Joseph YOUNG, Darrel Sims, Mark Steven Greer, Morris Pickett, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. NEW PROCESS STEEL, LP, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 04-11554.
United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit.
Aug. 9, 2005.
1201
David Wayne Long, Greenberg, Traurig, LLP, Atlanta, GA, Gaile Pugh Gratton, Sirote & Permutt, PC, Birmingham, AL, Sheldon E. Richie, Katherine J. Walters, Richie & Gueringer, P.C., Austin, TX, for Defendant-Appellee.
Before CARNES and PRYOR, Circuit Judges, and FORRESTER*, District Judge.
This appeal brings us a question of first impression: May a district court require, as a condition for appealing a judgment, that a losing plaintiff in a civil rights case post a
I.
In May 2001 Joseph Young, Darrel Sims, Mark Greer, and Morris Pickett filed a lawsuit against their employer, New Process Steel, L.P., pursuant to
In July 2002 Greer filed a new lawsuit alleging that he had been fired by New Process Steel after the original action was filed and that the firing was retaliatory. The new lawsuit was consolidated with the original one. Meanwhile the plaintiffs’ attorney informed New Process Steel that the plaintiffs planned to pursue only their hostile work environment claims. In response, New Process Steel filed, pursuant to
The first trial of those remaining claims ended in a mistrial in June of 2003, which was granted on motion of the defendant, which was apparently made as a result of some comments by the plaintiffs or their attorneys to the jurors. Thereafter, on Greer‘s own motion his retaliation claim was dismissed, leaving for the second trial only the plaintiffs’ hostile work environment claims. That trial ended in a jury verdict and final judgment for the defendant in October 2003. The four plaintiffs filed their notice of appeal from that judgment on November 21, 2003.
On February 5, 2004, the district court, without prodding from the defendant, entered an order stating:
Pursuant to
Rule 7, Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure , this court would require appellant to file a bond or provide other security in an amount necessary to ensure payment of costs on appeal if the potential costs taxable on appeal can be fairly approximated. If appellee wishes to invokeRule 7 , it shall within fourteen (14) days submit eviden-tiary materials to support the fixing of a bond amount.
Being able to take a hint when hit over the head with one, the defendant responded by filing a motion that asked the court to require the plaintiffs to post a bond. The defendant sought to have the bond cover its anticipated appellate attorney‘s fees as well as the other costs it would incur as a result of the appeal. The motion was accompanied by affidavits estimating the amount of those attorney‘s fees. In granting the motion in its entirety, the district court relied on Pedraza v. United Guar. Corp., 313 F.3d 1323 (11th Cir.2002), which it called “potent medicine.” The order the court entered required the plaintiffs to post a cost bond in the amount of $61,000 as a prerequisite to their appeal. All but $1,000 of that amount was to cover the attorney‘s fees the defendant estimated it would incur in the appeal.
The defendant‘s motion did not allege, and the court‘s order did not pretend to find, that the plaintiffs’ appeal would be frivolous, unreasonable, or groundless. Instead, the court expressly disavowed the need for a finding of that nature. In a memorandum opinion accompanying its order, the court stated: “The fixing of a
The plaintiffs appealed the district court‘s imposition of the
II.
While this Court generally reviews a district court‘s imposition of a
Pedraza was a case arising under
We said more in Pedraza, and the more we said has direct relevance to this case. Explicating our holding in Pedraza by giving an example of its converse, we stated that a district court could order a losing plaintiff to post a
Of course, the statement in Pedraza about what should be done in a case where
The plaintiffs contend that Pedraza‘s statement about the proper interpretation of
The plaintiffs in this case ask us to carry over Christiansburg‘s pro-plaintiff interpretation of the fee-shifting provision of
The Christiansburg decision argues against the absolutist position the plaintiffs advocate. The Supreme Court did not hold in Christiansburg that attorney‘s fees could never be awarded to prevailing defendants; it only restricted the circumstances in which that could happen. We can faithfully follow the Christiansburg decision by holding that the same restrictions applied by it to the award of attorney‘s fees under
And the same policy reasons are at play in both contexts. The reason that attorney‘s fees are awarded to successful plaintiffs as a matter of course where
By contrast, a victorious defendant in a civil rights action is not the “chosen instrument of Congress,” few defendants need any incentive to defend themselves when sued, and a losing plaintiff in a civil rights case has not been found to have violated anyone‘s civil rights. Hence the rule announced in Christiansburg that defendants who win civil rights lawsuits generally cannot recover their attorney‘s fees from plaintiffs. To that general rule, however, the Supreme Court in Christiansburg also announced an exception: A court may award attorney‘s fees under
The Christiansburg rule applies not only to trials in civil rights cases, but also to appeals by plaintiffs in them. Because a heavy majority of judgments are affirmed on appeal, most appeals by plaintiffs in civil rights cases do not ultimately result in righting a wrong under the civil rights acts. But some do. And when they do, the plaintiffs are awarded attorney‘s fees for the appellate part of their effort as well as for the trial part. See Lattimore v. Oman Constr., 868 F.2d 437, 440 & n. 6 (11th Cir.1989) (affirming the district court‘s grant of appellate attorney‘s fees to a prevailing civil rights plaintiff), abrogated on other grounds by City of Burlington v. Dague, 505 U.S. 557, 112 S.Ct. 2638, 120 L.Ed.2d 449 (1992). Likewise, when a plaintiff who was unsuccessful at trial fares no better on appeal, the plaintiff is not assessed the appellate attorney‘s fees of the defendant unless the appeal was frivolous, unreasonable, or without foundation. See Bugg v. Int‘l Union of Allied Indus. Workers of Am., Local 507, 674 F.2d 595, 599-601 (7th Cir.1982).
Applying the reasoning of the Christiansburg decision to the
By the same token, however, a plaintiff who is unsuccessful in a civil rights suit at trial should not be freed from the burden of an appellate bond that includes anticipated attorney‘s fees where the appeal is likely to be frivolous, unreasonable, or without foundation. On appeal, as at trial, applying full cost disincentives in those circumstances is consistent with the intent of Congress “to protect defendants from burdensome litigation having no legal or factual basis.” Christiansburg, 434 U.S. at 420, 98 S.Ct. at 700.
While happy to have Christiansburg‘s general rule imported into the
Experience has shown that because most appellees just want to be rid of the annoyance of a baseless appeal with as little additional fuss as possible, the trickle of
The plaintiffs’ impracticality argument against recognizing the Christiansburg exception in the
In deciding whether to allow an appeal from the denial of
In summary, reading
But it need not do so. Because
Of course, the fact that a plaintiff in a civil rights case is required to post a
We REVERSE the district court‘s order imposing a
