During the summer of 1981, a budget impasse in the Massachusetts legislature cut off funding to state welfare recipients under the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) and state General Relief (GR) programs. The appellants in this case, who will be referred to collectively as “the Coalition,” brought suit in federal district court to compel the appellees, including Governor King and other state officials, to resume AFDC and GR payments. Following the district court’s denial of a motion *598 for a temporary restraining order, this court granted the Coalition an injunction pending appeal that required the appellees to resume AFDC payments. Before the injunction took effect, however, the legislature passed a full budget that mooted the controversy. The Coalition now appeals a decision by the district court denying attorney’s fees to the Coalition for its work in the 1981 litigation on the ground that the Coalition was not a “prevailing party” within the meaning of the Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Awards Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1988, which provides in relevant part:
In any action or proceeding to enforce a provision of [42 U.S.C.] sections 1981, 1982,1983,1985, and 1986 ..., title IX of Public Law 92-318, or title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party, other than the United States, a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the costs.
We vacate the first paragraph of the order of the district court and remand for an award of attorney’s fees and costs.
I
The details of the 1981 Massachusetts budget crisis and the ensuing litigation between the Coalition and the appellees are set out in the opinion of the district court denying fees.
See Coalition for Basie Human Needs v. King,
On July 2, the district court denied the Coalition’s motion for a temporary restraining order, as well as an alternative request that the court order the governor to exercise his exclusive power to commence interim budget proceedings. On the same day, the governor submitted to the legislature the first in what would prove to be a series of proposed interim funding measures covering AFDC and GR payments as well as other emergency expenditures. The bill was approved by the state House of Representatives but was effectively killed by the state Senate.
On July 7, the Coalition appealed the district court’s denial of its motion for a temporary restraining order to this court. Pursuant to Fed.R.App.P. 8(a), the Coalition requested that this court issue an injunction pending appeal ordering the appellees to resume AFDC and GR payments. At 6:00 p.m. on July 13, this court granted in part the motion for injunction pending appeal.
Coalition for Basic Human Needs
v.
King,
In the twelve days between the filing of the Coalition’s suit and this court’s issuance of the injunction pending appeal, the governor had submitted four interim budget bills without success. Within six hours of the July 13 order, however, the governor submitted and both houses of the legislature approved a two-week retroactive funding bill covering AFDC and GR payments as well as other expenditures. As a result, the appellees returned to this court on July 15, seeking to have the July 13 order modified *599 or vacated. This court did modify the July 13 order, but only to the limited extent of postponing the effective date of the injunction from July 16 to July 23. Five days later, on July 20, the governor and legislature approved a full budget that mooted the Coalition’s suit before the injunction took effect.
Following these events, the Coalition submitted a request for the award of costs and attorney’s fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988, which provides in relevant part that a court may allow the “prevailing party” in an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to recover reasonable attorney’s fees. The Coalition relied principally on this court’s opinion in
Nadeau v. Helgemoe,
The Coalition argued below, and argues here on appeal, that it was entitled to attorney’s fees as a “prevailing party” under each of the two theories set forth in Nadeau. It first argued that by obtaining preliminary injunctive relief from this court, it “succeed[ed] on [a] significant issue in litigation which achieve[d] some of the benefit” that the Coalition had sought. It added that in any event, its suit was not “frivolous, unreasonable, or groundless” and that the preliminary injunction it obtained had caused the governor to submit the interim budget that finally provided AFDC and GR funding on July 13; thus, it argued, it satisfied Nadeau’s “catalyst” test.
The district court rejected the Coalition’s fee request. It found that the total amount of costs and fees requested by the Coalition was reasonable, and it agreed that the Coalition’s claims were not “frivolous, unreasonable, or groundless.” But it found that the litigation was not a “necessary factor” in the executive and legislative actions that provided AFDC and GR funding. This lack of a causal connection between the Coalition’s suit and the effective delivery of relief, in the court’s view, disqualified the Coalition from attorney’s fees. We question the district court’s parsing of “necessary and important” into separate requirements of necessity and importance, but we need not resolve now how strong a causal showing is required under Nadeau, for even accepting the district court’s finding of no causal connection, we do not agree with the legal conclusion it drew from that finding.
II
At the outset we should make clear that
Nadeau’s
two tests are separate and distinct; satisfying either of them is sufficient to qualify a party as “prevailing.” The first test states the obvious, namely, that a party has prevailed if it wins the litigation. The only reason that the “prevailing party” status of the plaintiff was not obvious in
Nadeau
was because the question there concerned a party who prevailed as to
some,
but not
all,
of his claims. It was with this question in mind that the court wrote that plaintiffs are “prevailing” if “they succeed
on any significant issue
in litigation which achieves some of the benefit the parties sought in bringing suit.”
The Coalition’s first problem arises out of a phrase used in
Nadeau
to describe the kind of judicial success that would qualify a plaintiff as a “prevailing party.” This court spoke of succeeding “on any significant issue in the litigation
which achieves some of the benefit
the parties sought in bringing suit” (emphasis added). One might argue that the Coalition’s success achieved none of the benefits of the suit because the benefits received were due to an independent supervening cause. A moment’s thought, however, is sufficient to demonstrate that the italicized language should not, and does not, determine the outcome here. The requirement that the legal success “achieve some of the benefit the parties sought” merely distinguishes cases in which plaintiffs obtain some substantive relief from those in which the “victories” are purely procedural.
Compare Nadeau
(fees awarded when plaintiffs obtain order expanding prisoner access to library facilities)
with Hanrahan v. Hampton,
In
Nadeau
we had in mind the typical case in which a party wins: winning provides a legal right to the relief sought, and it ordinarily means the winner will receive the relief. A win in the form of a final judgment that does not lead to the benefit sought is unusual. Of course, an intervening event may have made it unnecessary or impossible for the defendant to deliver that to which the plaintiff is legally entitled. The plaintiff may have won the right to readmission to a particular school, for example, but the school may burn down or the plaintiff may die. Alternatively, the school board might have readmitted the plaintiff after entry of final judgment for a totally independent reason, demonstrably unrelated to the law suit. But there is no reason why these sorts of fortuitous occurrences ought, in and of themselves, to deprive lawyers who win a civil rights suit of the fees to which they would otherwise be entitled. In ordinary English usage they have still “prevailed” in the case. No statutory purpose would be served by turning an award of fees upon the presence or absence of such fortuitous postjudgment circumstances. We are reinforced in this view by the language of the Supreme Court in
Hanrahan, supra.
The Court stated that Congress authorized awards “to a party who has established his
entitlement
to some relief on the merits of his claim.”
The more difficult question in this case is whether the Coalition established a legal “entitlement.” It did not obtain a final judgment or even a preliminary injunction. It sought, and was denied, a temporary restraining order and obtained only an in *601 junction pending appeal. Ordinarily, such preliminary relief might not be considered a win on the merits. See Hanrahan, supra. But this is an unusual case.
For one thing, the Coalition’s principal object was very temporary and provisional relief. No one doubted that Massachusetts would end up with a budget. No one doubted that the state’s welfare clients would receive their aid checks in the long run. However, the Coalition acted on the theory that, in the words of Harry Hopkins, “people don’t eat in the long run — they eat every day.” And the Coalition’s primary object was preliminary relief that would tide the recipients over until the budget was passed and regular checks once more arrived. This is precisely the legal entitlement that they received.
For another thing, this court was fully aware of the fact that, as a practical matter, its decision on the injunction pending appeal was a “final” decision — that it would require the state to release millions of dollars to welfare recipients before the legislature passed a final budget. And, this court made its decision only after careful consideration of the Coalition’s legal claims. While the decision that the Coalition was “likely to succeed” on its statutory claim has, for precedential purposes, only the weight of a preliminary determination, this court made that decision with full awareness that, given the press of time, it was most unlikely there would ever be a different legal outcome in the particular case. For these reasons taken together, we consider our preliminary order to have been— for fees purposes — close to a final judgment.
Of course, it may be argued that obtaining relief that is called “preliminary” never warrants the award of attorney’s fees.
See Smith v. University of North Carolina,
The circumstances set forth above make this ease different from those in which courts have denied attorneys’ fees to parties who have won interlocutory victories.
See Hanrahan, supra; Smith, supra
(construing parallel provision of 1964 Civil Rights Act);
Bly, supra; Parks
v.
Grayton Park Association,
The case before us, however, is similar to those in which courts have granted fees for interlocutory success. Thus, in
Williams
v.
Alioto,
Ill
We turn finally to appellees’ claim that this court should in its “discretion” withhold attorney’s fees, presumably because special circumstances render the award “unjust.”
See David v. Travisono,
If the appellees mean this fact to show that they acted in good faith — that they felt obliged to withhold the funds and obliged to contest the Coalition’s suit — we agree that they may have had good-faith reasons for their acts, but that is no reason to deny the Coalition attorney’s fees. The Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Awards Act is not meant as a “punishment” for “bad” defendants who resist plaintiffs’ claims in bad faith. Rather, it is meant to compensate civil rights attorneys who bring civil rights cases and win them. The need for such law suits, and such payment, may well be greatest in just those instances in which lawyers and officials, in totally good faith, have opposing views about what state and federal law requires of them.
Cf. Johnson v. Mississippi,
In sum, the Coalition and the other appellants are “prevailing parties” under § 1988 and are entitled to an award of attorney’s fees. The district court already has held that the total amount of costs and fees requested is reasonable. The order denying costs and fees is vacated and the case remanded for an appropriate award. The Coalition is also entitled to reasonable costs and attorney’s fees incurred in bringing this successful appeal.
See Southeast Legal Defense Group v. Adams,
Vacated in part and remanded for an award of attorney’s fees and costs.
