Hоward L. Wyatt appeals a summary judgment order denying his claim for monetary damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and awarding less than his requested attorneys fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. We find that monetary damages are barred by the defendants’ immunities and that the fee award against the state was not clearly erroneous, but remand to the district court for the calculation of a reasonаble fee award against defendant Bill Cole.
*720 I.
Howard L. Wyatt and Bill Cole are former business partners. On July 25, 1986, with the assistance of his attorney, John Robbins II, Cole filed a complaint in replev-in against Wyatt to the Circuit Court of Simpson County, Mississippi, accompanied with a replevin bond of $18,000. Cindy Jensen, a deputy of County Clerk Wiley Magee, then issued a writ of replevin. Circuit Judge Jerry Yeager signed an order directing the county sheriff to execute the writ of replevin several days later. Sheriff Jones, Deputy Sheriff Smith, wrangler Ray Roberts, and several others subsequently seized 24 head of cattle, a tractor, and parts on July 29 and 30, 1986. The writ and summons were served on Wyatt on July 31, 1986. Several months later, on October 3, 1986, Judge Yeager entered an order dismissing the writ, continuing the replevin bond in force, and ordering the immediate restoration of Wyatt’s property. Judge Yeager dismissed the action without prejudice on September 3, 1988, although Cole had not yet complied with the October 3, 1986, order. Mississippi’s replevin under bond statute, Miss.Code Ann. § 11-37-101, 1 prescribed this procedure.
Wyatt filed this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, 28 U.S.C. § 2201, and several state statutes, in July of 1987. When Mississippi filed as an аmicus curiae, Wyatt added the state as a defendant, later substituting Attorney General Moore in his official capacity for the state.
The district court declared § 11-37-101 unconstitutional on April 13, 1989,
After a jury found no actual damages, Wyatt moved for nominal damages and attorneys fees against Cole, Robbins, and Simpson County, and for attorneys fees against Moore in his official capacity. The district court found Mississippi liable for fifty percent of the fees earned for work before it declared § 11-37-101 unconstitutional, but found the remaining defendants were not liable for any damages or fees.
Defendants do not appeal the declaratory judgment. 2 Wyatt seeks monetary dam *721 ages from the private defendants, Cole and Robbins, and attorneys fees from both the private defendants and the state of Mississippi. He waived his claims against the county defendants individually below and, at oral argument before this court, conceded that those defendants are not liable in their capacities as county officials. 3
II.
Based on our opinion in
Folsom Inv. Co., Inc. v. Moore,
Wyatt contends that
Folsom
is inconsistent with
Dennis v. Sparks,
The private party who invokes a presumptively valid attachment law is not entitled to immunity because the officеr executing it is. Rather, quite independently, the private party is entitled to an immunity because of the important pub-lie interest in permitting ordinary citizens to rely on presumptively valid state laws, in shielding citizens from monetary damages when they reasonably resort to a legal process later held to be unconstitutional, and in protecting a private citizen from liability when his role in any unconstitutional action is marginal.
Wyatt also argues that, even if Cole and Robbins were entitled to a good faith immunity under
Folsom,
their actions here were not in good faith. He points out that § 11-37-101 was clearly unconstitutional after
Johnson v. American Credit Co. of Georgia,
We need not conclude that a private actor is entitled to rely on any statutory relic, regardless of its current absurdity, in order to conclude that Cole and Robbins, as nongovernmental actors, were entitled to rely on § 11-37-101 until the district court de- *722 dared it unconstitutionаl. Rather, we say only that liability on these facts would undercut the purpose of the immunity, promoting lawfulness by allowing citizens the reasonable sanctuary of the law. It is true that the statutory scheme was in legal jeopardy. It is also true that Cole and Robbins acted with the assistance of government officials who were giving full force and effect to the statutory procedure. The presence of these officials contributed to the reasonableness of the private actors’ conformity to the statutory procedure. In sum, the question is close, but on balance we are persuaded that reliance upon the statute by the private actors was not an act of unreasonable ignorance. The first line of responsibility rests with the legislative body enacting the statute. The next line of responsibility rests with the enforcing officials. When the legislature has not repealed, and executive and judicial officials are still enforcing a statute, it is not unreasonable for private actors to fail to quickly comprehend a developing bоdy of doctrine that portends trouble for its constitutionality. 5
III.
The district court concluded that Wyatt had prevailed on the central issue in the case, the constitutionality of § 11-37-101, and awarded Wyatt’s attorneys $16,588.15 in fees under § 1988, to be paid by the state of Mississippi. Wyatt had requested a much larger fee award, but the district court limited the award to compensate Wyatt’s attorneys only for their success on the constitutional issue.
A. Qualified immunity, sovereign immunity, and § 1988.
Wyatt argues that Cole and Robbins should be held jointly liable for his attorneys fees. But the same good faith immunity that insulates the private defendants from monetary damages also forecloses liability for attorneys fees.
Familias Unidas v. Briscoe,
Mississippi stands on different footing. Attorney General Moore, Sheriff Jones, Deputy Sheriff Smith, and Clerk Ma-gee were sued in their official capacities; good faith immunity is not available as a defense in official-capacity actions. The state is entitled only to its immunity under the Eleventh Amendment and as a sovereign.
Graham,
B. Judge Yeager, Sheriff Jones, and Clerk Magee as state agents.
In a cross-appeal, Mississippi argues that Attorney General Moore was an im
*723
proper party to the suit, as he did not contribute tо the found constitutional violation. We need not reach this issue because the state’s argument overlooks the fact that Yeager, Jones, Smith, Magee, and Jensen contributed to the violation by enforcing § 11-37-101. As we explained in
Echols v. Parker,
A county official pursues his duties as a state agent when he is enforcing state law or policy. He acts as a county аgent when he is enforcing county law or policy. It may be possible for the officer to wear both state and county hats at the same time, ... but when a state statute directs the actions of an official, as here, the officer, be he state or local, is acting as a state official.
See also Bigford v. Taylor,
The state also contends that it is not liable for attorneys fees because it cannot be liable on the merits (citing
Graham
and
Will v. Michigan Department of State Police,
C. Wyatt’s status as a prevailing party.
We turn to whether Wyatt was a prevailing party. It is true that the district court declared § 11-37-101 unconstitutional, but it also denied Wyatt’s damage claims. The judge below never ruled оn the request for an injunction.
A declaratory judgment supports a fee award under § 1988 “if, and only if, it affects the behavior of the defendant towards the plaintiff.”
Rhodes v. Stewart,
The declaratory judgment in this case affected the behavior of Cole towards Wyatt by effectively requiring him to return the property seized. He is liable for attorneys fees accrued after the date of the declaratory judgment because he continued to hold Wyatt’s property for several *724 months thereafter. 10 Robbins, on the other hand, is not liable for attorneys fees because he performed no acts subsequent to the declaratory judgment that contributed to the constitutional violation. In contrast to Rhodes and Jackson, Wyatt also achieved a legal victory over the state. The county officials, as state actors, vigorously defended their actions under § 11-37-101 until the district court declared it unconstitutionаl. Wyatt succeeded in his claim that the statute was invalid and not to be adhered to. He was a prevailing party.
D. The size of the fee.
Finally, Wyatt contends that the district court erred in calculating the fee award against Mississippi. The district court refused to award fees for work done after the date of the declaratory judgment and reduced, as excessive and duplicative, hours for time before the declaratory judgment by thirty percent, and by another fifty percent to account for limited success. We review the size of the fee award only for abuse of discretion.
See City of Riverside v. Rivera,
The fee award was consistent with the Supreme Court’s directives in
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
The Court distinguished between two situations in an effort to guide the discretion of lower courts in
Hensley
and
Texas State Teachers.
When claims are based on different facts and legal theories, the district cоurt should treat the claims as separate suits and award attorneys fees only for time expended on the successful claims. On the other hand, when the claims arise from a common core of facts and involve related legal theories, the district court should attempt to arrive at a reasonable fee award “either by attempting to idеntify specific hours that should be eliminated or by simply reducing the award to account for the limited success of the plaintiff.”
See Hensley,
Wyatt’s request for attorneys fees was of the second type. The district court chose an appropriate fee award both by identifying the time expended by his attorneys after the declaratory judgment and, in addition, by reducing the hours claimed before the declaratory judgment to account for his limited success.
Wyatt argues that the reduced fee award is inconsistent with
City of Riverside v. Rivera,
*725 Thе judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED in part and, in part, REVERSED and REMANDED. We return the case to the district court for the calculation of a reasonable fee award against Cole.
Notes
. At the time of the relevant events in this case, the Mississippi replevin statute provided as follows:
If any person, his agent or attorney, shall file a declaration under oath setting forth:
(a) A description of any personal property;
(b) Thе value, thereof, giving the value of each separate article and the value of the total of all articles;
(c) The plaintiff is entitled to the immediate possession thereof, setting forth all facts and circumstances upon which the plaintiff relies for his claim, and exhibiting all contracts and documents evidencing his claim;
(d) That the property is in the possession of the defendant; and
(e) That the defendant wrongfully took and detains or wrongfully detains the same; and shall present such pleadings to a judge of the supreme court, a judge of the circuit court, a chancellor, a county judge, a justice of the peace or other duly elected judge, such judge shall issue an order directing thе clerk of such court to issue a writ of replevin for the seizure of the property described in said declaration, upon the plaintiff posting a good and valid replevin bond in favor of the defendant for double the value of the property as alleged in the declaration, conditioned to pay any damages which may arise from the wrongful seizure of said property by the plaintiff ...
Miss.Code Ann. § 11-37-101 (West 1988 Supp.) (emphasis added).
. The district court concluded that § 11-37-101 was unconstitutional because it provided "no discretion to the judge to deny a writ of replevin on presentation of a complaint in the statutory form.” This result was mandated by
Johnson v. American Credit Co. of Georgia,
*721 Mississippi has since amended its replevin statute to conform to Johnson. See Miss.Code Ann. § 11-37-101 (West 1990 Supp.).
.
See Echols v. Parker,
. The Eighth, Tenth, and Eleventh Circuits have also granted qualified immunity to private individuals.
See Buller v. Buechler,
. Although Robbins is an attorney, he is subject to the same standard of good faith as Cole because the relevant distinction is between persons acting privately and those acting for the state.
. In contrast, fee awards against officials in their individual capacities are only appropriate when they acted in bad faith.
Finney,
.
Echols
expressly distinguished the case relied on by the state,
Nash v. Chandler,
. In a letter to this court after oral argument, attorneys for the county contended that Wyatt cannot rely on Echols to hold the county оfficials liable for attorneys fees in their capacity as state agents because he expressly abandoned his claims against them in his brief to this court. We think that the reference in the brief is ambiguous at best, and we interpret it as an abandonment of his claims against the county officials only in their individual capacities and not in their official capacities as state agents.
. In a separate cross-appeal, Simpsоn County asks that we modify the district court judgment to reflect that all attorneys fees are owed by the state, and none by the county. We believe that no modification is necessary, as both the district courts order and the accompanying memorandum opinion make it quite clear that all fees are owed by the state.
. We express no opinion on the size of a reasonable fee against Cole.
