Virginiа Espinoza Guerrero and Marcos Guerrero appeal the district court’s orders denying them “fees on fees” for work done by their attorney after they accepted Fed. R.Civ.P. 68 offers of judgment that provided for reasonable attorney’s fees and costs incurred “prior to the date оf’ the offers. We have jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we affirm.
I
The Guerreros brought a civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against William Cummings and the City of Nyssa. Cummings and Nyssa made Rule 68 offers of judgment priоr to the commencement of trial. Except for the dollar amounts and the plaintiffs’ names, the offers were identical and provided:
Pursuant to FRCP 68, defendants hereby allow judgment to be given against them in favor of plaintiff, Virginia Espinoza Guerrero, for a total of ONE THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED AND NO/100 DOLLARS ($1,500), plus reasonable attor *1113 ney fеes and costs incurred by this plaintiff prior to the date of this offer in an amount to be set by the court.
The Guerreros accepted, and judgment was еntered in their favor.
Their attorney then sought to recover costs and fees that included time spent in preparing the bill. The district court awarded pre-settlement costs and fees, but declined to award fees on fees on the ground that “the explicit terms of the offers dictate this result.”
II
The Guerreros contend that the terms of the offers they accepted do not clearly and unambiguously waive fees on fees. We cannot agreе.
As a general rule, “time spent in establishing entitlement to an amount of fees awardable under section 1988 is compensa-ble.”
Clark v. City of Los Angeles,
The Guerreros contend that the offers are ambiguous because, by allowing for costs and fees “in an amount to be set by this court,” thеy leave open the possibility that the court will choose to award an amount that includes post-settlement fees. Alternatively, they argue, the language is ambiguous because it could be interpreted to mean that if the parties fail to reach an agreement regarding the amount of fees, they will petition the court and, in that event, will be entitled to fees for the time spent on that effort because the offer is silent as to feеs for counsel’s efforts involved in those proceedings.
We see nothing ambiguous in these offers. By their own terms, the offers explicitly limit fees and costs to those ‘ incurred by this plaintiff prior to the date of this offer in an amount to be set by the court.” (Emphasis added). It is the reasonableness of those fees only — i.e., fees incurred before the offers — that mаy be left to the court to determine.
The Guerreros rely on
Holland v. Roeser,
Because the plain language of the settlement offers limits attorney’s fees to those accrued prior to the date of the offers, the district court did not err in finding that the Guerreros’ acceptance clearly and unambiguously waived attorney’s fees incurred thereafter.
Ill
The Guerreros contend that disallowing post-offer fees undermines the attornеy’s fees policy in civil rights actions. They are concerned that the district court’s decision puts plaintiffs in an impossible predicament: either rеject an offer of judgment which is reasonable as to the damages but leaves open the attorney’s fees, and with the rejection risk the feе-shifting penalties in Rule 68, or accept the Rule 68 offer which cuts off further entitlement to fees no matter how difficult it is to resolve the amount of the рre-offer fee. They also suggest that forcing plaintiffs to litigate the reasonableness of fees, yet depriving them of fees on fees, dilutes the attorney’s fees paid for work done on the underlying case.
These arguments fail in light of the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Marek v. Chesny,
*1114
IV
The Guerreros contend that under the language of Rule 68 itself, no Rule 68 offer that leaves open the “amount or extent of [defеndant’s] liability” for pre-offer attorney’s fees should preclude plaintiffs who accepted such an offer from securing reasonable attоrney’s fees for post-offer work to establish the amount or extent of liability for pre-offer attorney’s fees. They rely on the last sentence оf the Rule, which provides:
When the liability of one party to another has been determined by verdict or order or judgment, but the amount or extent of the liability remains to be determined by further proceedings, the party adjudged liable may make an offer of judgment, which shall have the same effect as аn offer made before trial____
Fed.R.Civ.P. 68. As we understand the suggestion, it is that their situation is like the bifurcated trial situation that the last sentence addresses — in accepting the offer, liability for attorney’s fees was determined, but the amount or extent of those fees remains to be determined in post-offer proceedings.
However, this is beside the point. Even though there may bе a post-offer proceeding, the terms of the offer — not the terms of Rule 68 — control the cut-off of attorney’s fees and costs.
Marek,
V
Finally, the Guerreros seek payment of attorney’s fees incurred in the course of pursuing this appeal, under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. Section 1988 permits the award of attorney’s fees only to a prevailing party. Because we affirm the district court, the Guerreros are not prevailing parties and so are not entitled to fees on appeal.
AFFIRMED.
