This class action was settled in March 1984. The district court entered a consent decree requiring the Board of Education of Chicago and the Illinois Superintendent of Education to place handicapped students in appropriate special programs promptly after their needs were diagnosed. The decree implemented the Education for All Handicapped Children Act, 20 U.S.C. §§ 1411-20 (the Act). Although the parties agreed on the appropriate relief for the children, they could not agree on compensating the children’s attorneys. In March 1984 the courts of appeals were divided about the availability of attorneys’ fees in cases such as this; the Supreme Court heard oral argument on March 28 in a case presenting the question. The parties therefore agreed to await the outcome of that litigation. The consent decree provides: “The issue of attorneys’ fees is hereby reserved pending the decision by the United States Supreme Court of Smith”.
On July 5, 1984, the Supreme Court held that fees were unavailable.
Smith v. Robinson,
On August 5, 1986, the President signed the Handicapped Children’s Protection Act, Pub.L. 99-372, 100 Stat. 798 (the Amendment), which added among other things an express grant of authority to award attorneys’ fees as part of the costs to plaintiffs prevailing under the Act. See 20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(4)(B) (1986). Section 5 of Pub.L. 99-372 provides that the attorneys’ fees provision “shall apply with respect to actions or proceedings brought under ... [the Act] after July 3, 1984, and actions or proceedings brought prior to July 4, 1984, ... which were pending on July 4, 1984.” The plaintiffs promptly filed a motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b)(6), asking the district court to reinstate their request for attorneys’ fees, which had been pending on July 4, 1984.
The district court granted that request. Recognizing that reopening a judgment two years after its entry is extraordinary given the parties’ legitimate interests in repose,
C.K.S. Engineers, Inc. v. White Mountain Gypsum Co.,
The state maintains that the award against it violates the eleventh amendment. Although Congress may override the states’ immunity by statute,
Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer,
The problem with this position is that attorneys’ fees do not compensate the plaintiffs for injuries. They are instead, as the statute says, part of the “costs” of prosecuting the suit. States have not had an historical immunity from awards of costs. The Supreme Court therefore held in
Hutto v. Finney,
The city and the state defendants join in two other contentions, one constitutional and the other statutory. Section 5 of the Amendments provides that the new attorneys’ fees provision applies to “actions or proceedings ... pending” on July 4, 1984. By then the case had been settled and the consent decree entered; only the request for attorneys’ fees remained for decision. The city and state contend that the case therefore was not “pending” on the critical date.
This is strange locution. Surely the motion was “pending”; the question rather is whether the pending motion was an “action or proceeding”. One might naturally say that the “action” had been settled, but a “proceeding” (the request for fees) remained. The language of the statute supports the plaintiffs. So does its purpose. July 4, 1984, is the day before the decision in
Smith v. Robinson.
The cases preceding
Smith
conflicted, meaning that some plaintiffs in the same position as those in this case had recovered fees. The only reason for picking July 4, 1984, as the effective date of the statute was to ensure that all plaintiffs receive the awards they would have received if
Smith
had been decided the other way. The class in this case would have received fees as a matter of course if
Smith
had been decided the way the dissenting Justices urged. We therefore conclude that a “proceeding” was
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“pending” on July 4, 1984. Accord,
Capello v. District of Columbia Board of Education,
The constitutional argument is that the Amendments upset “vested” rights, thus both taking the defendants’ property (the value of their judgment) and invading the province of the judicial branch. We initially questioned whether this subject is open, because despite 28 U.S.C. § 2403(a) and Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(c), each requiring the district court to notify the Attorney General whenever the constitutionality of an Act of Congress is drawn into question, no notice has been given in this case. The parties did not ask the district court to notify the Attorney General, and the court did not recognize that the statute requires it to act whether the parties ask or not. At oral argument, however, counsel for the state informed us that more than three months ago she sent a copy of the district court’s opinion and the state’s brief to the Attorney General. The Executive Branch therefore has actual notice of the case and has had time to exercise its right to intervene. Failure to notify the Attorney General is not a jurisdictional defect, see
Wallach v. Lieberman,
The “vested rights” doctrine starts from the proposition that a judgment, like a deed, is (or identifies) a species of property. It may be sold, hypothecated, or discounted like a note. Once the court has fixed property rights by judgment, the legislature has no greater power over this form of property than over any other. See
Hodges v. Snyder,
The rights of the defendants in this case are no more “vested” than were the rights of the defendants in Bradley, who discovered a decade into extended school desegregation litigation that they would have to pay fees for the plaintiffs’ work in the entire case. The entitlement of plaintiffs in proceedings under the Act was contested at the time the consent decree was entered in this case; the decree reserved rather than resolved the question. The parties agreed to wait for the outcome in Smith but did not specify that the outcome would fix their rights. The short-term outcome was favorable to the defendants, the longer-term outcome to the plaintiffs. The persons who decided in March 1984 to let the fees abide the event may not have contemplated that “the event” would stretch over two years, but nothing in the Constitution ensures that the resolution of legal disputes will come swiftly.
If the plaintiffs had pressed their claim in July 1984 and lost, we would have a harder problem. The plaintiffs argue that a reopening under Rule 60(b) does not interfere with vested rights because every judgment is subject to such reopening. On this view, however, there are no “rights” of any kind, and every decision fixing interests in property is forever malleable. We doubt that the Supreme Court would take that view, unless it is willing to overrule Hodges, O’Grady, and Wheeling & Belmont Bridge and jettison the doctrine. The plaintiffs did not press their claim, however; they withdrew it. There has never been a judicial disposition of the request for fees. The withdrawal in July 1984 is the equivalent of dismissing a suit without prejudice, then refiling it if the law takes a change in the plaintiff's favor. Such a refiling would not disturb vested rights or call any judicial decision into question. The reactivation of the motion for attorneys’ fees in this case has no greater effect. If the defendants wanted to have a judgment (vested or otherwise) on which to rely, they had to secure a dismissal with prejudice in 1984. They did not, and the Constitution does not give them as a gift what they failed to secure when they had the chance.
Three questions remain, all dealing with the district court’s exercise of discretion. Both sets of defendants say that the court should not have granted the motion under Rule 60(b). The state defendants alone say that the district court abused its discretion by awarding fees even if it was entitled to reopen the subject; “special circumstances” counsel against the award, according to the state. The state defendants also complain about the 50-50 allocation of fees; they want the city to bear 80% of the expense.
None of these arguments is compelling. District courts have discretion in making those decisions that cannot be governed by rule. When a balance of incommensurable factors informs the decision, an appellate court’s task is to ensure that the district court saw what it had to consider, disregarded what it had to disregard, and handled with care the interaction of the remaining factors. E.g.,
United States v. Beasley,
The district judge thought carefully about this case, considered the circumstances that matter, and made reasoned decisions. He reopened the subject under Rule 60(b) because that was necessary to afford the plaintiffs treatment similar to that received by others who were fortunate enough to receive final judgment before Smith. Either the plaintiffs were going to lose their fees because their motion was resolved too late to beat Smith but too soon for the 1986 Amendments, or the defendants were going to lose the benefit of their window of opportunity. This was a hard choice, and the district court resolved it in a principled way. Having decided to reopen the subject, the court necessarily rejected the state’s claim of “special circumstances that make an award unjust”; this line of argument just duplicates the contention that the court should not have granted the motion under Rule 60(b). 3 As for the allocation of fees: both city and state are involved in placing children who need special education and in administering the decree. The district court was entitled to conclude that they should share the costs of this litigation equally, without trying to fine-tune the apportionment. The state may well be less than 50% responsible for the decree and the problems that led up to it, but allocation of this sort is invariably approximate. This allocation is defensible; no more is required.
Affirmed.
Notes
. One court has held in the wake of the Amendments that the Act abrogates the states’ immunity even with respect to awards of damages. See
Muth v. Central Bucks School District,
. The situation under other statutes may be different. Several courts, including ours, have held that an application for fees was not enough to count as a live case under other statutes authorizing awards of fees. E.g.,
Gautreaux v. Chicago Housing Authority,
. On appeal the state adds the contention that the consent decree Is best understood as a roll of the dice on the outcome of Smith: the state was willing to give the plaintiff class what it wanted on the merits because it believed that Smith would be resolved favorably to defendants and that this disposition would be immune from subsequent legislation to create the entitlement to fees that the state (rightly) predicted in 1984 was not yet there. The state did not present this argument to the district court or raise it in its opening brief in this court. It is too late to add an argument, which in any event does not have a sound footing in the language of the consent decree. (We need not cogitate what will happen if the state, like the plaintiffs, persuades Congress to pass a new law giving it another chance to make its argument!)
