This case is on appeal from a decision of the district court awarding attorney’s fees to plaintiffs 1 under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1976 & Supp. V 1981) for all time spent in connection with their lawsuit challenging the operation of the Illinois Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) public assistance program. Defendants 2 contend that the district court erred in basing the amount of the award on the total time plaintiffs spent litigating the case in light of plaintiffs’ purported failure to prevail on significant issues in the litigation. Although we express no opinion as to the appropriateness of the size of the award in this case, we believe the case should be remanded to the district court for the reasons we explain.
I.
The rather complex issues underlying plaintiffs’ lawsuit were litigated over a period of more than eight years, beginning with the filing of the initial complaint in 1973 and culminating in a settlement agreement approved by the trial court on February 8, 1982. In their lawsuit, plaintiffs maintained that the manner in which the Illinois Department of Public Aid (IDPA) changed the method for calculating the “standard of need” it used in determining eligibility and payment levels for AFDC benefits violated section 402(a)(23) of the Social Security Act of 1935, 42 U.S.C. § 602(a)(23), and the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment. Plaintiffs argued that the IDPA consolidation methodology adopted in 1973, which altered the method for computing the “standard of need” from an individualized system to a consolidated, flat-grant procedure, improperly obscured the standard for AFDC recipients that existed under the old individualized grant system. Plaintiffs objected to the new consolidation methodology on two principal grounds. They argued that the 'new Consolidated Standard Plan (CSP) failed (1) to account fully for each of
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the need items
(e.g.,
food, clothing, rent) included in or that should have been included in the earlier individualized standard of need and (2) to assign fair prices to those items. Plaintiffs sought declaratory and injunctive relief invalidating the consolidated standard and requiring the I DP A to reformulate the standard to correct the alleged errors. After approximately two years of litigation, the district court granted summary judgment to plaintiffs as to certain portions of these objections, denied others, and clarified the issues of fact that remained to be tried.
Illinois Welfare Rights Organization v. Trainor,
On January 23,1983, Judge Flaum issued a memorandum opinion in which he awarded fees and costs to plaintiffs in the amount of $261,797.88. Illinois Welfare Rights Organization v. Miller, No. 73 C 2437 (N.D.Ill. Jan. 27, 1983). The amount was designed to compensate plaintiffs for all time expended in the litigation, since Judge Flaum concluded that the plaintiffs were “prevailing parties” and that “they succeeded, through settlement, in their overall objective of obtaining a new method of computing the standard of need.” Id., slip op. at 5.
II.
Section 1988 of Title 42, 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1976 & Supp. V 1981), allows courts to award reasonable attorney’s fees to “prevailing parties” in federal civil rights actions. A plaintiff will be considered a “prevailing party” and entitled to reasonable attorney’s fees if the plaintiff has succeeded “ ‘on any significant issue in litigation which achieves some of the benefit the part[y] sought in bringing the suit.’ ”
Hensley v.
Eckerhart, _ U.S. _,
The considerations for determining the amount of a reasonable attorney’s fees award only recently were described by the United States Supreme Court in
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
_ U.S. _,
The two-part analysis described in
Hensley
requires that, once a court has found a plaintiff to be a “prevailing party,” it then must consider whether the plaintiff has asserted any unsuccessful claims that are “distinctly different” from the successful claims. Such “distinctly different” claims, which are based on “different facts and legal theories” than the successful claims, should be excluded in determining reasonable attorney’s fees.
III.
Defendants concede that plaintiffs have met the threshold requirements to be considered “prevailing parties” but maintain that the case must be remanded because the district court never addressed the questions whether the plaintiffs failed to prevail on certain claims that were unrelated to or severable from their successful claims and whether they achieved a level of success that makes all of the hours reasonably expended a satisfactory basis for making the fee award. The problem with applying the analyses in Hensley to the present case, however, is that Hensley involved fully litigated claims and not a settlement agreement. Although some settlement agree7 ments may be structured so that they dispose of the original claims in a way that allows the court to decide whether a particular claim has been ultimately successful or unsuccessful, this will not always be the case. Indeed, many settlements will be informally structured with an eye toward the achievement of overall objectives, rather than the disposition of discrete claims. With these more general settlements, the analysis in Hensley regarding successful and unsuccessful claims may be unworkable, although the central teaching of Hensley will still apply. That teaching is that in every case the court must explicitly consider whether the fee is a reasonable one in light of the level of the plaintiff’s success.
The case before us is unusual in that some of the issues were decided on summary judgment and one was severed for separate consideration before the parties entered into the settlement agreement. It is even more unusual in that the settlement agreement arguably resolved some issues differently than the way these issues had been disposed of on summary judgment. For example, although plaintiffs lost on summary judgment on their claim that the IDPA erred in not incorporating the amount actually paid by the recipients for shelter and certain other items into its consolidation,
Illinois Welfare Rights Organiza
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tion v. Trainor,
We agree with defendants, however, that because Judge Flaum did not have an opportunity to consider explicitly the second and central analysis required by
Hensley, i.e.,
whether the amount of the award is reasonable in light of the extent of plaintiffs’ overall success, the case should be remanded to the district court to reconsider the amount of the award.
3
See, e.g., Inmates of Allegheny County Jail v. Pierce,
Hensley
instructs that the critical assessment to be made by the court under the second part of its analysis is “the extent of a plaintiff’s success” in terms of “the results obtained.”
Ordinarily, of course, once a plaintiff in a settlement situation is found to be a “prevailing party,” the court will already have concluded that the results of the settlement were a product of the litigation since, as we have already observed, to become a “prevailing party” when a settlement is involved, the plaintiff will have had to show that his or her lawsuit was “causally linked
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to the achievement of the result obtained.”
Harrington v. DeVito,
The requirement “that the lawsuit in some way have played a provocative role in obtaining relief” is a factual determination. Id. at 267. It is clear from Judge Flaum’s memorandum opinion that he implicitly concluded that plaintiffs’ lawsuit was instrumental in bringing about the new standard of need described in the settlement agreement. Illinois Welfare Rights Organization v. Miller, No. 73 C 2437, slip op. at 4-5 & n. 8 (N.D.Ill. Jan. 27, 1983). Defendants have offered no evidence showing that the new standard of need was arrived at because of factors wholly independent of plaintiffs’ lawsuit. They merely suggest, without explaining why, that state legislation, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 23, § 12-4.11, effective May 1, 1981 (P.A. 81-1523), was responsible for the changed standard. We note, however, that the legislation to which defendants refer did nothing more than permit the IDPA to move to a percentage reduction system in which it could make benefit payments to recipients at a level less than actual need, as measured by the standard. The legislation did not indicate what form the standard of need itself should take. By contrast, it was toward that end that plaintiffs’ lawsuit was directed. Moreover, although the legislation relied on by defendants was enacted on December 3, 1980, defendants continued for more than a year to litigate the case fully before a settlement was reached. Because we believe that Judge Flaum’s finding that plaintiffs’ lawsuit was a catalyst in bringing about the new standard of need is not clearly erroneous, the district court on remand should consider the new standard as part of the results obtained by plaintiffs’ litigation.
Hensley
emphasizes that “the inquiry does not end with a finding that the plaintiff obtained significant relief.”
The final step for the district court is to structure an award that is reasonable in light of the plaintiffs’ success. A reduced fee award is appropriate only “if the relief, however significant, is limited in comparison to the scope of the litigation as a whole.”
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
IV.
The judgment of the district court awarding attorney’s fees is vacated and the cause *570 remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. The parties shall bear their own costs for this appeal.
Notes
. Appellees here were plaintiffs in the trial court; they will be referred to as plaintiffs in this opinion.
. Appellants here were defendants in the trial court; they will be referred to as defendants in this opinion.
. Plaintiffs argue that Judge Flaum’s opinion is faithful to Hensley, even though Judge Flaum did not have the benefit of Hensley when he awarded the attorney’s fees here. Plaintiffs maintain that Judge Flaum’s conclusion that plaintiffs “essentially succeeded in what they sought” is a factual determination that makes the award compensating plaintiffs for all time spent on the litigation a reasonable one under the second part of the Hensley analysis. We believe, however, that a careful reading of Judge Flaum’s opinion indicates that his statement was directed primarily toward the determination whether plaintiffs were “prevailing parties,” a factual determination made in light of a different legal standard than the one used in the second part of the Hensley analysis. This reading is confirmed by the cases Judge Flaum cites in connection with the statement, since all of the cases cited pertain to whether a party was a “prevailing party” under the statute. Although Judge Flaum may have had plaintiffs’ overall success in mind when he made the statement about plaintiffs’ efforts having “essentially succeeded” rather than the more limited success necessary to be considered a prevailing party, the context of the statement is sufficiently ambiguous to leave us unconvinced that this is the proper interpretation. Therefore, although we are inclined to believe after a thorough review of the record that plaintiffs’ overall success was indeed considerable, fairness to the parties and the dictates of Hensley require that the critical analysis assessing the relationship between the amount of the fee award and the plaintiff’s success be made explicitly by the district court on remand.
. We are aware, of course, that Judge Flaum is no longer in a position to hear the case on remand, since he is now a member of this court. We believe, however, that the assessment of the relationship between the amount of the fees awarded and the level of plaintiffs’ success involves factual questions that should be made in the first instance by the district court, which can request additional argument by the parties.
