An 18-year-old girl named Angela Enoch managed to commit suicide even though she was on 24-hour suicide watch at Wisconsin’s prison for women, the Taycheedah Correctional Institution. Her Estate and her minor sisters, Ashley and Amber Enoch, sued a numbеr of correctional officers and staff, alleging violations of her civil rights. After a year of contentious litigatiоn, the plaintiffs accepted the defendants’ offer of judgment, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 68. The offer was for $635,000, exclusive of attorney fees—a fairly spectacular sum in the realm of prison-related litigation. Despite the hefty judgment, the plaintiffs’ request for attorney fees and costs was slashed by two-thirds because, the district judgе said, they recovered only 12 /£ percent of the requested relief in their complaint, which was $5 million for the Estate plus $5 million for the minors.
We review an award of attorney fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 for an abuse of discretion.
Sheehan v. Donlen Corp.,
Because the State’s offer of judgment was exclusive оf attorney fees (a regrettable situation, leading, of course, to more litigation), the plaintiffs filed a motion for attorney fees. Their request was for $328,740.42. The defendants argued that an award of around $220,000 in fees and costs was morе appropriate. The judge, however, awarded $100,000 to the plaintiffs, with $1,500 as an appropriate amount tо be taxed as fees for the guardian ad litem.
[ujltimately, given that plaintiffs recovered only a small fraction of the damages they were seeking, the feе award should be significantly less than the total amount requested.
The court went wrong when it likened this case to
Farrar. Farrar,
and our cases which follow its reasoning, deal with awards to prevailing parties who receive only nominal damages. Joseph Farrar asked for $17 million and was awarded $1. Because of the nominal award, the Court upheld the denial of fees altogether. In
Briggs v. Marshall,
But here, even though the complaint set out an absurd claim for damages, that should nоt be used against plaintiffs who obtained a significant judgment. In cases in which the recovery is not merely nominal—and a $635,000 award in prison litigation can, by no stretéh of the imagination, be considered nominal—the Farrar analysis is not relevant. In cases which involve more than a nominal award, we have rejected the notion that the fee award should be reduсed because the damages were smaller than a plaintiff originally sought or that the fee award might, in fact, be more than the plaintiffs recovery. For instance, we upheld an award of $72,563 in attorney fees when the jury verdict was $30,000:
This court has repeatedly rejected the notion that the fees must be calculated proportionally tо damages. The principle applies equally to purported disproportionality between the relief requested and that received.
Sheehan,
We therefore reverse the district court’s order and remand the case for a proper calculation of the award. That said, we also urge the parties to attempt to settlе the matter so that the tail can stop wagging the dog. As the Court stated in
Hensley,
“Ideally, of course, litigants will settle the amount of a fee.”
But if no settlement is reached, the district court must consider the lodestar figure—“the number of hours reasonably expended on the litigation multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate.”
Hensley,
at 433,
Accordingly, the decision of the district court is Reversed and the case is Remanded for a calculation of attorney fees and costs. Circuit Rule 36 shall apply on remand.
