This case was originally brought as a challenge to conditions in the Dallas County, Texas, jail system. Once more it appears here after protracted litigation over a period of nearly ten years, including four previous appeals to this Court. After the final appellate decision on the merits, the District Court awarded fees to John Jordan, an attorney for the plaintiff class, for time spent on the case from June 11, 1974, to July 30,1979. It denied an award of fees to Dallas Legal Services Foundation, Inc. (hereinafter DLSF) and to NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (hereinafter LDF), two organizations which had also participated to some extent in behalf of the plaintiff class.
The defendants, the Commissioners Court of Dallas County, challenge the award of fees to Jordan on grounds that (1) the District Court had no jurisdiction to award fees while the case was on appeal; (2) only supplemental enforcement proceedings were pending on the effective date of § 1988; (3) plaintiffs did not prevail in these proceedings; and (4) if plaintiffs could be considered to have prevailed in the supplemental proceedings, Jordan should only recover fees for time spent between June 11, 1974, and December 81, 1976. DLSF and LDF cross appeal, arguing that (1) non-profit legal service organizations, including federally-funded projects, may recover fees on the same basis as private attorneys; (2) the District Court failed to make findings on the criteria set forth in
Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc.,
We affirm the denial of fees to LDF and DLSF. We reverse and remand the award to Jordan for a reduction of amount allowed him.
I. History
This was a class action by inmates of the Dallas County Jail against the Dallas County Commissioners Court and other county officials, challenging the conditions there as violative of the Constitution and of Texas law. It initially filed on October 26, 1971. The complaint requested attorney’s fees on behalf of John Jordan, an employee of DLSF (Jordan went into private practice in June, 1974, but the Court requested that he continue to represent the plaintiff class). After trial on the merits, the District Court in a memorandum opinion and judgment filed June 5, 1972, held that the jail did not comply with state law and ordered modification of the physical facilities and changes in jail procedure; attorney’s fees were denied.
Taylor v. Sterrett,
On appeal, the Fifth Circuit affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded for exercise of a retained jurisdiction.
Taylor v. Sterrett,
Enforcement proceedings began on June 24, 1974. The defendants were ordered to file reports on their progress at specified intervals. At times, plaintiffs would respond, the Court would hold hearings on the reports, and would issue an order commenting on the report and identifying topics to be discussed in the next report. On August 15, 1974, Jordan filed a motion for attorney’s fees for time spent in preparation for defendants’ August 15, 1974, report and for subsequent proceedings. Apparently, this motion was never acted upon by the District Court.
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In 1976, two groups of property owners protesting the proposed conversion of a vacant hospital into a minimum security jail sought intervention in the federal court case. Plaintiffs opposed this intervention. The District Court denied intervention, but, upon defendants’ motion, joined both as third-party defendants. The Fifth Circuit vacated this order of joinder. The challenges were then tried in state court with the county officials prevailing.
Oak Lawn Preservation Society v. Bd. of Mgrs. of Dallas Cty. Hosp.,
On February 1,1977, the plaintiffs filed a § 1988 motion for attorney’s fees for time spent on the case from October 19, 1976 to the end of the case. On February 8, 1977, the District Court, disappointed with defendants’ progress, appointed a special master to gather information concerning jail facilities and operations. The special master’s report was filed April 15, 1977. The county responded, pointing out that Texas had established an agency to promulgate and enforce jail standards, and requested the Court to decline to retain further jurisdiction of the case. The Court’s April 27 order (entered as a separate order May 12 upon defendants’ request) approved the special master’s report, ordered the Commissioners’ Court to buy land and adopt a plan for a new jail within three months, and directed the sheriff not to accept new inmates when the present jail was full to capacity. Defendants then appealed from these two orders. During the pendency of this appeal, the enforcement procedure continued as before.
Jordan, Stanley Bass, LDF staff attorney, and Betsy Julian, DLSF staff attorney, filed an amended motion for attorney’s fees on July 3, 1979, requesting fees for services rendered from October 26, 1971, future services, and past and future appeals. Each attorney filed affidavits and memoranda detailing time spent on the case and discussing application of the Johnson factors. The hearing on the motions was held August 29, 1979.
On August 16, 1979, the Fifth Circuit rendered its opinion on the county’s latest appeal. Convinced that the District Court’s role in improving the Dallas County jail had been completed and that control of the jail system should be returned to state and local officials, the Court vacated the April 27 and May 12 orders and all other orders and stays still in effect. The case was remanded “with directions to the district court to discontinue the further exercise of its retained jurisdiction and to dismiss the cause.”
Taylor v. Sterrett,
On October 23, 1979, the District Court found that the case had been pending on the effective date of § 1988, that the plaintiff class had prevailed, and awarded fees of $26,417.50 to John Jordan for all time spent on the case from June 11, 1974, to July 30, 1979, and denied fees to DLSF and LDF. DLSF was denied fees because the Court found, inter alia, that there was no need for its services in that period because Jordan was capable of and did continue as plaintiffs’ primary counsel at the Court’s request. No reason was given for denying fees to LDF. The mandate pursuant to our August 19 opinion reached the District Court on October 25 and the case was dismissed on October 29.
II. Jurisdiction of the District Court
On appeal of the April 27 and May 12 orders, the Court held that these orders were appealable under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(l) (1976) as interlocutory orders modifying the 1972 injunction and, “necessarily” construing the orders as denying defendants’ request that the district court decline to retain jurisdiction, as refusals to dissolve or modify an injunction.
III. Attorney’s Fees
A. 42 U.S.C. § 1988
42 U.S.C. § 1988, as amended October 19, 1976, provides in pertinent part:
... In any action or proceeding to enforce a provision of sections 1981, 1982, 1983,1985, and 1986 of this title, Title IX of Public Law 92-318, or in any civil action or proceeding, by or on behalf of the United States of America, to enforce, or charging a violation of, a provision of the United States Internal Revenue Code, or title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party, other than the United States, a reasonable attorneys’ fees as part of the fees.
This Court has held that the decision to award attorney’s fees is delegated to the discretion of the trial court, and its decision will not be disturbed absent an abuse of that discretion.
See, e. g., Harkless v. Sweeny Independent School District,
B. Pendency
The amended version of § 1988 applies to all cases pending on the effective date.
Hutto v. Finney,
A case is considered to be pending if a motion for attorney’s fees for the initial case in unresolved or is on appeal on October 19, 1976.
Gore v. Turner,
The mere pendency on the date of enactment of an attorney fees act of supplemental proceedings to effectuate a prior final judgment [which had included a denial of attorney’s fees] is not, in our opinion, sufficient to convert an action into such a “pending action” as to warrant an award of attorney fees under such act pursuant to Bradley-type retroactive application of the Act.
In the case under consideration, attorney’s fees for the initial case had been denied as late as July 20, 1976 (date of the last amended order of the District Court); this denial was never appealed. The initial segment of this case had, therefore, been concluded on that date; the only pending active issue on October 19, 1976, was the supplemental enforcement proceedings begun on June 24, 1974, with the District Court ordering defendants to begin compliance with portions of the June 5, 1972, judgment.
Corpus v. Estelle,
Miller v. Carson,
Therefore, fees may only be awarded here for work relating to the supplemental proceeding stage of the case between June 24, 1974, and the time work began on matters relating to the April 27 order.
C. Prevailing Party
Section 1988, by its terms, permits an award of attorney’s fees only to a “prevailing party”. The question here, since only the supplemental proceedings were pending, is whether appellees prevailed in those proceedings. As
Iranian Students Association v. Edwards,
The central issue of the supplemental proceedings here was to ensure compliance with the district court judgment; the primary relief sought in these proceedings was compliance. Up until the April 27 order, the appellees were the prevailing parties in that compliance was being obtained; the April 27 order even stated that the sheriff was in compliance with “most of the orders” contained in the June 5,1972 order. Record, V. 6, p. 1480. As this Court said in the appeal of the April 27 and May 12 orders: “The objects sought to be accomplished in the original suit have been accomplished. That which was sought to be
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remedied has now been remedied.”
D. Denial of Fees to LDF and DLSF
The greatest portion of the time claimed by Stanley Bass, LDF staff attorney, in his 1979 affidavit for attorney’s fees was spent on the appeal of the initial case and, for that reason, is non-compensable. However, a small portion of the time claimed may relate to the supplemental proceedings (it is impossible to tell from Bass’s affidavit); if some of this time was expended in relation to the enforcement proceedings, it was spent only in reading papers of the case and in correspondence and telephone conversations with co-counsel and court clerks. Record, V. 8, p. 1916. The same is true of the time claimed by Betsy Julian, DLSF staff attorney, who was assigned to the case in September, 1976; after eliminating work relating to the April 27 and subsequent orders, the remaining 9.3 hours was spent in reading reports filed by defendants, preparing for and attending hearings on these reports, and conferring with co-counsel. According to
Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc.,
time spent by more than one attorney where only one is needed may be discounted.
E. Award of Fees to Jordan
The fee award to Jordan must be reduced so as to include only time spent in the supplemental proceedings from June 24, 1974, to December 3, 1976 (work done after this date related to matters involved in the April 27 order). Time spent on appeal of the initial case and on the
intervention
matters should be excluded. Appellee’s opposition to intervention was irrelevant to the goal of obtaining compliance; the attempted intervention was also a circumstance beyond appellants’ control. See
Robinson v. Kimbrough,
AFFIRMED in part; REVERSED and REMANDED in part.
Notes
. The August 15, 1974, attorney’s fees motion was still pending on October 19, 1976, but that motion requested fees for time spent in the enforcement proceedings only and, therefore, cannot be used to make the entire case pending.
. This holding in no way based on the fact that the DLSF is federally funded and that the LDF is a privately-funded civil rights organization.
Thompson v. Madison County Board of Education,
. The District Court’s failure to make specific findings on the
Johnson
factors may be excused for the reasons set forth in
Davis v. City of Abbeville,
