This case involves an award of attorney’s fees to the State of Wisconsin under 28 U.S.C. § 1447(e), the fee-shifting provision governing improper removal. The principal issue is whether § 1447(c), which authorizes payment of “actual” attorney’s fees “incurred” in resisting removal, permits salaried government attorneys to recover at prevailing market rates. The district court concluded that it does. Because we believe that the provision limits a fee award to actual оutlays, we vacate the award and remand for further proceedings.
I.
Hotline Industries, Inc., a Minnesota corporation, owns and maintains an old railroad ore dock on Lake Superior that is adjacent to a public boаt ramp maintained by the City of Superior, Wisconsin. When Hotline began installing piers off the dock and advertising a marina development, the State of Wisconsin sought a preliminary injunction in state court to enjoin Hotline from constructing any more piers. According to the state, Hotline never obtained the permits required by state law for placing structures in navigable waterways. The state also complained that the piers obstructed boat traffic around the publiс boat ramp and constituted a public nuisance. Hotline removed this case to federal district court. See 28 U.S.C. § 1441. The district court set a hearing date for the state’s preliminary injunction motion, and the state moved to remand the action to state court. See 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c).
Although the hearing was held, the motion for preliminary injunction was never addressed because Hotline could not establish a basis for federal jurisdiction (states are not citizens for purposes of diversity jurisdiction, and there was no federal question). The court advised Hotline that *365 the removal appeared groundless, and that it could either file a response to the state’s remand motion or stipulate to a remand. Hotline stipulated to the remand, and the court issued a remand order. The state then filed a motion for costs and fees under § 1447(c), attaching affidavits from an assistant attorney general that claimed an hourly billing rate of $200 for nearly 28 hours that she and another assistant devoted to the removal proceedings. The court accepted the $200 hourly figure as a reasonable market rate for the government attorneys, and awarded the state $5,583.60 for attorney’s fees. From this decision Hоtline appeals.
II.
Hotline limits its appeal to the award of fees; we have jurisdiction to review this award.
Tenner v. Zurek,
Hotline first argues that the district court lacked jurisdiction to award attorney’s fees after it remanded the case to state court. Focusing on § 1447(c)’s language, Hotline contends that the аward had to be included in the very same order remanding the case, and the district court’s remand order did not mention an award. The plain wording of § 1447(c) does not resolve the question; it provides only that “an order remanding the case mаy require payment of actual expenses, including attorney fees, incurred as a result of the removal.” But the statute does not purport to be exclusive, and it contains no language to suggest that there cannot be a supрlemental order. Several courts have directly rejected Hotline’s argument, holding that district courts retain jurisdiction to consider collateral matters after remand and that attorney’s fees may be awarded under a sepаrate order.
Stallworth v. Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Auth.,
Hotline next contends that the state did not incur any reimbursable attorney’s fees because its lawyers already were on the government payroll as salaried employees. But salaried government lawyers, like in-house and non-profit counsel, do incur expenses if the time and resources they devote to one case are not available for other work.
See Hamilton v. Daley,
Even if fees are recoverable, Hotline argues, they exceed whatever amount was allowed under § 1447(c). Section § 1447(c) provides that “[a]n order remanding the case may require payment of just costs and' any actual expenses, including attorney fees, incurred as a result of the removаl.” The district court construed § 1447(c) to authorize a fee award based on the prevailing rate in Madison, Wisconsin for lawyers specializing in similar work. “From a purely practical standpoint,” the court wrote, “it makes sense to cоmpensate government lawyers in the same manner as privately retained counsel rather than undertaking a calculation of the actual costs incurred.”
In using the market rate as the measure of compensation, the district court followed the general rule for calculating fee awards made under numerous statutes authorizing a “reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the costs.” This rule, applied in
Blum v. Stenson,
But
Fogerty v. Fantasy, Inc.,
Section 1447(c) is unusual among fee-shifting statutes. Unlike the numer
*367
ous statutes that authorize the recovery of “reasonable” attorney’s fees,
see, e.g., Delaware Valley Citizens’ Council,
Only a few fee-shifting statutes explicitly limit recoveries tо actual outlays. For example, the Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act, 42 U.S.C. § 4654, will “reimburse” prevailing claimants for attorney’s fees “actually incurred” in litigating condemnation proceedings brought by the government.
See United States v. 122.00 Acres of Land,
Congress envisioned a similar reimbursement scheme under § 1447(c). This provision specifies that the fees awarded must be the “actual” fees that were “incurred.” This formulation more closely approaches the Uniform Relocation Act or the Equal Access to Justice Act than the civil rights statutes that speak of a “reasonable attorney’s fee as pаrt of the costs.”
Cf. Neal v. Honeywell, Inc.,
We vacate the judgment as to the amount of attorney’s fees awarded to the state and remand so that the district court mаy determine the actual amount of fees incurred. The state bears the burden of proving these amounts. The district court, however, has discretion “to tailor the documentation requirement” according to the stakes involved, see
Garbie,
Vacated and Remanded
