GREATER LOS ANGELES COUNCIL ON DEAFNESS; Marcella M. Meyer;
Sue Gottfried, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
COMMUNITY TELEVISION OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA; James L.
Loper; William J. Lamb; U.S. Dept. of Health, Education &
Welfare; Federal Communications Commission; Corporation
for Public Broadcasting; Public Broadcasting Service;
California Public Broadcasting-Commission, Defendants-Appellees.
GREATER LOS ANGELES COUNCIL ON DEAFNESS, INCORPORATED, a
California nonprofit corporation; Marcella M. Meyer and Sue
Gottfried, for themselves & in behalf of all others
similarly situated, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
COMMUNITY TELEVISION OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA, doing business
as KCET, Defendant,
and
Federal Communications Commission; Department of Education,
and Department of Health & Human Services,
Defendants-Appellants.
Nos. 86-5525, 86-5559.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted Feb. 3, 1987.
Decided March 18, 1987.
Stanley Fleishman, Los Angeles, Cal., for plaintiffs-appellees.
Frank Rosenfeld, Washington, D.C., for defendants-appellants.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Central District of California.
Before SNEED, FARRIS and NOONAN, Circuit Judges.
FARRIS, Circuit Judge:
INTRODUCTION
The Government defendants--the Department of Education, the Federal Communications Commission, the Department of Health and Human Services, and the Attorney General--appeal an award of $484,901.50 in attorney's fees to plaintiffs' counsel under provisions of the Rehabilitation Act and the Equal Access to Justice Act. We agree with the district court that the plaintiffs "prevailed" for the purposes of attorney's fees, but the award must be reduced to reflect the limited success that plaintiffs achieved in this litigation.BACKGROUND
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act requires that programs receiving federal funds not exclude any "otherwise qualified handicapped individual." 29 U.S.C. Sec. 794. In March 1978, Abraham Gottfried, attorney for plaintiffs, filed an administrative complaint with HEW, alleging that public television station KCET in Los Angeles was violating Section 504 by making only a small number of its programs accessible to hearing impaired viewers. HEW replied that it could not address the complaint until its policy on applying Section 504 to public broadcasting could be clarified.
In December 1978, after further complaints brought no action from HEW, Gottfried filed a class action suit on behalf of two deaf persons and the Greater Los Angeles Council on Deafness,1 alleging that KCET had violated Section 504 by not providing open captions--subtitles visible to all viewers--for its programs. The suit asked that the FCC be required to promulgate and enforce regulations to implement Section 504 in public broadcasting and that HEW deny federal funds to stations or broadcasting groups not complying with Section 504.
In October 1979, HEW adopted the policy that Section 504 applied to public broadcasting, but what that policy would require was not established. HEW asked the trial court to remand the case to the agency for administrative rulemaking. The court gave HEW until November 17, 1980, to establish these compliance standards. In May 1980, however, the new Department of Education took over from HEW the responsibility for implementing Section 504. In 1981, the Department of Education published its intent to promulgate regulations applying Section 504 to public broadcasting, but asked for and received several continuances from the trial court.
In August 1981, the Department of Education advised the court that it had decided not to adopt regulations about Section 504 after all. Instead, it would deal with the problem through adjudication. In November 1981, the trial court entered judgment against the Government. The trial court awarded plaintiffs attorneys's fees of $432,285, plus costs of $3,714, for a total of $435,999.
In February 1982, the Department of Education adjudicated Gottfried's administrative complaint filed in 1978. It concluded that Section 504 required KCET to transmit with closed captions any programs it received from the Department with closed captions.
We reversed on the merits, see Greater Los Angeles Council on Deafness v. Community Television of So. California,
DISCUSSION
I. "PREVAILING" IN THE LITIGATION
Defendants argue that the district court erred in ruling that plaintiffs were a "prevailing" party for the purpose of receiving attorney's fees under the Rehabilitation Act. When, as here, a plaintiff does not win a final judgment on the merits, a two-part test determines whether that plaintiff nonetheless "prevailed" for the purpose of receiving attorney's fees. See California Ass'n of the Physically Handicapped v. FCC,
The record shows that plaintiffs' lawsuit against the Government defendants had three main goals: (1) forcing HEW (later the Department of Education) to promulgate regulations that would enforce Section 504 by requiring public broadcasters to use "captions" (open captions) for all programs, (2) forcing the FCC to require its licensees to follow such regulations requiring open captions, and (3) preventing HEW from granting funds to broadcasters not complying with section 504. The plaintiffs clearly won on all three issues at trial, but just as clearly lost on all three issues on appeal.
On remand, however, the district court ruled that plaintiffs had achieved two more limited goals of their litigation. One goal was "establishing that broadcasters have a duty to comply with Sec. 504 of the Rehabilitation Act." HEW had not decided, at the time Gottfried filed his administrative complaint with HEW in 1978, whether Section 504 applied to public broadcasters receiving federal funds. Defendants argue that plaintiffs achieved this goal in October 1979, when HEW stated formally that Section 504 applied to public broadcasters receiving federal funds, and that they should receive no fees for pursuing the litigation past this point.
We understand but reject the Government's argument. HEW's 1979 policy statement did not clarify what specific obligations Section 504 placed on broadcasters. HEW regulations enforcing Section 504 had been in place since 1977. See 45 C.F.R. Part 84. But how those regulations were to be applied to public television was not clear. As the district court found, one of the plaintiffs' goals in the litigation had been an injunction requiring HEW "to establish the parameters of public television's obligation to the hearing impaired." There was no clear error in the district court's conclusion that this goal was achieved when the Department of Education adjudicated Gottfried's administrative complaint in 1982. The Department's decision required KCET, a public television station, to transmit with closed captions any programs received from the Department with closed captions. The Department's decision was not a gratuitous act, but was based on law, therefore satisfying the second test of California Ass'n v. FCC,
The district court found that a second goal achieved "[a]s a result of the litigation" was that "the federal government established a policy requiring public television stations to comply with Sec. 504 and its implementing regulations." (Emphasis in original.) This "second" goal essentially duplicates the first one, referring again to the Department of Education's 1982 adjudication of Gottfried's complaint. The "implementing regulations" are the 1977 HEW regulations enforcing Section 504. As we indicated above, the Department interpreted the regulations to require broadcasters to transmit with closed captions those programs received from the Department with closed captions. Plaintiffs had sought to force HEW (and later the Department of Education) to promulgate new regulations, but on this issue they lost completely. No new "implementing regulations" were promulgated, and we held that enforcing Section 504 through adjudication rather than regulations was within the discretion of the Department. GLACD v. Community Television,
II. THE "LODESTAR" AMOUNTS
The starting point for determining an award of attorney's fees is the so-called "lodestar" amount, the hours "reasonably expended" on the litigation times a reasonable hourly rate. Hensley v. Eckerhart,
The district court did not abuse its discretion in computing the "lodestar" amounts. In 1982, the court determined that plaintiffs' attorneys had spent 1,646.8 hours on legal work from 1978-82. This figure was less than the 2,825.5 hours claimed by plaintiffs' attorneys, but 10% more than hours that the Government claims plaintiffs' attorneys had worked on the case. The court reasonably disallowed time spent on publicity, lobbying, and unrelated claims, then used the 10% upward adjustment to account for time worked but not written down by the attorneys. The "lodestar" figure was computed by multiplying these hours times a rate of $175 per hour for attorney Gottfried's time. The court found that he was a skillful, experienced attorney and that this rate was in line with similarly skilled attorneys handling civil rights cases in southern California. The abilities of an attorney appearing before the district court and the prevailing local rates are factual matters best left to the district court. We find no abuse of discretion in the district court's computation of a lodestar amount of $288,190 for fees from 1978 through 1982.
The court's computation of fees for work done from 1982 through 1985 by attorneys Gottfried and Fleishman also shows no abuse of discretion. The court reasonably determined that Gottfried worked 47 hours at a rate of $200 per hour and that Fleishman worked 171.75 hours at $230 per hour. This lodestar amount is $48,902.50.
III. THE MULTIPLIER
In computing the award for work done from 1978-82, the district court used a "multiplier" of 1.5 to enhance the lodestar amount. The multiplier was justified, the court said in its 1985 order, (1) because of the contingent nature of the case, and (2) because of the delay in payment of fees from November 1978 until February 12, 1982, when the award was first made. In its 1982 order, the court justified the 1.5 multiplier differently, mentioning other factors in addition to contingency and delay in payment: the novelty and difficulty of the issues, the skill of counsel, the sometimes severe time limitations, and the "massive" results obtained. Clearly the results obtained are no longer massive. Moreover, the novelty and difficulty of issues are inappropriate factors to use in enhancing a fee award, because they are already accounted for in the rate used to compute the lodestar amount. See Blum v. Stenson,
The court used no multiplier to enhance the lodestar amount of $48,902.50 for work done from 1982-85. The total lodestar amount for work done from 1978-85 is therefore $337,092.50.
IV. RELATION OF FEE AWARD TO DEGREE OF SUCCESS
As we have held, the district court did not err in finding that the plaintiffs "prevailed" in this litigation. Nor were the rates and hours excessive, and we have eliminated the multiplier. That does not end our review of the court's fee award, however. We must also determine whether the amount of fees awarded was reasonably related to the limited success plaintiffs obtained. See Hensley v. Eckerhart,
The district court failed to weigh adequately this teaching of Hensley in making its second fee award to plaintiffs. The result obtained by plaintiffs was much less than they sought. Instead of the "massive relief" they achieved at trial, they were left after the appeal with none of the affirmative remedies they had won. Their success was significant, but very limited. We hold that it was patently excessive for the district court to reinstate after the appeal the same full fee award it made after trial. As a matter of law, the award must be reduced to match the limited extent of plaintiffs' success. Because the factual record is complete, we may make this reduction ourselves rather than remand again to the district court.
The Supreme Court offers two different approaches for setting reasonable fees in cases where a plaintiff's success is limited. Where a suit includes separable legal claims, fees may be awarded only for work on claims that were successful. To do this, a "district court may attempt to identify specific hours that should be eliminated." Hensley,
To measure the extent of plaintiffs' success, we do not use a mathematical ratio of winning claims to losing claims, an approach criticized in Hensley. See
V. LITIGATING IN BAD FAITH
The district court's alternative ground for awarding full attorney's fees is that the Government litigated in bad faith. We review the court's finding of bad faith for clear error. In re Itel Securities Litigation,
Nothing in the record supports a finding of bad faith. We rejected plaintiffs' similar argument on appeal. Plaintiffs argued that the Department of Education should be "estopped from abandoning its rulemaking efforts since the litigation had been delayed on the Government's representation that regulations were being prepared." GLACD v. Community Television,
VI. FEES ON APPEAL
Plaintiffs request fees for this appeal. Even though we have reduced the fee award they received from the district court, plaintiffs are entitled to fees on this appeal because they were a "prevailing party" in the underlying litigation. Cf. Jensen v. City of San Jose,
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART.
Notes
The Council was later denied standing
The plaintiffs filed a cross-appeal, but withdrew it in light of Library of Congress v. Shaw, --- U.S. ----,
This issue is now squarely before the Supreme Court in Pennsylvania v. Delaware Valley Citizens' Council for Clean Air, --- U.S. ----,
