The question presented by this appeal is whether the defendant in a frivolous civil rights suit, having obtained a judgment for attorney’s fees, is entitled to recover the costs of collecting those fees if the plaintiff refuses to pay them. In Vukadinovich v. McCarthy,
As to the district court’s power to award any fees, however slight, in a ease of this character: We have previously held that the presumptive entitlement of a prevailing plaintiff in a civil rights case to an award of reasonable attorney’s fees (and related expenses) extends to the fees incurred by the plaintiff in attempting to collect the judgment, e.g., Balark v. Curtin,
Our conclusion that a defendant who is entitled to an award of attorney’s fees is also entitled to be reimbursed for the expense of collecting the award creates some, but we think not unbearable, tension with the principle that a defendant who has received a fee award because the plaintiffs suit was frivolous is not automatically entitled to an award of fees for successfully defending the initial award against the plaintiffs appeal. The defendant must show that the appeal was frivolous. Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx Corp.,
It could be argued, by analogy, that the defendant should not be entitled to recover the expense of collection proceedings unless the plaintiffs resistance to collection is frivolous. But there is an important difference. A party cannot be criticized for taking a nonfrivolous appeal from a judgment against him, but he can be criticized for forcing his opponent to resort to collection proceedings by refusing to pay or to agree to a payment scheme. Perhaps there are some exceptional cases where it would be considered unjust to shift the cost of such proceedings to the judgment defendant (in this ease the plaintiff), but we can deal with them when they arise. This is not one. The record shows that the defendants resorted to garnishment after Vukadinovich refused to pay the award of attorney’s fees voluntarily.
We are mindful that the shifting of attorney’s fees has been held not to be a part of the federal common law. Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. Wilderness Society,
We have treated the issue as one of federal law, either common law or statutory (42 U.S.C. § 1988), though Rule 69(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which governs collection proceedings in the federal courts, adopts whatever procedures are followed by the state courts in the state in which collection is sought, here Indiana, unless there is an applicable federal statute expressly regulating the execution of judgments. Resolution Trust Corp. v. Ruggiero,
There is a jurisdictional issue lurking here, however, unnoticed by the parties and the district court but, of course, not waivable. It is whether the district court’s ancillary jurisdiction (now a part of its statutory “supplemental jurisdiction,” 28 U.S.C. § 1367) extends to a garnishment proceeding directed against a nonparty to the original proceeding, namely Vukadinovich’s employer. We left the general issue of the scope of the supplemental jurisdiction with regard to actions to collect a judgment open in Argento v. Village of Melrose Park,
Vukadinovich’s other arguments are frivolous, as are his motions, which are denied. The judgment is
Affirmed.
