In this major school desegregation litigation in Kansas City,
Missouri, in which various desegregation remedies were granted
against the State of Missouri and other defendants, the plaintiff
class was represented by a Kansas City lawyer (Benson) and by the
NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF). Benson and
the LDF requested attorney's fees under the Civil Rights Attorney's
Fees Awards Act of 1976 (42 U.S.C. § 1988), which provides with
respect to such litigation that 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." In calculating the
hourly rates for Benson's, his associates', and the LDF attorneys'
fees, the District Court took account of delay in payment by using
current market rates, rather than those applicable at the time the
services were rendered. Both Benson and the LDF employed numerous
paralegals, law clerks, and recent law graduates, and the court
awarded fees for their work based on market rates, again using
current, rather than historic rates, in order to compensate for the
delay in payment.
Held:
1. The Eleventh Amendment does not prohibit enhancement of a fee
award under § 1988 against a State to compensate for delay in
payment. That Amendment has no application to an award of
attorney's fees, ancillary to a grant of prospective relief,
against a State,
Hutto v. Finney, 437 U.
S. 678, and it follows that the same is true for the
calculation of the amount of the fee. An adjustment for delay in
payment is an appropriate factor in determining what constitutes a
reasonable attorney's fee under
Page 491 U. S. 275
§ 1988. Pp.
491 U. S.
278-284.
2. The District Court correctly compensated the work of
paralegals, law clerks, and recent law graduates at the market
rates for their services, rather than at their cost to the
attorneys. Clearly, "a reasonable attorney's fee," as used in §
1988, cannot have been meant to compensate only work performed
personally by members of the Bar. Rather, that term must refer to a
reasonable fee for an attorney's work product, and thus must take
into account the work not only of attorneys, but also the work of
paralegals and the like. A reasonable attorney's fee under § 1988
is one calculated on the basis of rates and practices prevailing in
the relevant market and one that grants the successful civil rights
plaintiff a "fully compensatory fee," comparable to what "is
traditional with attorneys compensated by a fee-paying client." In
this case, where the practice in the relevant market is to bill the
work of paralegals separately, the District Court's decision to
award separate compensation for paralegals, law clerks, and recent
law graduates at prevailing market rates was fully in accord with §
1988. Pp.
491 U. S.
284-289.
838 F.2d 260, affirmed.
BRENNAN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which WHITE,
BLACKMUN, STEVENS, and KENNEDY, JJ., joined, and in Parts I and III
of which O'CONNOR and SCALIA, JJ., joined. O'CONNOR, J., filed an
opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, in which SCALIA,
J., joined, and in which REHNQUIST, C.J., joined in part,
post, p.
491 U. S. 289.
REHNQUIST, C.J., filed a dissenting opinion,
post, p.
491 U. S. 295.
MARSHALL, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of the
case.
JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is the attorney's fee aftermath of major school
desegregation litigation in Kansas City, Missouri. We granted
certiorari, 488 U.S. 888 (1988), to resolve two questions relating
to fees litigation under 90 Stat. 2641,
as amended, 42
U.S.C. § 1988. First, does the Eleventh Amendment prohibit
enhancement of a fee award against a State to compensate for delay
in payment? Second, should the fee award compensate the work of
paralegals and law clerks by applying the market rate for their
work?
Page 491 U. S. 276
I
This litigation began in 1977 as a suit by the Kansas City,
Missouri, School District (KCMSD), the school board, and the
children of two school board members against the State of Missouri
and other defendants. The plaintiffs alleged that the State,
surrounding school districts, and various federal agencies had
caused and perpetuated a system of racial segregation in the
schools of the Kansas City metropolitan area. They sought various
desegregation remedies. KCMSD was subsequently realigned as a
nominal defendant, and a class of present and future KCMSD students
was certified as plaintiffs. After lengthy proceedings, including a
trial that lasted 7 1/2 months during 1983 and 1984, the District
Court found the State of Missouri and KCMSD liable, while
dismissing the suburban school districts and the federal
defendants. It ordered various intradistrict remedies, to be paid
for by the State and KCMSD, including $260 million in capital
improvements and a magnet school plan costing over $200 million.
See Jenkins v. Missouri, 807 F.2d 657 (CA8 1986) (en
banc),
cert. denied, 484 U.S. 816 (1987);
Jenkins v.
Missouri, 855 F.2d 1295 (CA8 1988),
cert. granted,
490 U.S. 1034 (1989).
The plaintiff class has been represented, since 1979, by Kansas
City lawyer Arthur Benson, and, since 1982, by the NAACP Legal
Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF). Benson and the LDF
requested attorney's fees under the Civil Rights Attorney's Fees
Awards Act of 1976, 42 U.S.C. § 1988. [
Footnote 1] Benson and his associates had devoted 10,875
attorney hours to the litigation, as well as 8,108 hours of
paralegal and law clerk time. For the LDF, the corresponding
Page 491 U. S. 277
figures were 10,854 hours for attorneys and 15,517 hours for
paralegals and law clerks. Their fee applications deleted from
these totals 3,628 attorney hours and 7,046 paralegal hours
allocable to unsuccessful claims against the suburban school
districts. With additions for postjudgment monitoring and for
preparation of the fee application, the District Court awarded
Benson a total of approximately $1.7 million and the LDF $2.3
million. App. to Pet. for Cert. A22-A43.
In calculating the hourly rate for Benson's fees, the court
noted that the market rate in Kansas City for attorneys of Benson's
qualifications was in the range of $125 to $175 per hour, and found
that "Mr. Benson's rate would fall at the higher end of this range
based upon his expertise in the area of civil rights."
Id.
at A26. It calculated his fees on the basis of an even higher
hourly rate of $200, however, because of three additional factors:
the preclusion of other employment, the undesirability of the case,
and the delay in payment for Benson's services.
Id. at
A26-A27. The court also took account of the delay in payment in
setting the rates for several of Benson's associates by using
current market rates, rather than those applicable at the time the
services were rendered.
Id. at A28-A30. For the same
reason, it calculated the fees for the LDF attorneys at current
market rates.
Id. at A33.
Both Benson and the LDF employed numerous paralegals, law clerks
(generally law students working part time), and recent law
graduates in this litigation. The court awarded fees for their work
based on Kansas City market rates for those categories. As in the
case of the attorneys, it used current, rather than historic,
market rates in order to compensate for the delay in payment. It
therefore awarded fees based on hourly rates of $35 for law clerks,
$40 for paralegals, and $50 for recent law graduates.
Id.
at A29-A31, A34. The Court of Appeals affirmed in all respects. 838
F.2d 260 (CA8 1988).
Page 491 U. S. 278
II
Our grant of certiorari extends to two issues raised by the
State of Missouri. Missouri first contends that a State cannot,
consistent with the principle of sovereign immunity this Court has
found embodied in the Eleventh Amendment, be compelled to pay an
attorney's fee enhanced to compensate for delay in payment. This
question requires us to examine the intersection of two of our
precedents,
Hutto v. Finney, 437 U.
S. 678 (1978), and
Library of Congress v. Shaw,
478 U. S. 310
(1986). [
Footnote 2]
In
Hutto v. Finney, the lower courts had awarded
attorney's fees against the State of Arkansas, in part pursuant to
§ 1988, in connection with litigation over the conditions of
confinement in that State's prisons. The State contended that any
such award was subject to the Eleventh Amendment's constraints on
actions for damages payable from a State's treasury. We relied, in
rejecting that contention, on the distinction drawn in our earlier
cases between "retroactive monetary relief" and "prospective
injunctive relief."
See Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U.
S. 651 (1974);
Ex parte Young, 209 U.
S. 123 (1908). Attorney's fees, we held, belonged to the
latter category, because they constituted reimbursement of
"expenses incurred in litigation seeking only prospective relief,"
rather than "retroactive liability for prelitigation conduct."
Hutto, 437 U.S. at
437 U. S. 695;
see also id. at
437 U. S. 690.
We explained:
"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."
Id. at
437 U. S. 695,
n. 24. Section 1988, we noted, fit easily into the
Page 491 U. S. 279
longstanding practice of awarding "costs" against States, for
the statute imposed the award of attorney's fees "as part of the
costs."
Id. at
437 U. S.
695-696, citing
Fairmont Creamery Co. v.
Minnesota, 275 U. S. 70
(1927).
After
Hutto, therefore, it must be accepted as settled
that an award of attorney's fees ancillary to prospective relief is
not subject to the strictures of the Eleventh Amendment. And if the
principle of making such an award is beyond the reach of the
Eleventh Amendment, the same must also be true for the question of
how a "reasonable attorney's fee" is to be calculated.
See
Hutto, supra, at
437 U. S.
696-697.
Missouri contends, however, that the principle enunciated in
Hutto has been undermined by subsequent decisions of this
Court that require Congress to "express its intention to abrogate
the Eleventh Amendment in unmistakable language in the statute
itself."
Atascadero State Hospital v. Scanlon,
473 U. S. 234,
473 U. S. 243
(1985);
Welch v. Texas Dept. of Highways and Public
Transportation, 483 U. S. 468
(1987).
See also Dellmuth v. Muth, ante, p.
491 U. S. 223;
Pennsylvania v. Union Gas Co.,
ante, p. 1. The flaw in this argument lies in its
misreading of the holding of
Hutto. It is true that, in
Hutto, we noted that Congress could, in the exercise of
its enforcement power under § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, set
aside the States' immunity from retroactive damages, 437 U.S. at
437 U. S. 693,
citing
Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer, 427 U.
S. 445 (1976), and that Congress intended to do so in
enacting § 1988, 437 U.S. at
437 U. S.
693-694. But we also made clear that the application of
§ 1988 to the States did not depend on congressional abrogation of
the States' immunity. We did so in rejecting precisely the "clear
statement" argument that Missouri now suggests has undermined
Hutto. Arkansas had argued that § 1988 did not plainly
abrogate the States' immunity, citing
Employees v. Missouri
Dept. of Public Health and Welfare, 411 U.
S. 279 (1973); and
Edelman v. Jordan, supra,
the State contended that "retroactive liability" could not be
imposed on the States "in the absence of an extraordinarily
explicit
Page 491 U. S. 280
statutory mandate."
Hutto, 437 U.S. at
437 U. S. 695.
We responded as follows:
"[T]hese cases [
Employees and
Edelman] 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."
Ibid.
The holding of
Hutto, therefore, was not just that
Congress had spoken sufficiently clearly to overcome Eleventh
Amendment immunity in enacting § 1988, but rather that the Eleventh
Amendment did not apply to an award of attorney's fees ancillary to
a grant of prospective relief.
See Maine v. Thiboutot,
448 U. S. 1,
448 U. S. 9, n. 7
(1980). That holding is unaffected by our subsequent jurisprudence
concerning the degree of clarity with which Congress must speak in
order to override Eleventh Amendment immunity, and we reaffirm it
today.
Missouri's other line of argument is based on our decision in
Library of Congress v. Shaw, 478 U.
S. 310 (1988).
Shaw involved an application of
the longstanding "no-interest rule," under which interest cannot be
awarded against the United States unless it has expressly waived
its sovereign immunity. We held that, while Congress, in making the
Federal Government a potential defendant under Title VII of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, had waived the United States' immunity
from suit and from costs, including reasonable attorney's fees, it
had not waived the Federal Government's traditional immunity from
any award of interest. We thus held impermissible a 30 percent
increase in the "lodestar" fee to compensate for delay in payment.
Because we refused to find in the language of Title VII a waiver of
the United States' immunity from interest, Missouri argues, we
should likewise conclude that § 1988 is not sufficiently explicit
to constitute an abrogation of the States' immunity under the
Eleventh Amendment in regard to any award of interest.
Page 491 U. S. 281
The answer to this contention is already clear from what we have
said about
Hutto v. Finney. Since, as we held in
Hutto, the Eleventh Amendment does not bar an award of
attorney's fees ancillary to a grant of prospective relief, our
holding in
Shaw has no application, even by analogy.
[
Footnote 3] There is no need
in this case to determine whether Congress has spoken sufficiently
clearly to meet a "clear statement" requirement, and it is
therefore irrelevant whether the Eleventh Amendment standard should
be, as Missouri contends, as stringent as the one we applied for
purposes of the no-interest rule in
Shaw. Rather, the
issue here -- whether the "reasonable attorney's fee" provided for
in § 1988 should be calculated in such a manner as to include an
enhancement, where appropriate, for delay in payment -- is a
straightforward
Page 491 U. S. 282
matter of statutory interpretation. For this question, it is of
no relevance whether the party against which fees are awarded is a
State. The question is what Congress intended -- not whether it
manifested "the clear affirmative intent . . . to waive the
sovereign's immunity."
Shaw, 478 U.S. at
478 U. S. 321.
[
Footnote 4]
This question is not a difficult one. We have previously
explained, albeit in dicta, why an enhancement for delay in payment
is, where appropriate, part of a "reasonable attorney's fee." In
Pennsylvania v. Delaware Valley Citizens' Council,
483 U. S. 711
(1987), we rejected an argument that a prevailing party was
entitled to a fee augmentation to compensate for the risk of
nonpayment. But we took care to distinguish that risk from the
factor of delay:
"First is the matter of delay. When plaintiffs' entitlement to
attorney's fees depends on success, their lawyers are not paid
until a favorable decision finally eventuates, which may be years
later. . . . Meanwhile, their expenses of doing business continue,
and must be met. In setting fees for prevailing counsel, the courts
have regularly recognized the delay factor, either by basing the
award on current rates or by adjusting the fee based on historical
rates to reflect its present value.
See, e.g., Sierra Club v.
EPA, 248 U.S.App.D.C. 107, 120-121, 769 F.2d 796, 809-810
(1985);
Louisville Black Police Officers Organization, Inc. v.
Louisville, 700 F.2d 268, 276, 281 (CA6 1983). Although delay
and the risk of nonpayment are often mentioned in the same breath,
adjusting for the former is a distinct issue. . . . We do not
suggest . . . that adjustments for delay are
Page 491 U. S. 283
inconsistent with the typical fee-shifting statute."
Id. at
483 U. S.
716.
The same conclusion is appropriate under § 1988. [
Footnote 5] Our cases have repeatedly
stressed that attorney's fees awarded under this statute are to be
based on market rates for the services rendered.
See, e.g.,
Blanchard v. Bergeron, 489 U. S. 87
(1989);
Riverside v. Rivera, 477 U.
S. 561 (1986);
Blum v. Stenson, 465 U.
S. 886 (1984). Clearly, compensation received several
years after the services were rendered -- as it frequently is in
complex civil rights litigation -- is not equivalent to the same
dollar amount received reasonably promptly as the legal services
are performed, as would normally be the case with private billings.
[
Footnote 6] We agree,
therefore,
Page 491 U. S. 284
that an appropriate adjustment for delay in payment -- whether
by the application of current rather than historic hourly rates or
otherwise -- is within the contemplation of the statute.
To summarize: We reaffirm our holding in
Hutto v.
Finney that the Eleventh Amendment has no application to an award
of attorney's fees, ancillary to a grant of prospective relief,
against a State. It follows that the same is true for the
calculation of the amount of the fee. An adjustment for delay in
payment is, we hold, an appropriate factor in the determination of
what constitutes a reasonable attorney's fee under § 1988. An award
against a State of a fee that includes such an enhancement for
delay is not, therefore, barred by the Eleventh Amendment.
III
Missouri's second contention is that the District Court erred in
compensating the work of law clerks and paralegals (hereinafter
collectively "paralegals") at the market rates for their services,
rather than at their cost to the attorney. While Missouri agrees
that compensation for the cost of these personnel should be
included in the fee award, it suggests that an hourly rate of $15
-- which it argued below corresponded to their salaries, benefits,
and overhead -- would be appropriate, rather than the market rates
of $35 to $50. According to Missouri, § 1988 does not authorize
billing paralegals' hours at market rates, and doing so produces a
"windfall" for the attorney. [
Footnote 7]
Page 491 U. S. 285
We begin with the statutory language, which provides simply for
"a reasonable attorney's fee as part of the costs." 42 U.S.C. §
1988. Clearly, a "reasonable attorney's fee" cannot have been meant
to compensate only work performed personally by members of the bar.
Rather, the term must refer to a reasonable fee for the work
product of an attorney. Thus, the fee must take into account the
work not only of attorneys, but also of secretaries, messengers,
librarians, janitors, and others whose labor contributes to the
work product for which an attorney bills her client; and it must
also take account of other expenses and profit. The parties have
suggested no reason why the work of paralegals should not be
similarly compensated, nor can we think of any. We thus take as our
starting point the self-evident proposition that the "reasonable
attorney's fee" provided for by statute should compensate the work
of paralegals, as well as that of attorneys. The more difficult
question is how the work of paralegals is to be valuated in
calculating the overall attorney's fee.
The statute specifies a "reasonable" fee for the attorney's work
product. In determining how other elements of the attorney's fee
are to be calculated, we have consistently looked to the
marketplace as our guide to what is "reasonable." In
Blum v.
Stenson, 465 U. S. 886
(1984), for example, we rejected an argument that attorney's fees
for nonprofit legal
Page 491 U. S. 286
service organizations should be based on cost. We said:
"The statute and legislative history establish that 'reasonable
fees' under § 1988 are to be calculated according to the prevailing
market rates in the relevant community. . . ."
Id. at
465 U. S. 895.
See also e.g., Delaware Valley, 483 U.S. at
483 U. S. 732
(O'CONNOR, J., concurring) (controlling question concerning
contingency enhancements is "how the market in a community
compensates for contingency");
Rivera, 477 U.S. at
477 U. S. 591
(REHNQUIST, J., dissenting) (reasonableness of fee must be
determined "in light of both the traditional billing practices in
the profession, and the fundamental principle that the award of a
reasonable' attorney's fee under § 1988 means a fee that would
have been deemed reasonable if billed to affluent plaintiffs by
their own attorneys"). A reasonable attorney's fee under § 1988 is
one calculated on the basis of rates and practices prevailing in
the relevant market, i.e., "in line with those [rates]
prevailing in the community for similar services by lawyers of
reasonably comparable skill, experience, and reputation," Blum,
supra, at 465 U. S. 896,
n. 11, and one that grants the successful civil rights plaintiff a
"fully compensatory fee," Hensley v. Eckerhart,
461 U. S. 424,
461 U. S. 435
(1983), comparable to what "is traditional with attorneys
compensated by a fee-paying client." S.Rep. No. 94-1011, p. 6
(1976).
If an attorney's fee awarded under § 1988 is to yield the same
level of compensation that would be available from the market, the
"increasingly widespread custom of separately billing for the
services of paralegals and law students who serve as clerks,"
Ramos v. Lamm, 713 F.2d 546, 558 (CA10 1983), must be
taken into account. All else being equal, the hourly fee charged by
an attorney whose rates include paralegal work in her hourly fee,
or who bills separately for the work of paralegals at cost, will be
higher than the hourly fee charged by an attorney competing in the
same market who bills separately for the work of paralegals at
"market rates." In other words, the prevailing "market rate" for
attorney time is not independent of the manner in which
paralegal
Page 491 U. S. 287
time is accounted for. [
Footnote
8] Thus, if the prevailing practice in a given community were
to bill paralegal time separately at market rates, fees awarded the
attorney at market rates for attorney time would not be fully
compensatory if the court refused to compensate hours billed by
paralegals, or did so only at "cost." Similarly, the fee awarded
would be too high if the court accepted separate billing for
paralegal hours in a market where that was not the custom.
We reject the argument that compensation for paralegals at rates
above "cost" would yield a "windfall" for the prevailing attorney.
Neither petitioners nor anyone else, to our knowledge, has ever
suggested that the hourly rate applied to the work of an associate
attorney in a law firm creates a windfall for the firm's partners
or is otherwise improper under § 1988, merely because it exceeds
the cost of the attorney's services. If the fees are consistent
with market rates and practices, the "windfall" argument has no
more force with regard to paralegals than it does for associates.
And it would hardly accord with Congress' intent to provide a
"fully compensatory fee" if the prevailing plaintiff's attorney in
a civil rights lawsuit were not permitted to bill separately for
paralegals, while the defense attorney in the same litigation was
able to take advantage of the prevailing practice and obtain market
rates for such work. Yet that is precisely the result sought in
this case by the State of Missouri, which appears to have paid its
own outside counsel for the work of paralegals at the hourly rate
of $35. Record 2696, 2699. [
Footnote 9]
Page 491 U. S. 288
Nothing in § 1988 requires that the work of paralegals
invariably be billed separately. If it is the practice in the
relevant market not to do so, or to bill the work of paralegals
only at cost, that is all that § 1988 requires. Where, however, the
prevailing practice is to bill paralegal work at market rates,
treating civil rights lawyers' fee requests in the same way is not
only permitted by § 1988, but also makes economic sense. By
encouraging the use of lower cost paralegals rather than attorneys
wherever possible, permitting market-rate billing of paralegal
hours
"encourages cost-effective delivery of legal services and, by
reducing the spiraling cost of civil rights litigation, furthers
the policies underlying civil rights statutes."
Cameo Convalescent Center, Inc. v. Senn, 738 F.2d 836,
846 (CA7 1984),
cert. denied, 469 U.S. 1106 (1985).
[
Footnote 10]
Page 491 U. S. 289
Such separate billing appears to be the practice in most
communities today. [
Footnote
11] In the present case, Missouri concedes that "the local
market typically bills separately for paralegal services," Tr. of
Oral Arg. 14, and the District Court found that the requested
hourly rates of $35 for law clerks, $40 for paralegals, and $50 for
recent law graduates were the prevailing rates for such services in
the Kansas City area. App. to Pet. for Cert. A29, A31, A34. Under
these circumstances, the court's decision to award separate
compensation at these rates was fully in accord with § 1988.
IV
The courts below correctly granted a fee enhancement to
compensate for delay in payment and approved compensation of
paralegals and law clerks at market rates. The judgment of the
Court of Appeals is therefore
Affirmed.
JUSTICE MARSHALL took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
Section 1988 provides in relevant part:
"In any action or proceeding to enforce a provision of sections
1981, 1982, 1983, 1985, and 1986 of this title, title IX of Public
Law 92-318 [20 U.S.C. § 1681
et seq.], 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."
[
Footnote 2]
The holding of the Court of Appeals on this point, 838 F.2d at
265-266, is in conflict with the resolution of the same question in
Rogers v. Okin, 821 F.2d 22, 26-28 (CA1 1987),
cert.
denied sub nom. Commissioner, Massachusetts Dept. of Mental Health
v. Rogers, 484 U.S. 1010 (1988).
[
Footnote 3]
Our opinion in
Shaw does, to be sure, contain some
language that, if read in isolation, might suggest a different
result in this case. Most significantly, we equated compensation
for delay with prejudgment interest, and observed that
"[p]rejudgment interest . . . is considered as damages, not a
component of 'costs.' . . . Indeed, the term 'costs' has never been
understood to include any interest component."
Library of Congress v. Shaw, 478 U.
S. 310,
478 U. S. 321
(1986). These observations, however, cannot be divorced from the
context of the special "no-interest rule" that was at issue in
Shaw. That rule, which is applicable to the immunity of
the United States and is therefore not at issue here, provides an
"added gloss of strictness,"
id. at
478 U. S. 318,
only where the United States' liability for interest is at issue.
Our inclusion of compensation for delay within the definition of
prejudgment interest in
Shaw must be understood in light
of this broad proscription of interest awards against the United
States.
Shaw thus does not represent a general purpose
definition of compensation for delay that governs here. Outside the
context of the "no-interest rule" of federal immunity, we see no
reason why compensation for delay cannot be included within § 1988
attorney's fee awards, which
Hutto held to be "costs" not
subject to Eleventh Amendment strictures.
We cannot share JUSTICE O'CONNOR's view that the two cases she
cites,
post at
491 U. S. 293,
demonstrate the existence of an equivalent rule relating to State
immunity that embodies the same ultrastrict rule of construction
for interest awards that has grown up around the federal
no-interest rule.
Cf. Shaw, supra, at
478 U. S.
314-317 (discussing historical development of the
federal no-interest rule).
[
Footnote 4]
In
Shaw, which dealt with the sovereign immunity of the
Federal Government, there was of course no
prospective-retrospective distinction as there is when, as in
Hutto and the present case, it is the Eleventh Amendment
immunity of a State that is at issue.
[
Footnote 5]
Delaware Valley was decided under § 304(d) of the Clean
Air Act, 42 U.S.C. § 7604(d). We looked for guidance, however, to §
1988 and our cases construing it.
Pennsylvania v. Delaware
Valley Citizens' Council, 483 U. S. 711,
483 U. S. 713,
n. 1 (1987).
[
Footnote 6]
This delay, coupled with the fact that, as we recognized in
Delaware Valley, the attorney's expenses are not deferred
pending completion of the litigation, can cause considerable
hardship. The present case provides an illustration. During a
period of nearly three years, the demands of this case precluded
attorney Benson from accepting other employment. In order to pay
his staff and meet other operating expenses, he was obliged to
borrow $633,000. As of January, 1987, he had paid over $113,000 in
interest on this debt, and was continuing to borrow to meet
interest payments. Record 2336-2339; Tr. 130-131. The LDF, for its
part, incurred deficits of $700,000 in 1983 and over $1 million in
1984, largely because of this case. Tr. 46. If no compensation were
provided for the delay in payment, the prospect of such hardship
could well deter otherwise willing attorneys from accepting complex
civil rights cases that might offer great benefit to society at
large; this result would work to defeat Congress' purpose in
enacting § 1988 of "encourag[ing] the enforcement of federal law
through lawsuits filed by private persons."
Delaware Valley,
supra, at
483 U. S. 737
(BLACKMUN, J., dissenting).
We note also that we have recognized the availability of interim
fee awards under § 1988 when a litigant becomes a prevailing party
on one issue in the course of the litigation.
Texas State
Teachers Assn. v. Garland Independent School Dist.,
489 U. S. 782,
489 U. S.
791-792 (1989). In economic terms, such an interim award
does not differ from an enhancement for delay in payment.
[
Footnote 7]
The Courts of Appeals have taken a variety of positions on this
issue. Most permit separate billing of paralegal time.
See,
e.g., Save Our Cumberland Mountains, Inc. v. Hodel, 263
U.S.App.D.C. 409, 420, n. 7, 826 F.2d 43, 54, n. 7 (1987),
vacated in part on other grounds, 273 U.S.App.D.C. 78, 857
F.2d 1516 (1988) (en banc);
Jacoos v. Mancuso, 825 F.2d
559, 563, and n. 6 (CA1 1987) (collecting cases);
Spanish
Action Committee of Chicago v. Chicago, 811 F.2d 1129, 1138
(CA7 1987);
Ramos v. Lamm, 713 F.2d 546, 558-559 (CA10
1983);
Richardson v. Byrd, 709 F.2d 1016, 1023 (CA5),
cert. denied sub nom. Dallas County Commissioners Court v.
Richardson, 464 U.S. 1009 (1983).
See also Riverside v.
Rivera, 477 U. S. 561,
477 U. S. 566,
n. 2 (1986) (noting lower court approval of hourly rate for law
clerks). Some courts, on the other hand, have considered paralegal
work "out-of-pocket expense," recoverable only at cost to the
attorney.
See, e.g., Northcross v. Board of Education of
Memphis City Schools, 611 F.2d 624, 639 (CA6 1979),
cert.
denied, 447 U.S. 911 (1980);
Thornberry v. Delta Air
Lines, Inc., 676 F.2d 1240, 1244 (CA9 1982),
vacated,
461 U.S. 952 (1983). At least one Court of Appeals has refused to
permit any recovery of paralegal expense apart from the attorney's
hourly fee.
Abrams v. Baylor College of Medicine, 805 F.2d
528, 535 (CA5 1986).
[
Footnote 8]
The attorney who bills separately for paralegal time is merely
distributing her costs and profit margin among the hourly fees of
other members of her staff, rather than concentrating them in the
fee she sets for her own time.
[
Footnote 9]
A variant of Missouri's "windfall" argument is the
following:
"If paralegal expense is reimbursed at a rate many times the
actual cost, will attorneys next try to bill separately -- and at a
profit -- for such items as secretarial time, paper clips,
electricity, and other expenses?"
Reply Brief for Petitioners 15-16. The answer to this question
is, of course, that attorneys seeking fees under § 1988 would have
no basis for requesting separate compensation of such expenses
unless this were the prevailing practice in the local community.
The safeguard against the billing at a profit of secretarial
services and paper clips is the discipline of the market.
[
Footnote 10]
It has frequently been recognized in the lower courts that
paralegals are capable of carrying out many tasks, under the
supervision of an attorney, that might otherwise be performed by a
lawyer and billed at a higher rate. Such work might include, for
example, factual investigation, including locating and interviewing
witnesses; assistance with depositions, interrogatories, and
document production; compilation of statistical and financial data;
checking legal citations; and drafting correspondence. Much such
work lies in a gray area of tasks that might appropriately be
performed either by an attorney or a paralegal. To the extent that
fee applicants under § 1988 are not permitted to bill for the work
of paralegals at market rates, it would not be surprising to see a
greater amount of such work performed by attorneys themselves, thus
increasing the overall cost of litigation.
Of course, purely clerical or secretarial tasks should not be
billed at a paralegal rate, regardless of who performs them. What
the court in
Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc., 488
F.2d 714, 717 (CA5 1974), said in regard to the work of attorneys
is applicable by analogy to paralegals:
"It is appropriate to distinguish between legal work, in the
strict sense, and investigation, clerical work, compilation of
facts and statistics and other work which can often be accomplished
by nonlawyers but which a lawyer may do because he has no other
help available. Such nonlegal work may command a lesser rate. Its
dollar value is not enhanced just because a lawyer does it."
[
Footnote 11]
Amicus National Association of Legal Assistants reports
that 77 percent of 1,800 legal assistants responding to a survey of
the association's membership stated that their law firms charged
clients for paralegal work on an hourly billing basis. Brief for
National Association of Legal Assistants as
Amicus Curiae
11.
JUSTICE O'CONNOR, with whom JUSTICE SCALIA joins, and with whom
THE CHIEF JUSTICE joins in part, concurring in part and dissenting
in part.
I agree with the Court that 42 U.S.C. § 1988 allows compensation
for the work of paralegals and law clerks at market rates, and
therefore join Parts I and III of its opinion. I do not join Part
II, however, for in my view the Eleventh Amendment does not permit
enhancement of attorney's
Page 491 U. S. 290
fees assessed against a State as compensation for delay in
payment.
The Eleventh Amendment does not, of course, provide a State with
across-the-board immunity from all monetary relief. Relief that
"serves directly to bring an end to a violation of federal law
is not barred by the Eleventh Amendment, even though accompanied by
a substantial ancillary effect"
on a State's treasury.
Papasan v. Allain, 478 U.
S. 265,
478 U. S. 278
(1986). Thus, in
Milliken v. Bradley, 433 U.
S. 267,
433 U. S.
289-290 (1977), the Court unanimously upheld a decision
ordering a State to pay over $5 million to eliminate the effects of
de jure segregation in certain school systems. On the
other hand, "[r]elief that in essence serves to compensate a party
injured in the past," such as relief "expressly denominated as
damages," or "relief [that] is tantamount to an award of damages
for a past violation of federal law, even though styled as
something else," is prohibited by the Eleventh Amendment.
Papasan, supra, at
478 U. S. 278.
The crucial question in this case is whether that portion of
respondents' attorney's fees based on current hourly rates is
properly characterized as retroactive monetary relief.
In
Library of Congress v. Shaw, 478 U.
S. 310 (1986), the Court addressed whether the
attorney's fees provision of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of
1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(k), permits an award of attorney's fees
against the United States to be enhanced in order to compensate for
delay in payment. In relevant part, § 2000e-5(k) provides:
"In any action or proceeding under this subchapter the court, in
its discretion, may allow the prevailing party, other than the
[Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)] or the United
States, a reasonable attorney's fees as part of the costs, and the
[EEOC] and the United States shall be liable for costs the same as
a private person."
The Court began its analysis in
Shaw by holding that
"interest is an element of damages separate from damages on the
Page 491 U. S. 291
substantive claim." 478 U.S. at
478 U. S. 314
(citing C. McCormick, Law of Damages § 50, p. 205 (1935)). Given
the "no-interest" rule of federal sovereign immunity, under which
the United States is not liable for interest absent an express
statutory waiver to the contrary, the Court was unwilling to
conclude that, by equating the United States' liability to that of
private persons in § 2000e-5(k), Congress had waived the United
States' immunity from interest. 478 U.S. at
478 U. S.
314-319. The fact that § 2000e-5(k) used the word
"reasonable" to modify "attorney's fees" did not alter this result,
for the Court explained that it had
"consistently . . . refused to impute an intent to waive
immunity from interest into the ambiguous use of a particular word
or phrase in a statute."
Id. at
478 U. S. 320.
The description of attorney's fees as costs in § 2000e-5(k) also
did not mandate a contrary conclusion because "[p]rejudgment
interest . . . is considered as damages, not a component of
costs,'" and the "term `costs' has never been
understood to include any interest component." Id. at
478 U. S. 321
(emphasis added) (citing 10 C. Wright, A. Miller, & M. Kane,
Federal Practice and Procedure §§ 2664, 2666, 2670 (2d ed. 1983); 2
A. Sedgwick & G. Van Nest, Sedgwick on Damages 157-158 (7th ed.
1880)). Finally, the Court rejected the argument that the
enhancement was proper because the "no-interest" rule did not
prohibit compensation for delay in payment: "Interest and a delay
factor share an identical function. They are designed to compensate
for the belated receipt of money." 478 U.S. at 478 U. S.
322.
As the Court notes,
ante at
491 U. S. 281,
n. 3, the "no-interest" rule of federal sovereign immunity at issue
in
Shaw provided an "added gloss of strictness," 478 U.S.
at
478 U. S. 318,
and may have explained the
result reached by the Court in
that case,
i.e., that § 2000e-5(k) did not waive the
United States' immunity against awards of interest. But there is
not so much as a hint anywhere in
Shaw that the Court's
discussions and definitions of interest and compensation for delay
were dictated by, or limited to, the federal "no-interest" rule. As
the
Page 491 U. S. 292
quotations above illustrate, the Court's opinion in
Shaw is filled with broad, unqualified language. The
dissenters in
Shaw did not disagree with the Court's
sweeping characterization of interest and compensation for delay as
damages. Rather, they argued only that § 2000e-5(k) had waived the
immunity of the United States with respect to awards of interest.
See id. at
478 U. S.
323-327 (BRENNAN, J,, dissenting). I therefore
emphatically disagree with the Court's statement that
"
Shaw . . . does not represent a general purpose
definition of compensation for delay that governs here."
Ante at
491 U. S. 281,
n. 3.
Two general propositions that are relevant here emerge from
Shaw. First, interest is considered damages, and not
costs. Second, compensation for delay, which serves the same
function as interest, is also the equivalent of damages. These two
propositions make clear that enhancement for delay constitutes
retroactive monetary relief barred by the Eleventh Amendment. Given
my reading of
Shaw, I do not think the Court's reliance on
the cost rationale of § 1988 set forth in
Hutto v. Finney,
437 U. S. 678
(1978), is persuasive. Because
Shaw teaches that
compensation for delay constitutes damages and cannot be considered
costs,
see 478 U.S. at
478 U. S.
321-322,
Hutto is not controlling.
See
Hutto, 437 U.S.
437 U. S. 697,
n. 27 ("[W]e 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"). Furthermore,
Hutto does
not mean that inclusion of attorney's fees as costs in a statute
forecloses a challenge to the enhancement of fees as compensation
for delay in payment. If it did, then
Shaw would have been
resolved differently, for § 2000e-5(k) lists attorney's fees as
costs.
Even if I accepted the narrow interpretation of
Shaw
proffered by the Court, I would disagree with the result reached by
the Court in Part II of its opinion. On its own terms, the Court's
analysis fails. The Court suggests that the definitions of interest
and compensation for delay set forth in
Shaw
Page 491 U. S. 293
would be triggered only by a rule of sovereign immunity barring
awards of interest against the States:
"Outside the context of the 'no-interest rule' of federal
immunity, we see no reason why compensation for delay cannot be
included within § 1988 attorney's fee awards."
Ante at
491 U. S. 281,
n. 3. But the Court does not inquire about whether such a rule
exists. In fact, there is a federal rule barring awards of interest
against States.
See Virginia v. West Virginia,
238 U. S. 202,
238 U. S. 234
(1915) ("Nor can it be deemed in derogation of the sovereignty of
the State that she should be charged with interest
if her
agreement properly construed so provides") (emphasis added);
United States v. North Carolina, 136 U.
S. 211,
136 U. S. 221
(1890) ("general principle" is that "an obligation of the State to
pay interest, whether as interest or as damages, on any debt
overdue, cannot arise
except by the consent and contract
of the State, manifested by statute, or in a form authorized by
statute") (emphasis added). The Court has recently held that the
rule of immunity set forth in
Virginia and
North
Carolina is inapplicable in situations where the State does
not retain any immunity,
see West Virginia v. United
States, 479 U. S. 305,
479 U. S.
310-312 (1987) (State can be held liable for interest to
the United States, against whom it has no sovereign immunity), but
the rule has not otherwise been limited, and there is no reason why
it should not be relevant in the Eleventh Amendment context
presented in this case.
As
Virginia and
North Carolina indicate, a
State can waive its immunity against awards of interest.
See
also Clark v. Barnard, 108 U. S. 436,
108 U. S. 447
(1883). The Missouri courts have interpreted Mo.Rev.Stat. § 408.020
(1979 and Supp. 1989), providing for prejudgment interest on money
that becomes due and payable, and § 408.040, providing for
prejudgment interest on court judgments and orders, as making the
State liable for interest.
See Denton Construction Co. v.
Missouri State Highway Comm'n, 454 S.W.2d
44, 59-60 (Mo. 1970) (§ 408.020);
Steppelman v. State
Highway Comm'n of Missouri, 650 S.W.2d 343, 345 (Mo.App.
Page 491 U. S. 294
1983) (§ 408.040). There can be no argument, however, that these
Missouri statutes and cases allow interest to be awarded against
the State here. A "State's waiver of sovereign immunity in its own
courts is not a waiver of the Eleventh Amendment immunity in the
federal courts."
Pennhurst State School and Hospital v.
Halderman, 465 U. S. 89,
465 U. S. 99, n.
9 (1984).
The fact that a State has immunity from awards of interest is
not the end of the matter. In a case such as this one involving
school desegregation, interest or compensation for delay (in the
guise of current hourly rates) can theoretically be awarded against
a State despite the Eleventh Amendment's bar against retroactive
monetary liability. The Court has held that Congress can set aside
the States' Eleventh Amendment immunity in order to enforce the
provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment.
See City of Rome v.
United States, 446 U. S. 156,
446 U. S. 179
(1980);
Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer, 427 U.
S. 445,
427 U. S. 456
(1976). Congress must, however, be unequivocal in expressing its
intent to abrogate that immunity.
See generally Atascadero
State Hospital v. Scanlon, 473 U. S. 234,
473 U. S. 243
(1985) ("Congress must express its intention to abrogate the
Eleventh Amendment in unmistakable language in the statute itself
").
In
Hutto, the Court was able to avoid deciding whether
§ 1988 met the "clear statement" rule only because attorney's fees
(without any enhancement) are not considered retroactive in nature.
See 437 U.S. at
437 U. S.
695-697. The Court cannot do the same here, where the
attorney's fees were enhanced to compensate for delay in payment.
Cf. Osterneck v. Ernst & Whinney, 489 U.
S. 169,
489 U. S. 175
(1989) ("[U]nlike attorney's fees, which at common law were
regarded as an element of costs, . . . prejudgment interest
traditionally has been considered part of the compensation due
[the] plaintiff ").
In relevant part, § 1988 provides:
"In any action or proceeding to enforce a provision of sections
1981, 1982, 1983, 1985, and 1986 of this title,
Page 491 U. S. 295
title IX of Public Law 92-318, or title VI of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964, 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."
In my view, § 1988 does not meet the "clear statement" rule set
forth in
Atascadero. It does not mention damages,
interest, compensation for delay, or current hourly rates. As one
federal court has correctly noted,
"Congress has not yet made any statement suggesting that a §
1988 attorney's fee award should include prejudgment interest."
Rogers v. Okin, 821 F.2d 22, 27 (CA1 1987). A
comparison of the statute at issue in
Shaw also indicates
that § 1988, as currently written, is insufficient to allow
attorney's fees assessed against a State to be enhanced to
compensate for delay in payment. The language of § 1988 is
undoubtedly less expansive than that of § 2000e-5(k), for § 1988
does not equate the liability of States with that of private
persons. Since § 2000e-5(k) does not allow enhancement of an award
of attorney's fees to compensate for delay, it is logical to
conclude that § 1988, a more narrowly worded statute, likewise does
not allow interest (through the use of current hourly rates) to be
tacked on to an award of attorney's fees against a State,
Compensation for delay in payment was one of the reasons the
District Court used current hourly rates in calculating
respondents' attorney's fees.
See App. to Pet. for Cert.
A26-A27; 838 F.2d 260, 263, 265 (CA8 1988). I would reverse the
award of attorney's fees to respondents and remand so that the fees
can be calculated without taking compensation for delay into
account.
CHIEF JUSTICE REHNQUIST, dissenting.
I agree with JUSTICE O'CONNOR that the Eleventh Amendment does
not permit an award of attorney's fees against a State which
includes compensation for delay in payment. Unlike JUSTICE
O'CONNOR, however, I do not agree with the
Page 491 U. S. 296
Court's approval of the award of law clerk and paralegal fees
made here.
Section 1988 gives the district courts discretion to allow the
prevailing party in an action under § 1983 "a reasonable attorney's
fee as part of the costs." 42 U.S.C. § 1988. The Court reads this
language as authorizing recovery of "a
reasonable' fee for the
attorney's work product," ante at 491 U. S. 285,
which, the Court concludes, may include separate compensation for
the services of law clerks and paralegals. But the statute itself
simply uses the very familiar term "a reasonable attorney's fee,"
which, to those untutored in the Court's linguistic juggling, means
a fee charged for services rendered by an individual who has been
licensed to practice law. Because law clerks and paralegals have
not been licensed to practice law in Missouri, it is difficult to
see how charges for their services may be separately billed as part
of "attorney's fees." And since a prudent attorney customarily
includes compensation for the cost of law clerk and paralegal
services, like any other sort of office overhead -- from
secretarial staff, janitors, and librarians, to telephone service,
stationery, and paper clips -- in his own hourly billing rate,
allowing the prevailing party to recover separate compensation for
law clerk and paralegal services may result in "double
recovery."
The Court finds justification for its ruling in the fact that
the prevailing practice among attorneys in Kansas City is to bill
clients separately for the services of law clerks and paralegals.
But I do not think Congress intended the meaning of the statutory
term "attorney's fee" to expand and contract with each and every
vagary of local billing practice. Under the Court's logic,
prevailing parties could recover at market rates for the cost of
secretaries, private investigators, and other types of lay
personnel who assist the attorney in preparing his case, so long as
they could show that the prevailing practice in the local market
was to bill separately for these services. Such a result would be a
sufficiently drastic departure from the traditional concept of
"attorney's fees" that I
Page 491 U. S. 297
believe new statutory authorization should be required for it.
That permitting separate billing of law clerk and paralegal hours
at market rates might "
reduc[e] the spiraling cost of civil
rights litigation'" by encouraging attorneys to delegate to these
individuals tasks which they would otherwise perform themselves at
higher cost, ante at 491 U. S. 288,
and n. 10, may be a persuasive reason for Congress to enact such
additional legislation. It is not, however, a persuasive reason for
us to rewrite the legislation which Congress has in fact enacted.
See Badaracco v. Commissioner, 464 U.
S. 386, 464 U. S. 398
(1984) ("Courts are not authorized to rewrite a statute because
they might deem its effects susceptible of improvement").
I also disagree with the State's suggestion that law clerk and
paralegal expenses incurred by a prevailing party, if not
recoverable at market rates as "attorney's fees" under § 1988, are
nonetheless recoverable at actual cost under that statute. The
language of § 1988 expands the traditional definition of "costs" to
include "a reasonable attorney's fee," but it cannot fairly be read
to authorize the recovery of all other out-of-pocket expenses
actually incurred by the prevailing party in the course of
litigation. Absent specific statutory authorization for the
recovery of such expenses, the prevailing party remains subject to
the limitations on cost recovery imposed by Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 54(d) and 28 U.S.C. § 1920, which govern the taxation of
costs in federal litigation where a cost-shifting statute is not
applicable. Section 1920 gives the district court discretion to tax
certain types of costs against the losing party in any federal
litigation. The statute specifically enumerates six categories of
expenses which may be taxed as costs: fees of the court clerk and
marshal; fees of the court reporter; printing fees and witness
fees; copying fees; certain docket fees, and fees of
court-appointed experts and interpreters. We have held that this
list is exclusive.
Crawford Fitting Co. v. J. T. Gibbons,
Inc., 482 U. S. 437
(1987). Since none of these categories can possibly be construed to
include the fees of law clerks and paralegals,
Page 491 U. S. 298
I would also hold that reimbursement for these expenses may not
be separately awarded at actual cost.
I would therefore reverse the award of reimbursement for law
clerk and paralegal expenses.