This appeal — nominally by the plaintiff in a prisoner’s civil rights suit, really by his counsel — from a federal magistrate’s order denying an application for attorney’s fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988, requires ús to decide a novel question under that statute.
The plaintiff brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against officials at the state prison where he is incarcerated, alleging that they had violated his civil rights in a prison disciplinary proceeding. The suit asked for restoration of the year of statutory good time that had been taken away from him as one of the sanctions meted out in the disciplinary proceeding, and also asked for damages and other relief. The district court ruled that the plaintiff could get his good time restored only in a habeas corpus proceeding,
Preiser v. Rodriguez,
The magistrate refused to award attorney’s fees to the plaintiff’s counsel. He reasoned as follows. Although the plaintiff had “achieved some relief from the consent decree,” “there was no clear victor,” the relief obtained by the plaintiff “could have been more expeditiously obtained through habeas corpus proceedings,” and he therefore was not the “prevailing party” within the meaning of section 1988.
The magistrate was wrong if he thought the plaintiff was not the prevailing party just because he failed to obtain a
clear
victory. A plaintiff can “prevail” in a lawsuit without getting everything he asked for (few plaintiffs get everything they ask for), and if he can get it by a settlement, and thereby spare the parties and court the burden of trial, so much the better.
Maher v. Gagne,
The novelty of this case is that the main relief ordered in the consent decree— the restoration of the plaintiff’s good time — was beyond the court’s power to decree in a suit under section 1983. The Supreme Court held in
Preiser
that “when a state prisoner is challenging the very fact or duration of his physical imprisonment, and the relief he seeks is a determination
*118
that he is entitled to immediate release or a speedier release from that imprisonment, his sole federal remedy is a writ of habeas corpus.”
There is, though, a very natural judicial reluctance to pronounce judgments void, see, e.g.,
Ben Sager Chemicals Int’l v. E. Targosz & Co.,
A complication is added by the fact tjiat the plaintiff got the disciplinary proceedmg expunged, as well as good time restored. “Expungement” has been ordered in at least one section 1983 case,
McKinnis v. Mosely,
This was functionally a habeas corpus suit and nothing but a habeas corpus suit. Attorney’s fees may not be awarded in such suits, and therefore the magistrate correctly denied the plaintiff’s application— even though the plaintiff certainly prevailed in a meaningful sense, for whether or not the consent decree is void, the plaintiff’s good time has been restored.
Knighton v. Watkins,
Although we reject the magistrate’s approach, his result was correct and the judgment denying attorney’s fees is therefore
Affirmed.
