AMENDED MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER
This round of cross motions arises out of a civil rights action brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Plaintiffs Lillian Corder and Roberta Lombardo sought recovery of damages from numerous individual law enforcement officers and from the County of Orange. Trial was to a jury, which on August 18, 1987 returned a verdict awarding plaintiffs $24,006 in compensatory and punitive damages against three of the defendants, Stanton Loder, Keith Brown, and Roy Brown. The jury also returned verdicts in favor of the remaining defendants; *1420 of these, it found that several of the officers had violated plaintiffs’ civil rights, but that they were entitled to qualified immunity.
On September 30, 1985 the defendants County of Orange, Cities of Bell and Cudahy, and County of Los Angeles timely made a Fed.R.Civ.P. 68 offer, in behalf of the individually named and served defendants to plaintiffs, of $45,000 in settlement of their claims. Plaintiff Roberta Lombardo accepted this offer and plaintiff Lillian Corder rejected it.
Plaintiffs bring the following motions: 1) to enforce the Rule 68 offer accepted by Roberta Lombardo; 2) for attorney’s fees pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988; 3) for a new trial and Judgment Notwithstanding the Verdict; 4) for sanctions and attorney’s fees pursuant to Local Rule 7.15.4. Defendants bring the following motions: 1) for a new trial and JNOV (all defendants); 2) for attorney’s fees pursuant to Rule 68 (County of Los Angeles); 3) to hold a witness in contempt (Roy Brown); and 4) to take the contempt motion off calendar (Roy Brown).
Rule 68 Offer
1. Enforcement of the Rule 68 Offer
Plaintiff Lombardo moves to enforce the Rule 68 judgment that defendants offered on September 30, 1985. Lombardo accepted the offer; Corder rejected it.
Defendants argue that the offer cannot now be enforced. They claim that it was a joint offer and that both plaintiffs had to accept it to render it enforceable. Because of the partial rejection, they contend that their offer was terminated.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 68 offers of judgment are analogous to contract offers in that there must be a “meeting of the minds” to render the offer enforceable.
Boorstein v. City of New York,
2. Effect of the Rule 68 Offer
Defendants also argue that because the rejection of the Rule 68 offer by one of the plaintiffs has the same effect as if it had been rejected by both, any award of costs or attorney’s fees to the plaintiff pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988 therefore should only be based on the fees and costs incurred prior to the rejection of the Rule 68 offer. Additionally, the County of Los Angeles requests that it be awarded costs and attorney’s fees for the period after the rejection. 1
Defendants’ position is not sound. In calculating whether the judgment awarded plaintiffs is less than the Rule 68 offer, the court must also consider the pre-offer costs, including attorney’s fees that the plaintiffs deserve pursuant to § 1988, that defendants will pay. Judge Posner in
Chesny v. Marek,
Plaintiffs Attorney’s Fees
Under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 prevailing parties may obtain attorney’s fees. The amount of the award is within the sound discretion of the district court.
Kerr v. Screen Extras Guild, Inc.,
1. The Lodestar Figure
The factors that generally determine the “reasonable” hours and rate used in the first step calculation are identified in the
Johnson
twelve factor test.
Jordan v. Multnomah,
a) Reasonable Hours
Plaintiffs’ counsel claims that his firm expended a total of 601.95 hours on the case over a period of two years. This figure is based on a daily log that indicates the type of work and the precise amount of time that counsel spent on the case. The record furnished is similar to that employed by major law firms for their private clients and therefore meets the standard suggested by the Supreme Court.
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
The district court must review this record to determine that the time actually spent was reasonably necessary.
Sealy, Inc. v. Easy Living, Inc.,
Based on the record, it is not possible to determine meaningfully the adequacy of individual entries in isolation from the issue of the propriety of the overall number of hours expended on the case. Different litigators have different styles; that plaintiffs’ counsel occasionally opts for all-nighters and summarizes depositions himself should not be held against him if his overall figure is reasonable. 4 Moreover, it is not surprising to me that plaintiffs’ counsel in this case could have spent six hours preparing for closing argument on the last day of trial, which together with the nearly 12 hours of trial, would account for what would otherwise appear to be a high number recorded on a single day.
There is nothing in the record to suggest that the over-all figure is unreasonable. Defendants do not argue that the numerous depositions that were taken were unnecessary; it is also true that there were numerous pre-trial conferences and it is no secret that the court, at least, regarded much of the process as unnecessary. However, requests for sanctions have already been dealt with and the hours expended as a whole appear in line with what turned out to be required. While not extraordinarily complex, the factual and legal issues in the case were also not that simple or routine. Some forty law enforcement officers were involved in the investigation, search and seizure that were the subject of the suit. Finally, counsel for defendant County of Los Angeles spent approximately the same number of hours in defending the case, Defendant County of Los Angeles Motion for Attorney’s Fees, at Attachment 1; the similarity between the two figures strongly suggests that the number of hours expended by plaintiffs’ counsel is reasonable,
b) Reasonableness of Rate
Plaintiffs’ counsel’s customary rate for this type of case was $200 for the period January 1, 1984-December 31, 1985 and $225 per hour from January 1, 1986 to date. There is evidence, Declaration of Brian O’Neill, Esquire, that the typical hourly rate in Los Angeles for trial attorneys with 13 years experience is between $180 and $225. 5 Plaintiffs’ counsel’s practice is concentrated in civil rights litigation.
Although the affidavit of the moving attorney that his or her fees are reasonable will not carry the burden of proof imposed,
Jordan, supra
at 1263, nor does an affidavit of another attorney that fails to cite that attorney’s actual rates, or which does not give specific examples of the market rate, add greatly to the record,
Id.
n. 9, nonetheless I know from my own experience that litigators in the Los Angeles area with thirteen years experience charge an hourly rate that comports with the evidence from Mr. O’Neill. Both declarations make some reference to what the attorneys perceive to be the going rate in the community. Moreover, defendants do not really suggest an alternative market rate; instead, they cite examples from other communities over a period of several years that are not particularly relevant. Defendant Los Angeles County Opposition, at p. 11. While plaintiffs' counsel has therefore presented enough evidence of the market rate to sustain a fee award, the $225 figure he seeks is at the high end of the market range. Although the matter was tried effi
*1423
ciently and ably, neither the pre-trial process nor the paperwork submitted throughout was quite so efficient and able. I find that an hourly rate of $180 for 1984-85 and $200 for 1986-87 is appropriate.
Cf. Grendel’s Den, Inc. v. Larkin,
2. Plaintiffs’ Degree of Success
The second step in the fee analysis is to evaluate the prevailing parties’ degree of success and adjust the lodestar figure accordingly.
But see, Pennsylvania,
A downward evaluation in this case is appropriate. Even though the Rule 68 offer does not block the award of fees, the court cannot ignore the reality that the net effect of plaintiffs’ undergoing the ordeal of trial was to win a much smaller figure than they could have obtained much earlier by simply accepting defendants’ offer. Plaintiffs’ counsel’s arguments in his fee request actually bolster the view that the trial did not entirely serve their interests. If $24,000 is “a lot” of money to plaintiffs, as counsel states, Plaintiffs’ Reply, p. 3, then the $45,000 offered by defendants would have been “a lot” more. And because plaintiffs’ counsel admits that he thought the case had little economic value, the decision to proceed to trial seems all the more inexplicable. While this decision was ultimately one for the plaintiffs to make, it is nonetheless hard to view the result as wholly successful.
I also recognize that in civil rights cases the degree of success does not depend on the size of the monetary award alone.
City of Riverside v. Santos Rivera, 477
U.S. 561,
In summary, the court calculates costs as follows. Plaintiffs’ counsel’s fees for 1985 are $42,997.50 (245.2 hours at $175 per hour) and for 1986-87 are $66,700 (333.5 hours at $200 per hour). Paralegal costs are $1,462.50 and costs for copying are $1,756.25. The total, after application of the 20% discount, is $90,333.
Plaintiffs’ J.N.O.V. and New Trial Motions
Plaintiffs argue that they are entitled to a J.N.O.V. and a new trial because certain of the defendants are not entitled to the affirmative defense of qualified immunity. Plaintiffs do not advance any arguments that they have not previously tendered on this issue.
The standards for granting a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict are the same as those governing the granting of a directed verdict.
Hallmark Industry v. Reynolds Metals Co.,
Rule 59 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides that a new trial may be granted “for any of the reasons for which new trials have heretofore been granted in actions at law in the courts of the United States....” Rule 59 gives the trial judge the power to prevent what she considers to be a miscarriage of justice; thus, she may order a new trial if she deems it in the interest of justice to do so.
Moist Cold Refrigerator Co. v. Lou Johnson Co.,
Plaintiffs do not advance compelling factual or legal arguments for overturning the verdict. The court believes that the jury instruction on the defense of qualified immunity accurately reflects current law.
Anderson v. Creighton,
— U.S. —,
*1425 Defendants’ J.N.O.V and New Trial Motion
Defendants Brown and Loder contend that there was no basis for an award of punitive damages against them. However, evidence of the circumstances under which plaintiffs were ordered out of their house, their treatment by defendants, and the basis upon which the defendants acted is reasonably susceptible of a finding that these officers’ treatment of plaintiffs was oppressive.
Contempt Motion
The motion to hold Yagman in contempt for having failed to appear at a deposition is taken off calendar, subject to the condition that plaintiffs’ attorney’s fees are paid. Despite being advised of improper service, defendant persisted in going forward with the motion for contempt, thereby necessitating the preparation and filing of a response.
Notes
. In
Marek v. Chesny,
. Two California cases interpreting the California analog of Rule 68 also combined the pre-of
*1421
fer costs and the actual award in comparing the amount plaintiff received and defendant’s judgment.
Bennett v. Brown,
. If the combined amount of the costs and the judgment did not exceed the offer, the court would face the interesting question, apparently one of first impression, of how to treat a joint Rule 68 offer in which one of the plaintiffs accepted the offer and the other rejected it — at situation that raises difficult equitable issues. To treat the offer as rejected for this purpose would arguably unfairly extinguish the accepting plaintiffs right to costs and attorney’s fees. Yet a rule that required joint acceptance might encourage multiple plaintiffs to hedge their bets by collusively having at least one party accept the offer and at least one other decline. That way they could both benefit if the judgment is greater than the offer, and could both avoid incurring costs and loosing attorney’s fees if it is less.
. Obviously individual items that are logically impossible ("twenty-five billable hour days") or facially egregious should be stricken even if the over all figure is reasonable. None appears here.
. Plaintiffs’ counsel’s reference to the fees that he has been awarded in similar cases provides excellent support for the suggested rate. Unfortunately, however, this information is not included by reference in the declaration and is thus not part of the record.
. Plaintiffs' counsel cites the contingent nature of his fee arrangement as a factor that the Court should consider in determining his rate without mentioning that the Supreme Court has recently greatly restricted the consideration of this factor.
Pennsylvania v. Delaware Valley Citizens’ Council,
— U.S. —,
. An advantage of considering this factor at this stage is that determining a reasonable hourly rate can often take on an unfortunate personal cast ("How good a lawyer is this person?”), while analysis of success in a particular case suggests a more objective approach.
