Lionel Aubin won a $300,000 negligence verdict against the town of Bedford, New Hampshire, two of its policemen, and its chief of police. He and his parents obtained nominal damage awards on accompanying civil rights claims. Subsequently, Lionel asked the district court for about $80,000 in prejudgment interest. The plaintiffs also sought compensation “for all of their attorneys’ fees involved in this matter,” under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. The district court denied the request for prejudgment interest. It awarded $146.34 in attorneys’ fees. The Aubins appeal these decisions. In our view, Lionel Aubin is entitled tó prejudgment interest on his state law negligenсe claim. The district court should reconsider the request for fees.
I
The suit underlying this appeal is a combined ‘federal civil rights/state common law’ action that Maurice and Normande Aubin and their sons Lionel and Norman brought against the town of Bedford, its police chief, four police officers, and a state trooper. The claims arose out of a burglary investigation on New Year’s Eve, 1979. In the course of the investigation, one of the defendants, Officer Fudala, mistook Lionel Aubin for a suspect and shot him in the right shoulder. Defendant Trooper Meaney, mistaking Lionel’s brother Norman for an accomplice, arrested and handcuffed him. Defendant Officers Biron and Morency then went to the door of the Au-bin residence and prevailed upon a third Aubin son, Ronald, to let them search the house. The Aubin parents, Maurice and Normande, returned home later that night tо learn that one of their sons was in the hospital and another at the police station.
The Aubins later filed this suit, which, after a jury trial, yielded the following results:
1. The jury awarded Lionel Aubin $300,-000 on his state law negligence claim against Officers Fudala and Biron, the chief of police, and the town. It also аwarded him $500 on his parallel federal civil rights claim against Fudala for ‘unreasonable force.’
2. The jury found in favor of Lionel’s parents, Maurice and Normande Aubin, on their federal civil rights claim complaining that their house had been unlawfully searched, but awarded only nominal damages of $1.
3. The jury found against Norman Au-bin on his tort and civil rights claims stemming from his alleged false arrest and wrongful imprisonment. .
4. The court directed a verdict against all plaintiffs on a civil rights claim alleging that the defendants had conspired to cover up their mistake in shooting Lionel.
On December 8, 1982, the court enterеd judgments embodying these results. Both sides appealed. We affirmed the judgments in all respects, in an opinion to which the reader may refer for a fuller account of the facts.
Aubin v. Fudala,
Subsequently, when Lionel Aubin sought to collect his judgment, the defendants (or, rather, one of their insurance compаnies) refused to pay prejudgment interest on the $300,000 awarded Lionel under New Hampshire law. The plaintiffs then asked the district court to “add ... to the negligence verdict” an amount reflecting about $80,-000 in prejudgment interest. They also asked the court to “issue an execution in favor of the plaintiffs” in that amount.
In addition, the plaintiffs sought attorneys’ fees, see 42 U.S.C. § 1988, on the *289 ground that they had prevailed on two of their civil rights claims and that their remaining claims — in particular, Lionel’s negligence claim — were, as a practical matter, inseparably bound up with the civil rights claims on which they prevailed.
The district court treated the request for prеjudgment interest as “a motion to alter or amend judgment” under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e). It denied the request because it had not been made “10 days after the entry of the judgment.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e). And, as noted earlier, the court awarded the plaintiffs only $146.34 in attorneys’ fees.
II
We conclude that Lionel Aubin is entitled to prejudgment interest — despite the judgment’s failure to mention it — for the following reasons. First, when a plaintiff secures a jury verdict based on state law, the law of that state governs the award of prejudgment interest.
See Hobart v. O’Brien,
In ... civil proceedings ... in whiсh a verdict is rendered ... for pecuniary damages ..., there shall be added forthwith by the clerk of the court to the amount of damages interest thereon from the date of the writ or the filing of the petition to the date of such verdict____
N.H.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 524:l-b. Third, the amount of the state law negligence award was set forth separately in the judgment, making the computation of the appropriate interest a simple, mechanical, nondiscretionary task for the clerk to perform. Finally, Lionel’s delay in asking for the award is understandable in light of the standard practice in New Hampshire fеderal district court, see infra, and the delay does not appear to have prejudiced the defendants.
The award of prejudgment interest here at issue is thus quite different from an 'award of prejudgment interest under federal law, which is generally not automatic but is rather a matter for jury determination.
See, e.g., Segal v. Gilbert Color Systems, Inc.,
Our only uncertainty concerns the precise prоcedural device appropriate to secure Lionel the award. Ordinarily, we would instruct the court below to grant his motion to amend the judgment under Fed.
*290
R.Civ.P. 60(a), which allows the district court, “at any time,” to correct “clerical mistakes ... arising from oversight or omission.” The scope of thе rule is limited,
see Elias v. Ford Motor Co.,
The parties have informed us, however, that the New Hampshire federal district court’s standard practice in preparing the form of judgment is to mention only the amount of the damage award, and not to mention anything about costs or interest, even when there is no question about a party’s entitlement to the latter items. The court clerk explicitly adds those items to the amount of damages only if execution should prove necessary, and in that еvent, the items are mentioned only in the writ of execution, not in the original form of judgment.
Whether the District of New Hampshire wishes to continue this practice seems to be a matter for it to decide. We note that the model form of judgment accompanying the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure does make reference to interest and costs, see Form 31, Appendix of Forms, Fed.R.Civ.P., but these forms are suggestive, not mandatory, see Introductory Statement, Appendix of Forms, Fed.R.Civ.P. (forms “intended for illustration only”). Depending upon whether the district court prefers to modify or to retain its present prаctice, it should either (1) correct the judgment under Rule 60(a), or (2) leave the judgment unaltered and simply issue a writ of execution reflecting the amount of interest due. In either case, the court should award Lionel Aubin the prejudgment interest he seeks.
Ill
The appellants challenge the court’s award of $146.34 in attorneys’ fees as too low. The court apparently treated the appellants as “prevailing parties” on two of their federal civil rights claims, and agreed they were entitled to “a reasonable attorney’s fee.” 42 U.S.C. § 1988. But, after calculating the presumptively reasonable ‘lodestar’ amount — the hours the attorneys devoted to the litigation multiplied by their reasonable hourly rates — the court sharply reduced the lodestar to account for the limited “extent of [the plaintiffs’] success on [their] civil rights claims.” In an attempt to quantify the “extent of success,” the court discounted the lodestar by the ratio of the damages awarded on the civil rights claims to the total damages awarded. Since the jury awarded $501 damages on the civil rights claims and $300,000 on the negligence claim, the district court discounted the lodestar by more than 99 percent. We agree with the appellants that this method of calculation was improper.
First, the extent of a plaintiff’s success in a civil rights suit is a practical question, involving a qualitative, as well as a quantitative, judgment.
See, e.g., Segal v. Gilbert Color Systems, Inc.,
Second, the district court’s approach is inconsistent with
Hensley v. Eckerkart, supra.
The Supreme Court there held that when a civil rights suit consists of multiple claims, and when the plaintiff prevails on some of them but not on others, the plaintiff is entitled to fees for hours worked not only on the successful civil rights claims, but also on other claims involving a “common core of facts” or “related legal theories.”
Id.
at 435,
For one thing, precedent so holds. The Second Circuit has stated that a “reasonable fee” should not be denied simply because “the jury awarded substantial damages only on the pendent state law ... claim and not on the constitutional violation.”
Milwe v. Cavuoto,
For another thing, this precedent makes sense in light of the fact that ‘victory’ in a civil rights suit is typically a practical, rather than a strictly legal matter.
See, e.g., Nadeau v. Helgemoe,
Of course, we write on the assumption that the appropriate interconnection exists; we also have assumed the likelihood thаt nonsubstantive reasons (such as the existence of a ‘deep pocket’ defendant or other reasons peripheral to the merits of the federal claim) account for the disparity between the damage awards on the parallel federal and state claims аrising from Lionel’s shooting. We know enough of the case from its prior appeal for such arguments to sound plausible. We believe, however, that the district court, more familiar with the details of the case than are we, should decide initially whether, or the extent to which, these assumptions аre correct. While the court cannot fathom the mind of the jury, it can determine ‘interrelationships,’ the extent to which the plaintiffs got *292 basically what they wanted, and whether there was a substantial chance Lionel would have obtained (roughly) that same relief on his federal claim in the аbsence of the state claim. That is to say, in determining whether a ‘discount’ from the lodestar is appropriate, the district court should as an initial matter apply the principles set forth in Hensley and here to the facts of this case.
Finally, the appellees urge us to limit the fee award in light of the asserted failure of the appellants’ attorneys to submit adequate time records to the district court. While we have insisted that such records be precise,
see Wojtkowski v. Cade,
The order of the district court is vacated, and this case is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
