MEMORANDUM and ORDER
This is an action under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Following a non-jury trial on the merits of the case, I entered my Memorandum, Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Order which concluded that plaintiff Blowers had been unlawfully discharged in retaliation for having complained of defendants’ alleged discriminatory conduct. See, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a). The matter is currently pending before me for the fashioning of relief, including an award of attorney’s fees. See, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(k).
Plaintiff filed and served Interrogatories on defendants August 12, 1981 requesting information concerning legal services provided in this case by defendants’ law firm, Nixon, Hargrave, Devans & Doyle. The Interrogatories would require defendants to state: (1) the basis of its retainer with the law firm in this case; (2) the hourly rate at which defendants have been billed for any attorney, associate, paralegal or other person working on the case from 1971 to present; (3) the total fees billed with respect to the case from 1971 to present; (4) the total costs or disbursements billed with respect to the case from 1971 to present; 1 and (5) the number of hours billed for any attorney, associate, paralegal or any other person for each year from 1971 to present. Defendants have moved for a protective order with respect to such Interrogatories on the grounds that the information sought is irrelevant to Blowers’s claim for attorney’s fees.
The question whether information concerning legal services provided to a defendant in an action under Title VII may be discovered in connection with an award of attorney’s fees to the plaintiff has resulted in a split of authority. Such discovery has been permitted in two cases,
Naismith v. Professional Golfers Ass’n,
Title VII provides that in any action brought thereunder, “the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party, other than the [Equal Employment Opportunity] Commission or the United States, a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the
Defendants have argued that information concerning legal services rendered on their behalf is irrelevant with respect to plaintiff’s claim for attorney’s fees. 4 Plaintiff contends that such information is probative on the question whether the amount of time expended by her attorney was reasonable. In support of this contention, plaintiff relies on Stastny v. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co., supra, at 663-4, wherein the court stated:
“In a contest over what time was reasonably and necessarily spent in the preparation of a case, it is obvious that the time that the opposition found necessary to prepare its case would be probative. Each party must prepare to question the same witnesses, must review the same documents and other evidence, and must anticipate a presentation by the opposition of a complexity related to the facts in issue. Similarly, work on pretrial motions would reflect what volume of work opposing attorneys deemed reasonable.”
Defendants’ argument that the information requested by plaintiff is irrelevant to her claim for attorney’s fees is supported by
Mirabal v. General Motors Acceptance Corp.,
I am persuaded by the reasoning of
Stastny
insofar as it concerns the amount of time
Of course, in deciding to adhere to Stastny, I reject the approach taken in Mirabal and Samuel. The latter cases are both premised upon considerations which do not concern whether the information plaintiff seeks to discover is relevant to her claim for attorney’s fees, but which relate to the proper evidentiary weight to be accorded such information. In Mirabal, for example, the court suggested that a plaintiff’s attorney, by pursuing weak or frivolous claims, could force the defendant to incur substantial fees which the plaintiff might later attempt to use as a basis for his own claim for fees. Mirabal v. General Motors Acceptance Corp., supra, at 731. See, also, Samuel v. University of Pittsburgh, supra, at 294. The Mirabal court also suggested that a case may have greater precedential value for a defendant than for the plaintiff. Mirabal v. General Motors Acceptance Corp., supra, at 731. In Samuel, the court seemed to express a similar concern when it pointed out numerous differences between the work performed by plaintiff’s and defendant’s attorneys. Samuel v. University of Pittsburgh, supra, at 294-5. 5
At the present time, I am only concerned with the relevance of the information which plaintiff seeks to discover, rather than the weight of such information as evidence. If circumstances such as those discussed in Mirabal and Samuel are present in this case, defendants are free to describe them in appropriate affidavits. 6 The mere possibility that the significance of the information which plaintiff seeks to discover may be discounted due to such circumstances does not, however, mean that plaintiff should be precluded from obtaining the information. Thus, in Naismith v. Professional Golfers Ass’n, supra, at 563, the court elected to adhere to Stastny rather than Mirabal and Samuel, stating:
“The Court need not at this time decide how much weight to place on defendants’ attorneys’ hours, but those hours are at least minimally relevant. * * * [The factors relied on in Mirabal and Samuels] would be significant in deciding what weight to give evidence of defendants’ attorneys’ hours, but they do not preclude the discovery of such evidence.”
I therefore conclude that defendants must answer plaintiff’s Interrogatories concerning the amount of time expended by their attorneys in this case and the amount of costs and disbursements incurred by them.
Plaintiff is not however entitled to discover information concerning the amount of legal fees incurred by defendants in this action. The lodestar figure is determined according to the hourly rate normally
Based on the foregoing discussion, defendants’ motion for a protective order is hereby ORDERED granted with respect to Interrogatories 1, 2 and 3 but is ORDERED denied with respect to Interrogatories 4 and 5.
Notes
. I have assumed that Plaintiffs’ Interrogatory number 4 refers to costs or disbursements other than legal fees.
. Defendants dispute that Blowers is a “prevailing party” within the meaning of section 2000e-5(k). On the current motion, however, the issue which has been presented is whether, assuming that Blowers is entitled to an award of fees, information concerning legal services provided to defendants in connection with this case is relevant in determining the amount of such a prospective award.
. In
Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc.,
. They assert (although not with much vigor) that the information sought by Blowers is privileged. General information such as the number of hours worked by an attorney in connection with a particular case is not a privileged “communication” between client and attorney.
Colton v. United States,
. In Mirabal, the court also stated that “the amount of fees which one side is paid by its client is a matter involving various motivations in an on-going attorney-client relationship and may, therefore, have little relevance to the value which petitioner has provided to his clients in a given case.” Mirabal v. General Motors Acceptance Corp., supra, at 731. This suggestion relates to the relevance of information concerning the amount of fees charged to defendants, an issue which can (and should) be severed from the discoverability of information concerning the amount of time expended by defense counsel.
. Blowers has succeeded on her claim of retaliatory discharge, but I have found that the other plaintiffs’ claims are without merit. With respect to Blowers’s claim for fees, the probative value of evidence concerning the amount of time expended by defense counsel will probably depend, to a large extent, on the amount of time spent defending Blowers’s claim of retaliatory discharge.
