The underlying action was a suit by employees of a school district claiming employment discrimination on the basis of age and racе in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The parties settled the underlying claims and executed a written settlement agreement. The plaintiffs then applied for attorneys’ fees pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988, which authorizes attorneys’ fees to prevailing parties in civil rights cases. The district court denied thе application, holding that the plaintiffs had waived the right to attorneys’ fees in the settlement agreement. Plaintiffs appeal frоm the order denying fees. In the six page settlement agreement, the defendant agreed to pay $33,000.00 to plaintiff Wakefield and $5,000.00 to plaintiff Smith. The agreement provided a detailed release by the *483 plaintiffs in which they released defendants from:
any and all manner of action or actions, causes or causes of action, in law or in equity, suit, debts, liens, contracts, agreements, promises, liabilities, claims, rights, obligations, demands, damages, including punitive damages, injuries, debts, losses, costs or expenses of any nature whatsoever, known or unknown, fixed, or contingent ..., which [plaintiffs] now [hаve] or may hereafter have against each or any of the [defendants] arising out of, or what might be considered to arise out of or in any way connected with the aforementioned lawsuit or the conduct of [defendants] to date, (emphasis added).
The agrеement itself did not contain the phrase “attorneys’ fees.” However, when plaintiffs applied for attorneys’ fees following settlеment, defendants contended that the parties discussed the matter of fees during settlement negotiations and that the agreement wаs intended to release defendants from liability for attorneys’ fees.
The fees question was heard by the district judge who had conducted the settlement conference. The district judge relied upon the terms of the release and, in addition, his usual practice during settlement of civil rights cases of expressly referring any unwaived fee question to the trial court. There was no such referral here. Based оn its usual practice and the breadth of the release, the district court found that the appellants in fact intended to waive аttorneys’ fees and the court therefore denied appellants’ application.
The federal courts have recоgnized since the passage of section 1988 nearly ten years ago that Congress intended to make the courts more accessible by providing for fees in the normal course to successful civil rights litigants.
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
Settlеments of attorneys’ fees claims in civil rights cases have raised some troublesome issues. Prior to the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Evans v. Jeff D.,
In
Evans v. Jeff D.,
however, the Supreme Court held that simultaneous settlement of the merits and attorneys’ fees is appropriate and that plаintiff’s counsel may waive attorneys’ fees in such settlement negotiations.
Appellants contend that a settlement agreement, as a matter of law, should not be interpreted as including a waiver оf attorneys’ fees unless the agreement expressly contains a waiver of “attorneys’ fees”
in haec verba.
In support of this view, plaintiffs rely upon decisions of the Third Circuit which have held that when a settlement agreement is silent as to attorneys’ fees, the court may not find a waivеr of attorneys’ fees.
Ashley v. Atlantic Richfield Co.,
The most serious weakness in appellants’ position is that the settlement agreement in this case is not “silent” in the same manner that the agreements in those cases were. The agreements in both
Ashley
and
El Club Del Barrio
contained general releases of all claims and costs. In this case, however, we have an express release not only of all claims and elements of damages, but of any “costs or expenses of any nature whatsoever, known or unknown, fixed or contingent.” Although the
Ashley
court found that the agreement to include “costs” as part of the settlement in that case did not include attorneys’ fees, the agreement in this case is much broаder.
See Ashley,
In addition, in both
El Club Del Barrio
and
Ashley
the original agreements had included language referring to attorneys’ fees, but upon objection the language was deleted.
Ashley,
We are in full agreement with the Third Circuit’s resolution of both thе El Club Del Barrio and Ashley cases. Waiver of attorneys’ fees should not be presumed from a silent record. However, the release in this case is not only more sweeping than anything contained in the agreements in those cases, but also must be interpreted in light of a record which reflеcts that the parties and the district court viewed the waiver as inclusive of attorneys’ fees. Thus, the agreement in this case was a waiver of plaintiffs’ right to attorneys’ fees under section 1988.
AFFIRMED.
