Lead Opinion
Dеfendant-appellant Primary Residential Mortgage, Inc. (“PRMI”) appeals from the district court’s order awarding plaintiff-appellee Yvonne Flitton $367,689.00 in attorney’s fees as a prevailing party in a Title VII lawsuit. Ms. Flitton cross-appeals from the same order, challenging the district court’s conclusion that it lacked jurisdiction to award her appellate attorney’s fees because she failed to first request such fees in this court. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and AFFIRM.
I. BACKGROUND
In 2003, Ms. Flitton filed suit against PRMI alleging, inter alia, discriminatory and retaliatory discharge in violation of Title VII, and seeking both compensatory and punitive damagеs for these alleged violations. At the close of Ms. Flitton’s case, the district court partially granted PRMI’s motion for judgment as a matter of law (“JMOL”) and dismissed Ms. Flit-ton’s discrimination and punitive damages claims. The court, however, allowed Ms. Flitton’s retaliation claim to go to the jury, which returned a verdict in her favor and awarded her $50,000 in emotional distress damages. The district court then granted PRMI’s renewed motion for JMOL, vacated the jury’s verdict, and entered judg
On appeal, this court reversed the district court’s decisions, remanded the case for a new trial on Ms. Flitton’s discrimination and punitive damages claims, and reinstated the jury’s vеrdict on Ms. Flitton’s retaliation claim. Ms. Flitton did not ask, and has never asked, this court to award her appellate attorney’s fees.
On remand, the second trial was divided into a jury trial portion for Ms. Flitton’s discrimination and punitive damages claims and a bench trial portion to determine whether she was entitled to, and the amount of, front pay and back pay damages on her retaliation claim. The jury found in favor of PRMI on Ms. Flitton’s discrimination and punitive damages claims, and the district court awarded her $354,703.05 in back pay based on the first jury’s verdict in her favor.
Ms. Flitton then sought attorney’s fees for her counsel’s work in the first trial, the appeal to this court, and the second trial. After conducting a thorough review of the parties’ submissions and arguments relating to Ms. Flitton’s fees, the district court ultimately awarded her $367,689.00 in fees. In explaining the fee amount, the district court rejected PRMI’s contention that Ms. Flitton was not entitled to any fees related to the second trial, or, in the alternative, that the fee amount should be reduced to reflect Ms. Flitton’s “limited” success on her claims. The court also rejected Ms. Flitton’s argument that she was entitled to appellate fees, instead concluding that it lacked jurisdiction to order such an award because Ms. Flitton had never requested fees from this court. Finally, in calculating the precise amount of the fee, the court refused to include fees that it found were unreasonably high or excessive, or were for clerical work, background research, or were supported by vague billing descriptions. PRMI now appeals the amount of the award and Ms. Flitton cross-appeals, claiming the district court erroneously concluded that it lacked jurisdiction to award her appellate fees.
II. DISCUSSION
In Title VII cases, a district court, “in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party ... a reasonable attоrney’s fee.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(k). Thus, to obtain attorney’s fees, “a claimant must prove two elements: (1) that the claimant was the ‘prevailing party’ in the proceeding; and (2) that the claimant’s fee request is ‘reasonable.’ ” Robinson v. City of Edmond,
“The most useful starting point for determining the amount of a reasonable fee is the number of hours reasonably expended on the litigation multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate.” Hensley v. Eckerhart,
A. The District Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion by Awarding Ms. Flitton Fees for the Second Jury Trial
PRMI first argues that the district court should not haye awarded Ms. Flitton any fees associated with her counsel’s work on the second jury trial because that trial resulted in a “complete defense verdict,” and the discrimination and punitive damages claims litigated therein are completely unrelated to Ms. Flitton’s successful retaliation claim. “Where the plaintiff has failed to prevail on a claim that is distinct in all respects from his successful claims, the hours spent on the unsuccessful claim should be excluded in considering the amount of a reasonable fee.” Id. at 440,
The district court concluded that Ms. Flitton’s successful retaliation claim and her unsuccessful discrimination and punitive damages claims were interrelated. We agree. As thе district court pointed out, in the second jury trial Ms. Flitton pursued punitive damages for the retaliation claim on which she had obtained a jury verdict in the first trial. In these circumstances, it is difficult to distinguish between the time Ms. Flitton’s attorneys spent on the retaliation claim generally and the time they spent on her claim for punitive damages based on PRMI’s unlawful retaliation. See Hensley,
B. The District Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion by Refusing to Reduce Ms. Flitton’s Fee Award Based on Her Degree of Success
PRMI also contends that the district court erred by not reducing Ms. Flit-ton’s fee award based on her degree of overall success in this lawsuit. The Supreme Court has instructed that in calculating a reasonable fee award, “the most critical factor is the degree of success obtained.” Id. at 436,
PRMI contends that because Ms. Flitton succeeded on only one out of five causes of action listed in her initial complaint and received only $354,703.05 in total damages out of the $27,902,065.58 she sought, she obtainеd a limited degree of overall success and her fee award should have been reduced accordingly. Indeed, PRMI repeatedly emphasizes that Ms. Flitton ultimately received only about one percent of the total damages she sought.
We have rejected the mechanical approach to assessing a plaintiffs degree of overall success that PRMI endorses. In Jane L., we reversed a district court’s decision to reduce the lodestar by seventy-five percent based on the plaintiffs success on only two out of eight claims. Jane L.,
Here, the district court rejected PRMI’s request for a reduction of the fee award based on Ms. Flitton’s level of success, concluding that Ms. Flitton “obtained substantial success from the first jury trial,” and that “she obtained a substantial amount of damages.” Flitton v. Primary Residential Mortgage, Inc., No. 2:03-CV-481-DAK,
C. The District Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion by Refusing to Reduce Ms. Flitton’s Fee Award Based on Her Attorneys’ Billing Entries
PRMI next argues that the district court erred by not reducing Ms. Flitton’s fee award based on her attorneys’ allegedly vague and nondescript billing entries. “Plaintiffs’ burden^ in an apрlication for attorneys fees is to ‘prove and establish the reasonableness of each dollar, each hour, above zero.’ ” Jane L.,
Here, the district court conducted a thorough review of Ms. Flitton’s attorneys’ billing entries and reduced the fee award based on the inadequacy of eleven specific entries. Furthermore, the district court stated, “[w]hile the court does not believe that the entries of Plaintiffs counsel are ideal, it finds most of the entries adequately descriptive for purposes of reviewing the fee application.” Flitton,
D. The District Court Correctly Concluded that It Lacked Jurisdiction to Award Ms. Flitton Appeal-Related Fees
In her cross-appeal, Ms. Flitton argues that the district court erred by concluding that it lacked jurisdiction to award her appeal-related fees because she failed to first request those fees in this court. In Hoyt v. Robson Cos., Inc.,
In Crumpacker, we reaffirmed the Hoyt rule, stating that “appeal-related fees ... must generally be awarded by us.”
Ms. Flitton asks us to extend Crumpacker beyond interlocutory appeals. She contends that, after Crumpacker, all prevailing parties under Title VII are entitled, as a matter of law, to all appeal-related fees; therefore, requesting such
III. CONCLUSION ■
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the decision of the district court.
Notes
. We respectfully cannot agree with the dissent's contention that Hoyt can simply be disregarded by this subsequent panel. In Hoyt, we noted that "[tjhough we have addressed awards of appeal-related attorneys' fees pursuant to authorizing statutes, we have not previously confronted the jurisdictional requirements applicable in applying such fees.”
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I respectfully dissent from Section II.A of the majority opinion, in which the court holds that Ms. Flitton was appropriately awarded fees for the unsuccessful claims she raised in the second jury trial because these claims were interrelated to the successful claims she had pursued in the first jury trial. I disagree with this analysis and therefore would reverse and remand for the district court to impose an award excluding fees accrued during Ms. Flitton’s entirely unsuccessful second jury trial.
A fee award in a Title VII case is anchored in prevailing party status, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(k), which means that a plaintiff must succeed on at least some significant claim for relief to be entitled to attorney fees. See Hensley v. Eckerhart,
In the usual case, this interrelatedness rule is eminently sound. Where the time spent on interrelated claims is inherently separable, however, the application of this rule strikes me as both unnecessary аnd inconsistent with the purpose behind the statutory provision for fees.
I agree with the majority that the claims in this case are interrelated and, therefore, that Ms. Flitton should be compensated for all of the time her attorneys spent preparing for the first trial, even the time spent on the claims that ultimately turned out to be unsuccessful. In preparing for the first trial, Ms. Flitton’s attorneys worked on interrelated successful and unsuccessful claims, and it would be difficult to distinguish between the time spent on the successful retaliation claim and the time spent on the unsuccessful punitive damages and discrimination claims. Howevеr, I am not persuaded that Ms. Flitton should be further compensated for the completely unsuccessful pursuit of her punitive damages and discrimination claims on remand. Following our decision on appeal, Ms. Flitton began what was, in effect, a second lawsuit on the remanded claims— an action in which she did not prevail. The fact that these claims were interrelated to another claim on which she had previously succeeded in another proceeding is irrelevant, in my view, to the question of whether she should be awarded fees for the inherently separable fees incurred during this unsuccessful proсeeding. Under the circumstances of this case, I would hold that the district court abused its discretion by awarding fees for a proceeding in which Ms. Flitton was entirely unsuccessful.
I concur with the remainder of the majority’s opinion. I note in particular that, although I find persuasive Judge Gorsuch’s argument that the rule stated in Hoyt would be more appropriately treated as a procedural rule rather than a jurisdictional barrier, I agree with Judge Tacha that we are not free to ignore our treatment in Hoyt of this issue as a jurisdictional one. This issue may warrant further consideration by the en banc court, but this panel is currently bound by Hoyt’s holding that a district court lacks jurisdiction tо award appellate fees in this type of case.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I am in full agreement with the bulk of the court’s thoughtful opinion. My disagreement is confined to the holding in Section II.D, where the court affirms the district court’s determination that it lacked jurisdiction over Ms. Flitton’s request for appellate attorney fees. Respectfully, I would hold that the district court possessed jurisdiction over Ms. Flitton’s fee request and so would reverse its judgment.
Facts
The critical facts are these. Ms. Flitton brought claims for discrimination and retaliation under Title VII. The district court granted judgment as a matter of law (JMOL) against Ms. Flitton on her discrimination claim before the conclusion of trial but at the same time allowed her retaliation claim to go to the jury. After the jury found for Ms. Flitton and awarded $50,000 in damages on her retaliation claim, the district court reversed course, however, and decided to grant JMOL against Ms. Flitton on that claim, too. Ms. Flitton appealed and we reversed the district court’s JMOL decisions on both the discrimination and retaliation claims. We also reversed its JMOL decision that she wasn’t entitled to punitive damages as a matter of law. But the upshot of our
The Jurisdictional Misnomer
The court today agrees with and affirms the district court’s jurisdictional holding. But how can this be so? How did the district court lack jurisdiction to award fees associated with the appeal that led to the restoration of Ms. Flitton’s claims and her eventual partial success on remand? The terms of Title VII don’t appear to compel such a result. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(k) (instructing simply that “the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party ... a reasonable attorney’s fee”). And, to make the assessment of a reasonable fee, courts traditionally wait until the end of the case, when the dust has settled and they can sensibly assess the “results obtained” and the degree of success achieved by the plaintiff. Hensley v. Eckerhart,
The district court and this court submit that Hoyt v. Robson Cos.,
To be sure, Hoyt uses the word “jurisdiction[al]” to describe the nature of its holding, though it does so in passing and without explanation. See
From all this, it seems plain that, if any problem lurks here, it can’t be a jurisdictional one. Congress’s statute does not deprive the district court of authority to issue an award of appellate fees. To the contrary, Title VII’s very point is to entitle prevailing civil rights plaintiffs to their reasonable attorney fees. It is not for us to undo that legislative judgment by erecting new and dubious faux-jurisdictional hurdles to recovery. Because the district court erred in holding itself without jurisdiction to award fees, I would reverse and respectfully cannot join Section II.D. of the majority’s opinion today.
From Jurisdiction to Claims Processing
Recognizing that the district court’s holding that it lacked jurisdiction is in error, one might try to re-eonceive its decision as resting on the claims processing rule that appellate fees should be awarded by the court of appeals, not the district court. Of course this isn’t the basis of the district court’s holding or the court’s decision today. But even if it were, it would be insufficient to sustain the denial of fees in this particular case.
When it comes to the questions whether and when a plaintiff may seek appellate fees from district courts, we’ve sent mixed messages. In Hoyt, the plaintiff won in the district court and successfully defended her judgment on appeal. Because of this, everything needed to determine whether plaintiff qualified as a prevailing party as well as the degree of her success and whether she achieved success on all of her claims, the critical Hensley inquiries, was before us. We were well equipped in these circumstances to deal with a fee request for work done in connection with the appeal and we held that, in these circumstances, appellate fee award applications are best directed to us. Yet, in Crumpacker v. Kansas Department of Human Resources,
Given the mixed méssages we’ve sent about the propriety of district courts awarding appellate fees, what is a plaintiff — or a district court — to do? Especially where, as here, the case falls somewhere in betweеn Hoyt and Crumpacker? Unlike Hoyt, the appeal in this case didn’t come at the end of all trial court proceedings, when all the information necessary to undertake the Hensley inquiries was before us. In Ms. Flitton’s appeal, there’s simply no way we could’ve awarded fees; too much remained to be done on remand before anyone could know what degree of success she would ultimately obtain. But unlike Crumpacker, the appeal in this case did resolve at least one Hensley question: it made clear that Ms. Flitton was a prevailing party by reinstating the jury’s ver
While certain other circuits, like the Eighth and Eleventh, have adopted formal rules of court to alert potentially prevailing parties where to file their attorney fee claims, we haven’t. Perhaps we should. But in the absence of a clear claims processing rule or case law precedent controlling the plaintiffs’ circumstances, we should not strain to deny fees. Congress has directed the federal courts to calculate a fair award for the prevailing party in civil rights cases. It would be a “procedural contortion,” in defiance of that statutory mandate to deny a prevailing plaintiff her fees simply for failing to imagine in advance what administrative claims processing rule we might adopt. Little Rock Sch. Dist.,
Not only do we lack any precedent or rule requiring plaintiffs in Ms. Flitton’s circumstance to seek fees in the first instance from us. Nеither is it at all clear why we should want to adopt such a claims processing procedure. While Ms. Flitton’s appeal did answer the threshold Hensley inquiry, establishing her as a prevailing party, it left the question what claims she would ultimately succeed on, as well as the degree of success she’d ultimately achieve, undecided — discernable only after extensive further proceedings in the district court. In such circumstances (unlike those in Hoyt), a rule requiring a plaintiff to apply for appellate fees from us would be pointless. We could do no more than remand the fee matter, along with the merits, to the district court for rеsolution at the end of its proceedings. We could order, then, no more than what Ms. Flitton herself sought when she applied for fees at the conclusion of her case. The law does not normally require people to do pointless things — and surely it shouldn’t do so. Yet, requiring a plaintiff in Ms. Flitton’s shoes to file a piece of paper with us seeking fees at the time of her appeal could be no more than that: at best, a pointless exercise; at worst, a hidden trap to ensnare the unwary and deny them what Congress has said they should receive.
The court today worries that allowing a district court to award appellate fees in this case would risk “strip[ping] this court of its discretion to award appeal-related fees.” Maj. Op. at 1180. But the court’s concern seems to presume that this court has some rule absolutely forbidding district courts from considering appellate fees, which Crumpacker makes manifest we don’t. And its worry proves too much because it would require us not just to deny fees here but also to overrule Crumpacker, which we can’t. Besides, allowing the district court to assess fees in this case would hardly leave this court powerless: we always possess the power to review on appeal the reasonableness of any award the district court may authorize (indeed, in Crumpacker we held that we will review the district court’s award of appellate fees de novo,
From Section II.D, I respectfully dissent.
