Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually and as Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department, and William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C., Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually and as Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department, and John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville, and William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C., (Three Cases) Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually, and Charles D. McDaniel Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C.

852 F.2d 762
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 26, 1988
Docket85-1523
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 852 F.2d 762 (Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually and as Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department, and William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C., Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually and as Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department, and John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville, and William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C., (Three Cases) Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually, and Charles D. McDaniel Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually and as Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department, and William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C., Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually and as Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department, and John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville, and William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C., (Three Cases) Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually, and Charles D. McDaniel Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C., 852 F.2d 762 (4th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

852 F.2d 762

Henry Z. SPELL, Appellee,
v.
Charles D. McDANIEL, Individually and as Patrolman, City of
Fayetteville Police Department, Appellant,
and
William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville
Police Department; Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City
of Fayetteville Police Department; William C. Johnson,
Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville
Police Department; Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of
Fayetteville Police Department; John P. Smith, City
Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville,
N.C., a municipal corporation organized under and pursuant
to the laws of the State of N.C., Defendants.
Henry Z. SPELL, Appellee,
v.
Charles D. McDANIEL, Individually and as Patrolman, City of
Fayetteville Police Department, and John P. Smith,
City Manager, City of Fayetteville, Defendants,
and
William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville
Police Department; Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City
of Fayetteville Police Department; William C. Johnson,
Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville
Police Department; Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of
Fayetteville Police Department; and the City of
Fayetteville, N.C., a municipal corporation organized under
and pursuant to the laws of the State of N.C., Appellants.
(Three Cases)
Henry Z. SPELL, Appellee,
v.
Charles D. McDANIEL, Individually, Appellant,
and
Charles D. McDaniel, Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police
Department; William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of
Fayetteville Police Department; Roger T. Holman, Command
Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department; William
C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of
Fayetteville Police Department; Daniel K. Dixon, Chief,
City of Fayetteville Police Department; John P. Smith, City
Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville,
N.C., a municipal corporation organized under and pursuant
to the laws of the State of N.C., Defendants.

Nos. 85-1523, 85-1524, 85-1691, 85-1714 and 85-1757.

United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.

July 26, 1988.

Before PHILLIPS, CHAPMAN and WILKINSON, Circuit Judges.

ORDER

PER CURIAM:

Henry Z. Spell, a successful civil rights plaintiff in a suit brought against Patrolman Charles McDaniel and the City of Fayetteville, North Carolina, see Spell v. McDaniel, 824 F.2d 1380 (4th Cir.1987), is again before this court on a motion for attorney's fees under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1988 for services performed in connection with the appeal and subsequent response to the appellant's petition for writ of certiorari. Plaintiff also seeks attorney's fees for time spent by his attorneys in preparing the present fee petition. Plaintiff seeks reimbursement of the amount he has already substantially paid his seven appellate counsel, five of whom joined the case post-trial, under a contractual fee agreement whereby counsel charged Spell for 1,886.1 hours of attorney time at rates varying from $80 to $150 per hour with an additional "contingency multiplier" of 1.5 applied to 1,362.3 of these hours and a bonus for winning of $15,000 resulting in a total attorney's fee of $383,236.25. In addition, plaintiff seeks from defendants the $5,482 he was charged for 98.2 hours attributed by his counsel to paralegal services, over $8,000 in costs and expenses, compensation for delay, and interest on the fee award. These sums are in addition to the $224,758.50 in attorney's fees and costs already awarded plaintiff in connection with the trial. We find that the amounts charged to Spell by his multiple appellate counsel represent a vast duplication of endeavors already performed at the trial level, a substantial degree of duplication and overkill in connection with the post-trial proceedings, an unconscionable exercise of billing judgment as to the reasonable number of hours expended and ultimately charged to plaintiff Spell, and an affront to the very purposes of the Civil Rights Attorney's Fees Awards Act of 1976, 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1988. For these reasons, and as discussed more fully below, we award plaintiff the sum of $80,295.69 which we find represents a "reasonable" attorney's fee, expenses and adjustment for delay as contemplated by Sec. 1988.

* Plaintiff Spell brought the underlying Sec. 1983 action against the defendant police officers and the City of Fayetteville, North Carolina, in 1984. After two jury trials, compensatory damages of $900,000 were awarded to plaintiff. Subsequently the district court awarded attorney's fees and costs for plaintiff's trial counsel, Gerald Beaver and William Richardson of the Fayetteville law firm of Beaver, Thompson, Holt & Richardson, P.A., in the amount of $335,942.57. The district court arrived at this figure by enhancing the reasonable lodestar figure of $224,758.50 by a 1.5 contingency multiplier. See Spell v. McDaniel, 616 F.Supp. 1069, 1107-10 (E.D.N.C.1985). The defendants appealed contesting both the fee award and the imposition of liability against them under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983.

Plaintiff's trial counsel, Gerald Beaver, by affidavit in support of the present petition, states that as of May 1985 his four-member law firm was no longer able to shoulder the financial burden of representing Spell on the contingency basis which Spell's financial condition necessitated. Beaver and Richardson therefore took on a substantial additional case load and sought alternative or associate counsel to represent Spell on appeal. Beaver states that informal discussions with attorneys between the ages of 35 and 45 at several similarly small North Carolina law firms led him to believe that all such firms shared the same predicament as did his firm. He states further that he believed it unnecessary to contact larger firms because in his "personal experience" such firms "seldom, if ever, ... take contingent work."

In September 1985, Beaver came in contact with Alfred Bryant, then of the seven-member Richmond, Virginia, firm of Obenshain, Hinnant, Ellyson, Runkle & Bryant (Obenshain), who after some discussion with his partners and with Beaver, agreed to represent Spell on appeal, and ultimately in subsequent proceedings, in association with Beaver and Richardson on a contingency basis. Bryant and Beaver agreed that the only way their representation could go forward given the size of their firms, and the limited time until the appellant's brief was due, January 21, 1986, was if Spell agreed, by written contract, to compensate Bryant and all Obenshain attorneys who worked on Spell's case at a base hourly rate of $150 with an additional contingency multiplier of 1.5 resulting in a total hourly rate of $225. By the terms of this same contract Beaver and Richardson were to be compensated at base hourly rates of $125 again enhanced by 1.5 to reach a total hourly rate of $187.50. In addition, Spell must separately reimburse counsel for paralegal services and out-of-pocket costs. Spell, then currently an inmate in state prison, signed this contract, and its enforceability is not in issue.

On appeal, this court affirmed the verdict for Spell on the merits. See 824 F.2d 1380, 1405.

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