Julie Beaty brought a successful race- and sex-harassment lawsuit under California’s Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA), Cal. Gov’t Code § 12904
et seq.,
against her former employer, BET Holdings, Inc. After she prevailed at trial, she applied for and was awarded attorneys’ fees under Cal. Gov’t Code § 12965, which provides for such fees for the prevailing party in an FEHA case. Like federal law,
see Passantino v. Johnson & Johnson Consumer Prods., Inc.,
As is usually the case with matters committed to trial court discretion, a trial judge’s fee award, under California law as under federal law,
Passantino,
I.
Beaty, an account manager earning $100,000 peí year, alleged in her FEHA lawsuit that a company director repeatedly propositioned her for sex, and that after she complained to a supervisor, the supervisor began to harass her as well. Beaty’s complaint sought compensatory and punitive damages. A jury found BET liable under the FEHA for race- and sex-based harassment and awarded Beaty $30,000 in compensatory damages.
*610 After winning at trial, Beaty filed a motion for attorneys’ fees pursuant to Cal. Gov’t Code § 12965(b). Claiming an hourly rate of $350 for the 1075 hours he devoted to her case, Beaty’s counsel submitted that the “lodestar” amount to which he was entitled — the baseline from which attorneys’ fee awards are determined— was $376,520. Beaty’s counsel then requested that the lodestar be doubled based on the contingent nature of the case, the fact that he had to decline other work to pursue Beaty’s case, and the novelty of the questions presented and* his skill in litigating them. In response, BET argued that Beaty’s fee award should be decreased by 75 percent because, inter alia, the jury award was far more modest than the recovery Beaty sought in her lawsuit.
The district court determined that the $350 rate is a “reasonable hourly rate.” The court also concluded that “the hours submitted by plaintiffs counsel were reasonably spent on this case given the nature of the issues to be litigated and the difficulty of the case,” noting that the defendant had stipulated that the plaintiffs attorney had not spent excessive time on any particular task. The district court therefore agreed that the lodestar amount was $376,520, and declined to award any fee enhancement, a decision not here challenged. BET contends, however, that because the jury awarded Beaty only $30,000 in compensatory damages and no punitive damages, the district court should have decreased Beaty’s attorneys’ fee award from the lodestar on the basis that the results Beaty obtained demonstrate a lack of success. The district court, however, refused to award less than the lodestar amount.
II.
(A) California law allows the trial court to reduce Beaty’s attorneys’ fees award based on the results she obtained, or not to reduce the fee award, as the trial judge finds is appropriate in the exercise of her discretion. BET recognized at oral argument that, if the district court was aware of its discretion to reduce Beaty’s fee award based on the results she obtained and chose not to, then the lodestar fee award was reasonable and should not be disturbed on appeal. If, on the other hand, the district court misunderstood California law with regard to its authority to reduce lodestar fee awards for lack of success, then the district court abused its discretion and should have the opportunity to reconsider the fee award under the proper standard.
See Barjon v. Dalton,
In its October 19, 1998 Order awarding Beaty $376,250 in attorneys’ fees, the district court recognized that it had discretion to award attorneys’ fees, and to enhance the lodestar amount. Citing
Weeks v. Baker & McKenzie,
The district court then addressed whether it could decrease Beaty’s lodestar based on the results she secured in litigation. Noting that, contrary to BET’s submission, state law governing the question whether a trial court may decrease the lodestar fee award does not necessarily mimic federal law,
see Flannery v. California Highway Patrol,
The district court’s conclusion did not mitigate the apparent contradiction: The court stated only that “[i]n light of the analysis of Weeks, this Court in the exercise of its discretion, finds that the lodestar of plaintiffs counsel provides a reasonable fee” The reference to the “exercise of discretion” does not clear matters up, since in the same breath the district court referred to “the analysis in Weeks," an analysis which the earlier discussion appeared, at some junctures, to find precluded reduction of fees for lack of success.
(B) BET filed a motion to reconsider the fee award based on the California Court of Appeal’s October 23, 1998, decision in
Meister v. Regents of the University of California,
The district court in this case reconsidered Beaty’s fee award based on the first ground in Meister, concluding that it was not persuaded that the award should be decreased. 2 Although BET also argued in its Motion for Reconsideration that Meis-ter supported its position regarding reduction based on results obtained in the lawsuit, 3 the district court declined to reconsider Beaty’s fee award on this ground, finding that nothing in Meister affected its earlier decision on this question. See C.D. Cal. R. 7.16 (limiting grounds on which trial court may grant motion to reconsider). So the district court’s order on BET’s motion to reconsider sheds no further light on the question whether the district court recognized that it had discretion to reduce Beaty’s *612 fee award based on the results she obtained at trial.
III.
At the time of the district court’s decision in this case, California law regarding a trial court’s discretion to reduce a lodestar award was not absolutely clear. After the district court’s decision, but before this case was heard on appeal, the California Supreme Court issued its decision in
PLCM Group, supra,
making clear that the district court may consider the “success or failure” of the litigation as one factor in assessing the fee.
To say that California
permits
such reduction based on results obtained in an FEHA case is not, however, to say that state law
favors
decreasing lodestar fees based on the amount of damages received as compared to that sought. Rather, under the FEHA fees are
not
“limit[ed]
to
a percentage
of
the plaintiffs recovery,” and ordinarily, “the attorney who takes [an FEHA] case can anticipate receiving full compensation for every hour spent litigating a claim.... ”
Weeks,
This high threshold for triggering decreases due to limited success reflects the values underlying the award of attorneys’ fees in FEHA and other civil rights cases. Such cases vindicate important public interests whose value transcends the dollar amounts that attach to many civil rights claims. Fee awards ensure that neither financial imperatives nor market considerations raise an insurmountable barrier that prevents attorneys from litigating meritorious cases, and even a relatively small damages award “contributes significantly to the deterrence of civil rights violations in the future.”
City of Riverside v. Rivera,
Consistent with those purposes, a trial court does not under California law abuse its discretion simply by awarding fees in an amount higher, even very much higher, than the damages awarded, where successful litigation causes “conduct which the FEHA was enacted to deter [to be]
*613
exposed and corrected.”
Vo,
On appeal, the defendant argued that the trial court had necessarily erred, in light of the small damages award and lack of success on certain causes of action, in failing significantly to reduce the plaintiffs fee award from the very high lodestar amount. The Court of Appeal disagreed, rejecting any such per se rule. Instead, the court affirmed the award despite the discrepancy between the fee award and the damages verdict, relying on the fact that “the trial court clearly stated its determination as to the amount of fees awarded was based on
the entire course of the litigation
including pre-trial matters, settlement negotiations, discovery, litigation tactics, and the trial itself,” and stressing that the trial judge was “the best judge of what occurred in his courtroom.”
IV.
If the district court failed to realize it had the discretion to reduce Beaty’s fee award from the lodestar in the event it concluded that such a reduction was merited after considering the “entire course of the litigation,” then it erred. If, however, the trial court realized that it had such discretion, and chose not to exercise it, there has been no error. Indeed, as noted, BET conceded at oral argument that the fee award could be justified on the record in light of the amount of the damages award, and complained only that it had not been. 6
Because we are unsure whether the district court knew it had discretion to reduce Beaty’s fee award from the lodestar after considering the amount of her damages award, we cannot decide on this appeal whether that discretion was properly exercised. Therefore, we must remand this case to the district court for clarification. The district court should either inform the parties that it did in fact exercise its discretion and decided not to reduce fees in light of the degree of success earlier, or it should exercise its discretion now.
At the same time, because both parties agree that the fee would be valid if the district court did exercise its discretion in that regard, there can be no further appeal on the amount question if the district court either confirms that it did previ
*614
ously exercise its discretion taking into account the amount of the damages award or so exercises its discretion after remand.
See Amberhill Properties v. City of Berkeley,
REMANDED for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. California’s law of attorneys' fee awards under the FEHA has diverged from federal law as developed under civil rights fee-shifting statutes.
Flannery,
61 Cal.App.4th at
*611
645-46,
. The only settlement offer the defendant made in this case was one week prior to trial, so the reduction requested on this basis was much less than the 75% defendant had earlier sought.
. BET’s Motion for Reconsideration expressly repudiated any reliance on a comparison between the amount of the fee and the damages awarded, maintaining it was "not urging a strict 'numbers comparison,’" but instead was "asking the court to consider the overall result obtained at trial.” Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Motion for Reconsideration of Plaintiffs’ Motion for Attorneys’ Fees.
. For this reason, there is no reason to certify the question to the California Supreme Court, and we therefore deny BET’s Motion to do so.
. The
Vo
court was precluded by the absence of the trial court record from any more detailed inquiry.
. The fact that the jury awarded Beaty no punitive damages is not, standing alone, determinative of lack-of-success affecting her attorneys' fees award.
See Weeks,
