MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON ATTORNEY’S FEES
This action was brought by plaintiff Curtis Cowan (“Cowan”) against defendant The Prudential Insurance Company of America (“Prudential”). Mr. Cowan, a black man, alleged that Prudential had violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e
et seq.
(1982) (“Title VII”) and 42 U.S.C. § 1981 (1982) by discriminating against him in a series of promotion decisions. Mr. Cowan, who had resigned from Prudential when he was not promoted, also alleged that Prudential had subjected him to conditions so intolerable that they amounted to a constructive discharge. For trial purposes, liability and damages were bifurcated. In my decision on liability,
Cowan v. Prudential Ins. Co.,
Title 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(k) (1982) provides that in Title VII cases the court may, in its discretion, award the prevailing party a reasonable attorney’s fee. Title 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1982) provides in similar language for an award of fees to a prevailing party in a Section 1981 action.
Because the law is unclear as to the effect of the size of the damage award on the size of the permissible fee award, I am rendering alternative decisions in the hope of avoiding the need for a remand should appellate review lead to a reversal of the judgment entered. I first calculate a “lodestar” awаrd for all time spent by counsel on issues on which plaintiff prevailed. That amount is $52,905.76. I then calculate an alternative fee award by taking into account both the size of the damage award and the congressional purpose of encouraging the prosecution of meritorious civil rights cases. The amount I arrive at is $20,000.00, for which judgment will be entered. I next calculate an alternative fee taking into account only the size of the actual damage award. That amount is $6,000.
I turn first to the “lodestar” method under which compensation covers all time spent on issues on which plaintiff prevailed. A prevailing plaintiff “should ordinarily recover an attorney’s fee unless special circumstances would render such an award unjust.”
See Hensley v. Eckerhart,
Mr. Cowan requests fees totaling $84,-970.75 and costs of $4,722.55. He claims that the $84,970.75 figure represents a reasonable “lodestar” award based on “prevailing market rates.”
See Blum v. Stenson,
It is quite clear that much of the work performed by plaintiff’s counsel played no role in his prevailing and should not be
*90
compensated. Although a scientifically verifiable method of separating issues on which Mr. Cowan prevailed from those on which he failed is not available, I can easily make rough but fair estimates. The bases for the finding of liability were Mr. Ama-trudo’s admission at trial that he did not even consider Mr. Cowan for promotion and evidence that Mr. Cowan was qualified by Prudential’s own standards.
See
Using these distinctions as a guideline, the proceedings can be separated into six stages. The first stage involves the preparation, filing and pretrial work done through Judge Dorsey’s denial of Prudential’s motion for summary judgment on September 5, 1984. Distinguishing between matters on which plaintiff prevailed from those on which he did not prevail is difficult for this period. However, much of the work done concerned defendant’s motion for summary judgment, which was based on Mr. Amatrudo’s affidavit setting out his purported reasons for not promoting Mr. Cowan. This motion related only to liability and had to be defeated to get to trial. I have previously found that this affidavit was substantially an after-the-fact rationalization that contained various untruths.
See
The second stage encompasses the period from the denial of the motion for summary judgment through the trial. Work during this period consisted of preparation for trial and the trial itself. Substantial portions of this work involved preparation and introduction of evidence regarding Mr. Cowan’s meetings with Prudential officials, interaction with other employees and Mr. Amatrudo, and emotional reactions to events. As noted above, this evidence either did not contribute to Mr. Cowan’s prevailing on the liability issue or was relevant to the unsuccessful constructive discharge claim. Some witnesses who testified to these matters might not have been called or have been allowed to testify because their testimony on liability was essentially cumulative. A substantial discount must therefore be applied. Plaintiff should be awarded fees for 70% of the time spent.
The third stage involves the briefing and oral argument regarding liability. A very substantial discount must be applied here because counsel did not argue Mr. Amatrudo’s failure to consider Mr. Cowan for рromotion as a basis for liability even though I questioned Mr. Amatrudo closely on this issue at trial. Had the case been decided on the basis of the arguments in the briefs alone, Mr. Cowan would have lost on all his claims.
The failure to make this argument is not necessarily due to a lack of skill on the part of plaintiff’s attorneys. They are highly experienced in this area of the law and otherwise ably presented the case. The failurе to brief this argument may well have been a tactical decision based on the belief that Mr. Amatrudo’s failure even to consider Mr. Cowan became known only at trial and, if the sole basis of liability, would not support the constructive discharge claim. They might have feared—with ample reason—that the case on backpay was *91 non-existent unless the constructive discharge claim prevailed. Nevertheless, counsel fees should not be awarded for work that treated the only factual claim on which plaintiff prevailed as not worth winning. Moreover, the failure to make this argument provided the defendant an opportunity to take a cross-appeal, claiming that its due process rights had been violated by my holding it liable on an argument not made in plaintiffs post-trial brief. Still, plaintiff's brief was of some aid to me with regard to Prudential’s evaluative methods, and I award fees for 20% of this time.
The fourth stage encompasses the period from my decision on liability until the decision on damages and includes testimony, briefing and argument. Although I awarded Mr. Cowan $15,000 for emotional distress, very little of this award was based on the work performed by counsel during this period. Plaintiffs evidence on back pay failed to support the claim.
See
The fifth stage consists of the appeal to the Second Circuit. Plaintiff prevailed only as to defendant’s cross-appeal regarding liability, and his counsel indicate that they request fees only for work on the appellate reply brief. They further represent that the hours requested have been discounted to reflect the fact that a portion of the reply brief addresses the plaintiff's unsuccessful arguments оn damages. However, the affidavits supporting the fee request do not reflect the pre-discount total hours spent on the reply brief and indeed itemize some hours for appeals work not related to the reply brief. In addition, the principal ground of the cross-appeal was occasioned by plaintiff’s failure at the trial level to make the sole argument regarding liability that I found persuasive. Accordingly, I аward only 20% of the hours requested for appellate work.
The final stage encompasses preparation of the fee application. Although the application has succeeded only in part, I award fees for 100% of time spent. The hours spent are modest (largely because no attempt was made to separate out work on matters on which plaintiff did not prevail) and the prevailing pоrtion of work cannot be separated from the non-prevailing.
Mr. Cowan’s counsel argues that the congressional policy encouraging the bringing of civil rights suits by “private attorneys general” justifies a very generous fee award in this case. Although counsel concedes that Mr. Cowan’s class action became untenable after
General Tel. Co. v. Falcon,
Neither am I persuaded by Prudential’s contention that Mr. Cowan’s refusal of pretrial offers of settlement exceeding $15,000 should foreclose an award of attorney's fees for work done after that offer. Prudential argues that, because its settlement offers exceeded Mr. Cowan’s ultimate recovery, Mr. Cowan in effect lost by going to trial. Prudential thus maintains that Mr. Cowan cannot properly be described as a “prevailing party.”
It is true that
Marek v. Chesny,
Absent a statutory or procedural rule mandating otherwise, I do not believe that a party’s declining settlement offers should operate to reduce an otherwise appropriate fee award. The very existence of Rule 68, with its precise requirements, creates a negative implication as to offers of settlement that do not comply with its terms. Moreover, it is not clear that a rule barring all attorney’s fee awards for post-offer work where the ultimate judgment is below the offer would be consistent with Congress’s purpose of creating incentives to the bringing of meritorious civil rights claims. A rule giving trial judges discretion to deny such fees where the refusal of an offer is shown after the fact to have been unwise might well lead to very uneven results and even misuse in cases in which judges become involved in settlement negotiations. It may be that our legal system bаdly needs a mechanism to encourage early settlement, but that mechanism ought to emerge either from the rule-making process or directly from Congress.
I turn now to the precise calculation of the “lodestar” amount. In assigning a fee rate to the hours worked, it is the normal practice in this Circuit to apply the historic rate — that is, the amount that an attorney’s time would have been billed at the time the work was done.
New York State Ass’n for Retarded Children v. Carey,
I now turn to the proportionality issue. A majority of the Supreme Court has rejected a rule requiring proportionality of statutory attorney's fees to the damage award where constitutional rights are vindicated in a context of widespread, institutionalized racism.
City of Riverside v. Rivera,
In this case, an award of $52,905.76 in counsel fees is disproportionate to the $15,-000 recovered in damages. Because, as discussed above, the instant case involved isolated discriminatory conduct by one Prudential employee, the considerations that lеd Justice Powell to reject proportionality in Rivera are absent.
Rivera
clearly alters the law of this Circuit. In
DiFilippo v. Morizio,
However, it is not necessary to read the five Justices in Rivera to reject entirely the view that fees awarded in civil rights cases may be calibrated so as to ensure that meritorious civil rights cases will be brought even where substantial uncertainty exists as to the size of the ultimate award. The five Justices may mean only that the “lodestar” approach is inappropriate where the “lodestar” amount is substantially disproportionate to the damage award. If so, then a district court may still make a fee award somewhat in excess of the damage award where it finds that such an excess is necessary to fulfill the congressional purpose of assuring that counsel can be retained. I find the instant matter to be such a case. Because there was never any serious prospect of a back-pay award absent success on the wafer-thin constructive discharge claim, this case probably would not have been brought absent the incentive of a statutory fee award. Moreover, the likely award of damages for emotional injury was quite unpredictable, and I find that limiting the fee award to an amount equal to, or less than, the actual damage award would more probably than not have deterred counsel from taking this case, particularly because a vigorous and skillful defense was inevitable. Taking into account the congressional purpose as well as the size of the damage award, I believe an appropriate award of fees is $20,000.
It is also possible, however, to read Justice Powell and the four dissenting Justices in Rivera to take the position that the size of the actual damage award is dispositive (absent benefit to a wider community) not *94 withstanding deterrence of counsel in the future. Because the “lodestar” method focuses on the time actually spent on a cаse rather than the amount needed to encourage lawyers to take future civil rights cases, it can be argued that the actual damage award is similarly dispositive. Certainly, Justice Rehnquist’s dissent can be read to limit most awards to what attorneys would be able to charge in an identical case but for the availability of a statutory fee award. If that is the case, the fee award here should be substantially less than the damage award. Under this method, I calculate a reasonable award to be $6,000.
For the reasons stated, I award fees in the amount of $20,000. It is so ordered. Dated at New Haven, Connecticut, this 8th day of January, 1990.
APPENDIX A — FEE CALCULATIONS
Stage I (to Sept. 7, 1984)
Garrison: 117.4 hrs. at $175/hr. = $20,545.00 X 90% = $18,490.50
Stage II (to Aug. 30, 1985)
Garrison: 124.8 hrs. at $175/hr. = $21,840.00 Fey: 226.75 hrs. at $ 85/hr. = $19,273.75 X $41,113.75 70% = $28,779.63
_, <t> o • M S* I — 4 to 00 ,p Ig
$13)400.00 X 20% = $ 2,680.00 c+ c-P •€« -se V-1 OO -3 ÜI CR S? C? hi • * IÍ II OO OR 'o CO OX co cn> ^ bo OX Ox CO CO rf*. p ^-3 bx OX ox sr tr ^ I xn o S3
Stage IV (to Sept. 21, 1987)
Garrison: 30.05 hrs. at $175/hr. = $ Fey: 61.75 hrs. at $ 85/hr. = $ $10,507.50 X 15% = $ 1,576.13 to to ^ OX OO OO *-3 ^3 OX Ox
Stage V (appeal)
Garrison: 23.5 hrs. at $175/hr. = Fey: 2.0 hrs. at $ 85/hr. = Newman: 16.7 hrs. at $ 75/hr. = $ 5,535.00 X 20% = $ 1,107.00 O O O wow <*i © c4 i — I C— LO t-H t — 1 03
*95 Stage VI (fee application) Fey: 1.0 hrs. at $ 85/hr. = $ Newman: 2.5 hrs. at $ 75/hr. = $ X 100% = $ 272.50 Total Award: $18,490.50 28,779.63 2,680.00 1,576.13 1,107.00 272.50 $52,905.76 OO 00 r3 P1 bi o o o
Notes
The Hon. Ralph K. Winter, United States Circuit Judge for the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, sitting by designation.
. Rule 68 describes procedures by which a party defending against a claim may make an offer of judgment against the defending party and provides that "[i]f the judgment finally obtained by the offeree is not more favorable than the offer, the offeree must pay the costs incurred after the making of the offer.”
. Plaintiff also has provided no documentation or itemization of the requested $4,722.55 in costs; those costs therefore cannot be awarded.
