Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
In the most recent chapter of this extremely protracted litigation, the district court, invoking § 114(2) of the Civil Rights Act of 1991 (“Act”), Pub.L. No. 102-166, 105 Stat. 1071, 1079 (codified as an amendment to 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16(d)), ordered the U.S. Navy to pay prejudgment interest on backpay and attorneys’ fees for periods before November 21, 1991, to a class of women who successfully established that the Navy discriminated against them in employment on the basis of sex.
Trout v. England,
No. 73-55 (D.D.C. July 17, 2001);
see also Trout v. Dalton,
No. 73-55 (D.D.C. Aug. 12, 1998);
Trout v. Dalton,
No. 73-55 (D.D.C. July 22, 1998). The Navy appeals on the ground that § 114(2) cannot be applied retroactively to periods predating November 21, 1991, when § 114(2) became effective, citing
Brown v. Sec’y of the Army,
I.
In 1991, when Congress enacted § 114(2), the Trout class action was almost twenty years old. The litigation began in 1973 when Navy computer analyst Yvonne Trout and other female employees of the Navy’s computer operations center sued the Navy for sex discrimination in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e
et seq.
The district court consolidated the complaints and certified a class of civilian women employees who worked for the Navy’s computer operations center at any time between June 6, 1972 and June 4, 1979. In 1981, after a lengthy trial involving forty-two witnesses, more than 7,000 pages of exhibits, and extensive regression analyses demonstrating sex discrimination in the Navy’s hiring, promotion, evaluation, and assignment of women, the district court found the Navy liable for violating Title VII,
Trout v. Hidalgo,
On August 5, 1988, the district court made an interim award of attorneys’ fees and costs to the Trout class, in the amounts of $276,044.00 and $15,434.01, respectively.
Trout v. Lehman,
While the award of interim attorneys’ fees was pending appeal, the district court, on October 12, 1988, ordered back-pay relief for the Trout class dating back to 1970, with individual hearings to be held before a special master to" determine each claimant’s entitlement.
Trout v. Webb,
Six days after § 114(2) became effective, the district court, on November 27, 1991, issued an order that (1) identified the class members entitled to backpay, (2) accepted the special master’s findings that the Trout class’ regression analysis should be used to determine the amount of backpay, and (3) awarded an interim backpay award of $670,402.75 for the period from June 1970 through April 30, 1979.
Trout v. Garrett,
By stipulation of January 22, 1993, the parties agreed that the Trout class was entitled to additional backpay in the amount of $868,277.18 for the period from June 1, 1979 through December 31, 1991. In a settlement agreement of September 20, 1993, the parties agreed the eligible Trout class members were entitled to backpay through December 31, 1991, and attorneys fees through May 17, 1993; the Trout class reserved the right to seek interest on backpay and attorneys fees under § 114(2). The district court approved the settlement agreement on November 22,1993. Regarding the reservation in the settlement agreement for interest, the Navy advised the district court that the government’s position was that § 114(2) was not retroactive, and consequently, interest did not begin to run on backpay and attorneys’ fees until November 21, 1991. By stipulation of May 10, 1995, the Navy agreed to pay interest on backpay and attorneys’ fees awards beginning on November 21, 1991, again preserving the Trout class’s right to seek interest for periods prior to November 21,1991.
After this court issued its decision in
Brown,
II.
Section 114(2) provides Title VII plaintiffs in suits against the federal government with “the same interest to compensate for delay in payment [as is available] in cases against nonpublic parties.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16(d). Whether § 114(2) permits prejudgment interest for periods prior November 21, 1991, when it became effective, is a question of law that the court reviews
de novo. Herbert v. Nat’l Academy of Sciences,
A.
Statutes waiving the sovereign immunity of the United States are subject to the rule of strict construction.
Library of Congress v. Shaw,
In
Brown,
the court held that the rule of strict construction, enhanced by the no-interest rule, applies whether the court is examining a statute’s substantive scope
or
its temporal reach.
Therefore, Brown examined the temporal reach of § 114(2) through the lens of strict construction, taking care not to extend the provision beyond Congress’s intention. Finding no evidence in the text or the legislative history of the Civil Rights Act of 1991 that Congress intended its provisions to operate retroactively, id. at 648, and noting that with the exception of two provisions of the Act that operate prospectively, the Act otherwise states that it is to “take effect upon enactment,” § 402(a), Pub.L. No. 102-166, 105 Stat. 1071, 1099, the court held that § 114(2) was inapplicable where the government’s liability was established and attorney’s fees were incurred before § 114(2) became effective. Id. at 647, 654. The court explained that to apply § 114(2) retroactively would be to impose liability on the government without its explicit, required consent. Id. at 654.
B.
The only question, then, is whether the holding in Brown turns on the timing of the discriminatory conduct at issue, as the Navy contends, or on procedural posture of the case, as the district court concluded and the Trout class maintains on appeal. For the following reasons, we conclude that the district court misapplied Brown's retroactivity analysis by focusing on the procedural posture of the Trout litigation rather than the conduct underlying the litigation.
The last paragraph of the opinion in Brown states in relevant part:
Section 114(2) of the 1991 Act waives sovereign immunity with respect to interest on attorney’s fees awarded under Title VII. In the case at hand, the litigation on the merits of Brown’s claim was completed and the attorney’s fee incurred before the statute became effective. Therefore, to apply § 114(2) retroactively in this case would be to impose upon the United States a liability to which it has not explicitly consented.
This understanding of the last sentence of the opinion in
Brown
is also clear from the fact that the court in
Brown
explained its task as one of reconciling the principles applicable to waivers of sovereign immunity, articulated in
Shaw
and
Ruckelshaus,
with the principles applicable to retroactivity, articulated in
Bradley v. Richmond School Bd.,
The Supreme Court’s decisions in
INS v. St. Cyr,
The Trout class disputes that the Navy’s discriminatory conduct ended in 1979, maintaining that “the Navy continued to discriminate against women through at least December 31, 1991.” This position is based both on the district court’s extension of the backpay award to prevailing class members through December 31, 1991, and what the Trout class views as the Navy’s implicit agreement, by stipulating to those payments, that it was liable for conduct through that date. But the district court’s extension of the backpay award was remedial in nature, intended only to compensate the Trout class for the Navy’s delaying litigation tactics; the district court did not find that discrimination by the Navy against the Trout class extended past 1979. Nor did the Navy implicitly agree that it was liable for discriminatory conduct through 1991; rather, the Navy stipulated only to the liability determined by the district court in 1986 on remand.
Finally, in
Brown
the court found no evidence of congressional intent to apply § 114(2) retroactively.
Accordingly, in light of the court’s analysis of § 114(2) in
Brown
and the Supreme Court’s instruction that a “statement that a statute will become effective on a certain date does not suggest that it has any application to conduct that occurred at an earlier date,”
Landgraf,
