Ernest T. Rossiello & Associates, P.C. successfully represented plaintiff Danielle Pickett in a Title VII retaliation suit against her employer, defendant Sheridan Health Care Center (“Sheridan”). The jury awarded $65,000 in damages to Pickett, and her attorneys then sought to recover attorneys’ fees in the amount of $131,665.88. The district court granted plaintiffs fee request in part and denied it in part, resulting in a fee award to Rossiello of $70,000.
Although we appreciate the district court’s desire to limit the substantial fees that Rossiello stands to recover from this case, we conclude that the district court looked to certain impermissible considerations in calculating the fee award. Most significantly, the district court erred to the extent that it relied on the existence of the contingent fee agreement to reduce the statutory fee award. Further, the court should have provided plaintiff with an opportunity to respond before applying the Consumer Price Index (“CPI”) and the Laffey Matrix, and the court should have provided a clear explanation as to how it arrived at the hourly rate of $400. Finally, the district court erred in reversing its award of fees to outside counsel. We therefore vacate the award of attorneys’ fees and remand for further proceedings.
I. Background
The present dispute over attorneys’ fees stems from litigation brought under Title
*638
VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Pickett claimed that she was fired from her job as a housekeeper for complaining to management about being sexually harassed by residents of the Sheridan Health Care Center, a nursing home. The district court granted Sheridan’s motion for summary judgment on the sexual harassment claim but permitted the retaliation claim to go to trial. After a two-day trial, the jury returned a verdict for plaintiff in the amount of $65,000, consisting of $15,000 in compensatory damages and $50,000 in punitive damages. In addition, the district court awarded equitable relief, including back pay of $1,357.42. We affirmed these judgments.
Pickett v. Sheridan Health Care Ctr.,
Plaintiffs contract with her attorneys requires her to pay a 33.33% contingent fee and a $7,500 flat fee, in addition to assigning her statutory right to fees. The contract states that no portion of the contingent fee will be credited towards the statutory fee and that any statutory award is in addition to the contingent fee. Plaintiff sought a statutory award of $131,665.88 in attorneys’ fees and $1,271.27 in costs. Accompanying the fee petition was an affidavit from Rossiello, affidavits from three experienced employment lawyers in Chicago, evidence of Rossiello’s past fee awards, time and billing records for this case, and time records from Davis v. Electrical Insurance Trustees, No. 06C5913, a two-day Title VII case decided around the same time. Plaintiff also filed three motions requesting an evidentiary hearing on the fee petition, but none was held.
On March 29, 2011, the district court issued an opinion that granted in part and denied in part plaintiffs request for fees and costs. The court eliminated 20 hours due to Rossiello’s failure to remove hours spent on the losing sexual harassment claim. The court further reduced the award by 2.17 hours of associate time because Rossiello should not have been supervising while suspended from the practice of law. The district court then reduced the fee award due to duplicative work on the fee petition: even though Rossiello had retained outside counsel, Abrahamson, Vorachek & Levinson (“Abrahamson”), to prepare the fee petition, Rossiello also spent 17.16 hours on this task. The court awarded Rossiello only 10 of those hours but approved all 13.75 of Abrahamson’s hours.
Moreover, the court determined that Rossiello had not established his claimed hourly rate of $592.50 to be his market rate. The district court instead used the CPI and the Laffey Matrix (a measure used by some district courts to determine hourly rates), even though neither methodology had been presented by the parties. The district court then noted “most significantly” that Rossiello was entitled to receive a contingent fee and a flat fee, in addition to the statutory fee. The court stated that “[i]n light of this agreement, the evidence that Mr. Rossiello cites in support of his very substantial hourly fee is less persuasive” and concluded that “an hourly rate of $400 will amply compensate” him.
The district court ordered the parties to submit an agreed calculation of the amounts owed in accordance with its opinion. The parties arrived at a reduced fee award of $70,000 (175 hours at $400 per hour) for Rossiello and $9,268.79 in fees and costs for Abrahamson. The district court then entered its final award two days later, awarding $70,000 in fees to plaintiff for Rossiello’s work. Unexpectedly, the court denied the $9,268.79 award to Abrahamson, reversing its previous position on the ground that Rossiello had failed to *639 establish that he had prepaid Abraham-son’s fees.
Plaintiff now appeals certain aspects of the district court’s fee reduction. Specifically, plaintiff argues that the district court improperly reduced Rossiello’s hourly rate based on the contingent fee agreement and that the court improperly rejected the evidence submitted by Rossiello in support of his claimed hourly rate. Plaintiff also argues that the district court should not have applied the CPI adjustment or the Laffey Matrix without prior notice. Plaintiff further contends that the court failed to explain how it arrived at an hourly rate of $400 and that it abused its discretion in refusing to conduct an evidentiary hearing regarding attorneys’ fees. Finally, plaintiff argues that the district court erred in denying Abrahamson’s fees on the ground that they had not been prepaid.
II. Discussion
A. Standard of Review
We review the award of attorneys’ fees for abuse of discretion.
Anderson v. AB Painting & Sandblasting Inc.,
We review the district court’s “legal analysis and methodology” de novo,
see Anderson,
B. Reasonable Hourly Rate
In Title VII actions, the prevailing party may recover reasonable attorneys’ fees pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(k).
1
To determine a reasonable fee, the district court uses the lodestar method, multiplying the “number of hours reasonably expended on the litigation ... by a reasonable hourly rate.”
Hensley,
*640
We have defined a reasonable hourly rate as one that is “derived from the market rate for the services rendered.”
Denius v. Dunlap,
Recognizing the difficulty of determining the hourly rate of an attorney who uses contingent fee agreements, we have advised district courts to rely on the “next best evidence” of an attorney’s market rate, namely “evidence of rates similarly experienced attorneys in the community charge paying clients for similar work and evidence of fee awards the attorney has received in similar cases.”
Spegon v. Catholic Bishop of Chi.,
1. Reduction Due to Contingent Fee Arrangement
In reducing Rossiello’s hourly rate from $595 to $400, the district court appears to have relied in part on the fact that Rossiello will recover a contingent fee and a flat fee, amounting to nearly $30,000, aside from any statutory fees. The district court criticized Rossiello for not using the statutory award to offset Pickett’s contingent fee obligation, noting that he did not cite to any case that has enforced “an agreement that so gener[ous]ly compensates counsel.” The district court also found the third party affidavits presented by plaintiff to be less persuasive because those attorneys did not receive contingent fees on top of their hourly rates. The district court further seemed to rely on its notions of fairness in concluding that “an hourly rate of $400 will amply compensate Mr. Rossiello.”
We are unsure whether the court reduced the rate to prevent excessive recovery (i.e., reducing the rate by nearly 30% to balance out the 30% contingent fee) or whether it reduced the rate due to the lower persuasive weight of the affidavits from non-contingent-fee-earning attorneys — but we hold that either approach constitutes reversible error. The contingent fee that an attorney earns from his client and the statutory fee that an attorney recovers from the losing party represent distinct entitlements. In reviewing a fee petition, a district court is tasked only with examining whether the rate and hours requested are reasonable; the total amount that the attorney stands to recover must not influence this determination. We therefore vacate the award of attorneys’ fees and remand to the district court to *641 redetermine Rossiello’s reasonable hourly-rate without consideration of the contingent fee.
The Supreme Court has made clear that courts are to use the lodestar method to calculate the statutory fee even when the attorney does not bill by the hour.
See Venegas v. Mitchell,
Despite recognizing the lodestar method as “not perfect,” the Supreme Court recently extolled its virtues and reaffirmed its dominant role in federal fee-shifting cases.
See Perdue,
The Supreme Court has balanced the advantages and disadvantages of using the lodestar approach and has concluded that the lodestar’s imperfect estimate is preferable to a multifactor, case-by-case attempt to more accurately determine the fee. The district court in this case went beyond the bounds of the lodestar method when it reduced Rossiello’s hourly rate by a factor that has no bearing on the prevailing market rate. We recognize the district court’s desire to craft a more accurate award, but the Supreme Court adopted the lodestar approach to prevent this type of unbounded discretion.
Moreover, a fee applicant need only offer third party affidavits attesting to billing rates that truly are comparable to meet her burden,
see Spegon,
Further, when a district court deems a third party affidavit to carry less persuasive value because the affiant bills by the hour, the court erects an obstacle to the recovery of statutory fees by contingent-fee-earning attorneys. This is particularly problematic given that many civil rights plaintiffs cannot afford to pay attorneys by the hour.
See City of Riverside v. Rivera,
The Supreme Court has recognized that private fee arrangements and statutory fee awards can coexist.
See Venegas,
*643
Moreover, the Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized that a plaintiff is free to contract with her attorney to pay a contingent fee in addition to assigning rights to the statutory fee.
See Gisbrecht v. Barnhart,
In attempting to prevent plaintiff’s attorney from recovering a windfall, the district court impedes plaintiffs right to contract and plaintiffs ability to attract competent counsel. The Supreme Court has stated that “depriving plaintiffs of the option of promising to pay more than the statutory fee if that is necessary to secure counsel of their choice would not further § 1988’s general purpose of enabling such plaintiffs in civil rights cases to secure competent counsel.”
Venegas,
We do not intend to minimize the district court’s duty to prevent windfall recovery to attorneys in fee-shifting cases.
See Rivera, 477
U.S. at 580,
In this case, the district court reduced the fee award for numerous reasons that fall squarely within its authority and discretion, such as subtracting hours spent on an unsuccessful claim and disallowing duplicative hours spent on fee recovery. The district court could have reduced Rossiello’s claimed hourly rate if it found that the evidence did not support the claimed rate — e.g., because the third party affidavits are actually from attorneys with dissimilar experience or because the past fee awards support a lower rate.
4
See Mathur
*644
v. Bd. of Trustees of So. Ill. Univ.,
We are sympathetic to the court’s perception that Rossiello stands to recover an excessive amount. But once the court has determined that the rate claimed and hours spent are reasonable, the district court’s supervisory authority over statutory fee awards does not permit it to reduce the lodestar to prevent the attorney from recovering a windfall.
5
See
*645
id.; Van Gerwen v. Guarantee Mut. Life Co.,
As further support for our conclusion that the district court lacks the authority to lower the hourly rate due to the existence of a contingent fee agreement, the Supreme Court held in
Dague
that courts cannot enhance the lodestar to account for the risk of nonpayment incurred by attorneys who take cases pursuant to contingent fee agreements.
6
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that a district court may not reduce an attorney’s hourly rate or disregard third party affidavits based on the existence of a contingent fee agreement. Here, the district court criticized the contingent fee agreement but did not explain how it reduced the rate to account for the additional recovery. The district court’s language leaves us unable to conclude that the contingent fee arrangement played no part in the rate reduction. Thus, we remand to permit the district court to consider whether it would reach the same lodestar calculation in the absence of any consideration of the contingent fee.
2. Evidence Offered by Rossiello
Rossiello, as lead counsel, sought $592.50 for each hour that he spent on Pickett’s case. In support of this rate, Rossiello presented records from a 2008 Title VII case in which he received fees at an hourly rate of $620 and copies of settle *646 ments in similar cases in which he obtained rates between $540 and $585 in 2007. The exhibits attached to plaintiffs fee petition demonstrate a significant range in the size of the recent awards obtained by Rossiello: $260 per hour in 1996; $805 per hour in 1996; $320 per hour in 1997; $350 per hour in 1999; $375 per hour in 1999; $475 per hour in 2002; and $500 in 2003. In addition to his own affidavit, Rossiello produced affidavits from Richard Schnadig, Stephen Erf, and Vicki Lafer Abrahamson, who have each worked in employment law for more than 30 years. They offered their own hourly rates as support for the reasonableness of Rossiello’s claimed rate of $580 to $620, and they stated that this rate is reasonable for someone with Rossiello’s substantial experience and success in Title VII cases in Chicago. Schnadig and Erf asserted that the market rate for similarly experienced lawyers in their firms is $450 to $500 and $600 to $700, respectively. Abrahamson, a lawyer with less experience than Rossiello, stated her own rate as $550 for non-trial cases and noted that she would charge a higher rate for trial.
The district court found “little evidence” to support Rossiello’s claimed rate. The court acknowledged that certain evidence indicates “more substantial rates in a handful of circumstances” and that “these affidavits, and the settlement agreements in 2007 and 2008, arguably support an award in the range Mr. Rossiello seeks,” but the court expressed reluctance to approve that high rate here. We remind the district court not to “set[ ] the amount of evidence required at a nearly unattainable level,”
People Who Care,
A district court “is entitled to determine the probative value of each [evidentiary] submission.”
Batt v. Micro Warehouse, Inc.,
Although plaintiff provided some evidence that supports the requested rate, it is undeniable that substantial evidence supports much lower rates. Many of Rossiello’s fee awards, even after accounting for inflation, use lower rates. In
Uphoff,
we stated that, “while evidence of fee awards in prior similar cases must be considered by a district court as evidence of an attorney’s market rate, such evidence is not the
sine qua non
of that attorney’s market rate — for each case may present its own special set of circumstances and problems.”
We do note that, in contrast to the substantial evidence presented by plaintiff, defendant offered hardly any evidence in support of a lower hourly rate. Defendant’s evidence consists only of citations to previous cases in which the court reduced Rossiello’s hourly rate, as well as a comment from defendant’s counsel that he charged his client less than $250 per hour for his work in this case. Had defendant submitted no evidence, the district court would have had to award fees at Rossiello’s proposed rate.
See People Who Care,
There are, however, two evidentiary determinations that we conclude exceeded the scope of the district court’s discretion. First, as noted in the previous section, the fact that the affidavits came from attorneys who do not receive contingent fees does not lessen their persuasive value. Plaintiff is not able to submit the best type of evidence — evidence of Rossiello’s own billing rate — because Rossiello does not typically bill by the hour. But plaintiff did produce what we have labeled the “next best evidence,”
see Spegon,
We are unable to determine what role the impermissible considerations played in the district court’s reduction of Rossiello’s hourly rate. Therefore, we remand to give the district court an opportunity to reevaluate the evidence consistent with our conclusions.
*648 3. Reliance on the Consumer Price Index and the Laffey Matrix
The district court cited several reasons for its reluctance to approve the hourly rate sought by Rossiello, including the lower rates that resulted from the district court’s sua sponte use of the Consumer Price Index and the Laffey Matrix. We do not question that these two measures can assist the district court with the challenging task of determining a reasonable hourly rate. But even though the district court has the discretion to rely on these measures, the district court should have given the parties the opportunity to debate the strengths and weaknesses of applying these measures in this particular case.
Federal Rule of Evidence 201(c)(1) authorizes a court to take judicial notice without a request from a party. However subsection (e) of Rule 201 emphasizes that a party “is still entitled to be heard” when a court takes judicial notice before notifying a party. Underlying this rule is the notion that “[b]asic considerations of procedural fairness demand an opportunity to be heard on the propriety of taking judicial notice and the tenor of the matter noticed.” Fed.R.Evid. 201(e) advisory committee’s note. Thus, Rule 201 contains a procedural requirement— “namely, that the parties be given notice and an opportunity to object to the taking of judicial notice.”
United States v. Hoyts Cinemas Corp.,
a. Consumer Price Index
The district court used the CPI to determine Rossiello’s reasonable hourly rate by starting with the $350 rate that we approved for Rossiello in 2001,
see Batt,
Although we have never addressed whether a court may take judicial notice of the CPI, we now hold that the CPI belongs to the category of public records of which a court may take judicial notice.
See Pugh v. Tribune Co.,
The district court’s opinion does not identify what years it used for the calculation or what CPI-adjustment it found, leaving us unable to determine exactly what the court found Rossiello’s CPI-adjusted hourly rate to be. Attempting to *649 speculate with regard to the district court’s approach, we arrive at a CPI increase of 26.2%, which produces a 2011 hourly rate of $441.70 for Rossiello. 9 Thus, reliance on the CPI appears to yield a higher rate than the rate ultimately approved by the district court.
If the district court had given plaintiff notice that it intended to rely on the CPI and an opportunity to respond, plaintiff might have argued for the use of different years as guideposts or for the use of a different award as the starting point. The district court’s reliance on an hourly rate that we previously approved for Rossiello is logical, but our approval of a rate does not make that rate inherently more reasonable than other rates obtained by Rossiello. Aside from the $350 rate that we approved in
Batt
in 2001, Rossiello had been awarded rates of $350 and $375 two years earlier. The district court referred to these rates as “much more modest” but still selected an even lower award as the basis for the CPI adjustment. Since we have stated that “a previous attorneys’ fee award is useful for establishing a reasonable market rate for similar work whether it is disputed or not,”
Jeffboat, LLC,
We therefore hold that the district court abused its discretion by relying sua sponte on a CPI-adjusted rate. This approach deprived plaintiff of an opportunity to contest the application of the CPI or to argue for a particular manner of applying it to the present case.
b. Laffey Matrix
The district court also relied on the Laffey Matrix, even though it too had not been referenced by either party. The Laffey Matrix is a chart of hourly rates for attorneys and paralegals in the Washington, D.C. area that was prepared by the United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia to be used in fee-shifting cases.
See Warfield v. City of Chicago,
In the twenty years since the creation of the Laffey Matrix, we have never addressed this measure. No circuit outside the D.C. Circuit has formally adopted the Laffey Matrix, and few have even commented on it. While some circuits have applied the Laffey Matrix,
see, e.g., Interfaith Cmty. Org. v. Honeywell Int’l, Inc.,
District courts in this Circuit have occasionally considered the Laffey Matrix when considering the reasonableness of hourly rates for fee awards.
See Hadnott v. City of Chicago,
No. 07 C 6754,
We have not come across any other opinion from the Northern District of Illinois in which the court relied on the Laffey Matrix when it was not raised by a party. The Laffey Matrix is not without its critics, and plaintiff should have had the opportunity to contest its value in general and as applied to him. Even the D.C. Circuit has referred to the Matrix as “crude” and has recommended that plaintiffs provide affidavits, surveys, and past fee awards to enable the district court to refine the Matrix for the particular attorney.
See Covington v. District of Columbia,
Here, plaintiff presented substantial evidence to support the requested fee award. If the district court found this evidence to be unpersuasive and therefore intended to rely on an independent basis for the hourly rate, then the district court should have given the parties an opportunity to respond. The parties had no notice that they should address the CPI or the Laffey Matrix in their briefing, and the case law within this Circuit would not have put *651 them on constructive notice. Even when relying on these “objective” measures, the district court still exercised discretion in determining how to apply them, ultimately arriving a rate lower than those proposed by the CPI and the Laffey Matrix. The district court did not err simply by using the CPI and the Laffey Matrix to determine a reasonable hourly rate, but we hold that the court did err by relying on these measures without giving plaintiff an opportunity to respond. We instruct the district court, on remand, to give the parties an opportunity to comment on whether and how these two measures should be used to determine Rossiello’s reasonable hourly rate.
4. Clear and Concise Explanation for Hourly Rate
The district court must “provide a concise but clear explanation of its reasons for the fee award.”
Hensley,
The district court’s opinion leaves us uncertain as to how it arrived at $400 as the reasonable hourly rate for Rossiello. The district court acknowledged that the affidavits and settlement agreements “arguably support” the hourly rate requested. The district court referenced the Laffey Index and the CPI adjustment as yielding rates lower than Rossiello’s proposed rate, but both approaches still yield an hourly rate above $400. In fact, the district court’s only reference to a rate lower than $400 was its comment that defendant’s counsel “reports” charging defendant less than $250 per hour for his services.
To conclude its discussion of hourly rate, the district court stated that “an hourly rate of $400 will amply compensate Mr. Rossiello for his successful efforts.” This language suggests that the district court may have made a subjective determination as to the “just” price for Rossiello’s work, instead of making an objective determination — supported by the evidence — as to the reasonable rate for Rossiello.
See Pressley v. Haeger,
We do not require district courts to give extensive explanations, but a clear and concise explanation is needed so that we can determine whether the district court considered the evidence and how it arrived at its ultimate award. Although the district court’s opinion sufficiently describes its assessment of the evidence presented, the opinion does not sufficiently *652 explain its reasons for selecting $400 as the hourly rate. In the absence of this explanation, we are unable to determine whether the district court’s conclusion rests on a sound analysis. When the district court revisits this issue on remand, we urge the court to provide a meaningful explanation of its basis for the reasonable hourly rate.
We do not pass judgment on whether $400 is a reasonable hourly rate for Rossiello. We hold only that the district court may not reduce the claimed hourly rate due to the presence of a contingent fee agreement, that the court may not disregard evidence of uncontested fee awards, that the court must provide plaintiff with an adequate opportunity to respond if it decides to rely on independent evidence, and that the court must sufficiently explain its fee determination with a clear and concise statement.
C. Refusal to Conduct an Evidentiary Hearing Regarding Fees
We review the district court’s denial of a motion for an evidentiary hearing on attorneys’ fees for abuse of discretion.
See Small,
However, we have held that a district court must afford plaintiffs an opportunity to respond when the court raises concerns about the fee petition that are based upon its independent scrutiny of the record or when the court establishes reasons sua sponte for reducing the fee award.
See Jaffee,
In this ease, plaintiff filed three separate motions to request an evidentiary hearing on the fee petition. The district court explained that it does not ordinarily hold hearings to determine attorneys’ fees but would hold one if needed. Although no hearing was held, the district court based its significant fee reduction on several rationales that plaintiff did not have the opportunity to respond to: (1) the hourly rate reduction due to the presence of the contingent fee agreement; (2) the application of the Laffey Matrix, which has not been adopted by the Seventh Circuit or the Northern District of Illinois, and which was not proffered by either party; and (3) the post-opinion decision to reverse the award of fees to outside counsel because they were not prepaid. Although plaintiff had the opportunity to support the requested fee award through briefs and exhibits, plaintiff was deprived of the opportunity to respond to the reasons that *653 the district court ultimately relied on when reducing the fee award. We therefore conclude that the district court abused its discretion when it declined to hold an evidentiary hearing or to otherwise provide the parties with an opportunity to respond to the sua sponte reasoning used by the district court.
D. Denial of Fees to Outside Counsel Because They Were Not Prepaid
Finally, plaintiff argues that the district court erred when it reversed its award of fees to Abrahamson because Rossiello had not prepaid these fees. Because there is no requirement that Rossiello or Pickett have prepaid the fees incurred for pursuing fees, we direct the district court to reinstate its previous award.
In its March 29, 2011 opinion, the district court eliminated as duplicative 10 hours of time that Rossiello had spent but approved the 13.75 hours spent by Abrahamson’s firm on the fee petition. The district court did not analyze the reasonableness of the hourly rates sought by Abrahamson’s firm except to note that “retained counsel assigned the bulk of the work to an associate at a lower billable rate” and that “Ms. Abrahamson’s claimed hourly rate is a market rate, and the court presumes that Mr. Rossiello has paid it.” Despite its approval of both the hours spent and the rate requested, the district court ordered Rossiello to “demonstrate that he had paid Ms. Abrahamson at her billed rate.”
Rossiello had not prepaid Abrahamson’s fees, however, and he was thus unable to comply with the district court’s order. But the parties did respond with a joint certification, agreeing that defendant would issue and deliver a check in the amount of $9,268.97 to Abrahamson’s firm. Notwithstanding this apparent agreement, the district court reversed its position and denied the fees and costs to Abrahamson’s firm, stating:
[Plaintiffs counsel] has declined, however, to demonstrate that he has paid Ms. Abrahamson. As the court noted in its opinion, Ms. Abrahamson claimed a substantial rate as her market rate. Plaintiffs counsel asserted that Ms. Abrahamson’s fees were payable, at the hourly rate she claimed, regardless of the court’s ruling on the fee petition. Accordingly, the court presumed that she had been paid and expected counsel to confirm this, in order to eliminate any suspicion that Ms. Abrahamson would collect her substantial rate only if the court were to approve recovery from Defendant.
No such confirmation has been provided.... The court concludes that Mr. Rossiello has not in fact paid Ms. Abrahamson. The court declines therefore to award the requested fees for her services.
We find district court’s sudden reversal to be concerning for several reasons, and we are unable to conclude that the district court acted properly by denying these fees.
First, we note that, contrary to the district court’s later statement, the district court had not referred to Abrahamson’s rate as “substantial” in its earlier opinion. The opinion had only referred to Abrahamson’s claimed rate as “market rate.” In fact, the court seemed to praise Abrahamson for assigning most of the work to an associate at a lower hourly rate.
Second, the denial of the fee award does not appear to be grounded in a conclusion that Abrahamson’s hourly rate is unreasonable. Such a conclusion might have been proper, given our recognition that the “best evidence of whether attorney’s fees are reasonable is whether a
*654
party has paid them.”
Cintas Corp. v. Perry,
Third, we note that the court does not cite to any legal support, nor have we found any, that requires a party in a fee-shifting case to have prepaid the fees incurred by an outside firm as a precondition for recovery. This approach threatens the objectives underlying the fee award. We have explained that “[f]ee-shifting statutes in civil rights legislation are intended to allow litigants access to attorneys who would otherwise be inaccessible.”
Mathur,
Fourth, we are puzzled by the district court’s explanation that the prepaid requirement was necessary to “to eliminate any suspicion that Ms. Abrahamson would collect her substantial rate only if the court were to approve recovery from Defendant.” The district court’s concern is not misplaced, but it does not justify imposing a requirement that is not grounded in law and reversing its award without any opportunity to respond. We see nothing in the record, moreover, that would suggest that outside counsel ran up costs or otherwise took excessive risks, on the assumption that someone else was sure to pay the bill (i.e., there is no indication of moral hazard).
We are mindful of the fact that “[o]nly in extraordinary circumstances will we disturb a district judge’s exercise of his discretion in awarding or denying fees for establishing fees.”
Muscare v. Quinn,
III. Conclusion
Although we conclude that the district court abused its discretion in certain aspects of its fee determination, we do not intend to signal a retreat from the significant deference that we accord to a district court’s fee award, and we remain of the view that a fee petition “should not result in a second major litigation,”
Hensley,
For the foregoing reasons, we Vacate the award of attorneys’ fees for Rossiello’s *655 services, and we Remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Further, we direct the court to Reinstate the award of attorneys’ fees for Abraham-son’s firm.
Notes
. The standards for determining reasonable attorneys’ fees in a Title VII action are the same as those used to determine 42 U.S.C. § 1988 fees.
See Hensley,
.
In fact, prior to
Dague’s
prohibition of contingency enhancements to the lodestar, we had allowed upward adjustments to more effectively compensate contingent-fee-earning attorneys for the "risk of never being paid and the time-value of money.”
See OhioSealy Mattress Mfg. Co. v. Sealy Inc.,
. To precisely translate the earnings of a contingent-fee attorney into an hourly rate equivalent, we would need to divide each of the attorney's past contingent fee awards by the number of hours spent on each case. This approach would result in widely varying rates, administrative difficulties, and tension with the instructions of Supreme Court.
. In
Connolly v. National School Bus Service, Inc.,
. We recognize that this fee agreement, which highly compensates Rossiello by requiring Pickett to turn over three types of fees, may unfairly take advantage of Pickett. Although the Supreme Court has recognized that a plaintiff has the freedom "to become contractually and personally bound to pay an attorney a percentage of the recovery,”
Venegas,
We are aware that, even after
Venegas,
the Eighth Circuit has held that an attorney in a Title VII case is only entitled to the greater of the contingent fee award and the attorneys' fee award, effectively imposing a requirement that the statutory award offset the amount that the prevailing plaintiff owes to her attorney.
See Ross v. Douglas Cnty.,
. Though
Dague
involved fee-shifting provisions from the Solid Waste Disposal Act, 42 U.S.C. § 6972(e), and the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1365(d), the Court recognized that the language was similar to that of many other federal fee-shifting statutes and stated that “our case law construing what is a 'reasonable’ fee applies uniformly to all of them.”
Dague,
. Additionally, we reject plaintiff’s contention that defendant previously agreed to the rate of $595. As proof of this claim, plaintiff includes in the appendix an excerpt of defendant's December 22, 2008 response to plaintiff’s fee petition, on which defendant used $595 to calculate the fee award. But plaintiff left out of the appendix the three preceding pages, on which defendant strenuously contested this rate. This misrepresentation of the record is troubling, and we remind Rossiello of his duty of candor to the court.
. As an alternative to taking judicial notice of the Laffey Matrix and the CPI, the district court could have requested additional evidence from the parties.
See People Who Care,
. We selected 2001 (the year in which Batt was decided) and March 2011 (the month and year in which the district court's opinion was decided) as the guideposts for the calculation. See Bureau of Labor Statistics, How to Use the Consumer Price Index for Escalation, http:// www.bis. gov/cpi/cpi1998d.htm.
