After finding in respondent prison inmates' action against
petitioner prison officials that conditions in the Arkansas prison
system constituted cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the
Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments, the District Court entered a
series of detailed remedial orders. On appeal to the Court of
Appeals, petitioners challenged two aspects of that relief: (1) an
order placing a maximum limit of 30 days on confinement in punitive
isolation, and (2) an award of attorney's fees to be paid out of
Department of Correction funds, based on the District Court's
finding that petitioners had acted in bad faith in failing to cure
the previously identified violations. The Court of Appeals
affirmed, and assessed an additional attorney's fee to cover
services on appeal.
Held:
1. The District Court did not err in including the 30-day
limitation on sentences to isolation as part of its comprehensive
remedy to correct the constitutional violations. Where the question
before the court was whether these past constitutional violations
had been remedied, it was entitled to consider the severity of the
violations in assessing the constitutionality of conditions in the
isolation cells, the length of time each inmate spent in isolation
being simply one consideration among many. Pp.
437 U. S.
685-688.
2. The District Court's award of attorney's fees to be paid out
of Department of Correction funds is adequately supported by its
finding that petitioners had acted in bad faith, and does not
violate the Eleventh Amendment. The award served the same purpose
as a remedial fine imposed for civil contempt, and vindicated the
court's authority over a recalcitrant litigant. There being no
reason to distinguish the award from any other penalty imposed to
enforce a prospective injunction, the Eleventh Amendment's
substantive protections do not prevent the award against the
Department's officers in their official capacities, and the fact
that the order directed the award to be paid out of Department
funds, rather than being assessed against petitioners in their
official capacities, does not constitute reversible error. Pp.
437 U. S.
689-693.
3. The Civil Rights Attorney's Fees Awards Act of 1976, which
provides that, "[i]n any action" to enforce certain civil rights
laws (including the law under which this action was brought),
federal courts
Page 437 U. S. 679
may award prevailing parties reasonable attorney's fees "as part
of the costs," supports the additional award of attorney's fees by
the Court of Appeals. Pp.
437 U. S.
693-700.
(a) The Act's broad language, and the fact that it primarily
applies to laws specifically passed to restrain unlawful state
action, as well as the Act's legislative history, make it clear
that Congress, when it passed the Act, intended to exercise its
power to set aside the States' immunity from retroactive relief in
order to enforce the Fourteenth Amendment, and to authorize fee
awards payable by the States when their officials are sued in their
official capacities. Pp.
437 U. S.
693-694.
(b) Costs have traditionally been awarded against States without
regard for the States' Eleventh Amendment immunity, and it is much
too late to single out attorney's fees as the one kind of
litigation cost whose recovery may not be authorized by Congress
without an express statutory waiver of States' immunity. Pp.
437 U. S.
694-698.
(c) The fact that neither the State nor the Department of
Correction was expressly named as a defendant does not preclude the
Court of Appeals' award, since, although the Eleventh Amendment
prevented respondents from suing the State by name, their
injunctive suit against petitioner prison officials was, for all
practical purposes, brought against the State, so that, absent any
indication that petitioners acted in bad faith before the Court of
Appeals, the Department of Correction is the entity intended by
Congress to bear the burden of the award. Pp.
437 U. S.
699-700.
548 F.2d 740, affirmed.
STEVENS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BRENNAN, STEWART, MARSHALL, and BLACKMUN, JJ., joined, in Part I of
which WHITE, J., joined, and in Parts I and II-A of which BURGER,
C.J., and POWELL, J., joined. BRENNAN, J., filed a concurring
opinion,
post, p.
437 U. S. 700. POWELL, J., filed an opinion concurring
in part and dissenting in part, in which BURGER, C.J., joined, and
in the dissenting portion of which WHITE and REHNQUIST, JJ.,
joined,
post, p.
437 U. S. 704.
REHNQUIST, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in Part II of which
WHITE, J., joined,
post, p.
437 U. S.
710.
Page 437 U. S. 680
MR. JUSTICE STEVENS delivered the opinion of the Court.
*
After finding that conditions in the Arkansas penal system
constituted cruel and unusual punishment, the District Court
entered a series of detailed remedial orders. On appeal to the
United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, petitioners
[
Footnote 1] challenged two
aspects of that relief: (1) an order placing a maximum limit of 30
days on confinement in punitive isolation; and (2) an award of
attorney's fees to be paid out of Department of Correction funds.
The Court of
Page 437 U. S. 681
Appeals affirmed and assessed an additional attorney's fee to
cover services on appeal. 548 F.2d 740 (1977). We granted
certiorari, 434 U.S. 901, and now affirm.
This litigation began in 1969; it is a sequel to two earlier
cases holding that conditions in the Arkansas prison system
violated the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. [
Footnote 2] Only a brief summary of the facts is
necessary to explain the basis for the remedial orders.
The routine conditions that the ordinary Arkansas convict had to
endure were characterized by the District Court as "a dark and evil
world completely alien to the free world."
Holt v.
Sarver, 309 F.
Supp. 362, 381 (ED Ark.1970) (
Holt II). That
characterization was amply supported by the evidence. [
Footnote 3]
Page 437 U. S. 682
The punishments for misconduct not serious enough to result in
punitive isolation were cruel, [
Footnote 4] unusual, [
Footnote 5] and unpredictable. [
Footnote 6] It is the discipline known as "punitive
isolation" that is most relevant for present purposes.
Confinement in punitive isolation was for an indeterminate
period of time. An average of 4, and sometimes as many as 10 or 11,
prisoners were crowded into windowless 8' x 10' cells containing no
furniture other than a source of water and a toilet that could only
be flushed from outside the cell.
Holt v. Sarver, 300 F
Supp. 825, 831-832 (ED Ark.1969) (
Holt I). At night, the
prisoners were given mattresses to spread on the floor. Although
some prisoners suffered from infectious diseases such as hepatitis
and venereal disease, mattresses were removed and jumbled together
each morning,
Page 437 U. S. 683
then returned to the cells at random in the evening.
Id. at 832. Prisoners in isolation received fewer than
1,000 calories a day; [
Footnote
7] their meals consisted primarily of 4-inch squares of "grue,"
a substance created by mashing meat, potatoes, oleo, syrup,
vegetables, eggs, and seasoning into a paste and baking the mixture
in a pan.
Ibid.
After finding the conditions of confinement unconstitutional,
the District Court did not immediately impose a detailed remedy of
its own. Instead, it directed the Department of Correction to "make
a substantial start" on improving conditions and to file reports on
its progress.
Holt I, supra, at 833-834. When the
Department's progress proved unsatisfactory, a second hearing was
held. The District Court found some improvements, but concluded
that prison conditions remained unconstitutional.
Holt II,
309 F. Supp. at 383. Again the court offered prison administrators
an opportunity to devise a plan of their own for remedying the
constitutional violations, but this time the court issued
guidelines, identifying four areas of change that would cure the
worst evils: improving conditions in the isolation cells,
increasing inmate safety, eliminating the barracks sleeping
arrangements, and putting an end to the trusty system.
Id.
at 385. The Department was ordered to move as rapidly as funds
became available.
Ibid.
After this order was affirmed on appeal,
Holt v.
Sarver, 442 F.2d 304 (CA8 1971), more hearings were held in
1972 and 1973 to review the Department's progress. Finding
substantial improvements, the District Court concluded that
continuing supervision was no longer necessary. The court held,
Page 437 U. S. 684
however, that its prior decrees would remain in effect, and
noted that sanctions, as well as an award of costs and attorney's
fees, would be imposed if violations occurred.
Holt v.
Hutto, 363 F.
Supp. 194, 217 (ED Ark. 1973) (
Holt III).
The Court of Appeals reversed the District Court's decision to
withdraw its supervisory jurisdiction,
Finney v. Arkansas Board
of Correction, 505 F.2d 194 (CA8 1974), and the District Court
held a fourth set of hearings.
410 F.
Supp. 251 (ED Ark.1976). It found that, in some respects,
conditions had seriously deteriorated since 1973, when the court
had withdrawn its supervisory jurisdiction. Cummins Farm, which the
court had condemned as overcrowded in 1970 because it housed 1,000
inmates, now had a population of about 1,500.
Id. at
254-255. The situation in the punitive isolation cells was
particularly disturbing. The court concluded that either it had
misjudged conditions in these cells in 1973 or conditions had
become much worse since then.
Id. at 275. There were twice
as many prisoners as beds in some cells. And because inmates in
punitive isolation are often violently antisocial, overcrowding led
to persecution of the weaker prisoners. The "grue" diet was still
in use, and practically all inmates were losing weight on it. The
cells had been vandalized to a "very substantial" extent.
Id. at 276. Because of their inadequate numbers, guards
assigned to the punitive isolation cells frequently resorted to
physical violence, using nightsticks and Mace in their efforts to
maintain order. Prisoners were sometimes left in isolation for
months, their release depending on "their attitudes as appraised by
prison personnel."
Id. at 275.
The court concluded that the constitutional violations
identified earlier had not been cured. It entered an order that
placed limits on the number of men that could be confined in one
cell, required that each have a bunk, discontinued the "grue" diet,
and set 30 days as the maximum isolation sentence. The District
Court gave detailed consideration to
Page 437 U. S. 685
the matter of fees and expenses, made an express finding that
petitioners had acted in bad faith, and awarded counsel "a fee of
$20,000.00 to be paid out of Department of Correction funds."
Id. at 285. The Court of Appeals affirmed, and assessed an
additional $2,500 to cover fees and expenses on appeal. 548 F.2d at
743.
I
The Eighth Amendment's ban on inflicting cruel and unusual
punishments, made applicable to the States by the Fourteenth
Amendment, "procribe[s] more than physically barbarous
punishments."
Estelle v. Gamble, 429 U. S.
97,
429 U. S. 102.
It prohibits penalties that are grossly disproportionate to the
offense,
Weems v. United States, 217 U.
S. 349,
217 U. S. 367,
as well as those that transgress today's "
broad and idealistic
concepts of dignity, civilized standards, humanity, and decency.'"
Estelle v. Gamble, supra at 429 U. S. 102,
quoting Jackson v. Bishop, 404 F.2d 571, 579 (CA8 1968).
Confinement in a prison or in an isolation cell is a form of
punishment subject to scrutiny under Eighth Amendment standards.
Petitioners do not challenge this proposition; nor do they disagree
with the District Court's original conclusion that conditions in
Arkansas' prisons, including its punitive isolation cells,
constituted cruel and unusual punishment. Rather, petitioners
single out that portion of the District Court's most recent order
that forbids the Department to sentence inmates to more than 30
days in punitive isolation. Petitioners assume that the District
Court held that indeterminate sentences to punitive isolation
always constitute cruel and unusual punishment. This assumption
misreads the District Court's holding.
Read in its entirety, the District Court's opinion makes it
abundantly clear that the length of isolation sentences was not
considered in a vacuum. In the court's words, punitive isolation
"is not necessarily unconstitutional, but it may be, depending on
the duration of the confinement and the conditions
Page 437 U. S. 686
thereof." 410 F. Supp. at 275.8 [
Footnote 8] It is perfectly obvious that every decision to
remove a particular inmate from the general prison population for
an indeterminate period could not be characterized as cruel and
unusual. If new conditions of confinement are not materially
different from those affecting other prisoners, a transfer for the
duration of a prisoner's sentence might be completely
unobjectionable, and well within the authority of the prison
administrator.
Cf. Meachum v. Fanow, 427 U.
S. 215. It is equally plain, however, that the length of
confinement cannot be ignored in deciding whether the confinement
meets constitutional standards. A filthy, overcrowded cell and a
diet of
Page 437 U. S. 687
"grue" might be tolerable for a few days and intolerably cruel
for weeks or months.
The question before the trial court was whether past
constitutional violations had been remedied. The court was entitled
to consider the severity of those violations in assessing the
constitutionality of conditions in the isolation cells. The court
took note of the inmates' diet, the continued overcrowding, the
rampant violence, the vandalized cells, and the "lack of
professionalism and good judgment on the part of maximum security
personnel." 410 F. Supp. at 277 and 278. The length of time each
inmate spent in isolation was simply one consideration among many.
We find no error in the court's conclusion that, taken as a whole,
conditions in the isolation cells continued to violate the
prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment.
In fashioning a remedy, the District Court had ample authority
to go beyond earlier orders and to address each element
contributing to the violation. The District Court had given the
Department repeated opportunities to remedy the cruel and unusual
conditions in the isolation cells. If petitioners had fully
complied with the court's earlier orders, the present time limit
might well have been unnecessary. But taking the long and unhappy
history of the litigation into account, the court was justified in
entering a comprehensive order to insure against the risk of
inadequate compliance. [
Footnote
9]
Page 437 U. S. 688
The order is supported by the interdependence of the conditions
producing the violation. The vandalized cells and the atmosphere of
violence were attributable, in part, to overcrowding and to
deep-seated enmities growing out of months of constant daily
friction. [
Footnote 10] The
30-day limit will help to correct these conditions. [
Footnote 11] Moreover, the limit presents
little danger of interference with prison administration, for the
Commissioner of Correction himself stated that prisoners should not
ordinarily be held in punitive isolation for more than 14 days.
Id. at 278. Finally, the exercise of discretion in this
case is entitled to special deference because of the trial judge's
years of experience with the problem at hand and his recognition of
the limits on a federal court's authority in a case of this kind.
[
Footnote 12] Like the Court
of Appeals, we find no error in the inclusion of a 30-day
limitation on sentences to punitive isolation as a part of the
District Court's comprehensive remedy.
Page 437 U. S. 689
II
The Attorney General of Arkansas, whose office has represented
petitioners throughout this litigation, contends that any award of
fees is prohibited by the Eleventh Amendment. He also argues that
the Court of Appeals incorrectly held that fees were authorized by
the Civil Rights Attorney' Fees Awards Act of 1976. We hold that
the District Court's award is adequately supported by its finding
of bad faith, and that the Act supports the additional award by the
Court of Appeals.
A.
The District Court Award
Although the Attorney General argues that the finding of bad
faith does not overcome the State's Eleventh Amendment protection,
he does not question the accuracy of the finding made by the
District Court and approved by the Court of Appeals. [
Footnote 13] Nor does he question
the settled rule that a losing litigant's bad faith may justify an
allowance of fees to the prevailing party. [
Footnote 14] He merely argues that the order
requiring
Page 437 U. S. 690
that the fees be paid from public funds violates the Eleventh
Amendment. In the landmark decision in
Ex parte Young,
209 U. S. 123, the
Court held that, although prohibited from giving orders directly to
a State, federal courts could enjoin state officials in their
official capacities. And in
Edelman v. Jordan,
415 U. S. 651,
when the Court held that the Amendment grants the States an
immunity from retroactive monetary relief, it reaffirmed the
principle that state officers are not immune from prospective
injunctive relief. Aware that the difference between retroactive
and prospective relief "will not, in many instances, be that
between day and night,"
id. at
415 U. S. 667,
the Court emphasized in
Edelman that the distinction did
not immunize the States from their obligation to obey costly
federal court orders. The cost of compliance is "ancillary" to the
prospective order enforcing federal law.
Id. at
415 U. S. 668.
[
Footnote 15] The line
between retroactive and prospective relief cannot be so rigid that
it defeats the effective enforcement of prospective relief. The
present case requires application of that principle. In exercising
their prospective powers under
Ex parte Young and
Edelman v. Jordan, federal courts are not reduced to
issuing injunctions against state officers and hoping for
compliance. Once issued, an injunction may be enforced. Many of the
court's most effective enforcement weapons involve financial
penalties. A criminal contempt prosecution for "resistance to [the
court's] lawful . . . order" may result in a jail term or a fine.
18 U.S.C. § 401 (1976 ed.). Civil contempt proceedings may yield a
conditional jail term or fine.
United States
v.
Page 437 U. S. 691
Mine Workers, 330 U. S. 258,
330 U. S. 305.
Civil contempt may also be punished by a remedial fine, which
compensates the party who won the injunction for the effects of his
opponent's noncompliance.
Id. at
330 U. S. 304;
Gompers v. Bucks Stove & Range Co., 221 U.
S. 418. If a state agency refuses to adhere to a court
order, a financial penalty may be the most effective means of
insuring compliance. The principles of federalism that inform
Eleventh Amendment doctrine surely do not require federal courts to
enforce their decrees only by sending high state officials to jail.
[
Footnote 16] The less
intrusive power to impose a fine is properly treated as ancillary
to the federal court's power to impose injunctive relief.
In this case, the award of attorney's fees for bad faith served
the same purpose as a remedial fine imposed for civil contempt. It
vindicated the District Court's authority over a recalcitrant
litigant. Compensation was not the sole motive for the award; in
setting the amount of the fee, the court said that it would "make
no effort to adequately compensate counsel for the work that they
have done or for the time that they have spent on the case." 410 F.
Supp. at 285. The court did allow a "substantial" fee, however,
because "the allowance thereof may incline the Department to act in
such a manner that further protracted litigation about the prisons
will not be necessary."
Ibid. [
Footnote 17] We see no reason to distinguish
Page 437 U. S. 692
this award from any other penalty imposed to enforce a
prospective injunction. [
Footnote 18] Hence, the substantive protections of the
Eleventh Amendment do not prevent an award of attorney's fees
against the Department's officers in their official capacities.
Instead of assessing the award against the defendants in their
official capacities, the District Court directed that the fees are
"to be paid out of Department of Correction funds."
Ibid.
Although the Attorney General objects to the form of the order,
[
Footnote 19] no useful
purpose would be served by requiring that it be recast in different
language. We have previously approved directives that were
comparable in their actual impact on the State without pausing to
attach significance to the language used by the District Court.
[
Footnote 20] Even if it
might have
Page 437 U. S. 693
been better form to omit the reference to the Department of
Correction; the use of that language is surely not reversible
error.
B.
The Court of Appeals Award
Petitioners, as the losing litigants in the Court of Appeals,
were ordered to pay an additional $2,500 to counsel for the
prevailing parties "for their services on this appeal." 548 F.2d at
743. The order does not expressly direct the Department of
Correction to pay the award, but, since petitioners are sued in
their official capacities, and since they are represented by the
Attorney General, it is obvious that the award will be paid with
state funds. It is also clear that this order is not supported by
any finding of bad faith. It is founded instead on the provisions
of the Civil Rights Attorney's Fees Awards Act of 1976. Pub.L. No.
94-559, 90 Stat. 2641, 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1976 ed.). The Act
declares that, in suits under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and certain other
statutes, federal courts may award prevailing parties reasonable
attorney's fees "as part of the costs." [
Footnote 21]
As this Court made clear in
Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer,
427 U. S. 445,
Congress has plenary power to set aside the States' immunity from
retroactive relief in order to enforce the Fourteenth Amendment. en
it passed the Act, Congress undoubtedly intended to exercise that
power and to authorize fee awards
Page 437 U. S. 694
payable by the States when their officials are sued in their
official capacities. The Act itself could not be broader. It
applies to "any" action brought to enforce certain civil rights
laws. It contains no hint of an exception for States defending
injunction actions; indeed, the Act primarily applies to laws
passed specifically to restrain state action.
See, e.g.,
42 U.S.C.§ 1983.
The legislative history is equally plain:
"[I]t is intended that the attorneys' fees, like other items of
costs, will be collected either directly from the official, in his
official capacity, from funds of his agency or under his control,
or from the State or local government (whether or not the agency of
government is a named party)."
S.Rep. No. 94-1011, p. 5 (1976) (footnotes omitted). The House
Report is in accord:
"The greater resources available to governments provide an ample
base from which fees can be awarded to the prevailing plaintiff in
suits against governmental officials or entities."
H.R.Rep. No. 94-1558, p. 7 (1976). The Report adds in a footnote
that: "Of course, the 11th Amendment is not a bar to the awarding
of counsel fees against state governments.
Fitzpatrick v.
Bitzer."
Id. at 7 n. 14. Congress' intent was
expressed in deeds as well as words. It rejected at least two
attempts to amend the Act and immunize state and local governments
from awards. [
Footnote
22]
The Attorney General does not quarrel with the rule established
in
Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer, supra. Rather, he argues that
these plain indications of legislative intent are not enough. In
his view, Congress must enact express statutory language making the
States liable if it wishes to abrogate their immunity. [
Footnote 23] The Attorney General
points out that this Court has
Page 437 U. S. 695
sometimes refused to impose retroactive liability on the States
in the absence of an extraordinarily explicit statutory mandate.
See Employees v. Missouri Public Health & Welfare
Dept., 411 U. S. 279;
see also Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U.
S. 651. But these cases concern retroactive liability
for prelitigation conduct, rather than expenses incurred in
litigation seeking only prospective relief.
The Act imposes attorney's fees "as part of the costs." Costs
have traditionally been awarded without regard for the States'
Eleventh Amendment immunity. The practice of awarding costs against
the States goes back to 1849 in this Court.
See Missouri
v. Iowa, 7 How. 660,
48 U. S. 681;
North Dakota v. Minnesota, 263 U.
S. 583 (collecting cases). The Court has never viewed
the Eleventh Amendment as barring such awards, even in suits
between States and individual litigants. [
Footnote 24]
Page 437 U. S. 696
In
Fairmont Creamery Co. v. Minnesota, 275 U. S.
70, the State challenged this Court's award of costs,
but we squarely rejected the State's claim of immunity. Far from
requiring an explicit abrogation of state immunity, we relied on a
statutory mandate that was entirely silent on the question of state
liability. [
Footnote 25] The
power to make the award was supported by "the inherent authority of
the Court in the orderly administration of justice a between all
parties litigant."
Id. at
275 U. S. 74. A
federal court's interest in orderly, expeditious proceedings
"justifies [it] in treating the state just as any other litigant
and in imposing costs upon it" when an award is called for.
Id. at
275 U. S. 77.
[
Footnote 26]
Just as a federal court may treat a State like any other
litigant when it assesses costs, so also may Congress amend its
definition of taxable costs and have the amended class of costs
apply to the States, as it does to all other litigants, without
expressly stating that it intends to abrogate the States' Eleventh
Amendment immunity. For it would be absurd to require an
express
Page 437 U. S. 697
reference to state litigants whenever a filing fee, or a new
item, such as an expert witness' fee, is added to the category of
taxable costs. [
Footnote
27]
There is ample precedent for Congress' decision to authorize an
award of attorney's fees as an item of costs. In England, costs "as
between solicitor and client,"
Sprague v. Ticonic Nat.
Bank, 307 U. S. 161,
307 U. S. 167,
are routinely taxed today, and have been awarded since 1278.
Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. Wilderness Society,
421 U. S. 240,
421 U. S. 247
n. 18. In America, although fees are not routinely awarded, there
are a large number of statutory and common law situations in which
allowable costs include counsel fees. [
Footnote 28] Indeed, the federal statutory definition
of costs, which was enacted before the Civil War and which remains
in effect today, includes certain fixed attorney's fees as
recoverable costs. [
Footnote
29] In
Fairmont Creamery itself, the Court awarded
these statutory attorney's fees against the
Page 437 U. S. 698
State of Minnesota along with other taxable costs, [
Footnote 30] even though the
governing statute said nothing about state liability. It is much
too late to single out attorney's fees as the one kind of
litigation cost whose recovery may not be authorized by Congress
without an express statutory waiver of the States' immunity.
[
Footnote 31]
Page 437 U. S. 699
Finally, the Attorney General argues that, even if attorney's
fees may be awarded against a State, they should not be awarded in
this case, because neither the State nor the Department is
expressly named as a defendant. Although the Eleventh Amendment
prevented respondents from suing the State by name, their
injunctive suit against prison officials was, for all practical
purposes, brought against the State. The actions of the Attorney
General himself show that. His office has defended this action
since it began.
See Holt I, 300 F. Supp. at 826. The State
apparently paid earlier fee awards; and it was the State's lawyers
who decided to bring this appeal, thereby risking another award.
[
Footnote 32]
Page 437 U. S. 700
Like the Attorney General, Congress recognized that suits
brought against individual officers for injunctive relief are, for
all practical purposes, suits against the State itself. The
legislative history makes it clear that, in such suits, attorney's
fee awards should generally be obtained
"either directly from the official, in his official capacity,
from funds of his agency or under his control, or from the State or
local government (whether or not the agency or government is a
named party)."
S.Rep. No. 94-1011, p. 5 (1976). Awards against the official in
his individual capacity, in contrast, were not to be affected by
the statute; in injunctive suits, they would continue to be awarded
only "under the traditional bad faith standard recognized by the
Supreme Court in
Alyeska."
Id. at 5 n. 7. There
is no indication in this case that the named defendants litigated
in bad faith before the Court of Appeals. Consequently, the
Department of Correction is the entity intended by Congress to bear
the burden of the counsel fees award.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is accordingly
affirmed.
It is so ordered.
* MR. JUSTICE WHITE joins only Part I of this opinion.
[
Footnote 1]
Petitioners are the Commissioner of Correction and members of
the Arkansas Board of Correction.
[
Footnote 2]
This case began as
Holt v. Sarver, 300 F.
Supp. 825 (ED Ark. 1969) (
Holt I). The two earlier
cases were
Talley v. Stephens, 247 F.
Supp. 683 (ED Ark.1965), and
Jackson v.
Bishop, 268 F.
Supp. 804 (ED Ark.1967),
vacated, 404 F.2d 571 (CA8
1968). Judge Henley decided the first of these cases in 1965, when
he was Chief Judge of the Eastern District of Arkansas. Although
appointed to the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in 1975,
he was specially designated to continue to hear this case as a
District Judge.
[
Footnote 3]
The administrators of Arkansas' prison system evidently tried to
operate their prisons at a profit.
See Talley v. Stephens,
supra at 688. Cummins Farm, the institution at the center of
this litigation, required its 1,000 inmates to work in the fields
10 hours a day, six days a week, using mule-drawn tools and tending
crops by hand. 247 F. Supp. at 688. The inmates were sometimes
required to run to and from the fields, with a guard in an
automobile or on horseback driving them on.
Holt v.
Hutto, 363 F.
Supp. 194, 213 (ED Ark.1973) (
Holt III). They worked
in all sorts of weather, so long as the temperature was above
freezing, sometimes in unsuitably light clothing or without shoes.
Holt II, 309 F. Supp. at 370.
The inmates slept together in large, 100-man barracks, and some
convicts, known as "creepers," would slip from their beds to crawl
along the floor, stalking their sleeping enemies. In one 18-month
period, there were 17 stabbings, all but 1 occurring in the
barracks.
Holt I, supra at 830-831. Homosexual rape was so
common and uncontrolled that some potential victims dared not
sleep; instead they would leave their beds and spend the night
clinging to the bars nearest the guards' station.
Holt II,
supra, at 377.
[
Footnote 4]
Inmates were lashed with a wooden-handled leather strap five
feet long and four inches wide.
Talley v. Stephens, supra
at 687. Although it was not official policy to do so, some inmates
were apparently whipped for minor offenses until their skin was
bloody and bruised.
Jackson v. Bishop, supra at
810-811.
[
Footnote 5]
The "Tucker telephone," a hand-cranked device, was used to
administer electrical shocks to various sensitive parts of an
inmate's body.
Jackson v. Bishop, supra at 812.
[
Footnote 6]
Most of the guards were simply inmates who had been issued guns.
Holt II, supra at 373. Although it had 1,000 prisoners,
Cummins employed only eight guards who were not themselves
convicts. Only two nonconvict guards kept watch over the 1,000 men
at night. 309 F. Supp. at 373. While the "trusties" maintained an
appearance of order, they took a high toll from the other
prisoners. Inmates could obtain access to medical treatment only if
they bribed the trusty in charge of sick call. As the District
Court found, it was "within the power of a trusty guard to murder
another inmate with practical impunity," because trusties with
weapons were authorized to use deadly force against escapees.
Id. at 374. "Accidental shootings" also occurred; and one
trusty fired his shotgun into a crowded barracks because the
inmates would not turn off their TV.
Ibid. Another trusty
beat an inmate so badly the victim required partial dentures.
Talley v. Stephens, supra at 689.
[
Footnote 7]
A daily allowance of 2,700 calories is recommended for the
average male between 23 and 50. National Academy of Sciences,
Recommended Dietary Allowances, Appendix (8th rev. ed.1974).
Prisoners in punitive isolation are less active than the average
person; but a mature man who spends 12 hours a day lying down and
12 hours a day simply sitting or standing consumes approximately
2,000 calories a day.
Id. at 27.
[
Footnote 8]
The Department reads the following sentence in the District
Court's 76-page opinion as an unqualified holding that any
indeterminate sentence to solitary confinement is
unconstitutional:
"The court holds that the policy of sentencing inmates to
indeterminate periods of confinement in punitive isolation is
unreasonable and unconstitutional."
410 F. Supp. at 278. But, in the context of its full opinion, we
think it quite clear that the court was describing the specific
conditions found in the Arkansas penal system. Indeed, in the same
paragraph, it noted that
"segregated confinement under maximum security conditions is one
thing; segregated confinement under the
punitive
conditions that have been described is quite another thing."
Ibid. (emphasis in original).
The Department also suggests that the District Court made
rehabilitation a constitutional requirement. The court did note its
agreement with an expert witness who testified "that punitive
isolation as it exists at Cummins today serves no rehabilitative
purpose, and that it is counterproductive."
Id. at 277.
The court went on to say that punitive isolation "makes bad men
worse. It must be changed."
Ibid. We agree with the
Department's contention that the Constitution does not require that
every aspect of prison discipline serve a rehabilitative purpose.
Novak v. Beto, 453 F.2d 661, 670-671 (CA5 1971);
Nadeau v. Helgemoe, 561 F.2d 411, 415-416 (CA1 1977). But
the District Court did not impose a new legal test. Its remarks
form the transition from a detailed description of conditions in
the isolation cells to a traditional legal analysis of those
conditions. The quoted passage simply summarized the facts and
presaged the legal conclusion to come.
[
Footnote 9]
As we explained in
Milliken v. Bradley, 433 U.
S. 267,
433 U. S. 281,
state and local authorities have primary responsibility for curing
constitutional violations.
"If, however '[those] authorities fail in their affirmative
obligations . . . , judicial authority may be invoked.'
Swann
\[v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education,
402 U. S.
1,]
402 U. S. 15. Once
invoked,"
"the scope of a district court's equitable powers to remedy past
wrongs is broad, for breadth and flexibility are inherent in
equitable remedies."
Ibid. In this case, the District Court was not
remedying the present effects of a violation in the past. It was
seeking to bring an ongoing violation to an immediate halt.
Cooperation on the part of Department officials and compliance with
other aspects of the decree may justify elimination of this added
safeguard in the future, but it is entirely appropriate for the
District Court to postpone any such determination until the
Department's progress can be evaluated.
[
Footnote 10]
The District Court noted
"that as a class the inmates of the punitive cells hate those in
charge of them, and that they may harbor particular hatreds against
prison employees who have been in charge of the same inmates for a
substantial period of time."
410 F. Supp. at 277.
[
Footnote 11]
As early as 1969, the District Court had identified shorter
sentences as a possible remedy for overcrowding in the isolation
cells.
Holt I, 300 F.
Supp. at 834. The limit imposed in 1976 was a mechanical -- and
therefore an easily enforced -- method of minimizing overcrowding,
with its attendant vandalism and unsanitary conditions.
[
Footnote 12]
See, e.g., Holt II, 309 F.Supp. at 369:
"The Court, however, is limited in its inquiry to the question
of whether or not the constitutional rights of inmates are being
invaded and with whether the Penitentiary itself is
unconstitutional. The Court is not judicially concerned with
questions which, in the last analysis, are addressed to legislative
and administrative judgment. A practice that may be bad from the
standpoint of penology may not necessarily be forbidden by the
Constitution."
[
Footnote 13]
In affirming the award, the Court of Appeals relied chiefly on
the Civil Rights Attorney's Fees Awards Act of 1976, but it also
noted expressly that
"the record fully supports the finding of the district court
that the conduct of the state officials justified the award under
the bad faith exception enumerated in
Alyeska \[Pipeline
Service Co. v. Wilderness Society, 421 U. S.
240]."
548 F.2d 740, 742 n. 6.
[
Footnote 14]
An equity court has the unquestioned power to award attorney's
fees against a party who shows bad faith by delaying or disrupting
the litigation or by hampering enforcement of a court order.
Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. Wilderness Society,
421 U. S. 240,
421 U. S.
258-259;
Christiansburg Garment Co. v. EEOC,
434 U. S. 412;
Straub v. Vaisman & Co., Inc., 540 F.2d 591, 598-600
(CA3 1976);
cf. Fed.Rule Civ.Proc. 56(g) (attorney's fees
to be awarded against party filing summary judgment affidavits "in
bad faith or solely for the purpose of delay"); Fed.Rule Civ.Proc.
37(a)(4) (motions to compel discovery; prevailing party may recover
attorney's fees). The award vindicates judicial authority without
resort to the more drastic sanctions available for contempt of
court, and makes the prevailing party whole for expenses caused by
his opponent's obstinacy.
Cf. First Nat. Bank v. Dunham,
471 F.2d 712 (CA8 1973). Of course, fees can also be awarded as
part of a civil contempt penalty.
See, e.g., Toledo Scale Co.
v. Computing Scale Co., 261 U. S. 399;
Signal Delivery Service, Inc. v. Highway Truck Drivers, 68
F.R.D. 318 (ED Pa.1975).
[
Footnote 15]
"Ancillary" costs may be very large indeed. Last Term, for
example, this Court rejected an Eleventh Amendment defense and
approved an injunction ordering a State to pay almost $6 million to
help defray the costs of desegregating the Detroit school system.
Milliken v. Bradley, 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 293
(POWELL, J., concurring in judgment).
[
Footnote 16]
See Note, Attorneys' Fees and the Eleventh Amendment,
88 Harv.L.Rev. 1875, 1892 (1975).
[
Footnote 17]
That the award had a compensatory effect does not, in any event,
distinguish it from a fine for civil contempt, which also
compensates a private party for the consequences of a contemnor's
disobedience.
Gompers v. Bucks Stove & Range Co.,
221 U. S. 418.
Moreover, the Court has approved federal rulings requiring a State
to support programs that compensate for past misdeeds, saying:
"That the programs are also 'compensatory' in nature does not
change the fact that they are part of a plan that operates
prospectively to bring about the delayed benefits of a
unitary school system. We therefore hold that such prospective
relief is not barred by the Eleventh Amendment."
Milliken v. Bradley, supra at
433 U. S. 290
(emphasis in original). The award of attorney's fees against a
State disregarding a federal order stands on the same footing; like
other enforcement powers, it is integral to the court's grant of
prospective relief.
[
Footnote 18]
The Attorney General has not argued that this award was so large
or so unexpected that it interfered with the State's budgeting
process. Although the Eleventh Amendment does not prohibit
attorney's fees awards for bad faith, it may counsel moderation in
determining the size of the award or in giving the State time to
adjust its budget before paying the full amount of the fee.
Cf.
Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U. S. 651,
415 U. S. 666
n. 11. In this case, however, the timing of the award has not been
put in issue; nor has the State claimed that the award was larger
than necessary to enforce the Court's prior orders.
[
Footnote 19]
We do not understand the Attorney General to urge that the fees
should have been awarded against the officers personally; that
would be a remarkable way to treat individuals who have relied on
the Attorney General to represent their interests throughout this
litigation.
[
Footnote 20]
In
Milliken v. Bradley, supra, we affirmed an order
requiring a state treasurer to pay a substantial sum to another
litigant, even though the District Court's opinion explicitly
recognized that "this remedial decree will be paid for by the
taxpayers of the City of Detroit and the State of Michigan," App.
to Pet. for Cert. in
Milliken v. Bradley, O.T. 1976, No.
76-447, pp. 116a-117a, and even though the Court of Appeals, in
affirming, stated that "the District Court ordered that the State
and Detroit Board each pay one-half the costs" of relief.
Bradley v. Milliken, 540 F.2d 229, 245 (CA6 1976).
[
Footnote 21]
The Act declares:
"In any action or proceeding to enforce a provision of §§ 1977,
1978, 1979, 1980, and 1981 of the Revised Statutes [42 U.S.C. §§
1981-1983, 1985, 1986], title IX of Public Law 9218 [20 U.S.C. §
1681
et seq. (1976 ed.)], or in any civil action or
proceeding, by or on behalf of the United States of America, to
enforce, or charging a violation of, a provision of the United
States Internal Revenue Code [26 U.S.C. § 1
et seq. (1976
ed.)], or title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 [42 U.S.C. §
2000d
et seq.], 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."
90 Stat. 2641.
[
Footnote 22]
See 122 Cong.Rec. 31832-31835 (1976) (amendment of Sen.
Helms);
id. at 32296 and 32396-32397 (amendment of Sen.
Allen).
See also id. at 32931 (amendment of Sen. William
Scott).
[
Footnote 23]
The Attorney General also contends that the fee award should not
apply to cases, such as this one, that were pending when the Act
was passed in 1976. But the legislative history of the Act, as well
as this Court's general practice, defeats this argument. The House
Report declared: "In accordance with applicable decisions of the
Supreme Court, the bill is intended to apply to all cases pending
on the date of enactment. . . ." H.R.Rep. No. 94-1558, p. 4 n. 6
(1976).
See also Bradley v. Richmond School Board,
416 U. S. 696.
[
Footnote 24]
While the decisions allowing the award of costs against States
antedate the line drawn between retroactive and prospective relief
in
Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U. S. 651,
such awards do not seriously strain that distinction. Unlike
ordinary "retroactive" relief such as damages or restitution, an
award of costs does not compensate the plaintiff for the injury
that first brought him into court. Instead, the award reimburses
him for a portion of the expenses he incurred in seeking
prospective relief. (An award of costs will almost invariably be
incidental to an award of prospective relief, for costs are
generally awarded only to prevailing parties,
see Fed.Rule
Civ.Proc. 54(d), and only prospective relief can be successfully
pursued by an individual in a suit against a State.) Moreover, like
the power to award attorney's fees for litigating in bad faith, the
power to assess costs is an important and well recognized tool used
to restrain the behavior of parties during litigation.
See,
e.g., Rule 37(b) (costs may be awarded for failure to obey
discovery order); Rule 30(g) (costs may be awarded for failure to
attend deposition or for failure to serve subpoena). When a State
defends a suit for prospective relief, it is not exempt from the
ordinary discipline of the courtroom.
[
Footnote 25]
"If specific statutory authority [for an award of costs] is
needed, it is found in § 254 of the Judicial Code. . . . It
provides that there shall be 'taxed against the losing party in
each and every cause pending in the Supreme Court' the cost of
printing the record, except when the judgment is against the United
States. This exception of the United States in the section with its
emphatic inclusion of every other litigant shows that a state as
litigant must pay the costs of printing, if it loses, in every
case, civil or criminal. These costs constitute a large part of all
the costs. The section certainly constitutes
pro tanto
statutory authority to impose costs generally against a state if
defeated."
275 U.S. at
275 U. S.
77.
[
Footnote 26]
Because the interest in orderly and evenhanded justice is
equally pressing in lower courts,
Fairmont Creamery has
been widely understood as foreclosing any Eleventh Amendment
objection to assessing costs against a State in all federal courts.
See, e.g., Skehan v. Board of Trustees, 538 F.2d 53, 58
(CA3 1976) (en banc);
Utah v. United States, 304 F.2d 23
(CA10 1962);
United States ex rel. Griffin v. McMann, 310
F. Supp. 72 (EDNY 1970).
[
Footnote 27]
This conclusion is consistent with the reasons for requiring a
formal indication of Congress' intent to abrogate the States'
Eleventh Amendment immunity. The requirement insures that Congress
has not imposed "enormous fiscal burdens on the States" without
careful thought.
Employees v. Missouri Public Health &
Welfare Dept., 411 U. S. 279,
411 U. S. 284.
See Tribe, Intergovernmental Immunities in Litigation,
Taxation and Regulation, 89 Harv.L.Rev. 682, 695 (1976). But an
award of costs -- limited as it is to partially compensating a
successful litigant for the expense of his suit -- could hardly
create any such hardship for a State. Thus, we do not suggest that
our analysis would be the same if Congress were to expand the
concept of costs beyond the traditional category of litigation
expenses.
[
Footnote 28]
In 1975, we listed 29 statutes allowing federal courts to award
attorney's fees in certain suits.
See Alyeska Pipeline Service
Co. v. Wilderness Society, 421 U.S. at
421 U. S.
260-261, n. 33. Some of these statutes define attorney's
fees as an element of costs, while others separate fees from other
taxable costs.
Compare 42 U.S.C. § 2000a-3(b)
with 29 U.S.C. § 216(b) (1970 ed., Supp. V).
[
Footnote 29]
See 28 U.S.C. § 1923(a) ($100 in fees for admiralty
appeals involving more than $5,000). Inflation has now made the
awards merely nominal, but the principle of allowing such awards
against all parties has undiminished force.
[
Footnote 30]
File of the Clerk of this Court in
Fairmont Creamery Co. v.
Minnesota, O.T. 1926, No.725.
[
Footnote 31]
The Attorney General argues that the statute itself must
expressly abrogate the States' immunity from retroactive liability,
relying on
Employees v. Missouri Public Health & Welfare
Dept., supra. Even if we were not dealing with an item such as
costs, this reliance would be misplaced. In
Employees, the
Court refused to permit individual backpay suits against state
institutions because the Court
"found not a word in the history of the [statute] to indicate a
purpose of Congress to make it possible for a citizen of that State
or another State to sue the State in the federal courts."
411 U.S. at
411 U. S. 285.
The Court was careful to add, moreover, that its reading of the law
did not make the statute's inclusion of state institutions
meaningless. Because the Secretary of Labor was empowered to bring
suit against violators, the amendment covering state institutions
gave him authority to enforce the statute against them.
Id. at
411 U. S.
285-286.
The present Act, in contrast, has a history focusing directly on
the question of state liability; Congress considered and firmly
rejected the suggestion that States should be immune from fee
awards. Moreover, the Act is not part of an intricate regulatory
scheme offering alternative methods of obtaining relief. If the Act
does not impose liability for attorney's fees on the States, it has
no meaning with respect to them. Finally, the claims asserted in
Employees and in
Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U.
S. 651, were based on a statute rooted in Congress' Art.
I power.
See Employees, supra at
411 U. S. 281
(claim based on Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. § 201
et
seq.);
Edelman v. Jordan, supra at
415 U. S. 674
(underlying claim based on Social Security Act provisions dealing
with aid to aged, blind, and disabled, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1381-1385). In
this case, as in
Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer, 427 U.
S. 445, the claim is based on a statute enacted to
enforce the Fourteenth Amendment. As we pointed out in
Fitzpatrick:
"[T]he Eleventh Amendment, and the principle of state
sovereignty which it embodies . . . are necessarily limited by the
enforcement provisions of § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment. . . .
When Congress acts pursuant to § 5, not only is it exercising
legislative authority that is plenary within the terms of the
constitutional grant, it is exercising that authority under one
section of a constitutional Amendment whose other sections by their
own terms embody limitations on state authority."
Id. at
427 U. S. 456.
Cf. National League of Cities v. Usery, 426 U.
S. 833,
426 U. S. 852
n. 17. Applying the standard appropriate in a case brought to
enforce the Fourteenth Amendment, we have no doubt that the Act is
clear enough to authorize the award of attorney's fees payable by
the State.
[
Footnote 32]
The Attorney General is hardly in a position to argue that the
fee awards should be borne not by the State, but by individual
officers who have relied on his office to protect their interests
throughout the litigation. Nonetheless, our dissenting Brethren
would apparently force these officers to bear the award alone. The
Act authorizes an attorney's fee award even though the appeal was
not taken in bad faith; no one denies that. The Court of Appeals'
award is thus proper, and the only question is who will pay it. In
the dissenters' view, the Eleventh Amendment protects the State
from liability. But the State's immunity does not extend to the
individual officers. The dissenters would apparently leave the
officers to pay the award; whether the officials would be
reimbursed is a decision that "may . . . safely be left to the
State involved."
Post at
437 U. S. 716
(REHNQUIST, J., dissenting). This is manifestly unfair when, as
here, the individual officers have no personal interest in the
conduct of the State's litigation, and it defies this Court's
insistence in a related context that imposing personal liability in
the absence of bad faith may cause state officers to "exercise
their discretion with undue timidity."
Wood v. Strickland,
420 U. S. 308,
420 U. S.
321.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, concurring.
I join fully in the opinion of the Court and write separately
only to answer points made by MR JUSTICE POWELL.
I agree with the Court that there is no reason in this case to
decide more than whether 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1976 ed.), itself
authorizes awards of attorney's fees against the States. MR.
JUSTICE POWELL takes the view, however, that, unless 42 U.S.C. §
1983 also authorizes damages awards against the States, the
requirements of the Eleventh Amendment are not met. Citing
Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U. S. 651
(1974), he concludes that § 1983 does not authorize damages awards
against the State and, accordingly, that § 1988 does not either.
There are a number of difficulties with this syllogism, but the
most striking is its reliance on
Edelman v. Jordan, a case
whose foundations would seem to have been seriously undermined
Page 437 U. S. 701
by our later holdings in
Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer,
427 U. S. 445
(1976), and
Monell v. New York City Dept. of Social
Services, 436 U. S. 658
(1978).
It cannot be gainsaid that this Court, in
Edelman,
rejected the argument that 42 U.S.C. § 1983
"was intended to create a waiver of a State's Eleventh Amendment
immunity merely because an action could be brought under that
section against state officers, rather than against the State
itself."
415 U.S. at
415 U. S.
676-677. When
Edelman was decided, we had
affirmed monetary awards against the States only when they had
consented to suit or had waived their Eleventh Amendment immunity.
See, e.g., Petty v. Tennessee-Missouri Bridge Comm'n,
359 U. S. 275
(1959);
Parden v. Terminal R. Co., 377 U.
S. 184 (1964);
Employees v. Missouri Public Health
& Welfare Dept., 411 U. S. 279
(1973). In
Edelman, we summarized the rule of our cases as
follows: the
"question of waiver or consent under the Eleventh Amendment was
found in [our] cases to turn on whether Congress had intended to
abrogate the immunity in question, and whether the State, by its
participation in [a regulated activity] authorized by Congress,
had, in effect, consented to the abrogation of [Eleventh Amendment]
immunity."
415 U.S. at
415 U. S. 672.
At the very least, such consent could not be found unless Congress
had authorized suits against "a class of defendants which literally
includes States."
Ibid. It was a short jump from that
proposition to the conclusion that § 1983 -- which was then thought
to include only natural persons among those who could be party
defendants,
see Monroe v. Pape, 365 U.
S. 167,
365 U. S.
187-191 (1961) -- was not in the class of statutes that
might lead to a waiver of Eleventh Amendment immunity. This is best
summed up by MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST, the author of
Edelman,
in his opinion for the Court in
Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer,
supra:
"We concluded that none of the statutes relied upon by
plaintiffs in
Edelman contained any authorization by
Page 437 U. S. 702
Congress to join a State as defendant. The Civil Rights Act of
1871, 42 U.S.C. § 1983, had been held in
Monroe v. Pape,
365 U. S.
167,
365 U. S. 187-191 (1961), to
exclude cities and other municipal corporations from its ambit;
that being the case, it could not have been intended to include
States as parties defendant."
427 U.S. at
427 U. S.
452.
But time has not stood still. Two Terms ago, we decided
Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer, which, for the first time in the
recent history of the Court, asked us to decide
"the question of the relationship between the Eleventh Amendment
and the enforcement power granted to Congress under § 5 of the
Fourteenth Amendment. [
Footnote
2/1]"
Id. at
427 U. S. 456.
There we concluded that
"the Eleventh Amendment, and the principle of state sovereignty
which it embodies, . . . are necessarily limited by the enforcement
provisions of § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment."
Ibid. (Citation omitted.) And we went on to hold:
"Congress may, in determining what is 'appropriate legislation'
for the purpose of enforcing the provisions of the Fourteenth
Amendment, provide for private suits against States or state
officials which are constitutionally impermissible in other
contexts."
Ibid.
Then, in
Monell v. New York City Dept. of Social Services,
supra, decided only weeks ago, we held that the Congress which
passed the Civil Rights Act of 1871, now § 1983 -- a statute
enacted pursuant to § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment,
see
436 U.S. at
436 U. S. 665 --
"
did intend municipalities and other local government
units to be included among those persons to whom § 1983 applies."
Id. at
436 U. S. 690.
This holding alone would appear to be enough to vitiate the
vitality of
Fitzpatrick's explanation of
Edelman.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Page 437 U. S. 703
Moreover, central to the holding in
Monell was the
conclusion that the Act of Feb. 25, 1871, ch. 71, § 2, 16 Stat.
431, provided a definition of the word "person" used to describe
the class of defendants in § 1983 suits. 436 U.S. at
436 U. S. 688.
Although we did not, in
Monell, have to consider whether §
1983 as properly construed makes States liable in damages for their
constitutional violations, the conclusion seems inescapable that,
at the very least, § 1983 includes among possible defendants "a
class . . . which literally includes States."
Edelman v.
Jordan, 415 U.S. at
415 U. S. 672.
This follows immediately from the language of the Act of Feb. 25,
1871:
"[I]n all acts hereafter passed . . . the word 'person' may
extend and be applied to bodies politic and corporate . . . unless
the context shows that such words were intended to be used in a
more limited sense. . . ."
The phrase "bodies politic and corporate" is now, and certainly
would have been in 1871, a synonym for the word "State."
See,
e.g., United States v. Maurice, 26 F. Cas. 1211, 1216 (No.
15,747) (CC Va. 1823) (Marshall, C.J.) ("The United States is a
government and, consequently, a body politic and corporate").
See also Pfizer Inc. v. Government of India, 434 U.
S. 308 (1978).
Given our holding in
Monell, the essential premise of
our
Edelman holding -- that no statute involved in
Edelman authorized suit against "a class of defendants
which literally includes States," 415 U.S. at
415 U. S. 672
-- would clearly appear to be no longer true. Moreover, given
Fitzpatrick's holding that Congress has plenary power to
make States liable in damages when it acts pursuant to § 5 of the
Fourteenth Amendment, it is surely at least an open question
whether § 1983, properly construed, does not make the States liable
for relief of all kinds, notwithstanding the Eleventh Amendment.
Whether this is
Page 437 U. S. 704
in fact so, must, of course, await consideration in an
appropriate case. [
Footnote
2/3]
[
Footnote 2/1]
As
Fitzpatrick noted, this issue had been before the
Court in
Ex parte Virginia, 100 U.
S. 339 (1880).
[
Footnote 2/2]
It can also be questioned whether, had Congress meant to exempt
municipalities from liability under § 1983, it would necessarily
follow that Congress also meant to exempt States.
See Monell v.
New York City Dept. of Social Services, 436 U.
S. 658,
436 U. S.
673-674, n. 30 (1978).
[
Footnote 2/3]
As I understand MR. JUSTICE POWELL's objection to the Court's
opinion, it rests squarely on the proposition that a clear
statement to make States liable for damages cannot be found in
legislative history, but only on the face of a statute.
See
post at
437 U. S.
705-706. In § 1983 and the Act of Feb. 25, 1871, we have
a statute that, on its face, applies to state defendants, but now
MR. JUSTICE POWELL tells us that this is not enough, because there
is still an absence of "congressional purpose in 1871 to abrogate
the protections of the Eleventh Amendment."
Post at
437 U. S. 709
n. 6. I suppose that this means either that no statute can meet the
Eleventh Amendment clear statement test or, alternatively, that MR.
JUSTICE POWELL has some undisclosed rule as to when legislative
history may be taken into account that works only to defeat state
liability.
MR. JUSTICE POWELL, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE joins,
concurring in part and dissenting in part.*
While I join Parts I [
Footnote
3/1] and II-A of the Court's opinion, I cannot subscribe to
437 U. S. "
Ante at
437 U. S.
698.
Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U. S. 651,
415 U. S.
676-677 (1974), rejected the argument that 42 U.S.C. §
1983
"was intended to create a waiver of the State's Eleventh
Amendment immunity merely because an action could be brought under
that section against state officers, rather than against the State
itself."
In a § 1983
Page 437 U. S. 705
action,
"a federal court's remedial power, consistent with the Eleventh
Amendment, is necessarily limited to prospective injunctive relief,
. . . and may not include a retroactive award which requires the
payment of funds from the state treasury."
415 U.S. at
415 U. S. 677
(citations omitted). There is no indication in the language of the
Civil Rights Attorney's Fees Awards Act of 1976 (Act), Pub.L. No.
94-.59, 90 Stat. 2641, 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1976 ed.), that Congress
sought to overrule that holding. [
Footnote 3/2] In this case, as in
Edelman, "the
threshold fact of congressional authorization to sue a class of
defendants which
literally includes States is wholly
absent." 415 U.S. at
415 U. S. 672
(emphasis supplied). Absent such authorization, grounded in
statutory language sufficiently clear to alert every voting Member
of Congress of the constitutional implications of particular
legislation, we undermine the values of federalism served by the
Eleventh Amendment by inferring from congressional silence an
intent to "place new or even enormous fiscal burdens on the
States."
Employees v. Missouri Public Health Welfare
Dept., 411 U. S. 279,
411 U. S. 284
(1973).
The Court notes that the Committee Reports and the defeat of two
proposed amendments indicate a purpose to authorize counsel fee
awards against the States.
Ante at
437 U. S. 694.
That evidence might provide persuasive support for a finding of
"waiver" if this case involved
"a congressional enactment which by its terms authorized suit by
designated plaintiffs against a general class of defendants which
literally included
Page 437 U. S. 706
States or state instrumentalities."
Edelman, supra at
415 U. S. 672.
Compare Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer, 427 U.
S. 445,
427 U. S. 452
(1976),
with Employees, supra, at
411 U. S. 283,
411 U. S.
284-285. [
Footnote 3/3]
But in this sensitive area of conflicting interests of
constitutional dimension, we should not permit items of legislative
history to substitute for explicit statutory language. The Court
should be "hesitant to presume general congressional awareness,"
SEC v. Sloan, 436 U. S. 103,
436 U. S. 121
(1978), of Eleventh Amendment consequences of a statute that does
not make express provision for monetary recovery against the
States. [
Footnote 3/4]
Page 437 U. S. 707
The Court maintains that the Act presents a special case because
(i) it imposes attorney's fees as an element of costs that
traditionally have been awarded without regard to the States'
constitutional immunity from monetary liability, and (ii) Congress
acted pursuant to its enforcement power under § 5 of the Fourteenth
Amendment, as contrasted with its power under more general grants
such as the Commerce Clause. I find neither ground a persuasive
justification for dilution of the "clear statement" rule.
Notwithstanding the limitations of the Court's first ground of
justification,
see ante at
437 U. S. 697
n. 27, I am unwilling to ignore otherwise applicable principles
simply because the statute in question imposes substantial monetary
liability as an element of "costs." Counsel fees traditionally have
not been part of the routine litigation expenses assessed against
parties in American courts.
Cf. Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v.
Wilderness Society, 421 U. S. 240
(1975);
Arcambel v.
Wiseman, 3 Dall. 306 (1796). Quite unlike those
routine expenses, an award of counsel fees may involve substantial
sums, and is not a charge intimately related to the mechanics of
the litigation. I therefore cannot accept the Court's assumption
that counsel fee awards are part of "the ordinary discipline of the
courtroom."
Ante at
437 U. S. 696
n. 24. [
Footnote 3/5]
Page 437 U. S. 708
Moreover, counsel fee awards cannot be viewed as having the kind
of "ancillary effect on the state treasury,"
Edelman, 415
U.S. at
415 U. S. 668,
that avoids the need for an explicit waiver of Eleventh Amendment
protections. As with damages and restitutory relief, an award of
counsel fees could impose a substantial burden on the State to make
unbudgeted disbursements to satisfy an obligation stemming from
past (as opposed to post-litigation) activities. It stretches the
rationale of
Edelman beyond recognition to characterize
such awards as "the necessary result of compliance with decrees
which, by their terms, [are] prospective in nature."
Ibid.
In the case of a purely prospective decree, budgeting can take
account of the expenditures entailed in compliance, and the State
retains some flexibility in implementing the decree, which may
reduce the impact on the state fisc. In some situations, fiscal
considerations may induce the State to curtail the activity
triggering the constitutional obligation. Here, in contrast, the
State must satisfy a potentially substantial liability without the
measure of flexibility that would be available with respect to
prospective relief.
The Court's second ground for application of a diluted "clear
statement" rule stems from language in
Fitzpatrick
recognizing that, "[w]hen Congress acts pursuant to § 5" of the
Fourteenth Amendment,
"it is exercising [legislative] authority under one section of a
constitutional Amendment whose other sections, by their own terms,
embody limitations on state authority,"
427 U.S. at
427 U. S. 456.
I do not view this language as overruling, by implication,
Edelman's holding that no waiver is present in 1983
[
Footnote 3/6] -- the
quintessential Fourteenth Amendment
Page 437 U. S. 709
measure -- or disturbing the vitality of the "threshold
[requirement] of congressional authorization to sue a class of
defendants which literally includes States," 415 U.S. at 672.
[
Footnote 3/7]
Page 437 U. S. 710
Because explicit authorization "to join a State as defendant,"
Fitzpatrick, 427 U.S. at
427 U. S. 452,
is absent here, and because every part of the Act can be given
meaning without ascribing to Congress an intention to override the
Eleventh Amendment immunity, [
Footnote
3/8] I dissent from
437 U. S.
* MR. JUSTICE WHITE and MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST join this opinion
to the extent it dissents from the opinion and judgment of the
Court.
[
Footnote 3/1]
The principles emphasized by MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST,
post at
437 U. S. 711,
as to the limitation of equitable remedies are settled.
See
Dayton Board of Education v. Brinkman, 433 U.
S. 406 (1977);
Milliken v. Bradley,
433 U. S. 267
(1977). On the extraordinary facts of this case, however, I agree
with the Court that the 31-day limitation on punitive isolation was
within the bounds of the District Court's discretion in fashioning
appropriate relief. It also is evident from the Court's opinion,
see ante at
437 U. S. 688,
that this limitation will have only a minimal effect on prison
administration, an area of responsibility primarily reserved to the
States.
[
Footnote 3/2]
In
Monell v. New York City Dept. of Social Services,
436 U. S. 658
(1978), the Court held that
"the legislative history of the Civil Rights Act of 1871 compels
the conclusion that Congress
did intend municipalities and
other local government units to be included among those persons to
whom § 1983 applies."
Id. at
436 U. S. 690.
We noted, however, that there was no "basis for concluding that the
Eleventh Amendment is a bar to municipal liability," and that our
holding was "limited to local government units which are not
considered part of the State for Eleventh Amendment purposes."
Id. at
436 U. S. 690,
and n. 54 (emphasis in original).
[
Footnote 3/3]
Although
Fitzpatrick states that the "prerequisite" of
"congressional authorization . . . to sue the State as employer"
was found "wanting in
Employees," 427 U.S. at
427 U. S. 452,
this reference is to the Court's conclusion in
Employees
that, notwithstanding the literal inclusion of the States as
statutory employers, in certain contexts, there was
"not a word in the history of the [statute] to indicate a
purpose of Congress to make it possible for a citizen of that State
or another State to sue the State in the federal courts."
411 U.S. at
411 U. S. 285.
See Edelman, 415 U.S. at
415 U. S.
672.
While it has been suggested that
"[t]he legislative changes that made state governments liable
under Title VII closely paralleled the changes that made state
governments liable under the Fair Labor Standards Act,"
Baker, Federalism and the Eleventh Amendment, 48 U.Colo.L.Rev.
139, 171 n. 152 (1977),
comparing Fitzpatrick, 427 U.S. at
427 U. S. 449
n. 2,
with Employees, 411 U.S. at
411 U. S.
282-283, the statute considered in
Fitzpatrick
made explicit reference to the availability of a
private
action against state and local governments in the event the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission or the Attorney General failed to
bring suit or effect a conciliation agreement. Equal Opportunity
Employment Act of 1972, 86 Stat. 104, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(f)(1)
(1970 ed., Supp. V);
see H.R.Rep. No. 92-238, pp. 17-19
(1971); S.Rep. No. 92-415, pp. 9-11 (1971); S.Conf.Rep. No. 92-681,
pp. 17-18 (1972); H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 9899, pp. 17-18 (1972).
[
Footnote 3/4]
"By making a law unenforceable against the states unless a
contrary intent were apparent
in the language of the
statute, the clear statement rule . . . ensure[s] that
attempts to limit state power [are] unmistakable, thereby
structuring the legislative process to allow the centrifugal forces
in Congress the greatest opportunity to protect the states'
interests."
Tribe, Intergovernmental Immunities in Litigation, Taxation, and
Regulation: Separation of Powers Issues in Controversies About
Federalism, 89 Harv.L.Rev. 682, 695 (1976) (emphasis supplied).
[
Footnote 3/5]
The Court places undue reliance on
Fairmont Creamery Co. v.
Minnesota, 275 U. S. 70
(1927), in support of its holding. That decision holds that no
common law bar of sovereign immunity prevents the imposition of
costs against the State "when [it is] a party to litigation in this
Court. . . ."
Id. at
275 U. S. 74. In
addition to the fact that the State was a party in the litigation,
and that there is no discussion of counsel fees,
Fairmont
Creamery
"did not mention the eleventh amendment. Furthermore, the Court
had held long before that, when an individual appeals a case
initiated by a state to the Supreme Court, that appeal does not
fall within the eleventh amendment's prohibition of suit 'commenced
or prosecuted against' the states."
Note, Attorneys' Fees and the Eleventh Amendment, 88 Harv.L.Rev.
1875, 1890 (1975).
[
Footnote 3/6]
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN's concurring opinion asserts that the
Court's holding in
Edelman has been undermined,
sub
silentio, by
Fitzpatrick and the reexamination of the
legislative history of § 1983 undertaken in
Monell. The
language in question from
Fitzpatrick was not essential to
the Court's holding in that case. Moreover, this position ignores
the fact that
Edelman rests squarely on the Eleventh
Amendment immunity, without adverting in terms to the treatment of
the legislative history in
Monroe v. Pape, 365 U.
S. 167 (1961). And there is nothing in
Monroe
itself that supports the proposition that § 1983 was "thought to
include only natural persons among those who could be party
defendants. . . ."
Ante at
437 U. S. 701.
The
Monroe Court held that, because the 1871 Congress
entertained doubts as to its "power . . . to impose civil liability
on municipalities," the Court could not "believe that the word
person' was used in this particular Act to include them." 365
U.S. at 365 U. S. 190,
365 U. S. 191.
As the decision in Monell itself illustrates, see
437
U.S. 678fn3/2|>n. 2, supra, the statutory issue of
municipal liability is quite independent of the question of the
State's constitutional immunity.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN's opinion appears to dispense with the
"clear statement" requirement altogether, a position that the Court
does not embrace today. It relies on the reference to "bodies
politic" in the "Dictionary Act," Act of Feb. 25, 1871, 16 Stat.
431, as adequate to override the States' constitutional immunity,
even though there is no evidence of a congressional purpose in 1871
to abrogate the protections of the Eleventh Amendment. But the
Court's rulings in
Edelman and
Employees are
rendered obsolete if provisions like the "Dictionary Act" are all
that is necessary to expose the States to monetary liability. After
a century of § 1983 jurisprudence, in which States were not thought
to be liable in damages,
Edelman made clear that the 1871
measure does not override the Eleventh Amendment. I would give
force to our prior Eleventh Amendment decisions by requiring
explicit legislation on the point.
[
Footnote 3/7]
The Court suggests that the "dissenting Brethren would
apparently force [the individual] officers to bear the award
alone."
Ante at
437 U. S. 699
n. 32. It is not clear to me that this issue, not fairly embraced
within the questions presented, is before us. Moreover, there is no
suggestion in the opinion below that the Court of Appeals intended
that its award of fees for "services on this appeal" would be paid
by the individual petitioners, in the event the Eleventh Amendment
were found to bar an award against the Department of Correction.
See 548 F.2d 740, 742-743 (1977). But even if the question
properly were before this Court, there is nothing in the Act that
requires the routine imposition of counsel fee liability on anyone.
As we noted in
Monell, the Act "allows prevailing parties
(
in the discretion of the court) in § 1983 suits to obtain
attorney's fees from the losing parties. . . ." 436 U.S. at
436 U. S.
698-699 (emphasis supplied). Congress deliberately
rejected a mandatory statute, in favor of
"a more moderate approach [which left] the matter to the
discretion of the judge, guided of course by the case law
interpreting similar attorney's fee provisions."
H.R.Rep. No. 94-1558, p. 8 (1976). Whether or not the standard
of cases like
Wood v. Strickland, 420 U.
S. 308 (1975), was rejected with respect to counsel fee
liability,
see H.R.Rep. No. 94-1558,
supra, at 9,
and n. 17, neither the Act nor its legislative history prevents a
court from taking into account the personal culpability of the
individual officer where an award against the government entity
would be barred by the Eleventh Amendment.
[
Footnote 3/8]
I do not understand the Court's observation that, "[i]f the Act
does not impose liability for attorney's fees on the States, it has
no meaning with respect to them."
Ante at
437 U. S. 698
n. 31. Significantly, the Court does not say that any part of the
Act would be rendered meaningless without finding an Eleventh
Amendment waiver.
Cf. Employees, 411 U.S. at
411 U. S.
285-286.
MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST, dissenting.*
The Court's affirmance of a District Court's injunction against
a prison practice which has not been shown to violate the
Constitution can only be considered an aberration in light of
decisions as recently as last Term carefully defining the remedial
discretion of the federal courts.
Dayton Board of Education v.
Brinkman, 433 U. S. 406
(1977);
Milliken v. Bradley, 433 U.
S. 267 (1977) (
Milliken II). Nor are any of the
several theories which the Court advances in support of its
affirmance of the assessment of attorney's fees against the
taxpayers of Arkansas sufficiently convincing to overcome the
prohibition of the Eleventh Amendment. Accordingly, I dissent.
Page 437 U. S. 711
I
No person of ordinary feeling could fail to be moved by the
Court's recitation of the conditions formerly prevailing in the
Arkansas prison system. Yet I fear that the Court has allowed
itself to be moved beyond the well established bounds limiting the
exercise of remedial authority by the federal district courts. The
purpose and extent of that discretion in another context were
carefully defined by the Court's opinion last Term in
Milliken
II, supra at
437 U. S.
280-281:
"In the first place, like other equitable remedies, the nature
of the desegregation remedy is to be determined by the nature and
scope of the constitutional violation.
Swann v.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education, 402 U.S.
[1,]
402 U. S. 16 [(1971)]. The
remedy must therefore be related to 'the condition alleged to
offend the Constitution. . . .'
Milliken \[v.
Bradley\], 418 U.S. [717,]
418 U. S.
738 [(1974)]. Second, the decree must indeed be remedial
in nature, that is, it must be designed as nearly as possible 'to
restore the victims of discriminatory conduct to the position they
would have occupied in the absence of such conduct.'
Id.
at
418 U. S. 746. Third, the
federal courts, in devising a remedy, must take into account the
interests of state and local authorities in managing their own
affairs, consistent with the Constitution."
(Footnotes omitted.) [
Footnote
4/1]
Page 437 U. S. 712
The District Court's order limiting the maximum period of
punitive isolation to 30 days in no way relates to any condition
found offensive to the Constitution. It is, when stripped of
descriptive verbiage, a prophylactic rule, doubtless well designed
to assure a more humane prison system in Arkansas, but not
complying with the limitations set forth in
Milliken II,
supra. Petitioners do not dispute the District Court's
conclusion that the overcrowded conditions and the inadequate diet
provided for those prisoners in punitive isolation offended the
Constitution, but the District Court has ordered a cessation of
those practices. The District Court found that the confinement of
two prisoners in a single cell on a restricted diet for 30 days did
not violate the Eighth Amendment.
410 F.
Supp. 251, 278 (ED Ark.1976). While the Court today remarks
that "the length of confinement cannot be ignored,"
ante
at
437 U. S. 686,
it does not find that confinement under the conditions described by
the District Court becomes unconstitutional on the 31st day. It
must seek other justifications for its affirmance of that portion
of the District Court's order.
Certainly the provision is not remedial in the sense that it
"restore[s] the victims of discriminatory conduct to the position
they would have occupied in the absence of such conduct."
Milliken v. Bradley, 418 U. S. 717,
418 U. S. 746
(1974) (
Milliken I). The sole effect of the provision is
to grant future offenders against prison discipline greater
benefits than the Constitution requires; it does nothing to remedy
the plight of past victims of conditions which may well have been
unconstitutional. A prison is unlike a school system, in which
students in the later grades may receive special instruction to
compensate for discrimination to which they were subjected in
the
Page 437 U. S. 713
earlier grades.
Milliken II, supra at
433 U. S.
281-283. Nor has it been shown that petitioners' conduct
had any collateral effect upon private actions for which the
District Court may seek to compensate so as to eliminate the
continuing effect of past unconstitutional conduct.
See Swann
v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education, 402 U. S.
1,
402 U. S. 28
(1971). Even where such remedial relief is justified, a district
court may go no further than is necessary to eliminate the
consequences of official unconstitutional conduct.
Dayton,
supra at
433 U. S.
419-420;
Pasadena Board of Education v.
Spangler, 427 U. S. 424,
427 U. S.
435-437 (1976);
Swann, supra at
402 U. S.
31-32.
The Court's only asserted justification for its affirmance of
the decree, despite its dissimilarity to remedial decrees in other
contexts, is that it is "a mechanical -- and therefore an easily
enforced -- method of minimizing overcrowding."
Ante at
437 U. S. 688
n. 11. This conclusion fails adequately to take into account the
third consideration cited in
Milliken II: "the interests
of state and local authorities in managing their own affairs,
consistent with the Constitution." 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 281.
The prohibition against extended punitive isolation, a practice
which has not been shown to be inconsistent with the Constitution,
can only be defended because of the difficulty of policing the
District Court's explicit injunction against the overcrowding and
inadequate diet which have been found to be violative of the
Constitution. But even if such an expansion of remedial authority
could be justified in a case where the defendants had been
repeatedly contumacious, this is not such a case. The District
Court's dissatisfaction with petitioners' performance under its
earlier direction to "make a substantial start,"
Holt v.
Sarver, 300 F.
Supp. 825, 833 (ED Ark.1969), on alleviating unconstitutional
conditions cannot support an inference that petitioners are
prepared to defy the specific orders now laid down by the District
Court and not challenged by the petitioners. A proper respect for
"the interests of state and local authorities in managing their
own
Page 437 U. S. 714
affairs,"
Milliken II, 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 281,
requires the opposite conclusion. [
Footnote 4/2]
The District Court's order enjoins a practice which has not been
found inconsistent with the Constitution. The only ground for the
injunction, therefore, is the prophylactic one of assuring that no
unconstitutional conduct will occur in the future. In a unitary
system of prison management, there would be much to be said for
such a rule, but neither this Court nor any other federal court is
entrusted with such a management role under the Constitution.
II
The Court advances separate theories to support the separate
awards of attorney's fees in this case. First, the Court holds that
the taxpayers of Arkansas may be held responsible for the bad faith
of their officials in the litigation before the District Court.
Second, it concludes that the award of fees in the Court of
Appeals, where there was no bad faith, is authorized by the Civil
Rights Attorney's Fees Awards Act of 1976. Pub.L. No. 9659, 90
Stat. 241, 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1976 ed.). The first holding results
in a totally unnecessary intrusion upon the State's conduct of its
own affairs, and the second is not supportable under this Court's
earlier decisions outlining congressional authority to abrogate the
protections of the Eleventh Amendment.
A
Petitioners do not contest the District Court's finding that
they acted in bad faith. For this reason, the Court has no
Page 437 U. S. 715
occasion to address the nature of the showing necessary to
support an award of attorney's fees for bad faith under
Alyeska
Pipeline Service Co. v. Wilderness Society, 421 U.
S. 240,
421 U. S.
258-259 (1975). The only issue before us is whether a
proper finding of bad faith on the part of state officials will
support an award of attorney's fees directly against the state
treasury under the ancillary effect doctrine of
Edelman v.
Jordan, 415 U. S. 651,
415 U. S. 668
(1974).
The ancillary effect doctrine recognized in
Edelman is
a necessary concomitant of a federal court's authority to require
state officials to conform their conduct to the dictates of the
Constitution.
"State officials, in order to shape their official conduct to
the mandate of the Court's decrees, would more likely have to spend
money from the state treasury than if they had been left free to
pursue their previous course of conduct."
Id. at
415 U. S. 668.
The Court today suggests that a federal court may impose a
retroactive financial penalty upon a State when it fails to comply
with prospective relief previously and validly ordered. "If a state
agency refuses to adhere to a court order, a financial penalty may
be the most effective means of insuring compliance."
Ante
at
437 U.S. 691. This
application of the ancillary effect doctrine has never before been
recognized by this Court, and there is no need to do so in this
case, since it has not been shown that these petitioners have
"refuse[d] to adhere to a court order." A State's jealous defense
of its authority to operate its own correctional system cannot
casually be equated with contempt of court. [
Footnote 4/3]
Page 437 U. S. 716
Even were I to agree with the Court that petitioners had
willfully defied federal decrees, I could not conclude that the
award of fees against the taxpayers of Arkansas would be justified,
since there is a less intrusive means of insuring respondents'
right to relief. It is sufficient to order an award of fees against
those defendants, acting in their official capacity, who are
personally responsible for the recalcitrance which the District
Court wishes to penalize. There is no reason for the federal courts
to engage in speculation as to whether the imposition of a fine
against the State is "less intrusive" than "sending high state
officials to jail."
Ibid. So long as the rights of the
plaintiffs and the authority of the District Court are amply
vindicated by an award of fees, it should be a matter of no concern
to the court whether those fees are paid by state officials
personally or by the State itself. The Arkansas Legislature has
already made statutory provision for deciding when its officials
shall be reimbursed by the State for judgments ordered by the
federal courts. 1977 Ark. Gen. Act No. 543.
The Court presents no persuasive reason for its conclusion that
the decision of who must pay such fees may not safely be left to
the State involved. It insists,
ante at
437 U. S. 699
n. 32, that it is "manifestly unfair" to leave the individual state
officers to pay the award of counsel fees rather than permitting
their collection directly from the state treasury. But petitioners
do not contest the District Court's finding that they acted in bad
faith, and, thus, the Court's insistence that it is "unfair" to
impose attorney's fees on them individually rings somewhat hollow.
[
Footnote 4/4] Even in a case where
the equities were more strongly in favor of the individual state
officials (as opposed to the State as an entity) than they are in
this case,
Page 437 U. S. 717
the possibility of individual liability in damages of a state
official where the State itself could not be held liable is as old
as
Ex parte Young, 209 U. S. 123
(1908), and has been repeatedly reaffirmed by decisions of this
Court.
Great Northern Life Insurance Co. v. Read,
322 U. S. 47
(1944);
Ford Motor Co. v. Department of Treasury,
323 U. S. 459
(1945);
Edelman v. Jordan, supra. Since the Court
evidences no disagreement with this line of cases, its assertion of
"unfairness" is not only doubtful in fact, but also irrelevant as a
matter of law. Likewise, the Court's fear that imposition of
liability would inhibit state officials in the fearless exercise of
their duties may be remedied, if deemed desirable, by legislation
in each of the various States similar to that which Arkansas has
already enacted.
B
For the reasons stated in the dissenting portion of my Brother
POWELL's opinion, which I join, I do not agree that the Civil
Rights Attorney's Fees Awards Act of 1976 can be considered a valid
congressional abrogation of the State's Eleventh Amendment
immunity. I have, in addition, serious reservations about the lack
of any analysis accompanying the Court's transposition of the
holding of
Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer, 427 U.
S. 445 (1976), to this case. In
Fitzpatrick, we
held that, under § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, Congress could
explicitly allow for recovery against state agencies without
violating the Eleventh Amendment. But in
Fitzpatrick,
supra, there was conceded to be a violation of the Equal
Protection Clause which is contained
in haec verba in the
language of the Fourteenth Amendment itself. In this case, the
claimed constitutional violation is the infliction of cruel and
unusual punishment, which is expressly prohibited by the Eighth,
but not by the Fourteenth, Amendment. While the Court has held that
the Fourteenth Amendment "incorporates" the prohibition against
cruel and unusual punishment, it is not at all clear to me that it
follows that Congress has the same enforcement power
Page 437 U. S. 718
under § 5 with respect to a constitutional provision which has
merely been judicially "incorporated" into the Fourteenth Amendment
that it has with respect to a provision which was placed in that
Amendment by the drafters.
I would therefore reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals
in its entirety.
* MR. JUSTICE WHITE joins
437 U. S.
[
Footnote 4/1]
The Court suggests,
ante at
437 U. S. 687
n. 9, that its holding is consistent with
Milliken II
because it "was not remedying the present effects of a violation in
the past. It was seeking to bring an ongoing violation to an
immediate halt." This suggestion is wide of the mark. Whether
exercising its authority to "remed[y] the present effects of a
violation in the past," or "seeking to bring an ongoing violation
to an immediate halt," the court's remedial authority remains
circumscribed by the language quoted in the text from
Milliken
II. If anything, less ingenuity and discretion would appear to
be required to "bring an ongoing violation to an immediate halt"
than in "remedying the present effects of a violation in the past."
The difficulty with the Court's position is that it quite properly
refrains from characterizing solitary confinement for a period in
excess of 30 days as a cruel and unusual punishment; but given this
position, a "remedial" order that no such solitary confinement may
take place is necessarily of a prophylactic nature, and not
essential to "bring an ongoing violation to an immediate halt."
[
Footnote 4/2]
I reserve judgment on whether such a precautionary order would
be justified where state officials have been shown to have violated
previous remedial orders. I also note the similarity between this
decree and the "no majority of any minority" requirement which was
found impermissible in
Pasadena Board of Education v.
Spangler, 427 U. S. 424
(1976), even though it, too, might have been defended on the theory
that it was an easily enforceable mechanism for preventing future
acts of official discrimination.
[
Footnote 4/3]
In any event, it is apparent that the District Court did not
consider its order a form of retroactive discipline supporting its
previous orders. The court concluded that the allowance of the fee
"may incline the Department to act in such a manner that further
protracted litigation about the prisons will not be necessary."
410 F.
Supp. 251, 285 (ED Ark.1976). It does not appear to me that the
court's desire to weaken petitioners' future resistance is a
legitimate use of the
Alyeska doctrine permitting the
award of attorney's fees for past acts of bad faith.
[
Footnote 4/4]
It is true that fees may be awarded under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1976
ed.) even in the absence of bad faith. But that statute leaves the
decision to award fees to the discretion of the district court,
which may be expected to alleviate any possible unfairness.