TL;DR
- BMW was sued in 2017 over allegedly defective timing chains. The case settled, but the fight over how much the plaintiffs’ lawyers would get paid has now run nine years and two full trips through the appeals court.
- A district judge first calculated a baseline “lodestar” fee of $1.9 million, then applied a multiplier of 1.94 to reach exactly $3.7 million, the maximum Class Counsel was allowed to request. The Third Circuit vacated that in 2022.
- On remand, the same judge recalculated the baseline at $2.1 million and applied a different multiplier, 1.75, and landed on exactly $3.7 million again.
- More than 80% of the 2,877 hours billed, over 2,300 hours, were billed at partner rates, including 262 hours to draft complaints the court itself called “largely identical.”
- On June 11, 2026, the Third Circuit vacated the award a second time, ruling that Supreme Court limits on fee multipliers apply to contract-based settlements just as they do to statutory ones, and sent it back to the district court a third time.
Two different math problems, worked out nine years apart by the same judge, somehow produced the identical answer both times.
Legal Receipts
The Third Circuit’s own words do most of the damage here. These are verbatim excerpts from the June 11, 2026 opinion.
“Class action counsel serve a valuable role in our legal system and deserve to be paid. But not twice.”
- This is the opening line of the entire opinion, and the court chose it deliberately.
- It frames the whole case as a story about double payment, not about whether class counsel deserved fees at all.
“Perhaps not coincidentally, that multiplier yielded a fee award of $3.7 million—which the District Court ordered be paid to Class Counsel.”
- The appeals court is pointing out, in its own dry way, that a district judge picked a multiplier that happened to produce exactly the number the lawyers asked for.
- This sentence describes the first fee order. The same pattern repeated in the second one, with a different multiplier and a different baseline, landing on the same $3.7 million.
“A Michelangelo should not charge Sistine Chapel rates for painting a farmer’s barn.”
- The court used this line, borrowed from an earlier Third Circuit case, to explain why billing routine work at senior-partner rates is a problem.
- It directly targets the finding that more than 80% of billed hours, over 2,300 hours, came from partners.
“when a trial judge awards an enhancement on an impressionistic basis, a major purpose of the lodestar method—providing an objective and reviewable basis for fees—is undermined.”
- This is the Supreme Court’s own reasoning in Perdue, which the Third Circuit adopted to explain exactly what went wrong with the district court’s fee enhancement.
- It establishes the legal standard the district court failed twice: an enhancement has to be justified with specific evidence, not a feeling that the case was complicated.
Legal Minimalism: The Letter but Not the Spirit
The Settlement Agreement said BMW would pay “reasonable attorneys’ fees” and never defined how to calculate them. That silence is exactly what got exploited, twice.
- The Agreement set two numbers and nothing else: Class Counsel could request up to $3.7 million, and BMW agreed not to oppose anything up to $1.5 million. Everything in between was left to a judge’s discretion.
- Round one: the district court calculated a $1.9 million baseline lodestar (2,713 hours at $716/hour), then applied a 1.94 multiplier. Result: exactly $3.7 million.
- Round two, after the Third Circuit vacated that award: the baseline changed to about $2.1 million (2,877 hours at $726/hour), and the multiplier dropped to 1.75. Result: exactly $3.7 million again.
- The court found this pattern relied on factors, like “risk of nonpayment” and case complexity, that the Supreme Court’s Perdue decision says are already baked into the baseline lodestar and cannot be counted twice.
- Technically, “reasonable attorneys’ fees” was never violated on paper. In practice, the number was reverse-engineered to hit a pre-set ceiling twice, using two unrelated formulas.
Profit-Maximization at All Costs
The billing pattern behind the $3.7 million request shows senior partners doing high volumes of work that did not require senior partners.
- More than 2,300 of the 2,877 total hours billed, over 80%, came from partners billing at partner rates rather than associates at lower rates.
- 262 hours were billed to draft complaints, 222 of them by partners, even though the court found the second and third complaints were “largely identical” to the first, differing “in only minor respects.”
- 172 hours were billed for “negotiation and settlement,” including 97 hours to send three partners to a single day of mediation, with no record showing each partner did distinct, non-duplicative work.
- 279 more hours, almost all billed by partners, covered document production, meet-and-confers, and routine correspondence with the court.
- The $3.7 million ultimately awarded was roughly double the underlying baseline lodestar in both rounds, a gap created entirely by the multiplier, not by additional documented work.
This Is the System Working as Intended
It took nine years and two full appellate reversals to catch a pattern the court itself flagged as “not coincidental.” That is not a fluke. That is what happens when a contract says “reasonable fees” and leaves everything else to discretion.
- The same district judge produced the identical $3.7 million figure twice, using two different baselines and two different multipliers, a pattern the appeals court itself called out as “[p]erhaps not coincidentally.”
- The Settlement Agreement let Class Counsel set its own ceiling at $3.7 million while BMW pre-agreed not to fight anything up to $1.5 million, a 2.5x gap that got closed by judicial discretion rather than documented hours.
- The district court gave Class Counsel “some leeway” on partner-heavy staffing based on the case’s “uniquely complex nature,” even while separately admitting the hours looked “excessive” on their face.
- Before this ruling, the Ninth, Sixth, and Eleventh Circuits had already reached the same conclusion about contract-based fee awards, meaning trial courts nationwide could apply lodestar multipliers to contractual settlements without the stricter Supreme Court standard until each circuit closed the gap on its own.
What a Legitimate Fix Looks Like
Editorial analysisThis case exposes what happens when a fee-shifting contract sets a ceiling and a floor but no methodology in between: the number in the middle gets reverse-engineered instead of calculated.
Regulatory Track
- Require district courts to state, in dollar terms tied to specific documented evidence, exactly which factor justifies each portion of any lodestar multiplier before approving one, which is what Perdue already requires but what did not happen here twice.
- Require class action fee petitions to disclose partner-to-associate billing ratios up front, so a court can flag top-heavy staffing before argument instead of after a second appeal.
- Require settlement agreements with a request ceiling and a non-opposition floor to place on the record how that specific dollar range was negotiated.
Legislative Track
- Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23 governs class settlement approval; its fee-approval guidance should state explicitly that contractual fee-shifting gets the same Perdue-level scrutiny as statutory fee-shifting, closing the exact ambiguity this court had to resolve on its own.
- Standardized, itemized time-entry requirements for class action fee petitions, general industry standard, not a case-specific finding, would prevent the kind of vague “discovery activities” summary charts the court flagged in the first appeal.
Governance Track
- Class counsel firms should be required to submit contemporaneous, task-coded time entries with every fee petition, the exact defect that forced this case through two full rounds of appeal.
- Trial courts should be barred from approving any fee figure that exactly matches a pre-negotiated ceiling without an independent, itemized explanation for every dollar above the baseline lodestar.
What Now?
The fee fight is not over. The case goes back to the same District Court a third time, now bound by a controlling appellate rule it did not have before.
- U.S. District Court, District of New Jersey (Magistrate Judge Cathy L. Waldor’s docket): recalculates the fee award a third time, now required to apply Perdue‘s stricter standard.
- U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit: its ruling now sets the controlling standard for every contract-based class action fee dispute in the circuit going forward.
- Anyone who is a class member in a settlement with a similar fee-shifting clause should read the fee petition and any objections filed in their own case; class members are entitled to object to fee requests before a court approves them.
The source document for this investigation is attached below.
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