With regret, we are obliged upon the husband’s appeal to remand, for reconsideration, an order of a judge of the Probate Court awarding fees and expenses to counsel for the plaintiff wife in an action for divorce. We are especially regretful because we have previously made a similar ruling in the same case for the same reason, namely, insufficient support in the record.
Robbins
v.
Robbins,
After a master’s report, a judgment of divorce nisi entered on October 15, 1981, by which the husband was to provide the wife with annual alimony of $48,000; all the stock in a corporation having a net book value of $400,000; 22Vz shares out of 55 shares of a second corporation, her shares having a net book value of over $1,000,000; and rights in the husband’s *539 life policy .of a face amount of $150,000. 1 As part of the judgment, counsel for the wife, Mr. John I. Robinson and Mr. David J. Martel, were awarded $40,000 in fees presumably covering their work from the commencement of the retainer in July, 1979, to the time of the judgment. 2
Both parties took appeals from the judgment, but excluded expressly from the wife’s appeal was the $40,000 award, which her counsel defended as reasonable.
3
The parties made post-judgment motions (under Mass.R.Civ.P. 60[b],
Upon the remand, an evidentiary hearing was held on three trial days in November and December, 1983, at which senior counsel, Mr. Robinson, was sworn and made an extended state *540 ment; he was then cross-examined largely by reference to ledger sheets indicating time spent from the beginning of the retainer to its termination by the wife on October 11, 1983, shortly after the decision of this court. Counsel requested an award of $200,000. Upon findings of fact and conclusions of law made on March 5, 1984, the judge allowed $120,000. 5
In his findings, the judge said (we summarize): Counsel were highly qualified. Senior counsel had practiced with distinction for more than fifty years, and was skilled in business affairs and in dealing with a network of closely held corporations such as that dominated by the defendant husband. The issues in the divorce action, centering about the division of assets between husband and wife, were uniquely complex and difficult, and counsel’s task was aggravated by the lack of candor of the husband, a shrewd and resourceful man. Opposing counsel were formidable.
The judge accepted that (as claimed) Mr. Robinson had spent 485 hours, and Mr. Martel 145 hours, up to the entry of the judgment of October 15, 1981, and 285 hours and 178 hours, respectively, thereafter to the date of termination of the retainer on October 11,1983. These hours of service, according to the judge, were essential to the achievement of the results secured for the wife. It was irrelevant that counsel had not agreed with their client on a final amount as reasonable compensation. Unless the wife liquidated the assets awarded to her, she could not pay the fees, whereas the husband was much better circumstanced. But the judge was not suggesting that counsel might not recover from the wife a sum in addition to the $120,000.
Regarding the law, the judge wrote that he was applying the criteria set forth in the Cummings, O’Hara, Hayden, 6 and other relevant cases.
We do not intend to detract in any way from the good work done by conscientious, diligent, and effective counsel, nor do we intimate that counsel are advancing their claim otherwise than in good faith. But our inquiry must go deeper.
*541
We think the evidence submitted by counsel, on whom was cast the burden of proof (cf.
First Natl. Bank
v.
Brink,
Counsel made up their claim of $200,000 as follows. Senior counsel estimated that over the past nine years (1974-1982) he had generated legal fees totalling $1,330,000. Since, with advancing age, he had taken annual vacations of two to three months, he figured that he devoted about a thousand hours a year to law practice. This suggested an average hourly rate for his services of $147. Nevertheless, he thought $200 was the proper rate to be applied in the present case. He proposed a rate of $75 per hour for his junior counsel. Multiplying the rates by hours (770 for senior counsel, 323 for the junior as indicated above), he reached a total of $178,225. It was fair, he thought, to add a tenth of that amount to cover time actually spent but not recorded (with perhaps some loading for the delay in securing compensation). 7 Thus he reached a total of $196,130, which he rounded out to $200,000.
Cross-examination of senior counsel raised a high probability that there had been substantial needless duplication of effort as between the two counsel, and, aside from that, substantial expenditure of time which could be attributed to extreme circumspection and zeal for completeness of preparation running beyond the requirements of the case. See
Kane
v.
Kane,
So, in counting as reasonable all the hours claimed by counsel, we think the judge erred, and with respect to hourly rates we have a failure of persuasive proof and no specific indication of the judge’s own views. It is true that not in all assessments of counsel fees need hours and rates be regarded as the “touchstone” (see
First Natl. Bank,
As noted, counsel did not advise an appeal from the initial $40,000 award to them, and indeed they defended it as reasonable against attack by the husband when the case was last before this court. The $40,000 had been fixed by the judge below as payment for counsel’s work through judgment, comprising the 485/145 hours. Neither the evidence nor the judge’s *543 remarks explain satisfactorily why, if $40,000 was reasonable compensation for this expenditure of time by counsel, as much as $80,000 was not unreasonable for the 285/178 hours of work after the judgment. In this connection we have to observe that, whereas counsel managed to preserve the judgment (apart from the provision about counsel fees) on appeal to this court, they did not succeed in getting it modified in the wife’s favor; and, while defeating the husband’s postjudgment application below and in this court, they failed in both places on their own postjudgment application.
A reading of the several attempts to list the factors that ought to enter into the judicial setting of counsel fees shows that they consist inevitably of numerous, complex variables. See, e.g.,
Cummings
v.
National Shawmut Bank,
The determination of counsel fees should not deteriorate into ancillary major litigation. See
Hensley
v.
Eckerhart,
So ordered.
Notes
Also awarded to the wife: $12,000 for a new car, and husband’s obligation to maintain her medical and hospital insurance.
The divorce action was filed on August 8, 1979.
So they argued on the appeal to this court.
As the court pointed out, there was virtually no evidence in any detail to support the award.
And expenses of $2,723.50.
These cases are among those cited infra.
Pending the present appeal, a single justice of this court authorized a payment to counsel of $60,000.
For example, “averaging” left it unclear whether counsel had ever actually used hourly rates in fixing his fees; if so, what hourly rates he had charged in his practice in the field of domestic relations, as distinguished from other fields; and whether, in matrimonial matters, he had marked a difference between fees charged his own clients and those he sought from the opposing parties.
The
Cummings
case, often cited, dealing with fees between attorney- and client, says: “In determining what is a fair and reasonable charge to be made by an attorney for his services many considerations are pertinent, including the ability and reputation of the attorney, the demand for his services by others, the amount and importance of the matter involved, the time spent, the prices usually charged for similar services by other attorneys in the same neighborhood, the amount of money or the value of the property affected by controversy, and the results secured. Neither the time spent nor any other single factor is necessarily decisive of what is to be considered as a fair and reasonable charge for such services.”
Indeed, where the judge evinces first-hand knowledge of the work performed and of going rates, an evidentiary hearing may not be necessary. If the award made appears then to be reasonable on the face of the record, an appellate court may be content. Cf.
Ross
v.
Ross,
Awards in such cases were originally to equate, more or less, with the compensation of public officers such as auditors and masters (see
Madden
v.
Madden,
We do not think it is necessary at this stage to deal with the question, raised on appeal by the husband, whether an appeal from an award of counsel fees operates as a stay. See note 7,
supra; Dominick
v.
Dominick,
