This is an appeal from the order of the district court establishing the maximum ethically permissible fee which can properly be accepted by counsel from the victorious plaintiff, Farmington Dowel, in a civil anti-trust litigation. In its first ruling on the issue of fees, Far-mington Dowel Products Co. v. Forster Mfg. Co.,
After receiving counsel’s written memorandum and hearing oral argument, the district court by order made reference to Canons 12 and 13 of the Canons of Professional Ethics of the Ameriсan Bar Association, the Code of Professional Responsibility, Rule 3(e) of the Rules of the District Court of the District of Maine,
1
the factors listed in its prior opinion,
Counsel argues that, there having been no prior intimation that the fee agreement was unethical when made, and рlaintiff being entirely satisfied with the arrangement, the court cannot
*701
retrospectively abrogate such agreement, or errs when it declares the fee resulting therefrom excessive. As we noted in our prior opinion, the acquiescence or approval of the сlient is relevant but not controlling,
Nevertheless, counsel is entitled, we think, to a more “deliberate articulation of rationale”. Cf. Rule 52(a), F.R.Civ.P. While such an exеrcise in restrained hindsight is not likely to placate disappointed counsel, it is necessary if there is to be any possibility of disciplined and informed review of the court’s admittedly broad but not limitless discretion. Particularly here, where court intervention in fee dispositions is bound to be confined to exceptional circumstances, some articulation is called for. We acknowledge that it would be neither practiсable nor useful for a court to rehearse a detailed post-mortem of a lengthy and complex litigation. What we would expeсt, however, is some appraisal of the factors underlying the court’s decision to declare less than the amount resulting from the fee аgreement as the maximum which could ethically be received.
In this case, for example, counsel entered the litigation after threе and one half years of proceedings before the Federal Trade Commission had resulted in an initial decision of a hearing examiner. The bearing, if any, of this prior history on the prospects of success might be examined, as well as counsel’s contribution to two subsequent Fedеral Trade Commission opinions and their impact. Another area for evaluation is the difficulty posed by the statute of limitations problem faced by counsel in the light of then existing authorities, involving a high risk — soon to become an actuality — of summary dismissal of the major part of plaintiff’s case, but with correspondingly low prospects of extensive trial involvement. Also worthy of consideration is the fact that counsel’s threshold problem was solved almost three years later by Minnesota Mining & Mfg. Co. v. New Jersey Wood Finishing Co.,
We do not mean to say that these are all the significant issues to address in bringing to bear a balanced and reasoned scrutiny resulting in what must be ultimately a fair and sensitive ethical *702 judgment of the maximum amount which counsel’s services and the results of the litigation mеrit. But they illustrate the. kind of particularity which we think should characterize this kind of decision. While we are reluctant to delay further the termination of this litigation, the novelty and importance of this kind of decision-making convince us of the wisdom of remanding for a reconsideration of the fee issue and more precise articulation of reasons for the court’s conclusion.
Reversed and remanded for further procеedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Rule 3(e) adopts the Code of Professional Responsibility as the standard of conduct for all attorneys practicing before the court.
. We do not mean to imply counsel did nothing to advance the cause in the interim. The docket entries revеal action on plaintiffs request for admissions and interrogatories, and the taking of depositions. We are also aware that, a yeаr after the court granted partial summary judgment for defendant, it certified that its order, based on its view of the non-applicability of the tolling provision, section 5(b), of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 16(b), to Federal Trade Commission proceedings, involved a controlling question of law. Plaintiff sought and we denied permission to appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b).
