Plaintiffs, a non-profit organization
1
and ten white children living in Boston, challenged the City’s former and current school assignment systems in a case that the district court noted “may possibly be the concluding chapter in thirty years of litigation over the effort to desegregate the Boston public schools.”
Boston’s Children First v. Boston Sch. Comm.,
I.
Plaintiffs initiated the underlying suit on June 21,1999, challenging the Boston Public Schools (“BPS”) Controlled Choice Student Assignment Plan (“Old Plan”) on the grounds that it improperly considered students’ race when assigning them to schools in an effort to achieve “ideal racial percentages.” 3 The plaintiffs sought a declaration that the Old Plan violated their federal and state equal protection rights, as well as injunctive relief and damages.
*12 On July 14, 1999, the Boston School Committee voluntarily amended the Old Plan to eliminate race as a factor in the school admissions process (“New Plan”). The plaintiffs responded by adding a plethora of claims to their suit. They ultimately sought (1) a declaratory judgment that both Plans violated the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 and 1983, 4 Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 5 and Article 111 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights; 6 (2) a permanent injunction ordering BPS to admit plaintiffs to the schools of their choice, prohibiting BPS from considering race in school assignments and governance, ordering BPS to redraw attendance zones, and granting BCF access to school records to monitor BPS’s compliance with these orders; and (3) nominal and compensatory damages for plaintiffs who were not admitted to their preferred schools under the Old Plan.
In February 2002, the district court ruled that it would consider the plaintiffs’ damages claim separately from their claims for prospective relief. The plaintiffs filed a motion for summary judgment on the damages claim on November 1, 2002, seeking nominal damages for all ten student-plaintiffs. That motion noted that the defendants had admitted earlier in the litigation that two students, John Feeney, Jr. and Kathleen McCoy, were denied seats based on their race under the Old Plan. 7 It also emphasized that the defendants had not conceded that the Old Plan was unconstitutional. The parties then entered into unsuccessful settlement discussions, with the defendants expressing a willingness to pay “nominal damages” to Feeney and McCoy but an unwillingness to address the plaintiffs’ additional request that they admit the Old Plan had been unconstitutional. The court ultimately granted the defendants an extension for responding to the summary judgment motion, allowing them to file their opposition after a bench trial on the plaintiffs’ claims for prospective relief.
Over the course of four rulings between 1999 and 2003, the district court rejected all of the plaintiffs’ claims for prospective relief.
BCF I,
[Pjlaintiffs should not underestimate what they have accomplished. By bringing this lawsuit, they have persuaded the School Committee to abandon a constitutionally dubious school admissions policy. Plaintiffs have not obtained all of the relief they sought, prin *13 cipally because the court believes that their ultimate goal, mandatory neighborhood school assignments ... is not constitutionally compelled.
Id. at 334.
With the plaintiffs’ claims for prospective relief thus resolved, the parties returned to the issue of nominal damages. In their May 21, 2003 response to the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, the defendants again conceded that Fee-ney and McCoy had been denied seats based on their race and indicated that they were “willing to have this Court enter judgment awarding nominal damages to these plaintiffs.” However, asserting that no damages may be awarded absent the deprivation of a constitutional right, the defendants opposed a nominal damages award for the eight plaintiffs who had not shown that they were deprived of a seat based on their race. The defendants also urged the court not to address the constitutionality of the Old Plan.
The court’s May 27, 2003 ruling on the motion for summary judgment awarded nominal damages to Feeney and McCoy on the grounds that they “were denied seat assignments at their preferred schools because of their race” but without expressly stating whether the Old Plan was unconstitutional.
BCF V,
at 1. Stressing that nominal damages may not be awarded “absent the deprivation of a constitutional right,” the court denied damages to the remaining plaintiffs, who could “make no showing of a deprivation under
Texas v. Lesage,
The plaintiffs then moved for attorney’s fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b), which provides that in a federal civil rights suit, “the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party ... a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the costs.” The district court acknowledged that “a plaintiff who wins an award of nominal damages is properly deemed a ‘prevailing party.’ ” Nevertheless, it denied any attorney’s fees, concluding that:
While “hollow” may be too harsh a word, a one dollar nominal award to two of ten original plaintiffs, the entitlement to which was conceded by the defendants from the virtual outset in an otherwise unsuccessful lawsuit, will simply not bear the weight of the policy that Congress intended to promote by enacting section 1988.
This appeal followed.
II.
Because a trial judge familiar with the intricacies of a case is in the best position to evaluate a motion for attorney’s fees, we review the denial of such a motion for manifest abuse of discretion.
See Díaz-Rivera v. Rivera-Rodríguez,
A. Fee-shifting pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988
“In the United States, the prevailing litigant is ordinarily not entitled to collect
*14
a reasonable attorneys’ fee from the loser.”
Alyeska Pipeline Serv. Co. v. Wilderness Soc’y,
Section 1988 requires a two-part inquiry: (1) whether the plaintiff is a prevailing party, and (2) if the plaintiff is a prevailing party, what constitutes a reasonable fee award.
See, e.g., Farrar v. Hobby,
B. Prevailing party status
To prevail, a party must “ ‘succeed on any significant issue in litigation which achieves some of the benefit [it] sought in bringing suit.’ ”
Hensley,
The district court correctly concluded that prevailing party status cannot be based on the School Committee’s decision to amend the Old Plan, and plaintiffs do not argue to the contrary. Although eliminating race in the seat assignment plan was one of the plaintiffs’ central goals in bringing the suit, a fee award based on the School Committee’s voluntary actions would rest on the “catalyst theory” that the Supreme Court explicitly rejected in
Buckhannon. See
The Supreme Court has held that “a plaintiff who wins nominal damages is a prevailing party under § 1988.”
Farrar,
In support of their argument that our case law dictates a contrary result on the prevailing party issue, the defendants cite
Maine School Administrative District No. 35 v. Mr. R.,
In
Farrar,
the Court specifically considered “whether a nominal damages award is the sort of ‘technical,’ ‘insignificant’ victory that cannot confer prevailing party status.”
C. Reasonable attorney’s fee
The plaintiffs emphasize that we are “virtually obligated]” to grant a fee award to a prevailing party.
Gay Officers Action League,
Farrar
was a § 1983 civil rights suit in which a plaintiff sought $17 million in damages against six defendants who had allegedly conspired to violate his due process rights. A jury found that one of the defendants had “committed an act or acts under color of state law that deprived [Farrar] of a civil right,” but that this conduct was not a proximate cause of his damages.
The Supreme Court disagreed with the Fifth Circuit’s reasoning but affirmed the fee award reversal. It held that Farrar was not entitled to fees, despite the fact that the nominal damages award conferred prevailing party status. The Court explained that “the most critical factor in determining the reasonableness of a fee award is the degree of success obtained.”
Id.
at 114,
Justice O’Connor wrote separately to explain the relationship between nominal damages and a fee award. While “[njomi-nal relief does not necessarily a nominal victory make[,] ... a substantial difference between the judgment recovered and the recovery sought suggests that the victory is in fact purely technical.”
Id.
at 121,
Here, the court explained its denial of fees in an eight-page ruling that reviewed the course of the litigation and set forth the relevant law. It concluded that the nominal damages award, “the entitlement to which was conceded by the defendants from the virtual outset,” was too
de min-imis
a victory in relation to the plaintiffs’ other claims to merit a fee award.
See Farrar,
We acknowledge that the language of the decision explaining the nominal damages award is susceptible to both parties’ readings. The court said the following:
John Feeney[, Jr.] and Kathleen McCoy were denied seat assignments at their preferred schools because of their race. For that reason they are entitled to an award of nominal damages, and defendants do not contend otherwise. Defendants are correct, however, that absent the deprivation of a constitutional right, nominal damages may not be awarded. See Carey v. Piphus,435 U.S. 247 , 266-67,98 S.Ct. 1042 ,55 L.Ed.2d 252 (1978). As the remaining plaintiffs can make no showing of a deprivation under Texas v. Lesage,528 U.S. 18 , 21,120 S.Ct. 467 ,145 L.Ed.2d 347 (1999) (per curiam), no damages, nominal or otherwise, may be awarded.
BCF V,
at 1. Although the nominal damages judgment does not specify that the Old Plan was unconstitutional, the plaintiffs assert that such a finding was necessarily implicit in light of the court’s own statement that nominal damages must be premised on a constitutional injury. Losing a seat assignment because of race is not,
per se,
a constitutional deprivation. Race-conscious policies are permissible if they are narrowly tailored to serve a compelling governmental interest, which may include remedying past discrimination,
City of Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co.,
Yet, the nominal damages decision does not address the issues of compelling interest and narrow tailoring that would be integral to a fully developed legal analysis of the constitutionality of the Old Plan. Nor did the court explicitly state that Fee-ney and McCoy had suffered a constitutional injury. Its comment that nominal damages require such an injury was not an explanation for Feeney and McCoy’s award, but rather for the denial of damages to the remaining plaintiffs. See BCF V, at 1. Indeed, the only basis that the court cited for Feeney and McCoy’s award was their loss of seats because of their race — the point conceded by the defendants. This language suggests that the award did not include a finding that the Old Plan was unconstitutional.
We recognized this ambiguity in the nominal damages decision when we considered the merits of this case on appeal, noting that “[although the district court never explicitly described the Old Plan as unconstitutional, ... nominal damages in this context require a constitutional violation.”
Anderson,
This conclusion is compelled by the following considerations:
(1) The constitutionality of the Old Plan was not actively litigated; the court refused to consider injunctive or declaratory relief regarding the Old Plan once the New Plan was in place. Indeed, the court’s description of the Old Plan as “constitutionally dubious” in a ruling denying prospective relief one month before the nominal damages award,
BCF IV,
(2) The defendants’ motion opposing summary judgment, filed soon after the decision denying prospective relief, recognized that a finding on the constitutionality of the Old Plan would require the court to try issues that it had not previously *18 considered and therefore urged the court to award damages without reaching the constitutional issue. In essence, the defendants expressed a willingness to pay nominal damages to Feeney and McCoy without admitting any constitutional injury. As we have discussed, the language of the ensuing award is consistent with this position.
(3) Any remaining ambiguity on this point is resolved by the district court’s decision denying attorney’s fees. There, the court described the basis for the plaintiffs’ prevailing party status as “a one dollar nominal award to two of ten original plaintiffs, the entitlement to which was conceded by the defendants from the virtual outset .... ” (emphasis added). Again, the defendants had conceded only that they were willing to pay damages because Feeney and McCoy were denied seats based on their race, not because the Old Plan was unconstitutional. The district court’s description of its own judgment thus forecloses the plaintiffs’ argument that it found the Old Plan unconstitutional.
Viewed in this light, the nominal damages award does not represent a victory on a significant legal issue. To the contrary, it represents such a minimal success in the context of this litigation that the district court supportably concluded that “the only reasonable fee is ... no fee at all.”
Far-rar,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The non-profit organization, Boston’s Children First ("BCF”), was a party to the original suit but the court subsequently concluded that it lacked organizational standing.
Boston’s Children First v. Boston Sch. Comm.,
. We recognize that the reference to "plaintiffs” in this decision could be a source of confusion. When we refer to "plaintiffs” in describing the background of this case, we are referring to all the plaintiffs who initiated the underlying suit. However, when we discuss the plaintiffs who were prevailing parties in this litigation, we refer only to the two plaintiffs who were awarded nominal damages.
. As noted, the litigation for which plaintiffs now seek attorney’s fees is part of a long saga involving the desegregation of Boston’s public school system.
See, e.g., Wessmann v. Gittens,
. 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 and 1983 prohibit deprivations of constitutional rights under color of state law.
. Title VI prohibits institutions receiving federal funds from engaging in racial discrimination. 42 U.S.C. § 2000d.
. Article 111 states that "[n]o student shall be assigned to or denied admittance to a public school on the basis of race, color, national origin or creed.”
.The defendants initially conceded in November 2000 that three students’ placements were affected by race. In August 2001, they retracted the admission regarding one student, Kayleigh Bariy-Meltzer, explaining that it had been based on a mistaken assumption regarding the seating capacity at her preferred school.
. In the appeal on the merits, the plaintiffs argued that the unconstitutionality of the Old Plan required a presumption that the New Plan was also motivated by a racially discriminatory purpose. We declined to adopt such a presumption, noting that even if the Old Plan had been unconstitutional, "BPS voluntarily discontinued the use of the Old Plan once it concluded that the Plan was constitutionally suspect ... and replaced it with a racially neutral assignment system....” Anderson, 375 F.3d at 84-85.
