In Buckhannon Board and Care Home, Inc. v. West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources,
I.
This appeal is the denouement of a complex election saga that involved challenges in state and federal courts and a state legislature. This election ended, as all good elections should, not in the courts but with the political branches and the voters.
In Hawai’i’s November 1996 election, the electorate was asked to decide whether to hold a state constitutional convention. 163,869 votes were cast in favor of a constitutional convention, 160,153 votes were cast against, 45,245 ballots had no vote cast on the question, and 90 “over-votes” were marked both yes and no. Thus, the blank ballots and over-votes were determinative. If “yeses” were to be compared only to “nos,” the measure would have passed and a convention would have been held. If the blank ballots and over-votes were counted as “ballots cast,” they would have the same effect as “no” votes and the measure would have failed. On appeal from a lawsuit filed in state court, the Supreme Court of Hawai’i chose the latter interpretation and ordered the Chief Elections Officer to certify that the constitutional convention question had been rejected. Hawai’i State AFL-CIO v. Yoshina, 84 Hawai’i 374,
On January 28, 1998, two months before our final decision but after we had issued
The effect of the passage of Act 131 was to moot further consideration of the appeal, which was still before this court on plaintiffs’ motions for rehearing and rehearing en banc. The plaintiffs made a motion for attorneys’ fees. Accepting the “catalyst theory” of prevailing parties and recognizing that a substantial factual question remained, we transferred the motion to the district court to decide whether plaintiffs could establish a “clear causal relationship between this lawsuit” and the passage of Act 131. District Court Judge Ezra, whose order we had reversed, re-cused himself, and District Court Judge Mollway was assigned to decide the attorney’s fees question. The district court issued a detailed order denying plaintiffs’ motion. Bennett v. Yoshina,
II.
Our earlier opinion and the mooting effect of Act 131 disposed of all of the substantive issues in the plaintiffs’ complaint. The district court issued its published order on the fees motion on May 15, 2000. No judgment was subsequently entered, but our jurisdiction does not depend on the entry of a judgment following the final disposition of a post-judgment fee motion when nothing else is left to litigate. Cf. Gates v. Rowland,
III.
In Buckhannon, the Supreme Court held that the term "prevailing party," as it is used in various attorney's fees statutes, requires a "material alteration of the legal relationship of the parties," Buckhannon, U.S. at -,
There can be no doubt that the Court’s analysis in Buckhannon applies to statutes other than the two at issue in that case. Specifically, the provision at issue in this case, the Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Awards Act of 1976, 42 U.S.C. § 1988, was cited by the Court as a “nearly identical [fee-shifting] provisionf ]” to the two at
Plaintiffs advance only the catalyst theory in this case. They did not obtain any “material alteration of the legal relationship of the parties” in their favor. Id. In fact, plaintiffs suffered a complete defeat on the merits in this court. Yoshina I,
The Supreme Court’s new rule has simplified this appeal. We need not address the parties’ other claims. Although the district court ruled before Buckhannon was decided, we can affirm on any basis supported by the record. Balint v. Carson City,
AFFIRMED.
