In 1983, а consent decree was entered in a class action that had been brought against the City of Chicago complaining about the discharge of tenured City employees without due process of law. The decree gave a mеmber of the class named Junerous Cook preference in future hiring for a job called “Director.” Later that year Cook was notified in a letter from the City’s personnel commissioner that there were no Director vacanciеs at present but that she would be notified as soon as one opened up. The letter gave her a number to call if she had any questions. At the time and indeed until recently she was employed in jobs that paid considerably less than a Director’s job paid.
Vacancies in Directors’ positions opened up in 1985 and 1986 but the City without excuse failed to notify her and gave the positions to other people. The next vacancy occurred in July 1989 and again the City without excusе failed to notify Cook and gave the job to someone else. Five years later counsel for the class informed her that she might have a claim against the City for violation of the consent decree; and the following year she filеd a claim with the district judge who oversees the decree seeking backpay equal to the difference between the Director’s salary and her actual salary since 1985. The City admitted that it had violated the consent decree by failing to notify Cook when a vacancy in the Director’s position occurred, but it argued that Cook had failed to mitigate her damages because she had made no inquiry about vacancies between 1983, when the decree was entered, and 1994, when the lawyer for the class notified her that she might have a claim. The judge agreed with this argument and cut off Cook’s backpay as of 1989 when the second vacancy occurred. He thus awarded her four years of backpay, since the City had failed to notify her of a vacancy that had opened up in 1985. Cook, seeking backpay for the additional ten years that have elapsed since the cut-off date fixed by the district judge, argues that the consеnt decree was a contract that entitled her to notice of a vacancy in a Director’s position, that the breach of that contract entitled her to monetary relief equal to the difference between a Director’s salary and her salary, and that under normal principles of contract law it is mitigation enough in a contract of employment case if the plaintiff held, as Cook did, a full-time job throughout the period for which she is *695 seeking compensation. An extraordinary-feature of the consent decree is that it indeed appears to have given Cook a lifetime employment option.
From the standpoint of interpretation a consent decree is a contract, but from the standpoint оf remedy it is an equitable decree. See
Rufo v. Inmates of Suffolk County Jail,
One of these is the defense of laches,
id.,
§2.4(4);
Smith v. City of Chicago, supra,
It is possible to argue that since laches is the equitable substitute for the statute of limitations, and since statutes of limitations are designed to protect the defendаnt from prejudice caused by staleness of evidence, mere “economic” prejudice of the sort just described — having to pay a double salary — ought not to figure in a determination of laches.
(Cornetta v. United States,
Despite the reference in the passage we just cited to the
dual
purposes of a limitations period, there is a third purpose, and that is to enable the defendant to cap his liability. Normally the size of a plaintiffs claim is, apart from any entitlement to prejudgment interest, independent of when suit is filed. But. sometimes, notably in cases of wrongful discharge, it increases with the passage of time. As we said in
Cada v. Baxter Healthcare Corp.,
Turning from generalities to specifics, we cannot say that the district judge’s invocation of laches to truncate Cook’s claim was unreasonable, given the circumstances of this case, and it is immaterial whether we think it correct, because our review is deferential.
Hawxhurst v. Pettibone Corp.,
*697
This is, as we said, in general, not in every case (see, e.g.,
Ornelas v. United States,
Nor is the question of the correct application of the doctrine of laches of such transcendent importance as to require the appellate cоurt to decide whether the district court decided the question correctly, as opposed to reasonably. And finally, it is a question that the district judge is in a better position to decide than we, even though it does not involve a question of сredibility, or indeed any factual contest. District judges spend more time on a case than appellate judges do, even when the case is not tried. Cook’s claim was pending before the district court for three and a half years and involved numerous appearances before Judge Shadur and extensive submission of documents. The judge acquired a feel for the case that we could not match without an inordinate expenditure of time. If we nevertheless werе convinced that he had made a mistake, we would be bound to reverse; deferential review is not rubberstamp review.
Kidd v. Illinois State Police,
Two parenthetical points, and we are done. First, Cook is wrong in arguing that under contract law the duty of mitigation in an employment case is satisfied by proof that the plaintiff had a full-time job throughout the period of the alleged breach. The doctrinе is more flexible than that. It requires the victim of the breach to take reasonable efforts to minimize the cost to him.
Warren v. Stoddart,
Second, if parties to a consent decree wish to cabin the district court’s equitable discretion by stipulating the remedies for breach, they are free to do so. They have to persuade the judge that the remedies are reasonable — otherwise he will not sign the decree,
Blankenship & Associates, Inc. v. NLRB,
AFFIRMED.
