Lead Opinion
Cаrl Wesley Thomas, who unsuce$essfully charged the members of the Nevada Gaming Commission and others with violating his civil rights, appeals the district court’s award of attorneys’ fees to the defendants. Because the award is contrary tо law, we reverse.
Thomas brought a § 1983 action in which he alleged that the Commission’s decision to exclude him from licensed gaming establishments violated his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination and the Fourteenth Amendment guaranties of due process and equal protection of the laws. The district court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment in a thirty-two page order.
A district court may award a prevailing defendant attorneys’ fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 only if it “finds that thе plaintiff’s action was frivolous, unreasonable or without foundation, even though not brought in subjective bad faith.” Hughes v. Rowe,
Although not expressly denominated as such, Thomas’ first argument amounts to a contention that the panel’s decision as to frivolousness operates as law of the case. Under that doctrine a court is generally precluded from reconsidering an issue that has already been decided by the same court, or a higher court in the identical case. Milgard Tempering, Inc. v. Selas Corp. of America,
There may be eases in which a non-frivolous оr even a meritorious appeal could be taken from an order granting summary judgment against a plaintiff who has filed a frivolous action. For example, if the district court fails to adhere to the procedural requiremеnts of Fed.R.Civ.P. 56 before granting summary judgment, an appeal of such an order would not be frivolous, even though the underlying action is. However, in this case we addressed the merits of Thomas’ claims exclusively. The question before us previоusly was whether the award of summary judgment for defendants on the merits was proper. In such circumstances, the merits of the appeal are inseparable from the merits of the underlying action. In refusing to award fees on the grоund that Thomas’ appeal of the district court’s order was not frivolous, by necessary implication we decided that Thomas’ action itself was not frivolous.
While our previous decision to deny fees on appeal rested on our conclusion that the appeal was not frivolous, not every decision to deny appellate fees is the result of a such a determination. Because appellate sanctions are discretionary, it does not necessarily follow that we will award fees even where a district court’s award of attorneys’ fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 is upheld on appeal.
Because, by necessary implication, we previously determined that Thomas’ action was not frivolous, the preclusive doctrine of law of the case is applicable. Milgard,
(1) the first decision was clearly erroneous;
(2) an intervening change in the law has occurred;
(3) the evidence on remand is substantially different;
(4) other changed circumstances exist;
(5) a manifest injustice would otherwise result.
Milgard,
REVERSED.
Notes
. Ninth Circuit rule 36-3 prohibits citation of unpublished decisions except where relevant un
. The dissent rejects this conclusion for two reasons. First, the dissent considers "оur characterization of the appeal as not frivolous [ ]as functionally equivalent to a discretionary decision not to award attorney’s fees.” The fact is that if an appeal is non-frivolous we cannot award appellate fees under Fed.R.App.P. 38, but if an appeal is frivolous Fed.R.App.P. 38 gives us discretion to grant or deny fees. While the end result may be the same in either circumstance, for purposes of law of the case doctrine the consequences of relying on one ground rather than the other are entirely different. In one case we resolve a legal issue, in the other we exercise our discretionary authority. One, therefore, leads to law of the case as to the underlying issue; the other does not. The dissent’s novel "functionally equivalent” concept ignores this distinction as well as the express holding of Thomas I.
Second, the dissent suggests we have overlooked the fact that the Supreme Court’s standard for the award of defendant attorneys’ fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 is stated in the disjunctive. We have not. The terms "frivolous”, "unreasonable" and "without foundation” as used in this context do not have appreciably different meanings. If they did, then a claim could, paradoxically, be frivolous but yet reasonable and with foundation. There is simply no support in logic or precedent for the dissent’s reading of Christiansburg. See, e.g., Learned v. Bellvue,
. Equal Employment Opportunity Comm’n v. Bruno's Restaurant,
. Our resolution of the appeаl on these grounds makes it unnecessary to consider Thomas' alternative contentions.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
Thomas, the appellant, was convicted of ten felonies arising out of skimming at the Tropicana Hotel and Casino. See United States v. DeLuna,
The majority now holds that “the law of the case” prohibited the award of attorney’s fees in the district court because in the previous appeal we denied fees on appeal saying “[Ajttorney’s fees will be awarded if an appeal is entirely frivolous. Thomas’s appeal is not frivolous.” The majority concedes that there may be appeals that are not frivolous even though the underlying action is frivolous, but concludes that in this case the merits of the appeal were intertwined with the merits of the action, so that a decision that the appeal was not frivolous wаs a decision that the action was not frivolous. However, our characterization of the appeal as not frivolous was functionally equivalent to a discretionary decision not to award attorney’s fees. The exercise of this discretion by us cannot establish “the law of the case” for the exercise of discretion by the district court.
Moreover, the standard for the award of fees against a § 1983 plaintiff has been laid down with clarity in Hughes v. Rowe,
The standard set by the Court is in the disjunctive. We err in blithely assuming that the Court engaged in rhetorical sur-plusage or stuttered saying in five words what required only one. The ordinary rules of construction require that alternatives put in the disjunctive should not be collapsed into a single standard. Azure v. Morton,
The Court itself refers to the three distinct standards as “these criteria.” Christiansburg,
The district court did not mаke express findings of fact as to why it considered Thomas’s case unreasonable or without foundation. A reading of its grant of summary judgment would convince most unbiased persons that one or another such finding was amply justified. This ringleadеr of the skimmers had been kicked out of gambling in Nevada. Inferentially, he was mad and wanted to harass the officials who had enforced the law against him. He brought an action that all agree was meritless. Nonetheless, to remоve all doubt it would be appropriate to follow what we have laid down for a case where such findings are not made and the record is not completely obvious as to the reason for the fee award, and remand to the district court to “make findings of fact and conclusions of law supporting its decision so that there is a basis for appellate review.” Patton v. County of Kings,
Elementary respect for the district court calls for such a remand. It is difficult to understand why the present majority is unwilling to follow the standards set by the Supreme Court and the supplementary rule laid down by our court.
