*595 OPINION
In 2006, Bart McQueary challenged the validity of a Kentucky law placing limits on protests at military funerals, claiming that the law violated his free-speech rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments. The district court granted McQueary’s motion to enjoin enforcement of the law on a preliminary basis, soon after which Kentucky repealed the relevant provisions of the statute. The Comr monwealth’s voluntary repeal of the law, the parties now agree, mooted McQueary’s § 1983 action. Yet the parties take sides over whether, in the aftermath of the Commonwealth’s repeal of the law, McQueаry is a “prevailing party” eligible for attorney’s fees under § 1988.
I.
In March 2006, the Kentucky legislature added three misdemeanors to its criminal code, all designed to discourage protests by the Westboro Baptist Church, whose members have become known for staging anti-homosexual protests at military funerals — a practice that McQueary’s attorney acknowledges is “controversial (and offensive to many),” R.43 at 7.
See
2006 Ky. Laws Ch. 50-51;
Snyder v. Phelps,
A person is guilty of disorderly conduct in the first degree when he or she:
(a) In a public place and with intent to cause public inconvenienсe, annoyance, or alarm, or wantonly creating a risk thereof:
1. Engages in fighting or in violent, tumultuous, or threatening behavior;
2. Makes unreasonable noise; or
3. Creates a hazardous or physically offensive condition by any act that serves no legitimate purpose; and
(b) Acts in a way described in paragraph (a) of this subsection within three hundred (300) feet of a:
1. Cemetery during a funeral or burial;
2. Funeral home during the viewing of a deceased person;
3. Funeral procession;
4. Funeral or memorial service; and
(c) Knows that he or she is within three hundred (300) feet of an occasion described in paragraph (b) of this subsection.
2006 Ky. Laws Ch. 50 § 1(1), codified as amended at Ky.Rev.Stat. § 525.055(1).
A person is guilty of disrupting meetings and processions in the first degree when, with intent to prevent or disrupt a funeral or burial, funeral home viewing of a deceased pеrson, funeral procession, or funeral or memorial service for a deceased person, he or she does any act tending to obstruct or interfere with it physically or makes any utterance, gesture, or display designed to outrage the sensibilities of the group attending the occasion.
2006 Ky. Laws Ch. 50 § 3, codified at Ky.Rev.Stat. § 525.145(1).
A person is guilty of interference with a funeral when he or she at any time on any day:
(a) Blocks, impedes, inhibits, or in any other manner obstructs or interferes with access into or from any building or parking lot of a building in which a funeral, wake, memorial service, or burial is being conducted, or any burial plot or thе parking lot of the cemetery in which a funeral, wake, memorial service, or burial is being conducted;
*596 (b) Congregates, pickets, patrols, demonstrates, or enters on that portion of a public right-of-way or private property that is within three hundred (300) feet of an event specified in paragraph (a) of this subsection; or
(c) Without authorization from the family of the deceased or person conducting the service, during a funeral, wake, memorial service, or burial:
1. Sings, chants, whistles, shouts, yells, or uses a bullhorn, auto horn, sound amplification equipment, or other sounds or images observable to or within earshot of participants in the funeral, wake, memorial service, or burial; or
2. Distributes literature or any other item.
2006 Ky. Laws Ch. 50 § 5.
Roughly one month after the passage of these laws, Bart McQueary, a Kentucky resident who had joined these protests in the past and wanted to do so again, filed a lawsuit against Kentucky’s Attorney General in federal court. See R.l. McQueary claimed that §§ 5(b) and 5(c) of the March 2006 Act, located in the third of the new laws, violated his First and Fourteenth Amendment rights in several ways. He wanted to “eongregate[ ], picketf]” and “demonstrate[ ]” in a non-disruptive way on public rights-of-way within 300 feet of funerals, yet the 2006 Act appeared to prevent him from doing so. 2006 Ky. Laws Ch. 50 § 5(b). He wanted to make sounds and display images “observable to or within earshot of’ funerals without permission from the family of the deceased and without disrupting the funeral, yet the 2006 Act appeared to prevent him from doing so. 2006 Ky. Laws Ch. 50 § 5(c). And he wished to “distributee ] literature” during his funeral protests, yet the 2006 Act appeared to prohibit him from doing so. 2006 Ky. Laws Ch. 50 § 5(c). McQueary asked the district court to declare §§ 5(b) and 5(c) unconstitutional on their face and to enjoin their enforcement.
In September 2006, the district court preliminarily enjoined enforcement of §§ 5(b) and 5(c), finding it likely thаt the provisions were unconstitutionally over-broad.
See McQueary v. Stumbo (McQueary I),
After Kentucky repealed the challenged provisions, the district court dismissed the lawsuit as moot.
See McQueary v. Conway (McQueary II),
II.
In trying to resolve the thorny questions raised by McQueary’s appeal— whether or when the winner of a preliminary injunction may be treated as a “prevailing party” entitled to attorney’s feеs— a few basics are in order. There is no common law right to attorney’s fees. Un
*597
der the “American Rule,” the “general practice” is not to award fees to prevailing parties “absent explicit statutory authority.”
Buckhannon Bd. & Care Home v. W. Va. Dep’t of Health and Human Res.,
In any action or proceeding to enforce a provision of ... [§ ] 1983 ..., the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party, other than the United States, a reasonable attorney’s fee as part оf the costs....
42 U.S.C. § 1988(b); see, e.g., id. § 3613(c)(2) (authorizing fee awards to the “prevailing party” in Fair Housing Amendments Act eases); id. § 12205 (same in Americans with Disabilities Act cases); id. § 2000e-5(k) (same in Civil Rights Act cases); id. § 19731(e) (same in Voting Rights Act cases).
“[P]revailing party” is a “legal term of art,”
Buckhannon,
In
Sole v. Wyner,
*598
After
Buckhannon
but before
Sole,
our court considered whether the winner of a preliminary injunction was a “рrevailing party.” In
Dubuc v. Green Oak Township,
There are two more threads to the prevailing-party inquiry. One, to be a prevailing party, the plaintiff must obtain a “material” change in the legal relationship between himself and the defendant.
Sole,
Two, the idea behind § 1988 is to award fees to deserving parties, not to generate “satellite” disputes over fees,
City of Burlington v. Dague,
That is all well and good. But none of this readily resolves today’s case: McQueary does not invoke the “catalyst” theory; he did not ultimately lose on the merits; the preliminary injunction, as we will explain shortly, materially changed the relationship between the parties; and the preliminary injunction turned at least in *599 part on the district court’s assessment of the merits. Keeping in mind the Court’s admonishment that fee inquiries should not generate satellite litigation, are there any other considerations that might clarify the inquiry? Several possibilities come to mind:
* Perhaps, in view of the nature of a
preliminary
injunction, success on this type of interim relief
never
suffices. The statute after all refers to “the” prevailing party, not “a” prevailing party, 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b), suggesting that the only court-ordered change in the legal relationship between the parties that matters should be a lasting one, namely the change that culminates in a
final
judgment. Otherwise, individuals
and
States — both “prevailing” parties at times who “may” obtain fees— might seek fees for all manner of interim victories whenever for one reason or another the case does not proceed to final judgment.
Cf. Hewitt,
But this approach, clear as it might be, fails to account for fact patterns in which the claimant receives everything it asked for in the lawsuit, and all that moots the case is court-ordered success and the passage of time. When protesters seek an injunction to exercise their First Amendment rights at a specific time and place— say to demonstrate at a Saturday parade — a preliminary injunctiоn will give them all the court-ordered relief they need and the end of the parade will moot the case. In what way are such claimants not prevailing parties? We think they are.
See Young v. City of Chicago,
Not all preliminary injunctions, as these examples show, have merely a catalytic effect. The defendants in these cases did not voluntarily change their conduct. An immediately enforceable preliminary injunction compelled them to. And in each instance, the plaintiffs obtained all of the relief they requested once the preliminary injunction served its purpose.
See N. Cheyenne Tribe v. Jackson,
The plaintiffs in all of these cases, it is true, might have avoided the “preliminary” label attached to their victories by asking the courts to convert their motions for a preliminary injunction into motions for a final injunction. See Fed. R.Civ.P. 65(a)(2). Yet Rule 65 is not the Rosetta Stone to prevailing-party inqui *600 ries. A district court may, but it does not have to, grant Rule 65 requests, and nothing about the nature of the prevailing-party inquiry suggests that it should turn on whether a district court happens to embrace this administrative streamlining device. In the final analysis, the preliminary nature of the relief does not by itself provide a ground for never granting fees.
* Perhaps preliminary-injunction winners are never eligible for fees for a
different
reason. In
Sole,
the Court held that a preliminary injunction does not establish prevailing-party status if it is “reversed, dissolved, or otherwise undone by the final decision in the same case.”
The
Munsingwear
doctrine suggests a potentially straightforward approach to the fees question:
Sole
says that “dissolved” or “otherwise undone” preliminary injunctions do not warrant fees; mootness generally requires a court to vacate its earlier rulings, including any preliminary injunction granted in the case; fees for preliminary injunctions therefore are not permitted under
Sole.
But this approach again fails to account for the instances in which a party has prevailed by every measure of victory, as illustrated above. The
Munsingivear
rule, moreover, is not as clear as day: It has exceptions of its own,
see, e.g., U.S. Bancorp Mortgage Co. v. Bonner Mall P’ship,
* Perhaps instead preliminary-injunction winners are
always
eligible for fees.
Buckhannon
says that “a court-ordered change in the legal relationship” between the plaintiff аnd defendant suffices to establish prevailing-party status,
Several courts have rejected fee requests for obtaining such injunctions.
See Dearmore v. City of Garland,
A similar defect defeats a related intuition, permitting fees whenever the nature of the victory is one that Congress has permitted the losing party to appeal. That would be true of final judgments,
see
28 U.S.C. § 1291,
and
of the granting or the denial of preliminary injunctions,
see
28 U.S.C. § 1292(a). But that rule, too, picks up orders that have nothing to do with success on the merits. Even aside from the stay-put injunctions identified above, it would extend to class certification orders, which Congress has permitted parties immediately to appeal (with the permission of the court of appeals).
See
Fed. R.Civ.P. 23(f). “A procedural victory that may be a way station to utter substantive defeat creates no right to fees.”
Richardson v. Penfold,
All of this leaves us with a contextual and case-specific inquiry, one that does not permit us to say that preliminary-injunction winners always are, or never are, “prevailing parties.” In the aftermath of Buckhannon and Sole, however, we can say that the “preliminary” nature of the relief — together with the requirement that a prevailing-party victory must create a lasting change in the legal relationship between the parties and not merely “catalyze” the defendant to voluntary action— will generally counsel against fees in the context of preliminary injunctions. With these considerations in mind, we turn to the district court’s explanation for denying McQueary’s fee request.
First,
the court denied fees on the ground that McQueary did not “directly benefit[]” from the 2006 preliminary injunction. That is not so, however. Before the injunction, Kentucky cоuld prosecute McQueary for holding a large, controversial sign on a public sidewalk near a funeral,
see
2006 Ky. Laws Ch. 50 §§ 5(b), (c); it could prosecute him for quietly distributing anti-military literature to mourners entering a funeral home,
see id.
§ 5(c); and it could prosecute him for singing songs of protest that the funeral party could hear but that did not disrupt the funeral,
see id.
After the injunction, McQueary could do all of these things without fear of prosecution under these laws. No one disputes that Kentucky would have prosecuted McQueary in the absence of an injunction, establishing that this court-ordered free
*602
dom materially changed Kentucky’s bеhavior toward him — at least temporarily.
See DiLaura v. Township of Ann Arbor,
Second,
in explaining its “direct benefit” ruling, the court added that
other
Kentucky laws would prohibit McQueary’s proposed protests. But why should we assess McQueary’s prevailing-party status based on statutes he never challenged? That is not the norm. In considering whether a claimant directly benefitted from litigation, we usually measure the plaintiffs gain based on the relief requested in his complaint, not based on the practical significance of the relief obtained.
See Farrar,
There is a good reason for focusing on the relief the plaintiff requested, not the additional relief hе might have requested. “A request for attorney’s fees should not result in a second major litigation,”
Hensley,
All of this would be prelude to a difficult legal inquiry. The district court would have to decide whether, under the “facts” of this hypothetical protest, MеQueary would violate any other provisions of Kentucky law that the Attorney General might uncover. And that would require the court to assess any constitutional challenges MeQueary might have to those provisions. The possibility of prosecution under an additional unconstitutional statute after all could not undermine the practical significance of McQueary’s success. To say that this would create a costly side show divorced from the merits of the underlying dispute is an understatement. To say that it would lead to district court orders more in the nature of advisory opinions than fee determinations is an unvarnished reality.
Cf. Hall v. Beals,
In defending the district court’s reasoning, the Attorney General argues that we owe deference to the court’s find
*603
ing that other provisions — restrictions on “violent, tumultuous, or threatening behavior” and “hazardous and physically offensive condition[s]” near funerals, Ky.Rev. Stat. Ann. § 525.055 — “likely prohibit” McQueary’s proposed, controversial activities.
McQueary II,
Nor do we see any basis for concluding that McQueary’s proposed protests wоuld violate other, unchallenged aspects of Kentucky law. McQueary alleges that he wants to protest “in a non-disruptive manner.” R.l ¶ 15;
see
R.l ¶¶ 13-14. To deny the request for fees on the ground that his conduct would violate valid restrictions on “violent, tumultuous, or threatening behavior,” we would have to do one of two things: assume that McQueary’s pleadings misrepresent how he planned to behave or infer that non-disruptive protests involve threatening behavior. Either approach would alter our normal practice of accepting a complaint’s factual allegations as true and of drawing аll reasonable inferences in the plaintiffs favor when ruling without an evidentiary record.
Cf. Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
The Attorney General’s argument is unavailing for another reason. A plaintiff crosses the threshold to “prevailing party” status by succeeding on a single claim, even if he loses on several others and even if that limited success does not grant him the “primary relief’ he sought.
Tex. State Teachers Ass’n,
Third,
the court justified its fee denial on the ground that the injunction was premised on overbreadth grounds, not on the ground that McQueary’s proposed communications were constitutionally protected. This, too, is a theory that has nothing to do with the preliminary nature of the court’s relief; it would apply equally to permanent injunсtions. The theory does not work in either setting. When a plaintiff obtains the
greater
victory (striking a statute in all of its applications,
ie.,
on its face) rather than the more narrow victory (striking the statute as applied only to his communications), he does not become
less
eligible for fees. “Prevailing parties” are winning parties, and a party who succeeds in showing that a law cannot be enforced in
any
of its applications due to overbreadth concerns is the epitome of a prevailing party — for he has won not just on behalf of himself but on behalf of many others as well. One of the justifications for § 1988 is that it allows individual citizens to act as “private attorney[s] general,”
Tex. State Teachers Ass’n,
*604 Even if we focus on the effect of an overbreadth ruling solely with respect to McQueary, at any rate, how has he not prevailed? Whether premised on over-breadth grounds or as-applied grounds, the effect is the same: The injunction bars Kentucky from prosecuting McQueary under §§ 5(b) and 5(c) and thus alters the legal relationship between McQueary and the State.
At least four circuits agree that plaintiffs who prevail on overbreadth grounds may collect attorney’s feеs.
See Ways v. City of Lincoln,
Fourth, the court briefly justified its denial of fees on an alternative theory— that “special circumstances” warrant the denial of fees. But the court never explained what made the circumstances surrounding this litigation “special” and thus has given us no basis for assessing this theory for denying fees.
The “special circumstances” exception apparently flows from
dicta
in
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
which says that district courts may deny fees to a prevailing party “in ‘special circumstances’ when an award would be ‘unjust.’ ”
It is “extremely rare” to deny fees based on special circumstances in other circuits as well.
Saint John’s Organic Farm v. Gem County Mosquito Abatement Disk,
So far, we have explained why the district court’s explanations for denying fees in this difficult case do not hold up. Yet we have not explained whether McQueary should collect fees — and with good reason. That question initially is for the district court, which had a ring-side view of the underlying proceedings, which is in the best position to make an initial cut at whether McQueary deserves fees for this preliminary injunction and which is given considerable deference over most aspects of the fees inquiry. Buckhannon, Sole and Dubuc make clear, we think, that, when a claimant wins a preliminary injunction and nothing more, that usually will not suffice to obtain fees under § 1988. What remains unclear is when the occasional exceptions to that rule should apply, a contextual and case-specific inquiry that we ask the district court to undertake in the first instance.
*605 III.
For these reasons, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
