OPINION
This matter is before the Court on plaintiffs’ counsel’s petition for attorneys fees pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988. After nearly five years of litigation in a major prison conditions case, resulting in a judgment favorable to the plaintiff class, plaintiffs’ counsel seek $2,043,960.38 in attorneys fees, expenses and costs. The facts and legal issues involved in this matter are adequately reported in this Court’s published decisions,
Knop v. Johnson,
Defendants have interposed a number of objections to plaintiffs’ fee request. They contend that plaintiffs’ counsel are entitled to $156,950.00 in attorneys’ fees and $1,067.50 in costs and expenses. This calculation can most charitably be described as a gross underestimation. The trial alone in this matter lasted 35 days. Hearings on the remedial plans submitted by the parties lasted another four days. Plaintiffs were represented by four attorneys at trial and three at the remedial hearing. Assuming a trial or hearing day of 4.5 hours and compensation at an hourly rate even defendants admit is reasonable, $100 per hour, plaintiffs’ counsel are enti-
That having been said, however, the Court finds that a number of the defendants’ objections have substantial merit. While I have concluded that the reductions advocated by defendants are too extreme, the fee petition must be reduced to account for plaintiffs’ partial success on the race claim, excessive or duplicative hours and non-compensable costs and expenses. After conducting a two-day evidentiary hearing and reviewing each entry on each billing and expense record submitted by counsel, I find that attorneys fees in the amount of $1,299,568.04 and costs and expenses in the amount of $184,443.24 are appropriate. This results in a total award of $1,484,-006.28.
Plaintiffs’ counsel have submitted three separate applications for fees. This opinion treats each application separately. The Court’s calculations of reasonable attorneys’ fees for each application and the allowable expenses and costs may be found in the tables annexed to this Opinion.
7. Amended Petition for Attorneys Fees and Costs
Plaintiffs’ counsel initially submitted their petition for attorneys fees on April 12, 1988. After discovering that computer errors had resulted in some duplicative entries on their billing records, plaintiffs’ submitted an amended application for fees on November 28,1988. This Opinion refers to the billing records attached to the amended application.
A. Reasonable Hours
Having won a judgment in their favor, plaintiffs are without doubt “prevailing parties” within the meaning of § 1988. Plaintiffs’ counsel are thus entitled to reasonable attorneys’ fees, expenses and costs for their efforts. In
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
1. Partial Success on the Merits
One of the defendants’ major contentions is that the fee award must be reduced to reflect the limited degree of success plaintiffs obtained on the race discrimination claims. Plaintiffs began this litigation with a number of claims regarding racial discrimination against prisoners. These included: (1) discrimination in job assignment; (2) segregation of cafeteria serving lines; (3) discrimination in assignment to punitive segregation and protective custody; and (4) staff displays of racially motivated hostility toward black inmates. First Amended Complaint ¶ 55. Plaintiffs succeeded on only one of those claims — the claim that staff engaged in racially derogatory behavior, principally the use of racial slurs, against black inmates.
Knop v. Johnson,
In
Hensley,
Where the plaintiff’s successful and unsuccessful claims are based on “a common core of facts” and “related legal théories,” the lawsuit cannot be viewed as a series of discrete claims, and “the district court should focus on the significance of the overall relief obtained by the plaintiff in relation to the hours reasonably expended on the litigation.”
Hensley,
A number of cases have allowed compensation for hours spent on unsuccessful claims where the successful and unsuccessful claims involve a common core of facts and rely upon related legal theories.
City of Riverside v. Rivera,
As the Supreme Court recognized in
Hensley
and
Smith,
it is often difficult to determine which hours expended on a case contributed to the relief obtained and which did not. This is especially true where the plaintiffs raise a number of conceptually distinct but factually related claims. In such circumstances, it is appropriate to reduce the fee applicant’s award by a flat amount, rather than attempting to determine which specific hours were spent on the unsuccessful claims. In
Toussaint,
for example, the court concluded that the plaintiffs’ various claims were not easily categorized as “related” or “unrelated.” Although the claims were based upon related facts and legal theories, the plaintiffs had achieved only limited success on appeal, and it was impossible to determine the exact number of hours spent on each claim. Thus, the court reduced the fee award by one-third, to account for plaintiffs’ “very limited” success on appeal.
Toussaint,
Plaintiffs achieved only partial success on their race-related claims. They submit that they are entitled to full compensation for hours spent on- these claims because the Court found their statistical evidence to be significant, because the results obtained are extremely significant to the plaintiff class, and because the Court’s ruling on the racial slur issue will impact corrections officials not only in Michigan, but across the country. Defendants argue that because plaintiffs’ billing records make it impossible to determine exactly how much time was spent on the unsuccessful claims, virtually all of the hours claimed must be excluded either as spent on unsuccessful claims or as inadequately documented.
In considering defendants’ objections to the petition for attorneys fees, the Court has reviewed every billing entry on every billing record submitted by plaintiffs. In many instances, the entries identify the specific issue the attorney was working on at the time. At other times, the billing entries are more general. For example, billing entries often state, “prepared responses to interrogatories,” or “compiled documents,” while at other times they state, “drafted race brief,” or “prepared interrogatory answers re: race claims.” Because the entries are at times specific and at other times general, I think it fair to assume that at least some of the general entries refer to work relevant to the entire case, while the more specific entries reflect instances where attorneys spent substantial amounts of time working on a discrete claim. While the billing entries are not always as detailed as one would prefer, I am satisfied that they were contemporaneously compiled, and that they accurately reflect the number of hours each attorney spent working on this case. I find that plaintiffs’ counsel have adequately documented their request for fees, and I will deny defendants’ request to eliminate virtually every hour claimed by counsel for lack of proper documentation.
The plaintiffs’ position, however, is also unreasonable. They simply were not successful in obtaining the relief sought on a large percentage of their race-related claims. Hopefully, the Court’s ruling on the racial slur issue will enhance the lives of the plaintiff class and will convince prison officials here and elsewhere to aggressively discipline staff for such conduct. Perhaps at some point in the future, the Court’s findings regarding plaintiffs’ statistical evidence will be helpful in another race discrimination suit. But the fact remains that plaintiffs were unsuccessful in the attempt to convince the Court that the defendants segregated cafeteria serving lines, or that they discriminated on the basis of race in job assignments or in assignments to administrative segregation or protective custody. Under Hensley and its progeny, their fee award must be reduced by some amount to account for this partial success.
The question of how much to reduce the fee award is one of great difficulty for the Court. The various race claims are unrelated in the sense that they each relate to different policies and conduct of the defendants. They are related in the sense that the evidence of discriminatory intent and conduct was relevant to both the successful and unsuccessful race claims. Certainly, if
Nor can it be said with confidence that none of the information compiled on the unsuccessful race discrimination claims contributed to plaintiffs’ success on the racial slur claim. For example, much of the testimony about racial slurs was elicited while prisoner witnesses were testifying about other issues, and the evidence regarding racially stereotypic views held by staff contributed to the Court’s finding that the Department of Corrections at least implicitly authorized racially motivated conduct by staff. This information, in all likelihood, would not have been discovered or presented to the Court had plaintiffs not chosen to proceed to trial on the unsuccessful race claims. The matter is further complicated by the fact that some attorneys' spent a great deal of time on the race issues, while others spent relatively little time on those claims.
Because the billing records do not always identify the particular issue involved, and because some attorneys had more responsibility for the race claims than did others, I find that it would be unfair to reduce all attorneys’ fees by some arbitrary percent age to account for the partial success on these claims. By the same token, the sheer bulk of the billing sheets, their failure to always identify the particular issue involved and the relationship between the various race claims, makes it difficult to determine with certainty the exact number of hours spent on the unsuccessful claims. For these reasons, I adopted the following methodology in determining the appropriate reduction of plaintiffs’ fee request.
I reviewed each billing entry and attempted to identify those hours spent working on the unsuccessful claims. In the course of this review, I also considered the hours defendants identified as having been spent on unsuccessful claims. 2 I then determined the percentage of each attorneys’ time attributable to work on the race claims. 3 Because many of the billing entries are general, rather than specific, this process probably understates the amount of time each attorney spent on the race claims in general. However, since the plaintiffs succeeded on one of their race claims, and since a portion of the hours attributable to the unsuccessful claims are reasonably related to that successful claim, I find that it is equitable to reduce each attorney’s claimed hours by this percentage. This method compensates the plaintiffs for hours spent on tasks related to their successful claims, while reducing the overall award to account for their partial success.
2. Excessive or Duplicative Hours
Defendants’ next major objection is that the attorneys’ fees request should be substantially reduced to account for duplication of effort, excessive time spent on routine tasks and inefficient use of attorney time. A moderate reduction in claims hours is appropriate where counsels’ billing records indicate substantial duplication of effort or inefficiency.
Hensley,
Hensley
requires that counsel for a prevailing party exercise “billing judgment” in making a fee request, and that counsel excise “excessive, redundant, or otherwise unnecessary” hours from that request.
The requirement under Hensley is that plaintiffs’ hours be reasonably spent. There is no requirement that plaintiffs’ counsel staff their cases or delegate responsibilities in the same way that defense counsel would. In reviewing plaintiffs’ billing records in light of this objection, I found very few instances of the excessive or duplicative work defense counsel claimed existed. While a small reduction is appropriate for certain hours, I will decline defendants’ invitation to reduce counsels’ hours by twenty (20%) percent. The billing records do not substantiate such a large reduction.
Defendants particularly object to the hours claimed by Taifa-Caldwell as excessive or duplicative, given her general inexperience. Ms. Taifa-Caldwell’s inexperience is reflected in the lower hourly rate requested for her services. In analyzing each of the hours defendants objected to because they were “excessive, duplica-tive or compensable at a lower rate,” I discovered that defendants object to virtually every hour she spent responding to prisoner correspondence, summarizing depositions and analyzing them for admissions, scheduling trips and depositions, researching, compiling documents for exhibits and attachments to briefs and proof reading plaintiffs’ submissions. I find that these activities are appropriately delegated to an inexperienced attorney and that the hours claimed for these services are compensable. Obviously, plaintiffs’ counsel had an ethical duty to communicate with their clients, and time spent on that task is compensable. The time spent proof reading was time well spent, and the Court sincerely wishes counsel for the defense had been as conscientious in that regard during the course of this litigation.
4
In short, after reviewing
In reviewing the hours claimed by Ms. Aiyetoro, I also do not find evidence of excessive duplication or hours spent on routine tasks. Many of the defendants’ objections relate to hours Ms. Aiyetoro spent compiling documents and exhibits, and hours she spent coordinating witness appearances. I do not find those hours to be excessive. Although most document identification can be handled by support staff or less experienced attorneys, the attorney with primary responsibility for conducting deposition or trial testimony must also spend some time compiling and reviewing the pertinent documents. Similarly, some one with knowledge of the case and the trial schedule had to assume responsibility for identifying the prisoner witnesses and coordinating their appearances. The hours Ms. Aiyetoro spent on these tasks are not excessive or unreasonable. Defendants object that on May 1, 1986, Ms. Aiyetoro claims to have spent 25.2 hours working on this case. While I note that those billings are either excessive or an error in transcription, see Plaintiffs’ Reply Memorandum in Support of Petition for Attorneys Fees, Sept. 16, 1988 at 6, n. 5, at least half of the hours claimed have already been excised as related to unsuccessful claims. There is no need to further excise these hours for possible duplication.
On a number of other occasions, Ms. Aiyetoro billed more than eight hours for a single day. Standing alone, I do not view this as evidence of duplication or inefficiency. It is certainly not unusual for attorneys to work long hours when they are litigating a complex matter, and in fact I would be more suspicious of the billing entries if there were not days where counsel claimed to have spent more than eight hours working on this case.
5
See Ramos v. Lamm,
In reviewing Ms. Aiyetoro’s billing records, I did not find a substantial number of entries indicating duplicative work. As noted above, I find that many of the hours defendants object to on this basis were, in fact, reasonably spent. I did, however, find a number of entries that are objectionable. For example, on June 6 and 7, 1985, Ms. Aiyetoro bills nine hours for travel between Washington, D.C. and Lansing, but appears to have performed no compen-sable services on or near those dates. On November 21, 1985, she spent 17.5 hours preparing for a two hour deposition. On May 14 and 15,1986, Ms. Aiyetoro spent 15 hours marking documents. On August 5, 1986, she spent 2.25 hours in court organizing exhibits. These are examples of the hours I identified as having been unreasonably spent, in addition to those spent responding to the motion to dismiss. A two percent reduction in her claimed hours is sufficient to account for the possibility that she spent excessive amounts of time on certain tasks.
I did find some evidence of excessive hours in the time Ms. Alexander spent on discovery related matters. In reviewing her time sheets, I noted 263 hours attributed to discovery related tasks such as drafting or answering interrogatories, reviewing documents, summarizing depositions, preparing document lists and marking documents. This number does not include time spent planning discovery, editing or supervising other attorneys’ work or discussing information obtained with other counsel. It is certainly necessary for senior attorneys to participate in the discovery process, especially where, as here, the discovery requested by both sides was extensive and the process was complicated by defendants’ seeming inability to promptly and properly reply to any discovery request. On the other hand, tasks such as marking documents and summarizing depositions are routinely delegated either to paralegals or junior attorneys. In light of these considerations, I find that a two percent reduction in Ms. Alexander’s claimed hours is sufficient to account for hours which could as easily have been delegated to a less experienced attorney.
I found no evidence of duplication of effort or excessive hours in the hours claimed by the remaining attorneys on the case, the paralegals, law student interns or law clerks. I will, therefore, decline to reduce their hours on this basis.
3. Paralegals and Law Clerks
Defendants object to the hours billed by paralegals, law clerks and law student interns as vague, excessive or related to unsuccessful issues. I have already excised a portion of their claimed hours as related to unsuccessful issues, and I believe that this reduction is sufficient. The hours claimed by these individuals are neither vaguely documented nor excessive. I find them to be reasonable and compensable, with the exception already noted.
See Louisville Black Police Officers Organization v. City of Louisville,
4. Duplicative Award of Fees for Rule 11 Sanctions
Defendants also object that plaintiffs’ counsel should not be compensated on this petition for time spent seeking Rule 11 sanctions and on the appeal of those sanctions. On August 20,1987,1 granted plaintiffs’ counsel $6,165.00 in sanctions for defendants’ conduct in filing frivolous motions.
See Knop v. Johnson,
B. Hourly Rates
The defendants next object that the hourly rates sought by plaintiffs’ counsel are unreasonably high. Plaintiffs’ counsel seeks compensation for the relevant attorneys at hourly rates ranging from a high of $190 to a low of $90. Paralegals, law student interns and law clerks are billed at lower rates, ranging from $65 per hour to $25 per hour. Plaintiffs’ counsel have distinguished between time spent in court, out of court and in travel. They have submitted affidavits from three attorneys familiar with billing practices in the State of Michigan indicating that the hourly rates sought are reasonable for attorneys engaged in complex litigation in this state. See Declarations of Joseph L. Harding, Plaintiffs’ Exhibit (“PX”) 1, William Marshall Ellmann, PX 2, William H. Goodman, PX 3. I find as a matter of fact that the hourly rates requested for each attorney are reasonable, in light of the attorneys’ expertise in this complex and highly specialized area of the law, the high quality of their representation, the nationwide scope of their practice and the hourly rates charged by attorneys in private practice for services of a similar nature.
In attacking the rates sought by plaintiffs’ counsel, defendants focused upon the following passage from
Blum v. Stenson,
The statute and legislative history established that “reasonable fees” under § 1988 are to be calculated according to the prevailing market rates in the relevant community, regardless of whether plaintiff is represented by private or nonprofit counsel.11
11. We recognize, of course, that determining an appropriate “market rate” for the services of a lawyer is inherently difficult. Market prices of commodities and most services are determined by supply and demand. In this traditional sense there is no such thing as a prevailing market rate for the service of lawyers in a particular community. The type of services rendered by lawyers, as well as their experience, skill, and reputation, varies extensively — even within a law firm. Accordingly, the hourly rates of lawyers in private practice also varies widely. ... [T]he critical inquiry in determining reasonableness is now generally recognized as the appropriate hourly rate. And the rates charged in private representations may afford relevant comparisons.
... To inform and assist the court in the exercise of its discretion, the burden is on the fee applicant to produce satisfactory evidence ... that the requested rates are in line with those prevailing in the community for similar services by lawyers of reasonably comparable skill, evidence, and reputation.
Id.
at 895-96 and n. 11,
Defendants contend, on the basis of this passage, that plaintiffs’ counsel are entitled only to the
median
hourly rate charged by attorneys practicing in Michigan. In support of that contention, they
Defendants appear to assume that the Court is without discretion to award fees at a rate higher than the median hourly rate as determined by Dr. Stiffman’s survey. There is no support in the law for that proposition. In
Blum,
the Supreme Court specifically acknowledged that there is no such thing as a single “prevailing market rate” for lawyers’ services, and that district courts have discretion to establish a reasonable hourly rate based upon a number of factors, including the attorneys’ experience and expertise, and the complexity or novelty of the case at issue.
See Blum,
Further, in Louisville Black Police Officers Organization, the Sixth Circuit expressly acknowledged that district courts have discretion to award fees based upon an hourly rate the district court determines to be reasonable.
... Northcross [v. Board of Education,611 F.2d 624 (6th Cir.1979)] specifically provides that “[f]or those attorneys who have no private practice, the rates customarily charged in the community for similar services can be looked to for guidance.”611 F.2d at 638 . However, in keeping with the discretionary nature of fee awards, we did not require the district court to look only to such rates. In fact, there is nothing in Northcross to prevent a district judge from adjusting a fee upward or downward to reflect the quality of representation.
Id.
at 276-77 (emphasis in original). The court further noted that while reasonable hourly rates may be determined by looking to the jurisdiction where a case is tried,
id.
at 277 (quoting
Horace v. City of Pontiac,
Today’s holding is not to be interpreted as requiring district courts to always base the fees awarded non-private attorneys on the local rates. District courts are free to look to a national market, an area of specialization market or any other market they believe appropriate to fairly compensate particular attorneys in individual cases. ... [W]e reiterate today that the district courts retain theirdiscretion in such matters constrained only by their duty to achieve the goal enunciated in Northcross: “to make an award of fees which is ‘adequate to attract competent counsel, but which do not produce windfalls to attorneys.’” 611 F.2d at 633 .
Louisville Black Police Officers,
As the above citations indicate, I have no duty to slavishly adhere to the hourly rates Dr. Stiffman believes are reasonable. First, I think it unreasonable to confine these attorneys to a “median” market rate for their services. These attorneys are nationally recognized experts in a complex field of federal practice. They are by no means the “median” member of the bar, and their hourly rates should be adjusted upward to reflect both their specialization and the extremely high quality of the representation they provided to the plaintiff class. Such an adjustment is not simply reasonable, it is mandated by equity and fairness.
Second, I note that Dr. Stiffman based his opinion of reasonable rates on the assumption that plaintiffs’ counsel practice in a firm with between two and seven partners. He further testified that the size of the firm is crucial to determining the hourly rate appropriately charged by counsel. But it is unfair and unreasonable to consider these attorneys as persons who practice for such a small firm. The National Prison Project is but one legal project funded by the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation (“ACLUF”). The Court may take judicial notice of the fact that the ACLUF employs more than seven lawyers, not including the thousands of attorneys across the country who volunteer their time and services to aid the organization’s litigating efforts. In light of these considerations, it is more appropriate to consider the National Prison Project a department, or branch office of a large law firm, rather than a separate law firm.
Further, to compensate these attorneys at the lower rates available to lawyers in smaller firms would fail to recognize the truly nationwide scope of the National Prison Project’s practice. At present, the National Prison Project is involved in litigation in 22 states. Lawyers from small firms rarely practice outside their particular community, while lawyers from larger firms often have a statewide or nationwide practice, and are entitled to charge higher rates for these services. I note that none of the rates sought by the fee petitioners exceeds the range of rates reported by Dr. Stiffman’s study for firms with between 51 and 100 lawyers. See DX 2 at p. 23.
Third, Dr. Stiffman could not offer an opinion on what any particular lawyer in Michigan would actually charge a fee paying client to handle a case of this size and complexity. The plaintiffs on the other hand, offered the affidavits of three practicing attorneys in Michigan indicating that the rates sought are equal to or below the rates attorneys in private practice would charge for similar services. In addition, the plaintiffs offered evidence indicating that the defendants themselves consulted outside counsel in this case, and compensated those attorneys at higher hourly rates than those sought here. PX 32. Defendants protest that these rates are not an “admission” on their part of what reasonable hourly rates would be, but the rates do indicate that there are attorneys in Michigan whose hourly rates are similar to those requested here.
Finally, I note that awarding the hourly rates requested would serve the policy announced in
Northcross,
that attorney fee awards should be “adequate to attract competent counsel,” without producing a windfall for the attorneys involved.
I find, therefore, that the hourly rates sought by plaintiffs’ counsel are reasonable for attorneys practicing in the state of Michigan. To the extent that they are higher than the median rate, the increase is more than justified by the expertise of the attorneys involved, the nationwide scope of their practice, the high quality of the representation they provided their clients, and the complexity of the issues involved in this litigation. An award of fees at the requested rates is also necessary to attract competent counsel to this demanding field of practice. I will, therefore, award plaintiffs’ counsel fees at the requested hourly rates. I will apply current, rather than historic hourly rates to compensate plaintiffs’ counsel for the delay in payment.
See Louisville Black Police Officers,
C. Multiplier
Plaintiffs’ counsel in this case seek a multiplier or enhancement of the lodestar figure for two reasons. First, they argue that defense counsels’ uncooperative and unprofessional behavior made litigating this case “hazardous duty,” and they should be compensated for having to withstand that behavior. Second, counsel argues that the economic risk associated with this case — the chance that the massive costs advanced in order to litigate the case would not be repaid — justifies a multiplier. Defendants argue that plaintiffs have not achieved the exceptional success necessary to justify a multiplier, that a multiplier should not be applied to punish counsel for improper behavior and that enhancements based upon the risk on non-recovery are unavailable under
Pennsylvania v. Delaware Valley Citizens’ Council,
Delaware Valley
is, to say the least, a confusing case. A plurality of the Court concluded that fee shifting statutes such as § 1988 should not be construed to permit supplementing the lodestar to compensate counsel for assuming the risk of nonpayment of fees. The plurality went on to reason, however, that even if such enhancements are available, an enhancement was inappropriate in that case. The plurality questioned enhancements based upon the risk of nonpayment for two reasons. First, such enhancements compensate plaintiffs’ counsel for having lost other cases, while Congress intended to compensate counsel only when they prevail. Second, such enhancements tend to penalize the defendants who have the most meritorious cases, rather than those whose cases are weak.
Id.
at 725,
Justice O’Connor’s concurring opinion held that “Congress did not intend to foreclose consideration of contingency in setting a reasonable fee under fee-shifting provisions_”
Id.
at 731,
Delaware Valley
may be read to limit the availability of fee enhancements or multipliers even beyond the limitations imposed by
Blum v. Stenson,
The Supreme Court’s decisions in
Delaware Valley
and
Blum
leave at least one avenue available for enhancing the attorneys’ fees available under § 1988. Justice O’Connor and the
Delaware Valley
plurality agreed that an enhancement would be available where “necessary to attract competent counsel in the relevant community.”
In order to convince counsel in private practice to accept cases of this nature, the fee awards must compensate counsel for time spent on the particular case involved, and be sufficient to convince them to fore-go fees they would have earned from their regular clients in order to properly litigate a case of this nature. Because counsel in private practice are unwilling to accept the responsibility of litigating a major prison conditions case such as this, even with the potential for fee shifting, an enhancement is necessary to vindicate the congressional policy behind section 1988 — that of providing competent legal representation for those who are otherwise unable to afford it.
See Delaware Valley,
As I read
Delaware Valley,
even the plurality’s opinion would not foreclose an enhancement in a case like this where plaintiffs were able to show that local attorneys were unwilling to participate in the case, at least in part because of the enormous cost associated with that participation. Plaintiffs’ counsel advanced almost $300,000 in costs and expenses to litigate this case to its conclusion. Indigent civil rights plaintiffs who cannot afford to compensate their attorneys for expenses advanced will never be able to retain counsel in a major civil rights case if counsel are not compensated for the risk that they will not recover these out-of-pocket expenditures. This is true whether the counsel retained comes from the private bar or from a legal assistance project. Charitable organizations, like lawyers in private practice, have limits on the funds they can expend on any particular case. I note further that enhancing fees to com
Other factors mandate that plaintiffs’ counsel be awarded an enhancement of the lodestar figure. First, and most significantly, an enhancement is necessary to compensate plaintiffs’ counsel for the unpleasantness, stress, and gross inconvenience of litigating against counsel who repeatedly ignored deadlines imposed by the Federal Rules and by the Court, required plaintiffs’ counsel to return to Court again and again in order to accomplish adequate discovery, and who launched improper attacks on both plaintiffs’ counsel and witnesses. A brief sampling of some instances of defense counsel’s unprofessional conduct may be necessary (although undesirable).
First, as plaintiffs’ counsel testified at the fee hearing, defense counsel never responded timely to a single discovery request made during this litigation. Although they were repeatedly granted extensions of time, the defendants consistently failed to meet even these extended deadlines. Defendants delayed over five months in responding to plaintiffs’ request for admissions. Their answers to interrogatories were as much as four months late. Defendants’ responses to requests for production were not simply late, they were virtually non-existent. On at least one instance, plaintiffs were required to travel to Michigan to compile certain documents themselves because defense counsel were simply unwilling to do the work. As a direct result of defense counsels’ lack of cooperation, plaintiffs were unable to complete discovery before trial began.
Defendants’ uncooperative attitude resulted in the untimely filing of the joint pretrial order. They failed to disclose their list of expert witnesses until November, 1985, nearly five months past the stipulated date for disclosure. Even at this tardy date, defendants’ list was incomplete and they subsequently substituted at least one expert witness. Defendants attempted to prevent plaintiffs’ expert on race issues from touring the subject institutions, necessitating yet another pretrial hearing. Finally, defendants consistently failed to produce required summaries of their lay witnesses’ testimony, and subsequently had some of their lay witnesses stricken.
Plaintiffs are manifestly correct when they argue that defendants’ misconduct during discovery was due to counsels’ bad faith, rather than the difficulty of responding to the discovery requested. While defense counsel was unable to respond to discovery requests, they were vigorously engaged in filing a massive number of pretrial motions. Some of these motions were meritorious, or at least colorable, while others were patently frivolous.
The unnecessary stress and frustration visited upon plaintiffs’ counsel by the defense was not limited to discovery matters. Defense counsel were uncooperative in accomplishing notice to the plaintiff class and arguably violated the Canons of Ethics by communicating directly with members of the class who had been designated as witnesses rather than going through counsel. Interrogatories were served directly upon these individuals, rather than upon their counsel, and included instructions to return the answers directly to defendants. Plaintiffs’ counsel were not served with these interrogatories and had to obtain a protective order, necessitating yet another pretrial hearing, in order to prevent this practice. Order of February 19, 1986.
Finally, I note once again, that certain defense counsels’ treatment of plaintiffs’ counsel and their witnesses fell well below minimal standards of professional courtesy. Their conduct went beyond zealous advocacy and fell directly into the category (or gutter) of personal insult. Certain defense counsel routinely referred to plaintiffs’ arguments as laughable, ludicrous, abusive, and speculative.
See,
Response to Order to Show Cause Why Rule 11 Sanctions Should Not Enter, July 18, 1986 at 19 (plaintiffs’ case
“a
reckless and dangerous presentation of obvious untruths, irrelevancies, and misleading information coupled with naive opinions of marginally qualified corps of
This type of conduct may (or may not) fall below the level of sanctionable conduct under Rule 11, and in fact I am not concerned with whether the conduct should, in retrospect, have been punished with more force. The point here is that reasonable attorneys should never have to put up with this kind of behavior from their adversaries. The stress, frustration and outrage of having to do so vastly increased the personal toll plaintiffs’ counsel paid for participating in this case. That price is not adequately reflected in the lodestar figure, since personal insults, untimely responses, and uncooperative attitudes do not increase the number of hours one spends litigating a case nor do they increase one’s expertise or hourly rate in any meaningful fashion. I wish to emphasize that I find this behavior to be a basis for increasing the lodestar, not because I wish to sanction defense counsel or defendants’ themselves, but because I believe that the lodestar does not adequately compensate plaintiffs’ counsel for their efforts in this case, efforts which were insulted and frustrated at every turn by the behavior described above. An enhancement or multiplier is available in exceptional cases where the lodestar figure does not result in a reasonable attorneys’ fee.
See Pennsylvania v. Delaware Valley Citizens’ Council,
A second source of inconvenience to plaintiffs’ counsel also merits an enhancement of the fee award. This case involved four major prisons, widely spaced throughout the state of Michigan, and with the exception of the State Prison of Southern Michigan, located in remote areas. Plaintiffs’ counsel were required on several occasions to visit each of these prisons. In addition to the arduous travel, plaintiffs’ were inconvenienced by the prison officials’ refusal to promptly comply with their requests to interview members of the plaintiff class. Counsel testified at the hearing, and the billing records corroborate, that they were forced to spend long periods of time on each visit simply waiting to see their clients. This is evidence, not only of the defendants’ uncooperative behavior, but also of the additional stress and inconvenience plaintiffs’ counsel experienced
Finally, I note that these reasons for granting a fee enhancement do not necessarily rely upon the degree of success achieved by plaintiffs’ counsel. To the extent that a finding of exceptional success is necessary to justify an enhancement, I make it now. Plaintiffs’ counsel completely prevailed on four of the five major issues severed for trial. With regard to the fifth issue, racial discrimination, they were partially successful. The results obtained by plaintiffs' counsel are extremely important and beneficial to their clients, because the issues tried affect the plaintiff class members’ every day lives. For example, members of the plaintiff class now have adequate winter clothing. They can be assured that their privileged legal mail will be treated as confidential. Prisoners housed in locked cells will no longer have to depend upon a corrections officer’s consent to use sanitary toilet facilities. For the first time in Michigan, illiterate or non-English speaking prisoners will be able to consult with legal counsel on their civil rights claims. For other prisoners, their access to the courts has been increased by the expansion of the prisons’ law libraries. Finally, and for this Court most significantly, prisoners can be assured that openly racist behavior by corrections officers will no longer go unpunished by the defendants and that their complaints about such behavior will be taken seriously. This recognition of prisoners' basic right to be treated with dignity can only be described as an exceptional success for the plaintiff class.
I find, therefore, that a multiplier, or enhancement of the basic fee is appropriate in this case for four reasons. First, plaintiffs’ counsel established to my satisfaction that the costs associated with this litigation, coupled with the risk of non-recovery, made it impossible for the plaintiff class to retain local counsel. Without an enhancement of the basic fee, other similarly situated plaintiffs will also be unable to attract competent local counsel. Second, I find that the increased stress and frustration counsel suffered due to the conduct of defense counsel justifies an enhancement. The basic fee award is insufficient to compensate counsel for the personal costs they paid as a result of their participation in this litigation. Third, a multiplier is justified because of the inherent difficulty of litigating this case, given counsels’ limited access to their clients and the difficulties associated with the simultaneously litigating conditions in four separate, remote institutions. Fourth, plaintiffs’ counsel achieved exceptional success for their clients. In recognition of these factors, therefore, I have determined that a multiplier of 30% (1.3) should be applied to the basic fee award.
D. Costs and Expenses
Plaintiffs request reimbursement for expert witness fees in the amount of $97,530.61. Defendants object that, under the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Crawford Fitting Co. v. J.T. Gibbons, Inc.,
Section 1988 has been construed, as a general rule, to allow reimbursement for all reasonable out-of-pocket expenses incurred by prevailing counsel which normally are charged separately to fee-paying clients and which are not incorporated as part of office overhead into the attorneys’ billing rates.
See Kuzma v. I.R.S.,
In
Northcross,
the Sixth Circuit ruled that, “The authority granted in section 1988 to award a ‘reasonable attorney’s fee’ included the authority to award those reasonable out-of-pocket expenses incurred by the attorney which are normally charged to a fee-paying client, in the course of providing legal services. Reasonable photocopying, paralegal expense, and travel and telephone costs are thus recoverable pursuant to the statutory authority of § 1988.”
In
Crawford Fitting Co. v. J.T. Gibbons, Inc.,
- It seems to me that the distinction drawn by these courts between reasonable expenses which are recoverable as part of an attorneys’ fee, and the cost of expert witnesses which are recoverable only under § 1920, is illogical. Expert witnesses, as surely as long distance telephone calls, photocopies and airline tickets, are necessary expenses in many civil rights cases. Certainly that is true of prison conditions cases. Moreover, the cost of retaining an expert witness is an expense which would normally be billed to a fee-paying client in other types of litigation. Further, I think Congress’ intent to allow recovery of necessary expert witness expenses is demonstrated not only by the legislative history of § 1988, 122 Cong.Rec. 35,123 (1976) (“the phrase ‘attorney’s fees’ would include ... all incidental and necessary expenses incurred in furnishing effective and competent representation”); but also by the Equal Access to Justice Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(2)(A)(ii), which allows compensation for expert witness fees in actions against the federal government.
Whatever the merits of the rule, however,
Northcross
clearly held that the cost of expert witnesses is compensable, if at all, under § 1920, and
Crawford Fitting
held that § 1920 limits compensation to the statutory witness fee provided by § 1821. Although I wholeheartedly agree with plaintiffs’ argument that the use of expert witnesses was crucial to their success on the merits of this action,
Northcross
and
Crawford Fitting
require me, albeit reluctantly, to accept the defendants’ position. Costs for expert witnesses are limited to their travel expenses and witness fees of
Section 1821 provides that witnesses who are before the Court “or before any person authorized to take his deposition” shall be paid an attendance fee of $30 per day for each day’s attendance. 28 U.S.C. § 1821(a)(1), (b). Witnesses who travel by common carrier are to be compensated for their travel expenses, 28 U.S.C. § 1821(c)(1), and witnesses who use ground transportation are to be reimbursed for mileage, toll charges, taxicab fares, and parking. 28 U.S.C. § 1821(c)(2)-(3). Witnesses who must stay away from home overnight are also entitled to a subsistence allowance which shall not exceed the maximum per diem allowance for federal employees.
I have reviewed every item of expense claimed by the plaintiffs’ counsel, as well as the bills submitted by the expert witnesses themselves. During this review, I checked deposition and testimony dates against counsel’s billing records, the Court’s docket sheet, and its minute entries from trial and hearing dates. I also considered the objections interposed by defendants as well as their calculation of allowable witness expenses. This calculation was in error because it did not include reimbursement for deposition testimony which is clearly allowed by statute. I find that plaintiffs’ counsel are entitled to reimbursement for witness fees and expenses in the amount of $3,691.97. 8
Other out-of-pocket expenses normally reimbursed as part of the attorneys’ fees will, however, be allowed. Crawford Fitting did not reach this issue, and North-cross allows compensation for photocopying, travel, telephone and other extraordinary expenses as part of the reasonable attorneys fee, rather than as costs under § 1920. Other courts have routinely allowed recovery for non-overhead expenses such as postage, and I will do so as well. Because I find that these costs were necessary to the litigation as a whole, I will not reduce them to account for the plaintiffs’ partial success. The recoverable expenses would not have differed dramatically had plaintiffs pursued only their successful claims.
In evaluating plaintiffs’ claimed expenses for items other than expert witnesses, I checked the expense records against counsels’ billing records and against the specific objections interposed by the defendants. I have denied reimbursement where I was unable to find that counsel performed any legal services during the relevant period of time, although I allowed for some margin of error in the recording process (for example, if air fare was recorded for June 3, 1986 but services were performed only on June 2, 1986, I allowed the airfare on the theory that one entry or the other must be a simple mistake.) 9 I have not excluded expenses incurred by counsel in touring the various institutions because I find that these tours were reasonably necessary to the claims upon which plaintiffs prevailed at trial. The same is true for expenses incurred by counsel while attending depositions, hearings or trial. These expenses are charged as part of the reasonable attorneys’ fees available under § 1988. Defendants have objected to certain expense entries because more than one attorney attended the trial or hearing involved. I have not excised these expenses because I find that it. was reasonable for more than one attorney to attend.
After reviewing every single expense entry, I find that the expenses, with the exceptions noted above, are entirely reasonable and will be awarded. Costs for photocopying, postage, express mail are reasonable. Similarly, I find that the plaintiffs request expenses only for extraordinary secretarial and paralegal expenses. These are expenses which would normally be billed to a client and they will be reimbursed. The same finding pertains to ex
Defendants successfully pointed out a couple of minor duplicative or erroneous billings. See DX 27, 28. I have excised those charges. With regard to the remaining charges, they will be reimbursed as described above.
Defendants object that plaintiffs are not entitled to recover costs associated with depositions, such as court reporter fees and transcript costs, unless the deposition was entered into evidence at trial. I disagree. Section 1920 and F.R.Civ.P. 54(d) grant the Court discretion to tax costs for depositions which are reasonably necessary.
Furr v. AT & T Technologies,
Similarly, awarding of costs for trial transcript expenses is within the discretion of the court.
Farmer v. Arabian American Oil Co.,
In this case, I find that it is appropriate to tax costs associated with obtaining a trial transcript. The trial in this case was lengthy and fragmented. The issues involved were complex and the Court required the parties to submit proposed findings of fact. I find that the costs requested are reasonable and I will tax those costs to the defendants.
II. First Supplemental Application
In reviewing plaintiffs’ first supplemental application for attorneys’ fees and expenses, I followed the same methodology described above. With regard to the expenses claimed, I have excised expenses for expert witness fees. I have also excised expenses claimed by Ms. Aiyetoro for the period of time between August 19, 1988 and August 29, 1988. I could find no services performed by Ms. Aiyetoro in Knop on those dates, and the dates coincide with a compliance hearing on medical and mental health care issues in United States v. Michigan. I find that these services are unrelated to the claims upon which plaintiffs prevailed and that the expenses claimed are not compensable.
I reviewed the attorneys’ billing records and found relatively few hours which merited excision. I have deducted two hours from Ms. Alexander's claim for time spent on April 7, 1988 preparing for overcrowding depositions. I believe those depositions were unrelated to the successful claims. Ms. Aiyetoro’s hours and Mr. Lopez’s hours will be fully compensated. I have also deducted 1.4 hours from the time claimed by law student interns on June 10, 1988. These hours were spent responding to an inquiry about urine testing, a subject
With these exceptions, the first supplemental application will be granted at the hourly rates requested by plaintiffs’ counsel. 10 For the reasons outlined in my opinion on the amended application, a multiplier of 1.3 will be applied to hours spent working on the merits of this case. No multiplier will be applied to hours spent working on the fee petition itself.
III. Second Supplemental Application
In their second supplemental application, plaintiffs’ counsel seek attorneys fees for time expended on the fee litigation itself. Counsel are entitled to reasonable attorneys fees for litigation associated with the fee petition.
Northcross,
As I have with the other aspects of this fee petition, I extensively reviewed the billing records and expenses claimed by Jenner & Block. I find that their fee petition is adequately documented, based upon contemporaneous time records, and supported by affidavits from the attorneys and paralegals seeking fees.
The hours spent on the fee petition litigation were reasonable. In reviewing counsel’s billing records, I noted that fee counsel spent approximately 18% of their time (primarily that of Theresa Chmara) doing legal research and reviewing the underlying litigation with plaintiffs' counsel. The majority of the briefing that occurred on this fee petition was accomplished by plaintiffs’ counsel rather than by fee counsel. The plaintiffs’ counsel prepared the initial and amended petition for fees, the reply brief to defendants’ objections and the response to defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Fee counsel prepared a relatively lengthy pre-hearing memorandum and a brief memorandum in support of their second supplemental application for fees. At first blush, it would appear that the hours spent on legal research were excessive or duplicative hours spent by the plaintiffs’ counsel. On the other hand, it is obvious that fee counsel must do legal research to adequately represent their client’s interests. The parties engaged in substantial discovery on the fee petition and fee counsel represented plaintiffs’ counsel at the hearing on the fee petition. Legal research and an extensive review of the underlying litigation were necessary in order to appropriately conduct these activities. Not all legal research results in documents for the Court’s consideration. I note further that fee counsel volunteered to submit a post-hearing brief, a request which the Court declined. I find, therefore, that the hours spent on research and review were reasonably necessary.
I find that the hours spent on other tasks, such as reviewing defendants’ objections to the fee petition and engaging in discovery were reasonably spent. It was necessary for fee counsel to engage in this work primarily because defendants vigorously objected to the fee petition. Defendants’ objections were lengthy and specific. Fee counsel was required to spend a great deal of time preparing their response to these objections.
City of Riverside v. Rivera,
This is not a case in which a private out-of-town practicing attorney has been called in to try a case. In such a situation, the court would be justified in looking to his or her standard rate in the community where that attorney normally practices as a reflection of that attorney’s training, background, expertise and skill.
The declarations of fee counsel adequately document their unique expertise and skill, as well as the fact that the hourly rates sought are those charged to paying clients in the Washington, D.C. area. See also Declaration of William A. Bradford, PX 4 at 3 (indicating reasonable Washington, D.C. hourly rates). I will award fee counsel fees at the hourly rates sought.
Fee counsel have established to my satisfaction that the fees sought for paralegal and librarian assistance would normally be billed separately to paying clients, and are not included in the firm’s overhead. See Declaration of Chandanie Botejue; PX 4 at 4 (indicating that Washington, D.C. firms bill paralegals to clients, and do not charge their time to overhead). These fees will also be allowed.
Finally, I find that the expenses sought by fee counsel are reasonable and appropriate. Fee counsel seek reimbursement for expenses such as postage, transportation, long distance telephone calls, special messenger services and photocopying. I am satisfied that these are the type of expenses which would normally be billed to paying clients and that the expenses were reasonably necessary to the litigation. I will, therefore, reimburse fee counsel for the expenses claimed.
TABLE 1
Amended Application Attorney’s Fees
Attorney Hours Fee
Elizabeth Alexander
In court ($190/hour) 334.60 $ 63,574.00
Out of court ($150/hour) 2,293.35
— 10% partial success 2,064.02
— 2% excess/duplication 2,022.74 303,411.00
Travel ($80/hour) 321.25 25,700.00
Total $392,685.00
Adjoa Aiyetoro
In court ($160/hour) 218.35
— 25% partial success 163.77 $ 26,203.20
Out of court ($125/hour) 1,434.00
— 40% partial success 860.40
— 2% excess/duplication 843.20 105,400.00
Travel ($75/hour) 129.95 9,746.25
Total $141,349.45
Patricia Streeter
All hours ($110/hour) 896.30
— 5% partial success 851.49
Patricia Streeter
$ 93,663.90 Total
Nkechi Taifa-Caldwell
150.70 $ 13,563.00 In court
Out of court
881.59 66,119.25 —
46.70 2,335.00 Travel ($50/hour)
$ 82,017.25 Total
Mary McClymont
O 00 i-H
$ — success O 05
Out of court ($125/hour) O t-
— 20% success <N © CO
1,200.00 Travel O © rH
$ 10,140.00 Total
Edward Koren
Out of court ($150/hour) t-; <£> lO
— 5% success © CO lO
$ 8,088.00 Total
Alexa Freeman
23.40 Out of court ($100/hour)
$ 2,340.00 Total
Urvashi Vaid
20.30 Out of court ($90/hour)
$ 1,827.00 Total
Daniel Manville
1,732.15 Out of court ($65/hour)
—
207.55 Travel
$107,557.60 Total
Rhonda Lipkin
671.85 Out of court ($50/hour)
450.14 $ —
44.35 1.330.50 Travel ($30/hour)
$ 23,837.50 Total
Law Clerks
652.80 Out of court ($50/hour)
535.30 $ 26,765.00 — 18% partial success
15.50 387.50 Travel ($25/hour)
$ 27,152.50 Total
Law Student Interns
Out of court ($25/hour) 0} to to to o
— ^ co Oi bx
$ 10,888.50 Total
Sharon Goretsky
27.50 Out of court ($45/hour)
Sharon Goretsky
— 30% partial success 19.25
Total $ 886.25
Julia Case
Out of court ($60/hour) 21.65
Total $ 1,299.00
Total Attorneys’ Fees $903,731.95
Multiplier (1.3) $1,174,851.54
Witness Fees
Witness Item Fee
Christensen
Dep. 4-7-86 Witness fee $ 30.00
Trial 6-3-86 Witness fee 30.00
Food 29.00
Trial 6-4-86 Witness fee 30.00
Food 17.60
Trial 6-5-86 Witness fee 30.00
Food 3.31
Hotel 498.76
Total $668.67
Wilber
Trial 6-5-86 Witness fee $ 30.00
Food 17.60
Trial 8-4-85 Witness fee 30.00
Food 5.00
Trial 8-5-85 Witness fee 30.00
Food 3.75
Hearing 3-3-88 Witness fee 30.00
Food 32.79
Food 5.25
Food 15.65
Hotel 87.48
Hearing 3-4-88 Witness fee 30.00
Food 4.00
Mileage 58.50
Total $380.02
McManus
Hearing 3-3-88 Witness fee $ 30.00
Air fare 398.00
Parking 21.50
Food 20.00
Taxi 8.00
Total $477.50
Duel
Dep. 4-2-86 Witness fee $ 30.00
Trial 8-5-86 Witness fee 30.00
Trial 8-6-86 Witness fee 30.00
Mileage 95.25
Total $185.25
Rundel
Trial 10-22-86 Witness fee $ 30.00
Air fare 560.00
Food 16.57
Total $606.57
Chapman
Dep. 5-9-86 Witness fee $ 30.00
Air fare 165.00
Food 3.43
Ground transportation 16.00
Trial 8-6-86 Witness fee 30.00
Air fare 408.00
Hotel 102.45
Food 14.27
Dep. 11-5-85 Witness fee 60.00
Air fare 150.00
Hotel 139.34
Ground transportation 70.00
Total $1,188.49
Lav Witness Expenses
Trial 8-13-86 t-lO a*
Trial 10-20-86 ® 1-H T-i to
o ^ 00 <m
Total $ 185.47
Total Witnesses Expenses $3,691.97
Disallowed Expenses Other Than Witness Fees & Expenses
No services recorded
Date Attorney Expense
9-16-85
and
9-17-85 Manville $ 371.73
6-05-85
and
6-06-85 Aiyetoro 236.15
9-12-85 Taifa 281.48
10-14-85 Taifa 928.47
10-15-85 Taifa 7.45
10-10-85 Taifa 13.00
10-21-85 Taifa 690.00
10-27-85 Taifa 841.64
10-19-85
to
11-01-85 Taifa 767.41
11-12-85
and
11-13-85 Taifa 485.39
11-14-85
to
11-17-85 Taifa 516.68
11-18-85
to
11-19-85 Taifa 145.48
11-20-85
to
11-28-85 Aiyetoro $290.00
(excessive, reduced by one-half)
12-04-85
to
12-07-85 Taifa 595.93
12-16-85
to
12-18-85 Taifa 777,62
Total $6,948.43
Duplicate Billings 10-16-85 Alexander/Manville $ 61.00
10-25-88 Manville 271.00
Total $ 332.00
Miscellaneous
8-28-86 Manville (medicine for prisoner) $ 4.99
Expenses Claimed $285,392.66
Less Disallowed Expert Expenses 108,177.04
Less Disallowed Attorney Expenses 7,285,42
$169,930.20
Witness Fees 3,691,97
Total Allowable Expenses and
Costs $173,622.17
TABLE 2
First Supplemental Application
Attorneys’ Fees — Merits
Attorney Hours Fee
Elizabeth Alexander
Out of court ($150/hour) 34.50 $ 5,175.00
Adjoa Aiyetoro
In court ($160/hour) 1.50 240.00
Out of court ($125/hour) 51.00 6,375.00
Travel ($75/hour) 6.70 502.50
Total $ 7,117.50
Law Student Interns
Out of court ($25/hour) 43.90 $ 1,097.50
Total Hours 137.60 $13,390.00
Multiplier (1.3) $17,407.00
Expenses
Disallowed Expenses
Expert Fees $ 2,109.00
Aiyetoro Travel (8-19 to 8-28-88) 1,007.37
Total $ 3,116.37
Expenses Claimed $ 6,709.14
Less Disallowed Expenses 3,116.37
Allowed Expenses $ 3,592.77
Fees-Fee Petition
Elizabeth Alexander
$ 1,875.00 Out of court ($150/hour) © tO c4 rH
Adjoa Aiyetoro
160.00 2,862.50 203.25 In court ($160/hour) Out of court ($125/hour) Travel ($75/hour) O O tH OOit-t-5 <nj cci
$ 3,225.75 Total
Mark Lopez
50.20 $ 3,765.00 Out of court ($75/hour)
Law Clerks
16.00 $ 800.00 Out of court ($50/hour)
Law Student Interns
72.80 $ 1,820.00 Out of court ($25/hour)
$11,485.75 Total
$28,892.75 Total Attorneys’ Fees
3,592.77 Total Expenses
$32,485.52 GRAND TOTAL
TABLE 3
Second Supplemental Application
Attorney Fees
Attorney Hours Fee
Bruce J. Ennis
($220/hour) 89.00 $19,580.00
David W. Ogden
($165/hour) .50 82.50
Donald B. Verrilli, Jr.
($140/hour) 201.00 28,140.00
Mark D. Schneider
($140/hour) 37.50 5,250.00
Theresa Chmara
($90/hour) 433.75 39,037.50
Chandanie Botejue
($70/hour) 7.50 525.00
Mary C. Nally
($65/hour) 41.75 2,713.75
Paul Cane
($65/hour) 4.0 260.00
Vivek Jain
. ($55/hour) 1.0 55.00
Rosalie Gerber
($70/hour) 2.5 175.00
Total 818.50 $95,818.75
Total Expenses GRAND TOTAL $7,228.30 $103,047.05
TABLE 4
Total Attorneys’ Fees
Amended Application $1,174,851.54
First Supplemental Application 28.892.75
Second Supplemental Application 95.818.75
Total $1,299,563.04
Total Expenses
Amended $173,622.17
First
Second Supplemental Application 7,228.30
Total $184,443.24
GRAND TOTAL $1,484,006.28
ORDER
In accordance with the opinion entered April 5, 1989;
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Plaintiffs’ Amended Application for Attorneys’ Fees, Plaintiffs’ Supplemental Application for Attorneys’ Fees and Plaintiffs’ Second Supplemental Application for Attorneys’ Fees are GRANTED;
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Defendants shall pay to Plaintiffs’ counsel the sum of $1,484,006.28 in attorneys’ fees, expenses and costs.
Notes
. The product of reasonable hours and hourly rates is generally referred to as the "lodestar” figure.
. See, Defendants’ Objections to Plaintiffs’ Application for Attorneys Fees and Costs, Exhibits A-G; Defendants Exhibits 6-17.
. I have often commented on the proofreading skills exhibited by defense counsel in this mat-
.
See
Table 1,
infra.
. Perhaps the defendants’ attorneys are not used to working such lengthy hours. I do not know how many hours most Assistant Attorneys General work each week, but I do know that working hours in my chambers exceed 50 hours a week as a general rule, and often total between 60 and 80 hours per week during trial terms.
. In this regard, Ms. Streeter is a welcome exception to the rule.
.This ruling obviates the need to determine whether any reduction in plaintiffs’ expert witness expenses is required to account for plaintiffs’ partial success on their race claims.
. See Table 1, infra.
. The excluded expenses are itemized in Table 1, infra.
. See Table 2, infra.
