Thе City of Chicago has appealed from an order that it pay $113,000 in interim attorney’s fees to the plaintiffs in this civil rights case. The award of fees was made under the authority of 42 U.S.C. § 1988, which authorizes the award of reasonable attorney’s fees to “prevailing” parties. The question we are asked to decide is whether, for purposes of section 1988, you can win by losing. But we cannot reach that question without first satisfying ourselves that the order to pay is appealable.
The suit is a class action under section 1 of the Civil Rights Act of 1871, 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Brought in 1982 on behalf of state criminal defendants and сonvicts in Chicago, it challenges the constitutionality of the Chicago police department’s alleged practice of concealing exculpatory material collected in criminal investigations and lodged in the department’s informal “street files.” The district court issued a temporary restraining order directing the city to preserve such material pending decision on the plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction. In compliance with this order the city adopted retention procedures that in 1983 the district court by a preliminary injunction required the city to continue and in certain respects amplify.
Meanwhile the city had appealed from the grant of the preliminary injunction, and in 1985 this court reversed.
With the case back in the district court, the plaintiffs’ lawyers inspected the files but found nothing on which they could base a claim that any member of the class had been convicted in violation of the Constitution. The lawyers say they think the files were “stripped” of all exculpatory materials, but do not propose to try to prove this. Eventually the city moved to dismiss the case for want of prosecution. The motion was granted; and although it seems that no judgment dismissing the suit was actually entered, and although the plaintiffs filed a motion to reinstate the suit, at argument their counsel acknowledged that they did not intend to pursue the case further.
Although the case is effectively over and done with, we cannot ground our jurisdiction of the city’s appeal from the order to pay interim- fees on the existence of a final judgment winding up the entire litigation. Not only was no such judgment (it seems) entered, but nо notice of appeal from it has been filed. The only notice of appeal is from the district court’s order, issued back in 1984, directing the city to *1318 pay the plaintiffs forthwith the $113,000 in interim attorney’s fees that the court had previously awarded. If the 1984 order was not in some sense a final order we have no appellate jurisdiction over it just because, in the interim, the litigation has for all practical purposes come to an end.
Attorney’s fees usually are awarded after the final judgment; since there is then nothing else pending in the district court, the fee award is a final ordеr in an uncontroversial sense, appealable under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. The order to pay interim fees that was issued in 1984 neither wound up the entire litigation nor was entered after the litigation had been disposed of by some other order.
Another unavailing possibility would be to regard the fee award as a pendant to the preliminary injunction. When an order is properly appealed, another closely related order that would not be appealable independently can be reviewed along with it if that is the most efficient way of proceeding. See
Parks v. Pavkovic,
That leаves as the only possible route of appeal the collateral order doctrine of
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
The three elements are well illustrated by the facts of Cohen, a shareholders’ derivative suit. A state statute required the plaintiff in such a suit to post a bond to cover the defendant’s costs in the event the defendant won. The district court denied the corporate defendant’s motion to require the posting of a bond, holding that the statute was inapplicable to a suit in federal court. The defendant appealed. The Supreme Court held that the order denying the motion was indeed appealable. The denial was final, the issue resolved by it was unrelated to the merits of the derivative suit, and a final judgment in favor of the defendant would not repair the harm should the plaintiff not be good for the defendant’s costs.
The Court’s brief discussion has spawned an immense jurisprudence of collateral orders. See 15 Wright, Miller & Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3911 (1976); id., 1986 Supp. Although the test first stated in Cohen remains canonical, as with so many multi-“pronged” legal tests it manages to be at once redundant, incomplete, and unclear. The second “prong” is part of the third. If the order sought to be appealed is not definitive, an immediate appeal is not necessary to ward off harm; there is no harm yet. The first “prong” seems unduly rigid; if an order unless appealed really will harm the appellant irreparably, should the fact that it involves an issue not completely separate from the merits of the proceeding always prevent an immediate appeal?
The incompleteness of the test comes from the fact that it leaves out of account the need to compare the irreparable harm if an immediate appeal is not allowed with the
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irreparable harm if it is allowed. The Supreme Court’s decision in
Richardson-Merrell, Inc. v. Koller,
Koller
suggests an interpretation of the requirement of separability or “collateralness” differеnt from and more functional than the conventional interpretation illustrated by such cases as
Cipollone v. Liggett Group, Inc.,
The district judge thought the city would not be able to show irreparable harm, see
If (but for this appeal) the fees would have been disbursed to the lawyers rather than retained by the prisoners and defendants, the problem would be less serious. Although the recipients wоuld be nonparties, and the city asserts that to get its money back it would have to sue them for restitution, we assume that the district court has an inherent power to order attorneys to whom fees were paid over by their clients pursuant to court order to repay the fees should the order be reversed. But we do not think that back in 1984, when the city had to decide within thirty days whether to file a notice of appeal, it was required to investigate the fee arrangements between the plaintiffs and their attorneys in order to determine whose pockets the fees would end up in if the city complied with the order (which was to pay the plaintiffs, not their attorneys). To show irreparable harm it is enough to show that there was a danger — there was no more than that in Cohen —that the fees would disappear into insolvent hands.
*1320 So that the scope of our holding will not be exaggerated, we emphasize that the collateral order doctrine is not applicable merely because a discovery order or some other interlocutory order will force the party against whom it is directed to pay out money that he may not be able to recover by a final judgment in his favor. Most such orders are not even сollateral within the meaning we derive from cases like Roller. Allowing the immediate appeal of such orders would bring on a regime of piecemeal litigation with a vengeance. But an order to pay fees is genuinely collateral; it can be appealed (provided the requirement of irreparable harm is satisfied) without any disruption of the proceedings on the merits. Certainly this appeal did not threaten or cause any interruptions, quite apart from the fact that the underlying proceedings have now petered out. The fact that the merits of the order and the merits of the underlying litigation may be related is not decisive.
Notice, though, that it is the order to pay, issued in 1984, not the award itself, made in 1983, that makes the award ap-pealable by virtue of the collateral order doctrine. The city was not irreparably harmed by being told that it owed the plaintiffs $113,000 but did not have to pay till further notice (the 1983 order). The threat of irreparable harm arose when the city was told to pay immediately, in circumstances where if the payment order was later held invalid the city might very well not be able to get all its money back.
Lest the term “interim order” convey an ineradicable impression of something tentative, subject to revision, and hence incapable of inflicting irreparable harm on the would-be appellant, cf.
Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay,
We turn at last to the merits of the fee award.
A district court has the power to award fees before the entry of a final judgment,
Hanrahan v. Hampton,
Here, we now know, the plaintiffs lost— unless it is possible to win by losing, a proposition we reject. It is true that you can win a case by obtaining a settlement, even though one condition of the settlement might be the dismissal of the suit. See, e.g.,
Maher v. Gagne,
It might seem that unlike the situation in a damage action, where you have won nothing till you get a judgment and if the judgment is reversed on appeal you have nothing to show for the lawsuit, a plaintiff who obtains a preliminary injunction has won something even if the injunction is reversed; for unless it is stayed, it constrains the defendants’ conduct until it is reversed. Indeed, from this standpoint it would make no difference whether the pre
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liminary injunction was vacated as moot (as in
Williams)
or reversed. This line of argument is foreclosed, however, by our decision in
Ekanem v. Health & Hospital Corp.,
The plaintiffs say they won in a practical sense because the city has stopped discarding exculpatory material in police department files. But at oral argument the plaintiffs’ counsel conceded that if they had brought a damage suit against the city, and lost, and the next day the city had said, “Well, we won, but we think the plaintiffs have a point, and we have decided to change our procedures,” there could be no award of attorneys’ fees under section 1988. Or suppose (as in fact happened here) that a plaintiff gets an injunction to which he has no legal right but the dеfendant complies pending appeal, thus conferring a benefit on the plaintiff. As is apparent from
Ekanem
and
Smith,
this kind of benefit cannot support a fee award. “If it has been judicially determined that defendants’ conduct, however beneficial it may be to plaintiffs’ interests, is not required by law, then defendants must be held to have acted gratuitously and plaintiffs have not prevailed in a legal sense.”
Nadeau v. Helgemoe,
Mantolete v. Bolger,
The civil rights attorney’s fees statute does not reward a plaintiff who brings an unmeritorious suit, merely because by some fortuity the suit brings about changes favorable to him. The coercive effect of litigation on a defendant is by no means entirely dependent on the litigation’s having merit, especially in a regime (the regime created by section 1988, as interpreted) which makes it easy for a winning plaintiff, but difficult for a winning defendant (see
Hughes v. Rowe,
When a suit that is “frivolous, unreasonable, or groundless” is settled before judgment, there will be no award of attorney’s fees even though the suit helped the plaintiff in the settlement negotiations.
Harrington v. DeVito, supra,
We have difficulty understanding the force of the plaintiffs’ argument that because the preliminary injunction was re
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versed on the authority of
Younger
rather than on the basis of a finding that the plaintiffs' constitutional rights had not been violаted, the plaintiffs can somehow be regarded as prevailing parties. If you lose a case because the statute of limitations has run or because the court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction or because venue was improperly laid, still you’ve lost and are not the prevailing party. This case is distinguishable from
Thomas v. Honeybrook Mines, Inc.,
The order to pay attorney’s fees is reversed with directions to dismiss the fee petition. To help bring the underlying case to a close we suggest that the district court, on the basis of the representations made by the plaintiffs’ counsel in this court, dismiss their motion to reinstate the case. One final point. After the argument in this case the plaintiffs’ counsel submitted to the clerk of this court, with a request to distribute to the panel, a letter commenting on a case that the dеfendant’s counsel had cited in oral argument and then in a letter to the court filed under Circuit Rule 11. Rule 11 authorizes counsel, without obtaining the court’s permission, to notify this court of pertinent and significant authority that comes to counsel’s attention after his brief has been filed or oral argument held.. Rule 11 expressly forbids argumentation, and the defendant’s letter complied with this stricture. Rule 11 does not authorize responses to Rule 11 submissions. Nor (what is the same thing) do our rules authorize parties to file, without leave of court, supplementary briefs following argument. The plaintiffs’ letter of October 30 is an unauthorized brief; leave to file it should have been but was not requested. We trust that this violation of our rules will not recur.
Reversed.
