Plаintiff-appellant Susan A. Alizadeh (Al-izadeh) appeals a final judgment of the district court, which, in accordance with a jury verdict, ruled against Alizadeh in her civil rights suit brought against Safeway Stores, Inc. (Safeway), pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1981, and ordered that she pay Safeway attorneys’ fees of $33,750.13 under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. On her appeal, Ali-zadeh challenges only the аward of attorneys’ fees. We affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand for the district court to consider Alizadeh’s financial circumstances when fixing the amount of the attorneys’ fees award.
Facts and Proceedings Below
In August 1983, Safeway fired Alizadeh, a cashier at one of its supermarkets, following allegations by the store manager that a videotape from a surveillance camera revealed Alizadeh stealing money from a cash register. Alizadeh contended that her dismissal was actually a result of the manager’s racial prejudice against her husband, an Iranian national. She asserted in her complaint that two weeks prior to her discharge, her manager aрproached her husband “[i]n an open display of racial hatred and prejudice.”
Following the discharge, Alizadeh enlisted the assistance of her union. It filed a grievance, but, after viewing the videotape, withdrew the grievance and did not seek arbitration.
Alizadeh and her husband sued Safeway and the union, asserting claims against both under the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185, and the Civil Rights Act of 1866, 42 U.S.C. § 1981. Ali-zadeh has been represented by counsel throughout the course of this litigation. The district court granted the summary judgment motion of the union and Safeway as to both claims; however, a panel of this Court vacated the summary judgment with regard to Alizadeh's section 1981 action and remanded.
See Alizadeh v. Safeway Stores, Inc.,
Discussion
Alizadeh, though making no complaint as to the judgment on the merits, presents several issues on appeal concerning the attorneys’ fees award. We will take each in turn.
I. Due Process and the Award of Attorneys’ Fees
Alizadeh contends that the district court violated her due process rights by not ordering Safeway to plead with specificity its claims for attorneys’ fees and by failing to explicate the specific grounds on which its ruling was based, thus denying her notice of those grounds from which she could “formulate a specific response.” Alizadeh also maintains that the court should have held “a hearing on the recоrd” at which she could have demonstrated that her claim was not frivolous. As authority for her contention, Alizadeh cites dicta from
Roadway Express, Inc. v. Piper,
Alizadeh notes that the district court did not actually explain the reasoning for its attorneys’ fees ruling 1 until it issued its order and final judgment, in which it referred to the videotape showing Alizadeh taking money from the cash register and stated that no credible evidence existed demonstrating that her dismissal had resulted from prejudice toward her husband. Nevertheless, the court’s ruling could not have come as a surprise to Alizadeh. Safeway raised the issue of its recovery of attorneys’ fees as early as in its “First Amended Original Answer and Counterclaim,” in which Safeway asserted that Ali-zadeh’s actions were “frivolous, unreasonable and/or without foundation.” Alizadeh was again on notice of Safeway’s position regarding attorneys’ fees as a result of the Joint Pretrial Order, of which both parties were signatories. The order’s last contested issue of law was “[wjhether Safeway is entitled to recover reasonable attorney’s fees and costs from Plaintiff.” The foregoing demonstrates that the attorneys’ fеes issue was always before the trial court — a fact, we must conclude, of which Alizadeh was always aware.
The court’s failure to hold a hearing before ruling on the imposition of attorneys’ fees also did not work to violate Alizadeh’s due process rights. In the context of Rule 11 sanctions, authority exists for the proposition that a hearing is unnecessary when “ ‘the judge’s participation in the proceedings provide[s] him with full knowledge of the relevant facts,’ ”
Oliveri v. Thompson,
II. Was Alizadeh’s Claim Frivolous and Unreasonable?
Alizadeh maintains that the district court erred in finding that her suit wаs frivolous and unreasonable under the standard of
Christiansburg Garment Co. v. EEOC,
III. Attorneys’ Fees for the Appeals
Alizadeh next contends that because Safeway did not prevail in the initial appeal on the section 1981 issue, the district court should not have granted Sаfeway the $6,500 in attorneys’ fees it spent on that appeal. Citing
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
Reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard,
Vaughner v. Pulito,
IV. The Attorneys’ Fees Award and Ali-zadeh’s Ability to Pay
Alizadeh argues that the district court abused its discretion by not considering her impecunious circumstances when setting the attorneys’ fees award. 5
Section 1988 gives the district court the discretion to award the prevailing party “a reasonable attorney's fee as part of the costs.” The Supreme Court has never intimated that a party’s financial condition is a proper factor to consider in determining
whether
to award attorneys’ fees against that party
6
; nor has this court. We hold it is not.
See Miller v. Los Angeles County Bd. of Educ.,
In
Knighton v. Watkins,
Setting an attorneys’ fees award that is clearly wholly beyond any present or prospective ability of the losing party to pay has little tendency to advance section 1988’s general goal of compensating the prevailing party for legal expenses incurred as a result of the litigation.
See
S.Rep. No. 94-1011, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 5,
reprinted in
1976 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad. News 5908, 5913. We hold that the financial condition of a nonprevailing plaintiff charged with attorneys’ fees under section 1988 is a factor that, although not controlling, a court should consider when fixing the amount of such an award.
7
However, we do not now address whether or to what extent such a factоr should be considered where the suit has been brought in actual bad faith or malice.
8
Cf. Christiansburg Garment Co.,
Conclusion
We affirm the district court’s judgment that Alizadeh take nothing from Safeway on the merits, that Safeway is entitled to an award of attorneys’ fees under section 1988 in respect to all proceedings in this case through the district court’s March 23, 1989 judgment herein, and that Alizadeh is not entitled to any attorneys' feеs recovery from Safeway in respect to any of said proceedings. We likewise hold that Aliza-deh is not entitled to recover any attorneys’ fees in respect to the present appeal. We vacate so much of the district court’s judgment as fixes the amount of Safeway’s attorneys’ fees and remand for reсonsideration (and possible taking of additional evidence, affidavits, or the like, should the district court deem it desirable for this purpose) of the amount of such fees in light of Alizadeh’s claimed limited financial resources and inability to pay.
AFFIRMED in part, VACATED in part, and REMANDED.
Notes
. The court awarded attorneys’ fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988, which provides that ”[i]n any action or proсeeding to enforce a provision of section! 1 1981 ... the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party ... a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the costs.”
. Although Alizadeh seems to seek a hearing to challenge the propriety of any award rather than its amount, we note that the latter type heаring was not required here because both parties had the opportunity to, and in fact did, submit detailed motions explaining their positions on the amount of the award. Additionally, there is nothing to indicate that special circumstances required any further sort of hearing; nor does (or did) Alizadeh point to any such special factоrs.
See Konczak v. Tyrrell,
. Alizadeh’s transcript order form filed in the district court states merely "Transcript is unnecessary for appeal purposes.”
. In this regard, Alizadeh also argues that she should be awarded attorneys’ fees for this appeal for successfully defending against the imposition of attorneys' fees, and for the first appeal, all, as she says in her brief, "assuming, of course, that she will prevail in this appeal." We reject these contentions. For the reasons explained in the text, Alizadeh is not a prevailing party on the merits.
See Hanrahan v. Hampton,
. Alizadeh included with her "Mеmorandum in Opposition to Defendant’s Motion for Attorney's Fees and Request for Reconsideration” her affidavit in which she attested to her extremely limited financial circumstances, which appears to indicate that neither she nor she and her husband could, or had any reasonable prospects of becoming ablе to, pay anything close to the $33,750.13 in attorneys’ fees and expenses sought by (and ultimately awarded to) Safeway. In its order, the district court did not explicitly state whether or not it took into account Aliza-deh’s financial circumstances when determining the amount of the fee award. However, we infer it did not as the court did not mention financial circumstances but did state that the award takes into account the factors it is required to consider under
Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc.,
.The Court has suggested that attorneys’ fees awards are not always purely compensatory in nature.
See Blanchard v. Bergeron,
. The court need consider the nonprevailing plaintiffs financial condition only if that рarty has first affirmatively, and with sufficient timeliness before the fixing of the amount of the award, expressly requested consideration thereof in that connection and has supported that request with adequately detailed and comprehensive affidavits or similar "evidence”; the party against whom the attorneys’ fees are to bе assessed will bear the burden of going forward and of persuasion in this respect.
. Nor do we now address whether or under what circumstances a nonprevailing defendant’s financial condition may be weighed in charging that party with attorneys’ fees under section 1988. We note, however, that civil rights defendants, such as individual law enforcement officers, school principals, and many others, are often not at all wealthy and, like many plaintiffs, may be of very limited financial means.
