Sheriff Brad Gates and the other defendants appeal the district court’s award of $100,000 in attorney fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. Defendants do not dispute the $2539.24 award for costs incurred by plaintiffs’ attorneys. The underlying civil rights litigation concerns prison conditions in Orange County, California. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we reverse and remand the fee award.
I
Litigation over the Orange County prison conditions began in 1975 and has resulted in various court orders to improve those conditions. The district court has never appointed any attorney for plaintiffs to monitor the prison conditions for compliance with its orders.
This appeal arises from a fee awarded upon application by three attorneys and one paralegal. Attorney Richard Herman sought compensation for 271.5 hours of legal services. His time records, which covered only 237.7 hours, were handwritten and virtually indecipherable. Herman stated that his billing rate was $225 per hour and had been at that level for the year prior to the application. Herman’s paralegal, who also serves as his secretary, sought compensation for 300 hours of largely estimated time at $60 per hour. These two applications constituted about $79,000 of the total request of $87,757. To account for an asserted contingent risk of *1452 nonpayment of fees, the applicants requested that the court multiply their total request by a factor of 1.5 in determining the final award.
Most, if not all, of the services provided by Herman and his paralegal were in response to prisoner complaints. The complaints covered a wide range of topics, including improper strip searches, cold cells, missing magazines and denial of access to telephones. Many complaints were merit-less or unrelated to compliance with court orders. Hearings occurred on some matters.
The Orange County officials argue that plaintiffs are not entitled to payment for work performed by their attorneys without the direction of the district court. They also contend that the court improperly computed the amount of the fee award. We review the award for abuse of discretion.
Keith v. Volpe,
II
Section 1988 provides that “the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party, other than the United States, a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the costs.” Under this authority, the district court may award attorney fees and costs for certain post-judgment proceedings.
Pennsylvania v. Delaware Valley Citizens’ Council,
A. Nature of the Services.
Compensable work on post-judgment proceedings must be “useful” and of a type “ordinarily necessary” to secure the litigation’s final result.
Delaware Valley,
B. Basic Fee Computation.
Any award under § 1988 must be “reasonable.” The basic fee, which may be calculated by multiplying the number of hours reasonably expended by the reasonable hourly rate, is “strong[ly] presum[ed]” to constitute the final award.
Delaware Valley,
In deciding the number of hours “reasonably expended,” the district court should consider whether the applicant already has excluded hours that were “excessive, redundant, or otherwise unnecessary.”
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
Here, the court diminished the hours claimed by Herman and his paralegal by some undisclosed amount without determining which of those hours were reasonably expended in ensuring compliance with its orders. The court did not determine which of the hours claimed were mistakenly charged or noncompensable “padding.” The court was precluded from making this determination, and defendants were precluded from challenging the fee request, by illegibility and abbreviation of the time records submitted by Herman. The court made no attempt to determine the reasonable number of hours expended by the other applicants.
To the extent illegibility of Herman’s time records prevented a fair adversary process in which defendants could challenge the fee request or prevented detailed findings on the reasonable number of
*1453
hours expended by him, the court should have reduced his claimed hours accordingly or required an appropriate supplemental submission.
Hensley,
The “reasonable hourly rate” must be determined by reference to the prevailing market rates in the relevant community.
Blum v. Stenson,
The district court also may consider many of the factors set forth in
Kerr v. Screen Extras Guild, Inc.,
The district court must provide a “concise but clear” explanation of the basic fee.
Hensley,
C. Fee Enhancement.
Once determined, the basic fee leaves “very little room” for enhancement.
Delaware Valley,
In this case, the district court enhanced an uncalculated basic fee by an unspecified multiplier. The court impermissibly applied the multiplier to compensate for contingent risk of nonpayment of fees and for the experience, reputation and ability of Herman. Other factors the court believed warranted an increase were the preclusion *1454 of other employment, time limitations and the undesirability of the case. The court failed to determine the basic fee and specify in detail why each augmenting factor was necessary to the determination of a reasonable fee.
III
Plaintiffs seek attorney fees for work performed on appeal. Fees may be awarded for work performed in successfully defending an award under § 1988.
Cunningham v. County of Los Angeles,
IV
As we have said, we review the fee award for abuse of discretion. But “[a]b-sent some indication of how the district court’s discretion was exercised, this court has no way of knowing whether that discretion was abused."
Chalmers,
We reverse and remand the district court’s fee award for entry of findings and a judgment consistent with this opinion. On remand, the court shall separately compute the fee award for each applicant.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
