Lead Opinion
Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge HENDERSON.
This appeal involves consolidated challenges to attorneys’ fee awards granted under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1988 & Supp. V 1993) in favor of prevailing parties (collectively “plaintiffs”) in three civil rights eases against the District of Columbia (“District”). In support of the fee claims, the plaintiffs’ attor
The District Court found that plaintiffs’ attorneys intentionally charged their poorer clients reduced rates for non-economic, public-spirited reasons. The record indicates plaintiff counsels’ years of legal experience as well as their ability to handle complicated federal cases. The court found that the relevant market was complex federal litigation and that plaintiffs’ requested rates were in line with those prevailing in the District of Columbia for similar services by lawyers of reasonably comparable skill, experience, .and reputation. Thus, relying on established law, the District Court granted plaintiffs’ motion for reasonable attorneys’ fees. Finding no abuse of discretion, we affirm the judgments of the District Court.
In section 1988 attorneys’ fee cases, attorneys who customarily charge reduced fees reflecting non-economic, public-spirited goals may seek fees based on the prevailing market rates if the prevailing party demonstrates the reasonableness of the requested hourly rates. That burden entails the following: first, if the attorney customarily charges clients lower rates than plaintiff has requested under section 1988, the attorney must demonstrate that the customarily reduced rates are charged for non-economic reasons; second, the attorney must offer information documenting his or her skill, experience, and reputation; and third, the attorney must produce evidence of the prevailing market rates in the relevant community for attorneys of comparable skill, experience, and reputation. In the instant eases, plaintiffs met this burden, and the District offered little by way of rebuttal. Accordingly, the District Court did not err in finding plaintiffs’ requested rates reasonable and granting the motions for attorneys’ fee awards. Nor did the District Court err in determining that complex federal litigation was the relevant market for purposes of establishing the prevailing market rates in the District of Columbia. Accordingly, we affirm the District Court’s attorneys’ fee awards in all three cases.
I. BACKGROUND
In these consolidated cases, plaintiffs supported their motions for attorneys’ fees by submitting evidence of their attorneys’ billing practices, their attorneys’ legal experience, skill, and reputation, and the prevailing market rates for complex federal litigation in the District of Columbia. Plaintiffs’ motions were granted in all three cases. Although each case involved a different claim — Covington v. District of Columbia,
Attorneys for the plaintiffs in Covington brought a section 1983 action on behalf of ten prison inmates who were beaten while shackled and handcuffed and nine inmates who were sent to a maximum security facility
Plaintiffs’ fee application included information pertaining to counsels’ billing practices; their experience, skill, and reputation; and the prevailing market rates for complex federal litigation in the District of Columbia. Specifically, the lead attorneys in the case, Michael Gaffney and Daniel Schember, submitted declarations, explaining that they compose a two-attorney firm which handles federal court litigation concerning civil rights and civil liberties, military and veterans law, employment and labor law, and administrative proceedings. According to their declarations, Gaffney and Schember choose clients and cases based on “commitments to the clients and to the constitutional and statutory rights at issue,” Declaration of Michael J. Gaffney at 5, Joint Appendix (J.A.) at 1-163, and they offer needy clients reduced or below-market rates for these non-eeonomic reasons.
Two other attorneys in the Covington case, Linda Delaney and Mark Hager, also submitted declarations regarding their billing practices and experience. Delaney’s declaration revealed that when she bills clients, she charges below-market prices for non-economic reasons.
The Covington plaintiffs submitted a good deal of evidence establishing the prevailing market rates for comparably experienced attorneys handling complex federal litigation. They submitted the original Laffey matrix, a schedule of charges based on years of experience developed in Laffey v. Northwest Airlines, Inc., 572 F.Supp. 354 (D.D.C.1983), rev’d on other grounds,
Based on this evidence, plaintiffs requested fees for Schember and Gaffney at a rate of $260 per hour, which represented the 1993 prevailing market rate
The District Court found for plaintiffs and awarded them the requested attorneys’ fees. The trial judge noted that, because the Cov-ington “plaintiffs’ assertions that their counsel have taken public interest cases for below-market rates are reasonably well-documented” and that these assertions were “virtually unchallenged,” the court would “take plaintiffs at their word.” Covington,
The District Court found the District’s evidence unpersuasive: “Defendants’ sole affidavit ... cites only seven instances in which lawyers with 10-20 years of experience charged about $150 per hour in representing plaintiffs in civil rights, employment, or discrimination matters. Standing alone, these seven instances are insufficient to demonstrate that $150 per hour is the prevailing rate across the District of Columbia in this sub-market.” Id. at 898. Finally, the District Court rejected the District’s submarket theory, noting that the District had failed to convince the court “that lawyers handling civil rights, employment, or discrimination cases for plaintiffs constitute a sub-market of their own,” and that “the prevailing rate in the sub-market ... is — as defendants claim — lower than the rate prevailing in the broader legal market” of complex federal litigation. Id. at 898 & n. 8.
The District Court awarded plaintiffs attorneys’ fees for Gaffney and Schember at an hourly rate of $260; for Delaney and Hager at an hourly rate of $160; for the law graduates at an hourly rate of $85; and for the law students at an hourly rate of $70. Id. at 900-02. Defendants conceded to the reasonableness of the hours claimed in plaintiffs’ original motion. Id. at 903.
II. Analysis
The fee shifting provision embraced by 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b), covering federal civil rights actions, provides that
the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party, other than the United States, a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the costs.
“reasonable fees” under § 1988 are to be calculated according to the prevailing market rates in the relevant community, regardless of whether plaintiff is represented by private or non-profit counsel.
Four years later, this court, sitting en banc, held that
the prevailing market rate method heretofore used in awarding fees to traditional for-profit firms and public interest legal services organizations shall apply as well to those attorneys who practice privately and for profit but at reduced rates reflecting non-economic goals.
Save Our Cumberland Mountains,
This case involves a relatively straightforward application of these principles. The attorneys in the instant cases, who either practice privately and for-profit but at reduced rates reflecting non-economic goals or who have no established billing practice, request the prevailing market rates.
A The Attorneys’ Fee Case
As the Supreme Court has stated, “[a] request for attorney’s fees should not result in a second major litigation.” Hensley v. Eckerhart,
Under the statute, the district court is expressly empowered to exercise its discretion in determining the amount of a fee award, see 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b); however, a fee applicant bears the burden of establishing entitlement to an award, documenting the appropriate hours, and justifying the reasonableness of the rates, see Blum,
As a general matter, this court has characterized the Blum formulation as constituting a three-part analysis: “(1) determination of the number of hours reasonably expended in litigation; (2) determination of a reasonable hourly rate or ‘lodestar’; and (3) the use of multipliers as merited.” SOCM,
First, in cases in which prevailing attorneys request rates which are greater than those they normally charge, the attorneys must offer some evidence that they charge reduced rates for public-spirited or non-economic reasons. In SOCM, the court addressed the claims of attorneys engaged in private, for-profit practice, who “adjusted fee schedules downward from pro bono or quasi public interest motives to reflect the reduced ability of the client to pay or what the attorney saw as the importance and justice of the client’s cause.”
Congress did not intend the private but public-spirited rate-cutting attorney to be penalized for his public spiritedness by being paid on a lower scale than either his higher priced fellow barrister from a more established firm or his salaried neighbor at a legal services clinic.
As was true in SOCM, the burden is on the fee applicant to show that the attorney’s billing practices are of the sort covered by the SOCM test. That is, the attorney must show that his or her custom of charging reduced rates is in fact attributable to “public spiritedness.” Implicit in this line of inquiry is the assumption that the law was not written to subsidize attorneys who charge below-market rates because they cannot command anything more. And a defendant is free to rebut a fee claim on these terms in cases in which the issue is posed. We recognize that, in some cases, this may be a difficult line of inquiry, for an attorney who cannot command market rates invariably will have a “custom” of charging rates below the market. This problem is diminished with respect to attorneys who charge variable rates (both at and below the market, with the latter attributable to public-spirited goals). In any event, it is within the sound discretion of the district court to weigh the evidence to determine whether an attorney customarily charges reduced rates for non-economic reasons.
Second, prevailing parties must offer evidence to demonstrate their attorneys’ experience, skill, reputation, and the complexity of the ease they handled. In articulating the plaintiffs’ burden in these cases, the Supreme Court required that fee applicants “produce satisfactory evidence — in addition to the attorney’s own affidavits — that the requested rates are in line with those prevailing in the community for similar services by lawyers of reasonably comparable skill, experience, and reputation.” Blum,
Third, plaintiffs must produce data concerning the prevailing market rates in the relevant community for attorneys of reasonably comparable skill, experience, and reputation. This is undoubtedly a difficult assessment, and the Supreme Court has so acknowledged:
We recognize, of course, that determining an appropriate “market rate” for the services of a lawyer is inherently difficult. Market prices of commodities and most services are determined by supply and demand. In this traditional sense there is no such thing as a prevailing market rate for the service of lawyers in a particular community. The type of services rendered by lawyers, as well as their experience, skill, and reputation, varies extensively — even within a law firm. Accordingly, the hourly rates of lawyers in private practice also vary widely.
The Supreme Court’s decision in Blum establishes the framework for analysis:
To inform and assist the court in the exercise of its discretion, the burden is on the fee applicant to produce satisfactory evidence — in addition to the attorney’s own affidavits — that the requested rates are in line with those prevailing in the community for similar services by lawyers of reasonably comparable skill, experience, and reputation. A rate determined in.this way is normally deemed to be reasonable, and is referred to — for convenience — as the prevailing market rate.
Blum,
In order to demonstrate this third element, plaintiff's may point to such evidence as an updated version of the Laffey matrix or the U.S. Attorney’s Office matrix, or then-own survey of prevailing market rates in the community. In SOCM, we approved of the district court’s reliance, at least in part, on the schedule of prevailing rates compiled in Laffey. Although the SOCM court remanded the ease to the district court for the limited purpose of making new findings as to reasonable hourly rates at the time- the services were performed, it stated:
We do not intend, by this remand, to diminish the value of the fee schedule compiled by the District Court in Laffey. Indeed, we commend its use for the year to which it applies. Perhaps the most desirable result of the present litigation would be the compiling of a similar schedule of prevailing community rates for other relevant years.
SOCM,
“When ... the applicant for a fee has carried his burden of showing that the claimed rate and number of hours are reasonable, the resulting product is presumed to be the reasonable fee contemplated - by § 1988.” Blum,
Once the fee applicant has provided support for the requested rate, the burden falls on the Government to go forward with evidence that the rate is erroneous. And when the Government attempts to rebut the case for a requested rate, it must do so by equally specific countervailing evidence. Although there may be occasions in which the applicant’s showing is so weak that the Government may without more simply challenge the rate as unsubstantiated, in*1110 the normal ease the Government must either accede to the applicant’s requested rate or provide specific contrary evidence tending to show that a lower rate would be appropriate.
Concerned Veterans,
Defendants may challenge any part of the prevailing parties’ ease for attorneys’ fees. For example, defendants may challenge the plaintiff attorneys’ claims that they charge reduced rates for non-economic reasons, and this might include a claim that under no circumstances would that particular plaintiffs attorney ever command the rates he or she requests. Defendants also may challenge the plaintiff attorneys’ claims as to their competence, experience, reputation, or performance in the instant case. Finally, defendants may challenge plaintiff attorneys’ market data, in an effort to show that the submitted market rates are inaccurate.
B. The Claims in this Case
Our review function in this, case is limited, for district courts act with a real measure of discretion in granting a fee award under section 1988. See Blum,
In this ease, plaintiffs clearly met their burden and their requested rates were properly accorded a presumption of reasonableness. Plaintiffs submitted their counsels’ declarations attesting that they charged below-market rates for non-economic, public-spirited reasons.
The District, on the other hand, submitted little in rebuttal. First, the District attempt
Second, the District attempted to argue that plaintiffs are only entitled to the rates they regularly charge, i.e., that these rates are in fact the prevailing market rates. This argument was considered and rejected by this court in SOCM, and, therefore, merits little attention here. As the SOCM court stated, “[t]he result sought by plaintiffs, that is a fee award based on prevailing market rates rather than the actual rates of [plaintiffs’ attorneys], is not only not inconsistent with the express intent of Congress, but rather accomplishes Congress’ express goals.”
Finally, the District argues that the court should define the relevant market, for purposes of determining the prevailing market rates, narrowly, as including only plaintiff attorneys in civil rights, employment, or discrimination actions. Covington,
The Senate Report accompanying the enactment of section 1988 suggests that Congress envisioned rates to be set according to standards in other types of complex federal litigation: “It is intended that the amount of fees awarded under [§ 1988] be governed by the same standards which prevail in other types of equally complex Federal litigation, such as antitrust eases[,] and not be reduced because the rights may be nonpecuniary in nature.” Blum,
In short, we can find no basis to overturn the District Court’s determination that the relevant market is that of complex federal litigation.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the District Court did not abuse its discretion in awarding plaintiffs reasonable attorneys’ fees in these consolidated cases.
So ordered.
Notes
. For the sake of simplicity, our references to the parties and to the District Court will focus on the Covington litigation. We emphasize, however, that there are no material differences in the three cases on the principal points here in issue, and neither side suggests otherwise.
. From 1986 to 1990, Gaffney's and Schember's highest hourly rate was $125, and from 1990 to the present, their highest hourly rate was $150. They also accept clients on an attorneys’ fee award or contingency fee basis. Declaration of Gaffney at 2/ 12-13, J.A. at 1-160, 1-170-71.
. Schember and Gaffney were lead or sole counsel in several cases brought in federal district court, federal court of appeals, and the Supreme Court. Declaration of Schember at 2-5, J.A. at 1-151-54; Declaration of Gaffney at 2-4, J.A. at 1-160-62.
. Schember taught administrative law, constitutional law, and advanced legal research and writing at Antioch School of Law as an adjunct professor during the 1980s. Declaration of Schember at 5, J.A. at 1-154.
. Gaffney received an education law fellowship from the Legal Services Corporation’s Research Institute for Legal Assistance to co-author a paper on organizing the private bar to address the problems of urban education. Declaration of Gaffney at 8, J.A. at 1-166.
. In 1982, the ACLU Fund of the National Capital Area awarded their firm the Alan Barth Service Award for their effort in Hobson v. Wilson,
. Schember and Gaffney have participáted in several federally funded inter-disciplinary policy research studies concerning implementation of federal education programs. Declaration of Gaffney at 8, J.A. at 1-166.
. Gaffney also served on the board of directors of the National Veterans Legal Services Project, a non-profit organization funded by the Legal Services Corporation; Vietnam Veterans of America, and the Agent Orange Class Assistance Program. Declaration of Gaffney at 9, J.A. at 1-167.
. In 1988, Delaney set her hourly rate at $125 and has not changed it. She asserted that she "essentially permit[s] [her] clients to pay what they could afford when they could afford it.” Declaration of Delaney at 5, J.A. at 1-189.
. The original Laffey matrix rates for 1983 were as follows:
$175 an hour for very experienced federal court litigators, i.e., lawyers in their 20th year or more after graduation from law school;
$150 an hour for experienced federal court litigators in their 11th through 19th years after law school graduation;
$125 an hour for experienced federal court litigators in their 8th through 10th years after graduation from law school;
$100 an hour for senior associates, i.e., 4 to 7 years after graduation from law school; and
$75 an hour for junior associates, i.e., 1 to 3 years after law school graduation.
Laffey,572 F.Supp. at 371 . The Laffey court noted that plaintiffs’ fee matrix was supported “with a barrage of data.” Id.
. Covington attorneys also submitted 1988, 1989, and 1990 hourly rate information for lawyers in more than a dozen local law firms used by plaintiffs in Lewis v. Brady, Civ.Action No. 82-0918 (D.D.C. Feb. 7, 1991), J.A. at I-113-17, as well as affidavits from four attorneys in Robles attesting to the reasonableness of annual increases of $10 per hour for the updated Laffey matrix. See J.A. at 1-141-49.
. Plaintiffs requested current market rates rather than the rates that prevailed in the market when counsel actually worked on Covington to compensate for the delay in payment of their attorneys' fees. See Covington,
. Although the Laffey matrix charts fees only up to 1988-89, the. Robles district court updated the Laffey matrix by adding $10 per hour to the 1988-89 hourly rate of $220 and to the hourly rates of each succeeding year. See Covington,
. The U.S. Attorney's Office developed its fee matrix by adding the Consumer Price Index increase for the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area to the prior year's rate and rounding upwards if the sum is within $3 of the next $5 multiple. See Covington,
. Plaintiffs do not request any enhancements above the "lodestar” to compensate their attorneys for the risk of accepting contingency fee arrangements.
. The Supreme Court noted that the Senate Report accompanying the Civil Rights Attorneys’ Fees Award Act of 1976 explicitly approved of the "appropriate standards” for awarding attorneys' fees set out in Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc.,
. In SOCM, the court approved of the district court's use of the Laffey matrix, a schedule of hourly rates based largely on years of experience. See SOCM,
. In fact, the District Court in Galloway v. Superior Court noted its dissatisfaction with the Laffey matrix in this regard: "The Court accepts as credible evidence the Matrix, but nonetheless would hope that a more complete breakdown and study of rates could be compiled for future use in attorneys' fee awards.” Civ. Action No. 91-0644, slip op. at 4 n. 1.
. The dissenting opinion appears to challenge the District Court's findings that counsel in Sex-cius and Galloway reduced their rates for non-economic reasons. However, the record clearly supports the District Court on this point.
Counsel in Galloway submitted an affidavit explaining that "[b]ecause my clients are unable to pay the rates prevailing in the community for complex federal litigation and are frequently unemployed, my rates vary from pure contingent fee to $200 per hour, and I rely to a great extent on court-awarded fees for my compensation.” Second Affidavit of Vicki G. Golden, J.A. at III-50-51. The District Court determined that "[b]e-cause this case involves both attorneys who practice privately and for profit but who give reduced rates to many clients, and attorneys who practice in public interest legal services organizations, SOCM is particularly relevant.” Galloway, slip op. at 3, J.A. at III — 14. The District Court found that "[plaintiffs’ counsel] is exactly the type of private attorney who charges reduced rates to clients due to non-economic goals discussed in SOCM.” Id. Counsel in Sexcius submitted an affidavit with similar explanations, stating that their "clients are unable to pay the rates prevailing in the community for complex federal litigation,” and that they "charged plaintiffs a low hourly rate because their case was important and as teachers they could not afford the prevailing market rates.” Declaration of Francine K. Weiss, J.A. at 11-71. The District Court in Sexci-us found that "[bjecause plaintiffs’ counsel charged plaintiffs this low $100 rate out of public interest motives, plaintiffs are entitled to collect the prevailing market rate, not merely the rate they actually charged plaintiffs.” Sexcius,
. In reviewing a case approved of in the Senate Report that accompanied the Civil Rights Attorneys Fees Award Act, the SOCM court noted that "Congress did not intend to use historical billing rates as a cap on fee awards.” SOCM,
. The District mentions in its brief that the market consists of those attorneys who litigate "employment discrimination and civil rights actions in the District of Columbia.” Brief for the District of Columbia at 43. However, the point was not pressed in its briefs; nor did counsel attempt to argue the point when asked at oral argument about whether the District challenged the scope of the relevant market. In fact, counsel for the District suggested that this court need not reach that issue.
. Indeed, as noted by the Third Circuit, it makes little sense to narrow the market in the fashion suggested by the District in this case:
Courts that try to establish public interest market rates by looking to the going rate for public interest work ... do not examine an independently operating market governed by supply and demand, but rather recast fee awards made by previous courts into "market” rates. Courts adopting this micro-market approach, therefore, engage in a tautological, self-referential enterprise.
Student Pub. Interest Research Group v. AT&T Bell Laboratories,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
The Supreme Court has made clear that federal fee shifting statutes “were not designed as a form of economic relief to improve the financial lot of lawyers.” Pennsylvania v. Delaware Valley Citizens’ Council for Clean Air,
The majority recognizes that a fee applicant bears the burden of justifying the reasonableness of his requested hourly rate by showing “at least three elements: the attorneys’ billing practices; the attorneys’ skill, experience, and reputation; and the prevailing market rates in the relevant community.” Maj.Op. at 1107. In my view, however, it does not follow our precedent prescribing the evidence necessary to meet that burden with respect to at least two of the elements.
The applicants chiefly rely on adjusted versions of the fee matrix developed more than ten years ago in Laffey v. Northwest Airlines, Inc.,
In my view, the district court in Covington correctly outlined the type of specific evidence required to fulfill the burden prescribed by NACV:
A statistically reliable, well-documented, and extensive survey of the rates clients pay for a certain sub-market of legal services would be powerfully persuasive. Such a survey would collect the rates of a statistically significant number of lawyers or firms within a legal sub-market, convincing the court that the survey’s scope is broad enough to reflect the market faithfully. Such a survey would be sufficiently documented with supporting affidavits, assuring the court of the accuracy of the survey’s data. Lastly, such a survey would encompass both the high rates that large, prestigious law firms in the area command for their work in the sub-market and the lower rates commanded by others for their work in the sub-market. (Ideally, the survey would also indicate what fraction of clients pay which rates within the sub-market’s rate spectrum. That is, the survey would state what fraction of the sub-market’s clients take their cases to high-priced firms, what fraction to low-priced firms, and what fraction to firms priced in the middle. This would help the court determine whether any given rate is typical or aberrant.)
Covington v. District of Columbia,
Where the district court committed error, however, was in placing the burden of proof on the District, not the applicants.
Second, in Sexcius and Galloway, the district court did not give full effect to our precedent requiring it to consider the rates customarily charged by counsel to their paying clients for whom they have not reduced their rates in the public interest. The court in NACV explained
counsel for applicants may be required to submit specific evidence of his or her actual billing practice during the relevant time period, if in fact applicant has a billing practice to report. This information, when available, will provide important substantiating evidence of the prevailing community rate.... Accordingly, the actual rate that applicant’s counsel can command in the market is itself highly relevant proof of the prevailing community rate.
Together, NACV and SOCM instruct that a lawyer’s usual hourly rate remains the most probative evidence of a reasonable rate to award him under a fee-shifting statute unless that rate does not fairly reflect the value of his services because it is a “reduced rate[ ] reflecting non-economic goals.” SOCM,
I would reverse the district court’s conclusion that leap-frogged over the applicants’ burden and declared instead that the District had failed to meet its burden, thereby leaving it, in its view, no alternative but to grant the applicants’ requests. See, e.g., Covington,
. I assume arguendo that the applicants meet the skill and experience requirements. I part from the majority insofar as it, unlike the district court, relies on special interest recognition within the applicants’ limited area of practice to evaluate their experience. Maj.Op. at 1104-05 nn. 4 — 8. I would suggest that broader assessment such as that reflected in law directory listings like, for example, the Martindale-Hubbell Law Directory provides more probative “pieces of evidence that will enable the District Court to make a reasonable determination of the appropriate hourly rate.” National Ass’n of Concerned Veterans v. Secretary of Defense (NACV),
. Unless otherwise specified, the term "district court” refers to both district judges who decided the three fee awards consolidated on appeal.
. NACV,
. The data submitted with the District’s affidavit indicate that the Laffey rates significantly overstate the non-reduced market rates charged to fee-paying clients for employment discrimination and other civil rights cases in the District of Columbia, sometimes by more than $100 an hour. See, e.g., JA 1-220-21, 243-44 (hourly rate of $150 compared to Laffey rates of $250 and $260); JA 1-221-22, 247-48 (hourly rate of $150 compared to Laffey rates of $290 and $300). If the $150 figure accurately estimates the prevailing community rate for this litigation specialty, the bulk of the awards here is based on hourly rates overstated by more than $100 per hour. The difference amounts to more than $109,000 in additional fees for Schember and Gaffney, see Covington v. District of Columbia,
.Nothing in Save Our Cumberland Mountains, Inc. v. Hodel (SOCM),
. See Covington,
. I do not question the evidence indicating that some of the lawyers in these cases have reduced their rates for non-economic reasons both in the past and here. I do dispute, however, that a lawyer’s billing history can be disregarded in favor of a rate that he has never commanded. For example, a lawyer who normally charges $120 per hour to paying clients but agrees to reduce that rate to $100 per hour for non-economic reasons would not, in my view, be entitled under NACV or SOCM to recover a market rate of $150 per hour.
. Although the district court in Covington concluded that the District had produced insufficient evidence that counsel's ordinary billing rate of $150 per hour was below market value,
