This mаtter was remanded for the awarding of attorney’s fees under Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and 42 U.S.C. § 1988.
Eastway Construction Corp. v. City of New York,
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Plaintiff Eastway Construction Corporation is a general contractor that during the 1960s and 1970s engaged exclusively in construction work on publicly financed housing rehabilitation projects in New York City. Plaintiffs Jaffee, Kanarek and Jacobs are officers of Eastway Construction Corporation. Collectively, plaintiffs are referred to in this opinion as “East-way.” (A more extensive statement of the facts than is needed for this phase of the litigation is set forth in Eastway I.)
Between 1966 and 1974, defendant City of New York (“City”) loaned nearly twelve million dollars through a now defunct program to limited partnerships controlled by principals of Eastway Construction Corporation. The purpose of the loans was to enable the partnerships to rehabilitate thirty-four multiple dwelling buildings in depressed neighborhoods. The loans were generally non-recourse, secured only by mortgages on the buildings. The partnerships fell behind in their loan payments, so that by March 1983 all but three buildings had reverted to City ownership through default, and the remaining three buildings secured mortgage arrearages totaling about three million dollars.
In the early 1970s, the City’s housing rehabilitation loan program was enveloped in corruption, with one City official being convicted of extortion and accepting bribes, and several developers being charged with fraud. Jaffee admitted making payments to a city official in an attempt to expedite the processing of pending loan applications. No criminal charges were brought against him or Eastway Construction Corporation. In response to this scandal, New York State revised its public housing finance laws. One part of the new statutory scheme gave the City the power to regulate the creation and operation of certain housing redevelopment companies and to control the identities of firms with which these redevelopment companies did business.
In the exercise of its new powers, the City decided that it would no longer enter into rehabilitation contracts with firms whose principals controlled entities that were in arrears or had defaulted on loans from the City. This policy prevented East-way Construction Corporation from doing rehabilitation work directly for the City. In 1980 the City exercised its supervisory power over redevelopment companies and forbade them from entering into contracts with firms that the City refused to contract with. As a result Eastway was barred from doing any rehabilitation work for the City even indirectly.
Threatened with being forced out of business, Eastway went to the state court to challenge the City’s policy, initiating an Article 78 proceeding that sought to have the policy declared “arbitrary and capricious.” The state court challenge initially met with success, with the State Supreme Court granting summary judgment in East-way’s favor. On appeal, the Appellate Division reversed,
Eastway Construction Corp. v. Gliedman,
Another major actor in the New York City housing rehabilitation arena is the Community Preservation Corporation (“CPC”), a private consortium of thirty- *563 nine banks that do business in the city. CPC extends low interest loans to private developers to facilitate the rehabilitation of multiple dwelling buildings in depressed neighborhoods. In June of 1978 and again in July of 1981, Everett Jennings, on behalf of Orange Realty Co., applied to CPC for a loan to be used to rehabilitate a building in Brooklyn. Although Orange Realty was affiliated with Eastway, the loan applications did not list Eastway as general contractor. Both loan applications were rejected.
Unable to secure work on either publicly or privately financed housing rehabilitation projects, Eastway commenced the present action in this court. The complaint stated two causes of action under federal law. The first was an antitrust claim, which alleged that the City and CPC had conspired to prevent Eastway from carrying on its business. The second was, in essence, a due process claim, which alleged that the City’s policy had deprived Eastway of its rights without due process of law.
The municipal and private defendants each moved for summary judgment, and each requested an award of attorney’s fees. In August 1984 this court granted both summary judgment motions and dismissed the aсtion but denied the motions for attorney’s fees, stating on the record that it found plaintiffs’ claims were not frivolous. Eastway appealed the dismissal of its action, and the municipal defendants cross-appealed the denial of attorney’s fees.
The Court of Appeals affirmed the dismissal, but characterized the claims as “groundless” for purposes of determining entitlement to attorney’s fees. Eastway I at 252. It remanded for an award of attorney’s fees to the municipal defendants. Costs incurred in defending the civil rights claim were to be assessed against plaintiffs alone under 42 U.S.C. § 1988, while costs incurred in defending the antitrust claim were to be assessed against plaintiffs or plaintiffs’ counsel or both under Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The case is therefore now before this court for a determination of 1) the proper amount of attorney’s fees to be awarded to the municipal defendants, and 2) the person or persons who should pay those fees.
II. LAW
A. Purpose and Relationship of Rule 11 and W U.S.C. § 1988
The traditional American rule is that each party to litigation bears its own costs, including attorney’s fees.
See Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. Wilderness Society,
Courts have quite properly distinguished between two different purposes of the fee-shifting statutes and rules. One purpose is to compensate plaintiffs for the actual cost of vindicating legal rights, by partial analogy to the English system, in order to encourage private attorney general suits in enforcement of important public policies. The second is to deter unfounded claims and defenses by assessing fees as a punitive measure. The second purpose is usually applied in favor of defendants, with the secondary effect of compensating the aggrieved litigant for legal fees that he should never have been forced to incur.
Prominent among statutes providing an incentive for private enforcement of federal law is the Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Awards Act of 1976, 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1982), which provides for grants of attorney’s fees to successful parties in actions brought under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981-1983 & 1985-1986 and other civil rights provisions. Similarly, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 contains a provision awarding attorney’s fees to successful parties in actions brought under Title VII of the Act.
See
§ 204(b) of
*564
the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000a-3(b)(1982);
Eastway I
at 252-54;
Erie Conduit Corp. v. Metropolitan Asphalt Paving Association,
In applying these statutes to determine when to make awards of attorney’s fees to plaintiffs, courts have been quite liberal, concluding that attorney’s fees are routinely available to all prevailing plaintiffs. There are two reasons for such openness. “First, ... the plaintiff is the chosen instrument of Congress to vindicate ‘a policy that Congress considered of the highest priority.’ Second, when a district court awards counsel fees to a prevailing plaintiff, it is awarding them against a violator of federal law.”
Christiansburg Garment Co. v. EEOC,
In addition to fee-shifting provisions that are intended to encourage the bringing of some lawsuits, there are provisions intended to deter the bringing of others. It is these provisions that are of primary interest in this case. Among them are the two provisions just discussed, 42 U.S.C. § 1988 and 42 U.S.C. § 2000a-3(b), as applied in determining whether to award fees to prevailing defendants, as well as Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The purpose of these provisions is to discourage litigants from bringing frivolous cases or making frivolous motions.
Because such provisions 1) are in derogation of the general American policy of encouraging resort to the courts for peaceful resolution of disputes, 2) tend to breed time-consuming and expensive satellite litigation, and 3) increase tensions among the litigating bar and between bench and bar, the standard for imposition of sanctions is high. The provisions do not entitle all prevailing defendants to an award of fees; instead, fees are to be awarded only if the claim or motion was entirely unjustified, i.e., frivolous. Although they do contain a compensation element, the primary purpose of this group of provisions is deterrence.
See, e.g., Advisory Committee Notes to Rule 11
(“The word ‘sanctions’ in the caption ... stresses a deterrent orientation in dealing with improper pleadings, motions or other papers.”); S.M. Kassin,
An Empirical Study of Rule 11 Sanctions
at 29 (Federal Judicial Center 1985) (“[T]he majority of judges ... expressed a belief that deterrence is the most important purpose оf sanctions.”);
Carrion v. Yeshiva University,
*565 While none of the deterrence-oriented provisions actually uses the word “frivolous,” courts nonetheless consistently employ a “frivolousness” standard in determining whether an award of fees is appropriate. To properly inform the bar, simplify administration, and maximize substantive impact, it is advisable that the degree of frivolousness needed to trigger sanctions under each of these provisions be the same.
“Frivolous” is of the same order of magnitude as “less than a scintilla.” It is defined in Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1967) as “of little weight or importance: having no basis in law or fact: light, slight, sham, irrelevant, superficial.” The Oxford English Dictionary (1971) defines it as “[o]f little or no weight, value or importance; paltry; trumpery; not worthy of serious attention; having no reasonable ground or purpose ... In pleading: Manifestly insufficient or futile.”
If a claim is deemed frivolous for the purpose of imposing sanctions under Rule 11, it should also be considered frivolous for the purpose of imposing sanctions under section 1988. At least one court of appeals has expressly endorsed the application of a uniform standard for determining frivolousness.
See Zaldivar v. City of Los Angeles,
B. Role of the District Court
Once a trial court determines that a claim or motion fails to meet the standard for nonfrivolousness, the court of necessity has a great deal of discretion in deciding on the nature of the sanction, and if it be an award of attorney’s fees, how much to award. This is because the trial court’s role is to provide the “appropriate” deterrent. Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for the United States District Courts is directed to the trial judge. It requires that the trial court “impose ... an appropriate sanction.”
Punishment should never exceed the amount required to achieve the result desired. A deterrent is therefore appropriate when it is the minimum that will serve to adequately deter the undesirable behavior.
See U.S. v. Brennan,
Rule 11 on its face grants the trial judge the discretion not only to decide how much attorney’s fees to award, but also whether or not to grant attorney's fees at all. The Rule states that when a filing is determined to be frivolous, the court “shall” impose sanctions, which sanctions “may”— not must — include an order to pay the other party’s expenses. Other sanctions such as a reprimand or an order that the attorney take certain remedial courses or consult with skilled attorneys or attend court sessions are all available in place of a monetary award.
Recognizing that trial courts must have great discretion in fashioning proper sanctions under deterrence-oriented fee-shifting provisions, appellate courts have enunciated an “abuse of discretion” standard for reviewing specifics of fee awards.
See, e.g., Eastway I
at 254 n. 7 (“In reviewing the specifics of an award [under Rule 11] of attorneys’ fees, ... we shall continue to adhere to the 'abuse of discretion’ standard.”);
Zaldivar v. City of Los Angeles,
In addition, where the decision whether to impose any sanctions rests on resolution of factual issues, i.e., whether an attorney conducted the “reasonable inquiry” required by Rule 11, the trial court’s findings are reviewed under the “clearly erroneous” standard.
See Zaldivar,
C. Issues in Imposing Rule 11 Sanctions
(1) Objective and Subjective Standards.
Rule 11 read literally contains both subjective and objective components. In pertinent part, it states:
Every pleading, motion, and other paper of a party represented by an attorney shall be signed by at least one attorney of record____ The signature of an attorney ... constitutes a certificate by him that he has read the pleading, motion, or other paper; that to the best of his knowledge, information, and belief formed after reasonable inquiry it is well grounded in fact and is warranted by existing law or a good faith argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law____ If a pleading, motion, or other paper is signed in violation of this rule, the court ... shall impose upon the person who signed it, a represented party, or both, an appropriate sanction, which may include an order to pay to the other party or parties the amount of the reasonable expenses incurred because of the filing of the pleading, motion, or other paper, including a reasonable attorney’s fee.
(Emphasis added). The text suggests that the obligation imposed by the Rule is partly objective, and partly subjective. The requirement that the attorney base his certification on a “reasonable inquiry” is objective, because what is “reasonable” is judged by objective norms of reasonable attorneys. But the certification itself need only state that the motion is well grounded “to the best of [the attorney’s] knowledge, information, and belief.” Since the certifi *567 cation relates to the attorney’s own beliefs, it appears that it should be judged by a subjective standard. Even the subjective component has objective aspects since, as a matter of evidence, the judge will rely on what reasonable lawyers would have known or believed under the circumstances in deciding what this lawyer believed.
The objective “reasonable inquiry” element of Rule 11 serves to рrotect attorneys who reach reasonable, but erroneous, conclusions about the validity of their cases. Before a suit is filed, often only a limited investigation into the law and facts is possible. If an attorney makes a reasonable investigation under the circumstances and concludes based on that investigation that the pleading is well grounded in law and fact, he cannot be sanctioned for filing the pleading when time and discovery prove that the plaintiff does not in fact have a viable claim. See Advisory Committee Notes to Rule 11 (“[W]hat constitutes a reasonable inquiry may depend on such factors as how much time for investigation was available to the signer ... [and] whether he had to rely on a client for information as to the facts underlying the pleading____”).
A more difficult question is whether the apparently subjective element of Rule 11 can protect attorneys who honestly reach unreasonable conclusions about the factual or legal strength of their cases. What if an attorney conducts a reasonable inquiry into the facts and the law and concludes, honestly but mistakenly, that the law supports his pleading, even though the pleading would be recognized as plainly frivolous by a minimally competent member of the bar? A literal reading of the Rule would indicate that such conduct is not sanctionable because the attorney has clearly complied with the letter of the Rule: he has certified that to the best of his knowledge, information and belief, formed after a reasonable inquiry into the facts and the law, that the pleading is well grounded. This reading is also supported by the rationale behind the Rule, nаmely deterrence. While sanctioning an attorney’s failure to make a reasonable inquiry might make him more diligent in the future, sanctioning honest errors is unlikely to prevent their recurrence. Cf. The American Law Institute, Model Penal Code Tentative Draft No. 4, at 140 (1955) (“In the absence of minimal culpability, the [criminal] law has neither a deterrent nor corrective nor an incapacitative function to perform.”).
Eastway I
holds that policy requires that Rule 11 not be read according to its literal terms. In a telling paraphrase of the language of Rule 11, the Second Circuit restated the requirement of the Rule as follows: “[Sanctions shall be imposed [if], after reasonable inquiry, a
competent
attorney could not form a
reasonable
belief that the pleading is well grounded in fact and is warranted by existing law____”
Eastway I
at 254 (emphasis added). While the Rule requires certification only by the actual attorney of his actual beliefs,
East-way I
requires the reasonable beliefs of a hypothetical competent attorney. The Second Circuit’s restatement of the rule effectively eliminates the subjective element incorporated by the drafters of the Rule. As a result, an attorney’s erroneous conclusion that a pleading is well grounded may lead to sanctions.
Eastway I,
in other words, holds attorneys strictly liable for mistakes in judgment that lead to the filing of papers later deemed frivolous.
Accord, Wells v. Oppenheimer & Co., Inc.,
(2) Due Process Right to a Hearing.
Rule 11 does not address the issue of the procedural rights of attorneys and clients who are being sanctioned. The Advisory Committee Notes to Rule 11 contains a mixed message about procedural rights. *568 While the Notes comment that “[t]he procedure obviously must comport with due process requirements,” they go on to suggest that procedural safeguards should be kept to a minimum:
To assure that the efficiencies achieved through more effective operation of the pleading regimen will not be offset by the cost of satellite litigation over the imposition of sanctions, the court must to the extent possible limit the scope of sanction proceedings to the record.
Id. In the absence of specific instructions from the Rule, our discussion of the due process issue must be based on general principles.
Due process requires, at a minimum, notice and an opportunity to be heard “appropriate to the nature of the case.”
Goss v. Lopez,
The constitutional mandate that the due process rights be appropriate to the nature of the case also requires that an evidentiary hearing be held if necessary. An evidentiary hearing will be necessary “when the imposition of the sanction is dependant upon facts genuinely in dispute.” The Committee on Federal Courts аt 323-24.
See also
Schwarzer,
Sanctions Under the New Federal Rule 11,
As pointed out earlier in this opinion, there are two basic ways in which Rule 11 might be violated. First, an attorney might violate the Rule by failing to make a reasonable inquiry into the facts and law. Second, according to Eastway I, an attorney might also violate the Rule by failing to draw the “reasonable” conclusions that a “competent” attorney would have reached.
In the first type of Rule 11 violation, it is obvious why there may be genuine factual disputes: the nature of the inquiry actually conducted is an issue of fact. In other words, whether sanctions ought be imposed may depend on disputed facts about what kind of inquiry was made.
In the second type of Rule 11 violation, the decision whether or not to impose sanctions does not depend on any facts relating to the attorney’s investigation or reasoning. Presumably a judge can take judicial notice of what a reasonable . attorney should know.
See Rodgers v. Lincoln Towing Service, Inc.,
Hindsight rationalizations for finding frivolousness must constantly be guarded against.
See Advisory Committee Notes to Rule 11
(“the court is expected to avoid using the wisdom of hindsight”);
Erie Conduit Corp. v. Metropolitan Asphalt Paving Association,
Even if, as required by Eastway I, a strict liability standard for attorney errors is imposed, and even if it is imposed without hearing, there is the issue of the amount of sanctions to be imposed. This decision may well depend on the factual circumstances that led to the attorney’s mistake. As will be developed below, many factors may justify the court’s mitigating the severity of the sanctions imposed. On this issue an attorney must be given the opportunity to present evidence to the trial court before he or she or the client is severely sanctioned. See The Committee on Federal Courts, Procedural Rights of Attorneys Facing Sanctions, 40 The Record 313, 326 (1985).
(3) Allocation of the Sanction Between the Attorney and the Client.
Rule 11 authorizes the trial court to impose sanctions upon the attorney, his client, or both, but provides no standards to guide the court’s decision as to how the allocation should be made. Both courts and commentators have suggested that the court should direct sanctions at whoever is responsible for the filing of the frivolous paper.
See Weisman v. Rivlin,
In practice, assessment of fault between attorney and client is rather difficult. There are some cases in which it is fairly clear who should be sanctioned. For example, the attorney alone is generally responsible for sharp practice, such as a frivolous motion to disqualify opposing counsel.
See Wold v. Minerals Engineering Co.,
Even this analysis, modest as it is, is not quite accurate. In the case in which it was suggested that fees be assessed against the client alone, Rule 11 does not— technically speaking — even apply. Rule 11 does not, by its terms, provide for sanctions against the filing of frivolous papers. Rather, it provides for sanctions against an attorney’s filing papers without making an adequate inquiry. In a case in which an attorney makes a reasonable inquiry into the facts but still ends up filing a frivolous pleading because his client deceived him, there has technically not beеn any violation of Rule 11. Consequently, there is technically no basis for the imposition of sanctions, even against the client who in bad faith induced the filing a frivolous suit. This conclusion, however, is completely at odds with the spirit of the Rule. It would also lead to bizarre consequences, because it would mean that clients could be sanctioned in cases where they were partially responsible for filing frivolous papers, but *570 not in cases where their responsibility was total. The better conclusion is that sanctions may be imposed against the client under the circumstances described above despite the flaw in the Rule’s language.
As the trial court attempts to determine fault and allocate fees on that basis, the risk of creating substantial satellite litigation at great cost to the parties increases. First, there is a problem because of conflict of interest. If attorney and client disagree about who is at fault and point their fingers at each other, the interests of the two are now clearly adverse. The client, therefore, will need new counsel to represent him against his former counsel in the proceedings to determine fault.
See
Schwarzer,
Sanctions Under the New Federal Rule 11,
The reverse scenario, in which attorney and client not only do not contest relative fault before the court, but have agreed between themselves to privately reallocate any sanction imposed against them, may also present problems. The attorney and his client do not stand as equals before the court. Sanctions are imposed against the client purely for their deterrent effect. But sanctions are imposed against the attorney also for disciplinary purposes, as a punishment for dereliction of duty by an officer of the court who should know better. Allowing the client to reimburse the attorney would interfere with the court’s attempt to maintain discipline. Therefore, reimbursement by the client should be prohibited.
See
Schwarzer,
Sanctions Under the New Federal Rule 11,
(4) Allocation of Rule 11 Sanctions by Cause of Action.
Rule 11 provides that the court may assess fees to cover “reasonable expenses [including attorney’s fees] incurred because of the filing of the [frivolous] pleading, motion, or other paper____” Since fees may be assessed only for frivolous filings, it may be necessary to analyze the contents of a filing and examine each of its constituent parts to determine the proрer amount of the fee award. If, for example, a pleadings states two unrelated causes of action, one of which is frivolous and one of which is not, attorney’s fees may be assessed only for the time spent responding to the frivolous part of the pleading.
See Weisman v. Rivlin,
(5) Amount of the Sanctions.
Determining the kinds of sanctions and the amount of fees, if any, to be imposed requires consideration of the following factors: a) the cost of the Rule 11 violation to the party seeking sanctions, and b) mitigating factors such as (i) whether the client and lawyer believed they were correct in taking the course they did; (ii) whether there was vindictiveness or a desire to punish an opponent; (iii) whether the lawyer is a neophyte who needs education, a repeat offender, or a person of standing at the bar whose actions have heretofore been ethical and in the high tradition of the bar; (iv) the ability to pay; (v) the need for compensation; (vi) the degree of frivolousness; and (vii) the dangers in chilling the particular kind of litigation involved. In аddition, there are questions relating to compensation for time spent on Rule 11 sanction litigation and on appeals.
(a) Expenditures of party seeking sanctions — lodestar method and market rates.
The logical starting point for a determination of attorney’s fees is a calculation of the number of hours reasonably expended in responding to the frivolous paper, multiplied by a reasonable hourly attorney’s fee based on the prevailing market rate.
See, e.g., Perez v. Velez,
The plaintiffs in this case urge that Rule 11 does not contemplate the award of market-based rates to parties who are represented by in-house counsel, as was the defendant seeking fees in this case. They point first to the wording of Rule 11, which speaks of “expenses incurred ... including a reasonable attorney’s fee,” as opposed to section 1988, which simply “allow[s] the prevailing party ... a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the costs.” The argument goes that the “incurred” language in Rule 11 prevents the court from awarding more than the party’s actual cost. This contention is not persuasive because nothing in the Rule or the Advisory Committee Notes suggests that the inclusion of that single word was intеnded to completely alter the usual method of calculating attorney’s fees. Courts have applied caselaw developed under section 1988 to other differently-worded fee statutes, discounting arguments that slight differences in wording should make a difference.
See, e.g., Delaware Valley Citizens’ Council v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
Practical problems of administration suggest that a single readily ascertainable market rate be applied where possible.
See In re Agent Orange Product Liability Litigation,
Plaintiffs also attempt to distinguish existing section 1988 caselaw on policy grounds. Nearly all the cases allowing market rates to parties represented by nonprofit counsel in civil rights actions involve prevailing plaintiffs. As was noted earlier, section 1988 as applied to plaintiffs is a litigation-encouraging provision; Rule 11, by contrast, is a litigation-deterring provision. Market-based fees are awarded to prevailing plaintiffs in section 1988 cases, even where they exceed cost, because we *572 wish to encourage such suits. Since this reasoning is inapplicable to awards under Rule 11, the submission is, only cost-based fees should be allowed.
While this argument has obvious weight, it is not convincing. Granted that the purpose of Rule 11 is deterrence; this still does not prove that only cost-based rates are appropriate. There might certainly be cases in which an attorney’s conduct is so egregious that the only appropriate sanction is one that is well above the actual monetary damage caused by the frivolous filing. The deterrent nature of the Rule, therefore, does not preclude a market-based fee award to a party represented by in-house counsel.
Cf.
Schwarzer,
Sanctions Under the New Federal Rule 11,
(b) Mitigating factors leading to a reduction of the award.
While agreeing on the propriety of starting the calculation of an award of attorney's fees by multiplying a reasonable number of hours by a reasonable hourly rate, courts have not ended their inquiries at that point. Without explaining why they are doing it — and often without even noting that they are doing it — courts have reduced their awards of fees to prevailing defendants in both Rule 11 and section 1988 cases. In many cases a nominal award results.
See, e.g., Index Fund v. Hagopian,
(i) Subjective Factors — Generally. As was demonstrated earlier, Rule 11, at least as interpreted by the Second Circuit in Eastway I, uses a purely objective standard amounting in many cases to strict liability to determine when to impose sanctions. But a pure strict and unmitigated liability standard in determining the form of the sanctions in Rule 11 cases is inappropriate. Because the purpose of Rule 11 is deterrence through punishment, the Rule is quasi-criminal. It is well established in Anglo-American law that strict liability1 is used in criminal law only in narrow circumstances; in most cases, the defendant’s mens rea is a focal point of the law’s inquiry. By analogy, in fixing a penalty, the law must be reluctant to ignore the state of mind of the attorney being sanctioned in Rule 11 cases. Since state of mind is not a factor in determining whether the Rule has been violated, it must be introduced in the second stage of the proceeding, and given weight in deciding on the severity of the sanctions. As Professor Kassin pointed out in an excellent study of Rule 11:
[I]t seems reasonable to propose a bifurcated task that explicitly distinguishes the dual requirements that sanctions be “mandatory” (a statement of whether they should be imposed) and “appropriate” (a statement of severity). Essentially, this kind of approach would enable courts to resolve the conflict by granting sanctions according to a strict objective *573 standard, but then engaging subjective-faith considerations in setting an amount.
S.M. Kassin, An Empirical Study of Rule 11 Sanctions at 45 (Federal Judicial Center 1985).
(ii)
Subjective Factors
— Vindictiveness
and Desire to Punish Opponent.
It is widely agreed that the “wilfulness” of the violation is of major importance.
See, e.g., Friedgood v. Axelrod,
(iii)
First Offenders and Others of Good Repute.
Other factors should be considered as well. For example, the court should be more lenient with first offenders with an otherwise good reputation than with an attorneys or clients who have a history of filing frivolous actions.
See In re Itel Securities Litigation,
Similarly, where a filing has been deemed to be legally, as opposed to factually, frivolous, the court should be more lenient on nonspecialists than on attorneys who have great expertise in the area of law involved, although there are circumstances where the attorney should have been aware that a specialist should have been consulted. See Advisory Committee Notes to Rule 11. As Judge Schwarzer points out:
While all attorneys practicing in the federal court are subject to its rules, it is not realistic to hold all to the same standards. For example, a failure to cite contrary authority may be excusable neglect in the case of an inexperienced solo practitioner but amount to serious misconduct if perpetrated by a lawyer from a large, well-equipрed law firm engaged in a substantial matter. Similarly, violations by persons appearing pro se must be judged differently from those of lawyers.
Thus a violation may stem from a variety of causes: inexperience, incompetence, neglect, wilfulness or deliberate choice. The need for punishment and deterrence is a function of the cause of the violation. In assessing the cause, the judge should consider not only the circumstances of the particular violation but also the factors bearing on the reasonableness of the conduct, such as experience and past performance of the lawyer and his firm, and the general standard of conduct of the bar of the court.
Schwarzer,
Sanctions Under the New Federal Rule 11,
(iv)
Ability to pay.
The deterrent effect of an award of attorney’s fees of a given sum of money is obviously dependent on the extent of the sanctioned party’s resources. The poorer the offender, the smaller need be the sanction to ensure the desired deterrent effect.
See e.g., Oliveri v. Thompson,
CV-83-3572 (E.D.N.Y. Dec. 23, 1985) (reducing sanction against attorney from $51,000 to $5,000 because of his financial condition). Accordingly, many courts have reduced fee awards based on ability to pay. Most of these cases arise under section 706(k) of the Civil Rights Act
*574
of 1964 or under section 1988, because these provisions require that the sanction be imposed only against the client, and not against the attorney, and plaintiffs with civil rights claims usually are poorer than attorneys subject to Rule 11 sanctions. Rule 11 cases in which the issue arises usually involve pro se plaintiffs.
See, e.g., Faraci v. Hickey Freeman Co., Inc.,
(v) Need for Compensation. The other side of the ability to pay concept is the defendant’s need for compensation. A single suit of modest proportions will be insignificant to a major corporation while such a suit against an individual may have crushing economic effect. This factor needs to be taken into account both to deter harassment of weaker defendants as well as to reduce any unnecessary burdens on plaintiff or his counsel.
(vi) Degree of frivolousness. Court opinions on attorney’s fees speak easily of cases being either frivolous or nonfrivolous, as if all cases fit easily into one or the other category. Reality is more complicated. In the legal world, claims span the entire continuum from overwhelmingly strong to outrageously weak. Somewhere between these two points, courts draw a line to separate the nonfrivolous from the frivolous, the former category providing safe shelter, the latter subjecting attorney and client to sanctions.
Attorneys are thus placed in a dilemma because they have the right — in fact, they have an ethical obligation (subject to tactical considerations) — to present to the court all the nonfrivolous arguments that might be made on their clients’ behalf, even if only barely nonfrivolous. They are forced by their position as advocates in the legal profession to live close to the line, wherever the courts may draw it. Yet Rule 11 threatens them with severe sanctions if they miscalculate ever so slightly the location of that line. As a result many members of the bar are concerned that Rule 11 will discourage attorneys from pursuing novel yet meritorious legal theories. See, e.g., Snyder, The Chill of Rule 11, 11 Litigation 16 (Winter 1985). The necessity of avoiding such an effect has alsо been widely recognized. As the Court of Appeals so eloquently put the matter:
[W]e do not intend to stifle the enthusiasm or chill the creativity that is the very lifeblood of the law. Vital changes have been wrought by those members of the bar who have dared to challenge the received wisdom, and a rule that penalized such innovation would run counter to our notion of the common law itself.
Eastway I
at 254.
See Taylor v. Prudential-Bache Securities,
In part, the solution seems to lie in frank recognition of the fact that rather than being adequately described by the frivolous-nonfrivolous dichotomy, cases really do lie along a continuum. Some are clearly frivolous, some clearly nonfrivolous, and some are difficult to call. Attorney fee awards of the full market value of services rendered should be reserved for extremely frivolous cases, while more moderate awards should be given for frivolous filings near the border. This approach harmonizes with the deterrent approach of the Rule. It penalizes more severely conduct that society seeks more strongly to deter. But it penalizes only lightly filings in that zone where the bar’s imagination and creativity assert themselves most strongly, *575 thus helping to insulate attorneys from the chill of the Rule.
(vii) The Importance of Not Discouraging Particular Types of Litigation. By providing that when the court finds the pleading or other papers to be frivolous, it “shall” impose sanctions, Rule 11 takes the decision whether to impose sanctions out of the trial judge’s hands. The premise underlying the Rule’s mandatory sanction is that frivolous pleadings are worthless and are to be always condemned. But such an interpretation takes too narrow a view of the purposes of litigation.
Some litigations should be, if not encouraged, at least not discouraged. Of particular importance are cases brought against government officials and government agencies. Such suits are often the only effective channel for keeping within bounds official arrogance and lawlessness. At the very least, they publicize grievances and thus permit the ventilation of private outrage that the First Amendment’s right to petition protects. They serve the public policy of avoiding violence by providing a peaceful forum. They may provide the basis for legislative and executive ameliorative action even when the courts lack power to act. See, e.g., Mather, The Mobilizing Potential of Class Actions, 57 Xnd.L.J. 451 (1982). Many civil rights cases fall into this category. So, too, do many prisoner habeas corpus cases. And even in what appear to be purely commercial actions, the threat of suit may deter official abuses such as favoritism.
Sometimes there are reasons to sue even when one cannot win. Bad court decisions must be challenged if they are to be overruled, but the early challenges are certainly hopeless. The first attorney to challenge
Plessy v. Ferguson
was certainly bringing a frivolous action, but his efforts and the efforts of others eventually led to
Brown v. Board of Education.
Similarly, the apparently useless challenges by attorneys of the still relatively recent Supreme Court decision in
Swain v. Alabama
have induced the Court quickly to reconsider and reject that ill-conceived ruling.
Batson v. Kentucky,
— U.S. -,
(c) Award of attorney’s fees for time spent on the motion for fees.
In cases in which a prevailing plaintiff is awarded attorney’s fees under section 1988, he is also entitled to an award of fees for time spent in connection with the fee application.
See Gagne v. Maher,
A defendant requesting Rule 11 sanctions for a frivolous pleading is in a position analogous to that of a plaintiff in a civil rights action. Rule 11 differs from section 1988 as applied to plaintiffs in that it is designed to deter rather than encourage litigation. Nonetheless, the Rule is intended to further a governmental interest, in this case deterring frivolous actions from reaching the courts. In requesting Rule 11 sanctions, the defendant is acting as a private attorney general, enforcing the federal policy of deterring frivolous suits. In order not to discourage parties from bringing warranted Rule 11 motions, the time spent on the motion for fees should be taken into account in calculating the lodestar figure.
See, e.g., Perez v. Velez,
Only time
reasonably
expended on the motion for attorney’s fees should be includible in the lodestar calculation. If, for example, the defendant requests attorney’s fees of an excessive amount, the plaintiff should certаinly be entitled to contest the request without having to pay for the additional expenses being caused by the defendant’s unreasonableness. Should defendant’s fee request be so unreasonable as to itself rise to the level of frivolousness, Rule 11 sanctions may be imposed against the defendant for making that mo
*576
tion.
Cf. Hensley v. Eckerhart,
(d) Award of attorney’s fees for time spent on appeal.
Prevailing plaintiffs in section 1988 cases are routinely awarded attorney’s fees for time spent on a successful appeal. This is the logically correct result because success is the criterion for an award of fees to a civil rights suit plaintiff, and plaintiff’s efforts on appeal have, by hypothesis, been successful.
See Hastings v. Maine-End-well Central School District,
In the case of Rule 11, an award of attorney’s fees for the costs of defending an appeal can be made only if the appeal was frivolous. Generally the appellate court is in the best position to pass on whether an appeal is frivolous, and the district court is without authority to award attorney’s fees for an appeal in the absence of instructions from the appellate court to do so.
See Sierra Club v. United States Army Corps. of Engineers,
D. Awards of Attorney’s Fees to Prevailing Defendants Under Section 1988.
42 U.S.C. § 1988 provides that “[i]n any action or proceeding to enforce a provision of [certain civil rights statutes] 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.” The circumstances under which prevailing defendants are to be awarded fees under section 1988 were described by the Supreme Court in
Hughes v. Rowe,
Unlike Rule 11, which has a long, carefully drafted text and comes accompanied by even longer Committee Notes, the text of section 1988 is bare and brief. Furthermore, since Hughes and Christiansburg are quite recent cases, the caselaw applying the Hughes standard is still sparse. All in all, therefore, the law of attorney fee awards to prevailing defendants under section 1988 is poorly developed. But since sections 1988 and 706(k) and Rule 11 all have the same purpose and are applying the same standard, it is appropriate to borrow the caselaw of each to help develop the caselaw of the others. As already noted, treating awards under all the deterrence-oriented provisions similarly furthers both policy and ease of administration.
III. LAW APPLIED TO THE FACTS
Rule 11 provides that, once a finding of frivolousness is made, the court “shall” impose sanctions which “may” include attorney’s fees. And, as the Court of Appeals recognized in
Eastway I,
“the district
*577
courts retain broad discretion in fashioning sanctions.”
Eastway I,
The Court of Appeals found plaintiffs’ complaint legally, rather than factually, frivolous. Under Eastway /’ s purely objective standard holding attorneys strictly liable for unreasonably filing frivolous papers, there was, the appellate court implicitly found, no need for a hearing to determine whether the Rule had been violated. Although the plaintiff was still entitled to an evidentiary hearing to provide proof of any factual circumstances supporting mitigation of the amount of attorney’s fees, the plaintiff did not request a hearing and none was therefore held. The court did hear oral argument on the legal standards involved, and the legal issues were briefed.
A. Number of Compensable Hours and Allowable Maximum Hourly Rate
The City requests an award of $58,550, which represents 395% hours of work for three different attorneys, John P. Woods, William L. Barish, and Fred Kolikoff. Mr. Barish worked on the antitrust and due process issues at the district court level, Mr. Woods on the attorney’s fees issue at the district court level, and Mr. Kolikoff on the appeal to the Second Circuit. The City requests that fees be calculated using billing rates of $125 and $150 per hour. The hours for which compensation is requested include time spent on the motion for attorney’s fees, as well as time spent on the appeal.
(1) Time Spent on the Motion for Fees.
As indicated earlier, time spent on a motion for attorney’s fees should be included in the lodestar figure. The number of hours requested in this case — 184—seems high, but is not excessive in view of the difficulty of the issues involved and the court’s request on two occasions for supplemental briefs on various questions.
(2) Time Spent on the Appeal.
As was indicated above, a trial court should not compensate in its award of attorney’s fees time spent defending an appeal, absent an explicit finding by the Court of Appeals that the appeal was frivolous and an order directing the district court to award such fees. The Court of Appeals in Eastway I did not explicitly declare Eastway’s position on appeal to be frivolous, and did not in its remand order instruct this court to award attorney’s fees for the time spent by the City on the appeal. Accordingly, the City’s request for attorney’s fees for 43 hours spent by Mr. Kolikoff on the appeal must be denied.
(3) Maximum Allowable Fee.
The City requests compensation for 168% hours of Mr. Barish’s time and for 184 hours of Mr. Woods’ time, at an hourly rate of $150 per hour, for a total of $52,912.50. The number of hours requested is well-documented by affidavits, and justified by the difficulty of the issues involved in the case. The hourly rаte of $150 is reasonable for Assistant Corporation Counsel who, at the time the case was before this court, had been in practice for 8 and 9 years, respectively.
See, e.g., Perez v. Velez,
B. Mitigating Factors
(1) Subjective Factors.
There is no evidence or reason to believe that plaintiffs or their attorneys did not bring this action in good faith for the purpose of obtaining the relief they sought. Plaintiffs had suffered serious financial reverses as a result of the defendants’ actions. The suit itself was undoubtedly expensive. Plaintiffs’ extensive papers reflected a great deal of research into the law and the facts and were well written, undoubtedly at high hourly rates. There was no desire to punish defendants or to harass them. The relevant subjective factors therefore point towards imposition of mild sanctions.
(2) Frivolousness of the Complaint.
The severity of the sanction to be imposed depends in part on the degree of frivolousness of the underlying claim. While the law of the case is that Eastway’s claims were frivolous, investigation of the underlying substantive law reveals considerable support for Eastway’s position.
(a) The antitrust claim.
The Court of Appeals’ analysis of Eastway’s antitrust claim was very brief; it did “not tarry over Eastway’s appeal,” Eastway I at 249, no doubt because the appellate court thought the frivolousness of the claim obvious. Nonetheless, it is possible to discern three separate points in the Second Circuit’s discussion of the antitrust claim. First, the court seems to suggest that Eastway did not have antitrust stаnding, because the injury alleged was not “of the type that the antitrust laws are designed to prevent,” Eastway I at 250. Second, the court found that Eastway’s complaint did not allege a group boycott of a sort that would constitute a per se violation of the antitrust laws, Eastway I at 251 n. 5. Finally, the court found that East-way could not prevail by proving the existence of a group boycott that violated the rule of reason, because 1) even if there had been a conspiracy between the City and the CPC, “such action could not possibly have injured competition. Indeed, Eastway does not even allege anti-competitive effect,” Eastway I at 251; and 2) “neither the City nor CPC stood to gain from inhibition of competition among general contractors,” id.
On the antitrust standing issue, the Court of Appeals appears, by citing and quoting Supreme Court decisions on antitrust standing, to be suggesting that East-way lacks such standing. But
Associated General Contractors of California v. California State Council of Carpenters,
In addition, the very complexity of the law on antitrust standing makes it difficult to say with assurance that any plaintiff’s claim to have standing is obviously frivolous. One district court complained: “We must confess at the outset that we find antitrust standing cases more than a little confusing and certainly beyond our powers of reconciliation.”
Wilson v. Ringsby Truck Lines,
Regarding the question whether East-way’s complaint had made out a
per se
violation of the antitrust laws, the Court of Appeals listed the cases relied upon by the plaintiffs and then commented in a footnote: “In those and other
per se
unlawful group boycott cases, the excluded plaintiff was in competition with some or all of the defendants. The same certainly cannot be said here; neither the City nor CPC competes in any way with any [plaintiff].”
Eastway I
at 251 n. 5. The Second Circuit’s characterization of the three cases it listed by name,
Silver v. The New York Stock Exchange,
Legal scholаrs have long been troubled by the question of when a group boycott constitutes a per se violation of the antitrust laws as opposed to simply being subject to the “rule of reason.” See Bauer, Per Se Illegality of Concerted Refusals to Deal: A Rule Ripe for Reexamination, 79 Colum.L.Rev. 685 (1979). The Court of Appeals’ analysis distinguishing between per se and non -per se group boycotts on the basis of the existence or nonexistence of competition between the plaintiff and the defendants represents a logical attempt to devise simple rules to determine whether claims state a per se cause of action. But it does not represent any fully settled law.
Several circuits have attempted to devise tests for determining the extent of the
per se
rule. As one commentator has noted, though, “[while] several lower courts have held that the per se rule applies only to
certain
group boycotts, ... Supreme Court decisions do not contain any such limitations.” Bauer,
supra,
79 Colum.L.Rev. at 694 (emphasis in original). The Supreme Court has itself noted the attempts by various courts and commentators to provide a workable definition of a group boycott that constitutes a
per se
violation, and concluded: “We express no opinion, however, as to the merit of any of these definitions.”
St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co. v. Barry,
One Supreme Court decision provides at least some support for the opposite proposition, namely, that a group boycott can constitute a
per se
violation even when the plaintiff cоmpetes with none of the defendants. In
Kiefer-Stewart Co. v. Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc.,
Although it is unclear whether the
Kiefer-Stewart
Court really intended an alternative holding based on a group boycott theory, the case has subsequently been cited as a group boycott case. The Supreme Court has itself cited
Kiefer-Stewart
as a group boycott case in several later group boycott decisions, including
Klor’s v. Broadway-Hale Stores,
Whether or not a concerted refusal to deal is an illegal
per se
group boycott is, in sum, often difficult to say. As one court recently put it, “A concerted refusal to deal is generally subject to a rule of
per se
illegality____ However, a confusing array of exceptions and qualifications to this rule have developed, and case law in this area is unsettled.”
Cha-Car, Inc. v. Calder Race Course, Inc.,
Even if the alleged conspiracy did not constitute an illegal boycott
per se,
it might still have been found illegal under the rule of reason. The Second Circuit found to be frivolous even Eastway's claim that the boycott was illegal under the rule of reason, because the “conspiracy could not possibly have injured competition. Indeed, Eastway does not even allege anti-competitive effect.”
Eastway I
at 251. The Second Circuit’s statement that the conspiracy
could not
have affected competition might be subject to factual dispute; nothing in the record indicates that anticompetitive effect was inconceivable. Certainly, the defendants’ actions decreased the number of persons who could bid on rehabilitation projects. Furthermore, that Eastway’s complaint did not allege anti-competitive effect is immaterial. All a pleading need do, even in antitrust cases, is give notice of the nature of the claim to the opposing side.
See George C. Frey Ready-Mixed Concrete, Inc. v. Pine Hill Concrete Mix Corp.,
Finally, although Eastway did not have to allege anticompetitive effect, it in fact did so, although not in its complaint. Paragraph six of Plaintiffs’ Statement Pursuant to Local Rule 3(g) claims “[t]hat the defendants' endeavors do have a substantial effect upon competitive conditions within the construction industry in relation to rehabilitation in the metropolitan New York area.”
The Court of Appeals also found the rule of reason claim to be frivolous for a second reason, that “neither the City nor CPC stood to gain from inhibition of competition among general contractors.” Eastway I at *581 251. The Court of Appeals’ position appears to be that unless the conspirators intended to improve their position at the expense of the victim of the conspiracy, the victim cannot prevail. But as other courts dealing with similar situations have noted, whether the conspirators intended to improve their positions at the victim’s expense is only one of many factors to be considered in a rule of reason analysis. As one court stated:
The motive which underlies a challenged restraint is but one element in the examination for reasonableness____ Additionally, we should consider the relative positive and negative effects, the power of the parties in the markets they serve, and whether other less restrictive means could be employed to achieve the same desired ends.
Hennessey v. National Collegiate Athletic Association,
For all of the above reasons, even though we are bound by the Court of Appeals' characterization of frivolousness, we cannot say that Eastway’s antitrust claim was more than marginally frivolous. Many competent attorneys might have believed the claim viable.
(b) The due process claim.
The Court of Appeals found East-way’s due process claim frivolous for two reasons, Eastway I at 249-250. First, the court found that Eastway had not made out a claim for deprivation of “property” without due process of law because East-way’s interest in bidding on contracts did not rise to the level of a constitutionally protected, state-created property interest. Second, the court found that even if East-way had a property right, the state court Article 78 proceeding had provided East-way with sufficient process to protect East-way’s rights.
The Second Circuit emphasized that because Eastway had no entitlement to receive future contracts with the City, it possessed no protective property interest. But the fourteenth amendment protects liberty interests as well as property interests, and several cases have held that government contractors may have a liberty interest in being allowed to bid for new contracts. As one court put it:
One who has been dealing with the government on an ongoing basis may not be blacklisted, whether by suspension or debarment, without being afforded procedural safeguards including notice of the charges, an opportunity to rebut those charges, and under most circumstances, a hearing____ While the deprivation of the right to bid on government contracts is not a property interest ... the bidder’s liberty interest is affected when that denial is based on charges of fraud and dishonesty.
Transco Security Inc. of Ohio v. Freeman,
In addition, a recent Third Circuit case has held that government contractors do have a property right to bid on state contracts.
Berlanti v. Bodman,
By stating that Eastway was in any event afforded sufficient due process by the Article 78 proceeding, the Second Circuit was in effect ruling that Eastway was not entitled to a predeprivation hearing. Entitlement to a predeprivation hearing is controlled by the balancing test of
Mathews v. Eldridge,
One final point in the Court of Appeals’ Eastway I opinion deserves mention. In explaining its decision to award attorney’s fees under section 1988, the court relied upon Eastway’s prior unsuccessful state litigation, commеnting:
[W]e find it particularly noteworthy that Eastway had already challenged the City’s policy in the state courts, and had been unsuccessful. These proceedings should at least have put it on notice of the possiblity that its adversary might be awarded counsel fees. See Carrion v. Yeshiva University,535 F.2d 722 , 728 (2d Cir.1976) (upholding an award of attorney’s fees to successful defendant in Title VII action, where plaintiff had brought similar claims in a state proceeding and had lost).
Eastway I at 252. The question of what Eastway should have learned from its setback in the state court is an interesting one, reminiscent of the dispute about whether the glass is half full or half empty. Eastway’s loss on its state law claim in the Appellate Division certainly put it on notice that its federal claim might fail as well. But its successful motion for summary judgment in the New York Supreme Court also gave Eastway reason to believe that its case had some merit. This, in turn, gave Eastway some grounds to believe that it would not be sanctioned, especially considering Eastway I’s definition of “frivolousness” as a case where “it is patently clear that a claim has absolutely no chance of success,” Eastway I at 254. The Carrion case relied upon in Eastway I is arguably distinguishable, because plaintiff's state court action in Carrion had failed at both trial and appellate levels.
For all the above reasons, even though it is bound by the Second Circuit’s characterization of frivolousness, this court cannot say that Eastway’s due process claim was extremely frivolous. Many competent lawyers might have believed this claim to be viable.
*583 (3) Need of Lawyer and Client for Punishment.
Plaintiffs’ lead counsel, James LaRossa, is a leading member of the bar. He has been practicing law for nearly 30 years, including 3 years spent as an Assistant United States Attorney in this district. He is admitted to practicе before the United States Supreme Court and several Circuit Courts of Appeal. He has lectured numerous times at PLI seminars, state trial lawyer association conferences and at Harvard Law School. He has published articles of interest to the bar in the areas of evidence and white collar crime and has received the American Academy of Achievement Award as Outstanding Lawyer of the Year and the B’nai Brith National Medal of Honor. He has tried numerous difficult cases in this court and is well respected by the Bench of this district. Such an attorney needs no punishment to induce him to act ethically. Nor is there any showing that plaintiffs have a history of abusing the courts that would support a severe sanction.
(4) Ability to Pay and Need for Compensation.
Neither plaintiffs not plaintiffs’ counsel have requested a hearing to present evidence of financial distress. Accordingly, their fiscal status will not be taken into account at this time. Should they wish to do so at a later time, they may make a motion to reconsider the sanction because of inability to pay. See Oliveri v. Thompson, CV-83-3572 (E.D.N.Y. Nov. 13, 1985) (conditional award of attorney’s fees of $51,000, pending a later hearing to determine counsel’s ability to pay). There appears to be no reason to believe that this suit has unduly burdened the City or its huge Corporation Counsel’s office.
(5) Chilling This Type of Litigation.
Suits of this kind should not be kept out of court by threats of sanctions except in the clearest case of frivolousness. What lies below the surface in real estate litigation of this type against the City is the suspicion of widespread cronyism, favoritism and corruption. Contributions of real estate people to political campaigns are of major importance in New York City and State. Political connections are worth many millions of dollars in city contracts and other favors. There is no continuing method by which the criminal law, political processes or even the press can police this dangerously explosive combination of politics, money and power. See, e.g., Key Officials Call Scandal Undetectable, N.Y. Times, May 12, 1986, at Bl, col. 1; Bronx Development Official Testifies Before Grand Jury, id., May 10, 1986, at 31, col. 5; U.S. Indictment Says a City Aide Got Real-Estate Holding as Bribe, id., May 8, 1986, at A1, col. 2; City Ends Contract for Queens Tower, id., May 14, 1986, at B2, col. 3; Eastway I at 246.
This litigation, had it been permitted to go forward, might have revealed unseemly aspects of the City’s real estate transactions, an area long shadowed by charges of favoritism and politicization. Lurking behind the allegations in this suit were implications of serious misconduct by the City in granting favored — and unfavored — treatment. Under such conditions it becomes dangerous to throttle any avenue to the courts for vindication of rights of private real estate developers.
C. Allocation of Award of Attorney’s Fees
The Second Circuit’s mandate to this court on remand was to award attorney’s fees for the due process claim against the plaintiffs alone under section 1988, and to award attorney’s fees for the antitrust claim against the plaintiffs or their counsel or both under Rule 11.
Eastway I
at 254;
cf. Donaldson v. Clark,
If this court were to now impose any attorney’s fees against plaintiffs’ counsel under Rule 11, it would be necessary to allocate the time spent by the City’s counsel between the due process claim and the antitrust claim to ensure that client and counsel are each sanсtioned the proper *584 amount. If, on the other hand, the court does not impose any sanctions on plaintiffs’ counsel, allocation between causes of action will be unnecessary because the entire sanction can simply be imposed on the client. As a cursory examination of Mr. Barish’s and Mr. Woods’ time records indicates, and as the City conceded at oral argument, it would be difficult if not impossible to allocate their hours between the two causes of action. The court therefore concludes that, in the interests of efficiency, fairness and policy, the Rule 11 sanctions, as well as section 1988 sanctions, should be imposed against the plaintiffs alone.
IV. CONCLUSION
In accord with the mandate of the Court of Appeals, attorney’s fees must be awarded in this case. Heavy sanctions would be unfair because Eastway I is a case of first impression; there was no reason for plaintiffs or their counsel to have predicted the objective standard Rule 11 ruling of the Court of Appeals. In addition, because the case was brought in good faith, because of the otherwise exemplary conduct of plaintiffs’ counsel, because the pleading was only marginally frivolous, and for other reasons set forth in this opinion, attorney’s fees in the amount of $1,000, jointly and severally, against plaintiffs Eastway Construction Corporation, Jaffee, Kanarek, and Jacobs, are sufficiently punitive.
This award is considerable in light of the nominal $100 sanctions imposed by other courts under similar circumstances. Courts must take care not to use their almost unlimited Rule 11 powers to punish in a vindictive and excessively harsh manner.
So ordered.
