After a lengthy battle to redeem egregious violations of their civil rights, the plaintiffs were granted attorneys’ fees pursuant to the Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Awards Act of 1976 (the Fees Act), 42 U.S.C. § 1988. They were later denied additional recompense for services rendered in (i) litigating the fee petition, (ii) attempting to collect the underlying judgments, and (iii) seeking statutory interest. Displeased with the district court’s calculation and apportionment of the fees awarded and with its rejection of their supplemental motion, the plaintiffs prosecuted this appeal.
After careful consideration of a tangled record, we conclude that the district court abused its discretion in two respects. First, the court used an inappropriate methodology in apportioning the original fee award. Second, despite the plaintiffs’ presumptive entitlement to further relief, the court failed adequately to explain its denial of the supplemental motion. Consequently, we vacate the orders appealed from and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. BACKGROUND
Our earlier opinion in
Torres-Rivera v. O’Neill-Cancel (Torres-Rivera I),
In August of 1998, Ernesto Espada-Cruz (Espada), a Puerto Rico police officer, beat two teenage boys, Angel Santiago-Cora (Santiago) and Ernid Gómez. Charles O’Neill-Cancel (O’Neill), an agent of the Puerto Rico Treasury Department, stood by without intervening and trained his gun first on Gómez and then on Gomez’s mother, Margaret Torres-Rivera (who witnessed the attack).
On August 27, 1999, Torres-Rivera and the two boys sued O’Neill and Espada under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Puerto Rico tort law. 1 The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico agreed to represent O’Neill but not Espada.
Espada failed to answer the complaint and the clerk of court entered a default against him on June 19, 2000. See Fed. *335 R.Civ.P. 55(a). O’Neill answered the complaint and later moved unsuccessfully for summary judgment. A flurry of activity followed, including an interlocutory appeal, several motions, and protracted pretrial discovery involving O’Neill and the plaintiffs.
This skirmishing culminated in a five-day trial that began on August 6, 2003. Espada did not participate in the trial. O’Neill, represented by four attorneys, mounted a ferocious defense.
At the end of the plaintiffs’ case in chief, the district court granted O’Neill’s motion for judgment as a matter of law vis-á-vis Santiago. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(a). At the close of all the evidence, the court submitted the remaining claims to the jury (including questions as to the amount of damages to be assessed against the defaulted defendant, Espada). The jurors found O’Neill liable to Gómez for violating his Fourth Amendment rights by failing to intervene notwithstanding Espada’s use of excessive force. They also found him liable to Torres-Rivera under local law for negligently causing her harm. Espada’s liability to all three plaintiffs was assumed by reason of the default.
The jurors awarded damages as follows: $100,000 for Gómez against O’Neill; $20,000 for Torres-Rivera against O’Neill; $100,000 for Gómez against Espada; $20,000 for Torres-Rivera against Espada; and $100,000 for Santiago against Espada. O’Neill appealed, but to no avail.
See Torres-Rivera I,
In due course, the plaintiffs moved under the Fees Act for attorneys’ fees referable to services rendered through October 9, 2005. The district court granted fees in an amount that the plaintiffs thought was too meager. When the plaintiffs moved for reconsideration, the court revised the award, using the lodestar method.
Torres-Rivera v. Espada-Cruz (Torres-Rivera II),
Civ. No. 99-1972,
During some of the time that the fee petition was pending, the underlying judgments remained unsatisfied. Eventually, the plaintiffs filed a supplemental motion seeking payment of attorneys’ fees generated after October 9, 2005 in litigating the fee petition itself and in litigating to compel payment not only of the judgments but also of interest thereon. The district court, without explanation, denied this motion. See Torres-Rivera v. Espado-Cruz, Civ. No. 99-1972 (D.P.R. Feb. 2, 2007) (unpublished order).
O’Neill paid the damages judgments against him on or about October 28, 2005; but as of March 27, 2008, he had not paid any post-judgment interest. Espada has not paid any part of the judgments or fees and is apparently judgment-proof.
The plaintiffs appeal both the fee award and the denial of their supplemental motion. Our standard of review is familiar. We review a fee award for abuse of discretion.
Coutin v. Young & Rubicam P.R., Inc.,
II. ANALYSIS
On appeal, the plaintiffs advance three claims. They assert that the district court erred in (i) apportioning fees based on the defendants’ relative liability for damages, (ii) applying a global reduction to their fee request, and (iii) denying them fees for their efforts in litigating the fee petition and trying to collect the underlying judgments (including the accrued interest). We address these claims of error sequentially.
First, we sketch the legal landscape. Congress authored the Fees Act as a means of encouraging persons to seek redress for civil rights violations through judicial avenues.
Hensley v. Eekerhart,
A reasonable fee typically is determined through the lodestar method, which involves multiplying the number of hours productively spent by a reasonable hourly rate to calculate a base figure.
Hensley,
Reasonableness in this context is largely a matter of informed judgment. There are, however, guideposts in the case law. For instance, a district court may deem an expenditure of time unreasonable if the reported hours are “excessive, redundant, or otherwise unnecessary.”
Hensley,
Of particular pertinence for present purposes, time records may be too generic and, thus, insufficient as a practical matter to permit a court to answer questions about excessiveness, redundancy, and the like. In that event, the court may either discount or disallow those hours.
See, e.g., Tenn. Gas Pipeline Co. v. 101 Acres of Land,
After determining the time reasonably expended by the prevailing party’s legal team, the court must focus on the
*337
rates to be applied to those hours.
See, e.g., Grendel’s Den,
When the district court arrives at the lodestar and completes its consideration of possible adjustments, it ought to provide a “concise but clear” explanation of its calculation of the resultant fee award.
Hensley,
Where the plaintiffs have prevailed over more than one defendant, the court must take an additional step: it must determine whether the fee award should run jointly and severally against the defendants or, if not, what portion of the award each defendant should bear.
See Grendel’s Den,
Allocation of fees by time expended is the default modality in certain circumstances: that method is ordinarily the most appropriate when, in a multi-defendant case in which joint and several responsibility has been deemed inappropriate, the relative time dedicated to litigating with one defendant is clearly disproportionate to the time required to litigate with another defendant.
Our decision in Grendel’s Den illustrates this point. There, the district court considered only that both defendants had “participate[d] to some degree at every stage of the litigation” and apportioned the awarded fees equally between them. Id. On appeal, we modified that order because one defendant had mounted three times the opposition as had the other defendant. Id. (holding that equity required that seventy-five percent of the fee award be allocated against the former defendant).
Other federal appellate courts have enunciated similar tenets and concluded that, when the defensive efforts mustered by one defendant have been markedly more robust than the defensive efforts mustered by another, the relative time spent litigating against each of them is the appropriate methodology by which to apportion an award of attorneys’ fees. For example, the Ninth Circuit has held that, under fairness principles, markedly unequal efforts by each defendant require apportionment by the “time expended” method.
Corder v. Gates,
A. The Apportionment of Fees.
Against this background, we return to the case at hand. The district court decided that the responsibility for fees should not run jointly and severally, and that apportionment was in order; no one disputes either of these eminently reasonable decisions. The court proceeded to use the “relative liability” method as a means of effectuating that apportionment, comparing the damages assessed against each defendant to apportion the awarded attorneys’ fees.
See Torres-Rivera II,
The issue here is the district court’s selection of a “relative liability” method of apportionment. The plaintiffs take umbrage at that choice. They asseverate that since O’Neill was the only defendant to mount a defense—and a ferocious one at that—their lawyers spent virtually all of their time litigating against him. Conversely, very little time was spent litigating against Espada. On this basis, they posit that O’Neill should be held responsible for the lion’s share of the awarded fees.
O’Neill disagrees with this construct. He emphasizes the broad discretion vested in the district court and argues that a “relative liability” apportionment of the fee award falls within the eneincture of that discretion.
This is a case in which the considerable time spent by the plaintiffs in litigating against O’Neill dwarfs the rather modest amount of time spent in litigating against Espada. O’Neill, as was his right, mounted a Stalingrad-type defense, employing four lawyers and battling the plaintiffs at every turn. By contrast, Espada never answered the complaint but, rather, defaulted while the litigation was in an embryonic stage. The time, effort, and energy involved in litigating against O’Neill—a take-no-prisoners opponent—scarcely can be compared to the time, effort, and energy involved in securing a default and proving damages against a non-appearing party-
Of course, Espada’s actions were front and center. The claims against O’Neill were based on multiple theories of failure to intervene to prevent Espada’s unlawful behavior. The first of these required the plaintiffs to show that Espada used excessive force; that O’Neill observed what was transpiring; and that he took no action to prevent the ongoing mayhem.
See Tor
*339
res-Rivera I,
So viewed, developing the claims against O’Neill depended in part on developing the basis for a case against Espada. But given the entry of default, the plaintiffs would not have had to make the case against Espada except for O’Neill’s decision to resist the claims against him.
See Goldman, Antonetti, Ferraiuoli, Axtmayer & Hertell v. Medfit Int'l Inc.,
The rule that we glean from the case law runs along the following lines. Where apportionment is indicated, the choice among available options generally lies within the district court’s sound discretion.
See Grendel’s Den,
This is a case of the latter stripe: because Espada defaulted, the plaintiffs had no need to spend significant time either in preparing a case against him or in presenting that case to the jury. 3 Thus, it was O’Neill, as the lone defendant actually contesting the plaintiffs’ proof, who caused the plaintiffs to incur the bulk of the time expended. The short of it, then, is that the amount of time spent in mounting the case against O’Neill was grossly disproportionate to the amount of time spent in litigating against Espada.
We have carefully perused the record, the district court’s explanation of the fee award, and the court’s comments on the choice of a “relative liability” method of apportionment.
See Torres Rivera II,
B. The Global Reduction.
Even though vacation of the fee award is in order, see supra Part 11(A), we are mindful that the plaintiffs have contested the global reduction essayed by the district court in calculating the lodestar. When reallocating the responsibility for payment of the award, the district court will once again have to begin with its extant lodestar computation (which includes the fifteen percent global reduction). Thus, it be *340 hooves us to resolve this contretemps here and now.
The lower court explained that many of the time entries logged by the plaintiffs’ attorneys failed adequately to describe the tasks for which the time was expended.
Torres-Rivera II,
This assignment of error engenders abuse of discretion review.
See, e.g., Gay Officers,
The judge had managed the case for several years and had presided over the trial. She was intimately familiar with the nuances of the litigation. She canvassed the time records and provided a plausible rationale for her binary decision to discount generic time entries and to shrink the overall award. No more was exigible.
The prevailing party has the burden of proving the reasonableness of the hours claimed.
See Hensley,
To be sure, the district court’s discretion in this regard is not unbounded. Here, however, the court’s description of the entries as “generic” appears apt. Moreover, the court sensibly explained what it was doing and why it felt impelled to make the adjustment. Our case law has acknowledged that in the fee-shifting milieu reasonableness is not an absolute but a range.
See, e.g., Metro. Dist. Comm’n,
C. The Supplemental Motion.
The district court denied without explanation the plaintiffs’ supplemental motion for additional attorneys’ fees. The plaintiffs’ last challenge implicates this ruling.
A prevailing party in a civil rights action normally is entitled to attorneys’ fees incurred in the pursuit of fees under section 1988.
See, e.g., Brewster v. Dukakis,
These principles inform our treatment of this claim of error. The original fee application was hotly contested, and litigation over fees was required to perfect the plaintiffs’ rights under section 1988. By the same token, the underlying judgments were not seasonably paid and collection efforts were at least arguably necessary. Finally, the plaintiffs were entitled to post-judgment interest up until the date that the damages judgments were paid. See 28 U.S.C. § 1961. Yet as of March 27, 2008, no accrued interest had been tendered.
There is a presumption that the plaintiffs, as prevailing parties, are entitled to recover reasonable attorneys’ fees with respect to these matters.
See, e.g., Wey-ant,
III. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. For the reasons elucidated above, we vacate both the fee award and the order denying the plaintiffs’ supplemental motion. This case has been pending for several years. Thus, we direct the district court, on remand, to give expeditious consideration to this last vestige of the matter.
We vacate the orders appealed from and remand the case to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. In addition to the matters discussed above, the district court shall consider the plaintiffs’ entitlement vel non to fees incurred in connection with the aspects of this appeal as to which the plaintiffs may be deemed prevailing parties and shall award a reasonable fee for those services. See 1st Cir. R. 39.1(b).
Notes
. Three other plaintiffs who asserted derivative claims fell by the wayside during the course of the litigation. They are not parties to this appeal.
. We note in passing that Santiago’s claim against Espada was successful but his claim against O’Neill was not. Thus, there may be a question as to whether—and for what purposes—Santiago should be deemed a prevailing party. But because O'Neill has not raised this issue on appeal, we do not probe the point more deeply.
. To be sure, the plaintiffs had to prove damages against Espada.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 55(b)(2);
In re Home Restaurants, Inc.,
