Plaintiff Lynn Ayala proved to a jury’s satisfaction that she suffered sexual harassment in her employment with defendants Center Line, Inc. and Hiram Walker and the jury compensated her with a $13,500 verdict. Following trial, plaintiff’s counsel moved for an award of attorney fees and costs, items of recovery sought as part of plaintiff’s civil rights action and authorized under Iowa Code section 601A.15(8)(a)(8) (1983). Defendants resisted the motion, arguing that plaintiff was not entitled to prevail on her claim for attorney fees because her proof had not been submitted for the jury’s determination along with proof of other damages. The district court agreed with defendants and denied the motion.
On plaintiff’s appeal from the district court’s ruling, our review is limited to correction of errors at law. Iowa R.App.P. 4. Because we find the district court misinterpreted section 601A.15(8)(a)(8), we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
The issue, simply put, is this: In a civil rights action commenced under Iowa Code chapter 601A, at what stage of the proceedings should an award of attorney fees be adjudicated and by whom?
I. We note at the outset that plaintiff filed her petition in district court, accompanied by a jury demand, upon receipt of an administrative release granted by the Iowa Civil Rights Commission in accordance with Iowa Code section 601A.16. Section 601A.16(5) empowers the district court to “grant any relief ... which is authorized by section 601A.15, subsection 8.” The parties’ controversy centers on section 601A.15(8) which states, in pertinent part:
If upon taking into consideration all of the evidence at a hearing, the commission determines that the respondent has engaged in a discriminatory or unfair practice, the commission shall state its findings of fact and conclusions of law and shall ... take the necessary remedial action as in the judgment of the commission will carry out the purposes of this chapter.
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a. For the purposes of this subsection and pursuant to the provisions of this chapter “remedial action” includes but is not limited to the following:
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(8) Payment to the complainant of damages for an injury caused by the discriminatory or unfair practice which damages shall include but are not limited to actual damages, court costs and reasonable attorney fees.
*605 Plaintiff, whose jury demand was honored by the court, asserts that the statute is silent regarding the procedure by which attorney fees must be fixed under such circumstances. She therefore asserts that the legislative intent behind the statutory enactment must be examined, contending that the usual view of taxing attorney fees as court costs should prevail. Defendants take an opposite view, arguing that no statutory interpretation is necessary. They claim that under the clear language of the statute, actual damages include attorney fees, determinable by the trier of fact no matter whether by commission, court or jury-
We faced a nearly identical controversy in
Maday v. Elview-Stewart Sys., Co.,
Equally persuasive considerations compel our avoidance of such an impractical result in the case before us. The complainant in a chapter 601A case bears an onerous burden in proving the existence of a civil rights violation.
See Frank v. American Freight Sys., Inc.,
Viewed from this perspective, an award of attorney fees is more in the nature of an equitable remedy than an award of actual damages. We have recognized that the purpose of awarding actual damages in a civil rights case “is to place the injured party in the position he or she would have been had there been no injury.”
Foods, Inc. v. Iowa Civil Rights Comm’n,
To the extent that a reasonable attorney fee may greatly exceed the actual damages suffered in a civil rights case, it is likely that proof of such a disparity would unfairly affect the jury’s determination of whether a discriminatory practice has been proved. Such a prejudicial impact would be contrary to the expressed legislative intent that chapter 601A be construed broadly to effectuate its purposes. Iowa Code § 601A.18.
To avoid this unjust result, federal civil rights statutes prescribe essentially
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the same procedure for awarding attorney fees that we adopted in
Maday. See
42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1982);
Knighton v. Watkins,
II. The assessment of attorney fees, like the assessment of court costs, cannot be done until liability has been established.
Maday,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
