. Lubrizol then filed a motion to have the

court set   a   discovery   schedule,   to   which   the   district   court

responded by ordering ("February 1991 order") Lubrizol to file a

statement of any necessary discovery including, but not limited to,

the name of anyone to be deposed and the reason why.             Lubrizol

responded by filing a ten-page affidavit and thirty-one page

memorandum that failed to set forth the items and amounts it was

not contesting, the amounts that it considered reasonable for items

in dispute, and the names of anyone it wished to depose.

     The district court ruled that Lubrizol had failed to comply

with its February 1991 order by not providing the information

required and, as a sanction for Lubrizol's "egregious" conduct,

accepted Exxon's affidavits as uncontradicted.        The district court

also found the $2.4 million figure to be both reasonable and

conservative and found the Exxon affidavits to be thorough and

supported by ample documentation;       accordingly, the district court

awarded Exxon the full $2.4 million.

                                  II

     Lubrizol again appeals to this court, this time contending:

(a) that the district court erred in ruling that Lubrizol's breach

of the parties' covenant not to sue was obvious and by imposing

liability in accordance with New York law;            and (b) that the
district court abused its discretion when it accepted Exxon's proof

of its $2.4 million in litigation expenses as uncontradicted and

awarded Exxon judgment for that amount as a sanction for Lubrizol's

failure to comply with the district court's February 1991 order.

                                        A

        Lubrizol    asserts   that:   (i)   according   to   New   York   law,

attorney's fees may be awarded as damages for a breach of contract

only if the contract expressly and unmistakably so provides, or if

the award of attorney's fees is authorized by statute or by court

rule;       (ii) the case relied upon by the district court—Artvale,

Inc. v. Rugby Fabrics Corp., 363 F.2d 1002 (2d Cir.1966)—actually

supports Lubrizol's position since the case states unequivocally

that a party is not subject to damages for a good faith testing of

the scope of a covenant not to sue, and the rule set down in

Artvale requires a finding that a party acted in bad faith before

attorney's fees will be awarded for breach of a covenant not to

sue;3       and (iii) the district court erred in finding that contract

was "unambiguous."       We disagree.

        3
         Specifically, Lubrizol contends that:

                    The district court did not conclude that
               Lubrizol's fraud claim against Exxon was [a] bad faith
               breach of the Settlement Agreement between the parties;
               and the overwhelming evidence in the record of
               Lubrizol's reasonable belief—based on the statements
               and conduct of Exxon—that its fraud claim against Exxon
               was not included in the Settlement Agreement makes the
               award of attorney's fees erroneous as a matter of law.

        Brief for Appellant at 8, Lubrizol Corp. v. Exxon Corp., No.
        91–2514 (5th Cir. filed Aug. 30, 1991) ["Lubrizol Brief"].
     It is undisputed that, by its express terms, the Settlement

Agreement entered into by the parties on September 7, 1984 is

governed by New York law.     Also, we have already decided "that the

settlement agreement is unambiguous insofar as it released any

claim that Lubrizol might have brought against Exxon resulting from

the computer dispute."     Lubrizol, 871 F.2d at 1286.4   The question

now before this court is whether the district court correctly

applied New York law in finding that Lubrizol's breach of the

parties' covenant not to sue was obvious and, in accordance with

that finding, correctly imposed liability.

         In awarding Exxon its litigation expenses, the district court

relied upon Artvale, 363 F.2d at 1002—a case that both frames the

issue before us and sets a standard for resolving it:

          The question, in other words, is to be solved not by
     invoking an abstract rule of law but by seeking to determine
     what the parties fairly contemplated [in drafting their
     Settlement Agreement], or would have had they addressed their
     minds to the problem. Certainly it is not beyond the powers
     of a lawyer to draw a covenant not to sue in such terms as to
     make clear that any breach will entail liability for damages,
     including the most certain of all—defendant's litigation
     expense.   Yet to distill all this out of the usual formal
     covenant would be going too far; its primary function is to
     serve as a shield rather than as a sword, often being employed
     instead of a release to avoid the common law rule with respect
     to the effect of a release on joint tort-feasors.       In the

     4
      Although this Settlement Agreement is part of the record
before this court, see Record Excerpts of Appellant at tab 16, p.
120, Lubrizol Corp. v. Exxon Corp., No. 91–2514 (5th Cir. filed
Aug. 30, 1991) ["Record Excerpts"], the parties originally agreed
that this Agreement would remain confidential. Id. at 129, art.
VII, ¶ 7.01. In deference to this agreement between the parties
and the fact that we do not feel it would make a substantial
contribution to this opinion, we abstain from quoting the actual
text in any detail.
      absence of contrary evidence, sufficient effect is given the
      usual covenant not to sue if, in addition to its service as a
      defense, it is read as imposing liability only for suits
      brought in obvious breach or otherwise in bad faith—clearly
      not the situation here.

Id. at 1008 (emphasis added).5         In short, we must determine whether

the   district    court    correctly    found   that   Lubrizol's     suit    was

"brought   in    obvious   breach   [of   the   covenant   not   to    sue]    or

otherwise in bad faith."6

      The district court, applying the Artvale rule, found that

"Lubrizol's breach of the covenant not to sue was an obvious one."7

      5
      The Artvale rule has been applied by courts deciding cases
under New York law. See, e.g., Bellefonte Re Ins. Co. v.
Argonaut Ins. Co., 757 F.2d 523 (2nd Cir.1985); Le Cordon Bleu,
S.A. v. BPC Pub. Ltd., 451 F.Supp. 63 (S.D.N.Y.1978); Cefali v.
Buffalo Brass Co., 748 F.Supp. 1011 (W.D.N.Y.1990).
      6
      Lubrizol argues that "obvious breach or otherwise in bad
faith" requires a separate finding of bad faith. See Lubrizol's
Brief at 19. Lubrizol shifts the emphasis to "obvious breach or
otherwise in bad faith." To reiterate Judge Jones' reply to a
similar argument made by Lubrizol, "[w]e cannot accept either the
grammatical or linguistic underpinnings of this argument."
Lubrizol, 871 F.2d at 1286. See Cefali, 748 F.Supp. at 1011
(awarding litigation expenses to defendant that prevailed on its
New York common law counterclaim for an obvious breach of a
covenant not to sue, and concluding that the court did not,
therefore, need to rule on defendant's motions for litigation
expenses on grounds that plaintiffs' claims were baseless and
made in bad faith).
      7
       More specifically, the district court held that:

           Both this court and the Fifth Circuit have found that
           the claims brought by Lubrizol in this case were
           clearly and unambiguously released in the New Jersey
           Settlement Agreement. Consequently, there can be no
           genuine factual dispute regarding whether Lubrizol's
           breach of the covenant not to sue was an obvious one.
           Exxon's motion for summary judgment as to Lubrizol's
           liability for damages, including attorney's fees and
           other litigation expenses, should be granted.

      Record Excerpts at tab 9, p. 68 (Memorandum and Order filed
We agree.    Lubrizol's chief contention is that its breach was a

good faith test of the covenant not to sue—a practice recognized as

acceptable in Artvale.     As support for this proposition, Lubrizol

notes that the district court originally denied Exxon's motion to

dismiss in 1986.   Lubrizol also relied upon communications between

Lubrizol's chief legal officer, Roger Hsu, and Exxon Chemical

Company's    general   counsel,    James    Phillips—evidence     that   the

district court and this court refused to consider on the grounds

that (i) the parol evidence rule bars consideration of prior

statements to contradict an unambiguous covenant, and (ii) because

the   settlement   agreement      unambiguously      prohibits   subsequent

modifications. See Lubrizol, 871 F.2d at 1286–87; Record Excerpts

at tab 11, pp. 81–83.

      First, in its June 1990 Memorandum in Opposition to Exxon's

Motion for Summary Judgment, Lubrizol admitted that its "actions

involve no direct or deliberate challenge to the scope of the

settlement agreement[.]"    We find that this discredits Lubrizol's

good-faith    assertion   argument.        Second,    the   district   court

originally denied Exxon's motion to dismiss.            We note that this

early ruling of the district court was vacated by that same court's

July 27, 1987 order, which this court later affirmed.8           Third, we

stand behind our earlier decision and again refuse to consider the

      Nov. 8, 1990).
      8
      Judge DeAnda vacated his earlier order after the New Jersey
settlement agreement and order of dismissal were introduced at
the trial and he had the opportunity to reexamine these exhibits.
Hsu–Phillips    communications.       Our   reasons   have    not   changed.9

Accordingly,    we   find   that   Lubrizol's   breach   of   the   parties'

covenant not to sue was obvious and that the district court

rightfully imposed liability in accordance with New York law.

                                      B

         At a conference on December 12, 1990, the district court

announced that it would hear, via affidavits, Exxon's proof of

litigation expenses and Lubrizol's counterproof. Exxon complied by

filing affidavits providing $2,424,462.04 in litigation expenses.

     9
      See Lubrizol, 871 F.2d at 1286–87. Even if the
Hsu–Phillips communications were relevant to the question of
obvious breach, Lubrizol cannot assert with credibility that such
communication gave Lubrizol a good-faith belief that it could
file suit against Exxon on claims that Lubrizol had clearly and
unambiguously covenanted never to reassert. Lubrizol asserts
that its alleged good-faith belief that it could file suit was
based on "Exxon's own statements [by Phillips] that it did not
consider the computer matter to have been settled by the
Settlement Agreement." Lubrizol's Brief at 22. Lubrizol
conveniently overlooks an April 12, 1985 letter from Phillips to
Hsu that predates Lubrizol's suit and makes very clear Exxon's
view that the computer dispute was settled:

            With respect to the reference in your April 4, 1985
            letter to the "unresolved status of the computer
            issue," I do not agree with your characterization of
            the events surrounding the adjournment of Lubrizol's
            motion on that subject in the New Jersey case. Exxon
            and Lubrizol mutually agreed to adjourn your renewed
            motion so that the apparently fruitful settlement
            discussions would continue without diversions resulting
            from peripheral matters. That was why we both
            authorized your counsel, Mr. Del Deo, to advise Judge
            Debevoise that the parties were engaged in serious
            settlement discussions and that the hearing on the
            renewed computerization motion should be adjourned. As
            you know, that decision proved sound as we were able to
            agree to a settlement shortly thereafter and thus
            avoided any necessity for the New Jersey Court to rule
            on what had become a moot point.
Lubrizol failed to comply—even after it was given a second chance.10

Accordingly, the district court decided to sanction Lubrizol by

accepting Exxon's affidavits as uncontradicted.11

     10
      Consider the district court's summation of Lubrizol's
failure to comply with the December 12 order:

                  Instead of the counteraffidavit which Lubrizol was
             to file in response to Exxon's affidavits, Lubrizol
             filed a motion for the Court to set a schedule for
             discovery. In order to provide Lubrizol with a second
             opportunity to meet its obligations under the December
             12 order, the court signed an order on February 14,
             1991, directing Lubrizol to file an affidavit setting
             forth (1) those items and amounts which were not
             contested, (2) the amounts which Lubrizol would
             consider reasonable for those items in dispute, and (3)
             a statement regarding what discovery was needed by
             Lubrizol, including the name of anyone to be deposed
             and the reason for the deposition. Lubrizol again
             failed to comply with the requirements of the Court,
             filing only a blanket objection to Exxon's submission
             "in its entirety." Lubrizol did not set forth any
             items and amounts which were not contested or the
             amounts it would consider reasonable for those items in
             dispute. Instead, Lubrizol made broad, general
             complaints about the alleged lack of detail in the
             Exxon affidavits. Lubrizol did not provide the Court
             with the name of any person needed to be deposed and
             the reason for the deposition. Instead, Lubrizol
             simply maintained, again in very broad and general
             terms, that it needed more discovery.

     Record Excerpts at tab 2, pp. 50–51.
     11
          Id. at 51–52:

             Having been given two opportunities to submit a
             counteraffidavit as required by the Court and having
             failed on each occasion to do so, Lubrizol is no longer
             entitled to submit its counteraffidavit and Exxon's
             affidavits will be accepted as uncontradicted. The
             court recognizes that the large damages claim in this
             case makes this sanction seem harsh. The Court also
             finds, however, that Lubrizol's conduct has been
             egregious and that this severe sanction is both proper
             and virtually unavoidable.

                  Because the Exxon affidavits are undisputed by
             counteraffidavit, there is no factual issue to be
             resolved by a trier of fact. Based upon the case law
     The    sanction     imposed      by   the   district   court   is    severe.

However, "[t]he question, of course, is not ... whether the Court

of Appeals ... would as an original matter have [chosen the

sanction];       it is whether the District Court abused its discretion

in doing so."      National Hockey League v. Metropolitan Hockey Club,

427 U.S. 639, 642, 96 S.Ct. 2778, 2780, 49 L.Ed.2d 747, reh'g

denied,    429    U.S.   874,   97    S.Ct.   197,   50   L.Ed.2d   158   (1976).

Recently reinforced by the Supreme Court, the sanctioning power of

district courts is potent:

          It has long been understood that "[c]ertain implied
     powers must necessarily result to our courts of justice from
     the nature of their institution," powers "which cannot be
     dispensed with in a court, because they are necessary to the
     exercise of all others." For this reason, "Courts of justice
     are universally acknowledged to be vested, by their very
     creation, with power to impose silence, respect, and decorum,
     in their presence, and submission to their lawful mandates."
     These powers are "governed not by rule or statute but by the
     control necessarily vested in courts to manage their own
     affairs so as to achieve the orderly and expeditious
     disposition of cases."

                                     * * * * * *

     As we recognized in Roadway Express [v. Piper, 447 U.S. 752,
     100 S.Ct. 2455, 65 L.Ed.2d 488], outright dismissal of a
     lawsuit, which we had upheld in Link [v. Wabash R. Co., 370
     U.S. 626, 82 S.Ct. 1386, 8 L.Ed.2d 734], is a particularly
     severe sanction, yet is within the Court's discretion.
     Consequently, the "less severe sanction" of an assessment of
     attorney's fees is undoubtedly within a court's inherent power
     as well.

                                     * * * * * *

     [A] court may assess attorney's fees as a sanction for the "
     "willful disobedience of a court order.' " Thus, a court's

            set forth above, the pleadings in this case, and the
            uncontradicted affidavits submitted by Exxon, the Court
            finds that Exxon has proved damages on its counterclaim
            in the amount of $2,424,462.04.
      discretion to determine "[t]he degree of punishment for
      contempt" permits the court to impose as part of the fine
      attorney's fees representing the entire cost of the
      litigation.

Chambers v. Nasco, Inc., ––– U.S. ––––, ––––, 111 S.Ct. 2123,

2132–33, 115 L.Ed.2d 27 (1991) (citations omitted).

      The district court's February 14 order12 bestowed upon Lubrizol

the   opportunity     to    conduct     discovery   into    Exxon's   litigation

expenses, and, had Lubrizol exercised that opportunity, it is

highly      likely   that   the   district    court   would    have   heard    its

arguments and Exxon's counterarguments. Rather, Lubrizol failed to

comply and has missed its opportunity to persuade the district

court as to what constitutes a reasonable fee.

       Lubrizol goes on to argue that the award of attorneys' fees

made to Exxon was improper because Exxon made no showing of the

reasonableness of the fees requested.            Lubrizol urges us to remand

the case to the district court with instructions to make the

inquiry mandated by this Court in Johnson v. Georgia Highway

Express, 488 F.2d 714 (5th Cir.1974).            We decline to do that.        The

district court found that when compared to the $2,028,000 incurred

by Lubrizol for two years of pre-trial proceedings, the $2,400,000

incurred      by   Exxon    for   the   entire   six-year    duration   of    this

litigation is "both reasonable and conservative."13              We review that

      12
           See supra note 15.
      13
           The district court made the following analysis:

              The amount claimed by Exxon ($2,424,462.04) does not
              include expenses for paralegal services or time spent
conclusion under an abuse of discretion standard.14     We are not

prepared to say, with the case in its peculiar procedural posture

as a result of Lubrizol's failure to comply with the district

court's order, that the district court abused its discretion in

arriving at the amount of the fee.    Indeed, the district court's

conclusion is perfectly reasonable. To send this case back for the

district judge to go through the Johnson hoops, on the basis of the

same record and without any further input from Lubrizol, would be

a needless exercise.   This case needs to come to an end.

                                III

          on the case by non-attorney executives at Exxon. The
          claimed amount is only for work performed on this case
          by Exxon Litigation Section attorneys and for attorneys
          fees charged to Exxon by outside law firms, fees which
          were determined to be proper by Exxon and,
          consequently, paid by Exxon. Additionally, the amount
          claimed by Exxon is for the entire course of the
          proceedings. The Court notes that Lubrizol's evidence
          at trial established that it incurred $2,028,000.00 in
          attorneys fees during the pre-trial proceedings. Much
          of the work performed during that stage involved Exxon
          and Lubrizol working on like matters, albeit from
          opposing sides. When compared to the amount incurred
          and deemed reasonable by Lubrizol prior to trial, the
          $2,424,462.04 claimed by Exxon for the entire
          litigation is both reasonable and conservative. The
          damages claim is supported by affidavits which are
          detailed and comprehensive, and which include two
          volumes of documentation as exhibits.
     14
      See Von Clark v. Butler, 916 F.2d 255, 259 (5th Cir.1990);
Leroy v. City of Houston, 831 F.2d 576, 584 (5th Cir.1987) ("The
district court's findings of fact supporting its award are
reviewed under the clearly erroneous standard, but the ultimate
award of attorneys' fees is reviewed for abuse of discretion."),
cert. denied, 486 U.S. 1008, 108 S.Ct. 1735, 100 L.Ed.2d 199
(1988); see also Hensley v. Eckerhart, 461 U.S. 424, 437, 103
S.Ct. 1933, 1941, 76 L.Ed.2d 40 (1983) (district court has
discretion in determining what is reasonable amount for
litigation expenses and, because of its superior understanding of
the litigation, frequent appellate review is to be avoided).
     For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the

district court.

     EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judge, dissenting in part:

     I agree with everything in the panel opinion except for the

ultimate conclusion not to send this case back to the district

court with instructions to calculate Exxon's fee in accordance with

the formula prescribed by this court in Johnson v. Georgia Highway

Express,   488   F.2d   714   (5th   Cir.1974);   see   also   Hensley   v.

Eckerhart, 461 U.S. 424, 429–40, 103 S.Ct. 1933, 1937–43, 76

L.Ed.2d 40 (1983) (applying Johnson factors), clarified by Cobb v.

Miller, 818 F.2d 1227, 1231–32 (5th Cir.1987).

     In my view, the district court simply has not satisfied our

Johnson standard.15     Although I acknowledge that the sanctioning

     15
      In rendering an award of attorney's fees, we have held
that a district court must consider:

           (1) the time and labor required;

           (2) the novelty and difficulty of the question(s)
                presented;

           (3) the skill requisite to properly perform the legal
                service;

           (4) the preclusion of other employment due to the
                acceptance of the case;

           (5) the customary fee;

           (6) whether the fee is fixed or contingent;

           (7) the time limitation imposed by the client or the
                circumstances;

           (8) the amount involved and result obtained;
power of the district court is potent (for example, I agree that

the district court may calculate Exxon's fee based solely on the

information supplied by Exxon), I am not comfortable in allowing

the district court's power to sanction to serve as license for

ignoring our Johnson formula—especially where the district court

has reduced its calculation of attorney fees to a comparative

analysis of fees charged by counsel in the case before it and

awarded $2.4 million.

     Accordingly, I would vacate the amount of the district court's

award and remand with instructions to apply the Johnson formula to

the Exxon-supplied information.

          (9) the experience, reputation, and ability of the
               attorneys;

          (10) the "undesirability" of the case;

          (11) the nature and length of the professional
               relationship with the client; and

          (12) awards in similar cases.

     Id. at 717–19 (including commentary on each factor).