LEFEMINE, DBA COLUMBIA CHRISTIANS FOR LIFE v. WIDEMAN ET AL.
No. 12-168
Supreme Court of the United States
Decided November 5, 2012
This case concerns the award of attorney‘s fees in a suit alleging unconstitutional conduct by government officials. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit held that a plaintiff who secured a permanent injunction but no monetary damages was not a “prevailing party” under
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Petitioner Steven Lefemine and members of Columbia Christians for Life (CCL) engage in demonstrations in which they carry pictures of aborted fetuses to protest the availability of abortions. On November 3, 2005, Lefemine and about 20 other CCL members conducted such a demonstration at a busy intersection in Greenwood County, South Carolina. Citing complaints about the graphic signs, a Greenwood County police officer informed Lefemine that if the signs were not discarded, he would be ticketed for breach of the peace. Lefemine objected, asserting that the officer was violating his First Amendment rights, but the threat eventually caused him to disband the protest. See Lefemine v. Davis, 732 F. Supp. 2d 614, 617-619 (SC 2010).
A year later, an attorney for Lefemine sent a letter to Dan Wideman, the sheriff of Greenwood County, informing him that the group intended to return to the same site with the disputed signs. The letter cautioned that further interference would cause Lefemine “to pursue all available legal remedies.” Id., at 619. Chief Deputy Mike Frederick responded that the police had not previously violated Lefemine‘s rights, and warned that ““should we observe any protester or demonstrator committing the same act, we will again conduct ourselves in exactly the same manner: order the person(s) to stop or face criminal sanctions.“” Ibid. Out of fear of those sanctions, the group chose not to protest in the county for the next two years. See ibid.
On October 31, 2008, Lefemine filed a complaint under
The Fourth Circuit affirmed the denial of attorney‘s fees on the ground that the District Court‘s judgment did not make Lefemine a “prevailing party” under
The Civil Rights Attorney‘s Fees Awards Act of 1976,
Under these established standards, Lefemine was a prevailing party. Lefemine desired to conduct demonstrations in Greenwood County with signs that the defendant police officers had told him he could not carry. He brought this suit in part to secure an injunction to protect himself from the defendants’ standing threat of sanctions. And he succeeded in removing that threat. The District Court held that the defendants had violated Lefemine‘s rights and enjoined them from engaging in similar conduct in the future. Contrary to the Fourth Circuit‘s view, that ruling worked the requisite material alteration in the parties’ relationship. Before the ruling, the police intended to stop Lefemine from protesting with his signs; after the ruling, the police could not prevent him from demonstrating in that manner. So when the District Court “ordered [d]efendants to comply with the law,” 672 F. 3d, at 303, the relief given—as in the usual case involving such an injunction—supported the award of attorney‘s fees.
Because Lefemine is a “prevailing party,” he “should ordinarily recover an attorney‘s fee unless special circumstances would render such an award unjust.” Hensley v. Eckerhart, 461 U. S. 424, 429 (1983) (internal
It is so ordered.
