John Mackey appeals the district court’s judgment, following a bench trial on remand from this court, in favor of Knowlton Merritt in Merritt’s action against Mackey, et al. Merritt’s action charges that Mack-ey, a federal official, violated his due process rights in improperly coercing Merritt’s private employer to fire him. Merritt cross-appeals. We affirm all of the rulings of the district court except for the аward of a multiplier in the award of attorney’s fees.
BACKGROUND
Merritt is a former counselor supervisor with Klamath Alcohol and Drug Abuse, Inc. (“KADA”), a private nonprofit corporation. He was fired from that position, partly as a consequence of actions taken by Mackey and Steven Vincent. Mackey was the Area Alcoholism Coordinator for Indian Health Services (“IHS”), a federal agency. Vincent was a Regional Alcohol Specialist with the State of Oregon’s Mental Health Division. Mackey and Vincent had jointly evaluated the management of KADA, and had concluded that Merritt had failed to perform adequately. Their report recommended that further funding of KADA be conditioned on Merritt’s dismissal. The KADA Board of Director’s dismissed Merritt without a pre-termination hearing. The circumstances of this dispute are related in this cоurt’s earlier decision in this ease,
Merritt v. Mackey,
Merritt brought this action against several defendants alleging various claims. Among those claims was one against Vincent under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and one against Mackey pursuant to
Bivens v. Six Unknown Agents of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
On appeal, а divided panel of this court affirmed the grant of summary judgment as to the liberty deprivation claims, but reversed and remanded as to the property deprivation claims.
Merritt I,
On remand, the district court ruled that Merritt was entitled to a pretermination hearing and that his due process rights were violated becausе he had not received such a hearing. The court also found, however, that Merritt would have been terminated even if he had been provided with an adequate predeprivation hearing. Further, the district court concluded that Vincent and Mackey were not entitled to qualified immunity, under this court’s mandate in Merritt I.
After a bench trial, the district court awarded Merritt $35,000 in damages as compensation for emotional distress arising from the due process deprivation. It concluded that he was not entitled to either lost wages or punitive damages because he would have been terminated even if he had been afforded a pretermination hearing. In addition, the court awarded Merritt approximately $100,000 in attorney’s fees pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988. The court reasoned that Mackey, although a federal *1316 official, was liable undеr Section 1988 because he acted jointly with Vincent, a state official, to • violate Merritt’s rights. The court awarded Merritt fees for 90% of the hours he requested at $125 per hour. It also enhanced the fee by one-third.
Mackey appeals the district court's rulings that he is not entitled to qualified immunity, and that he is liable for attorney’s fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. He also challenges as excessive the amount of damages and attоrney’s fees awarded. Merritt cross-appeals, 1 contending that the district court failed to recognize that his rights to due process were violated not only by the deprivation of a timely hearing, but also by unreasonable governmental interference with his property rights in his chosen occupation. Consequently, Merritt claims, the court improperly denied him damages for lost wages and punitive damages. We affirm the district court as to all issues raised by these appeals.
ANALYSIS
I. Qualified Immunity
In
Merritt I,
this court held that neither Vincent nor Mackey was entitled to qualified immunity because “their conduct exceeded the scope of their authority and because they violated Merritt’s clearly established constitutional rights.”
“[U]nder the ‘law of the case’ doctrine, one panel of an appellate court will not as a general rule reconsidеr questions which another panel has decided on a prior appeal in the same case.”
Kimball v. Callahan,
Mackey contends that two of these exceptions apply here. First, he contends that
Anderson v. Creighton,
A. A change in the law
Anderson v. Creighton
did not change controlling authority on this issue so as to require us to reconsider the merits of Mackey’s qualified immunity defense. First,
Anderson
was decided three months prior to
Merritt,
so there was no
intervening
change of law. More important,
Anderson
did not
change
the controlling
*1317
standard as Mackey suggests.
Anderson
clarified and refined the law articulated in
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
The Supreme Court in
Anderson
said, “our holding today does not extend official qualified immunity beyond the bounds articulated in
Harlow
and our subsequent cases_”
The
Merritt I
opinion recognized that immunity attaches to official action unless that action “ ‘violate[s] clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’ ”
The Merritt I court had the Anderson decision before it, and the language of its opinion indicates that it exercised the specificity of scrutiny required by Anderson:
Vincent and Mackey testified that they knew they had no authority to require KADA to fire Merritt. Because they knowingly acted outside the scope of their authority, they are not entitled to qualified immunity.... Vincent and Mackey should have known that they could not cause Merritt’s summary dismissal without violating his .due process rights.
Merritt I,
B. Clearly erroneous and manifest injustice
We also reject Mackey’s other argument that the
Merritt I
qualified immunity holding should not be considered the law of the case. Mackey contends that it is “manifestly unjust” to hold thаt he violated a clearly established right, when the dissent in
Merritt I
strongly disputed the very existence of that right.
See Merritt I,
Mackey poses a question with seductive implications for qualified immunity doctrine, but it is not the question upon which this appeal should turn. We are not presented as a matter of first impression with thе question of which view in
Merritt
/ — that of the majority or that of the dissent — was correct. That issue was thrashed out in
Merritt I
itself, and we owe a certain deference to the view that prevailed. The question before us on this appeal is whether the majority decision in
Merritt I
is so
clearly
incorrect that we are justified in refusing to regard it as the law of the case.
See United States v. Houser,
Although there was substantial prece-dential support for the Merritt I majority opinion, 4 and it has been cited approvingly *1318 since, 5 Mackey contends that the very fact of a dissent establishes manifest error in the majority’s conclusion that the right in issue was clearly established. We cannot accord a dissent that much probative power.
Dissent or no, two judges ruled that the right in question was clearly established and that reasonable officials would have known that their actions infringed that right. Those two judges may well have been correct. To hold that they could not have bеen correct simply because a dissent was filed would be to hold the majority hostage to the dissent. One judge would have a veto that would prevent any majority of two from denying a claim of qualified immunity.
The dissent alone does not compel us, therefore, to conclude that the decision in Merritt I was incorrect. Nor do we approach the qualified immunity question as if it were being presented for the first time. At this stage of the litigation, it is incumbent upon Mackey to convince us not only that the majority decision in Merritt I was wrong, but that it was clearly wrong. This he has failed to do. Mackey has not demonstrated clear error by the Merritt I majority in applying this principle to the specific facts of his case. We accordingly find no justification for departing from our usual policy of adhering to the law of the case. 6
II. Damages
A. Merritt’s appeal
The district court awarded Merritt damages for emotional suffering, but did not award him lost wages or punitive damages. Merritt cross-appeals, arguing that the district court erroneously identified the due process violation which he suffered.
The district court confined its finding of a due process violation to KADA’s failure to provide Merritt with a pretermination hearing. That finding was based on this court’s holding in
Merritt I
that Merritt “was deprived of his property interest in сontinued employment when the state and federal agents intentionally coerced KADA to fire him.”
Merritt I,
The district court found, however, that Merritt would have been fired regardless of Mackey’s involvement. Unless thаt finding is clearly erroneous, it limits Merritt’s damages to those arising from the denial of procedural due process only, and precludes an award of damages for deprivation of the employment itself, a loss not caused by Mackey.
Carey v. Piphus,
We cannot say that the district court s trading that Merritt would have been fired anyway was clearly erroneous. Although the evidence conflicted, there was ample support for the district court’s finding. We therefore conclude that the district court did not err in refusing to award Merritt damages for his loss of employment. 7
B. Mackey’s appeal
Mackey also appeals the district court’s damage award. He contends that Merritt is entitled to no damages, in spite of his loss of a pretermination hearing, because any injury sustained was caused by his loss of employment. Mackey contends that because the district court found that Merritt’s discharge was justified and would have occurred regardless of Mackey’s intervention, he is liable for no damages.
Merritt can recover for mental and emotional distress caused by the denial of procedural due process if he proves actual injury.
Carey v. Piphus,
We review the district court’s computation of damages for clear error.
See Galindo v. Stoody Co.,
III. Attorney’s Fees
The district court ordered Mackey, as well as Vincent, to pay Merritt’s attorney’s fees, in the amount of $99,856.39, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988. Mackey contends that, as a federal official, he is not liable for attorney’s fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988, and, alternatively, that the fees awarded here were excessive.
A. Mackey’s liability for fees under § 1988
Section 1988 allows the court to award attorney s fees to the prеvailing party in an action brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Actions filed under § 1983 require state action. Mackey, as an individual or as a federal official, is, thus, exempt from Section 1988 liability unless he “conspire[d] with or participate^] in concert with state officials who, under color of state law, act[ed] to deprive a person of protected rights.”
Scott v. Rosenberg,
The district court found that Mackey was acting under color of state law because he *1320 was involved in a joint action with Vincent, a state official. “Historical” factual findings underlying that holding are reviewed for clear error. The district court found that “Mackey and Vincent jointly evaluated KADA (and plaintiff), and jointly agreed to require plaintiffs termination.” Opinion, Mar. 6, 1989. The final report rеsulting in Merritt’s termination (and this litigation) was issued under state letterhead, signed by both Mackey and Vincent. The district court’s finding was not clearly erroneous; the form of that report accurately reflected what the investigation was — a joint collaboration between a state and federal official.
We review de novo the district court’s application of these facts to statutory and precedentiаl authority leading to the district courts finding that “state action” was present here.
United States v. McConney,
B. Amount of attorneys’ fees awarded
Mackey alternatively argues that the fee award of nearly $100,000 was excessive. We review this award fоr an abuse of discretion.
See Hensley v. Eckerhart,
We conclude, however, that the district court granted a multiplier of 1.33 on improper grounds. Even though the distriсt court properly recognized that some of the factors derived from
Kerr v. Screen Extras Guild, Inc.,
CONCLUSION
The fee awards entered by the district court are reversed insofar as they include a multiplier of 1.33, and the fee awards are remanded to the district court fоr recalculation and reentry of the awards without the multiplier.
In all other respects, the judgment of the district court is affirmed. Each party will bear its own share of the regular costs on appeal.
As prevailing party in this litigation, Merritt is entitled to an award of fees on appeal pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988, subject to reduction in light of Merritt’s unsuccessful cross-appeal. Application is to be made as providеd in 9th Cir. Rule 39-1.
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART; REMANDED.
Notes
. Vincent also appealed, but later voluntarily dismissed his appeal.
. This formulation has since been repeatedly quoted in this circuit.
See, e.g., League of Women Voters of California v. F.C.C.,
. In support of his argument, Mackey cites
Harris v. Young,
. The majority opinion relied primarily on the Supreme Court's opinion in
Greene v. McElroy,
.
See, e.g., Roth v. Veteran’s Administration of United States,
Mackey contends that this court’s Memorandum Disposition in
Johnson v. Serv-Air, Inc.,
. Mackey also argues that adhering to
Merritt I
will cause "manifest injustice." This argument is simply a reprise of his "clearly erroneous” argument. He argues that because the majority holding is "clearly erroneous" (by virtue of a dissent),
for that reason
it works a "substantial injustice" on
Mackey.
We reject that argument because we find no clear error in the majority decision in
Merritt I.
Moreover, we would depart from the law of the case only if we found clear
and
manifest injustice.
See Houser,
. Merritt also contends that the district court erred in failing to award punitive damages for Mackey’s violation of his right to continued employment. Without any evidence that Mackey acted willfully or recklessly in disregard of Merritt’s due process rights, we are unprepared to overturn the district court’s denial of punitive damages.
.
Scott v. Rosenberg,
