When the Superintendent of Schools in Cumberland, R.I., informed
petitioner parents of petitioner child, who suffers from cerebral
palsy and other handicaps, that the School Committee no longer
would fund the child's placement in a special educational program,
the parents, in addition to appealing the Superintendent's decision
to the School Committee and thereafter through the state
administrative process, filed an action in Federal District Court
against the School Committee and, subsequently, against certain
state school officials. They asserted, at various points in the
proceedings, claims for declaratory and injunctive relief based on
state law, on the Education of the Handicapped Act (EHA), on § 504
of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and, with respect to certain
federal constitutional claims, on 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The District
Court held that the child was entitled, as a matter of state law,
to a free appropriate special education paid for by the School
Committee, and that it was therefore unnecessary and improper to
reach petitioners' federal statutory and constitutional claims. By
agreement between the parties, the court awarded attorney's fees
against the School Committee. Petitioners then requested attorney's
fees against the state defendants. The District Court held that
petitioners were entitled to such fees for the hours spent in the
state administrative process both before and after the date the
state defendants were named as parties, reasoning that, because
petitioners were required to exhaust their EHA remedies before
asserting their § 1983 and § 504 claims, they were entitled to fees
for those procedures. The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that,
since the action and relief granted fell within the reach of the
EHA, which establishes a comprehensive federal-state scheme for the
provision of special education to handicapped children but does not
provide for attorney's fees, the District Court had to look to 42
U.S.C. § 1988 and § 505 of the Rehabilitation Act for such fees.
The Court of Appeals concluded that, even if the unaddressed § 1983
claims were substantial enough to support federal jurisdiction so
as generally to warrant an award of attorney's fees, nevertheless,
given the comprehensiveness of the EHA, Congress could not have
intended its omission of attorney's fees relief in that statute
to
Page 468 U. S. 993
be rectified by recourse to § 1988. The court disposed of the
Rehabilitation Act basis for attorney's fees for similar
reasons.
Held:
1. Petitioners were not entitled to attorney's fees under §
1988. Pp.
468 U. S.
1006-1016.
(a) The fact that petitioners prevailed on their initial claim
that the School Committee violated due process by refusing to grant
petitioners a full hearing before terminating funding of petitioner
child's special education program does not, by itself, entitle
petitioners to attorney's fees for the subsequent administrative
and judicial proceedings. That due process claim was entirely
separate from the claims made in the subsequent proceedings, and
was not sufficiently related to petitioners' ultimate success to
support an award of fees for the entire proceeding. Pp.
468 U. S.
1008-1009.
(b) As to petitioners' claim that the child was being
discriminated against on the basis of his handicapped condition, in
violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, it is apparent that Congress intended the EHA to be the
exclusive avenue through which such a claim can be pursued. The EHA
is a comprehensive scheme to aid the States in complying with their
constitutional obligations to provide public education for the
handicapped. Allowing a plaintiff to circumvent the EHA's
administrative remedies by relying on § 1983 as a remedy for a
substantial equal protection claim would be inconsistent with that
scheme. Pp.
468 U. S.
1009-1013.
(c) Even if petitioners' due process challenge to the partiality
of the state hearing officer who reviewed the School Committee's
decision might be maintained as an independent challenge,
petitioners are not entitled to attorney's fees for such claim.
That claim had no bearing on the substantive claim, on which
petitioners prevailed, that the School Committee, as a matter of
state and federal law, was required to pay for petitioner child's
education. Where petitioners presented different claims for
different relief, based on different facts and legal theories, and
prevailed only on a nonfee claim, they are not entitled to a fee
award simply because the other claim was a constitutional claim
that could be asserted through § 1983. Pp.
468 U. S.
1013-1016.
2. Nor were petitioners entitled to attorney's fees under § 505
of the Rehabilitation Act. Congress struck a careful balance in the
EHA between clarifying and making enforceable the rights of
handicapped children to a free appropriate public education and
endeavoring to relieve the financial burden imposed on the agencies
responsible to guarantee those rights. It could not have intended a
handicapped child to upset that balance by relying on § 504 for
otherwise unavailable damages or for
Page 468 U. S. 994
an award of attorney's fees. Where, as here, whatever remedy
might be provided under § 504 -- which prevents discrimination on
the basis of a handicap in any program receiving federal financial
assistance -- is provided with more clarity and precision under the
EHA, a plaintiff may not circumvent or enlarge on the remedies
available under the EHA by resort to § 504. Pp.
468 U. S.
1016-1021.
703 F.2d 4, affirmed.
BLACKMUN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BURGER, C.J., and WHITE, POWELL, REHNQUIST, and O'CONNOR, JJ.,
joined. BRENNAN, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which MARSHALL
and STEVENS, JJ., joined,
post, p.
468 U. S.
1021.
JUSTICE BLACKMUN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents questions regarding the award of attorney's
fees in a proceeding to secure a "free appropriate public
education" for a handicapped child. At various stages in the
proceeding, petitioners asserted claims for relief based on state
law, on the Education of the Handicapped Act (EHA), 84 Stat. 175,
as amended, 20 U.S.C. § 1400
et seq., on § 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 87 Stat. 394, as amended, 29 U.S.C. §
794, and on the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the
Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The United
States Court of Appeals
Page 468 U. S. 995
for the First Circuit concluded that, because the proceeding, in
essence, was one to enforce the provisions of the EHA, a statute
that does not provide for the payment of attorney's fees,
petitioners were not entitled to such fees.
Smith v. Cumberland
School Committee, 703 F.2d 4 (1983). Petitioners insist that
this Court's decision in
Maher v. Gagne, 448 U.
S. 122 (1980), compels a different conclusion.
I
The procedural history of the case is complicated, but it is
significant to the resolution of the issues. Petitioner Thomas F.
Smith III (Tommy), suffers from cerebral palsy and a variety of
physical and emotional handicaps. When this proceeding began in
November, 1976, Tommy was eight years old. In the preceding
December, the Cumberland School Committee had agreed to place Tommy
in a day program at Emma Pendleton Bradley Hospital in East
Providence, R.I., and Tommy began attending that program. In
November, 1976, however, the Superintendent of Schools informed
Tommy's parents, who are the other petitioners here, that the
School Committee no longer would fund Tommy's placement because, as
it construed Rhode Island law, the responsibility for educating an
emotionally disturbed child lay with the State's Division of Mental
Health, Retardation and Hospitals (MHRH). App. 25-26.
Petitioners took an appeal from the decision of the
Superintendent to the School Committee. In addition, petitioners
filed a complaint under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in the United States
District Court for the District of Rhode Island against the members
of the School Committee, asserting that due process required that
the Committee comply with "Article IX -- Procedural Safeguards" of
the Regulations adopted by the State Board of Regents regarding
Education of Handicapped Children (Regulations) [
Footnote 1] and that Tommy's placement
Page 468 U. S. 996
in his program be continued pending appeal of the
Superintendent's decision.
In orders issued in December, 1976 and January, 1977, the
District Court entered a temporary restraining order and then a
preliminary injunction. The court agreed with petitioners that the
Regulations required the School Committee to continue Tommy in his
placement at Bradley Hospital pending appeal of the
Superintendent's decision. The School Committee's failure to follow
the Regulations, the court concluded, would constitute a
deprivation of due process.
On May 10, 1978, petitioners filed a first amended complaint.
App. 49. By that time, petitioners had completed the state
administrative process. They had appealed the Superintendent's
decision to the School Committee and then to the State Commissioner
of Education, who delegated responsibility for conducting a hearing
to an Associate Commissioner of Education. Petitioners had moved
that the Associate Commissioner recuse himself from conducting the
review of the School Committee's decision, since he was an employee
of the state education agency, and therefore not an impartial
hearing officer. The Associate Commissioner denied the motion to
recuse.
Page 468 U. S. 997
All the state officers agreed that, under R.I.Gen.Laws, Tit. 40,
ch. 7 (1977), the responsibility for educating Tommy lay with MHRH.
[
Footnote 2] The Associate
Commissioner acknowledged petitioners' argument that, since §
40.1-7-8 would require them to pay a portion of the cost of
services provided to Tommy, [
Footnote 3] the statute conflicted with the EHA, but
concluded that the problem was not within his jurisdiction to
resolve.
In their first amended complaint, petitioners added as
defendants the Commissioner of Education, the Associate
Commissioner of Education, the Board of Regents for Education, and
the Director of MHRH. They also specifically relied for the first
time on the EHA, noting that, at all times mentioned in the
complaint, the State of Rhode Island had submitted a plan for
state-administered programs of special education and related
services and had received federal funds pursuant to the EHA.
[
Footnote 4]
Page 468 U. S. 998
In the first count of their amended complaint, petitioners
challenged the fact that both the hearing before the School
Committee and the hearing before the Associate Commissioner were
conducted before examiners who were employees of the local or state
education agency. They sought a declaratory judgment that the
procedural safeguards contained in Article IX of the Regulations
did not comply with the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment or with the requirements of the EHA, 20 U.S.C. § 1415,
and its accompanying regulations. They also sought an injunction
prohibiting the Commissioner and Associate Commissioner from
conducting any more hearings in review of decisions of the Rhode
Island local education agencies (LEA's) unless and until the Board
of Regents adopted regulations that conformed to the requirements
of § 1415 and its regulations. Finally, they sought reasonable
attorney's fees and costs.
In the second count of their amended complaint, petitioners
challenged the substance of the Associate Commissioner's decision.
In their view, the decision violated Tommy's rights
"under federal and state law to have his LEA provide a free,
appropriate educational placement without regard to whether or not
said placement can be made within the local school system."
App. 61. They sought both a declaratory judgment that the School
Committee, not MHRH, was responsible for providing Tommy a free
appropriate education, and an injunction requiring the School
Committee to provide Tommy such an education. They also asked for
reasonable attorney's fees and costs.
On December 22, 1978, the District Court issued an opinion
acknowledging confusion over whether, as a matter of state law, the
School Committee or MHRH was responsible for funding and providing
the necessary services for Tommy.
Id. at 108. The court
also noted that, if the Associate
Page 468 U. S. 999
Commissioner were correct that Tommy's education was governed by
§ 40.1-7, the state scheme would appear to be in conflict with the
requirements of the EHA, since § 40.1-7 may require parental
contribution and may not require MHRH to provide education at all
if it would cause the Department to incur a deficit. At the request
of the state defendants, the District Court certified to the
Supreme Court of Rhode Island the state law questions whether the
School Committee was required to provide special education for a
resident handicapped student if the local educational programs were
inadequate, and whether the cost of such programs was the
responsibility of the local School Committee or of the MHRH.
On May 29, 1979, the District Court granted partial summary
judgment for the defendants on petitioners' claim that they were
denied due process by the requirement of the Regulations that they
submit their dispute to the School Committee and by the Associate
State Commissioner's refusal to recuse himself. The court noted
that the School Committee's members were not "employees" of the
local education agency, but elected officials, and determined that
the provision of the EHA directing that no hearing shall be
conducted by an employee of an agency or unit involved in the
education or care of the child does not apply to hearings conducted
by the state education agency.
On June 3, 1980, the Rhode Island Supreme Court issued an
opinion answering the certified questions.
Smith v. Cumberland
School Committee, 415 A.2d
168. Noting the responsibility of the Board of Regents for
Education to comply with the requirements of the EHA, the court
determined that the primary obligation of financing a handicapped
child's special education lay with the local School Committee.
Whatever obligation § 40.1-7 imposes on MHRH to provide educational
services is limited and complements, rather than supplants, the
obligations of School Committees under § 16.24-1.
Page 468 U. S. 1000
Petitioners thereafter filed their second amended and
supplemental complaint. App. 152. In it, they added to Count II
claims for relief under the Equal Protection Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment and under § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of
1973, as amended, 29 U.S.C. § 794. They also requested attorney's
fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 and what was then 31 U.S.C. § 1244(e)
(1976 ed.). [
Footnote 5]
On January 12, 1981, the District Court issued an order
declaring petitioners' rights, entering a permanent injunction
against the School Committee defendants, and approving an award of
attorney's fees against those defendants. App. 172. The court
ordered the School Committee to pay the full cost of Tommy's
attendance at Harmony Hill School, Tommy's then-current placement.
By agreement between petitioners and the School Committee and
without prejudice to petitioners' claims against the other
defendants, the court awarded attorney's fees in the amount of
$8,000, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988 and the then 31 U.S.C. § 1244
(e) (1976 ed.).
On June A, 1981, the District Court issued two orders, this time
addressed to petitioners' claims against the state defendants. In
the first order, App. 177, the court denied the state defendants'
motion to dismiss. In the second order,
id. at 189, the
court declared that Tommy is entitled to a
Page 468 U. S. 1001
free appropriate special education paid for by the Cumberland
School Committee. The court noted that, since Tommy was entitled to
the relief he sought as a matter of state law, it was unnecessary
and improper for the court to go further and reach petitioners'
federal statutory and constitutional claims. Petitioners were given
14 days to move for an award of fees.
The Court of Appeals for the First Circuit affirmed in an
unpublished per curiam opinion filed on January 11, 1982. It
concluded that the Commissioner was not immune from injunctive
relief and that petitioners' challenge to the District Court's
award of summary judgment to respondents on their due process
challenge was moot.
Petitioners requested fees and costs against the state
defendants.
Id. at 195. On April 30, 1982, the District
Court ruled orally that petitioners were entitled to fees and costs
in the amount of $32,109 for the hours spent in the state
administrative process both before and after the state defendants
were named as parties to the federal litigation. App. to Pet. for
Cert. A31-A58. Relying on
New York Gaslight Club, Inc. v.
Carey, 447 U. S. 54
(1980), and its own opinion in
Turillo v.
Tyson, 535 F.
Supp. 577 (1982), the court reasoned that, because petitioners
were required to exhaust their EHA remedies before bringing their §
1983 and § 504 claims, they were entitled to fees for those
procedures. The court agreed with respondents that petitioners were
not entitled to compensation for hours spent challenging the use of
employees as hearing officers. No fees were awarded for hours spent
obtaining the preliminary injunctive relief, as petitioners already
had been compensated for that work by the School Committee
defendants. Finally, the court rejected the defendants' argument
that fees should not be allowed, because this was an action under
the EHA, which does not provide for fees. In the court's view,
respondents had given insufficient weight to the fact that
petitioners had alleged equal protection and § 1983 claims as well
as the EHA claim. The court
Page 468 U. S. 1002
added that it found the equal protection claim petitioners
included in their second amended complaint to be colorable and
nonfrivolous. Petitioners thus were entitled to fees for prevailing
in an action to enforce their § 1983 claim.
The Court of Appeals reversed.
Smith v. Cumberland School
Committee, 703 F.2d 4 (CA1 1983). The court first noted that,
under what is labeled the "American Rule," attorney's fees are
available as a general matter only when statutory authority so
provides.
Alyeska Pipeline Co. v. Wilderness Society,
421 U. S. 240
(1975). Here the action and relief granted in this case fell within
the reach of the EHA, a federal statute that establishes a
comprehensive federal-state scheme for the provision of special
education to handicapped children, but that does not provide for
attorney's fees. [
Footnote 6]
For fees, the District Court had to look to § 1988 and § 505 of the
Rehabilitation Act.
As to the § 1988 claim, the court acknowledged the general rule
that, when the claim upon which a plaintiff actually prevails is
accompanied by a "substantial," though undecided, § 1983 claim
arising from the same nucleus of facts, a fee award is appropriate.
Maher v. Gagne, 448 U.S. at
448 U. S.
130-131. Here, petitioners' § 1983 claims arguably were
at least substantial enough to support federal jurisdiction.
Ibid. Even if the § 1983 claims were substantial,
however,
Page 468 U. S. 1003
the Court of Appeals concluded that, given the comprehensiveness
of the EHA, Congress could not have intended its omission of
attorney's fees relief to be rectified by recourse to § 1988.
The Court of Appeals drew support for its conclusion from this
Court's decision in
Middlesex County Sewerage Authority v.
National Sea Clammers Assn., 453 U. S. 1 (1981).
There the Court held that, where Congress had provided
comprehensive enforcement mechanisms for protection of a federal
right and those mechanisms did not include a private right of
action, a litigant could not obtain a private right of action by
asserting his claim under § 1983. The Court of Appeals recognized
that
Sea Clammers might not logically preclude a 1983
action for violation of the EHA, since the EHA expressly recognizes
a private right of action, but it does support the more general
proposition that, when a statute creates a comprehensive remedial
scheme, intentional "omissions" from that scheme should not be
supplanted by the remedial apparatus of § 1983. In the view of the
Court of Appeals, the fact that the § 1983 claims alleged here were
based on independent constitutional violations, rather than
violations of the EHA, was immaterial. The constitutional claims
alleged -- a denial of due process and a denial of a free
appropriate public education because of handicap -- are factually
identical to the EHA claims. If a litigant could obtain fees simply
by an incantation of § 1983, fees would become available in almost
every case. [
Footnote 7]
Page 468 U. S. 1004
The court disposed of the Rehabilitation Act basis for fees in a
similar fashion. Even if Congress did not specifically intend to
preempt § 504 claims with the EHA, the EHA's comprehensive remedial
scheme entails a rejection of fee-shifting that properly limits the
fees provision of the more general Rehabilitation Act.
Because of confusion in the Courts of Appeals over the proper
interplay among the various statutory and constitutional bases for
relief in cases of this nature, and over the effect of that
interplay on the provision of attorney's fees, [
Footnote 8] we granted certiorari, 464 U.S. 932
(1983).
II
Petitioners insist that the Court of Appeals simply ignored the
guidance of this Court in
Maher v. Gagne, supra, that a
prevailing party who asserts substantial but unaddressed
constitutional claims is entitled to attorney's fees under 42
U.S.C. § 1988. They urge that the reliance of the Court of Appeals
on
Sea Clammers was misplaced.
Sea Clammers had
to do only with an effort to enlarge a statutory remedy by
asserting a claim based on that statute under the "and laws"
provision of § 1983. [
Footnote
9] In this case, petitioners made no
Page 468 U. S. 1005
effort to enlarge the remedies available under the EHA by
asserting their claim through the "and laws" provision of § 1983.
They presented separate constitutional claims, properly cognizable
under § 1983. Since the claim on which they prevailed and their
constitutional claims arose out of a "
"common nucleus of
operative fact,"'" Maher v. Gagne, 448 U.S. at
448 U. S. 133,
n. 15, quoting H.R.Rep. No. 94-1558, p. 4, n. 7 (1976), in turn
quoting Mine Workers v. Gibbs, 383 U.
S. 715, 383 U. S. 725
(1966), and since the constitutional claims were found by the
District Court and assumed by the Court of Appeals to be
substantial, petitioners urge that they are entitled to fees under
§ 1988. In addition, petitioners presented a substantial claim
under § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. Since § 505 of that Act
authorizes attorney's fees in the same manner as does § 1988, and
in fact incorporates the legislative history of § 1988,
see 124 Cong.Rec. 30346 (1978) (remarks of Sen. Cranston),
the reasoning of Maher applies to claims based on § 504.
Petitioners therefore, it is claimed, are entitled to fees for
substantial, though unaddressed, § 504 claims.
Respondents counter that petitioners simply are attempting to
circumvent the lack of a provision for attorney's fees in the EHA
by resorting to the pleading trick of adding surplus constitutional
claims and similar claims under § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act.
Whatever Congress' intent was in authorizing fees for substantial,
unaddressed claims based on § 1988 or § 505, it could not have been
to allow plaintiffs to receive an award of attorney's fees in a
situation where Congress has made clear its intent that fees not be
available.
Resolution of this dispute requires us to explore congressional
intent, both in authorizing fees for substantial unaddressed
Page 468 U. S. 1006
constitutional claims and in setting out the elaborate
substantive and procedural requirements of the EHA, with no
indication that attorney's fees are available in an action to
enforce those requirements. We turn first to petitioners' claim
that they were entitled to fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 because they
asserted substantial constitutional claims.
III
As the legislative history illustrates and as this Court has
recognized, § 1988 is a broad grant of authority to courts to award
attorney's fees to plaintiffs seeking to vindicate federal
constitutional and statutory rights.
Maine v. Thiboutot,
448 U. S. 1,
448 U. S. 9
(1980);
Maher v. Gagne, supra; Hutto v. Finney,
437 U. S. 678,
437 U. S. 694
(1978); S.Rep. No. 94-1011, p. 4 (1976) (a prevailing plaintiff
"
should ordinarily recover an attorney's fee unless special
circumstances would render such an award unjust,'" quoting
Newman v. Piggie Park Enterprises, Inc., 390 U.
S. 400, 390 U. S. 402
(1968)). Congress did not intend to have that authority
extinguished by the fact that the case was settled or resolved on a
nonconstitutional ground. Maher v. Gagne, 448 U.S. at
448 U. S. 132.
As the Court also has recognized, however, the authority to award
fees in a case where the plaintiff prevails on substantial
constitutional claims is not without qualification. Due regard must
be paid, not only to the fact that a plaintiff "prevailed," but
also to the relationship between the claims on which effort was
expended and the ultimate relief obtained. Hensley v.
Eckerhart, 461 U. S. 424
(1983); Blum v. Stenson, 465 U. S. 886
(1984). Thus, for example, fees are not properly awarded for work
done on a claim on which a plaintiff did not prevail and which
involved distinctly different facts and legal theories from the
claims on the basis of which relief was awarded. Hensley v.
Eckerhart, 461 U.S. at 461 U. S.
434-435, 461 U. S. 440.
Although, in most cases, there is no clear line between hours of
work that contributed to a plaintiff's success and those that did
not, district courts remain charged with the responsibility,
imposed by Congress, of evaluating the award requested
Page 468 U. S. 1007
in light of the relationship between particular claims for which
work is done and the plaintiff's success.
Id. at
461 U. S.
436-437.
A similar analysis is appropriate in a case like this, where the
prevailing plaintiffs rely on substantial, unaddressed
constitutional claims as the basis for an award of attorney's fees.
The fact that constitutional claims are made does not render
automatic an award of fees for the entire proceeding. Congress'
purpose in authorizing a fee award for an unaddressed
constitutional claim was to avoid penalizing a litigant for the
fact that courts are properly reluctant to resolve constitutional
questions if a nonconstitutional claim is dispositive. H.R.Rep. No.
94-1558, at 4, n. 7. That purpose does not alter the requirement
that a claim for which fees are awarded be reasonably related to
the plaintiff's ultimate success. It simply authorizes a district
court to assume that the plaintiff has prevailed on his
fee-generating claim, and to award fees appropriate to that
success. [
Footnote 10]
In light of the requirement that a claim for which fees are
awarded be reasonably related to the plaintiff's ultimate success,
it is clear that plaintiffs may not rely simply on the fact that
substantial fee-generating claims were made during the course of
the litigation. Closer examination of the nature of the claims and
the relationship between those claims and petitioners' ultimate
success is required.
Besides making a claim under the EHA, petitioners asserted at
two different points in the proceedings that procedures employed by
state officials denied them due process. They also claimed that
Tommy was being discriminated against on the basis of his
handicapping condition, in violation
Page 468 U. S. 1008
of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
A
The first due process claim may be disposed of briefly.
Petitioners challenged the refusal of the School Committee to grant
them a full hearing before terminating Tommy's funding. Petitioners
were awarded fees against the School Committee for their efforts in
obtaining an injunction to prevent that due process deprivation.
The award was not challenged on appeal, and we therefore assume
that it was proper.
The fact that petitioners prevailed on their initial due process
claim, however, by itself does not entitle them to fees for the
subsequent administrative and judicial proceedings. The due process
claim that entitled petitioners to an order maintaining Tommy's
placement throughout the course of the subsequent proceedings is
entirely separate from the claims petitioners made in those
proceedings. Nor were those proceedings necessitated by the School
Committee's failings. Even if the School Committee had complied
with state regulations and had guaranteed Tommy's continued
placement pending administrative review of its decision,
petitioners still would have had to avail themselves of the
administrative process in order to obtain the permanent relief they
wanted -- an interpretation of state law that placed on the School
Committee the obligation to pay for Tommy's education. Petitioners'
initial due process claim is not sufficiently related to their
ultimate success to support an award of fees for the entire
proceeding. We turn, therefore, to petitioners' other § 1983
claims.
As petitioners emphasize, their § 1983 claims were not based on
alleged violations of the EHA, [
Footnote 11] but on independent
Page 468 U. S. 1009
claims of constitutional deprivations. As the Court of Appeals
recognized, however, petitioners' constitutional claims, a denial
of due process and a denial of a free appropriate public education
as guaranteed by the Equal Protection Clause, are virtually
identical to their EHA claims. [
Footnote 12] The question to be asked, therefore, is
whether Congress intended that the EHA be the exclusive avenue
through which a plaintiff may assert those claims.
B
We have little difficulty concluding that Congress intended the
EHA to be the exclusive avenue through which a plaintiff may assert
an equal protection claim to a publicly financed special education.
The EHA is a comprehensive scheme set up by Congress to aid the
States in complying with their constitutional obligations to
provide public education for handicapped children. Both the
provisions of the statute and its legislative history indicate that
Congress intended handicapped children with constitutional claims
to a free appropriate public education to pursue those claims
through the carefully tailored administrative and judicial
mechanism set out in the statute.
In the statement of findings with which the EHA begins, Congress
noted that there were more than 8 million handicapped children in
the country, the special education needs of most of whom were not
being fully met. 20 U.S.C.
Page 468 U. S. 1010
§§ 1400(b)(1), (2), and (3). Congress also recognized that, in a
series of "landmark court cases," the right to an equal education
opportunity for handicapped children had been established. S.Rep.
No. 94-168, p. 6 (1975).
See also id. at 13 ("It is the
intent of the Committee to establish and protect the right to
education for all handicapped children and to provide assistance to
the States in carrying out their responsibilities under State law
and the Constitution of the United States to provide equal
protection of the laws"). The EHA was an attempt to relieve the
fiscal burden placed on States and localities by their
responsibility to provide education for all handicapped children.
20 U.S.C. §§ 1400(b)(8) and (9). At the same time, however,
Congress made clear that the EHA is not simply a funding statute.
The responsibility for providing the required education remains on
the States. S.Rep. No. 94-168, at 22. And the Act establishes an
enforceable substantive right to a free appropriate public
education.
See Board of Education of Hendrick Hudson Central
School Dist. v. Rowley, 458 U. S. 176
(1982).
See also 121 Cong.Rec. 37417 (1975) (statement of
Sen. Schweiker: "It can no longer be the policy of the Government
to merely establish an unenforceable goal requiring all children to
be in school. [The bill] takes positive necessary steps to insure
that the rights of children and their families are protected").
[
Footnote 13] Finally, the
Act establishes an elaborate procedural mechanism to protect the
rights of handicapped
Page 468 U. S. 1011
children. The procedures not only ensure that hearings conducted
by the State are fair and adequate. They also effect Congress'
intent that each child's individual educational needs be worked out
through a process that begins on the local level and includes
ongoing parental involvement, detailed procedural safeguards, and a
right to judicial review. §§ 1412(4), 1414(a)(5), 1415.
See
also S.Rep. No. 94-168, at 11-12 (emphasizing the role of
parental involvement in assuring that appropriate services are
provided to a handicapped child);
id. at 22;
Board of
Education of Hendrick Hudson Central School Dist. v. Rowley,
458 U.S. at
458 U. S.
208-209.
In light of the comprehensive nature of the procedures and
guarantees set out in the EHA and Congress' express efforts to
place on local and state educational agencies the primary
responsibility for developing a plan to accommodate the needs of
each individual handicapped child, we find it difficult to believe
that Congress also meant to leave undisturbed the ability of a
handicapped child to go directly to court with an equal protection
claim to a free appropriate public education. [
Footnote 14] Not only would such a result render
superfluous most of the detailed procedural protections outlined in
the statute,
Page 468 U. S. 1012
but, more important, it would also run counter to Congress' view
that the needs of handicapped children are best accommodated by
having the parents and the local education agency work together to
formulate an individualized plan for each handicapped child's
education. No federal district court presented with a
constitutional claim to a public education can duplicate that
process.
We do not lightly conclude that Congress intended to preclude
reliance on § 1983 as a remedy for a substantial equal protection
claim. Since 1871, when it was passed by Congress, § 1983 has stood
as an independent safeguard against deprivations of federal
constitutional and statutory rights.
See Patsy v. Florida Board
of Regents, 457 U. S. 496
(1982);
Mitchm v. Foster, 407 U.
S. 225,
407 U. S. 242
(1972);
Monroe v. Pape, 365 U. S. 167,
365 U. S. 183
(1961). Nevertheless, § 1983 is a statutory remedy, and Congress
retains the authority to repeal it or replace it with an
alternative remedy. [
Footnote
15] The crucial consideration is what Congress intended.
See Brown v. GSA, 425 U. S. 820,
425 U. S.
825-829 (1976);
Johnson v. Railway Express Agency,
Inc., 421 U. S. 454,
421 U. S. 459
(1975);
Adickes v. S. H. Kress & Co., 398 U.
S. 144,
398 U. S. 151,
n. 5 (1970).
In this case, we think Congress' intent is clear. Allowing a
plaintiff to circumvent the EHA administrative remedies would be
inconsistent with Congress' carefully tailored scheme. The
legislative history gives no indication that Congress intended such
a result. [
Footnote 16]
Rather, it indicates that
Page 468 U. S. 1013
Congress perceived the EHA as the most effective vehicle for
protecting the constitutional right of a handicapped child to a
public education. We conclude, therefore, that where the EHA is
available to a handicapped child asserting a right to a free
appropriate public education, based either on the EHA or on the
Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, the EHA is the
exclusive avenue through which the child and his parents or
guardian can pursue their claim.
C
Petitioners also made a due process challenge to the partiality
of the state hearing officer. The question whether this claim will
support an award of attorney's fees has two aspects -- whether the
procedural safeguards set out in the EHA manifest Congress' intent
to preclude resort to § 1983
Page 468 U. S. 1014
on a due process challenge and, if not, whether petitioners are
entitled to attorney's fees for their due process claim. We find it
unnecessary to resolve the first question, because we are satisfied
that, even if an independent due process challenge may be
maintained, petitioners are not entitled to attorney's fees for
their particular claim. [
Footnote 17]
Page 468 U. S. 1015
Petitioners' plea for injunctive relief was not made until after
the administrative proceedings had ended. They did not seek an
order requiring the Commissioner of Education to grant them a new
hearing, but only a declaratory judgment that the state Regulations
did not comply with the requirements of due process and the EHA,
and an injunction prohibiting the Commissioner from conducting
further hearings under those Regulations. App. 59-60. That due
process claim and the substantive claim on which petitioners
ultimately prevailed involved entirely separate legal theories and,
more important, would have warranted entirely different relief.
According to their complaint, petitioners did not even seek relief
for themselves on the due process claim, but sought only to protect
the rights of others coming after them in the administrative
process. The efforts petitioners subsequently expended in the
judicial process addressed only the substantive question as to
which agency, as a matter of state and federal law, was required to
pay for Tommy's education. Whether or not the state procedures
accorded petitioners the process they were due had no bearing on
that substantive question.
We conclude that where, as here, petitioners have presented
distinctly different claims for different relief, based on
different facts and legal theories, and have prevailed only on a
nonfee claim, they are not entitled to a fee award simply because
the other claim was a constitutional claim that could be asserted
through § 1983. We note that a contrary conclusion would mean that
every EHA plaintiff who seeks judicial review after an adverse
agency determination could ensure a fee award for successful
judicial efforts simply by including in his substantive challenge a
claim that the administrative process was unfair. If the court
ignored the due process claim but granted substantive relief, the
due process claim could be considered a substantial unaddressed
constitutional
Page 468 U. S. 1016
claim and the plaintiff would be entitled to fees. [
Footnote 18] It is unlikely that
Congress intended such a result.
IV
We turn, finally, to petitioners' claim that they were entitled
to fees under § 505 of the Rehabilitation Act, because they
asserted a substantial claim for relief under § 504 of that
Act.
Much of our analysis of petitioners' equal protection claim is
applicable here. The EHA is a comprehensive scheme designed by
Congress as the most effective way to protect the right of a
handicapped child to a free appropriate public education. We
concluded above that, in enacting the EHA, Congress was aware of,
and intended to accommodate, the claims of handicapped children
that the Equal Protection Clause required that they be ensured
access to public education. We also concluded that Congress did not
intend to have the EHA scheme circumvented by resort to the more
general provisions of § 1983. We reach the same conclusion
regarding petitioners' § 504 claim. The relationship between the
EHA and § 504, however, requires a slightly different analysis from
that required by petitioners' equal protection claim.
Section 504 and the EHA are different substantive statutes.
While the EHA guarantees a right to a free appropriate public
education, § 504 simply prevents discrimination on the basis of
handicap. But while the EHA is limited to handicapped children
seeking access to public education,
Page 468 U. S. 1017
§ 504 protects handicapped persons of all ages from
discrimination in a variety of programs and activities receiving
federal financial assistance.
Because both statutes are built around fundamental notions of
equal access to state programs and facilities, their substantive
requirements, as applied to the right of a handicapped child to a
public education, have been interpreted to be strikingly similar.
In regulations promulgated pursuant to § 504, the Secretary of
Education [
Footnote 19] has
interpreted § 504 as requiring a recipient of federal funds that
operates a public elementary or secondary education program to
provide a free appropriate public education to each qualified
handicapped person in the recipient's jurisdiction. 34 CFR §
104.33(a) (1983). [
Footnote
20] The requirement extends to the provision of a public or
private residential placement if necessary to provide a free
appropriate public education. § 104.33(c)(3). The regulations also
require that the recipient implement procedural safeguards,
including notice, an opportunity for the parents or guardian to
examine relevant records, an impartial hearing with opportunity for
participation by the parents or guardian and representation by
counsel, and a review procedure. § 104.36. The Secretary declined
to require the exact EHA procedures, because those procedures might
be inappropriate for some recipients not subject to the EHA,
see 34
Page 468 U. S. 1018
CFR, Subtitle B, ch. 1, App. A, p. 371 (1983), but indicated
that compliance with EHA procedures would satisfy § 104.36.
On the other hand, although both statutes begin with an equal
protection premise that handicapped children must be given access
to public education, it does not follow that the affirmative
requirements imposed by the two statutes are the same. The
significant difference between the two, as applied to special
education claims, is that the substantive and procedural rights
assumed to be guaranteed by both statutes are specifically required
only by the EHA.
Section 504, 29 U.S.C. § 794, provides, in pertinent part:
"No otherwise qualified handicapped individual in the United
States, . . . shall, solely by reason of his handicap, be excluded
from the participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be
subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving
Federal financial assistance. . . ."
In
Southeastern Community College v. Davis,
442 U. S. 397
(1979), the Court emphasized that § 504 does not require
affirmative action on behalf of handicapped persons, but only the
absence of discrimination against those persons. 442 U.S. at
442 U. S.
411-412. In light of
Davis, courts construing §
504 as applied to the educational needs of handicapped children
have expressed confusion about the extent to which § 504 requires
special services necessary to make public education accessible to
handicapped children. [
Footnote
21]
In the EHA, on the other hand, Congress specified the
affirmative obligations imposed on States to ensure that
Page 468 U. S. 1019
equal access to a public education is not an empty guarantee,
but offers some benefit to a handicapped child. Thus, the statute
specifically requires "such . . . supportive services . . . as may
be required to assist a handicapped child to benefit from special
education,"
see Board of Education v. Rowley, 458 U.S. at
458 U. S. 200,
including, if the public facilities are inadequate for the needs of
the child, "instruction in hospitals and institutions." 20 U.S.C.
§§ 1401(16) and (17).
We need not decide the extent of the guarantee of a free
appropriate public education Congress intended to impose under §
504. We note the uncertainty regarding the reach of § 504 to
emphasize that it is only in the EHA that Congress specified the
rights and remedies available to a handicapped child seeking access
to public education. Even assuming that the reach of § 504 is
coextensive with that of the EHA, there is no doubt that the
remedies, rights, and procedures Congress set out in the EHA are
the ones it intended to apply to a handicapped child's claim to a
free appropriate public education. We are satisfied that Congress
did not intend a handicapped child to be able to circumvent the
requirements or supplement the remedies of the EHA by resort to the
general antidiscrimination provision of § 504.
There is no suggestion that § 504 adds anything to petitioners'
substantive right to a free appropriate public education. [
Footnote 22] The only elements added
by § 504 are the possibility of circumventing EHA administrative
procedures and going straight to court with a § 504 claim,
[
Footnote 23] the
possibility of a damages
Page 468 U. S. 1020
award in cases where no such award is available under the EHA,
[
Footnote 24] and attorney's
fees. As discussed above, Congress' intent to place on local and
state educational agencies the responsibility for determining the
most appropriate educational plan for a handicapped child is clear.
To the extent § 504 otherwise would allow a plaintiff to circumvent
that state procedure, we are satisfied that the remedy conflicts
with Congress' intent in the EHA.
Congress did not explain the absence of a provision for a
damages remedy and attorney's fees in the EHA. Several references
in the statute itself and in its legislative history, however,
indicate that the omissions were in response to Congress' awareness
of the financial burden already imposed on States by the
responsibility of providing education for handicapped children. As
noted above, one of the stated purposes of the statute was to
relieve this financial burden.
See 20 U.S.C. §§ 1400(b)(8)
and (9). Discussions of the EHA by its proponents reflect Congress'
intent to "make every resource, or as much as possible, available
to the direct activities and the direct programs that are going to
benefit the handicapped." 121 Cong.Rec.19501 (1975) (remarks of
Sen. Dole).
See also id. at 37025 (procedural safeguards
designed to further the congressional goal of ensuring full
educational opportunity without overburdening the local school
districts and state educational agencies) (remarks of
Page 468 U. S. 1021
Rep. Perkins); S.Rep. No. 94-168, at 81 (minority views
cognizant of financial burdens on localities). The Act appears to
represent Congress' judgment that the best way to ensure a free
appropriate public education for handicapped children is to clarify
and make enforceable the rights of those children while at the same
time endeavoring to relieve the financial burden imposed on the
agencies responsible to guarantee those rights. Where § 504 adds
nothing to the substantive rights of a handicapped child, we cannot
believe that Congress intended to have the careful balance struck
in the EHA upset by reliance on § 504 for otherwise unavailable
damages or for an award of attorney's fees.
We emphasize the narrowness of our holding. We do not address a
situation where the EHA is not available or where § 504 guarantees
substantive rights greater than those available under the EHA. We
hold only that where, as here, whatever remedy might be provided
under § 504 is provided with more clarity and precision under the
EHA, a plaintiff may not circumvent or enlarge on the remedies
available under the EHA by resort to § 504.
In light of our conclusion that § 504 was not available to
petitioners as an alternative basis for the relief they sought, we
need not decide whether, as petitioners urge, § 505 authorizes
attorney's fees for substantial, unaddressed § 504 claims or
whether a Rehabilitation Act claim is entitled only to a
"determination on the . . . claim for the purpose of awarding
counsel fees." H.R.Rep. No. 94-1558, at 4, n. 7.
V
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
In November, 1976, Rhode Island, through its Board of Regents
for Education, was in the process of promulgating new regulations
concerning the education of handicapped children. The old
regulations, approved in 1963, had been issued by the State
Department of Education and were entitled "Regulations -- Education
of Handicapped Children." Most of the new Regulations became
effective October 1, 1977. Article IX of Section One, however, was
made effective June 14, 1976.
See Section One, Art.
XII.
The Regulations were promulgated pursuant to R.I.Gen.Laws §
16-24-2 (1981). The immediately preceding section, § 16-24-1, sets
out the duty of the local school committee to provide for a
child,
"who is either mentally retarded or physically or emotionally
handicapped to such an extent that normal educational growth and
development is prevented,"
such type of special education
"that will best satisfy the needs of the handicapped child, as
recommended and approved by the state board of regents for
education in accordance with its regulations."
Section 16-24-1 has its origin in 1952 R.I.Pub.Laws, ch. 2905, §
1, and was in effect in November, 1976.
[
Footnote 2]
Under § 40.1-7-3, enacted by 1971 RI.Pub.Laws, ch. 89, art. 1, §
1, MHRH is charged
"with the responsibility to promote the development of
specialized services for the care and treatment of emotionally
disturbed children and to cooperate to this end with all reputable
agencies of a public or private character serving such children. .
. ."
[
Footnote 3]
Section 40.1-7-8 provides:
"The parents of children in the program, depending upon their
resources, shall be obligated to participate in the costs of the
care and treatment of their children in accordance with regulations
to be promulgated by the director."
[
Footnote 4]
The 1975 amendment to the EHA, on which petitioners rely, became
effective October 1, 1977. Prior to that date, the federal
requirements governing States which, like Rhode Island, submitted
state plans and received federal money for the education of
handicapped children were found in the EHA, 84 Stat. 175, as
amended in 1974, 88 Stat. 579. The obligations imposed on a State
by that Act were to expend federal money on programs designed to
benefit handicapped children. From August, 1974, to September 30,
1977, the Act also required that parents be given minimal due
process protections when the State proposed to change the
educational placement of the child. 88 Stat. 582. The state hearing
process in this case began on January 20, 1977, with a hearing
before the School Committee. By the time petitioners' appeal
progressed to the Associate Commissioner of Education on November
2, 1977, the 1975 Act was in effect. Unless otherwise indicated,
future references to the "EHA" refer to the 1975 amendments to that
Act.
[
Footnote 5]
By the time of the filing of petitioners' second amended and
supplemental complaint on September 16, 1980, attorney's fees were
available directly under the Rehabilitation Act.
See
Rehabilitation, Comprehensive Services, and Developmental
Disabilities Amendments of 1978, § 120 92 Stat. 2982, 29 U.S.C. §
794a. Instead of relying on that statute, however, petitioners
relied on 31 U.S.C. 1244(e) (1976 ed.) (now replaced by 31 U.S.C. §
6721(c)(2)), a statute that authorized a civil action to enforce §
504 of the Rehabilitation Act against any State or local government
receiving federal funds under the State and Local Fiscal Assistance
Act of 1972, 86 Stat. 919, as amended by the State and Local Fiscal
Assistance Amendments of 1976, 90 Stat. 2341. Section 1244(e)
authorized an award of attorney's fees to a "prevailing party."
[
Footnote 6]
The District Court purported to award relief on the basis of
state law. In light of the decision in
Pennhurst State School
and Hospital v. Halderman, 465 U. S. 89
(1984), that was improper. The propriety of the injunctive relief,
however, is not at issue here. We think the Court of Appeals was
correct in treating the relief as essentially awarded under the
EHA, since petitioners had challenged the State Commissioner's
construction of state law on the basis of their rights under the
EHA, and since the question of state law on which petitioners
prevailed was certified by the District Court in an effort to avoid
a Supremacy Clause conflict with the EHA. It is clear that the EHA
creates a right, enforceable in federal court, to the free
appropriate public education required by the statute.
Board of
Education of Hendrick Hudson Central School Dist. v. Rowley,
458 U. S. 176
(1982); 20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(2).
[
Footnote 7]
The Court of Appeals added that it did not intend to indicate
that the EHA in any way limits the scope of a handicapped child's
constitutional rights. Claims not covered by the EHA should still
be cognizable under § 1983, with fees available for such actions.
The court noted, for instance, that to the extent petitioners'
securing of a preliminary injunction fell outside any relief
available under the EHA, attorney's fees might be appropriate for
that relief. Because the award of fees against the School Committee
for work done in obtaining the preliminary injunction was not
challenged on appeal, the court had no occasion to decide the
issue.
[
Footnote 8]
See, e.g., Quackenbush v. Johnson City School District,
716 F.2d 141 (CA2 1983) (§ 1983 remedy, including damages,
available for claim that plaintiff was denied access to EHA
procedures);
Department of Education of Hawaii v. Katherine
D., 727 F.2d 809 (CA9 1983) (EHA precludes reliance on § 1983
or § 504);
Robert M. v. Benton, 671 F.2d 1104 (CA8 1982)
(fees available under § 1988 because plaintiff made colorable due
process as well as EHA challenges to use of state agency employee
as hearing officer);
Hymes v. Harnett County Board of
Education, 664 F.2d 410 (CA4 1981) (claims made under the EHA,
§ 504, and § 1983; fees available for due process relief not
available under the EHA);
Anderson v. Thompson, 658 F.2d
1205 (CA7 1981) (EHA claim not assertable under § 1983; attorney's
fees therefore not available).
[
Footnote 9]
Title 42 U.S.C. § 1983 provides a remedy for a deprivation,
under color of state law, "of any rights, privileges, or immunities
secured by the Constitution
and laws" (emphasis added). In
Maine v. Thiboutot, 448 U. S. 1 (1980),
the Court held that § 1983 authorizes suits to redress violations
by state officials of rights created by federal statutes as well as
by the Federal Constitution, and that fees are available under §
1988 for such statutory violations.
Sea Clammers excluded from the reach of
Thiboutot cases in which Congress specifically foreclosed
a remedy under § 1983. 453 U.S. at
453 U. S. 19.
[
Footnote 10]
The legislative history also makes clear that the fact that a
plaintiff has prevailed on one of two or more alternative bases for
relief does not prevent an award of fees for the unaddressed
claims, as long as those claims are reasonably related to the
plaintiff's ultimate success.
See S.Rep. No. 94-1011, p. 6
(1976), citing
Davis v. County of Los Angeles, 8 EPD �
9444 (CD Cal.1974).
See also Hensley v. Eckerhart,
461 U. S. 424,
461 U. S. 435
(1983). The same rule should apply when an unaddressed
constitutional claim provides an alternative, but reasonably
related, basis for the plaintiff's ultimate relief.
[
Footnote 11]
Courts generally agree that the EHA may not be claimed as the
basis for a § 1983 action.
See, e.g., Quackenbush v. Johnson
City School District, 716 F.2d 141 (CA2 1983);
Department
of Education of Hawaii v. Katherine D., 727 F.2d 809 (CA9
1983);
Anderson v. Thompson, 658 F.2d 1205 (CA7 1981).
[
Footnote 12]
The timing of the filing of petitioners' second amended
complaint, after the Supreme Court of Rhode Island had ruled that
petitioners were entitled to the relief they sought, reveals that
the equal protection claim added nothing to petitioners' claims
under the EHA and provides an alternative basis for denying
attorney's fees on the basis of that claim. There is, of course,
nothing wrong with seeking relief on the basis of certain statutes
because those statutes provide for attorney's fees, or with
amending a complaint to include claims that provide for attorney's
fees. But where it is clear that the claims that provide for
attorney's fees had nothing to do with a plaintiff's success,
Hensley v. Eckerhart, supra, requires that fees not be
awarded on the basis of those claims.
[
Footnote 13]
Prior to 1975, federal provisions for the education of
handicapped children were contained in the EHA, passed in 1970, 84
Stat. 175, and amended in 1974, 88 Stat. 579 (current version at 20
U.S.C. § 1400
et seq.). The Act then provided for grants
to States to facilitate the development of programs for the
education of handicapped children. § 611(a). The only requirements
imposed on the States were that they use federal funds on programs
designed to meet the special education needs of handicapped
children, § 613(a), and that parents or guardians be guaranteed
minimum procedural safeguards, including prior notice and an
opportunity to be heard when a State proposed to change the
educational placement of the child. § 614 (d).
See
n 4,
supra.
[
Footnote 14]
The District Court in this case relied on similar reasoning --
that Congress could not have meant for a plaintiff to be able to
circumvent the EHA administrative process -- and concluded that a
handicapped child asserting an equal protection claim to public
education was required to exhaust his administrative remedies
before making his § 1983 claim.
See Turillo v.
Tyson, 535 F.
Supp. 577, 583 (RI 1982), cited in the District Court's oral
decision of April 30, 1982, App. to Pet. for Cert. A40. Because
exhaustion was required, the court, relying on
New York
Gaslight Club, Inc. v. Carey, 447 U. S.
54 (1980), concluded that attorney's fees were
appropriate under § 1988 for work performed in the state
administrative process.
The difference between
Carey and this case is that, in
Carey, the statute that authorized fees, Title VII of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, also required a plaintiff to pursue
available state administrative remedies. In contrast, nothing in §
1983 requires that a plaintiff exhaust his administrative remedies
before bringing a § 1983 suit.
See Patsy v. Florida Board of
Regents, 457 U. S. 496
(1982). If § 1983 stood as an independent avenue of relief for
petitioners, then they could go straight to court to assert it.
[
Footnote 15]
There is no issue here of Congress' ability to preclude the
federal courts from granting a remedy for a constitutional
deprivation. Even if Congress repealed all statutory remedies for
constitutional violations, the power of federal courts to grant the
relief necessary to protect against constitutional deprivations or
to remedy the wrong done is presumed to be available in cases
within their jurisdiction.
See Bell v. Hood, 327 U.
S. 678,
327 U. S. 684
(1946);
Bivens v. Six Unknown Fed. Narcotics Agents,
403 U. S. 388,
403 U. S. 396
(1971);
id. at
403 U. S.
400-406 (Harlan, J., concurring in judgment).
[
Footnote 16]
Petitioners insist that, regardless of the wisdom of requiring
resort to available EHA remedies before a handicapped child may
seek judicial review, Congress specifically indicated that it did
not intend to limit the judicial remedies otherwise available to a
handicapped child. If that were true, we would agree with
petitioners that Congress' intent is controlling and that a § 1983
remedy remained available to them.
See Johnson v. Railway
Express Agency, Inc., 421 U. S. 454,
421 U. S. 459
(1975). The sentence in the legislative history on which
petitioners rely, however, is not the clear expression of
congressional intent petitioners would like it to be.
The sentence on which petitioners rely is included in the
Committee Report of the Senate's version of the EHA. S.Rep. No.
94-168, pp. 27-28 (1975). The Senate bill included a requirement,
not in the Conference bill,
see S.Conf.Rep. No. 94-455,
pp. 39-40 (1975), that the States set up an entity for ensuring
compliance with the EHA. The compliance entity would be authorized,
inter alia, to receive complaints regarding alleged
violations of the Act. The Committee added that it did
"not intend the existence of such an entity to limit the right
of individuals to seek redress of grievances through other avenues,
such as bringing civil action in Federal or State courts to protect
and enforce the rights of handicapped children under applicable
law."
S.Rep. No. 94-168, at 26. In the context in which the statement
was made, it appears to establish nothing more than that
handicapped children retain a right to judicial review of their
individual cases. It does not establish that they can choose
whether to avail themselves of the EHA process or go straight to
court with an equal protection claim.
[
Footnote 17]
We note that the issue is not the same as that presented by a
substantive equal protection claim to a free appropriate public
education. The EHA does set out specific procedural safeguards that
must be guaranteed by a State seeking funds under the Act.
See 20 U.S.C. § 1415. And although some courts have
concluded that the EHA does not authorize injunctive relief to
remedy procedural deficiencies,
see, e.g., Hymes v. Harnett
County Board of Education, 664 F.2d 410 (CA4 1981), other
courts have construed the district courts' authority under §
1415(e)(2) to grant "appropriate relief" as including the authority
to grant injunctive relief, either after an unsuccessful and
allegedly unfair administrative proceeding or prior to exhaustion
of the state remedies if pursuing those remedies would be futile or
inadequate.
See, e.g., Robert M. v. Benton, 622 F.2d 370
(CA8 1980);
Monahan v. Nebraska, 491 F.
Supp. 1074 (Neb.1980),
aff'd in part and vacated in
part, 645 F.2d 592 (CA8 1981);
Howard S. v. Friendswood
Independent School District, 454 F.
Supp. 634 (SD Tex.1978);
Armstrong v.
Kline, 476 F.
Supp. 583, 601-602 (ED Pa.1979),
remanded on other grounds
sub nom. Battle v. Pennsylvania, 629 F.2d 269 (CA3 1980),
cert. denied, 452 U. S. 968
(1981);
North v. District of Columbia Board of
Education, 471 F.
Supp. 136 (DC 1979).
See also 121 Cong.Rec. 37416
(1975) (remarks of Sen. Williams) ("exhaustion of the
administrative procedures established under this part should not be
required for any individual complainant filing a judicial action in
cases where such exhaustion would be futile either as a legal or
practical matter").
On the other hand, unlike an independent equal protection claim,
maintenance of an independent due process challenge to state
procedures would not be inconsistent with the EHA's comprehensive
scheme. Under either the EHA or § 1983, a plaintiff would be
entitled to bypass the administrative process by obtaining
injunctive relief only on a showing that irreparable harm otherwise
would result.
See Monahan v. Nebraska, 645 F.2d at
598-599. And, while Congress apparently has determined that local
and state agencies should not be burdened with attorney's fees to
litigants who succeed, through resort to the procedures outlined in
the EHA, in requiring those agencies to provide free schooling,
there is no indication that agencies should be exempt from a fee
award where plaintiffs have had to resort to judicial relief to
force the agencies to provide them the process they were
constitutionally due.
[
Footnote 18]
Even if the court denied the due process claim, as here, it is
arguable that the plaintiff would be entitled to have an appellate
court determine whether the district court was correct in its
ruling on the due process claim. In this case, the District Court
ruled against petitioners on their due process claim, and the Court
of Appeals determined, on appeal from the District Court's award of
substantive relief, that the issue was moot. Nevertheless, in
considering the propriety of the District Court's award of fees,
the Court of Appeals recognized that the due process claim was at
least substantial enough to support federal jurisdiction. 703 F.2d
at 7.
[
Footnote 19]
The regulations were promulgated by the Secretary of Health,
Education, and Welfare (HEW). 42 Fed.Reg. 22676 (1977). The
functions of the Secretary of HEW under the Rehabilitation Act and
under the EHA were transferred in 1979 to the Secretary of
Education under the Department of Education Organization Act, §
301(a), 93 Stat. 677, 20 U.S.C. § 3441(a).
[
Footnote 20]
Regulations under § 504 and the EHA were being formulated at the
same time. The § 504 regulations were effective June 3, 1977. 42
Fed.Reg., at 22676. The EHA regulations were effective October 1,
1977.
Id. at 42474. The Secretary of HEW and the
Commissioner of Education emphasized the coordination of effort
behind the two sets of regulations and the Department's intent that
the § 504 regulations be consistent with the requirements of the
EHA.
See 41 Fed.Reg. 56967 (1976); 42 Fed.Reg., at
22677.
[
Footnote 21]
Courts generally have upheld the § 504 regulations on the
grounds that they do not require extensive modification of existing
programs and that States and localities generally provide
nonhandicapped children with educational services appropriate to
their needs.
See Phipps v. New Hanover County Board of
Education, 551 F.
Supp. 732 (EDNC 1982).
But see Colin K. by John K. v.
Schmidt, 715 F.2d 1, 9 (CA1 1983) (in light of
Davis,
requirement that a school system provide a private residential
placement could not be imposed under § 504).
[
Footnote 22]
Of course, if a State provided services beyond those required by
the EHA, but discriminatorily denied those services to a
handicapped child, § 504 would remain available to the child as an
avenue of relief. In view of the substantial overlap between the
two statutes and Congress' intent that efforts to accommodate
educational needs be made first on the local level, the presumption
in a case involving a claim arguably within the EHA should be that
the plaintiff is required to exhaust EHA remedies, unless doing so
would be futile.
[
Footnote 23]
Lower courts appear to agree, however, that unless doing so
would be futile, EHA administrative remedies must be exhausted
before a § 504 claim for the same relief available under the EHA
may be brought.
See e.g., Riley v. Ambach, 668 F.2d 635
(CA2 1981);
Phipps v. New Hanover County Board of Education,
supra; Harris v. Campbell, 472 F. Supp.
51 (ED Va.1979);
H.R. v. Hornbeck, 524 F.
Supp. 215 (Md.1981).
[
Footnote 24]
There is some confusion among the Circuits as to the
availability of a damages remedy under § 504 and under the EHA.
Without expressing an opinion on the matter, we note that courts
generally agree that damages are available under § 504, but are
available under the EHA only in exceptional circumstances.
See,
e.g., Miener v. Missouri, 673 F.2d 969, 978 (CA8),
cert.
denied, 459 U.S. 909 (1982);
Anderson v. Thompson,
658 F.2d 1205 (CA7 1981);
Monahan v. Nebraska, 491 F.
Supp. at 1094;
Hurry v. Jones, 560 F.
Supp. 500 (RI 1983);
Gregg B. v. Board of Education of
Lawrence School District, 535 F.
Supp. 1333, 1339-1340 (EDNY 1982).
JUSTICE BRENNAN, with whom JUSTICE MARSHALL and JUSTICE STEVENS
join, dissenting.
In this case, we are called upon to analyze the interaction
among five statutory provisions: § 1 of the Civil Rights Act of
Page 468 U. S. 1022
1871, as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 1983; § 2 of the Civil Rights
Attorney's Fees Awards Act of 1976, 42 U.S.C. § 1988; § 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended, 29 U.S.C. § 794; § 505(b)
of the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. § 794a(b); and § 615(e)(2) of
the Education of the Handicapped Act (EHA or Act), as added, 89
Stat. 789, 20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(2).
Section 1983 provides:
"Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance,
regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory or the
District of Columbia, subjects, or causes to be subjected, any
citizen of the United States or other person within the
jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of
any rights,
privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and
laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law,
suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress."
(Emphasis added.) And § 1988 provides that the prevailing party
in an action prosecuted under § 1983 may be awarded reasonable
attorney's fees. Similarly, §§ 504 and 505(b) of the Rehabilitation
Act provide a cause of action and attorney's fees, respectively, to
an individual who, "solely by reason of his handicap," has been
"excluded from the participation in, . . . denied the benefits
of, . . . [or] subjected to discrimination under any program or
activity receiving Federal financial assistance."
Finally, § 615(e)(2) of the EHA authorizes judicial review of
the States' provision of "free appropriate public education" to
handicapped children. Unlike 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and § 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act, however, § 615(e)(2) has no counterpart in the
EHA authorizing the award of attorney's fees to prevailing
parties.
Petitioners challenge Rhode Island's discriminatory failure to
afford Thomas F. Smith III access to certain educational programs
made available to other handicapped children. As the Court
recognizes,
ante at
468 U. S.
1006,
468 U. S.
1007,
468 U. S.
1008-1009, this challenge states a meritorious claim
under the EHA and a
Page 468 U. S. 1023
substantial claim under the Equal Protection Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment. In addition, petitioners' claim appears to
fall squarely within the terms of § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act.
Consequently, if §§ 504 and 1983 are available as bases for
petitioners' action, petitioners are entitled to recover reasonable
attorney's fees under § 1988 and, at a minimum, to be given an
opportunity to establish the meritoriousness of their § 504 claim.
Maher v. Gagne, 448 U. S. 122
(1980); H.R.Rep. No. 94-1558, p. 4, n. 7 (1976); Brief for
Petitioners 61-62, n. 26 (legislative history establishes that §
505(b) incorporates standards governing § 1988). [
Footnote 2/1]
To determine whether § 504 or § 1983 is available, each
provision must be read together with the EHA. [
Footnote 2/2] As the Court demonstrates, in
enacting the EHA, Congress surely intended that individuals with
claims covered by that Act
Page 468 U. S. 1024
would pursue relief through the administrative channels that the
Act established before seeking redress in court.
See ante
at
468 U. S.
1009-1013,
468 U. S.
1016-1019. It would make little sense for Congress to
have established such a detailed and comprehensive administrative
system and yet allow individuals to bypass the system, at their
option, by bringing suits directly to the courts under either § 504
or § 1983. To that extent, therefore, the statutes before us are in
conflict with one another. Accordingly, our guide must be the
familiar principle of statutory construction that conflicting
statutes should be interpreted so as to give effect to each but to
allow a later enacted, more specific statute to amend an earlier,
more general statute only to the extent of the repugnancy between
the two statutes.
Watt v. Alaska, 451 U.
S. 259,
451 U. S. 267
(1981);
Radzanower v. Touche Ross & Co., 426 U.
S. 148,
426 U. S. 153
(1976);
Morton v. Mancari, 417 U.
S. 535,
417 U. S. 551
(1974). We must, therefore, construe the statutory provisions at
issue here so as to promote the congressional intent underlying the
EHA, which was enacted after §§ 504 and 1983 and which is addressed
specifically to the problems facing handicapped schoolchildren. At
the same time, however, we must preserve those aspects of §§ 504
and 1983 that are not in irreconcilable conflict with the EHA.
The natural resolution of the conflict between the EHA, on the
one hand, and §§ 504 and 1983, on the other, is to require a
plaintiff with a claim covered by the EHA to pursue relief through
the administrative channels established by that Act before seeking
redress in the courts under § 504 or § 1983. Under this resolution,
the integrity of the EHA is preserved entirely, and yet §§ 504 and
1983 are also preserved to the extent that they do not undermine
the EHA. Although the primary function of §§ 504 and 1983 is to
provide direct access to the courts for certain types of claims,
these provisions also operate, as this case demonstrates, to
identify those types of causes of action for which Congress has
authorized the award of attorney's fees to prevailing parties.
Significantly, this
Page 468 U. S. 1025
function does not in any way conflict with the goals or
operation of the EHA. There is no basis, therefore, for concluding
that either § 504 or § 1983 is unavailable for this limited
purpose.
The Court, however, has responded to the conflict among these
statutes by restricting the applicability of §§ 504 and 1983 far
more than is necessary to resolve their inconsistency. Indeed, the
Court holds that both §§ 504 and 1983 are wholly unavailable to
individuals seeking to secure their rights to a free appropriate
public education, despite the fact that the terms and intent of
Congress in enacting each of these provisions unquestionably extend
to many of those claims. As a result, the Court finds that
attorney's fees, which would otherwise be available to those
individuals under §§ 505(b) and 1988, are now unavailable. Yet the
Court recognizes that there is absolutely no indication in the
language of the EHA or in the Act's legislative history that
Congress meant to effect such a repeal, let alone any indication
that Congress specifically intended to bar the recovery of
attorney's fees for parties that prevail in this type of action.
The Court's rationale for effectively repealing §§ 504, 505(b),
1983, and 1988 to the extent that they cover petitioners' claim is
that the comprehensiveness and detail with which the EHA addresses
the problem of providing schooling to handicapped children implies
that Congress intended to repeal all other remedies that overlap
with the EHA, even if they do not conflict with the EHA. [
Footnote 2/3]
Page 468 U. S. 1026
Repeals by implication, however, are strongly disfavored.
St. Martin Evangelical Lutheran Church v. South Dakota,
451 U. S. 772,
451 U. S. 788
(1981);
Morton v. Mancari, supra, at
417 U. S. 550;
Posadas v. National City Bank, 296 U.
S. 497,
296 U. S. 503
(1936). And, as stated above, they are tolerated only to the extent
necessary to resolve clear repugnancy between statutes.
Radzanower v. Touche Ross & Co., supra, at
426 U. S. 154;
Posadas v. National City Bank, supra, at
296 U. S. 503.
The function that §§ 504 and 1983 perform of identifying those
claims for which attorney's fees are authorized under §§ 505(b) and
1988 is not repugnant to the EHA. The Court therefore has erred in
concluding that petitioners cannot obtain attorney's fees. In cases
like this, it is particularly important that the Court exercise
restraint in concluding that one Act of Congress implicitly repeals
another, not only to avoid misconstruction of the law effecting the
putative repeal but also to preserve the intent of later Congresses
that have already enacted laws that are dependent on the continued
applicability of the law whose implicit repeal is in question. By
failing to exercise such restraint here, and hence concluding that
the EHA implicitly repealed, in part, §§ 504 and 1983, the Court
has not only misconstrued the congressional intent underlying the
EHA, it has also frustrated Congress' intent in enacting §§ 505(b)
and 1988 -- each of which was enacted after the EHA and premised on
a view of §§ 504 and 1983 that was significantly more expansive
than that offered by the Court today. Although, in enacting the
EHA, Congress was silent with respect to the continued availability
of §§ 504 and 1983 for claims that could be brought directly under
the EHA, there can be no doubt that, at the time §§ 505(b) and 1988
were passed, Congress believed that the EHA had not eliminated
these alternative remedies. Congressional understanding at these
later points certainly sheds light on Congress' earlier intent in
enacting the EHA, but, perhaps more importantly, it demonstrates
the extent to which the Court's finding of an implicit repeal has
undermined the congressional intent behind the enactment of §§
505(b) and 1988.
Page 468 U. S. 1027
The Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW)
promulgated regulations under § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act after
the EHA was passed. Those regulations contained a lengthy subpart
governing the provision of education to the handicapped
stating:
"A recipient that operates a public elementary or secondary
education program shall provide a free appropriate public education
to each qualified handicapped person who is in the recipient's
jurisdiction, regardless of the nature or severity of the person's
handicap."
42 Fed.Reg. 22676, 22682 (1977). Thus, the Department charged
with enforcing the Rehabilitation Act and the EHA did not
understand the latter to repeal the former with respect to
handicapped education. [
Footnote
2/4] And, of course, the interpretation of the Act by the
agency responsible for its enforcement is entitled to great
deference.
Griggs v. Duke Power Co., 401 U.
S. 424,
401 U. S. 434
(1971). Furthermore, Congress was very much aware of HEW's
interpretation of the two Acts. During oversight hearings on the
Rehabilitation Act, held after the enactment of the EHA,
representatives of HEW testified that the agency had recently
promulgated regulations under § 504 and that those regulations
addressed discrimination in the provision of education to
handicapped children. [
Footnote
2/5] Hearings on Implementation of Section 504, Rehabilitation
Act of 1973, before the Subcommittee on Select Education of the
House Committee on Education and Labor, 95th Cong., 1st Sess.,
296-297 (1977) (statement of David Tatel, Director,
Page 468 U. S. 1028
Office for Civil Rights Department of Health, Education, and
Welfare); [
Footnote 2/6] Hearings
on the Rehabilitation of the Handicapped Programs, 1976, before the
Subcommittee on the Handicapped of the Senate Committee on Labor
and Public Welfare, 94th Cong., 2d Sess., 1498, 1499, 1508,
1539-1546 (1976) (statement of Martin H. Gerry, Director, Office
for Civil Rights, Department of Health, Education, and Welfare). No
member of the House or Senate Subcommittee raised any question
regarding § 504's continued coverage of discrimination in education
after the passage of the EHA.
Indeed, the Senate Report accompanying the bill that included §
505(b) of the Rehabilitation Act explicitly referred to, and
approved, the regulations promulgated under § 504. The Report then
went on to address the need for attorney's fees, referring to the
rights that § 504 extended to handicapped individuals generally and
intimating no exception for handicapped children seeking education.
S.Rep. No. 95-890, pp.19-20 (1978).
Similarly, the House Report stated:
"The proposed amendment is not in any way unique. At present,
there are at least 90 separate attorney's fees provisions to
promote enforcement of over 90 different
Page 468 U. S. 1029
Federal laws. In fact, disabled individuals are one of the very
few minority groups in this country who have not been authorized by
the Congress to seek attorney's fees. The amendment proposes to
correct this omission, and thereby assist handicapped individuals
in securing the legal protection guaranteed them under title V of
the Act."
H.R.Rep. No. 95-1149, p. 21 (1978). Neither the terms nor the
logic of this statement admits of the possibility that Congress
intended to exclude from the coverage of § 505(b) the claims of
handicapped children seeking a free appropriate public
education.
Finally, although Congress, in enacting § 1988, did not
specifically refer to the applicability of § 1983 to constitutional
claims by handicapped children seeking education, it clearly
intended to authorize attorney's fees in all cases involving the
deprivation of civil rights. Adopted in response to this Court's
decision in
Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. Wilderness
Society, 421 U. S. 240
(1975), § 1988 was intended to close "anomalous gaps in our civil
rights laws whereby awards of fees are . . . unavailable." S.Rep.
No. 94-1011, p. 4 (1976). The Senate Report thus stated:
"In many cases arising under our civil rights laws, the citizen
who must sue to enforce the law has little or no money with which
to hire a lawyer. If private citizens are to be able to assert
their civil rights, and if those who violate the Nation's
fundamental laws are not to proceed with impunity, then citizens
must have the opportunity to recover what it costs them to
vindicate these rights in court."
"
* * * *"
" Not to award counsel fees in cases such as this would be
tantamount to repealing the Act itself by frustrating its basic
purpose. . . . Without counsel fees, the grant of Federal
jurisdiction is but an empty gesture. . . ."
"
Hall
Page 468 U. S. 1030
v. Cole, 412 U. S. 1 (1973), quoting 462
F.2d 777, 780-81 (2d Cir.1972)."
"The remedy of attorneys' fees has always been recognized as
particularly appropriate in the civil rights area, and civil rights
and attorneys' fees have always been closely interwoven."
Id. at 2-3. It would be anomalous, to say the least,
for Congress to have passed a provision as broad as § 1988, and to
provide an equally broad explanation, and yet to leave a "gap" in
its own coverage of the constitutional claims of handicapped
children seeking a free appropriate public education. [
Footnote 2/7]
See also H.R.Rep.
No. 94-1558, pp. 4-5 (1976).
In sum, the Court's conclusion that the EHA repealed the
availability of §§ 504 and 1983 to individuals seeking a free
appropriate public education runs counter to well-established
principles of statutory interpretation. It finds no support in the
terms or legislative history of the EHA. And, most importantly, it
undermines the intent of Congress in enacting both §§ 505(b) and
1988. Had this case arisen prior to the enactment of §§ 505(b) and
1988, Congress could have taken account of the Court's expansive
interpretation of the EHA. Presumably, it would have either
clarified the applicability of §§ 504 and 1983 to claims for a free
appropriate public education or it would have extended the coverage
of §§ 505(b) and 1988 to certain claims brought under the EHA. But
with today's decision coming as it does after Congress has
Page 468 U. S. 1031
spoken on the subject of attorney's fees, Congress will now have
to take the time to revisit the matter. And until it does, the
handicapped children of this country whose difficulties are
compounded by discrimination and by other deprivations of
constitutional rights will have to pay the costs. It is, at best,
ironic that the Court has managed to impose this burden on
handicapped children in the course of interpreting a statute wholly
intended to promote the educational rights of those children.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The Court holds that petitioners may not recover any fees for
this lawsuit. That result is wrong, I believe, without regard to
whether § 505(b) requires an unlitigated § 504 claim to be
meritorious or merely "substantial." Even if petitioners must
establish the meritoriousness, and not just the substantiality, of
their unlitigated § 504 claim, affirmance of the Court of Appeals'
judgment would be improper, for petitioners have been given no
opportunity to establish that their § 504 claim has merit, and
because petitioners are entitled to fees under § 1988. Since I
think petitioners are entitled to fees under § 1988, and since even
my dissent from the Court's holding on § 505(b) does not depend on
whether the substantiality standard applies to unlitigated § 504
claims, I do not address that question.
I also need not consider what effect petitioners' due process
claim against respondents,
ante at
468 U. S.
1013-1016, may have on petitioners' entitlement to fees.
I dissent from the Court's holding because I believe that
petitioners are entitled to fees under § 1988 and may be entitled
to fees under § 505(b) of the Rehabilitation Act. Petitioners' due
process claim might have a bearing on the amount of fees they
should recover, but it does not deprive petitioners of all
entitlement to a fee award.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Some claims covered by the EHA are also grounded in the
Constitution, and hence could be pursued under § 1983. Others are
nonconstitutional claims cognizable under § 504. Still others are
nonconstitutional claims cognizable only under the EHA. This case
is concerned only with claims that have as a substantive basis both
the EHA and either the Constitution or § 504.
[
Footnote 2/3]
The Court at one point seems to indicate that Congress actually
considered the question of withholding attorney's fees from
prevailing parties in actions covered by the EHA.
Ante at
468 U. S.
1020-1021. But at the time the EHA was enacted, neither
§ 505(b) of the Rehabilitation Act nor § 1988 had yet been enacted.
In that context, congressional silence on the question of
attorney's fees can only be interpreted to indicate that Congress
did not consider the matter. Thus, this claim is particularly
unpersuasive and, in fact, does not appear to constitute a
significant basis of the Court's decision.
[
Footnote 2/4]
As the Court notes,
ante at
468 U. S.
1017, n. 20, the regulations promulgated under § 504 and
the EHA were closely coordinated with one another.
See 42
Fed.Reg. 22677 (1977).
[
Footnote 2/5]
In addition, testimony was generally taken on the success of §
504 as applied to discrimination against handicapped children in
the provision of publicly funded education.
See, e.g.,
Hearings on Implementation of Section 604, Rehabilitation Act of
1973, before the Subcommittee on Select Education of the House
Committee on Education and Labor, 95th Cong., 1st Sess., 263-265
(1977) (statement of Daniel Yohalem, Children's Defense Fund);
id. at 278-285 (statement of Edward E. Corbett, Jr.,
Maryland School for the Deaf).
[
Footnote 2/6]
Mr. Tatel's testimony included the following:
"With regard to preschool, elementary, and secondary education
institutions, the regulations require:"
"-- annual identification and location of unserved handicapped
children;"
"-- free appropriate public education to each qualified
handicapped child regardless of the nature or severity of the
handicap (including coverage of nonmedical care, room and board
where residential placement required);"
"-- education of handicapped students to maximum extent
possible"
"-- comparability of facilities (including services and
activities provided therein) identifiable as being for handicapped
persons;"
"-- evaluation requirements to insure proper classification and
placement of handicapped children and procedural safeguards;"
"-- equal opportunity for participation of handicapped students
in nonacademic and extracurricular services and activities."
Id. at 296.
[
Footnote 2/7]
Moreover, Congress was fully aware of the possibility that the
same claim in the civil rights area might have duplicative
statutory remedies. For instance, one of the "gaps" that Congress
sought to close in enacting § 1988 was the possibility that an
individual could bring an employment discrimination suit under
Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and receive attorney's fees,
although another individual bringing the same suit under 42 U.S.C.
§ 1981 could not recover attorney's fees. S.Rep. No. 94-1011, p. 4
(1976). Congress' response to this situation was to ensure that
attorney's fees would be available under either provision.