In Thonen v. Jenkins,
I. Damages
The district court awarded nominal damages of $100 to both Thonen and Schell based upon the fact, established by our previous opinion,
But the.Supreme Court has consistently held that public officials sued under § 1983 have a qualified immunity from damages if they acted in good faith.
See
Scheuer v. Rhodes,
The record on appeal does not contain the parties’ trial briefs, but the transcript of the hearing below indicates that defendants raised the good faith defense, and- they have pressed it on appeal. The district court in its opinion acknowledged defendants’ claim of immunity, but made no findings of fact on the issue in its discussion of the damage claim. Its only reference to defendants’
bona fides
came in its earlier discussion of the attorney’s fee award, where it stated that “this Court has not concluded that defendants acted in bad faith or with malice.” But we decline to interpret that statement, made in another context, as dispositive of the good faith
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issue on the damage claim. We are especially unwilling to do so because the appropriate test for these defendants after Wood v. Strickland requires an inquiry into objective as well as subjective good faith,
The district court’s decision on the damage claim will be vacated and the cause remanded to enable the court to enter findings as to defendants’ good faith under the standards of Wood v. Strickland.
We also note that the district court did not specify whether defendants should pay the damages in their official or their individual capacities. Should the court find that defendants did not act in good faith and that plaintiffs can therefore recover damages, the court should frame its order to run against defendants in their individual capacities only. Damage awards against officials in their official capacities, which are in effect awards against the state, are barred in federal court by the eleventh amendment.
1
See Scheuer, supra,
II. Attorney’s Fees
The district court rested its award of attorney’s fees of $3,429.60 on alternative theories. One was that the actions of defendants and their counsel both prior to suit ,and during litigation brought the case within the “obdurate obstinacy” exception to the general “American Rule” that attorney’s fees are not taxed against a losing party absent a statutory provision or contractual obligation for them.
See
F. D. Rich Co. v. Industrial Lumber Co.,
. We sustain the award of attorney’s fees on the ground of “obdurate obstinacy.” The court’s findings of fact amply support its conclusion that defendants’ actions throughout the case were “unreasonable and obdurate and obstinate,” and the court was well within its discretion in awarding counsel fees for that reason. Although it found no bad faith or malice on defendants’ part, the district court did consider defendants to have been “unreasonable” in disciplining Thonen and Schell for -use of language in one letter that had been allowed without incident in others, and in pursuing the disciplinary actions even after it became apparent that the letter had had no disruptive effect on the campus. The court also found that once suit was filed, defendants “continually blocked all avenues of compromise and fully litigated every detail much to the delay and detriment of the plaintiffs,” despite a weak case on the merits, and failed on numerous occasions to cooperate with plaintiffs’ counsel and the court. The court noted two specific instances of unreasonable litigation tactics: appeal of a consent order entered at defendants’ own suggestion; and insistence on an incor *7 rect procedural position, with the result that plaintiffs’ counsel had to make an unnecessary trip to the chambers of a judge of this court.
Our affirmance on the ground of “obdurate obstinacy” makes it unnecessary to reach the court’s second theory, and we express no opinion on it. 2
As with the damage- award, the district court’s order on attorney’s fees does not reveal in which capacity defendants are liable. We believe the award can be assessed against them in both their individual and their official capacities.
We are aware that the Supreme Court’s interpretation of the eleventh amendment in Edelman v. Jordan,
We decline to read
Edelman,
which dealt only with retroactive payment of welfare benefits, quite so broadly.
Edelman
did not purport to overrule Amos v. Sims,
Our decision is also 'supported by Fairmont Creamery Co. v. Minnesota,
III. Conclusion
The award of damages is vacated and remanded for findings on the issue of defendants’ good faith, and entry of an award, if any, against them in their individual capacities. The award of attorney’s fees is affirmed. On remand, the district court may enter judgment as to attorney’s fees against the defendants in their individual or official capacities, or both.
Affirmed in part; vacated in part; and remanded.
Notes
. The parties have assumed, and so do we, that the college is the state and not a subsidiary governmental unit falling without the protection of the eleventh amendment.
See
Skehan v. Board of Trustees,
. We do note that this “private attorney general” theory has been recently embraced by several federal courts as grounds for attorney’s fee awards in § 1983 suits.
E. g.,
Incarcerated Men of Allen County Jail v. Fair,
