ORDER
In this lawsuit, a plaintiff class of African-Americans challenged the “at large” system used to elect councilmembers for defendant City of Elba, as violating § 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, as amended, 42 U.S.C.A. § 1973. By order entered on April 1, 1988, the court approved a conseht decree requiring that the 1988 elections for city council be conducted under a five single-member district plan. In 1992, the plaintiffs filed a motion for additional relief claiming that the city must reapportion itself because the 1988 redistricting plan no longer meets the one-person one-vote requirements of the United States Constitution. By order entered on July 28, 1993, the court ordered the city to conduct elections under a new plan which met the one-person one-vote requirements. This cause is now before the- court on the plaintiffs’ motion for attorney’s fees and expenses incurred as a result of their request for additional relief. For the reasons that follow, the court concludes that the plaintiffs are entitled to recover $6,670.00 in attorney’s fees and $463.45 in expenses, for a total of $7,133.45 from the City of Elba.
I.
The plaintiffs seek an award of attorney’s fees under the Voting Rights Act. The Act' provides that
“In any action or proceeding to enforce the voting guarantees of the fourteenth or fifteenth amendment, the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party, other than the United States, a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the cost.”
42 U.S.C.A § 1973Z(e). This provision, which is similar in substance and purpose to the Attorney’s Fees Awards Act of 1976,
1
serves the familiar purpose of encouraging private litigants to act as “private attorneys general” to vindicate their rights and the rights of the public at large, by guaranteeing to them, if they prevail, a reasonable attor
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ney’s fee.
2
With this provision, Congress sought to create an alternative means to ensure, without the expenditure of additional public funds, that the policies underlying the Voting Rights Act are implemented and enforced successfully. Guaranteed fees, were considered to be essential to this end in light of concerns over the financial ability of victims of discrimination to bring such actions and the fact that the relief sought and obtained is often nonmonetary.
Donnell v. United States,
The City of Elba has not questioned that the plaintiffs are the prevailing parties in this litigation and thus entitled to reasonable attorney’s fees. Indeed, the city could not do so in good faith. This lawsuit is an offshoot of a voting rights case brought in 1985.
Dillard v. Crenshaw County,
II.
The starting point in setting any reasonable attorney’s fee is determining the “lodestar” figure — that is, the product of the number of hours reasonably expended to prosecute the lawsuit and the reasonable hourly rate for non-contingent work performed by similarly situated attorneys in the community. After calculating the lodestar fed, the court should then proceed with an analysis of whether any portion of this fee should be adjusted upwards or downwards.
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
In making the above determinations, the court is guided by the 12 factors set out in
Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express,
A. Reasonable Hours
James U. Blacksher and Edward Still represented, the plaintiffs in this matter. They seek compensation for the following hours:
Blacksher 18.6 hours;
Still 4.4 hours;
The court has considered two
Johnson
factors — the novelty and difficulty of the case, and the amount involved and the result obtained — in assessing the reasonableness of the hours claimed. A cursory review of such cases as
Brown v. Thomson,
B. Prevailing Market Rate
“A reasonable hourly rate is the prevailing market rate in the relevant legal community for similar services by lawyers of reasonably comparable skills, experience, and reputation.”
Norman v. Housing Authority of Montgomery,
Customary Fee: The plaintiffs contend that the customary fee for an attorney of similar experience in the community supports an hourly non-contingent fee of $350 for Blacksher and Still. The evidence shows that Alabama attorneys practicing in the same and similar areas of law with approximately the same experience and skill as plaintiffs’ attorneys charge a non-contingent fee of at least $290 an hour. 3
Skill Required to Perform the Legal Services Properly: It cannot be questioned that voting rights litigation requires a highly skilled attorney. As explained earlier, even the simplest voting rights case would be daunting to an attorney who had not specialized in voting rights law. •
Experience, Reputation, and Ability of the Attorney:
Blacksher and Still have now rightfully earned the reputation as two of the most experienced, knowledgeable, and able voting rights lawyers in the State of Alabama, if not the nation. They have to their credit such trail-blazing cases as
Bolden v. City of Mobile,
Time Limitations:
Where there has been “[p]riority work that delays the lawyer’s other legal work,” this factor requires “some premium.”
Johnson,
Preclusion of Other Employment:
This factor “involves the dual consideration of otherwise available business which is foreclosed because of conflicts of interest which occur from the representation, and the fact that once the employment is undertaken the attorney is not free to use the time spent on the chent’s behalf for other purposes.”
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Johnson,
Contingency. Plaintiffs have not sought an enhancement based on contingency.
Undesirability of the Case:
In general, civil rights litigation is seen “as very undesirable because it stigmatizes an attorney as a ‘civil rights lawyer’ and thus tends to deter fee-paying clients, particularly high-paying commercial clients, from seeking assistance from that lawyer.”
Stokes v. City of Montgomery,
Nature and Length of Relationship with Client. Blacksher and Still have represented the plaintiffs in this matter from its inception. There is no evidence that they had a prior professional relationship with the plaintiffs, except to the extent that they have represented the plaintiffs in all these Dillard cases.
Awards in Similar Cases:
Blacksher and Still were awarded $350 an hour in another voting rights case.
Lawrence v. City of Talladega,
civil action no. 91-C-1340-M,
The court is of the opinion, based on these criteria, that the prevailing market rate for non-contingent work performed by attorneys of similar knowledge and experience in similar cases is at least $290 an- hour. 5
C. Lodestar Calculation
The unadjusted lodestar for an attorney consists, as stated, of the product of the attorney’s compensable hours multiplied by his prevailing market fee. The lodestars for plaintiffs’ counsel are therefore as follows:
Blacksher 18.5 hours x $290 = $5,394
Still 4.4 hours x $290 = 1,276
Total $6,670
D. Adjustment
An adjústment neither upward nor downward is warranted.
III.
Plaintiffs’ counsel also seek an award of $463.45 for certain expenses. With the exception of routine overhead office normally absorbed by the practicing attorney, all reasonable expenses incurred in case preparation, during the course of litigation, or as an aspect of settlement of the case may be taxed as costs under section 1988 and the standard of reasonableness is to be given a liberal interpretation.
Loranger v. Stierheim,
. It is therefore the ORDER, JUDGMENT, and DECREE of the court that the plaintiffs’ motion for award of attorney’s fees, filed September 1, 1993, is granted, and that the plaintiffs have and recover from defendant City of Elba the sum of $6,670.00 as attorney’s fees and $463.45 for expenses, for a total sum of $7,133.45.
Notes
. 42 U.S.C.A. § 1988. Plaintiffs also seek to recover under this provision.
. Indeed, the similarity between the language and underlying purposes of the fee award provisions of the Voting Rights Act, § 19731(e), the. Attorney's Fees Awards Act of 1976, § 1988, arid the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C.A. § 2000e-5(k), has led the Eleventh Circuit to conclude that the standards for awarding fees under the various provisions should be generally the same.
Brooks v. Georgia State Board of Elections,
. As originally envisioned by Congress, civil rights attorneys were to be paid on a par with commercial lawyers. See S.Rep. No. 1011, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 6 (1976), 1976 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News p. 5908, 5913 ("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 cases[,] and not be reduced because the rights involved may be nonpecuniary in nature.”) Regrettably, this has not proved to be true. Indeed, if upon completion of law school, plaintiffs' attorneys chosen to devote themselves to commercial rather than public interest law, they would today, in light of their abilities, be able to command a substantially higher hourly rate.
.
See also Robinson v. Alabama State Department of Education,
. By establishing the appropriate market rate on the basis of current rates, the court is also compensating plaintiffs' counsel for the delay in payment.
See Missouri v. Jenkins,
