For several years New Hampshire Legal Assistance has been representing the plaintiff class, the inmates held in protective custody at the New Hampshire State Prison, in a § 1983 suit alleging that the conditions of confinement imposed on plaintiffs violates various provisions of the Constitution. In December, 1976, the district court concluded that plaintiffs’ allegations were supported and awarded them significant in-junctive relief,
Much of the district court’s analysis was based on its view that the treatment of prisoners must be in accord with some legitimate penological purpose to meet constitutional requirements. We rejected that standard of review, but were unable to determine with any degree of confidence which of the district court’s conclusions and the consequent relief it had ordered was supportable by more traditional Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment analysis. Accordingly we remanded the case to the district court and directed it to scrutinize plaintiffs’ conditions of confinement from a less exacting perspective. However, we affirmed that part of the district court’s opinion and order concerned with expanding plaintiffs’ access to library facilities.
Before trial was resumed, in October of 1977, the parties entered into a consent decree which was subsequently approved by the district court. On the basis of their limited success on appeal and the changes in plaintiffs’ conditions of confinement required by the consent decree, plaintiffs’ counsel moved for an award of attorney’s fees pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988, the Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Awards Act of 1976. The district court denied plaintiffs any attorney’s fees on the ground that they were not the “prevailing parties” in the litigation. While agreeing that “the consent decree entered into has resulted in considerable improvement for the plaintiff class as compared to the conditions they were subjected to prior to the institution of this suit”, the court nevertheless concluded that fees were inappropriate since the improvements reflected, “not only the intensive work and effort of plaintiffs’ attorneys, but *278 also a good faith effort on the part of [Assistant] Attorney [General] Sargent and Warden Perrin to improve conditions at the New Hampshire State Prison.” Plaintiffs appeal that denial.
For purposes of analysis plaintiffs’ request can best be discussed by distinguishing between two separate rationales for an award of attorney’s fees. 1 First, plaintiffs argue that the vindication of their rights to increased access to library facilities, affirmed by this court on appeal, requires that they be denoted prevailing parties for that part of this litigation and that at a minimum they should receive an award proportional to their effort on that issue. Second, they argue that the achievements formalized in the consent decree, allegedly due in significant part to their efforts, should also be considered sufficiently “prevailing” to support an attorney fees award. We shall discuss each rationale in turn.
The new Attorney’s Fees Awards Act makes it clear that only “prevailing parties” may be awarded attorney’s fees, but it does not elaborate on the criteria courts should employ in determining when a party has met that standard. The legislative history strongly suggests that a plaintiff who is partially successful in achieving the relief sought may still receive an award. Thus in discussing pendente lite awards, the Senate Report states, “Such awards are especially appropriate where a party has prevailed on an important matter in the course of litigation, even when he ultimately does not prevail on all issues.” Senate Rep. No. 94-1011, 5 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News, pp. 5908, 5912 (1976). The relevant case law confirms this principle. 2
Many courts have awarded fees to plaintiffs who have succeeded in proving class wide discrimination but failed to establish that they had individually suffered injury and were entitled to personal remedies.
See Bolton v. Murray Envelope Corp.,
Given the legislative history and case law cited above, we conclude that plaintiffs may be considered “prevailing parties" for attorney’s fees purposes if they succeed on any significant issue in litigation *279 which achieves some of the benefit the parties sought in bringing suit. However, the amount of attorney’s fees they receive should be based on the work performed on the issues in which they were successful. In this case the statements of plaintiffs’ counsel submitted to the court do not purport to indicate how much time was devoted to each issue or to the library access issue. But it does not appear that the question whether success on one issue entitled plaintiffs to be considered “prevailing parties” was made the focus of any consideration, and we cannot fairly hold plaintiffs foreclosed from attempting to reconstruct their time through estimates. As for the future, we would not view with sympathy any claim that a district court abused its discretion in awarding unreasonably low attorney’s fees in a suit in which plaintiffs were only partially successful if counsel’s records do not provide a proper basis for determining how much time was spent on particular claims.
In the instant case, we have no choice but to remand this matter for additional evaluation by the district court. We think it is clear that the library access issue was significant enough a victory for plaintiffs to be considered prevailing parties. For their work on that issue they “should ordinarily recover an attorney’s fee unless special circumstances would render such an award unjust.”
Newman v. Piggie Park Enterprises, Inc.,
The second issue relating to attorney’s fees based on the improvements in plaintiffs’ conditions of confinement as required by the consent decree is more difficult to resolve. It is abundantly clear and the Senate Report specifically states that in general “parties may be considered to have prevailed when they vindicate rights through a consent judgment or without formally obtaining relief.
Kopet v. Esquire Realty Co.,
However, applying the rule is not so simple as stating it. The two bounds of the
*280
continuum are well represented by the cases. In
Parham v. Southwestern Bell Telephone Co., supra,
the court found both that defendant had been acting illegally and that plaintiffs’ lawsuit had in fact prompted the defendant to bring its employment practices into compliance with federal law. Attorney’s fees were held to be properly awarded. On the other side of the continuum, in
Taylor v. Safeway Stores, Inc.,
The district court denied plaintiffs attorney’s fees on the grounds that defendants acted in good faith and that the improvements in plaintiffs’ conditions of confinement resulted from the joint effort of plaintiffs’ attorneys and New Hampshire officials, not plaintiffs’ efforts exclusively. Defendants support this analysis and argue in addition that several condition of confinement suits were in process during the duration of plaintiffs’ action and that the particular impact of plaintiffs’ suit cannot be delineated. Finally, defendants contend on policy grounds that requiring parties who accept settlements to pay large attorney’s fees awards will discourage out of court agreements and lead to unnecessary litigation.
We appreciate the difficulty of arriving at an attorney’s fees award in a context of legal and factual uncertainty. And the district court might justify after some further probing and delicate weighing of interests a partial or even complete rejection of plaintiffs’ claims for matters covered by the consent decree. But this uncertainty does not, in our view, justify the court’s rejection of plaintiffs’ fee request for the reasons stated in its order.
To begin with, the good faith of defendants is not a controlling factor in determining whether or not plaintiffs merit an award. In
Chastang v. Flynn & Emrich Co.,
Leaving aside the district court’s reference to the motivation of defendants, we cannot determine from its language its answers to the two critical questions which should control whether or not plaintiffs are prevailing parties on those issues resolved by the consent decree. The first question is one of fact. We agree with the Tenth
*281
Circuit in
Taylor v. Safeway Stores, Inc., supra,
that no award is required if the court determines that plaintiff’s suit was completely superfluous in achieving the improvements undertaken by defendants on plaintiff’s behalf. But the district court made no such specific finding. However, if, as may well be the case here, the plaintiffs’ suit and their attorney’s efforts were a necessary and important factor in achieving the improvements, although they could not have accomplished as much as they did without the constructive leadership of New Hampshire officials, plaintiffs should be held to have overcome their first hurdle toward their goal of receiving
some
attorney fees. Of course, this is not an “all or nothing” determination. Our general recognition of relevant factors in fee awards,
see King
v.
Greenblatt,
On the other hand, the mere existence of other similar suits by other plaintiffs should not automatically be considered a basis for diminishing a plaintiff’s award. Such a doctrine would, contrary to the objective of the Attorney’s Fees Awards Act, be a powerful disincentive to legitimate actions, for the fact that there was more than one suit against officials of an institution would not merely bar the later attorneys from compensation but would jeopardize the fees of counsel in the original suit. 4
We should also note that we consider the chronological sequence of events to be an important, although clearly not definitive factor, in determining whether or not defendant can be reasonably inferred to have guided his actions in response to plaintiff’s lawsuit. This is particularly true where the evidence relevant to the causes of defendant’s behavior is under defendant’s control and not easily available to plaintiff.
Even if plaintiffs can establish that their suit was causally related to the defendants’ actions which improved their condition, this is only half of their battle. The test they must pass is legal as well as factual. If it has been judicially determined that defendants’ conduct, however beneficial it may be to plaintiffs’ interests, is not required by law, then defendants must be held to have acted gratuitously and plaintiffs have not prevailed in a legal sense.
See Taylor v. Safeway Stores, Inc., supra.
In the present case while the district court’s novel penological purpose theory of relief was not accepted, there has not yet been a judicial determination of whether plaintiffs’ rights were violated under traditional standards of analysis. In such circumstances, one might argue that the district court cannot meaningfully decide the legal requirements that govern defendants’ conduct without conducting the very trial the consent decree was signed to avoid. However, we believe the court has had sufficient exposure to the facts and law of this case to determine, whether if plaintiffs had continued to press their claims under traditional constitutional theory, their action could be considered “frivolous, unreasonable, or groundless, or that the plaintiff continued to litigate after it clearly became so.”
Christiansburg Garment Co. v. E.E. O.C.,
In conclusion, we should also note that we are sympathetic to defendants’ policy argument that fear of a significant attorney’s fee award may force defendants to continue litigating an issue not because they wish to *282 establish a legal principle or avoid meeting plaintiffs’ concerns, but solely to escape if possible from onerous attorney’s fees. But the argument cuts both ways. If defendants may refuse to settle a case and accept the cost of continued litigation to avoid paying attorney’s fees, it is equally likely that plaintiffs’ counsel, rather than receive no compensation at all for their efforts, would be willing to continue the litigation on the chance that they might cut if not eliminate their losses. We cannot decide this issue based on such honest but speculative concerns.
We remand this case to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. At the outset we note our adherence to our prior rulings and our consequent rejection of appellees’ arguments that the Eleventh Amendment bars attorney’s fees against the state,
see King v. Greenblatt,
. There is little case law interpreting the new Attorney’s Fees Awards Act itself. However, the legislative history of the Act makes it clear that “It is intended that the standards for awarding fees be generally the same as under the fee provisions of the 1964 Civil Rights Act." Senate Rep. No. 94-1011, supra, U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News, p. 5912. Therefore, we consider judicial interpretations of the term “prevailing parties” under the 1964 Act to be controlling precedent in interpreting the new Act.
. An example of the special circumstances which would make an award of attorney’s fees inappropriate is described in
Naprstek v. City of Norwich,
. While a defendant who is subject to multiple suits may well find himself vulnerable to a greater amount of attorney’s fees than a defendant subject tp only a single suit, we believe that the procedural mechanisms available for class actions, consolidated suits and the like make it doubtful that our holding here will result in defendants having exaggerated attorney’s fees exacted from them.
