Bear Butte is a mountain formation seven miles northeast of Sturgis, South Dako
I.
The City of Sturgis and its Industrial Expansion Corporation (collectively, “the City”) planned to purchase land and construct the shooting range. To fund the project, the City applied for and received a grant of $825,000 from funds allocated to the State of South Dakota under the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program established by Title I of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974, 42 U.S.C. §§ 5301 et seq. Under that program, HUD allocates funds to each State to support development projects by local governments. Once funds are allocated, the State makes awards to local governments without prior HUD approval, but HUD conducts periodic audits to ensure that the State is properly awarding grants and administering the program. See 24 C.F.R. § 570.493.
The Tribes filed their complaint against the Secretary of HUD, the City of Sturgis, and two private parties. The Tribes promptly moved for a preliminary injunction to prevent construction of the shooting range until the litigation was resolved. The Secretary moved to dismiss. The other defendants agreed to stay construction of the shooting range. The district court dismissed some claims but granted a preliminary injunction against the Secretary and HUD based on the Tribes’ claims under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA) and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA). As the State had previously transferred some CDBG funds to the City, the practical effect of the preliminary injunction was to compel HUD to bar the State — a non-party to the lawsuit — from accessing additional CDBG funds for the shooting range project.
In June 2003, after conducting a periodic review of South Dakota’s CDBG program, HUD advised the State that the Bear Butte shooting range project failed to satisfy any of the CDBG program objectives — to benefit low and moderate income persons, to aid in preventing or eliminating slums or blight, and to meet other urgent community development needs. In September 2003, South Dakota responded by cancelling its CDBG grant to the City. With this loss of funding, the City aban
II.
Congress has granted district courts discretion to award attorneys’ fees to a “prevailing party” in an action to enforce RLUIPA or RFRA against the United States or its officials.
See
42 U.S.C. § 1988(b); 28 U.S.C. § 2412(b). In
Buckhannon,
the Supreme Court rejected the “catalyst theory” then prevailing in the circuit courts, which permitted a plaintiff to recover fees if the lawsuit achieved the desired result through a voluntary change in the defendant’s conduct. Instead, the Court held that, to be a prevailing party entitled to a statutory attorneys’ fee award, a party must obtain a
judicially sanctioned
material alteration of the legal relationship of the parties to the lawsuit.
Here, the only relief the Tribes obtained in the lawsuit was a preliminary injunction that barred HUD from providing funds for construction of the shooting range from the time the injunction was entered until South Dakota canceled its block grant to the City. The issue, then, is whether that judicially sanctioned injunction effected the requisite material alteration in legal relationship to make the Tribes prevailing parties
against the federal defendant.
We review this issue
de novo. Christina A.,
The Tribes first argue that they are prevailing parties because they “obtain[ed] an interim order granting them relief, even though their complaint ultimately [was] dismissed.” It is of course literally true that every preliminary injunction effects some judicially sanctioned change in the parties’ legal relationship. If that were all Buckhannon requires, then every recipient of a preliminary injunction becomes a prevailing party eligible for an attorneys’ fee award. But when dealing with a non-final order such as a preliminary injunction, the argument ignores an important principle established by the Supreme Court well before Buckhannon and re-emphasized in the Buckhannon opinion:
Congress intended to permit the interim award of counsel fees only when a party has prevailed on the merits of at least some of his claims. For only in that event has there been a determination of the “substantial rights of the parties,” which Congress determined was a necessary foundation for departing from the usual rule in this country that each party is to bear the expense of his own attorney.
Hanrahan v. Hampton,
The Tribes further argue that they are entitled to prevailing party status because they obtained relief based on the merits of their claims. Most of our sister circuits have concluded that some preliminary injunctions are sufficiently akin to final relief on the merits to confer prevailing party status.
See, e.g. Dupuy v. Samuels,
Here, on the other hand, although the district court before issuing the preliminary injunction considered whether the Tribes were
likely
to prevail on the merits, as we required in
Dataphase Sys., Inc. v. C L Sys., Inc.,
In the end, the Tribes achieved their desired result because of a regulatory action taken by HUD under the CDBG program for reasons unrelated to the merits of the Tribes’ RFRA and RLUIPA claims, and because of voluntary decisions by the other defendants to abandon the shooting range project. In these circumstances, it would be ironic, to say the least, if the Tribes were awarded attorneys’ fees against the defendant whose voluntary action triggered this result. We conclude that such an award is not authorized by the governing statutes and Supreme Court decisions. The Tribes obtained no relief on the merits of their claims against the
The order of the district court dated September 28, 2004, is affirmed.
Notes
. The HONORABLE KAREN E. SCHREIER, United States District Judge for the District of South Dakota.
. The dissent in
Christina A.
and some of our sister circuits have misread that decision as limiting prevailing party status under
Buckhannon
to those who obtain consent decrees and judgments on the merits.
See Christina A.,
