Gary HARRINGTON, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Robert DeVITO, Director of the Illinois Department of Mental
Health, Defendant-Appellant,
and
George W. Dunne, President of the Cook County Board of
Commissioners, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 80-2070.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued April 29, 1981.
Decided Aug. 10, 1981.
Karen Konieczny, Asst. Atty. Gen., Chicago, Ill., for defendant-appellant.
Sally Elson, Legal Assoc. Found., Chicago, Ill., John A. Dienner, III, Asst. State's Atty., Chicago, Ill., for defendants-appellees.
Before PELL and BAUER, Circuit Judges, and CAMPBELL, Senior District Judge.*
PELL, Circuit Judge.
Plaintiffs-appellees, pretrial detainees in need of mental health care, sued Illinois and Cook County officials under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging that the defendants failed to provide necessary mental health care in the Cook County Department of Corrections. The parties negotiated for several years under court supervision to resolve the acknowledged mental health care deficiencies. Ultimately, the parties settled the case by consent order.
On October 19, 1979, the district judge awarded the plaintiffs $25,000 in attorneys' fees pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988 finding that the plaintiffs had prevailed against all of the defendants. The court assessed the fee jointly and severally against Illinois and Cook County officials, but declined to apportion it at that time. Instead, the court instructed the defendants to attempt to allocate the fee themselves, but to return to court for allocation should they fail to reach an agreement.
The Illinois Department of Mental Health (Department, State, or Illinois) thereafter moved the court to determine the allocation contending that Illinois should not be required to pay any portion of the award. On June 24, 1980, the court ordered Cook County to pay 80%, and the State to pay 20%, of the fee award.
In its appeal of the allocation order, the State argues that the allocation of fees against the State constituted an abuse of discretion1 because the plaintiffs did not prevail against it, or alternatively, even if they did prevail against Illinois, special circumstances exist which render an award against the State unjust.
I.
Attorneys' fee awards under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 rest within the sound discretion of the trial court. Muscare v. Quinn,
The appellant concedes that the lack of formal judicial relief does not itself deprive the plaintiffs of prevailing party status. Attorneys' fees may be appropriate if the plaintiffs have vindicated their rights by settlement. Maher v. Gagne,
The first step, which requires that the lawsuit in some way have played a provocative role in obtaining relief, is a factual determination. Nadeau,
Even apart from these events, the Department of Mental Health agreed to perform certain limited obligations in the consent order itself. The State agreed, inter alia, to participate in (1) any reevaluations of the mental health team occurring pursuant to circumstances specified in the order, and (2) the resolution of disputes relating to space and equipment needs for mental health screening. The Department additionally agreed to file with the court, and to submit copies to plaintiffs' counsel, reports regarding the implementation of specific provisions of the order including Department reports made pursuant to its monitoring of the program under the grant agreement with the Health and Hospitals Governing Commission. The Department argues, however, that it was obligated under Illinois law to compile grant-in-aid monitoring reports in any event. While there may be an overlap between some of the obligations imposed by the consent agreement and the Department's existing legal duties, we view the evidence of the Department's participation as a whole in this case as supporting a conclusion that the Department did take certain steps to alleviate deficiencies in mental health treatment of pretrial detainees as a result of the plaintiffs' lawsuit. Especially because all of these actions followed soon after the institution of this lawsuit, it is not unreasonable to suppose that they were causally related to the lawsuit. As the court in Nadeau noted,
the chronological sequence of events (is) ... an important, although clearly not definitive factor, in determining whether or not defendant can be reasonably inferred to have guided his actions in response to plaintiff's lawsuit. This is particularly true where the evidence relevant to the causes of defendant's behavior is under defendant's control and is not easily available to plaintiff.
This case is unlike United Handicapped Federation v. Andre to the extent that the Andre plaintiffs prevailed only against local, and not federal, defendants. The federal defendants in that case took no part in ongoing negotiations and did not participate in the settlement stipulation.
The State argues that the Department "acted gratuitously and in good faith to assist in curing a serious problem." As the court in Nadeau v. Helgemoe admonished, however, the good faith of the defendant is irrelevant because the "key issue is the provocative role of the plaintiff's lawsuit, not the motivations of the defendant."
The second prong of Nadeau, however, does require that the defendant's actions not be gratuitous. The First Circuit recognized that the resolution of this aspect of the test is necessarily difficult:
In the present case ... there has not yet been a judicial determination of whether plaintiffs' rights were violated under traditional standards of analysis. In such circumstances, one might argue that the district court cannot meaningfully decide the legal requirements that govern defendants' conduct without conducting the very trial the consent decree was signed to avoid. However, we believe the court has had sufficient exposure to the facts and law of this case to determine, whether if plaintiffs had continued to press their claims under traditional constitutional theory, their action could be considered "frivolous, unreasonable, or groundless, or that the plaintiff continued to litigate after it clearly became so."
II.
The State also urges that the court's apportionment award constituted an abuse of discretion because special circumstances rendered the award unjust, citing Chastang v. Flynn & Emrich Co.,
III.
Appellate review of a district court's discretion is very limited. Generally, an abuse of discretion only occurs where no reasonable person could take the view adopted by the trial court. If reasonable persons could differ, no abuse of discretion can be found. Particle Data Laboratories, Inc. v. Coulter Electronics, Inc.,
The appellant contends that upholding fee awards in cases such as this will discourage settlement because "(u)nder the District Court's ruling, neither cooperation nor voluntary participation to achieve relief for the plaintiff class, will relieve defendant of attorneys' fees." While we sympathize with the State's position, we agree with the First Circuit's observation that
the argument cuts both ways. If defendants may refuse to settle a case and accept the cost of continued litigation to avoid paying attorney's fees, it is equally likely that plaintiffs' counsel, rather than receive no compensation at all for their efforts, would be willing to continue the litigation on the chance that they might cut if not eliminate their losses. We cannot decide this issue based on such honest but speculative concerns.
Nadeau v. Helgemoe,
Also, we think it is appropriate to observe that counsel would ordinarily be well advised when negotiating a settlement to endeavor to reach an agreement as to all potential issues rather than relying on the hope that troublesome ones not disposed of somehow will just go away. Such an incomplete package often, not surprisingly, will have tremellose aspects.
Finally, the court's failure to explicate the precise reasons for its allocation does not imply, a fortiori, that it applied an erroneous standard as the State contends. Reviewing the award under the analysis set forth in Nadeau v. Helgemoe and United Handicapped Federation v. Andre, we find the court's award to be supported by the record.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
William J. Campbell, Senior District Judge of the Northern District of Illinois, is sitting by designation
The County defendants have not appealed the 80% apportioned to them, but they agree with the appellant that the plaintiffs did not prevail against the State. In view of our disposition of the case, we need not address the County's argument that if the plaintiffs are found not to have prevailed against the State the total award should be reduced so that the County would not have to pay the portion now allocated to the State
Similarly, we need not decide an issue raised in oral argument, but not briefed by the parties, of whether the State's appeal is precluded by its failure to appeal the district court's original order awarding the $25,000 fee against the defendants jointly and severally. In any event, the result, if we were to raise the issue, would be consistent with the disposition we have reached in this case.
Whether or not the State's actions in response to the lawsuit, taken as a whole, were purely gratuitous, as the State contends, is not relevant to the first prong of the Nadeau analysis, but will be analyzed as a separate element of the test
That ruling was upheld by this court in an unpublished order, No. 76-1430 (Feb. 24, 1977)
