OPINION OF THE COURT
This appeal arises out of a successful claim brought under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq. (1976). Following a jury verdict in favor of appellee James Sullivan, the district court awarded $116,000 in compensatory and liquidated damages and ordered that Sullivan be reinstated. The district court further awarded plaintiff’s counsel $41,287 in attorney’s fees under the procedure set forth in
Lindy Bros. Builders, Inc.
v.
American Radiator and Standard Sanitary Corp.,
I.
The contingent nature of an attorney’s fee recovery is a valid factor in the determination of court awarded fees. The
*669
legislative history of the Civil Rights Attorney’s Fee Awards Act of 1976 specifically endorses the standard devised in
Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express,
In no event, however, should the litigant be awarded a fee greater than he is contractually bound to pay....”
II.
This Court has yet to determine the procedure by which district courts are to incorporate private fee arrangements into a statutory fee award. As a practical matter, in cases where the statutory fees exceed the private contingent fee arrangements, three distinct orders are possible:
(1) Defendant can be ordered to pay only the difference between the statutory award and the contingent fee the plaintiff had agreed to pay. This is an inequitable solution that would give a windfall to the defendant despite the finding of liability. Such a result would also frustrate the legislative policy objective that the fee itself serve as a disincentive to future discriminatory conduct.
(2) The statutory fee should be paid to plaintiff’s attorney with any lesser contingency fee considered satisfied. This is the accepted formulation in most circuits that have, addressed this question:
[W]e reiterate that a fee agreement is irrelevant to the issue of entitlement and should not enter into the determination of the amount of a reasonable fee.... The better route would be to order that the award reimburse the plaintiff, with any excess over the amount set by the fee agreement going to her counsel.
Sargeant v. Sharp,
to the extent counsel receives payment of the Section 1988 statutory award, his *670 claim for services rendered under his contingency fee arrangement with his client shall be deemed paid and satisfied.
Wheatley v. Ford,
(3)
Plaintiffs attorney should recover both the statutory fee and the contingency fee.
This position, advanced by plaintiff here, finds support in
Zarcone v. Perry,
the prospect of an award supplementing the fee that the successful plaintiff might be able to pay would be essential to attract competent counsel.
Id.
at 1044.
See also Buxton v. Patel,
Without rejecting the possibility of a proper dual fee recovery as a matter of law, we hold that the case at bar does not present an occasion for such an award. Zarcone itself allows for dual recovery only
when the claim involves civil rights of broad significance, prosecuted on behalf of a large class, and the prospective monetary award, if the suit is successful, would be modest in relation to the time, effort and skill required of counsel ....
III.
The record fails to indicate the precise terms of the plaintiff’s contingency fee arrangement with counsel. On remand, the trial court should ascertain this amount and allow a recovery of the contingency fee amount or the statutory fee, whichever is greater. If the statutory fee is greater, plaintiff shall be entitled to his full damages award and his obligation to counsel shall be deemed settled in full. Should the contingency fee be greater, plaintiff should be directed to pay to counsel only the difference between the statutory award and the contingent fee.
The judgment of the district court will be vacated and the case remanded for action consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The fact that attorney’s fees under the ADEA are governed by the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. § 216(b) (1976), rather than the principal fee award statute, 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1976), is of no consequence. Section 216(b) provides only that “reasonable” fees may be awarded. It has been the practice of federal courts to treat the various fee-shifting antidiscrimination statutes as governed by the same standards.
Spagnuolo v. Whirlpool Corp.,
. Only one decision has held that the terms of a contingency fee set the upper limit of a statutory award.
Cooper v. Singer,
. Appellee’s counsel indirectly challenges this point by claiming that “in those cases where a multiplier is not applied, as was the case here, plaintiffs counsel would be awarded nothing for undertaking the risk....” Appellee’s Brief at 13. This claim correctly signals that any rule of law regarding double recoveries must be-squared with this Court’s endorsement of a multiplier of the lodestar to compensate counsel for the risks taken and the contingent nature of success.
Lindy Bros. Builders v. American Radiator & Standard Sanitary
(Lindy II),
