www.wvrecord.com
Jul. 4, 2009 | West Virginia's Legal Journal
 
NEWS

No decision yet in Visa, MC attorney fees

9/24/2008 2:00 PM
By Steve Korris -Ohio Bureau

WHEELING - Thirty-five days after Circuit Judge Ronald Wilson gave himself 30 days to consider an objection to a $3.6 million fee for special assistants to Attorney General Darrell McGraw, Wilson has not released a decision.

He withheld approval of the $3,684,484.51 fee at a hearing on Aug. 20, stunning lawyers who had expected to divide it into six equal shares.

The lawyers acted as McGraw's special assistants in five years of class action litigation against the Visa and MasterCard credit companies.

Visa and MasterCard agreed earlier this year to settle the claim by funding a $12 million sales tax holiday on certain appliances.

Wilson approved the settlement on Aug. 20 but said he would hear an objection to the fee from Steve Cohen of Wheeling, director of West Virginia Citizens Against Lawsuit Abuse.

Cohen asked Wilson to require an accounting of the work each lawyer performed, and he proposed to award fees on that basis rather than dividing it equally.

Wilson said he hadn't had time to read the fee motion. McGraw's deputy, Fran Hughes, had filed it the previous day.

Wilson said he would rule in 30 days, and the hearing ended.

Hughes hurried to Cohen and told him, "One of these days you will be exposed and you will get your due."

The fee motion identifies Teresa Toriseva of Wheeling, Guy Bucci and Timothy Bailey of Charleston, George Sampson of Seattle, and Dan Cohen and Jonathan Cuneo of Washington as McGraw assistants.

Barry Hill of Wheeling, who helped file the suit in 2003 and worked on it through 2006, demanded a share of the fee in a letter to Wilson in March.

Neither McGraw nor Wilson has responded to the letter.


EMAIL A FRIEND | PRINT | DIGG THIS | POST TO DEL.ICIO.US




COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE

blog comments powered by Disqus
EMAIL A FRIEND | PRINT

SUBSCRIBE To get our free email newsletter and make changes to your subscription:
 
 Subscribe to Print Edition
 Renew Print Edition Subscription
Filing for dollars, not justice - 6/26/2009
THEIR VIEW: The way forward on mountaintop removal - 6/25/2009

ARGUMENTS Archive

Gee, this story sounds familiar
Wright was a good man
This is what we do, and this is what you do

BLOG Archive
Do you think the state should be forced to arbitrate in the tobacco litigation?
Yes
 
(47%)
No
 
(53%)
Total Votes:58

Thank you for voting in this poll.

This poll is closed.

View Results
Attention bloggers:
Add Record Headlines to your site!


fast + free- click here
Need to know more about us or have questions? Try the links below:
Where you can find The West Virginia Record
Contact us
By way of introduction