Memorandum of Decision and Order
In a memorandum of decision dated October 17, 1973, this court directed that an evidentiary hearing be held on the plaintiff’s motion for supplementary attorney’s fees for services rendered in the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit,
At the hearing, plaintiff’s counsel testified that he had expended 158 hours in performing various services relating to *461 the appeal before the Court of Appeals, and 354 hours in performing services relating to the appeal before the Supreme Court. Plaintiff’s counsel is an experienced labor lawyer. The issues involved in the appeals were novel. His skill and effort brought success to the plaintiff and other members of the defendant-union.
I find that of the 158 hours devoted to preparing the appeal before the Court of Appeals, approximately 100 hours were spent performing services that may be fairly classified as legal. Of the 354 hours devoted to the appeal before the Supreme Court, I find that approximately 110 hours may be fairly classified as time spent performing legal services. 1
The fair and reasonable hourly rate for the legal services rendered is $50.00. Plaintiff’s counsel is entitled to the sum of $5,000 for services rendered in the Court of Appeals and $5,500 for services rendered in the Supreme Court.
Defendant vigorously opposes the grant of counsel fees for services rendered in the Supreme Court on the ground that the appeal involved solely the right to counsel fees.
2
The fact that the right to counsel fees was the only issue litigated on appeal does not in itself, however, preclude recovery by plaintiff’s counsel for services rendered in that appeal. In Knight v. Auciello,
The determinative factor in awarding counsel fees is whether the services rendered conferred a “substantial benefit on the members of an ascertainable class.” Mills v. Electric Auto-Lite,
With the exception of Knight v. Auciello,
supra,
the search for authority on this precise point proved to be fruitless. The court finds some support for reimbursing counsel in Newman v. Piggie Park Enterprises, Inc.,
If successful plaintiffs were routinely forced to bear their own attorneys’ fees, few aggrieved parties would be in a position to advance the public interest .... Congress therefore enacted the provision for counsel fees . to encourage individuals injured by racial discrimination to seek judicial relief under Title II.
Similarly, the Supreme Court in Hall v. Cole, upholding this court’s award of counsel fees for services rendered at trial, pointed to the Congressional objectives in enacting the Labor Management and Disclosure Act:
Title I of the LMRDA — the “Bill of Rights of Members of Labor Organizations” — was specifically designed to promote the “full and active participation by the rank and file in the affairs of the union,” and . . . the rights enumerated in Title I were deemed “vital to the independence of the membership and the effective and fair operation of the union as the representative of its membership.”
The court has this day made an order directing the defendant union to pay plaintiff the sum of $10,500.
Notes
. Counsel claims to have spent the following amounts of time in preparing for the Supreme Court appeal:
Reviewing petition for cert. 20 hours
Memo in opposition to cert. 20
Motion to dismiss writ of cert. 30
Reviewing petitioner’s brief 30
Researching respondent’s brief 140
Drafting respondent’s brief 80 Reviewing A.C.L.U. amicus brief 20
Travel and argument 14
354 hours
A large portion of this time, however, was spent in performing clerical and secretarial tasks. Plaintiff’s counsel does not engage secretarial help and personally performs many tasks normally assigned to secretaries and clerks.
. The “Questions Presented” as formulated in Petitioner’s Brief indicate the limited scope of the appeal before the Supreme Court:
1. Whether a federal court in a Section 102 proceeding, reviewing an expulsion of a member by a union, finding bis expulsion in violation of Section 101(a)(2), and directing his restoration to membership, may also award the member’s attorney reasonable counsel fees.
2. Whether a federal court in a Section 102 proceeding, in restoring an expelled member to membership, may award reasonable counsel fees when it is found that the member sustained no damages by reason of the expulsion; additionally found that the union in good faith believed it had the right to discipline the member of his conduct; further found no motivation of malice by the union in its discipline of the member and does not find that the member by his conduct acted in good faith, but instead concludes that the member’s conduct was motivated in fact for personal political ambitions.
. Knight involved a claim under 42 TJ.S.C. § 1982 of racial discrimination in housing. This claim, it should be noted, does not fall within 42 U.S.O. § 2000a-3(b) providing for counsel fees in' cases brought under the 1964 Civil Rights Act.
. In
Kahan,
the Court of Appeals, in reversing the lower court’s dismissal of the plaintiff’s petition for counsel fees, mentioned in a footnote that “[t]he District Court . . . must determine the actual benefit which plaintiff created for the other . . . shareholders.”
. The Supreme Court in Hall v. Cole,
