Lead Opinion
Opinion for the Court filed by SILBERMAN, Circuit Judge, in which BUCKLEY, STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS, D.H. GINSBURG, SENTELLE, KAREN LeCRAFT HENDERSON, and RANDOLPH, Circuit Judges, concur.
Dissenting opinion filed by HARRY T. EDWARDS, Circuit Judge, with whom MIKVA, Chief Judge, WALD and RUTH BADER GINSBURG, Circuit Judges, join.
SILBERMAN, Circuit Judge, in which BUCKLEY, STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS, D.H. GINSBURG, SENTELLE, KAREN LeCRAFT HENDERSON, and RANDOLPH, Circuit Judges, concur:
This case concerns the circumstances in which a court making an award of reasonable attorney’s fees under federal fee-shifting statutes may augment the lodestar with a contingency enhancement designed to compensate the prevailing party’s attorney for the risk of losing the case. The panel opinion in this case, King v. Palmer,
I.
Mabel King brought a gender discrimination claim against her employer, the District of Columbia, and ultimately received an award of back pay and retroactive promotion. See King v. Palmer,
Ms. King experienced no difficulty in securing an attorney. She was represented throughout the litigation by the first attorney she contacted, Robert Adler, who took the case on a partial contingency basis. Ms. King contacted Mr. Adler as a result of his successful representation of a colleague of hers in another Title VII case, for which he had received a 10% contingency enhancement. Ms. King and Mr. Adler agreed that she would be responsible for litigation costs and expenses, as well as for fees of up to $5000, and that she would receive any award of damages, while Mr. Adler would receive any statutory attor
Mr. Adler averred that he took the case expecting that a contingency enhancement would be available. In his applications for attorney’s fees following Ms. King’s success on the merits, Mr. Adler twice requested a 35% fee bonus to compensate him for the risk of nonpayment he had borne during the litigation, but the district court held this request in abeyance pending the Supreme Court’s decision concerning the availability of contingency enhancements in Pennsylvania v. Delaware Valley Citizens’ Council for Clean Air,
After the Court issued its fragmented decision in Delaware Valley II, Mr. Adler reapplied for a contingency enhancement, increasing his request to 100%. Reading Justice O’Connor’s concurrence in Delaware Valley II as controlling the availability and degree of contingency enhancement, the district court held that the plaintiff must establish how the market compensates for contingent cases on a class-wide basis and then show that without such enhancement she would have had substantial difficulty attracting competent counsel to her case. See King v. Palmer, Civ. No. 83-1980-LFO, Mem. at 2,
The panel, following our previous opinion in McKenzie v. Kennickell,
Judge Buckley, dissenting on this issue, thought the McKenzie majority misread Delaware Valley II. He pointed out that “Justice O’Connor joined the plurality in requiring proof that the prevailing party ‘would have faced substantial difficulties’ in obtaining competent counsel ... absent an upward fee adjustment for contingency risks.” Id. at 340-41 (Buckley, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (quoting Delaware Valley II,
Because the record establishes that McKenzie and his fellow plaintiffs had in fact located qualified lawyers willing to represent them in Washington, D.C. in the early 1970’s, I conclude that under Delaware Valley II these fee applicants have failed to prove that the prevailing party “would have faced substantial difficulties” in securing competent attorneys absent the incentive of an enhanced fee.
Id. (emphasis added).
In accordance with McKenzie, the panel in this case thought the failure of the district court to make a specific finding that Ms. King would have faced substantial difficulties in obtaining counsel without a risk enhancement was of no real significance. See King,
We decided to rehear the case en banc in order to reconsider the interpretation of Delaware Valley II that the panel in McKenzie adopted. It is our view that the approach followed by the majority in McKenzie is, as Judge Buckley argued, a misreading of Justice O’Connor’s concurring opinion. Moreover, we do not think that Justice O’Connor’s concurring opinion in Delaware Valley II controls the issue of the circumstances under which contingency enhancements are permitted. We conclude that the fragmented decision in Delaware Valley II provides no test for determining the availability, much less the calculation, of contingency enhancements under fee-shifting statutes and that we are therefore obliged to continue the search for the most sensible rule to govern contingency enhancements. The rule we adopt is that of the Delaware Valley II plurality: a reasonable lodestar fee awarded under federal fee-shifting statutes may not be enhanced to compensate a prevailing party for his initial risk of loss.
II.
A.
Delaware Valley II has given rise to a spate of circuit court opinions that attempt — with varying degrees of confidence — to interpret the Supreme Court’s
The Supreme Court’s decisions on attorney’s fees prior to Delaware Valley II had established the lodestar — a measure of fees defined by the number of hours reasonably expended on a case multiplied by a reasonable market rate per hour — as the presumptively reasonable award, steadily subsuming most other factors into that single calculation. See Hensley v. Eckerhart,
The judgment in Delaware Valley II reversed an award of a 100% contingency enhancement.
Justice O’Connor concurred in part and concurred in the judgment reversing the award. She agreed with the dissenters that “Congress did not intend to foreclose consideration of contingency in setting a reasonable fee.” Id. at 731,
B.
In our prior opinions interpreting Delaware Valley II, we, like other circuit courts, have assumed that Justice O’Con-nor’s concurrence controls. See McKenzie v. Kennickell,
To ascertain when contingency enhancements should be made available under Delaware Valley II, we have looked for some common ground between Justice O’Con-nor’s concurrence and the plurality opinion. We have had little difficulty placing a label on that common ground, since Justice O’Connor expressly joined the plurality’s statement in Part V that enhancements should be available only when a plaintiff would have faced “substantial difficulties” in attracting counsel to his case without the prospect of an enhancement. However, we and the other courts of appeals have had considerable trouble determining the content of that “substantial difficulties” label — that is, determining just how “substantial” the “difficulties” in attracting counsel have to be, and how they must be proven.
In this search for content, several of our sister circuits have read Justice O’Connor’s concurrence as implicitly agreeing with the plurality’s statement, Delaware Valley II,
To be sure, Justice O’Connor does not say at any point that she disagrees with the plurality’s “exceptional cases” position. And she does endorse the plurality’s view that the lodestar is a presumptively adequate fee. See Delaware Valley II,
There is only one point concerning the availability of contingency enhancements that a fair reading of Justice O’Connor’s concurrence clearly supports. This point is that evidence of actual difficulties is highly probative of the “substantial difficulties” Delaware Valley II describes. In adopting the plurality’s “substantial difficulties” test, Justice O’Connor quotes from Part V of the plurality opinion. The passage she quotes concludes with a footnote that we presume Justice O’Connor adopted along with the textual language she cited. The footnote states: “ ‘an attorney’s fee award should be only as large as necessary to attract competent counsel,’ and ‘one relevant factor bearing on high-risk is whether other counsel had declined to take the case because there was little or no prospect of earning a fee.' ” Id. at 731 n. 12,
This is, we recognize, a hard standard to meet. Indeed, if evidence that other counsel actually refused the case is only “one relevant factor” in determining whether the plaintiff would have had “substantial difficulties” in obtaining counsel without a risk enhancement — a factor insufficient by itself to justify awarding an enhancement — the plaintiff’s burden in producing sufficient evidence to meet the test must be quite daunting. And it also follows that a plaintiff’s failure to put on any evidence of actual difficulties in attracting counsel without extra compensation would severely undermine a claim for a contingency enhancement.
The district court here made no finding that Ms. King would have faced substantial difficulties in attracting counsel without a contingency bonus. Nor was there any evidence that Ms. King faced actual difficulties in securing representation. As it happened, Robert Adler was the first attorney the plaintiff contacted, and, although he later stated that he would not have accepted representation without the “definite possibility” of a contingency enhancement, his fee award in a previous case had
Before the district court and again before us, Ms. King has also sought to rely on the affidavits of attorneys who were not approached by Ms. King and were never involved in the case.
Nor do we believe the few affidavits presented that expressed a view as to whether the affiant lawyer would or would not have taken Ms. King’s case add much to her claim for an enhancement. Insofar as they seek to hypothesize whether the affiants would have taken her case, they focus (inevitably it seems to us) on the strength or weakness of her claim. See supra note 3. But in Delaware Valley II, it will be recalled, both the plurality and Justice O’Connor regarded that factor as inappropriate. See Delaware Valley II,
In sum, even if we were to apply Justice O’Connor’s concurrence as the holding of Delaware Valley II, we think Ms. King’s evidence does not paint a picture of a situation where a contingency enhancement is necessary to “mak[e] it possible for poor clients with good claims to secure competent help.” Id. at 730-31,
C.
Although we have determined that Ms. King failed to carry her burden under Justice O’Connor’s opinion in Delaware Valley II, candor obliges us to concede that we are unable to set forth a conceptual framework that would govern further litigation on the subject of contingency enhancements. We have certainly suggested, in accordance with our understanding of the substantial difficulties test, that actual evidence that attorneys did refuse a case is of greater probative value
To add to our quandary, even if we did have evidence that several lawyers had declined Ms. King’s case, we think it would be impossible to separate out from their decision not to represent her the strength or weakness of her claim as it appeared to them at the time. After all, this is surely the principal reason a lawyer will turn down a case under a fee-shifting statute. Delaware Valley II, however, tells us unequivocally that the risk of loss in a particular case is not a factor that courts may look at in determining whether a contingency enhancement is appropriate. “[A] court should not award any enhancement based on ‘legal’ risks or risks peculiar to the case.” Delaware Valley II,
The more we struggle with this problem, the more we are convinced that it is virtually impossible to determine whether a given plaintiff would have had “substantial difficulties” in obtaining counsel without a contingency enhancement. The inquiry is quite artificial, because, by definition, the plaintiff stands before the court with counsel. And since counsel could not possibly know whether a risk enhancement was in the offing until a court decides the question years later, our inquiry is circular. As Judge Williams noted in his concurrence in the panel opinion in this case, whether a plaintiff would have faced substantial difficulties absent the possibility of a contingency enhancement is essentially unknowable when the most critical assumption necessary to make such a counterfac-tual judgment is itself the issue before the court. See King,
As Judge Buckley correctly observed in McKenzie, if Justice O’Connor’s opinion controls the holding of Delaware Valley II, we would be obliged to apply the “substantial difficulties” test, notwithstanding these analytical difficulties, “like it or not.” McKenzie,
In Gregg v. Georgia,
In Gregg, the Court — in another fragmented opinion — treated the opinions of Justices Stewart and White as controlling. See Gregg,
Similarly, in Marks itself, the Court adopted as the governing definition of obscenity the position of the plurality from the earlier case of A Book Named “John Cleland’s Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure” v. Attorney General of Massachusetts,
The Court itself appears not to apply Marks in cases of this type. To take one example, in Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
It seems to us that Delaware Valley II is one of the fragmented opinion cases that cannot be resolved satisfactorily by Marks. Unlike Furman or Fanny Hill, Delaware Valley II is not a case in which the concurrence posits a narrow test to which the plurality must necessarily agree as a logical consequence of its own, broader position. In other words, it is not a case in which there is an implicit majority of the Court. Rather, Delaware Valley II involves three distinct approaches to the issue of contingency enhancements in fee-shifting statutes, none of which enjoys the support of five Justices.
Superficially, to be sure, there is a common link between the plurality opinion and Justice O’Connor’s concurrence; both Part V of the plurality opinion and Justice O’Connor seem to endorse the substantial difficulties test we sought to apply earlier in this opinion. But the plurality quite clearly indicated in Part IV that it did not believe that contingency enhancements were ever available. See Delaware Valley II,
Justice O’Connor does appear to accept the bare concept that contingency enhancements should not be awarded unless the plaintiff shows substantial difficulties, but it is far from clear, as we noted earlier, what content she would give to the “substantial difficulties” test the plurality articulates in Part V. Her concurrence does not contain enough independent reasoning on the question of availability to allow us to compare her position analytically to that of the plurality. In that sense, her opinion
Even if it were possible to determine from Justice O’Connor’s opinion when to apply a contingency enhancement and to conclude that her views on that subject were somehow narrower than the plurality’s, it is quite clear that one could not say in the Marks sense that her carefully explained view of how the contingency enhancement should be calculated is narrower than the plurality’s answer to that question. The plurality in Part V stated that if an upward adjustment for contingency risk were applied, the amount should be based on the “real risk-of-not-prevailing” in the case — but as a general rule should be “no more than one-third of the lodestar.” Id. at 730,
To apply Marks to Delaware Valley II, we would have to conclude that Justice O’Connor’s answers to both the “when” and the “how” questions were “narrower” than the plurality’s in Part V. Without implicit agreement on both, it is simply impossible to regard the substantial difficulties test as controlling. Of course, as we have recognized, how one calculates a contingency enhancement could be thought to be a separate analytic issue from the question whether and under what circumstances a contingency enhancement is available. But as the panel opinion and other cases demonstrate, the two questions tend to run together. See King,
The Third Circuit, taking a different approach, has reasoned that Justice O’Con-nor’s opinion can be regarded as a subset of the dissent if not the plurality. As such, Justice O’Connor’s concurrence would speak for a majority of the Court. See id. (“Because the four dissenters would allow contingency multipliers in all cases in which Justice O’Connor would allow them, her position commands a majority of the Court.”). The Third Circuit appears to apply the Marks methodology to reach this result, but it does not explicitly rely on Marks. See id. at 1451 n. 16 (citing Marks as a “see also” in a footnote appended to the citation of a circuit opinion). This is understandable, because Marks has never been so applied by the Supreme Court, and we do not think we are free to combine a dissent with a concurrence to form a Marks majority. As the Court said in Marks itself, “When a fragmented Court decides a case and no single rationale explaining the result enjoys the assent of five Justices, ‘the holding of the Court may be viewed as that position taken by those members who concurred in the judgments on the narrowest grounds.’ ” Marks,
To be sure, in Vasquez v. Hillery,
To say that Delaware Valley II provides no controlling legal holding is not to say that it has no binding impact on us. Because the Court’s result was to deny a contingency enhancement without even a remand, we think we could not authorize the routine awarding of contingency enhancements of whatever size. Cf. National Mut. Ins. Co. v. Tidewater Transfer Co.,
We have done our best to apply Delaware Valley II but have been unable to derive a governing rule from the opinion. Considering our struggle to understand and apply Delaware Valley II as well as the difficulties our sister circuits have experienced, we urge the Supreme Court to clarify its position.
* * * * * *
For the foregoing reasons, we overrule McKenzie v. Kennickell,
It is so ordered.
Notes
. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(k) provides in pertinent part:
In any action or proceeding under this sub-chapter the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party ... a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the costs_
Section 2000e-16(d) extends the provisions of § 2000e-5(k) to actions by employees of the District of Columbia. Congress has made clear that it intends the courts to resolve the policy questions inherent in determining what is "reasonable.” See H.R.Rep. No. 1558, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 8 (1976).
. We do not understand how, as the dissent suggests, the discrete question presented in this case — whether a contingency enhancement is properly included within an award of attorney’s fees — can possibly be thought a matter for the discretion of the trial judge. If the overall reasonableness of a statutory attorney’s fee award were always a matter for the trial judge’s discretion, unguided by a legal structure, the Supreme Court certainly has wasted a good deal of time and effort attempting to develop uniform rules. See Blanchard v. Bergeron,
. Delaware Valley II interpreted the fee-shifting provision of the Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. § 7604(d). However, the Court has said that its standards for determining "reasonable” fees apply to all federal statutes awarding "reasonable" attorney’s fees to a "prevailing party,” including Title VII. See Hensley,
. Of these numerous affidavits, only five addressed the facts of Ms. King’s particular case or expressed any opinion at all about whether Ms. King herself would have faced substantial difficulties in attracting competent counsel absent the availability of a contingency enhancement. Two of these described the weakness and difficulty of her case as the principal reason the affiants would have been unwilling to assume representation. See J.A. at 112d (Cashdan); 173b (Fitzpatrick). Another attorney allowed that his firm would possibly have represented Ms. King if she had an "exceptionally strong claim.” J.A. at 124b (Chuzi). The fourth admitted there was at least a possibility, although "remote,” of finding pro bono representation for Ms. King. See J.A. at 214 (Lapidus). Only a single affidavit stated flatly that the affiant would not take Ms. King’s case because of the unavailability of contingency enhancements. See J.A. at 177 (Gottfried).
. The dissent, nevertheless, would calculate the amount of contingency enhancement based on the degree of risk faced by the plaintiffs lawyer in each case. As the plurality in Delaware Valley II noted, that approach would provide incentives to bring the weakest cases to court, and it would put the district judge who had to make that determination in a difficult psychological posture. See Delaware Valley II,
. Justice Stewart’s “hardcore” test, though it was also a logical subset of Justice Black and Doug
. In our view, even applying the Third Circuit’s reasoning, we do not think Justice O’Connor’s concurrence constitutes a controlling opinion in Delaware Valley II. For similar reasons to those we outlined in our discussion as to whether her opinion could be thought narrower than the plurality opinion, Justice O’Connor’s thoughtful answer to the question of how to calculate a contingency enhancement should it be available cannot possibly be thought a subset of the dissent’s approach to the same issue. She herself recognizes this. See Delaware Valley II,
. The dissent’s reliance on the legislative history of 42 U.S.C. § 1988 — particularly citations to Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc.,
Dissenting Opinion
join, dissenting:
In deciding this appeal, we are constrained to apply a specific statutory provision, section 706(k) of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(k) (1988), under which the District Court has broad authority to assess the reasonableness of a fee request. In the absence of legal error, the trial judge’s determination as to reasonableness may not be disturbed unless it is an abuse of discretion. Given this highly deferential standard of review, there is no legitimate basis whatsoever for this court to overturn the judgment of the trial judge on the facts of this case.
Furthermore, the majority’s new rule, that contingency awards are never justified, is completely without foundation. Twelve other circuits have reviewed the question at hand, and not one other circuit has adopted a rule that completely bars contingency enhancements.
The plaintiff, Mabel King, was awarded an attorney’s fee pursuant to section 706(k), which reads, in pertinent part, as follows:
In any action or proceeding under this subchapter the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party ... a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the costs [of bringing the action]_
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(k) (1988) (emphasis added). As may be seen from the clear terms of the statute, the “district court is expressly empowered to exercise discretion in determining whether an award is to be made and if so its reasonableness.” Blum v. Stenson,
In this case, the District Court awarded an attorney’s fee that compensates Ms. King’s counsel for the risk of having taken the case on a contingent-fee basis. In reaching its conclusion that a 50% enhancement over normal hourly rates was “reasonable” compensation in this case, the District Court properly looked to evidence of prevailing market practices to ensure that the fee award was roughly commensurable with what counsel could obtain on the open market. There is no doubt, given the language of the statute, that the District Court’s judgment in this regard is to be reviewed under a highly deferential, abuse-of-discretion standard. See Blum, 465 U.S.
Notwithstanding the latitude vested by Congress in trial courts to craft “reasonable” fee awards, the District of Columbia (“Government”) defendants in this case urge this court to substitute its judgment for that of the trial judge in overturning the award of fees. In following this suggestion, the majority seizes upon the “substantial difficulties” test found in Pennsylvania v. Delaware Valley Citizens’ Council for Clear Air,
Just recently, in rejecting a claim for expert fees as a part of a claim for attorney’s fees, the Supreme Court reminded us that we must enforce fee statutes as written. On this point, Justice Scalia, borrowing a well-known passage from an opinion by Justice Brandéis, said:
[The statute’s] language is plain and unambiguous. What the Government asks is not a construction of a statute, but, in effect, an enlargement of it by the court, so that what was omitted, presumably by inadvertence, may be included within its scope. To supply omissions transcends the judicial function.
West Va. Univ. Hosps., Inc. v. Casey, — U.S. -,
I.
By now, it should be beyond dispute that the fee-shifting provision of Title VII permits district courts to enhance time-based fee awards to take account of the fact that an attorney has taken a case on a contingent-fee basis. It is, of course, true that, in determining what is “a reasonable attorney’s fee” in any given case, the trial judge normally begins by calculating the prevailing attorney’s so-called “lodestar” fee. As the Supreme Court has explained:
The most useful starting point for determining the amount of a reasonable fee is the number of hours reasonably expended on the litigation multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate. This calculation provides an objective basis on which to make an initial estimate of the value of a lawyer’s services.
Hensley,
Among these “other considerations,” it appears quite certain that Congress intended that the courts would take into account whether a lawyer had taken a case on a fixed- or contingent-fee basis. This can be inferred from Congress’ approving citation of a 1974 Fifth Circuit decision, Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc.,
Apart from these indications of congressional intent, the Supreme Court also has acknowledged the propriety of considering the uncertainty of payment in calculating a fee award. Five Justices undoubtedly agreed in Delaware Valley II that “Congress did not intend to foreclose consideration of contingency in setting a reasonable fee under fee-shifting provisions” such as that found in Title VII.
There should be no controversy in the observation that attorneys in the private legal-services market ordinarily demand somewhat greater compensation in exchange for taking a case on a contingent-fee basis. It appears indisputable that “[Ijawyers operating in the marketplace can be expected to charge a higher hourly rate when their compensation is contingent on success than when they will be promptly paid[ ] irrespective of whether they win or lose.” Blum,
Furthermore, it is absolutely clear that the lodestar is not the sole measure of a reasonable attorney’s fee. It is true that the Supreme Court has said that “many of the Johnson factors,” such as “ ‘novelty [and] complexity of the issues,’ ‘the special skill and experience of counsel,’ the ‘quality of representation,’ and the ‘results obtained’ from the litigation[,] are presumably fully reflected in the lodestar amount, and thus cannot serve as independent bases for increasing the basic fee award,” see Delaware Valley I,
We recognize that the contingency factor could be accounted for within the initial lodestar calculation. A court could simply enhance the “reasonable” hourly rate used in calculating the lodestar and forgo post-lodestar adjustments. See, e.g., Copeland,
The majority rejects the prevailing view that enhancements are available because it can find no governing principle in Delaware Valley II. With no precedent or logic to support its opinion, the majority simply decides that contingency enhancements never should be permitted. This rule is created completely out of new cloth. Neither the plurality, concurring, nor dissenting opinion in Delaware Valley II holds that contingency enhancements are never available. In a sweep of reasoning that defies comprehension, the majority attempts to dismiss Part V of Justice White’s plurality opinion because Justice O'Connor declined to join this portion of the plurality. But, of course, as is clear from the Court’s opinion, Part V remains as written and means what it says: see, e.g.,
Furthermore, the majority in this case, having decided that Delaware Valley II does not control interpretation of the fees statute, does absolutely no work to interpret the statute. Rather, the majority relies on the utterly irrelevant proposition that “the question of attorney’s fees must not turn into major litigation itself,” see Delaware Valley II,
The majority’s result also flies in the face of the decisions from every circuit that has considered the issue since Delaware Valley II. In creating a split in the circuits, the majority now causes the D.C. Circuit to stand oddly alone on this question. Of the thirteen circuits applying Delaware Valley II, none — save the D.C. Circuit — has completely ruled out contingency enhancements. See, e.g., Jacobs v. Mancuso,
Additionally, despite the majority’s assertion that the tests developed in many circuits are “difficult, if not impossible, to meet,” even courts of those circuits have continued to award contingency enhancements in some circumstances. See, e.g., Morris v. American Nat’l Can Corp.,
Thus, setting aside the more contentious question of what degree of enhancement is appropriate, there ought to be no dispute that some upward adjustment of the lodestar fee is permissible where the prevailing attorney assumed the greater risk inherent in contingent-fee cases. There is simply no justification — in the statute, in the case law or in common sense — for the suggestion that contingent-fee lawyers may not be fully compensated for their services.
II.
With regard to the particular facts of this case, there is no basis under the abuse-of-discretion standard of review to overturn the District Court’s decision to allow a 50% enhancement of the lodestar fee submitted by Ms. King’s counsel. Although the Supreme Court’s guidance concerning the appropriate method for calculating a contingency adjustment has been regrettably uncertain, the trial court’s decision in this case is consistent with what standards can be gleaned from recent cases.
The clearest instruction found in the Supreme Court’s cases is that fee awards must be tied to evidence of the fee practices prevailing in the local legal market. See, e.g., Jenkins,
Another way to assess the reasonableness of the fee amount awarded by the District Court is pursuant to the two-prong test set forth in Justice O’Connor’s concurring opinion in Delaware Valley II. Although it is unclear what precedential force that opinion should be given, cf. Marks v. United States,
Under the first prong of Justice O’Con-nor’s test, the District Court here reasonably concluded that “the relevant market” does in fact compensate lawyers for assuming the risk of contingent payment. In addition to the evidence cited in Palmer v. Shultz, which went directly to the degree to which the Washington, D.C., legal market customarily compensates for contingency, the court had before it several dozen affidavits from local attorneys swearing either that they generally demand an enhancement over normal hourly rates in order to accept contingent-fee cases or that they refuse such cases altogether because of the risk involved.
Under the second prong of Justice O’Connor’s test, Ms. King was required to show that she “would have faced substantial difficulties in finding counsel” had contingency enhancements not been customarily available in the Washington, D.C., legal market. This proposition, of course, turning as it does on a counterfactual supposition, is difficult to prove. Nonetheless, Ms. King produced an affidavit from her attorney stating that he would not have taken her case without the prospect of a fee enhancement. See Declaration of Robert M. Adler at 2 (Sept. 11, 1987), reprinted in Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) 74, 75. In addition, she produced further affidavits from several Washington, D.C., Title VII plaintiffs’ attorneys corroborating that Ms. King likely would have faced substantial difficulties securing counsel without the promise of a contingency premium.
Because Title VII and the governing case law clearly permit trial courts to enhance attorney’s fees to compensate for the risk of contingent payment, and because the facts of the instant case satisfy whatever standards can be gleaned from recent Supreme Court cases, it cannot be found that the District Court abused its discretion in shaping the fee award in this case. As we noted at the outset, the standard of review in this case is abuse of discretion. The majority, however, has simply ignored the constraints of appellate review in second-guessing the findings of the trial judge. Indeed, the majority’s approach in this case borders on de novo review, in flat defiance of the Supreme Court’s instruction that “[i]t is central to the awarding of attorney’s fees ... that the district court judge,
III.
The fundamental problem with this case, as with other fee cases, is that the Supreme Court has yet to give us coherent guidance about how to determine the reasonableness of fee awards under Title VII and similar fee-shifting statutes. In this, we share the majority’s frustration, if not its solution. In particular, we do not yet know under what circumstances to award a contingency enhancement, nor do we know whether the degree of enhancement allowed by the courts merely reflects prevailing market rates or actually creates the relevant market forces by defining the extent to which economic risk will be compensated.
Logically, of course, the size of a contingency enhancement should be determined in each case according to the degree of risk actually incurred by the prevailing attorney. It is impossible to determine with any confidence what a “reasonable fee” would be in any particular contingency case without first assessing just how much risk the plaintiff’s lawyer actually assumed.
Although we share Justice O’Connor’s concern that risk enhancements not be calculated or awarded in “an arbitrary or unjust” manner, Delaware Valley II,
Second, the so-called “substantial difficulties” test is a confusing and potentially mischievous requirement. For example, the requirements that the court determine the amount of enhancement by looking at contingency cases as a class, and that it look at the circumstances of the particular case only to determine if the plaintiff would have had substantial difficulty in obtaining counsel without the enhancement, force trial judges to award contingency enhancements on an all-or-nothing basis. The judge must either award the supposed “market” risk enhancement or no enhancement at all; there is no leeway for the court to decide that some enhancement is appropriate, but that it should be less than the previously determined “market” rate. Although the awards calculated by this method are concededly uniform, they may be nonsensical insofar as they overcompensate some plaintiffs with not-so-risky cases while inadequately compensating others with especially risky ones.
Consequently, we believe that district judges, in enhancing the lodestar to account for the risk of nonpayment, should have the same discretion that they have in determining other components of the reasonable fee. Although no one formula can be devised for all cases, we think that district courts should consider both the size of the attorney’s investment in the case and the likelihood that that investment would not be recouped. For one thing, in determining whether a contingency enhancement is necessary to enable the plaintiff to secure counsel, the court could consider the amount that the lawyer would lose if the plaintiff did not prevail. See Delaware Valley II,
what, if any, payment the attorneys would have received had the suit not been successful; what, if any, costs or expenses the attorneys would have incurred if the case had been lost; the extent to which the attorneys were required to compensate associates and to carry overhead expenses without assurance of compensation; and whether other attorneys refused to take the case because of the risk of nonpayment.
Delaware Valley II,
For another thing, the court could consider the plaintiffs likely “ability to prove liability and damages ... [and the legal precedent] either in favor of or against the theories put forth in the case” in order to determine the magnitude of the risk that the plaintiff would not prevail. See Wildman,
In the absence of further guidance in this area from Congress or the Supreme Court, however, we would adhere to the only secure legislative directive available to us — that assessments of what constitutes a “reasonable attorney’s fee” are to be left to the sound and reasoned discretion of trial judges. A decade ago, this court, sitting en banc, acknowledged the inherent lack of certainty in this enterprise but concluded that such determinations were nonetheless best left, as Congress intended, with trial judges:
To the district court judge falls the task of calculating as closely as possible a contingency adjustment with which fairly to compensate the successful attorney. We have not ... lost sight of the fact that this adjustment is inherently imprecise and that certain estimations must be made. For example, it is difficult in hindsight to determine the risk of failure at the commencement of a lawsuit that ultimately proved to be successful. Thus, we ask only that the district court judges exercise their discretion as conscientiously as possible, and state their reasons as clearly as possible.
Copeland,
. See also Blanchard v. Bergeron,
Although some of these precedents focus upon the parallel fee-shifting provision set out in the Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Awards Act of 1976, Pub.L. No. 94-559, 90 Stat. 2641, codified at 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1988), Congress and the Supreme Court have made clear that the fee-shifting provisions of that statute and Title VII are to be interpreted alike. See Hensley,
. The Court reiterated the presumptive reasonableness of the lodestar fee in Blanchard, but did so there only to rebut the suggestion that a fee arrangement set in a contingent-fee contract should govern as a strict ceiling on a court-ordered fee in the same case. See
. The majority’s extended discussion of whether the five votes that adopt this position constitute a binding majority of the Court seems to us overly pedantic, and mostly irrelevant. It is axiomatic that lower court judges routinely consider and weigh the diverse statements in Supreme Court opinions, especially those propositions garnering a majority, to seek guidance in the disposition of subsequent cases. Indeed, that is precisely what our sister circuits have done in construing Delaware Valley II.
.The Supreme Court acknowledged as much in Blanchard when it stated that the lodestar figure is to be derived by “applying prevailing billing rates to the hours reasonably expended on successful claims.”
. In one affidavit, attorney George Chuzi stated:
During 1983,1 was personally familiar with most of the attorneys regularly bringing Title VII suits in the District of Columbia on behalf of plaintiffs. Had Mr. Adler not agreed to represent Mrs. King in this case, I am unaware of any other Title VII attorney who would have agreed in 1983 to represent her on a contingency fee basis (even had she agreed to pay up to $5,000 in legal fees). The only way in which I believe that a competent Title VII attorney would have been convinced to seriously consider this representation was if there was a reasonable possibility of receiving an enhanced fee for risk (over and above hourly rates) if Mrs. King prevailed.
Supplemental Declaration of George M. Chuzi at 2 (Dec. 21, 1987), reprinted in J.A. 130, 131; see abo Declaration of David R. Cashdan at 4 (Apr. 25, 1986) ("I believe that it is highly unlikely that I would have agreed to act as sole counsel in this case.”), reprinted in J.A. 112a, 112d; Declaration of Robert B. Fitzpatrick at 2 (Apr. 24, 1986) (“I believe that the chances of prevailing in this case ... were so remote that my firm would not have accepted representation of Mrs. King.”), reprinted in J.A. 173a, 173b; Declaration of Barry H. Gottfried at 2 (July 31, 1987) (“Had the plaintiff sought to retain me to represent her by filing a suit for the claims involved herein I do not believe that I would have accepted representation.”), reprinted in J.A. 176, 177.
. For example, as Judge Williams has pointed out, if courts generally allow a contingency enhancement of 50%, lawyers will have an economic incentive to bring only those cases in which the odds of succeeding on the merits are at least two-to-one; if the court-ordered enhancement figure rises to 100%, lawyers will presumably bring any case in which the chances of winning are at least 50%. See King v. Palmer,
. In this respect, a risk enhancement arguably should not encompass hours of labor for which compensation was secure. In the instant case, the argument could well be made that the risk of nonpayment incurred by Ms. King’s counsel virtually vanished after this court decided the merits in Ms. King’s favor in 1985. In King v. Palmer,
. To the contrary, lawyers claimed to demand contingency enhancements from 33% to 300% of their regular hourly rates. Other lawyers did not specify a percentage, saying only that they needed a "reasonable” risk enhancement to accept a Title VII case on a contingent basis.
. As a result, the lawyer and client may tailor the terms of the contract to address the risks and potential rewards involved in each case. See, e.g., Declaration of Nora A. Bailey at 2 (Aug. 12, 1987), reprinted in J.A. 82, 83; Declaration of John R. Erickson at 2 (Nov. 16, 1987), reprinted in J.A. 168, 169; Declaration of Chester T. Kamin at 2-3 (Aug. 24, 1987), reprinted in J.A. 193, 194-95; Affidavit of David N. Webster at 6 (Sept. 20, 1982) (“The greater the uncertainty of result, the greater the percentage fee may be, albeit always within the limit of reasonableness.”), reprinted in J.A. 289, 294.
.The plurality summarized these concerns in Delaware Valley II:
[Evaluation of the risk of loss creates a potential conflict of interest between an attorney and his client, for in order to increase a fee award, a plaintiffs lawyer must expose all of the weaknesses and inconsistencies in his client’s case, and a defendant’s attorney must either concede the strength of the plaintiffs case in order to keep down the fee award, or "allo[w] the fee to be boosted by the contingency bonus [by] insisting that the plaintiffs victory was freakish.”
. The plurality in Delaware Valley II voted to reverse the 50% risk enhancement of lodestar fees incurred to enforce a consent decree in part because there was not "a real risk of not persuading the District Court to enforce its own decree."
. In saying that the district court should have the discretion to tailor the contingency enhancement to the particular case, we are not saying that the experience of other similarly situated plaintiffs can be disregarded. To the contrary, we think that the success rate of other plaintiffs who have filed suits based on similar legal theories is a good indicator of the risk presented in the case.
. The court further observed:
The setting of contingency adjustments is particularly within the expertise of the District Judge, As the Supreme Court said long ago, the District Court “has far better means of knowing what is just and reasonable than an appellate court can have.” Trustees v.*796 Greenough,105 U.S. 527 , 537,26 L.Ed. 1157 (1882).
Copeland,
