How Much EPL Insurance Should Your Clients Buy? Beware of Fee Shifting. Statutory Rule Escalates Awards in Employment Cases.

Expert Guest Entry by Laura Zaroski, J.D.

Sometimes it’s good to be a plaintiff’s attorney. Why? Fee shifting. You don’t need a big win in lawsuits where statutes allow the court to make the defendant pay the plaintiff’s legal fees. Even if the plaintiff only obtains a small award (even just a dollar), a “win” entitles plaintiff’s counsel to submit fees they incurred in prosecuting the case to the defendant for reimbursement. It seems almost too good to be true! But that is what the law allows in most employment-related cases.

You might then ask—What stops plaintiff’s counsel from submitting made-up or inflated fees for reimbursement? Nothing! The plaintiff’s counsel submits the fee petition to the court and the court is the only gatekeeper that decides the appropriateness of the request. In a perfect world, a court would review the fee petition carefully, scrutinizing counsel’s listed activities closely to make sure those services were actually rendered and that the time billed to those activities was reasonable. But in the real world, courts usually only make reductions for entries or activities that are clearly duplicative, exorbitant or outrageous.

Based upon these fee shifting provisions, it is important to caution your clients that any employment claim, no matter how seemingly minor, can turn into a case that exhausts their insurance policy limits. For example, in a recent case in San Francisco (Kim Muniz v. United Parcel Service, Inc.), plaintiff Muniz had demanded $700,000 to settle her case. No settlement was reached and the case went to trial. At trial, Muniz was only awarded $27,000. However, the $27,000 award was soon followed by a $2 million dollar fee petition by plaintiff’s counsel. The court reviewed the petition and reduced the fees submitted to approximately $700,000. Although the reduction was substantial, even with the reduction, what was a minor victory for the plaintiff still resulted in a major victory for plaintiff’s attorneys, who are set to recover a $700,000 fee award for their efforts.

When you add it all up, the bottom-line expenses for the employer in the Muniz matter would include the following: 1) Plaintiff’s award of $27,000, 2) Plaintiff’s counsel fee award of $700,000, and estimated defense expenses (similar to plaintiff’s counsel) of around $700,000 (which is likely very conservative). In such a case, if your client had a $1 million EPL policy, the client’s policy would almost have been exhausted just by their own defense expenses, leaving little to fund an award or the award of plaintiff’s attorney fees. In such a case, unless your client had other applicable insurance coverage for this case, the client would have to dig into its own pocket to fund the uninsured amounts.

What does this mean for your clients? It means that when clients seek insurance protection for employment related lawsuits, it should consider not only the potential award that the plaintiff might receive, but also the risk that even if $1 is awarded to the plaintiff, plaintiff’s counsel in fee shifting cases will file a petition for their fees. Even the smallest of victories for plaintiffs can still leave the employer holding the bag for its own substantial defense fees plus the plaintiff’s attorney fees. Buyers beware! Carefully consider your client’s EPLI coverage and ask yourself: Are their limits adequate?

Related Event

EPLI

When: Monday, June 23 to Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Where:  InterContinental Chicago Magnificent Mile, Chicago, IL

To learn more, visit:  http://www.americanconference.com/EPLI