The questions involved in this appeal are the propriety, vel non, and the measure, of an award of fees to counsel for prisoners in a declaratory action seeking revision of the rules and procedures for disciplinary proceedings at the- Federal Reformatory at Lorton, Virginia. This institution houses certain prisoners from the District of Columbia. In a prior appeal by defendant prison authorities we remanded for reconsideration because the Supreme Court’s subsequent decision in
Wolff v. McDonnell,
1974,
Before us defendants’ first contention is that, in the light of our decision, the district court had no jurisdiction, and therefore could not award costs. Quite apart from the fact that costs may be awarded although a court dismisses for lack of jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1919,
see Mashak
v.
Hacker,
7 Cir., 1962,
Since oral argument, however, defendants have been supplied with a better defense so far as the award of counsel fees on a public benefit basis is concerned: it is not to be done.
Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. The Wilderness Society,
(1975)
The Alyeska Court expressly excluded from its condemnation, however, “attorneys’ fees for the ‘willful disobedience of a court order ... as part of the fine to be levied on the defendant.’ [citations omitted] or when the losing party has ‘acted in bad faith, vexatiously, wantonly, or for oppressive reasons . .’ [citations omitted].” Accordingly, there is still open the question of an award based on a finding of obduracy.
A question not raised by either party is the district court’s power to award costs after the filing of a notice of appeal. An appeal from a final order normally ousts the district court of jurisdiction. See 9 Moore’s Federal Practice, f 203.11, at 734. While power to perform “ministerial” acts remains,
cf. Sykes v. United States,
8 Cir., 1968,
We do not feel obliged, however, to apply this prohibition to an award for general obstinacy unconnected with the merits of the case. On this aspect the court found three general grounds. The first was defendants’ unwillingness, from the beginning, to “conciliate,” particularly where it was “implicitly conceded by [their] counsel” that some of their procedures needed correcting. Secondly, the court found unsatisfactory defendants’ response to its directions to draft rules. Finally, and this, according to the court, was where “the real obduracy and obstinacy set in,” defendants were recalcitrant in carrying out the final order. All of these were fitting subject for obduracy. None, however, singly or collectively, warranted the court’s decision awarding fees computed on counsel’s total preparation and trial time. An award for obstinacy, although a penalty, is only for the unnecessary effort occasioned by the obstinacy.
Cf. Carrillo v. Westbulk,
1 Cir., 1975,
While we do not agree with defendants that a party who offers a legitimate defense cannot have been obstinate in the process,
Marston v. American Employers,
ante, — indeed, even a winner may have to pay obstinacy fees,
McEnteggart v. Cataldo,
1 Cir., 1971,
There remains the question of the extent that defendants were obdurate in regard to redrafting their rules in response to the court’s instructions. Even if the decision was erroneous, defendants were obligated to obey until there was a stay, or a reversal. If their inadequate redrafting was obstinate and thereby occasioned the expenditure of unnecessary time by plaintiffs, here, in addition to “the real obduracy” in failing to comply with the final order previously referred to, or obdurate failure to concede, we see a basis for obstinacy fees. These were strictly district court matters, and we feel may be properly considered within the authority to tax costs that remains in the district court even after an appeal.
We vacate the award of plaintiffs’ counsel fees and remand for a new assessment consistent herewith.
