This appeal is before us once more, this time not on the .merits but.on plaintiff Charles Murphy’s petition for an award of attorney fees on appeal as a prevailing party pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b). We deny the petition. Plaintiff prevailed on only one issue on appeal, an issue of only state law that could not have affected the judgment in his favor on federal-law claims that allowed a fee award. He lost on the federal matters at issue on appeal. While he remains, a prevailing party in the lawsuit as a whole, a.fee award on this appeal is not justified.
Murphy divided those allegations into six claims:- (1) a federal Eighth Amendment claim for unconstitutional- use- of force and (2) a state-law' battery claim regarding the punch; (3) a federal Eighth Amendment claim for unconstitutional use of force and (4) a state-law battery, claim regarding the choking and throwing; (5) a federal Eighth Amendment claim for failure to intervene to prevent federal constitutional violations; and- (6) a federal Eighth Amendment claim for deliberate indifference to serious medical needs.
Murphy prevailed on four of those claims in a jury trial. The jury found in his favor and against Officer Smith on both the federal and state claims for the punch. The jury also found for Murphy and against Smith on the state-law battery claim for choking him and throwing him into the cell and against the toilet, but against Murphy on the federal claim for those same actions. And the jury found for Murphy on. his Eighth Amendment claim against Lieutenant Fulk for deliberate indifference to. his medical needs after he was injured.
The jury awarded a total of about $410,000 in compensatory and punitive damages. The court later reduced the total to $307,734.82. The court also awarded Murphy attorney fees and costs totaling $110,643.66 under 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b). The court interpreted a provision of the Prison Litigation Reform Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(d)(2), as giving the court discretion in deciding what percentage, up' to twenty-five percent, of the judgment should be used to pay attorney fees, and the court set that percentage at ten percent. Murphy v. Smith, No. 12-cv-0841-SCW,
Defendants Smith and Fulk appealed and' challenged just two separate aspects of the district court judgment. First, defendants argued that the Prison Litigation Reform Act required that fully twenty-five percent of the damages award be put toward the attorney fee award. Second, defendants argued that state-law sovereign immunity-barred Murphy’s recovery on his state-law-claims. As a practical matter, the only part of the judgment implicated by this argument.was an award of $25,501 against Smith on the state-law battery claim for the choking and throwing. That was the claim on which the jury rejected the parallel federal constitutional claim.
We ruled in the defendants’ favor on the PLRA issue. Murphy,
In. 1976, Congress enacted the Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Awards Act, adding language that is now in 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b). The statute allows courts to award prevailing parties reasonable attorney’s fees in “any action or proceeding to enforce a provision of’ 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
When a plaintiff prevails in a suit under § 1983, a court should award a reasonable attorney fee, which is calculated by determining a lodestar amount and multiplying the attorney’s hours on the case by a reasonable hourly rate. That lodestar amount may then be adjusted for a variety of reasons, including the results obtained. Hensley,
Fee issues under § 1988 can become fairly complex in cases like this one, where the plaintiff has asserted several distinct claims under both federal and state law against several defendants, and where the plaintiff prevails on some but not all claims. Hensley offers broad guidance for such problems. Work on an unsuccessful claim that is unrelated to the successful claim would not be covered.
For the work done in the district court, the district court worked out most of those complications in its substantial fee award, and neither side appealed on those issues. See Murphy,
Consider first the federal issue under the PLRA. Murphy did not prevail on that issue in the appeal. His loss reduced his overall degree of success; more of the judgment will go to pay attorney fees, effectively reducing the judgment’s benefits for Murphy. We must account for that result in awarding fees. See Hensley,
The other part of this appeal was the state-law issue of sovereign immunity. On this issue, Murphy prevailed. Since the defendants did not appeal the damages awarded under § 1983, this sovereign immunity issue had practical implications only for the battery claim against Smith for injuries caused by his choking Murphy and throwing him head-first into the toilet in the cell. That’s because the $25,501 in damages awarded on that claim were awarded only under state law. The jury found in Smith’s favor on the federal claim for those actions. See Murphy v. Smith, No. 12-cv-0841-SCW,
Section 1988 does not directly authorize fees for pursuing state-law claims. But plaintiffs often pursue in one suit claims for which federal law authorizes fees and claims for which it does not. See, e.g., Zabkowicz v. West Bend Co.,
In the latter situation, trying to separate out which legal services were rendered with respect to which claim can be “an exercise in futility.” Garrity v. Sununu,
As the fee question was presented to the district court, the battery claim for the choking and the throwing was related to the successful federal claim for the punch. The two claims shared a common factual core—different acts in the course of the same assault. The district court concluded (and we agree) that work done on the former could not be separated from work done on the latter for purposes of § 1988(b), Murphy,
■But the question of appellate fees is framed differently. On appeal, parties can sometimes do what- the defendants did here: present narrow questions affecting only a defined subset of the relief at stake in the larger lawsuit. That narrowing of issues will sometimes make it simple to distinguish work done on fee-authorized claims from other work.
This is such a case. The state-law sovereign immunity issue did not threaten to affect Murphy’s success on his successful federal claims for injuries suffered from the punch and the deliberate indifference to his medical needs. Even, if we had ruled against Murphy and decided that sovereign immunity barred recovery on his state-law claims, his recovery on his federal claims would-have been unaffected. That is true even though the successful federal claim and the- state battery claim share a common factual core; - the- common facts were not relevant to the appealed question. ■Appellate work done on the staté-law battery claim was therefore not related to work on the successful federal claims.
To avoid this result, Murphy argues that he actually prevailed on appeal on his federal claims because the defendants’ sovereign immunity argument threatened all of the damages he had won in the district court, including those awarded under federal law. See Ustrak,
Plaintiffs petition for an attorney fee award for this appeal is therefore
DENIED.
Notes
. All other damages awarded for Murphy’s other injuries—for the punch to his eye and the deliberate indifference to his medical needs—were supported by federal law on grounds that were independent of the defendants’ sovereign immunity theory. Even if the defendants had prevailed on state-law sovereign immunity, that could not have undermined the federal-law foundation for the damages awarded for those other injuries. See Duran v. Town of Cicero,
