Rufus Cunningham, a peace officer for the California Department of Insurance, brought an action on a claim of false arrest and wrongful search against employees of the Los Angeles County Sheriffs Department and the County. He prevailed in his action, although not on all grounds asserted in the complaint or against all defendants. He appeals: 1) the amount of the award for attorney’s fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988; 2) the imposition of Fed.R.Civ.P. 11 sanctions against his counsel; and 3) the failure to award him his costs as prevailing party.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL OVERVIEW
Cunningham filed suit against the County of Los Angeles; Sheriff Sherman Block; Sheriff Deputies Robert Birdsall, Richard Papp, and Richard Payne; and Sergeants David Brusby and Edgar Price. He alleged that his arrest by the Sheriffs Department was unsupported by probable cause and resulted in a “deprivation of liberty, invasion of his privacy, and violation of his civil rights.” He also contended that the Sheriffs Department has a “custom, policy and practice of racial discrimination against Blacks.” He claimed compensatory damages of $20,000 and punitive damages of $500,000.
On April 22, 1987, Los Angeles County and Sheriff Block moved for summary judgment on the theory that no policy or custom attributable to the County was the legal cause of Cunningham’s constitutional deprivation. Cunningham did not oppose the motion, which was granted. On May 26, 1987 just before trial, the court also dismissed all counts against Sergeant Brus-by and Deputy Sheriff Payne.
The trial began on May 26, 1987. Prior to closing arguments or jury instructions, the case settled for $5,000. Because the settlement labeled Cunningham the prevailing party, he became entitled to seek attorney’s fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. The trial court ordered a hearing on Cunningham’s motion for attorney’s fees and issued an order to show cause why the naming of certain defendants in the complaint should not be deemed a violation of Fed.R.Civ.P. 11.
At the hearing, the district court awarded attorney’s fees of $7,500 to Cunningham and assessed monetary sanctions against him in the sum of $5,000. Counsel for. the County and Sheriff Block later submitted a declaration detailing fees and costs at $4,719, and the court reduced the Rule 11 sanctions to this amount.
Cunningham appealed in a timely fashion. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
I. THE ATTORNEY’S FEE AWARD
Section 1988 provides that in federal civil rights actions or proceedings, “the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party, other than the United States, a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the costs.” 42 U.S.C. § 1988. We review the district court’s assessment of attorney’s fees for abuse of discretion.
Jordan v. Multnomah County,
The legislative history of § 1988 does not explain what constitutes a “reasonable” attorney’s fee, but it does endorse the multi-factor guidelines developed by the Fifth Circuit in
Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc.,
A. The Lodestar Figure
The only dispute on appeal with respect to the lodestar calculation concerns the number of hours reasonably expended on the case. The district court, after considering Cunningham’s requests of $26,120 for work on the merits and $3,037.50 for work on motions relating to attorney’s fees and sanctions, fixed the lodestar figure at $12,-000. This amount was based on the hourly rate of $135 claimed for Cunningham’s attorney, Richard Eiden, and the hourly rates claimed for Eiden’s clerks. The court accepted both of these rates as reasonable. In determining the number of hours to be figured into the lodestar, however, the court reduced the figure claimed by Cunningham because it deemed this number of hours excessive. We review this decision for abuse of discretion.
The starting point of our review of the record must be a “recognition] that deference is to be given to a district court’s determination of a reasonable attorney’s fee.”
Chalmers v. City of Los Angeles,
Substantively, both the Supreme Court and our cases have emphasized the discretionary nature of the court’s determination of the number of hours
reasonably
expended. One factor that may be used to reduce this number is inadequate documentation.
Hensley,
We focus first on the requirement that the district court give at least a brief explanation of its reasoning and calculations. In the portion of its order devoted to determining the lodestar amount, the court justified its view that the time spent on the case was unreasonable with reference to Cunningham’s level of success. The court did not express any doubts that the time claimed by Eiden was actually spent. 1 Instead, it analyzed the claims brought against the various defendants and concluded, based in part on the fact that only three of the seven defendants named in the complaint remained at trial, that Cunningham’s level of success was not high. The order then reduced the number of hours to reflect the lack of success. In addition, the court stated that the twenty-two hours that Eiden devoted to the Rule 11 sanctions threatened against him by the court do “not reflect a civil rights claim successfully pursued,” and should therefore be deemed unreasonable for lodestar calculation purposes. On the basis of these two reductions, the court set the lodestar figure, which encompasses “work on the merits and on the post-settlement motions,” at $12,000.
Courts need not attempt to portray the discretionary analyses that leads to their numerical conclusions as elaborate mathematical equations, but they must provide sufficient insight into their exercises of discretion to enable us to discharge our reviewing function. As in Quesada, the order before us is hardly a model of clarity, and we would have preferred a more straightforward calculation of the number of hours reasonably spent. Nonetheless, the court’s citations and numerical conclusions are helpful, and the explanation of its reasoning gives us a good indication of how the court’s discretionary authority was exercised in this case. We conclude that the attorney’s fee order satisfies the “concise but clear” explanation requirement of Hensley and its progeny.
A weightier question concerns whether the district court abused its discretion in reducing the lodestar amount for the reasons cited in the court’s order. Cunningham contends that there was an abuse of discretion because the reduction in number of hours was based on impermissible factors that were unrelated to whether the time spent on the case was “reasonable.” In particular, Cunningham takes exception to the comparison in the court’s order of the number of defendants who remained at trial with the number of defendants named in the complaint. In Cunningham’s view, this comparison bears no relation either to the success of his lawsuit or to the time and effort that was reasonably spent in preparation of his case. Cunningham claims that his attorney is entitled to collect fees for all of the time claimed because, despite the dismissal of several defendants and his failure to succeed on every theory, the litigation was generally a success from the plaintiff’s perspective.
We agree with Cunningham’s legal premise that courts may not adopt rigid mathematical formulas tying the lodestar figure to the ratio of defendants remaining at trial to defendants served in the complaint. The Supreme Court has disapproved on more than one occasion of such pretensions to mathematical precision. In
Hensley,
the Court expressed its agree
*486
ment “with the District Court’s rejection of ‘a mathematical approach comparing the total number of issues in the case with those actually prevailed upon,’ ” reasoning that “[s]uch a ratio provides little aid in determining what is a reasonable fee in light of all the relevant factors.”
But insofar as Cunningham argues that this is what the district court did in the case at bar, we do not agree. We recognize that the court considered, among several factors, Cunningham’s failure to produce evidence to back up his allegations against four of the seven defendants named in the complaint. But far from an arbitrary slashing of the lodestar amount by the percentage of defendants dismissed, the court analyzed the importance of each defendant to Cunningham’s overall case. The court considered not just the number of defendants, but also the claims brought against each one. Each factor was analyzed not for some talismanic significance of its own, but for its ability to shed light on “ ‘the significance of the overall relief obtained’ to all the claims and remedies pursued in the litigation.”
Greater Los Angeles Council on Deafness v. Community Television of Southern California,
This analysis was wholly proper. As we have recognized in the past, the “results obtained” are probative on the issue of the “reasonableness” of a fee award.
See Kerr,
[Tjhe mere fact that [plaintiff] was not victorious as to all defendants does not automatically bar an attorney’s fees award- However, the amount of attorney’s fees they receive should be based on the work performed on the issues in which they were successful.
Sethy v. Alameda County Water Dist.,
The district court’s analysis was faithful to that principle. Congress vested trial courts with the discretion to undertake such analyses because they are by their nature inexact. Reasonable people may differ as to what number of hours was reasonable to spend on this case. But once we are satisfied that the district court has considered the appropriate factors for the appropriate reasons, our reviewing function is finished. Because we are so satisfied in this case, we hold that it was not an abuse of discretion to set the lodestar figure at $12,000.
B. The Kerr Factors
Our affirmance of the lodestar calculation does not end our inquiry. Cunning *487 ham also objects to the district court’s use of the Kerr factors to reduce Eiden's fee award from the lodestar figure of $12,000 to $7,500. According to Cunningham, all of the factors relied upon by the district court to lower the award are subsumed in the initial lodestar determination and are therefore impermissible grounds for further reductions.
We generally review the application of the
Kerr
factors to the facts of individual cases for abuse of discretion. This discretion is circumscribed by the pronouncements of the Supreme Court and this Circuit,
Jordan,
Under the lodestar approach, many of the
Kerr
factors have been held subsumed in the lodestar determination as a matter of law.
Blum,
In this case, the district court gave four justifications for the downward adjustment of the lodestar amount: (1) insufficient documentation of dates and activities with regard to the work done by the law clerks; (2) a “mediocre” performance by Eiden; (3) the relatively low settlement figure of $5,000, as compared with Cunningham’s request in his complaint for compensatory and punitive damages totaling $520,000; and (4) the court’s view that “there was a substantial doubt as to whether the settling defendants intended to deny the plaintiff of [sic] his civil rights.”
The precedents make clear that the first two of these reasons are not properly considered under the second step of the “hybrid” analysis. The Supreme Court held in
Hensley
that the first rationale, inadequate documentation, is subsumed in the lodestar determination.
The third factor, a comparison of the damages sought with the settlement figure, raises the question of whether the relief obtained is subsumed in the lodestar determination. The district court sought to distinguish “the question of whether the time was reasonably spent, arriving at a figure by examining in part the claims asserted and whether they were successful,” from an examination of “the final award relative only to the' ‘amount involved.’ ” The court allowed that the first part of its dichotomy was accounted for in the lodestar calculation, but nonetheless considered a narrower focus on the final damage award a legitimate
Kerr
factor. As sup
*488
port for this dichotomy, the court cited the Supreme Court’s decisions in
Blum
and
Hensley.
As authority for reducing the fee award because the damages recovered were much less than those sought, the court cited our decision in
Greater Los Angeles Council on Deafness,
The Supreme Court, in its
post^-Hensley
pronouncements on § 1988, has put considerable force behind its requirements that district courts treat the lodestar figure as presumptively reasonable and adjust it only in rare or exceptional cases. Whereas in
Hensley,
the Court hinted at a two-part inquiry that first addressed the lodestar and then modified that number “upward or downward”, according to the “results obtained,”
Thus, in ordinary cases, a plaintiff’s “degree of success” or the “results obtained” should be adequately accounted for in the lodestar. Only in rare or exceptional cases will an attorney’s
reasonable
expenditure of time on a case not be commensurate with the fees to which he is entitled. Adjustments to the lodestar based on “results obtained” must be supported by evidence in the record demonstrating why such a deviation from the lodestar is appropriate.
See Blum,
What the district court did was assess Cunningham and his counsel a double penalty for the modest success of the lawsuit. There is no justification in the case law for bifurcating the “results obtained” test in this fashion. To the contrary,
Blum
held that the district court had abused its discretion by adjusting the lodestar upward for “quality of representation” in the absence of “specific evidence to show that the quality of service rendered was superior to that one reasonably should expect in light of the hourly rates charged and that the success was ‘exceptional.’ ”
Contrary to the district court’s assertion, therefore,
Blum
does not stand for the proposition “that a requested attorney’s fee may be reduced twice — for unsuccessful claims, and again if the final award reflects only partial success.” Nor does
Hensley,
which although it reflected the Court’s thinking before it explicitly held that the “results obtained” inquiry is subsumed in the lodestar, allowed for only a single reduction of the fee award to reflect a plaintiff’s degree of success.
See
Our decision in
Quesada
sheds further light on why the double penalty in this case must be considered an abuse of the district court’s discretion. In
Quesada,
as in the instant case, the district court reduced the
*489
lodestar figure because plaintiff settled for much less than he requested in his complaint. We reversed on the ground that “it is inappropriate for a district court to reduce a fee award below the lodestar simply because the damages obtained are small.”
Our decision in
Greater Los Angeles Council on Deafness,
upon which the court relied, is not to the contrary. In that case, we held that the district court abused its discretion by failing to consider the “results obtained” and “degree of success” under either the lodestar or the
Kerr/Johnson
steps of its analysis.
See
By contrast, the instant case does not raise the question of whether a court may totally disregard the “results obtained,” but rather, whether it may count this factor twice. We hold that in ordinary cases, such double counting is impermissible. In exceptional cases, such deviations may be proper, but the court must explain why the results of the lawsuit are not adequately factored into the lodestar. Because the district court did not do so, it abused its discretion.
The fourth factor cited by the court in support of the reduction from $12,-000 to $7,500 — its doubt that defendants intended to violate plaintiff’s civil rights— was also an improper ground on which to base a
Kerr
reduction. We have held as a threshold matter “that a plaintiff cannot be a prevailing party where a defendant’s action is only gratuitous.”
California Ass’n of the Physically Handicapped, Inc. v. Federal Communications Comm’n,
The settlement agreement labels Cunningham the prevailing party in this lawsuit, and the government does not seek to overturn this characterization. We therefore do not address the question of whether the County and Sheriff Block acted gratuitously in agreeing to this label. In any event, if the district court wanted to address this factor, it should have done so as a threshold matter, not to justify its Kerr adjustment. Or, if the district court meant this factor as a surrogate for the “results obtained” or “degree of success,” it should have considered it under the lodestar calculation. In either case, the court abused its discretion.
Because all of the factors relied on by the court to support the downward adjustment were improper, we reverse the second round of reductions and set the attorney’s fee award at the lodestar figure of $12,000.
II. SANCTIONS
The district court assessed sanctions under Rule 11 in the amount of $4,719. The *490 court justified this penalty on the following grounds:
[T]he plaintiffs actions against the County of Los Angeles and Sheriff Block were frivolous. When the County filed for summary judgment, the plaintiff failed to file any written opposition to the motion. Finally, at the hearing of the motion, defendant’s counsel admitted that there was no evidentiary basis for imposing liability against the County of Los Angeles.
The court also stated “that the naming of officers Brusby and Payne was without factual foundation.”
We review
de novo
the district court’s conclusion that the facts constitute a violation of Rule 11.
Zaldivar v. City of Los Angeles,
The district court misconstrued Rule 11 by imposing sanctions for the conduct of the litigation after the signing of the pleadings. Plaintiff’s claims were n<4t frivolous at the time they were filed. The fact that some of the claims were later found lacking in evidentiary foundation is irrelevant to the Rule 11 inquiry. Without a finding of recklessness or bad faith, which the district court has not made, sanctions may not be imposed.
See Stoneberger,
III. COSTS
Cunningham argues that the district court erred in refusing to award him his costs. We disagree. Cunningham’s failure to comply with the mandatory filing provisions of Central District Local Rule 16.3 barred his recovery of costs.
IV. FEES ON APPEAL
Cunningham requests an award of attorneys’ fees incurred in prosecuting this appeal. He correctly notes that section 1988 fees are ordinarily available to compensate attorneys for successful litigation of their fee applications, including work on appeal.
See Cabrales v. County of Los Angeles,
To determine whether special circumstances exist, we examine two factors: (1)
*491
whether awarding fees would further the congressional purpose of the Act (42 U.S.C. § 1988), and (2) the balance of equities.
Abu-Sahyun,
REVERSED IN PART and AFFIRMED IN PART.
Notes
. The court does assert, in its discussion of the Johnson/Kerr factors under the second step of the "hybrid” analysis, that Cunningham failed adequately to document the work of three law clerks. The court nowhere states, however, what portion of the 290 hours claimed for the clerks’ work was documented. The court merely uses its assertion of inadequate documentation to support a further reduction of the fee award below the lodestar. Because this analysis was insufficiently explained, we decline to transpose it to the lodestar analysis. And because the Supreme Court has held that this factor may only be considered as part of the lodestar calculation, it was improper for the court to rely on this rationale to adjust the lodestar. See discussion, infra.
. The court did refer in its lodestar analysis to the "substantial amount of effort [that] was directed to defendants against whom no recovery was obtained." Even assuming that this statement would have supported a downward adjustment of the lodestar had it been made under the second step of the “hybrid” analysis, it cannot justify the reduction here from $12,000 to $7,500 because it was used to justify the setting of the lodestar at $12,000. Such an interpolation would necessarily entail both mathematical imprecision and an impermissible double penalty for plaintiff’s modest level of success.
