In
an 8-1 decision on May 28, the U.S. Supreme Court held
that attorneys successfully representing Social Security
disability claimants in court may be awarded fees based
on contingent fee agreements with their clients.
The
decision reverses a ruling by the Ninth Circuit that the
Social Security statute, providing for awarding of "a
reasonable fee," requires courts to use the "lodestar"
method based on hourly rates. Justice Ginsburg, for the
majority, noted that the lodestar method is a relatively
recent development, frequently used in fee-shifting situations.
However, there is no reason to believe that Congress intended
to outlaw the use of contingency fees paid by clients.
The
decision rejects the notion, advanced before the Supreme
Court, that contingency fees are inherently unreasonable
and that such agreements must be conformed, after the
fact, to a judge's sense of what the legal services were
worth in light of the result.
In
its brief to the Supreme Court, AAJ argued that the agreed
contingent fee should be presumed reasonable. Contingent
fee agreements have provided a key to the courthouse as
far back as colonial times in a wide variety of situations.
In fact, it is the dominant means of providing representation
for monetary claims. Charging by the hour was not common
until the 1960's and has been the subject of scandal and
fraud ever since.
Petitioner's
attorney, Eric Schnaufer, indicated that AAJ's amicus
brief "helped significantly" in obtaining this
victory.
Read
AAJ's amicus curiae brief in Gisbrecht v. Barnhart