In the present proceedings, appellants, in their official capacities, appeal the award of attorneys’ fees for plaintiffs who successfully challenged the 1981 apportionment of the Arkansas legislature under the Voting Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1973. A three-judge district court awarded a total in attorneys’ fees and expenses of $1,034,492 including an adjusted fifty percent. enhancement over the lodestar
Only the enhanced fee is at issue. As a threshold question, the appellees contest the jurisdiction of this court to decide this appeal because the notice of appeal fails to name several of the appellants.
We reject the jurisdictional defense to the appeal and reverse and remand this case for further consideration by the three-judge district court.
I.
Seventeen African-American citizens of Arkansas challenged the 1981 legislative apportionment plan as violating the Voting Rights Act and the U.S. Constitution. The plaintiffs sued the Arkansas Governor, Attorney General, Secretary of State, and Board of Apportionment.
The complaint in the case before the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas, Eastern Division lists the following' defendants:
BILL CLINTON, in his capacity as Governor of Arkansas and Chairman of the Arkansas Board of Apportionment; W.J. McCUEN, in his capacity as Secretary of State of Arkansas and member of the Arkansas Board of Apportionment; and STEVE CLARK, in his capacity аs Attorney General of Arkansas and member of the Arkansas Board of Apportionment; and the ARKANSAS BOARD OF APPORTIONMENT
Appendix of Appellants at A-l.
A three-judge district court found the redistricting plan violated the Voting Rights Act and in a later decision found it also violated the fifteenth amendment. Jeffers v. Clinton,
The plaintiffs then filed an application under 42 U.S.C. § 1973Í (e) for attorneys’ fees and costs against the four defendants. The district court granted the application, awarding $1,034,492, consisting of a lodestar feе award of $653,687, a cost and expense award of $72,060, and a fifty percent contingency enhancement of $305,745.
The district court made adjustments to the hourly rates and hours worked for lawyers and paralegals serving plaintiffs’ cause, arriving at a lodestаr figure of $653,895 and enhanced this lodestar to account for the possibility of losing the case. The enhancement amounted to a fifty percent increase in fees applying to hours entitled to enhancement (excluding certain hours such as those spent on fee petition) and added $308,745 to the lodestar fee.
Initially, all four defendants sought to appeal the fee award to the United States Supreme Court, the Court which had jurisdiction over the merits. See Clinton v. Jeffers, — U.S. -,
II.
The appellees contend only one of the four defendants filed a timely notice of appeal. They claim this court has no jurisdiction over the three parties not named in the appeal: Arkansas Secretary of State W.J. MeCuen, Attorney General Clark, and the Board of Apportionment. The appellees concede that Bill Clinton is a proper party. The title of the action establishes Clinton is sued in his official caрacity as Governor of Arkansas and Chairman of the Arkansas Board of Apportionment.
We need to resolve the question whether the notice of appeal complies with Fed. RApp.P. 3(c) which provides, in relevant part:
The notice оf appeal shall specify the party or parties taking the appeal; shall designate the judgment, order or part thereof appealed from; and shall name the court to which the appeal is taken.
The appelleеs contend the appeal is defective because it fails specifically to name parties other than Bill Clinton. The appellees rely on Torres v. Oakland Scavenger Co.,
We reject this jurisdictional challenge. The Torres decision does not apply in this case. In Torres, the Supreme Court considered whether petitioner Torres, one of sixteen plaintiffs who intervened in an employment discrimination suit against the respondent, Oakland Scavenger Company, could claim a right to be an aрpellant when the notice of appeal and the order of the court of appeals, which granted relief on the appeal to the appellants, did not contain his name. Torres contended the use of “et al.” in the noticе of appeal was sufficient to indicate his intention to appeal. Justice Marshall, writing for the majority, stated:
Petitioner urges that the use of “et al.” in the notice of appeal was sufficient to indicate his intention to appeal. We cannot agree. The purpose of the specificity requirement of Rule 3(c) is to provide notice both to the opposition and to the court of the identity of the appellant or appellants. The use of the phrase “et al.,” whiсh literally means “and others,” utterly fails to provide such notice to either intended recipient. Permitting such vague designation would leave the appellee and the court unable to determine with certitude whether a losing party not named in the nоtice of appeal should be bound by an adverse judgment or held liable for costs or sanctions. The specificity requirement of Rule 3(c) is met only by some designation that gives fair notice of the specific individual or entity seeking to appeal.
Torres,
The Torres case relates to an individual party who had an individual interest in the case and who was not named as an appellant. The instant case differs in that the parties here are sued in their official capacities and the State of Arkansas is responsible for paying the attorneys’ fees.
The relevant and persuasive authority for us is Brown v. Palmer,
The fedеral district court granted relief to the plaintiffs and the defendants attempted a timely appeal in which the United States Attorney for the District of Colorado filed a notice listing Colonel James O. Palmer, et al., as defendants-appellants. The nоtice of appeal failed to specify whether Palmer was sued in his official capacity and further failed
The Tenth Circuit determined that the plaintiffs received fair notice under Torres because they understood that an appeal by Colonel Palmer was in effect an appeal by the United States, as they had sued Colonel Palmer and Colonel Cullinane only in their official capacities. Brown,
As with Brown, the appeal by Governor Bill Clinton, who was sued in his official capacity, gives fair notice that the State of Arkansas, which was the obligor on the fee bill, sought to appeal.
Furthermore, in this ease, appellees could not mistake that all defendants intended to appeal because in the initial apрeal to the United States Supreme Court on the fee award which was later reinstated by the three-judge district court, all of the named defendants had joined in the notice of appeal. Thus, the second notice of appeal to this court naming “Bill Clinton, et al., defendants herein,” Appendix of Appellants at A-33, obviously included all of the defendants who serve in an official capacity as officers of the State of Arkansas.
Accordingly, we hold the notice of appeal herе gave fair notice to the appellees that the State of Arkansas and Bill Clinton, on behalf of the State, were appealing the fee award. We reject the jurisdictional challenge and reach the merits of the challenge to thе enhanced fee claim.
III.
More than two months after the substituted judgment in this case, the law regarding fee enhancements on the basis of contingency changed significantly. On June 24, 1992, the Supreme Court decided City of Burlington v. Dague, — U.S. —,
Contingency enhancement is a feature inherent in the contingent-fee model (since attorneys factor in thе particular risks of a ease in negotiating their fee and in deciding whether to accept the case). To en-graft this feature onto the lodestar model would be to concoct a hybrid scheme that resorts to the contingent-fee model to increase a fee award but not to reduce it. Contingency enhancement is therefore not consistent with our general rejection of the contingent-fee model for fee awards, nor is it necessary to the determination of a reаsonable fee.
Burlington, — U.S. at —,
The appellees suggest that language in the City of Burlington case permit factoring contingency into the lodestar rates. The appellants disagree, referring to the following language:
The risk of loss in a partiсular ease (and, therefore, the attorney’s contingent risk) is the product of two factors: (1) the legal and factual merits of the claim, and (2) the*831 difficulty of establishing those merits. The second factor, however, is ordinarily reflected in the lodestar — either in the higher number of hours expended to overcome the difficulty, or in the higher hourly rate of the attorney skilled and experienced enough to do so.
City of Burlington, — U.S. at —,
Notes
. The lodestar is "the product of reasonable hours times a reasonable ratе.” Pennsylvania v. Delaware Valley Citizens' Council for Clear Air,
. Senior United States District Judge Eisele dissented, opining that the fee award was excessive and the enhancement unjustified.
. The Eighth Circuit case of Wise v. Parkman,
