Plaintiffs successfully completed an action protesting the constitutionality of a state statute allowing the loan of textbooks to private schools engaged in discriminatory practices. The district court, in a thorough and careful opinion, awarded $23,852 of the $31,379 claimed in attorneys’ fees, based on services rendered for the period ending March 2, 1976, pursuant to Section 718 of the Emergency School Aid Act, P.L. 92-318, 20 U.S.C. § 1617, and, alternatively, the Civil Rights Attorneys Fees Awards Act, P.L. 94-559, 42 U.S.C. § 1988.
Defendants appeal from the award, claiming that it was barred by the Eleventh Amendment, that the statutory provisions did not abrogate the state’s immunity to monetary judgment, and that the state was an indispensable party to the action. Plaintiffs cross-appeal for an increase in the amount of fees awarded and for additional fees to cover later services.
For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment in the plaintiffs’ favor, and remand for further allowance on the plaintiffs’ cross-appeal.
During the pendency of the appeal, the Supreme Court decided the case of
Hutto
v.
Finney,
1978, - U.S. -,
The district court made an award for the period ending March 2, 1976 with careful calculation.
See Norwood v. Harrison,
N.D. Miss.1976,
Plaintiffs appear now to have reached the conclusion that the hourly rates they initially requested were inadequate. Whether or not this is the ease, the time to amend their claim was prior to the order awarding fees.
It is settled in this circuit that “[t]he determination of a reasonable attorney’s fee is left to the sound discretion of the trial judge. ... An attorney’s fee award of a trial court should not be set aside unless there has been a clear abuse of his discretion.”
Weeks v. Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Co.,
5 Cir. 1972,
It is always not only appropriate but mandatory for a court, in fixing fees, to consider all of the Johnson factors, including the customary fee for similar work in the community, and whether the fee is fixed or contingent. We do not in this opinion endorse an average fee of so much per hour in all contingent fee cases, nor hold that the lawyer who undertakes to handle a difficult case for a plaintiff on a contingent basis should be held to the hourly fee that is expected by attorneys whose retainers are sure. In the award appealed from, however, we think the trial court, in considering the request for attorneys’ fees, framed as it was, gave adequate attention to the contingency factor.
The plaintiffs should, however, be compensated for any time their attorneys spent on the matter after March 2, 1976. Although we have the power to award attorneys’ fees, or to adjust any award we find inequitable,
see Brown v. Culpepper,
5 Cir. 1977,
For these reasons, the awarded attorneys’ fees to March 2, 1976, is affirmed; the case is remanded to the district judge for a determination of appropriate compensation for work performed since its March 2 order.
REMANDED.
