In this appeal, we review a denial of an award of attorney’s fees and costs under the Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Award Act of 1976 (Fees Act), 42 U.S.C. § 1988. The district court apparently concluded that a jury award of punitive damages unaccompanied by actual or nominal damages in favor of plaintiff-appellant Migdalia De Jesus Nazario (De Jesus Nazario) was insufficient to confer on her the requisite prevailing party status under the Fees Act, and consequently, it declined to award any fees. Because we conclude that, in the circumstances of this ease, the court’s determination was in error, we vacate the order denying attorney’s fees and remand the case for calculation of an appropriate award of attorney’s fees and costs.
I. Background
On behalf of herself and as a representative of the estate of her deceased son, Michael Ortiz De Jesus, De Jesus Nazario brought an action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1988, as well as under Puerto Rico Law, alleging that police officers Jos A. Morris Rodriguez (Rodriguez) and Jos Ortiz-Reyes (Ortiz-Reyes) violated the decedent’s constitutional right to be free from excessive force. 1 Specifically, she alleged that the defendants’ discharge of seventeen rounds from their government-issued firearms after Michael was already lying on the ground constituted excessive force. The complaint sought actual and compensatory damages “in an amount no less [than] $500,000,” and punitive damages “in an amount no less than $300,000.”
After trial, a jury returned a verdict in favor of the decedent’s estate under § 1983 and Puerto Rico law. But there was a twist: the jury awarded no actual or nominal damages on the § 1983 claim, yet found Rodriguez liable for $25,000 in punitive damages and Ortiz-Reyes liable for $15,000 in punitive damages. 2 Although the plaintiff made no motion for additur of nominal damages, the defendants did not move to set aside the punitive damages award on the ground that such damages may be awarded only when there are actual or nominal damages. Neither party appealed, and the punitive damages judgment became final.
Eventually, De Jesus Nazario moved, pursuant to the Fees Act, for an award of attorney’s fees and costs totaling approximately $75,000. She argued that the punitive damages award gave her status as a “prevailing party” under the Fees Act, and therefore that she is entitled to fees and costs. The defendants resisted on the ground that the jury’s failure to award nominal or compensatory damages — and the plaintiffs failure to request such damages immediately after the jury returned its verdict — rendered the punitive damages impermissible. Accordingly, they ar *199 gued that an award of attorney’s fees would only compound the legal error.
In light of the plaintiffs failure to move for additur following the verdict, the trial court considered itself bound by our holding in
Kerr-Selgas v. American Airlines,
II. Legal Standards
We normally review an award of attorney’s fees for abuse of discretion.
Torres-Rivera v. O’Neill-Cancel,
We begin with a brief review of the legal landscape. In civil rights cases, courts often used their equitable powers to award attorney’s fees until the Supreme Court held that under the “American Rule,” each party must ordinarily bear his own attorney’s fees unless there is express statutory authority to the contrary.
Alyeska Pipeline Serv. Co. v. Wilderness Soc’y,
Even if a plaintiff achieves prevailing party status, special circumstances might still render the award of attorney’s fees and costs unjust. These special circumstances, however, are narrowly circumscribed. As the Supreme Court has explained, the rationale for confining “special circumstances” to a tight encincture “is that Congress meant to encourage [civil rights] lawsuits because of their public purpose.”
United States v. Cofield,
We have had occasion to elaborate on the sorts of “special circumstances” that would permit the outright denial of a fee award, and they are few and far between. We have found that “outrageous” or “inexcusable” conduct on the part of the plaintiff or its counsel during litigation of the ease can sometimes constitute “special circumstances” warranting denial of attorney’s fees.
Williams v. Hanover Hous. Auth.,
Nevertheless, few such special circumstances satisfy these stringent criteria. We have held that a defendant’s good faith is “by itself not a special circumstance justifying a denial of attorney’s fees.”
Burke v. Guiney,
[ajfter a jury’s verdict has been rendered and has withstood whatever barrage of post-trial motions may ensue, the time for debate has expired. It is an abuse of discretion for the trial court thereafter to vent its skepticism about the claimant’s right to recover by reducing the fee award to which the prevailing party is entitled.... Indeed, if a plaintiff has a thin case but nonetheless manages, as here, to secure [a large verdict,] such template suggests skillful advocacy, perhaps worthy of an award of full fees.
III. Analysis
In declining to authorize any attorney’s fees, the district court began by noting that although the jury found a constitutional violation, it did not award compensatory or nominal damages, the latter of which the plaintiff did not request. Thus, the court reasoned that circuit precedent, which allows fee awards based on nominal damages, foreclosed the possibility that the jury’s finding of constitutional liability but not damages, by itself could support the finding that De Jesus Nazario was a prevailing party within the meaning of the Fees Act.
Nazario,
Although its opinion was somewhat unclear on this point, the court also appears to have determined that the jury’s punitive damage award similarly could not support prevailing party status, despite the defendants’ failure to object to or appeal the punitive damages award. The court believed the punitive damage award was contrary to our decision in
Kerr-Selgas,
requiring actual or nominal damages as a precondition to an award of punitive damages.
Id. (citing Kerr-Selgas,
De Jesus Nazario’s argument in favor of attorney’s fees treads a simple but effective path: first, she notes that the jury awarded her punitive damages in the aggregate amount of $40,000, and second, she notes that the trial court has confirmed that the award will be enforced. Based on these two indisputable facts, De Jesus Na-zario argues she meets the requirements for prevailing party status. Thus, De Jesus Nazario asserts that any further objections should be directed to the
amount
of an attorney’s fees award, not its
avail ability. See Farrar,
We agree. The test for determining De Jesus Nazario’s status as a prevailing party has been met. The trial court has acknowledged that De Jesus Nazario’s damages award is final and that the court will enforce it. The parties’ relationship has thus been altered in De Jesus Naza-rio’s favor and her success has the necessary legal imprimatur. Consequently, De Jesus Nazario is a prevailing party, who is ordinarily entitled to an award of attorney’s fees.
Construing analogous attorney’s fees provisions of the Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. § 3613(c)(2), the Third Circuit has held that a plaintiff is entitled to “prevailing party” status based on a jury’s finding that the Fair Housing Act was violated, despite the jury’s failure to award compensatory or nominal damages, and the trial court’s failure to submit the question of punitive damages to the jury.
Alexander v. Riga,
Since the defendants did not appeal the punitive damages award, this case is distinguishable from the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Sole v. Wyner,
In arguing that the district court’s order denying fees should be affirmed, the defendants first say that the legal infirmity of the punitive damages award renders the plaintiffs success merely technical or de minimis,' 7 thereby depriving her of prevailing party status. We have already explained the flaw in this argument: as a result of the litigation, there was a cognizable alteration in the legal relationship between the parties, and therefore the plaintiff is a prevailing party.
In this regard we also note that the procedural posture of this case causes us to view this challenge with a jaundiced eye because any objection that the punitive damages award was improper has already been forfeited at least twice. The defendants at trial failed to move on these grounds to vacate the underlying punitive damages award and also failed to appeal the award. We are especially concerned about the implications of these failures, because of the sandbagging opportunities they present. Although we do
not
suggest such was the case here, delay in attacking the punitive damages award until a collateral proceeding could easily be a strategic decision to avoid reminding the plaintiff of the availability of a nominal damages instruction — even post-verdict — which would regularize the punitive damages award in this circuit.
See Campos-Orrego v. Rivera,
The appellees next argue that the legal defect in the punitive damages award constitutes the sort of “special circumstance” that serves to render a fee award unjust in this case. There is an insufficient basis for that conclusion.
The district court viewed the punitive damages award as a windfall because the award was prohibited by
Kerr-Selgas.
Unlike the district court, we think the applicability of the
Kerr-Selgas
rule to this case is so questionable that the award of fees cannot be considered unjust. In
Kerr-Selgas,
we noted that at common law, an award of punitive damages generally must be accompanied by an award of actual or nominal damages.
*204
Each of these sources of authority, however, is problematic. As another circuit has noted, there is no consensus at common law regarding the availability of punitive damages absent compensatory or even nominal damages.
Cush-Crawford v. Adchem Corp.,
Of course, if the rule in Kerr-Selgas encompasses suits for damages under § 1983, we are bound to follow it. But, we have never held that Kerr-Selgas applies to actions brought under § 1983, and have suggested the probability that we would not apply it in such suits. In Campos-Orrego, we noted:
While it is true that in a typical state law tort case punitive damages unaccompanied by either compensatory or nominal damages cannot stand, ... a section 1983 case premised on a constitutional violation evokes a different set of considerations. Several respected courts have ruled persuasively that, as a matter of federal law, a punitive damage award which responds to a finding of a constitutional breach may endure even though unaccompanied by an award of compensatory damages.
[I]f it be once conceded that [punitive] damages may be assessed against the wrongdoer, and, when assessed, may be taken by the plaintiff, — and such is the settled law of the federal courts, — there is neither sense nor reason in the proposition that such additional damages may be recovered by a plaintiff who is able to show that he has lost $10, and may not be recovered by some other plaintiff who has sustained, it may be, far greater *205 injury but is unable to prove that he is poorer in the pocket by wrongdoing of defendant.
Id. (quoting Basista,
With this weight of authority permitting the imposition of punitive damages even in the absence of compensatory or nominal damages, the policy of maintaining uniformity in the federal common law militates in favor of at least limiting the
Kerr-Selgas
rule.
See, e.g., Bhd. of Locomotive Eng’rs v. Springfield Terminal Ry. Co.,
In this circuit several district courts have declined to extend the
Kerr-Selgas
rule to § 1983 claims. In
Acevedo-Luis v. Zayas,
citing
Campos-Orrego,
the district court allowed a punitive damages award of $5,000 to stand despite the jury’s failure to award actual or nominal damages.
In light of the nearly universal authority counseling against applying the
Kerr-Sel-gas
rule to section 1983 actions, we hold that the
Kerr-Selgas
rule does not (and henceforth will not) apply to such cases. Thus, the district court’s decision to accept and enforce the unchallenged punitive damages award was entirely proper. Consequently, De Jesus Nazario’s success was not the sort of technical or
de minimis
*206
victory that can serve to deny prevailing party status under our precedent.
11
See Farrar,
The appellees have one more arrow in their quiver. They urge — based on the Supreme Court’s holding in
Farrar
— that the incongruity between the results the plaintiff initially sought and the results she actually obtained supports a complete denial of attorney’s fees. The defendants observe that a gap of $760,000 separates the aggregate damages the plaintiff sought ($800,000) from the damages that the jury actually awarded ($40,000). This chasm, they argue, suggests such modest success as to permit a refusal of all fees. In most cases, however, as we have noted, a gulf between results sought and those obtained is properly addressed when determining the amount of attorney’s fees to be awarded, not when determining whether to award fees in the first place.
See Farrar,
Nevertheless, the cases counsel that courts should normally award some attorney’s fees, and adjust the amount of the award to account for the results that the plaintiff obtained.
13
See, e.g., City of Riverside v. Rivera,
IV. Calculation of Fee
Having determined that the plaintiff is a prevailing party, who is entitled to an award of attorney’s fees, we remand the case for determination of an appropriate fee.
Normally, a district court begins with a lodestar analysis, because failure to conduct such an undertaking “creates a substantial burden upon the district court to account for its actions.”
Coutin,
In making this adjustment, the trial court should be mindful of the complexities of defining the results obtained. As we have already noted, in determining the quality of the plaintiffs results, we look to a combination of the plaintiffs claim-by-claim success, the relief achieved, and the societal importance of the rights vindicated.
Coutin,
Similarly, while a trial court can and should reduce the lodestar to disallow fees for time inefficiently, unnecessarily, or unreasonably expended, it also must be mindful of the realities of modern litigation. It is of course true that each fee case generally rests “on its own congeries of facts,” but nevertheless, we have previ
*208
ously reversed decisions to substantially reduce hours allowed for pre-trial proceedings, where we have found that significant time was expended and the plaintiff was not responsible for the delay.
De Jesus v. Banco Popular de Puerto Rico,
Y. Conclusion
The trial court’s decision to deny an award of attorney’s fees and costs is therefore vacated. We remand the case for a determination of reasonable attorney’s fees and costs, not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The complaint also stated claims against two police supervisors in their individual capacities: Jorge Brenes-Escobar and Carlos Santos-Ortiz. The trial court granted judgment as a matter of law as to those defendants, and that ruling is not before us.
. There is some dispute over whether the plaintiff requested or the trial court gave any instruction about nominal damages, but we have been provided no transcript to review. After reviewing the jury verdict form, we note that the form itself contains no bar against awarding punitive damages in the absence of any compensatory damages. Moreover, the phrase "nominal damages” does not appear anywhere on the verdict form. As we explain in more detail, this fact does not affect the outcome of our analysis.
. A prevailing defendant, however, "may recover an attorney's fee only where the suit was vexatious, frivolous, or brought to harass or embarrass the defendant.”
Hensley,
. A second precondition for a fee award is that the material alteration between the parties must be judicially sanctioned.
Buckhan-non Bd.. and Care Home, Inc. v. W. Va. Dep’t of Health and Human Res.,
. In
Lewis
we found it “inexcusable” that despite the fact that plaintiff had failed "entirely or largely in everything,” her lawyers failed to adjust their billing accordingly.
. The trial court's statement that the punitive damages judgment is "more than adequate in this instance to cover attorney's fees” suggests that the trial court may have viewed the fact that the punitive damages judgment did not comply with our rule in
Kerr-Selgas
as a special circumstance warranting denial of attorney’s fees. Although such a reading is a possible one, it appears in tension with the trial court's discussion of
Diaz-Rivera v. Rivera-Rodriguez,
.
see Gay Officers Action League,
. In other contexts, the Third Circuit has not required proof of actual or nominal damages to support punitive damages.
See, e.g., Basista
v.
Weir,
. We have been unable to find cases addressing this issue in the Fourth, Sixth, or D.C. Circuits. But these courts have not adopted the
Kerr-Selgas
rule, and at least one of these courts has affirmatively declined to follow it.
See Tisdale v. Fed. Express Corp.,
. That the federal common law rather than the common law as it exists in the several states should provide the rule of decision regarding punitive damages may be a reason to reexamine the rule set forth in Kerr-Selgas.
. The Supreme Court has emphasized that once any damages-actual or nominal-are awarded, any complaints regarding the technical or
de minimis
nature of a plaintiff's success cannot be addressed in deciding whether the plaintiff was a prevailing party; rather, such arguments would go to the amount of the fee award, not its availability.
Farrar,
However, where no damages-actual, nominal, or punitive-are awarded, the technical or
de minimis
nature of a plaintiff's victory might support a denial of prevailing party status.
Farrar,
. Neither do we think that plaintiff's failure to request additur-that she was entitled to receive-supports a finding of special circumstances constituting an injustice, particularly when we have already held that a defendant’s reliance on settled law does not create a special circumstance worthy of denying attorney’s fees.
Williams,
. We have previously noted that results obtained "has a variety of meanings, including [a] plaintiff's success claim by claim, or to relief actually achieved, or to the societal importance of the right vindicated, or to all of these measures in combination.”
Coutin,
. In the same vein, we reiterate that our precedent forecloses the possibility that the trial court can consider the strength or weakness of the plaintiff's claim-other than through the results obtained calculus-in arriving at a fee award because the time for other skepticism regarding the plaintiff’s claim has long since passed.
Coutin,
