Robert J. QUINN, Jr. and Patricia J. Kampsen, individually
and on behalf of all other similarly situated non-freeholder
electors of St. Louis County, Missouri and of the City of
St. Louis, Missouri, Appellees,
v.
The STATE OF MISSOURI, John D. Ashcroft, Governor of
Missouri, Gene McNary, County Executive of St. Louis County,
Missouri, Vincent C. Schoemehl, Jr., Mayor of the City of
St. Louis, and Joseph S. Balcer, Robert L. Bannister, Sandra
H. Bennett, Allen S. Boston, Claude Brown, William G. Cocos,
Jr., Jo Curran, Thomas P. Dunne, C. Fran Emerson, Gretta
Forrester, Albert H. Hamel, William J. Harrison, Wayne L.
Millsap, Chairman, J.P. Morgan, Catherine Rea, Daniel
Schlafly, Henry S. Stolar, Lucille Walton and Margaret Bush
Wilson, Comprising the St. Louis City and County Board of
Freeholders, Appellants.
No. 88-1433.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.
Aug. 3, 1989.
Order on Denial of Rehearing
and Rehearing En Banc
Nov. 21, 1989.
Order on Motion to Modify Jan. 8, 1990.
Before McMILLIAN, FAGG, and BOWMAN, Circuit Judges.
ORDER
The Court has carefully considered Appellees' motion for attorneys' fees. The federal court litigation initiated by Appellees resulted only in a decision by this Court reversing the District Court on the ground that it should have abstained pending resolution of the state court action. Ultimately, after the state court action reached the United States Supreme Court, we ordered the dismissal of the federal court action. Although Appellees have prevailed in the state court action, we cannot conclude that they have prevailed in the federal court action, or that the federal court action contributed in any way to Appellees' success in the state court action. Accordingly, Appellees' motion for attorneys' fees is denied, and their motion for remand of same to the District Court is denied as moot.
ON MOTION FOR REHEARING
By order of this Court on August 3, 1989, appellees' motion for attorney fees in this case was denied. Appellees have filed a timely petition for rehearing of that order with suggestion for rehearing en banc. The panel has carefully considered appellees' petition for rehearing on the fees issue. We conclude that our August 3, 1989, order should not be disturbed, and therefore the petition for rehearing is denied.
Appellees brought a federal class action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the state of Missouri and various other defendants. The federal suit sought declaratory and injunctive relief in a federal constitutional challenge to article VI, section 30 of the Missouri Constitution. That section provides for the appointment of a "board of freeholders" with authority to prepare a plan, to be voted on by the citizens, for the reorganization and government of St. Louis city and county. Mo. Const. art. VI, § 30(a), (b). As non-property owners, plaintiffs alleged that the section violates their equal protection rights, since the common meaning of "freeholder" is "real property owner."
A parallel action in state circuit court was filed by the federal defendants just before the trial began in federal court. In spite of the pending state action and the unresolved question of state law (whether "freeholder" had its common meaning in this case), the District Court declined to abstain. The court reached the merits of the case, declaring section 30 unconstitutional. Quinn v. Missouri,
Appellees then filed a counterclaim in the state circuit court action seeking a declaration that section 30 violated the equal protection clause of the United States Constitution. The state circuit court found no such violation. The Missouri Supreme Court affirmed the state circuit court without reaching the freeholder issue. Millsap v. Quinn,
After the case was briefed and argued in the Supreme Court, we filed an order remanding the federal case to the District Court and directing that the action be dismissed. We explained that the basis for our earlier abstention ruling and reversal was Railroad Commission v. Pullman Co.,
On June 15, 1989, the Supreme Court reversed the judgment of the Missouri Supreme Court and declared section 30 unconstitutional. Quinn v. Millsap, --- U.S. ----,
In a motion filed June 30, 1989, appellees asked this Court to remand the case to the District Court for an award of attorney fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. We denied the motion and appellees now petition for rehearing or rehearing en banc.
Appellees rely upon several cases from other circuits that, at first blush, are nearly on point with the instant case. The distinguishing feature, however, is the procedural posture of this case. The federal constitutional question was fully litigated in the state system, resulting in review and conclusive determination of that question by the United States Supreme Court, thus making the suit in federal court irrelevant. It is of no consequence that the District Court's decision paralleled that of the Supreme Court, since the District Court's decision was reversed (under the abstention doctrine) and therefore has no legal significance.
Appellees' petition first cites Exeter-West Greenwich Regional School District v. Pontarelli,
In Stathos v. Bowden,
The Seventh Circuit in Lampher v. Zagel,
Appellees also cite Bartholomew v. Watson,
In Stathos, Lampher, and Bartholomew, the federal lawsuits never were dismissed and, in fact, were adjudicated favorably to federal plaintiffs after the state cases were completed. In the instant case, the District Court decision was reversed and the federal case was dismissed when resolution of the state case in the United States Supreme Court made, or was about to make, the issue res judicata. It comports neither with legal precedent nor with fairness to tax attorney fees to the federal court defendants for a federal court suit that should have been put on hold once the related state court suit was filed.
Appellees also cite New York Gaslight Club, Inc. v. Carey,
Carey, however, arose under a statute that expressly requires the claimant to pursue available state remedies before commencing proceedings in a federal forum. There is no comparable requirement in § 1983, and therefore the reasoning in Carey is not applicable to this case.
Webb,
The ultimate question is whether appellees should be considered "prevailing parties" in the federal court action, a prerequisite to eligibility for attorney fees under section 1988. Hewitt v. Helms,
We have no controlling precedents from our Court as this is a case of first impression in this circuit. Cases from other circuits are distinguishable from this case, and the Supreme Court cases to which appellees direct our attention are inapposite. We conclude that appellees are not "prevailing parties" in the federal court lawsuit and therefore are not entitled to an award of attorney fees under section 1988. Accordingly, the petition for rehearing is denied.
McMILLIAN, Circuit Judge, concurring.
I concur in the decision to deny appellees' petition for rehearing.
I agree that the procedural posture of the present case distinguishes it from the cases cited by appellees in their petition for rehearing. In the present case appellees began this litigation as federal plaintiffs. On the day before the federal trial began, however, appellants launched, somewhat belatedly, a pre-emptive strike by filing a declaratory judgment action in state court, and appellees became state defendants. No doubt prompted by our reversal of the district court's decision refusing to abstain, appellees filed a "cross petition" in state court in which they asserted their federal claims. By doing this, appellees opted to "freely and without reservation" litigate their federal claims in state court and to forego their right to return to district court. See England v. Louisiana State Board of Medical Examiners,
The present case is essentially the converse: appellees as the prevailing parties in state court seek attorney's fees for the work performed in the related federal court action. Appellees are in the wrong forum; they should file their motion for attorney's fees under § 1988 in the state court. See Maine v. Thiboutot,
Unlike my colleagues, I believe that New York Gaslight Club, Inc. v. Carey,
[t]he difference between Carey and this case is that in Carey the statute that authorized fees, Title VII (of the Civil Rights Act of 1964), also required a plaintiff to pursue available state administrative remedies. In contrast, nothing in § 1983 requires that a plaintiff exhaust his [or her] administrative remedies before bringing a § 1983 suit.
Id. at 241,
In my view, abstention is analogous to exhaustion because it forces federal plaintiffs to litigate in state court, usually as plaintiffs but occasionally as defendants. See England,
Finally, because I am confident that the state court will acknowledge that appellees, following their success in the Supreme Court, are the prevailing parties and will award them attorney's fees for the federal court proceedings, as well the state court and Supreme Court proceedings, I do not decide whether appellees are prevailing parties in federal court. One could argue, however, that appellees were in fact prevailing parties in the district court because they achieved at least part of the relief they sought. By obtaining the TRO and preliminary injunctive relief, they succeeded, albeit briefly, in preventing the board of freeholders from taking any final action or submitting a final proposal until the district court ruled on the merits. It may be that, at least for purposes of preserving appellees' claim for attorney's fees in federal court, our June 19 order should have dismissed only the appeal as moot and not the entire action. See Crowell v. Mader,
ON MOTION TO MODIFY
The St. Louis County Board of Freeholders (the Board) in its separate motion of December 7, 1989, has asked this Court to modify the language of our order of November 21, 1989, denying rehearing of our denial of appellees' motion for reimbursement of attorney fees for litigation of this case in the District Court and this Court. We deny the motion.
The Board contends that some of the language in our order is potentially prejudicial to its motion now pending before the Missouri Supreme Court, which motion seeks to establish the meaning of the term "freeholder" as used in the Missouri Constitution, Article VI, Section 30. We have carefully reviewed our order and find nothing therein that could be construed as bearing on the meaning of "freeholder" in this or any other provision of the Missouri Constitution or on the ability of the Missouri Supreme Court to reach that issue given the procedural posture of the case. We emphasize that nothing in our order of November 21, 1989, is intended to have any effect upon the Missouri Supreme Court's consideration of the motion now before it.
Motion denied.
