Plaintiff-appellant Antowyn Cauley appeals from a district court order awarding $7,500 in attorney’s fees to defendant John Wilson. We affirm the district court’s decision to condition the plaintiff’s voluntary dismissal on the payment of attorney’s fees, but because the defendant failed to offer sufficiently detailed proof of the fees incurred, we remand to the district court for a new determination of fees.
Cauley filed his initial complaint in this suit on April 1, 1975. That complaint alleged that on August 7, 1974, Chicago Police Officer John Wilson shot plaintiff Antowyn Cauley and that Wilson and other unnamed officers then arrested Cauley, assaulted him, and falsely imprisoned him. The complaint named the City of Chicago, Acting Police Superintendent James Rochford, Police Officer John Wilson, and other unnamed police officers as defendants.
More than seven years passed before the case was ready for trial. During that time, the district court dismissed the complaint as to the Superintendent, the plaintiff filed an amended complaint again naming the Superintendent, and the district court then granted summary judgment for the Superintendent. From March, 1980 until October, 1982, the case was placed on military hold while Cauley served in the United States Navy. With the trial finally set for November 15, 1982, the defendants moved on November 3, 1982 for a dismissal of the claim against the unnamed officers and, citing
Powe v. City of Chicago,
I.
Before addressing the attorney’s fees issue, we must consider whether the plaintiff can bring this appeal. Generally, a plaintiff may not appeal an order of voluntary dismissal without prejudice because the dismissal is the relief that the plaintiff requested.
See LeCompte v. Mr. Chip, Inc.,
We believe that — at least in cases in which a plaintiff requests a dismissal in order to proceed in state court — the District of Columbia Circuit approach provides the sounder rule. We agree that a plaintiff may not appeal an unconditional, voluntary dismissal without prejudice; a plaintiff has no rational reason to appeal such an order. It also seems reasonable that a plaintiff may not appeal a condition that the suit may only be refiled in a specified state or federal court, especially when the plaintiff does not oppose the condition in the district court.
See Bowers,
Furthermore, the Fifth and Sixth Circuits also consider whether the district court abused its discretion in awarding fees, but those circuits have tucked the attorneys’ fees issue into the “legal prejudice” aspect of their jurisdictional analysis. For example, in
Yoffe,
the Fifth Circuit found that the $44,000 attorneys’ fees award was not so unreasonable as to constitute legal prejudice and concluded that no appellate jurisdiction existed.
II.
Rule 41(a)(2) permits the district court to condition a voluntary dismissal without prejudice on payment of attorneys’ fees to the defendant. Fed.R.Civ.P. 41(a)(2);
see Yoffe,
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The purpose of awarding attorneys’ fees on a voluntary dismissal without prejudice is to compensate the defendant for the unnecessary expense that the litigation has caused.
See Galva Union Elevator Co. v. Chicago and North Western Transportation Co.,
The plaintiff argues that a fees award of $7,500 cannot reasonably be based on the itemization of services provided by defendant’s attorney. Wilson’s attorney submitted a two-page affidavit and a one-page itemization of attorney’s fees which stated that the attorney spent twenty-five hours on researching, drafting, and filing pleadings, eighty hours on discovery, and forty hours on trial preparation. Charging $100 per hour, Wilson’s attorney requested an award of $14,500; the district court awarded $7,500. The showing is inadequate to support either amount.
We think the plaintiff’s criticism is well-founded. We would expect more documentary evidence
{e.g.,
billing statements submitted by counsel to the City, time sheets, etc.) than the sketchy itemization provided here in order to allow the district court to determine reasonable attorney’s fees.
See, e.g., Yoffe,
In addition, some of the work product of Wilson’s attorney may be useful in the state court proceedings and therefore not compensable. The plaintiff sought a dismissal without prejudice because the district court’s rulings in favor of the Superintendent and the City on the federal section 1983 claims eliminated the court’s pendent jurisdiction over the state claims against the Superintendent and the City. With Wilson left as the only defendant in federal court, Cauley would have had to proceed against Wilson in federal court and then bring an action in state court against the Superintendent and the City. The plaintiff chose instead to obtain a dismissal without prejudice in federal court and proceed against all three defendants in state court. Since the state court action presumably alleges both the federal and state claims against Wilson, Wilson’s attorney should be able to use much of the research and
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discovery from the federal suit in defending the same claims in state court.
See Galva Union Elevator Co.,
For the foregoing reasons, the order of the district court is vacated and the case is remanded for a determination of reasonable attorney’s fees.
Notes
. In the district court the plaintiff contested the fees request on several grounds, arguing that the itemization was insufficient and that the City of Chicago, and not Wilson, paid for the attorney.
. The City of Chicago hired an attorney in private practice to represent both the City and Wilson in this litigation. That attorney submitted bills to the City of Chicago. The City’s Corporation Counsel represented Wilson on appeal.
