ORDER
The memorandum disposition filed July 26, 1988, is redesignated as a per curiam opinion.
OPINION
This court affirmed the district court’s judgment against the City and County of San Francisco for damages and affirmed the base award of attorney’s fees computed at an ordinary hourly rate for hours expended without any enhancement.
Fadhl v. City and County of San Francisco,
In
Delaware Valley II,
a majority of the Court held that enhancing a fee award for contingency is permissible if two prerequisites identified in Justice O’Con-nor’s concurrence are met.
1
First, the fee applicant must establish that “without an adjustment for risk the prevailing party ‘would have faced substantial difficulties in finding counsel in the local or other relevant market.’ ”
Id.
The district court found that contingent fees that yield approximately two times the ordinary hourly rate for time expended is the return expected by lawyers in the relevant market (Title VII cases in San Francisco), and that Fadhl would have faced severe difficulties in obtaining an attorney without a contingency fee agreement that held out the possibility of substantial enhancement over the ordinary hourly rate.
The court chose a multiplier of 2.0 primarily to reflect the difference in market treatment accorded to contingency cases in San Francisco, as evidenced by the testimony Fadhl produced and by Ninth Circuit precedent. “For example, [San Francisco attorney] Steven Mayer testifies that because of the substantial risk of contingent fee litigation, his law firm will generally *651 not accept a contingent fee case unless the anticipated fee, if successful, will be equal to twice the value of the firm’s services billed at a normal rate.” 38 EPD ¶ 35,677 at 40,029. The court also cited this court’s acknowledgment that Title VII cases are especially unappealing to the private bar, id. at 40,030 n. 3, and regarded Fadhl’s own difficulty in retaining counsel as “indicative” of the economic unattractiveness of litigating such cases in San Francisco. Id. at 40,030. The City presented no evidence challenging either the finding that added compensation is necessary to attract competent counsel, or the 2.0 figure.
The court further found that the fact that Fadhl approached 35 lawyers before she found one who would represent her was strong support for the proposition that in the absence of risk enhancement, she would have faced substantial difficulties in retaining an attorney. This holding was further reinforced by testimony from the Executive Director of the San Francisco Lawyers’ Committee for Urban Affairs, as well as from Fadhl’s own attorney, that the possibility of enhancement was critical in persuading competent counsel to accept civil rights cases.
In addition to these permissible bases for fee enhancement, the district court considered factors the Supreme Court has found inappropriate. 2
To the extent that the district court considered inappropriate factors in calculating the multiplier, its reliance was improper. Nevertheless, we may still affirm its choice of multiplier on any permissible ground supported by the record.
Smith v. Block,
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Justice O'Connor's concurring opinion constitutes the Court’s holding in the case.
Save our Cumberland Mountains, Inc. v. Hodel,
Delaware Valley II
applied the Clean Air Act's attorney’s fees provision, 42 U.S.C. § 7604(d). The Court held that this statute should be applied in accordance with the principles and case law governing fee awards under 42 U.S.C. § 1988.
Delaware Valley II,
. It referred specifically to the risks inherent in suing a public entity like the San Francisco Police Department, and to the difficulty of Fadhl’s case. 38 EPD at 40,029. A majority in
Delaware Valley II
ruled that neither the complexity of an individual case nor the tenacity of the defendant justifies an enhancement of the base fee award.
