ORDER
Before the Court is plaintiffs’ motion for award of post-judgment interest. The State filed a response and plaintiffs filed a reply to the State’s response. The State filed a memorandum reply to plaintiffs’ reply and plaintiffs filed a comment to the State’s memorandum reply. Plaintiffs’ mo *1438 tion for award of post-judgment interest will be granted.
On September 17, 1984, the Court entered judgment in the above-captioned case in favor of plaintiffs and against the State and the KCMSD.
Jenkins v. State of Missouri,
Plaintiffs’ motion for award of post-judgment interest argues that plaintiffs are entitled to post-judgment interest on attorneys’ fees from the date of the February 24, 1986, order in which the Court first determined plaintiffs were entitled to an award of attorneys’ fees. The State responds that post-judgment interest is only available from the date of the May 11, 1987, order quantifying plaintiffs’ attorneys’ fees and that even if post-judgment interest runs from a date earlier than the quantifying of the fee award, the Court’s award of current market rates and enhancement of Benson’s rate for delay in payment should preclude awarding post-judgment interest prior to the quantifying of the fee award, as it would result in a windfall to plaintiffs.
Plaintiffs originally alleged claims against defendants under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 2000d and under the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Id.,
Interest shall be allowed on any money judgment in a civil case recovered in a district court. Execution therefor may be levied by the marshal, in any case where, by the law of the State in which such court is held, execution may be levied for interest on judgments recovered in the courts of the State. Such interest shall be calculated from the date of the entry of the judgment, at a rate equal to the coupon issue yield equivalent (as determined by the Secretary of the Treasury) of the average accepted auction price for the last auction of fifty-two week United States Treasury bills settled immediately prior to the date of the judgment. The Director of the Administrative Office of the United States Courts shall distribute notice of that rate and any changes in it to all Federal judges.
It is well-settled that the language “any money judgment” in § 1961 includes a judgment awarding attorneys’ fees,
see, e.g., Mathis v. Spears,
All courts that have specifically addressed this issue have determined that interest should accrue from the date the *1439 Court recognizes the party’s right to recover attorneys’ fees even if the fees were not quantified. The Fifth Circuit has stated:
If a judgment is rendered that does not mention the right to attorneys’ fees, and the prevailing party is unconditionally entitled to such fees by statutory right, interest will accrue from the date of judgment. If, however, judgment is rendered without mention of attorneys’ fees, and the allowance of fees is within the discretion of the court, interest will accrue only from the date the court recognizes the right to such fees in a judgment.
Copper Liquor,
The provision for calculating interest from entry of judgment deters use of the appellate process by the judgment debtor solely as a means of prolonging its free use of money owed the judgment creditor. Interest on an attorney fee award thus runs from the date of the judgment establishing the right to the award, not the date of the judgment establishing its quantum.
Mathis,
If a dollar amount had been set by this Court when the order was entered [granting plaintiffs’ request for attorneys’ fees], the plaintiffs’ attorneys would have been entitled to immediate payment. Since the amount of the award was not set forth at that time, the defendants have enjoyed the use of that money and the plaintiffs’ attorneys have not.
Williamsburg,
It appears that the cases cited by the State to support the proposition that interest begins to accrue on the date an attorneys’ fees award is quantified are distinguishable from the current case and do not specifically address the issue raised in the current motion. In
R.W.T. v. Dalton,
The State also cites
Griffin v. Ozark County, Missouri,
The remaining cases cited by the State or disclosed through the Court’s research are not dispositive on the issue of when post-judgment interest begins to accrue on an attorneys’ fees award because the cases do not specifically address that issue and the courts in those cases both awarded attorneys’ fees
and
quantified such awards on the same date.
See Institutionalized Juveniles v. Secretary of Public Welfare,
758
F.2d
897, 927 (3d Cir.1985);
McCullough v. Cady,
Therefore, the Court finds that the weight of authority favors an award of interest on plaintiffs’ attorneys' fees award from February 24, 1986, the date the Court first determined that plaintiffs were entitled to an award of attorneys’ fees. The State argues that even if post-judgment interest is available to plaintiffs from February 24,1986, such an award would not be appropriate in this case because plaintiffs received both current market rates and an enhancement for delay in payment in the May 11, 1987, order quantifying plaintiffs’ attorneys’ fees award. Thus, the State argues that allowing plaintiffs to receive post-judgment interest from February 24, 1986, results in a windfall to plaintiffs. However, allowing plaintiffs to receive post-judgment interest from February 24, 1986, does not result in a windfall to plaintiffs. In its order of May 11, 1987, the Court determined that Benson’s hourly rate would fall at the high end of a $125 to $175 per hour range. Jenkins, Order of May 11, 1987, at 4. The Court then considered the preclusion of other employment by Benson due to this case, the undesirability of the case and the delay in payment and found that “a reasonable hourly rate for Mr. Benson’s services from 1979 through June 30, 1986, is $200.00 per hour.” Id. at 4-5. Thus, it is clear that the enhanced hourly rate for Benson was not based solely on delay in payment, but also included the undesirability of the case and preclusion of other employment. In addition, although the Court stated that the enhanced hourly rate was for Benson’s services through June 30, 1986, Benson’s last time entry for litigation other than Year I monitoring and attorneys’ fees litigation, which were compensated at a lower hourly rate of $125, id. at 8; id., Order of July 14, 1987, at 2, was on September 3, 1985. Benson was the only attorney whose hourly rate was enhanced and this enhancement was for services rendered prior to September 3, 1985. This fact, combined with the Court’s statement that “a reasonably hourly rate for Mr. Benson’s services from 1979 through June 30, 1986, is $200.00 per hour,” id., Order of May 11, 1987, at 4-5, indicates that the May 11, 1987, order did not com *1441 pensate Benson at current 1987 market rates, but instead at 1986 rates. The attorneys’ fees award at the 1986 rates and its enhancement was not meant to be a substitute for post-judgment interest. Therefore, the Court finds that an award of post-judgment interest on plaintiffs’ attorneys’ fees award is appropriate.
In the alternative, plaintiffs’ motion requests the Court to award Benson $178,-859.18 in prejudgment interest. Because the Court will grant plaintiffs’ motion, it is unnecessary for the Court to address the issues contained in plaintiffs’ alternative motion.
For the foregoing reasons the Court will grant plaintiffs’ motion for award of post-judgment interest. The United States Treasury Bill rate on February 24, 1986, was 7.71% and, therefore, plaintiffs are entitled to an award of interest on their attorneys’ fees award at a rate of 7.71% from February 24, 1986. The State shall be solely liable for such interest payments. See id. at 14-16. The State’s post-judgment interest obligation to Arthur Benson and the Legal Defense Fund shall be credited $113,379.44 and $184,124.26, respectively, for June 23, 1989, payments of post-judgment interest by the State.
Accordingly, it is hereby
ORDERED that plaintiffs’ motion for award of post-judgment interest is granted; and it is further
ORDERED that plaintiffs are awarded post-judgment interest at a rate of 7.71% from February 24, 1986, on their attorneys’ fees award; and it is further
ORDERED that the State shall be solely liable for post-judgment interest payments to plaintiffs; and it is further
ORDERED that the State’s post-judgment interest obligation to Arthur Benson and the Legal Defense Fund shall be credited $113,379.44 and $184,124.26, respectively, for previous post-judgment interest payments.
