852 F. Supp. 542 | S.D. Miss. | 1994
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Previously before this three-judge court for consideration was a motion by plaintiffs for an award of attorneys’ fees and expenses pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 1973Z (e) and 1988. By memorandum opinion and order of October 29, 1992, the court concluded that for purposes of an attorneys’ fees award, plaintiffs were the prevailing parties in this voting rights litigation. Watkins v. Fordice, 807 F.Supp. 406, 410-11 (S.D.Miss.1992). The court then determined, after reviewing the parties’ extensive submissions, that plaintiffs should recover attorneys’ fees of $188,506.55, together with $10,182.18 in expenses. In arriving at what it considered an appropriate award, the court cut a significant number of the hours for which plaintiffs sought attorneys’ fees compensation and found, in addition, that the hourly rate claimed by all but one of plaintiffs’ attorneys was too high. The court further refused to award an enhancement with respect to plaintiffs’ attorneys’ fees. Finally, the court disallowed a substantial amount of the expenses for which plaintiffs sought reimbursement. A final judgment was entered on March 23, 1993.
Plaintiffs appealed the court’s ruling, arguing primarily that the fee award was exceedingly low, particularly in light of the exceptional results they were able to obtain through a negotiated compromise and settlement.
ISSUE ON REMAND
Plaintiffs were represented in this action by seven attorneys for each of whom attorney’s fee compensation was sought. With the exception of one attorney, Mike Sayer, plaintiffs requested higher hourly rates than were awarded, as follows:
Attorney Rate Requested Rate Awarded
Carroll Rhodes $160.00 $110.00
John L. Walker $160.00 $110.00
Deborah McDonald $135.00 $ 95.00
Tomie Green $135.00 $ 95.00
Johnny Parker $135.00 $ 95.00
Wilbur Colom $125.00 $ 95.00
This court recited in its memorandum opinion awarding these lower rates that it had, in arriving at these figures,
considered the evidence submitted by the parties relating to the local rates of attorneys and has taken into account the experience and expertise of each attorney, the nature and complexity of the case, including the level of skill and expertise required by the case, and the demands imposed on the attorneys by the case.
Watkins, 807 F.Supp. at 416. On appeal, the Fifth Circuit determined, in accordance with the rule stated in Islamic Center of Mississippi v. Starkville, 876 F.2d 465 (5th Cir. 1989), that in light of the fact that the “customary billing rates of [plaintiffs’] attorneys” fell “within the market range,” this court was bound to articulate its reasons for choosing different hourly rates. Watkins, 7 F.3d at 459. Though recognizing that the factors this court had identified are properly considered in setting hourly rates, the Fifth Circuit found this court’s recitation insufficiently explanatory and therefore remanded the case for this court to either “(1) award each attorney’s customary billing rate, or (2) state the reasons for its decision to do otherwise.” Id. That is now this court’s charge.
CONSIDERATION BY THREE-JUDGE COURT
As a preliminary matter, plaintiffs have raised an issue as to whether the determination of appropriate hourly rates on remand is to be made by the three-judge court or the single district judge. They point out that the three-judge court was dissolved upon entry of the October 29,1992 memorandum opinion and insist, therefore, that the issue on remand is to be decided by the managing district judge. Defendants, on the other hand, contend that the opinion which the Fifth Circuit vacated was that of the three-judge court such that the remand must therefore necessarily be addressed to the three-judge court.
SCOPE OF INQUIRY ON REMAND
In addition to the question whether the remand is properly addressed to the single district judge or the three-judge court, an issue is presented as to the scope of this court’s inquiry on remand. Defendants submit that the court has only to consider on remand the fee awards to two of plaintiffs’ attorneys, Carroll Rhodes and Wilbur Colom, since none of plaintiffs’ other attorneys who were denied the requested hourly rates identified a normal or customary billing rate in their affidavits, or otherwise.
While the Fifth Circuit directed that the district court award “each” attorney his or her customary billing rate, or explain its reasons for not doing so, it appears the court was under the mistaken impression that plaintiffs had submitted to this court “affidavits of their attorneys’ customary billing rates____,” Watkins, 7 F.3d at 458, and that this court had “deviated from the customary billing rates of [plaintiffs’] attorneys,” id. at 459. That is not entirely accurate. Some of plaintiffs’ attorneys — Mr. Rhodes, Mr. Colom and Mr. Sayer — had submitted affidavits to this court setting forth their customary hourly rates;
That plaintiffs recognized this omission is reflected by their brief on appeal to the Fifth Circuit, in which they challenged “[t]he district court’s articulated reason for the reduced rate for Rhodes and Colom,” on the basis that “[t]wo of plaintiffs counsel’s [Rhodes’ and Colom’s] billing rates fell within the prevailing market rate but exceeded the rate awarded them by the trial court.” (Plaintiffs’ Brief on Appeal, p. 27) (bracketed material in original).
In their response to defendants’ memorandum brief on remand, filed in January 1994, plaintiffs advised that each of their attorneys was submitting a supplemental affidavit setting forth his or her customary billing rate, which it was said would be as follows: Mr. Rhodes would claim $160 (plus a delayed enhancement that would increase his rate to
It is not the court’s responsibility to ensure that attorneys present evidence to substantiate their positions. That is the obligation of the attorneys. Plaintiffs represented to the court that affidavits would be furnished to satisfy plaintiffs’ burden to prove the hourly rates of their attorneys. The simple fact is that they have not been submitted, and as the record currently stands, there is no evidence of the hourly rate of attorneys Parker, Walker or Green, and no evidence of the hourly rate of attorney McDonald for the time period at issue.
GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS
Ultimately, whether the court must reexamine the rates of all attorneys or just those of Mr. Rhodes and Mr. Colom is of little practical consequence, for the primary considerations which impacted the court’s decision on hourly rates stemmed more from the court’s broader view of the case as a whole rather than focusing on factors respecting any particular attorney, such as his or her experience and expertise. The court would therefore make the following general observations about the case which ultimately bear on the attorneys’ fees issue and which have most significantly affected the court’s decision as to hourly rates.
Decisions respecting awards of reasonable attorneys’ fees involve consideration of the factors identified in Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc. 488 F.2d 714, 716-19 (5th Cir.1974), which are: (1) the time and labor required; (2) the novelty and difficulty of the questions; (3) the skill requisite to perform the legal service properly; (4) the preclusion of other employment by the attorney due to the acceptance of the case; (5) the customary fee; (6) whether the fee is fixed or contingent; (7) time limitations imposed by
(1) ascertain the nature and extent of the services supplied by the attorney; (2) value the services according to the customary fee and quality of the legal work; and (3) adjust the compensation on the basis of the other Johnson factors that may be of significance in that particular case.
Leroy v. City of Houston, 831 F.2d 576, 583 n. 11 (5th Cir.1987); Sims v. Jefferson Downs Racing Ass’n, 778 F.2d 1068, 1084 (5th Cir.1985). What is before the court is the second prong of this inquiry.
Regarding the proof as to local rates of attorneys, this court recognized before, and the Fifth Circuit observed that plaintiffs had submitted affidavits showing a range of attorneys’ fees of $100 to $150 per hour for attorneys with four to ten years’ experience, and $150 to $200 an hour for those with ten to twenty years’ experience. Defendants’ affidavits showed the range to be $75 to $125. These affidavits provide some direction to the court in its endeavor, of course, but other evidence is also instructive. Indeed, reference to such other evidence is particularly appropriate in light of the disparity in rates evidenced by the parties’ affidavits. In this regard, the results of a bar survey conducted by the Mississippi Bar Association, as reported in The Mississippi Lawyer, Vol. XXXV (March-April 1989), and in The Mississippi Lawyer, Vol. XXXV (May-June 1989), are instructive.
In addition to this evidence, the court considers that awards in similar cases place in question the range of rates claimed by plaintiffs. The court has been directed to no civil rights case covering the time period at issue in which an attorney in Mississippi has been awarded the $160 rate which Mr. Rhodes requested for his work in this case.
Though the court viewed the range of hourly rates prevailing in the community as lower than represented by plaintiffs, that was only one factor which affected the court’s decision as to rates. Another consideration that significantly impacted the court’s decision on the amount of attorneys’ fees, both as to the time expended and appropriate hourly rates, was plaintiffs’ attorneys’ lack of effectiveness and lack of success before the court. While the court did conclude that plaintiffs had “prevailed” in the case, the court made it clear that this was a close call and that had the case proceeded to a judicial resolution, plaintiffs could not have expected to “secure a court-ordered plan that satisfied their agenda.” Watkins, 807 F.Supp. at 411. The conclusion that plaintiffs “prevailed” entitled them to an award of attorneys’ fees, but as the court hinted in its earlier opinion, the success claimed by plaintiffs was not due to the merit of their position or the skill or expertise of their attorneys.
As this court previously observed, all parties to this litigation recognized from the outset that the state’s legislative districts were unconstitutionally malapportioned and that reapportionment was inevitable.
With these remarks having been made, the court would make the following specific comments about the hourly rates awarded each of the attorneys.
Carroll Rhodes
Mr. Rhodes was plaintiffs’ lead counsel and performed the predominant share of the work for plaintiffs in this case. He requested an award of $160 per hour, even though his affidavit reflected that his hourly rate during the years which encompassed
Wilbur Colom
As with Mr. Rhodes, the court is of the opinion that its original award of $95 an hour for Mr. Colom was reasonable under the circumstances and should stand. Mr. Colom’s affidavit reflects that he has been a practicing attorney since 1977, but there is nothing in his submission to indicate that he had any experience or expertise in voting rights litigation.
Deborah McDonald
Ms. McDonald graduated from law school in 1982, and thereafter became employed with Southwest Mississippi Legal Services as a staff attorney. She eventually became a managing attorney, and ultimately executive director of Southwest Mississippi Legal Services, a position she held when she left Legal Services to enter private practice in October 1991. During her legal career, Ms. McDonald has been involved in a number of civil rights eases, including voting rights cases, and in this case, she performed a significant share of the work.
In the brief submitted in support of plaintiffs’ request for attorneys’ fees, demand was made for compensation of Ms. McDonald at the hourly rate of $135. However, as indicated supra, in her original affidavit and a supplemental affidavit submitted prior to the court’s ruling on the attorneys’ fee motion, while Ms. McDonald described her education and work experience, she did not, and to date has not advised the court what she customarily charged or what her normal hourly rate was. She has not informed the court of any fee awards she may have received in other litigation, nor has she even provided any statement as to what she considers would be an appropriate hourly rate for her services in this case.
The court concluded originally, and remains of the opinion that Ms. McDonald should receive attorney’s fee compensation based on an hourly rate of $95. With the exception of Mr. Rhodes, Ms. McDonald performed more work in this case than plaintiffs’ other attorneys. However, unlike Mr. Rhodes, she does not assert that the ease posed any undue demands on her or her
John L. Walker
Mr. Walker requested that he be awarded for his services in this ease an hourly rate “in the range of $130-$160,” and stated that in 1980, he had received an award of an attorney’s fee in a civil rights case of $100.00 for work performed from 1973-1977. Mr. Walker did not state that he customarily or normally charged between $130 and $160 per hour for his services but rather merely provided his “opinion” that this represented a reasonable range of rates for the work he performed in this case. The court determined that he should receive $110 per hour.
Johnny Parker
Mr. Parker completed his legal education in 1987, when he was awarded his masters of law degree. Over the next several years, he was employed as an associate professor at various law schools, where he taught courses in torts, civil rights, secured transactions and business associations. In 1991, Mr. Parker became a “consultant” to the Owens Law Firm and in that capacity, performed services in connection with this case. In his affidavit, Mr. Parker did not represent, that his customary hourly rate or normal billing rate is $135, or any other amount. He merely provided a copy of his resume, a listing of the services performed in this litigation and the time expended in the performance of those services, along with a statement that he “rendered valuable legal services” in this case. As the foregoing illustrates, prior to his participation in this case, Mr. Parker had never represented a client, and there is thus no suggestion that he had an established billing rate for clients. Nor is there any indication that he has a set fee for his “consulting” services. Consequently, in concluding that Mr. Parker’s services should be compensated at the rate of $95 per hour, the court did not award him less than his normal hourly rate. It merely considered that in light of Mr. Parker’s experience, $95 was a reasonable hourly rate. Mr. Parker did not complete his formal legal education and actually begin work in the legal field until 1987, barely four years before he performed his work in this case. During his few years as an academician, he taught some courses in civil rights, but nothing in the documentation provided to the court hints of any expertise in voting rights or civil rights litigation.
Tomie T. Green
Ms. Green was awarded $95 an hour for her limited services in this case, though plaintiffs had requested that she receive $135 an hour. Ms. Green graduated from law school in December 1983. Upon graduation, she entered private practice for approximately a year and a half, after which she clerked for Judge Henry T. Wingate for about a year and a half. She then worked as an assistant district attorney for another year and a few months. In October 1988, she became an associate with the law firm of Walker & Walker and in January 1991, became a partner in that firm. Ms. Green did not include in her affidavit any representation of her customary hourly rate. She stated simply that she had “rendered ... good and valuable legal services on behalf of plaintiffs.” At the time of her work in this case, Ms. Green had been engaged in the practice of law for about six years. Moreover, there is no contention that she had any experience or expertise in voting rights cases, and her services in this case were exceedingly limited in scope.
SUMMARY ON HOURLY RATES
In addressing plaintiffs’ attorneys’ request for an enhancement of their hourly rates for the “exceptional level of success they attained,” the court in its earlier opinion, while noting that plaintiffs’ “level of success in their efforts before the court was quite low,” Watkins, 807 F.Supp. at 417 n. 22, stated that it had attributed their ultimate success to the “time expended toward achieving their goal,” and further explained that it had “accounted for their success in the computation of hours” for which compensation would be allowed, id. at 417. However, the court was most conservative in excising portions of the attorneys’ fees claimed (i.e., hours claimed) that were considered unreasonable, excessive, duplicative, or otherwise not compensable. Indeed, the court specifically indicated that with respect to questions of duplication of effort and/or excessive number of hours, its estimates were “conservative,” and that doubts had been resolved in plaintiffs’ favor. Watkins, 807 F.Supp. at 414 n. 15. In many instances, the court afforded plaintiffs’ attorneys the benefit of the doubt and allowed compensation for time that was of questionable compensability. Moreover, the court was confronted with a number of dubious time submissions. See Watkins, 807 F.Supp. at 414 n. 12. To some extent, perhaps, the court’s decision to award lower hourly rates than had been requested was a function of the court’s inability to ascertain with confidence the number of hours which the attorneys actually and reasonably worked on compensable services, without duplication of effort. There is no doubt but that had it determined to award the hourly rates that were being sought, the court would have been far more meticulous in scrutinizing the time submissions and without question, would have been less willing to resolve these doubts in plaintiffs’ favor.
The court would also observe that even had it awarded the full hourly rates requested and deducted no more time than it did, the court would likely have reduced the overall award on the basis that it was excessive in light of the facts that have already been discussed. The lodestar is presumptively reasonable, but not necessarily so, and the court may “adjust” the lodestar if an adjustment is warranted. See Leroy, 831 F.2d at 583 n. 11. The court’s goal was to ascertain an overall fee award that was reasonable, and which would reasonably compensate plaintiffs’ attorneys for their services. The court was confronted with an attorneys’ fee request of over $800,000 for a case, the merits of which were resolved within a year of the date it was filed, and during the pendency of which plaintiffs were unsuccessful at every turn. It was a case in which all parties knew from the beginning that some relief would be granted, and in which plain
ATTORNEYS’ FEES FOR WORK ON APPEAL
Plaintiffs have moved for an award of attorneys’ fees of nearly $90,000 for work performed by Mr. Rhodes and Ms. McDonald on the appeal of the attorneys’ fee issues, arguing that they prevailed on “significant issues” on appeal. Mr. Rhodes requests compensation of $64,513.75 (368.65 hours at $175 per hour), and Ms. McDonald asks that she be awarded $23,280 (145.5 hours at $160 per hour), for a total of $87,793.75. In the court’s opinion, there exists no reasonable basis whatsoever for an award of this magnitude.
Fees are requested for work performed both on plaintiffs’ appeal to the Supreme Court and their appeal to the Fifth Circuit. Though they maintain that compensation is due for their appellate work before the Supreme Court, there is no sense in which they can be said to have prevailed on their Supreme Court appeal, which was dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
Plaintiffs argued on their appeal to the Fifth Circuit that this court (1) erred in failing to conduct an evidentiary hearing, (2) abused its discretion in awarding an unreasonably low attorneys’ fee given the exceptional results obtained, (3) erred in its “subsidiary factual determination” that the hourly rates awarded were reasonable, (4) erred in finding that counsels’ reported tasks were duplicative and unrelated to the litigation, and that their expenses and costs were excessive, (5) erred in failing to award a premium fee or in having reduced the lodestar, and finally, (6) abused its discretion in not awarding interest on attorneys’ fees and litigation expenses. The only claims by plaintiffs which were not rejected outright by the Fifth Circuit were their claims relating to hourly rates and interest. The Fifth Circuit, in all other respects, “agreed with [this] court.” Watkins, 7 F.3d at 460. However, even on the hourly rates and interest issues, plaintiffs did not prevail.
Regarding hourly rates, the Fifth Circuit merely remanded the case for this court to either award the claimed hourly rates or alternatively, state the reasons for doing otherwise. On the interest issue, plaintiffs had demanded of this court and were entitled to an award of interest on their attorneys’ fee award. This court, however, failed to specifically provide for interest in its judgment. Rather than attempting to remedy this omission by the simple expedient of moving this court to correct its judgment, plaintiffs chose instead to include the issue in their appeal.
The court did not refuse to award interest and indeed, plaintiffs did not contend on appeal that it did.
In addition to their request for fees for work on their own appeal, plaintiffs seek attorneys’ fee compensation for time expended on the defense of defendants’ cross-appeal. Essentially, that appeal challenged this court’s determination that plaintiffs were the prevailing party in this case for purposes of an attorneys’ fee award and challenged the fee award as excessive. Defendants lost on these issues. Defendants now do not vigorously dispute plaintiffs’ entitlement to an award of fees for plaintiffs’ attorneys’ time spent defending the cross-appeal, and in the court’s opinion, they are entitled to an award of fees for that work.
The court has reviewed Mr. Rhodes’ time submissions, and finds that from the time that defendants filed the cross-appeal until the time the Fifth Circuit ruled on the appeals, Mr. Rhodes spent a total of 79.25 hours working on the ease. While he should be compensated for a portion of this time, the court cannot agree that an award should cover all of this time since the work performed by Mr. Rhodes in this time period related not only to defending the cross-appeal but also to rebutting defendants’ arguments on plaintiffs’ own appeal. The court concludes, therefore, that compensation should be awarded for half the time claimed, or 39.63 hours.
Ms. McDonald’s submission reflects that she spent 25.5 hours on the ease during this same time frame. Even though Ms. McDonald’s submission, unlike that of Mr. Rhodes, specifically identifies most of this time as having been expended on the cross-appeal, the court is of the opinion that the time claimed is excessive in light of the nature of the work required. Fifteen of the 25.5 hours claimed by Ms. McDonald were spent reviewing the record for the cross-appeal. That amount is excessive given that plaintiffs had initiated the appeals process and should have been thoroughly familiar with the record. The court concludes that half of the time claimed should be disallowed and that Ms. McDonald should be awarded fees for 12.75 hours.
Having determined the number of hours for which compensation should be awarded to Mr. Rhodes and Ms. McDonald, the court is again confronted with the task of setting a reasonable hourly rate for their work. Mr. Rhodes has requested $175 an hour, and Ms. McDonald has requested an hourly fee of $160. For the reasons expressed previously in this memorandum with respect to hourly rates, both of these requests are inordinately high. But they are excessive for yet another reason. Even given that voting rights litigation can be complex and demanding, the appeal was not addressed to any substantive or complex voting rights issues but was instead devoted to the issue of attorneys’ fees. In view of this fact, the court concludes that Ms. McDonald should receive a fee based on an hourly rate of $100 an hour, and that Mr. Rhodes’ services should be compensated at the rate of $115 an hour.
In light of the foregoing, the court concludes that Mr. Rhodes and Ms. McDonald are entitled to awards in the amounts of $4557.45, and $1275.00, respectively.
COSTS AND EXPENSES ON APPEAL
Finally, Mr. Rhodes requests an award of expenses and costs associated with the appeal and with the motion for attorneys’
CONCLUSION
A separate judgment incorporating the court’s conclusions herein will be entered in accordance with Rule 58 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
ORDERED.
. Plaintiffs appealed simultaneously to the Supreme Court and the Fifth Circuit, and asked for and were granted a stay by the Fifth Circuit pending the Supreme Court's resolution of plaintiffs' appeal. In response to the plaintiffs' appeals, the defendants cross-appealed. By order of March 22, 1993, the Supreme Court dismissed plaintiffs' and defendants' appeals for want of jurisdiction. Watkins v. Fordice, —— U.S. ——, 113 S.Ct. 1573, 123 L.Ed.2d 142 (1993); Fordice v. Watkins, — U.S. -, 113 S.Ct. 1573, 123 L.Ed.2d 142 (1993).
. Defendants are Kirk Fordice, Governor of the State of Mississippi; Mike Moore, Attorney General of the State of Mississippi; and Dick Mol- • pus, Secretary of State of the State of Mississippi, in their respective official capacities and as members of the State Board of Election Commissioners; the Standing Joint Legislative Committee on Reapportionment of the Mississippi Legislature; Tim Ford, in his official capacity as Speaker of the Mississippi House of Representatives; and Ollie Mohamed, in his official capacity as President Pro Tempore of the Mississippi Senate.
. Mr. Sayer requested and was awarded fees at the hourly rate of $95.00.
. Plaintiffs have insisted from the outset that the attorneys' fees issue was to be decided by the managing district judge rather than the three-judge court. They took that position in the briefing before this court on their attorneys' fees motion, and similarly urged that position on their appeal to the Supreme Court, arguing that the three-judge court lacked jurisdiction to decide the attorneys' fee issue.
. Under these circumstances, the court perceives no need for an order reconvening the three-judge court.
. Mr. Rhodes stated in his affidavit that he has "billed fee paying clients, in complex non-contingent civil cases, for the years 1988-1992 at the rate of $150.00 per hour. I recently raised my hourly rate ... to $160.00 per hour." Similarly, Mr. Colom stated that his "regular and customary billing rate for non-contingency fee paying clients is $125.00 per hour____"
. Further, plaintiffs stated in the text of their brief that "plaintiffs’ counsel detailed the legal work they had performed on the case and their normal billable hourly rate for complex non-contingent cases." Plaintiffs' Brief on Appeal, p. 15. In a footnote accompanying that statement, plaintiffs set forth the number of years' experience of each attorney, and stated:
Attorneys Rhodes, Colom, and Sayer stated, under oath, their customary billable hourly rate for non-contingent cases. Additionally, Walker stated the hourly rate he had been awarded in a 1973-77 civil rights case. Rhodes’ customary non-contingent billable hourly rate was $150.00 between 1988-1992. He raised his hourly rate in such cases in 1992 to $160.00. Colom’s customary billable non-contingent hourly rate was $125.00. And, Say-er’s customary billable non-contingent hourly rate was $95.00. Walker had been awarded, in 1980, $100.00 per hour for work performed in 1973-77.
No indication was given that Ms. McDonald, Mr. Parker or Ms. Green had identified a customary hourly rate, and while plaintiffs expressed that Mr. Walker had previously received a court-awarded hourly rate of $100.00, no representation was made that Walker had stated a customary hourly rate.
. Mr. Rhodes asserts in his supplemental affidavit that his hourly rate in 1992 was $160 and that his hourly rate is now $175; Ms. McDonald claims that her present hourly rate for non-complex non-contingency cases ranges from $100 to $150, though she requests $160 per hour for her work on the appeal in this case because of the non-contingent nature of the case and its complexity.
. Plaintiffs have insisted throughout the court’s consideration of the attorneys’ fee issue that the court should hold a hearing on, inter alia, the question of hourly rates. This court declined to do so initially, and the Fifth Circuit agreed that such a hearing was not required. Watkins, 7 F.3d at 459-60. Plaintiffs have now suggested that if the court still has questions about their rates after reviewing these supplemental affidavits, it could hold an evidentiary hearing. The court cannot agree that this procedure is warranted. Plaintiffs have had the opportunity to provide their proof and have not done so.
. The court has already performed the inquiry required by the first prong, but additional observations on that matter are included infra, at p. 553.
. Although the survey was conducted in 1989, two years prior to the time period at issue, the court considers that it is still instructive.
. Over a third of all members of the Mississippi State Bar responded to the survey.
. On April 4, 1994, United States District Judge Henry T. Wingate entered an agreed judgment in Madison County Voter’s League v. Runnels, No. 3:93-CV-092(W)(S) (S.D.Miss. Apr. 4, 1994) awarding Mr. Rhodes, as well as a number of other attorneys, fees at the rate of $ 160 per hour. The court observes that this award covered work performed on a case filed in 1993, two years after the case at bar. Further, the court notes that the judgment in Runnels is not accompanied by an explanation of the proof, if any, submitted by the parties or of the basis for the award. The judgment reflects only that the award was ordered by agreement of the parties.
.It is notable that a number of the affidavits which plaintiffs supplied in this case to substantiate their claimed range of hourly rates were affidavits that had been filed by the plaintiffs in Martin v. Mabus. However, whereas the range of hourly rates identified by those affidavits was from $100 to $200, depending on the number of years of experience, the court in Martin awarded significantly lower hourly rates ranging from $75
. Most recently, in January of this year, Judge William H. Barbour awarded an hourly rate of $150 to a local attorney. See Bell v. City of Jackson, No. 3:92cv009(B) (S.D.Miss.1994). However, the defendant in Bell did not contest the award and in fact, did not even respond to the request for fees.
. Thus, even though plaintiffs characterize their fee as "contingent,” it was virtually certain that some relief would be granted. In this vein, the court would also note that there is no credible suggestion that plaintiffs’ attorneys found this case "undesirable.”
. Actually, plaintiffs requested a 50% enhancement of the hourly rate for each of their attorneys, including Mr. Rhodes.
. The court would take this opportunity to note that Mr. Rhodes' time submissions, unlike most of the other attorneys in this case, were of doubtful accuracy. For example, Mr. Rhodes’ submissions reflected that he had on a number of occasions worked on the case more than 24 hours a day. See Watkins, 807 F.Supp. at 414 n. 12.
.The fact that he was lead counsel in Islamic Center of Mississippi v. Starkville, 876 F.2d 465 (5th Cir.1989), suggests that he has some experience in civil rights cases, but plaintiffs have presented no proof that he has experience or expertise in voting rights cases. That is not to say that he does not have experience or expertise. That is simply to say that there has been presented no proof to that effect.
. It appears that at the time she performed most of her work in this case, Ms. McDonald was still employed by Southwest Mississippi Legal Services.
. The court would note, too, that particularly with respect to Mr. Rhodes and Ms. McDonald, there was likely duplication of effort and excessive time claimed for which the court failed to account in computing compensable hours. See infra p. 553.
. The court notes that this figure was higher than the rate he had received in the one case he identified in his affidavit.
. And it appears that his professional affiliation with the Owens Law Firm may have been limited
. All she did in the case was perform a few hours of legal research on a very narrow issue.
. Plaintiffs claim they won on their appeal to the Supreme Court because they argued that the Court lacked jurisdiction over decisions on attorneys’ fees. Plaintiffs obviously were uncertain whether the Fifth Circuit would have jurisdiction over the appeal of the attorneys’ fees issues, or whether the appeal was instead properly brought in the Supreme Court. Nevertheless, they filed an appeal to the Supreme Court, with complete briefing, in which they argued that the Court had jurisdiction, although they did request, alternatively, that the Court treat their jurisdictional statement as a petition for writ of certiorari in the event the Court were to conclude that it lacked jurisdiction. The Court explicitly rejected their contention that jurisdiction was proper in that forum, and implicitly rejected their alternative request.
. The State expressed to the Fifth Circuit its "view that as a matter of law interest is allowed from the date of judgment regardless of whether the judgment references interest."
. Though these rates are higher than the court concluded was reasonable for their earlier work, over two years have passed since that work was performed and an increase is thus in order.
. They argued only that "the district court’s attorney fees Order, Judgment, and Amended Judgment [were] all silent as to any interest,” and pointed out that they were entitled to such interest from the date of this court’s October 29, 1992 attorneys' fees order.