The question we decide in this case is the proper standard for appellate review of a district court’s refusal to award attorneys’ fees to a civil rights plaintiff for the time spent in establishing the attorneys’ fees to which he is entitled for having prevailed on the civil rights claim itself.
The appellant in this case is a Chicago fireman who in 1975 was suspended for 29 days because he refused, in violation of a fire department regulation, to shave off his goatee. He brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, contending that the regulation was unconstitutional and that in any event he should have been given a hearing before being suspended. The district court rejected both contentions and dismissed the complaint. This court reversed. It held that the plaintiff was entitled to a hearing, but did not reach the issue whether the regulation was constitutional.
The plaintiff then moved the district court for an award of attorneys’ fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988, which allows the court, “in its discretion,” to award “a reasonable attorney’s fee” to “the prevailing party” in a section 1983 suit. The plaintiff asked for $41,000 in attorneys’ fees (all dollar figures in this opinion are rounded off to the nearest thousand). The district court cut him down to $25,000. The defendant appealed
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and this court reversed, holding that the plaintiff had prevailed on only one of his two claims and was entitled to attorneys’ fees only for the time spent on that claim.
The plaintiff then moved the district court to award him $10,000 in attorneys’ fees for time spent in litigating his original claim for attorneys’ fees. The district court refused to award any more fees, and this appeal followed.
Both the plaintiff and the defendant pose the issue as whether the plaintiff was “the prevailing party” in the litigation over the original claim for attorneys’ fees. The plaintiff claims that he was the prevailing party because, in the end, he was awarded $8,000. He goes further: in answer to a question from the bench at oral argument he stated that even if he had in the end been awarded an attorney’s fee of $1, he would be the prevailing party in the fees litigation and would therefore be entitled, by analogy to
Skoda v. Fontani,
Though there is some case support for this way of posing the question of fees for proving fees, see
Southeast Legal Defense Group v. Adams,
For rather obvious practical reasons we are loath to disturb a ruling by a district judge on a request for second-round attorneys’ fees. The consequence if we should reverse and remand for an award of additional fees is all too predictable: however little the plaintiff is awarded on remand he will move the district court to award him attorneys’ fees for the time spent in prosecuting this appeal, and if the district court denies his motion he will be back up here. Every civil rights litigation will be like a nest of Chinese boxes. The outside box is the litigation of the civil rights issue itself. Within it is the litigation over the fees incurred in the litigation over the merits— ordinarily a lesser litigation, as our metaphor implies, though in this case the stakes in each of the two rounds of fee litigation have been greater, at least in monetary terms, than the stakes in the original civil rights litigation. Within the initial fee litigation will be another litigation — usually a smaller one, here again a bigger one — over the attorneys’ fees incurred by the plaintiff in the initial fee litigation. And so on without necessary end.
The present case illustrates our concern. It began as we said in 1974. Without meaning to disparage the plaintiff’s civil rights claims — for he prevailed on one of them — we confess to some doubt whether a claim arising out of a fireman’s refusal to shave off his goatee in accordance with a fire department regulation whose constitutionality has since been established is the stuff out of which great constitutional cases are made. In any event, that litigation ended in 1976 with the payment of modest backpay to the plaintiff. The litigation had taken two years. Then the fees litigation began and is now in its sixth year.
*45 The $10,000 that the plaintiff is seeking in attorneys’ fees in this latest round represents a substantial expenditure of attorney time and effort. The cause of that expenditure is the extravagant fee claim with which the plaintiff started — $41,000, five times the fee that he ultimately received and that he was sufficiently happy with (or resigned to) not to appeal. Since the defendant did not appeal from that fee award either, it is likely that if the plaintiff had asked for $8,000 originally he would have gotten the entire amount without having to incur any additional attorneys’ fees. The plaintiff (realistically, his counsel) showed questionable judgment in asking for $41,000 in fees when he had prevailed on only one of his claims on the merits — and that the less important one, as it got him some back-pay but not the right to wear a goatee, which is after all what precipitated this lawsuit.
The plaintiff argues that unless he receives an award of fees for proving fees civil rights defendants will be encouraged to drag out the attorneys’ fees phase (or phases) of civil rights litigation in order to make the plaintiff’s victory on the merits a Pyrrhic one. See, e.g.,
Gagne v. Maher,
From this review of the history of the litigation it is clear that the district judge had discretion to deny the plaintiff’s second fee request in its entirety. “The exercise of discretion ... gives the district judge great leeway. If the fee claims are exorbitant or the time devoted to presenting them is unnecessarily high, the judge may refuse further compensation ... . ”
Gagne v. Maher, supra,
Three appeals in a case about a goatee are enough. Only in extraordinary circumstances will we disturb a district judge’s exercise of his discretion in awarding or denying fees for establishing fees. No extraordinary circumstances warrant such intervention here. The judgment is therefore
AFFIRMED.
