This appeal presents the question whether an award by the District Court of the Virgin Islands of attorney’s fees to the prevailing plaintiff in an uncontested mortgage foreclosure action was so excessive in amount as to constitute a reviewable abuse of the discretion vested in the District Court in that regard by the Virgin Islands Code.
The complaint, which was prepared by the attorneys for the plaintiff and filed in the District Court on April 11, 1967, sought the foreclosure of a mortgage given by the defendant on its real property in St. Croix. The mortgaged property had been valued at $350,000 and the remaining principle due on the mortgage was $254,449.80. On June 1, after the time allowed for filing an answer had expired the attorneys for the plaintiff moved for the appointment of a receiver and on August 31 and again on October 17 for a default judgment. Meanwhile the attorneys for the defendant on May 29 had moved for and obtained an extension of time for filing the answer on the ground that negotiations for refinancing the mortgaged property were about to bear fruit. These, however, subsequently came to naught.
At the hearing on September 28 of the plaintiff’s motion for a default judgment
Attorney’s fees are allowable as costs to the prevailing party in the Virgin Islands under section 541 of Title 5, V.I.C., the pertinent provisions of which are:
“(a) Costs which may be allowed in a civil action include:
(6) Attorney’s fees as provided in subsection (b) of this section.
(b) The measure and mode of compensation of attorneys shall be left to the agreement, expressed or implied, of the parties; but there shall be allowed to the prevailing party in the judgment such sums as the court in its discretion may fix by way of indemnity for his attorneys fees in maintaining the action or defenses thereto.”
On this appeal the defendant urges that the award of attorney’s fees by the district court in this case was so grossly excessive as to amount to a clear abuse of discretion. We agree. The amount of attorney’s fees to be awarded to the prevailing party is discretionary with the court, as the statute states, and is reversible on appeal only in case of a clear abuse of discretion. Tebbs v. Alcoa Steamship Company, 3 Cir. 1957,
Canon 12 of the Canons of Professional Ethics of the American Bar Association 1 sets forth some of the criteria appropriate for consideration in fixing an attorney’s fee. Among them are the time and labor required, the novelty and difficulty of the questions involved, the skill requisite properly to conduct the cause, the customary charges of the bar for similar services, the amount involved in the controversy, the benefits resulting to the client from the services, and the contingency or certainty of the compensation. We think that these are appropriate criteria for the court’s consideration in awarding attorney’s fees as costs to a prevailing party in a civil action under section 541 of title 5, V.I.C.
In the present case it appears that the time of the plaintiff’s attorneys involved was only 28 1/2 hours. If they were to charge as much as $85 per hour
2
the total would come to only about $1,000. By way of contrast the sum awarded by the
The judgment of the district court will be modified by reducing the award of attorney’s fees to the plaintiff to $2,000 and as so modified will be affirmed, without costs.
