In 1975, Plaintiffs-Appellees Barbara Marks and Shirley Johnson filed suit against their former employer, Prattco, Inc., claiming that they were discharged from employment on account of their race in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. Following a non-jury trial, the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Eldon B. Mahon, J., entered judgment for the plaintiffs and awarded them back pay and attorneys’ fees.
This case was first before this court on appeal from that judgment.
Marks v. Prattco, Inc.,
Following the remand, Prаttco filed a motion requesting the court to reduce the back pay originally awarded the plaintiffs on the basis of evidence adduced at trial concerning the plaintiffs’ efforts to acquire employment and employment actually obtained by the plaintiffs following their termination by Prattco. Alternatively, Prattco requested that if the district court found the record incomplete on these questions, the court hold a hearing at which both parties would have the opportunity to present additional evidence concerning these issues.
The court сoncluded that an additional hearing was unnecessary because both parties had been afforded ample opportunity to present evidence on these matters at trial; the trial record contained substantial evidence on these issues; and although the original back pay order had not indicated on its face that interim earnings and amounts which the plaintiffs could have earned by the exercise of reasonable diligence in seeking employment were considered, these factors had in fact been taken into account by the district court in making its original award.
The court did however re-examine the evidence presented at trial concerning the questions whether the plaintiffs had exercised reasonablе diligence in seeking employment following their termination and the amount of interim earnings to be setoff against the back pay award. Based on this re-examination of the evidence, the court found that both plaintiffs had exercised reasonable diligence in attempting to obtain employment. The court then re-calculated the amount of interim earnings actually received by the plaintiffs and found that errors in its original computation had produced an award less than the amount actually due to the plaintiffs. 1 Upon the basis of these revised calculations, which the court included in its back pay order, the court awarded Barbara Marks mitigated back pay totalling $12,043 and Shirley Johnson mitigated back pay totalling $7,215. The plaintiffs were also awarded prejudgment interest and additional attorneys’ fees to cover the fees incurred in the course of the first appeal to this court.
Prattco has again appeаled the judgment of the district court. Prattco now claims that the district court erred in refusing to hold a hearing following our remand of the case; that the district court erred in finding, upon re-examining the trial record, that the plaintiffs had exercised reasonable diligence in seeking employment; and that the district court erred in awarding the plaintiffs additional attorneys’ fees to covеr the costs incurred on the first appeal and remand of this case. We find no error in any of the above rulings.
*1125 I
The Failure To Hold A Hearing Upon Remand
Our original opinion in this case did not require the district court to conduct a hearing following our remand of the case. We required only that the district court document the validity of its back pay award by entering a more detailed order evidencing the court’s consideration of amounts earned or earnаble by the plaintiffs following their wrongful discharge in the calculation of the back pay award. A hearing on these issues was unnecessary unless evidence concerning these matters was imрroperly excluded at trial or for some other reason the original trial record did not contain evidence sufficient to support any findings on these questions. Prattco makes no сlaim that evidence on the questions of interim earnings and reasonable diligence in seeking employment was erroneously excluded at trial, or that the original trial record contained insufficient evidence to allow the court to make any decision on these issues. Prattco claims only that our original opinion required the district court to hold a hearing. The clear meaning of the language in the original opinion is to the contrary and Prattco’s contentions in this regard are completely without merit.
II
The District Court’s Findings On “Reasonable Diligence” and Interim Earnings
Prаttco claims that the district court erred in its calculations of interim earnings and in its finding that both plaintiffs had exercised reasonable diligence in seeking employment following their wrongful terminatiоn by Prattco. Both of these determinations are findings of fact, which we review subject to the “clearly erroneous” standard of Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a). After reviewing the district court’s calculations of the intеrim earnings received by the plaintiffs in this case, we find no error.
Once a plaintiff in a Title VII case has established a prima facie case and established what he or she contends tо be the damages resulting from the discriminatory acts of the employer, the burden of producing further evidence on the question of damages in order to establish the amount of interim earnings оr lack of diligence properly falls to the defendant.
Sias v. City Demonstration Agency,
Ill
Attorneys’ Fees
Prattco’s argument that the district court abused its discretion in awarding the plaintiffs attorneys’ fees incurred in the original appeal and рroceedings upon remand to the district court is almost incomprehensible and utterly devoid of merit. Prattco apparently contends that there is no authority for an award of attоrneys’ fees incurred on appeal. This argument is refuted by a long and consistent line of precedent.
James v. Stockham Valves & Fit
*1126
tings Co.,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed and the case is remanded in order that the district court may fix the amount of attorneys’ fees allowable in connection with this appeal.
AFFIRMED and REMANDED.
Notes
. In re examining the back pay awards, the district court discovered that exhibits introduced by the plaintiffs at trial in order to substantiate their back pay claims contained errors. Specifically, the court fоund that plaintiffs had erred in figuring the number of months for which they were entitled to back pay and had calculated prejudgment interest at a flat rate of 6% rather than at 6% per annum. The district court corrected these errors in making its revised back pay calculations.
