The State of Missouri appeals from a district court order in the Kansas City school desegregation case granting the plaintiff class attorneys’ fees against the State for defending the remedial plan in this case from attacks by intervenors in the Jenkins suit and by plaintiffs in a collateral suit. Order of October 10, 1990, slip op. at 3-4. The State rеlies on inferences
When the plaintiff class moved for the award of attorneys’ fees for year V of the remedial plan, it included $9,280.25 for feеs incurred in connection with three different attacks on the remedial plans adopted in this case. The first attack was launched by the Ronika Newton group, members of the Jenkins class, who moved in the main action to modify the racial admission requirements for the magnet schools. The district court denied the Newton group’s mоtion and disqualified its counsel, and we affirmed. Jenkins v. Missouri,
The remedy was also challenged by Quinton Rivarde et alia, also members of the Jenkins class, who filed a separate suit against the Kansas City, Missouri School District and the State, alleging that the remedy in the main action had been ineffective and demanding that the State pay minority students’ tuition at private schools as an alternative remedy. The State moved to dismiss the Rivarde suit, and the Jenkins plaintiffs sought to intervene to protect the magnet plan from the threat posed by the competing plan urged by the Rivarde plaintiffs. The district court dismissed Rivarde оn the grounds that the Rivarde group was seeking modification of the Jenkins remedy and could not pursue its interests in a separate lawsuit from the Jenkins case. We affirmed. Rivarde v. Missouri,
Finally, the plaintiffs defended аgainst a group that intervened in the main action to prevent the Paseo High School from being torn down, as called for in the capital improvement plаn,' adopted as part of the desegregation remedy. The district court denied the Paseo intervenors’ motion to adopt a “Revitalization Plan” for the Pаseo High building. Order of October 10, 1990, slip op. at 1 (“Paseo Order”).
The district court found that the attorney time the plaintiffs claimed in connection with these three attaсks was “reasonably expended,” Order of October 10, 1990, slip op. at 4, and awarded the fees. Id.
I.
The State first objects to the award of fees plaintiffs incurred in litigating аgainst intervenors in the main action, relying on Zipes,
Since Zipes considered the liability of a losing intervenor, not that qf a defendant, its holding obviously does not decide the
Both these factors cut in the oрposite direction in this case. First, given the special nature of desegregation cases, withholding from the plaintiffs the means for paying their attorneys could be devastating to the national policy of enforcing civil rights laws through the use of private attorneys general. School desegregation cases can сontinue for years and affect nearly everyone in the community in one way or another. Various interventions and collateral attacks are not only рredictable, but inevitable in litigation affecting so many people in so many different capacities. Furthermore, a school desegregation case differs from much other litigation in that the main action does not result in a monetary recovery that might enable plaintiffs to finance a defense against collаteral attacks on their judgments. The only monetary award received by the plaintiffs in a desegregation case is simply payment of their attorneys’ fees, and it is inequitable to require the attorney for the class to defend against collateral attacks on the award. Such service is just as much a part of the reprеsentation of the plaintiff class as obtaining relief in the first instance. To deny plaintiffs fees in a desegregation case would be to deny them the means to respond to attacks on the remedy. Monitoring implementation of the remedy is a crucial part of. the plaintiffs’ function in these cases: “Services devoted tо ■ reasonable monitoring of the court’s decrees, both to insure full compliance and to ensure that the plan is indeed working to desegregate the school system, are compensable services. They are essential to the long-term success of the plaintiff’s suit.” Northcross v. Board of Educ.,
Second, the State, unlike the intervenor in Zipes, is a constitutional violator, and not entitled to the solicitude Zipes showed the “blameless” intervenor. See
The State argues that dictum from Zipes indicates the Supreme Court contemplated that plaintiffs might be required to litigate against intervenors without compensation.
II.
Second, the Statе raises the related question of whether the district court could award plaintiffs their fees for intervening in the separate Rivarde case.
We believe that this question must be decided on the basis of Zipes. Part of the Zipes majority’s reasoning was that plaintiffs should not be awarded fees against intervenors, since they would not be entitled to fees had the intervenors chоsen to bring suit in a collateral attack.
Further, in Rivarde the thrust of the litigation was inadequacy of the remedy and the proposal of an alternative remedy in addition to thаt in Jenkins. In issues as close as those before us, this also militates against awarding fees incurred in Rivarde.
III.
Accordingly, we affirm the order of the district court with respect to the Newton-Nevels and Paseo High School litigation, but reverse with respect to the fee awarded for services rendered by counsel for the Jenkins class in Rivarde.
Notes
. The Supremе Court noted that the language of' § 706(k) of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(k) (1988), which it interpreted in Zipes, is "substantially the same” as 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1988), which forms the basis for the award in this case.
. Two district courts have reached opposite results on the question of whether Zipes permits an award of attorneys’ fees against a defendant for fees incurred litigating against intervenors. Compare United States v. City and County of San Francisco,
. The State also cites passages in the Zipes concurrence,
