Lead Opinion
This case arises from ongoing litigation between a class of plaintiffs (the “Walker plaintiffs”) and the Dallas Housing Authority (DHA), the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), and the City of Dallas (collectively, “the defendants”). In the primary litigation, the defendants were found liable for unconstitutional racial discrimination and segregation in Dallas’s public housing programs. The result was a remedial order from the district court that, in relevant part, ordered DHA to construct or acquire public housing projects in “predominantly white” neighborhoods.
Two homeowners and their homeowners’ associations (collectively, the “Homeowners”) then sued for declaratory and injunctive relief to prevent construction of these new projects adjacent to their neighborhoods. The Homeowners challenged the remedial order as unconstitutional. In a separate action, the Walker plaintiffs sought declaratory relief that the remedial order was constitutional. The district court found against the Homeowners and for the Walker plaintiffs in the two actions, respectively. The Homeowners appealed, and we partially vacated the remedial order, reversed the declaratory judgment, and remanded for revision of the order. A more-thorough recitation of the facts and issues of this complicated case can be found in our decision, Walker v. City of Mesquite,
Section 1988 provides in relevant part: “In any action or proceeding to enforce a provision of [§ 1983], the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party, other than the United States, a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the costs.” A litigant is not eligible for attorney’s fees unless it is a “prevailing party.” Hewitt v. Helms,
Three years later, the Court returned to this issue in Farrar v. Hobby,
In this case, the Homeowners sought declaratory relief, alleging the remedial order was unconstitutional because it included race-based distinctions and was not narrowly tailored. They also sought a temporary restraining order, a preliminary injunction, and a permanent injunction to prevent the DHA from purchasing and/or constructing public housing on the disputed sites. The district court denied the Homeowners the relief they sought and, in response to the Walker plaintiffs’ suit, declared the remedial order constitutional. On appeal, we partially vacated the district court’s remedial order, reversed the declaratory judgment, and stayed the construction of the housing projects until the district court revised the order. Our opin
The DHA argues that the Homeowners cannot be a prevailing party because our holding was not “judicial relief’ for the purposes of § 1988. We find this argument to be without merit. Although the permanent injunction sought by the Homeowners was never granted, this court held, as a matter of law, that the remedial order was unconstitutional for precisely the reasons argued by the Homeowners in their request for declaratory relief. On its face, our ruling entitled the Homeowners to relief. Thus, the district court’s ultimate vacation of the offending provisions of the order is the functional equivalent of an enforceable judgment for the Homeowners and against the DHA.
Notwithstanding the Homeowners’ status as a prevailing party, attor-
Finally, the district court found that the Homeowners’ fee request should be denied because they failed to substantiate their request under well-established principles. Generally, the magistrate judge found, and the district court agreed, that the Homeowners’ attorneys did not exercise “billing judgment” because they did not document both the hours charged and -the hours written off and they included non-legal hours in their submissions, including time billed for drafting press releases and preparing for a media interview. Walker v. HUD,
The district court is correct that “[t]he plaintiffs are charged with the burden of showing the reasonableness of the hours they bill and, accordingly, are charged with proving that they exercised billing judgment.” Walker v. HUD,
Although the district court found the Homeowners’ marshaling of evi
For the forgoing reasons, we REVERSE the district court’s findings that the Homeowners were not a prevailing party within the meaning of § 1988 and that special circumstances existed that justified the denial of attorney’s fees, and we REMAND for a determination of attorney’s fees consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The Homeowners did not simply achieve a favorable statement of the law or a temporary stay, as suggested by the DHA in its brief. This court's finding that the remedial order was unconstitutional, and the district court’s later modification of that order to comply with our ruling is distinguishable from the cases cited by the DHA. In Hewitt, the prisoner plaintiff had only obtained an "interlocutory ruling that his complaint should not have been dismissed for failure to state a constitutional claim.”
. The district court also held that, if the PHA was liable under § 1988, the fees recoverable by the Homeowners should be reduced pro rata because the Walker plaintiffs were also responsible for the remedial order. Walker v. HUD,
. At this point, we pause to emphasize that the bills presented by the Homeowners are in fact the same bills the Homeowners reviewed and paid during the litigation.
. For example, at least one invoice includes such summary descriptions as “research regarding” and "research legal issues.” These general descriptions axe almost identical to the entry we found vague in LULAC.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
Because I believe that the distinguished district judge did not abuse his discretion in finding that the Appellants were not “prevailing parties” entitled to an award of attorney’s fees under § 1988,1 respectfully dissent..
From the very beginning of their involvement in this litigation until now, the real objective of the Homeowners has been to prevent the Dallas Housing Authority from constructing new public housing units on land adjacent to the their neighborhoods. They have not achieved that objective. When this Court decided the previous appeal in 1999, it did stay construction at the sites adjacent to the Homeowners’ neighborhoods pending further proceedings in the district court. Walker v. City of Mesquite, Texas,
