Appellant was appointed to represent an indigent state prisoner in federal court. The prisoner had instituted a civil rights action based upon his claim of an alleged beating received in a St. Louis jail. In oral argument this court was informed that a trial to a jury, taking three days, was had, and that the verdict was for the defendants and against the civil rights plaintiff. Thus, there was no recovery out of which counsel could be compensated. Subsequent to the trial counsel filed a Motion for “An Attorney’s Fee, and That the Treasurer of the United States Be Made a Party to This Action.” The motion was denied without hearing and from its denial counsel takes this appeal.
Appellant’s argument is threefold: (1) The denial of attorney’s fees by the lower court violated' counsel’s Fifth Amendment rights in that his “private property was taken for public use, without just compensation.” (2) The lower court abused its discretion by failing to award attorney’s fees pursuant to 18 U. S.C. § 3006A (1970). (3) The lower court abused its discretion in not awarding attorney’s fees within its “inherent power.”
I. FIFTH AMENDMENT
Appellant asserts that irrespective of any statutory provisions for the payment of attorney’s fees, such payment is constitutionally mandated by the Fifth Amendment which states that private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation. For this proposition appellant cites Allison v. Wilson,
If it is true, then, that there was no common law right to compensation and that representation of indigents upon court order has been a traditional obligation of the lawyer which he assumes when he becomes a member of the bar, it follows that there has been no “taking” as that term is used in the Fifth Amendment.
3
As the Court in United States v. Dillon,
“An applicant for admission to practice law may justly be deemed to be aware of the traditions of the profession which he is joining, and to know that one of these traditions is that a lawyer is an officer of the court obligated to represent indigents for little or no compensation upon court order. Thus, the lawyer has consented to, and assumed, this obligation and when he is called upon to fulfill it, he cannot contend that it is a ‘taking of his services.’ ” 4
*1080 II. 18 U.S.C. § 3006A (1970)
The relevant section of 18 U.S.C. § 3006A (1970) reads:
“Each United States district court, with the approval of the judicial council of the circuit, shall place in operation throughout the district a plan for furnishing representation for any person financially unable to obtain adequate representation ... (4) for whom the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution requires the appointment of counsel or for whom, in a case in which he faces loss of liberty, any Federal law requires the appointment of counsel.”
The appellant’s argument that his representation in the instant case falls within the ambit of this statute fails for three reasons. First, the statute speaks of the possible future loss of liberty. The statute under which the indigent plaintiff brought his action below, 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1970), is designed to provide a means of redress for past violations of civil rights. Therefore, the action below simply does not come within the statutory language. Second, it is obvious from the language of the statute and from relevant legislative history that the statute was intended to provide legal assistance to indigent defendants in criminal cases. Ray v. United States,
III. INHERENT POWER
Appellant asserts that federal courts have inherent powers to do that which is necessary to the administration of justice, including the awarding of attorneys fees, and that it was an abuse of the lower court’s discretion in the instant case not to exercise its inherent power in granting an award of fees. Such an argument is insufficient to sustain reversal here. An analogy to the power of courts to appoint and compensate medical experts, special masters .or commissions misses the mark because attorneys, unlike these other groups, have a special relationship to the administration of justice; they are officers of the court and thereby have a duty to serve when called upon to do so. Powell v. Alabama,
The denial of Mr. Beilenson’s motion is affirmed.
Notes
. As the government points out, only three states have held that there is a non-statutory right to just compensation. knox County Council v. State ex rel. McCormick,
. Posey & Tompkins v. Mobile County,
. Since it is unnecessary to the holding we do not decide whether the attorney’s services are “property.”
. The Court in
Dillon
correctly points out that the problem of compensation is a legislative matter. Prior to the enactment of compensation statutes the obligation of representation existed without the correlative right to receive attorneys fees. Dolan v. United States,
. 18 U.S.C. § 3006A (1970); 28 U.S.C. § 1915 (1970).
