Williams v. The Hanover Housing ( 1997 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 96-1612

    TASHIMA WILLIAMS, ET AL.,

    Plaintiffs, Appellants,

    v.

    THE HANOVER HOUSING AUTHORITY, ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. William G. Young, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Stahl, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Aldrich and Campbell, Senior Circuit Judges. _____________________

    ____________________

    Judith Liben with whom Ernest Winsor, Massachusetts Law Reform ____________ _____________
    Institute, were on briefs for appellant.
    Bernard M. Ortwein for appellees. __________________


    ____________________

    May 22, 1997
    ____________________
























    CAMPBELL, Senior Circuit Judge. At issue in this _____________________

    appeal is whether the plaintiffs in an action they brought

    under 42 U.S.C. 19831 are entitled to recover attorneys'

    fees under 42 U.S.C. 1988.2 In the course of plaintiffs'

    1983 action, the district court determined an underlying

    state law issue in plaintiffs' favor. Because federal and

    state officials thereupon accepted the district court's

    interpretation reversing a former interpretation

    challenged by plaintiffs the 1983 action became moot.

    The district court denied attorneys' fees, ruling that fees

    under 1988 were improper as plaintiffs had vindicated no

    federal right. Williams v. Hanover Housing Auth., 926 F. ________ ______________________

    Supp. 10 (D. Mass. 1996). See also Williams v. Hanover ___ ____ ________ _______

    Housing Auth., 871 F. Supp. 527 (D. Mass. 1994). The court _____________

    ____________________

    1. Section 1983 provides, in relevant part:
    "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."
    42 U.S.C. 1983 (West 1994).

    2. Section 1988 provides, in pertinent part:
    "In any action or proceeding to enforce a provision
    of section [] . . . 1983 . . . , the court, in its ______
    discretion, may allow the prevailing party, other __________ _____________________
    than the United States, a reasonable attorney's fee
    as part of the costs."
    42 U.S.C. 1988(b) (West 1994) (emphasis added).


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    also declined fees as a matter of discretion. We conclude,

    notwithstanding plaintiffs failure to prevail on specifically

    federal grounds, that they are nonetheless prevailing parties

    under 1988, and entitled to fees.

    I. I.

    The disputed fees claim arises in the following

    circumstances. The plaintiffs-appellants were receiving

    federal housing subsidies under Section 8 of the United

    States Housing Act of 1937, as amended.3 In April of 1993,

    they brought an action under 42 U.S.C. 1983 against the

    Arlington and Danvers, Massachusetts, Public Housing

    Authorities (the "Authorities"), as well as against the

    Hanover, Massachusetts Public Housing Authority and the

    Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development

    ("HUD").4 Plaintiffs-appellants alleged that the

    Authorities, with HUD's approval, were illegally and

    unconstitutionally preventing them from using their Section 8

    subsidies for housing outside the geographical limits of the

    city or town within which the Authority issuing the subsidy

    was located. The Authorities are quasi-public entities


    ____________________

    3. Plaintiffs'-appellants' subsidies were provided under the
    Section 8 Rental Certificate and Voucher Programs. 42 U.S.C.
    1437f(r). See 24 C.F.R. Parts 882, 887 (1995). ___


    4. Appellants did not seek attorneys' fees against the
    Hanover Public Housing Authority, nor against the Secretary
    of HUD, and these defendants are not parties to this appeal.

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    established under Massachusetts law to administer federal and

    state housing programs. Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 121B, 1 et __

    seq. (West 1986 & Supp. 1996). ____

    The Housing Act of 1937, which includes Section 8,

    sought to provide an adequate supply of housing for low

    income families by subsidizing their rent in the private

    market. 42 U.S.C. 1437f(a) (West 1994). Section 8 allowed

    tenants wider geographical choice than did earlier programs,

    increasing opportunities to obtain dwellings in areas of less

    concentrated poverty. 42 U.S.C. 1437f(r) (West 1994).5

    See also Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act, ___ ____

    Pub. L. No. 101-625, 551, 104 Stat. 4224 (1990); Housing

    and Community Development Act of 1987, Pub. L. No. 100-242,

    145, 101 Stat. 1852 (1988).

    The Act leaves it up to the states, however, to

    determine the area within which a particular public housing

    authority may contract with landlords to furnish subsidized

    housing. HUD, the federal agency administering the Section 8

    ____________________

    5. Section 1437f(r) provides, in part:
    "(1) Any family assisted under subsection
    (b) or (o) of this section may receive
    such assistance to rent an eligible
    dwelling unit if the dwelling unit to
    which the family moves is within the same
    State, or the same or a contiguous
    metropolitan statistical area as the
    metropolitan statistical area within
    which is located the area of jurisdiction
    of the public housing agency approving
    such assistance . . . ." 42 U.S.C.
    1437f(r)(1) (West 1994).

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    housing programs, provided in its regulations that the local

    public housing authorities will determine their own

    jurisdictional reach by reference to state law. See 24 ___

    C.F.R. 882.103(a) (1995).

    In 1977, HUD was presented with conflicting legal

    opinions from two different Massachusetts public housing

    authorities as to whether they could legally contract with

    private landlords outside their municipal boundaries.6 HUD

    asked the Massachusetts Executive Office of Communities and

    Development ("EOCD"), the state agency that supervises local

    public housing authorities, to seek a legal opinion from the

    Massachusetts Attorney General. Instead, the EOCD provided

    its own legal opinion, which was that a Massachusetts public

    housing authority could not contract with private landlords _________

    outside its municipal boundaries, except by agreement with

    another local public housing authority. HUD and the

    Authorities accepted and followed the EOCD's opinion on this

    matter. The extent of a local authority's "jurisdiction" to

    provide subsidized housing took on added significance in 1992

    when Congress amended the portability rules of the Section 8

    housing programs. Plaintiffs say that the amendment forced


    ____________________

    6. The Cambridge Housing Authority, like the plaintiffs in
    this case, took the position that state law does not bar
    local public housing authorities from contracting anywhere in
    the Commonwealth, while the Arlington Housing Authority,
    similar to the defendants in this litigation, took a much
    narrower view of Section 8 "jurisdiction."

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    them and others like them to seek rental units within the

    jurisdiction of a single authority.7 Unless that authority

    could provide housing beyond its municipal limits, tenants

    like plaintiffs were curtailed in their mobility and choice

    of housing. Faced with this situation, plaintiffs sued in

    the district court under 1983 in April of 1993, seeking a

    judicial determination of their right to use their Section 8

    housing subsidies in any community within the Commonwealth.

    To expedite a decision, the parties agreed that the facts

    would be submitted as a case stated. See Continental Grain ___ _________________

    Co. v. Puerto Rico Maritime Shipping Auth., 927 F.2d 426, 429 ___ ___________________________________

    n.7 (1st Cir. 1992).

    In contending that it was unlawful for HUD and the

    Authorities to restrict their Section 8 housing subsidies to

    the city or town in which the issuing Authority was located,

    the tenants alleged that the geographical restrictions

    ____________________

    7. Section 147 of the Housing and Community Development Act
    of 1992 amended the portability provisions of 42 U.S.C.
    1437f by providing that:
    "any family not living within the
    jurisdiction of a public housing agency
    at the time that such family applies for
    assistance from such agency shall, during
    the 12-month period beginning upon the
    receipt of any tenant-based rental
    assistance made available on behalf of
    the family, use such assistance to rent
    an eligible dwelling unit located within
    the jurisdiction served by such public
    housing agency." Housing and Community
    Development Act 147, 42 U.S.C.
    1437f(r)(1) (West 1994).


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    violated 42 U.S.C. 1437f(r)(1), the relevant HUD

    regulations, Title VIII of the Civil Rights Act of 1968, and

    42 U.S.C. 1983. They also alleged that the restrictions

    interfered with their constitutional right to travel under

    the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States

    Constitution.

    Fearing the loss of their Section 8 subsidies if

    they could not immediately find housing within the municipal

    boundaries of the Authority that issued their respective

    Section 8 certificates, the plaintiffs moved for a

    preliminary injunction that would toll or freeze the

    subsidies' expiration dates. The need for preliminary relief

    ceased, however, when defendants agreed not to terminate the

    plaintiffs' subsidies while the case was pending.

    After reviewing submissions and hearing arguments,

    the district court issued an oral opinion on September 9,

    1993, followed by a written decision on December 12, 1994.

    See Williams, 871 F. Supp. at 527-35. The district court ___ ________

    stated in both that, in its view, Massachusetts law permitted

    state public housing authorities to contract with landlords

    owning dwellings outside their municipal boundaries.

    Less than a month after the district court's oral

    opinion, HUD issued a directive to the Massachusetts public

    housing authorities informing them that all Section 8 tenants

    could henceforth use their housing subsidies anywhere in the



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    Commonwealth. HUD, as the district court later declared,

    Williams, 926 F. Supp. at 12, treated the district court's ________

    ruling as an authoritative declaration of state law,

    superseding the contrary opinion of the EOCD. The

    Authorities also went along.

    While the district court rendered its own opinion

    as to an authority's jurisdiction, it also certified the same

    question to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court.8

    Before that court reached the matter, the district court

    withdrew its certification, in part because of certain

    changes in HUD's regulations. At a November 30, 1995 hearing

    in the district court to determine the status of the case,

    HUD assured the district court that, in spite of its changed

    regulations,9 it would continue to instruct all Massachusetts

    public housing authorities to abide by the court's oral and

    written decisions issued in plaintiffs' 1983 case. The

    district court thereupon dismissed the 1983 action as moot

    and plaintiffs petitioned, unsuccessfully, for their

    attorneys' fees.

    II. II.

    ____________________

    8. The district court certified the following question:
    "Is a Massachusetts Public Housing
    Authority legally barred from contracting
    with landlords outside the boundaries of
    the organizing city or town?"


    9. Compare 24 C.F.R. 882.103(a) (1995) with 60 Fed. Reg. _______ ____
    34660, 34697 (1995).

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    In its opinion denying to plaintiffs attorneys'

    fees under 42 U.S.C. 1988, the district court stated that,

    to receive fees, the plaintiffs had to be prevailing parties

    in their 1983 action. In that action, the court continued,

    plaintiffs claimed to have been deprived of "rights secured

    by federal statutes, regulations and the United States

    Constitution." Williams, 926 F. Supp. at 13. In the court's ________

    view, plaintiffs never became entitled to fees because the

    court never found that they "had a right under federal law to

    have the Authorities contract outside of their political

    boundaries for Section 8 housing." Id. Rather the import of ___

    the court's ruling was that state, not federal law allowed

    the Authorities to contract outside of their political

    boundaries. Id. As plaintiffs did not vindicate a federal ___

    right, the district court believed that 1988 provided no

    right to fees.

    The court also stated, as a separate ground for

    decision, that it would refrain from awarding attorneys' fees

    as a matter of discretion, even assuming plaintiffs could be

    said to have prevailed on a federal right.

    III. III.

    In reviewing the district court's denial of fees,

    we turn first to its ruling that, because plaintiffs did not

    prevail on any of their federal claims, they are barred from

    receiving attorneys' fees under 1988. We review this



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    ruling de novo as it presents essentially a question of law, __ ____

    not the individualized considerations which lead us to apply

    a deferential review standard. See Domegan v. Ponte, 972 ___ _______ _____

    F.2d 401, 406 n.8 (1st Cir. 1992).

    We think the district court's analysis is

    unsupported by Supreme Court precedent and that of this and

    other circuits. The clear tendency of the courts has been to

    apply the fees statute in a more practical and less

    restrictive way.

    Section 1988 itself nowhere states that attorneys'

    fees can be awarded only to those who prevail on expressly

    federal grounds. To be sure, the statute specifies that fees

    are to be awarded only "in" any of the enumerated federal

    causes of action, including 1983. Note 2, supra. And fees _____

    can be allowed only to a prevailing party. But the

    attorneys' fees being requested here are for services in an

    action to enforce a provision of 1983 and (as further

    discussed below) plaintiffs have, in every practical sense,

    prevailed having, as a result of their lawsuit, achieved

    precisely the end-relief they wanted, namely the right to use

    their Section 8 housing subsidies outside the political

    boundaries of the Authority providing the subsidy.

    To uphold the district court's rationale, we would

    have to read into 1988 an implied further requirement that,

    to be a prevailing party, it is necessary not only to have



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    secured a significant objective of one's federal lawsuit, but

    to have done so by obtaining a favorable ruling on some

    federal legal or constitutional claim advanced in the suit.

    A theory akin to this was rejected seventeen years ago in

    Maherv. Gagne, 448 U.S. 122 (1980), the Supreme Court saying, _____ _____

    "The fact that respondent prevailed
    through settlement rather than through
    litigation does not weaken her claim to
    fees. Nothing in the language of 1988
    conditions the District Court's power to
    award fees on full litigation of the
    issues or on a judicial determination
    that the plaintiffs' rights have been
    violated. Moreover, the Senate Report
    expressly stated that 'for purposes of
    the award of counsel fees, parties may be
    considered to have prevailed when they
    vindicate rights through a consent
    judgment or without obtaining relief
    . . . ."

    Maher, 448 U.S. at 129 (citation omitted). _____

    Maher, it is true, did not deal with precisely the _____

    present situation, where the winning party has prevailed

    through the federal court's favorable interpretation of an

    issue of state law. But decisions in this and other circuits

    have dealt with outcomes like the present. These decisions

    indicate that it is immaterial for 1988 purposes that

    plaintiffs' success in the 1983 action results from a

    favorable ruling on a relevant issue of state law, so long as

    the state law issue and the federal claims being made in the

    1983 proceeding are closely interrelated.





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    Judge (now Justice) Breyer writing for this court

    in Aubin v. Fudala, 782 F.2d 287, 291 (1st Cir. 1986) _____ ______

    (citation omitted), said that "'victory' in a civil rights

    suit is typically a practical rather than a strictly legal

    matter." The court went on to endorse the Aubins' right to

    fees if they received "the basic relief they sought (but on

    the state claim) and if, in fact, the state and federal

    claims are factually and legally interconnected." Id. In ___

    Aubin, id., we quoted the statement in 10 C. Wright, A. _____ ___

    Miller & M. Kane, Federal Practice and Procedure 2675 at

    306 (2d ed. 1983), that 1988 "has been applied to allow

    fees for the successful prosecution of pendant state law

    claims when the federal claims, though presenting substantial

    federal issues, never were reached by the district court."

    See, e.g., Milwe v. Cavuoto, 653 F.2d 80, 84 (2d Cir. 1981) ___ ____ _____ _______

    (reasonable fee should not be denied simply because the jury

    awarded substantial damages only in the pendant state law

    claim).

    Virtually identical to the present was the

    situation in our case of Exeter-West Greenwich Regional ________________________________

    School v. Pontarelli, 788 F.2d 47 (1st Cir. 1986). We said ______ __________

    there that attorneys' fees were recoverable in a 1983

    action where plaintiffs prevailed on a state law issue

    arising from the same nucleus of common facts as the federal

    claims, provided the latter were substantial enough to



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    support federal jurisdiction. Id. at 51-53. There, the ___

    1983 action alleging that a state education commissioner's

    interpretation and application of a state law violated the

    federal constitution became moot when the Rhode Island

    Supreme Court, on certification from the federal court, ruled

    that the commissioner had interpreted the state law

    incorrectly. As here, the favorable interpretation of state

    law came as a consequence of the 1983 litigation, the

    federal court, as part of that proceeding, having certified

    the determinative state law question to the state court,

    which overturned the commissioner's interpretation. Also as

    here, the federal claims in the lawsuit were mooted by the

    state law ruling and were never decided.

    In the present case, as in Exeter-West Greenwich, _____________________

    the unfavorable interpretation of state law that led

    plaintiffs to bring the 1983 action was also certified to

    the highest state court. However, the certification was

    withdrawn and federal and state authorities agreed to

    continue to abide by the district judge's own determination

    of state law a determination that had reversed the EOCD's

    construction challenged in the 1983 lawsuit. Following

    Exeter-West Greenwich, therefore, we see no legal impediment _____________________

    to allowing plaintiffs their attorneys' fees under 1988

    even though their victory rests on a state, not a federal





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    ground. See also Paris v. U.S. Dept. of Housing & Urban ___ ____ _____ ________________________________

    Dev., 988 F.2d 236, 239-40 ____

    n.7 (1st Cir. 1993) (quoting legislative history of "almost

    identical" bill to that which produced 1988, supporting

    recovery of fees if the claim for which fees may be awarded

    meets the "substantiality" test in Hagans v. Lavine, 415 U.S. ______ ______

    528 (1974), even though court declines to enter judgment on

    that claim, so long as plaintiff prevails on non-fee claim

    arising out of a common nucleus of operative fact).

    It is, of course, important to our decision that

    the dispositive state law question was closely interconnected

    with the federal claims. Here, as in Exeter-West Greenwich, _____________________

    the federal statutory and constitutional claims made in the

    1983 action were directed at overthrowing an unfavorable

    state law ruling. Whether that ruling was itself correct was

    a legitimate question for consideration in the 1983 suit:

    if, as the district court determined, the EOCD's

    interpretation was incorrect, there was no need to resolve

    the federal constitutional claim raised by plaintiffs, a fact

    noted by the district judge himself as a reason for

    certification. Williams, 926 F. Supp. at 12.10 By ________

    ____________________

    10. In the 1994 opinion, the district court stated:
    "In view of this Court's interpretation of state
    law, there is no occasion to consider the
    constitutional question whether the 1992 amendment
    to 42 U.S.C. 1437f(r) infringes upon the right to
    travel. A court should address constitutional issues
    only when a case cannot be resolved on other grounds.

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    addressing the state law question first, the federal court

    followed the principle that a case should not be decided on

    constitutional grounds if other grounds are available. The

    certification process enabled the federal court to seek an

    authoritative interpretation of state law from the state's

    highest court; but this proved unnecessary as the district

    court's own announced view of the state law persuaded HUD and

    the Authorities to abandon, without more, their previous

    construction, and to embrace the one plaintiffs wanted. The

    state law question on which the court ruled was thus closely

    entwined with the federal claims, the court's addressing of

    it being an appropriate judicial action taken within the

    context of the 1983 proceeding itself. Being integral to

    the latter and to the federal claims therein, it furnished an

    unexceptionable basis for finding plaintiffs to be

    "prevailing parties" entitled to fees under 1988. We,

    therefore, reject the district court's reasoning that

    plaintiffs are not entitled to attorneys' fees because their








    ____________________

    Burton v. United States, 196 U.S. 283, 295, 25 S. ______ _____________
    Ct. 243, 245, 49 L.Ed. 482 (1905). This Court will
    confront the constitutional question if the decision
    of the Supreme Judicial Court on the issues presented
    makes such confrontation necessary and appropriate."
    Williams, 871 F. Supp. at 535. ________

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    success did not derive from the vindication of any

    specifically federal right.11

    We add that it is well-settled in this circuit that

    a 1983 plaintiff seeking attorneys' fees under 1988 may

    establish "prevailing party" status under a "catalyst" as

    well as a "merits" analysis. See, e.g., Paris, 988 F.2d at ___ ____ _____

    241. Plaintiffs argue that they win under either approach.

    Because the "catalyst" formulation is so plainly dispositive

    we need not determine whether plaintiffs sufficiently

    prevailed on the merits of their claims to be entitled to

    fees under a "merits" analysis also. Their action under

    1983 was at least a "catalyst," which resulted in their

    achieving precisely the result they sought by bringing the

    action.

    In order to qualify for "prevailing party" status

    under a catalyst theory, plaintiffs must show "(1) a causal

    connection between the litigation and the relief obtained,

    and (2) that the fee-target did not act gratuitously."

    Guglietti v. Secretary of Health & Human Servs., 900 F.2d _________ _____________________________________

    397, 401 (1st Cir. 1990) (citing to Nadeau v. Helgemoe, 581 ______ ________


    ____________________

    11. No question has been raised as to the jurisdictional
    sufficiency of the plaintiffs' 1983 action. It is not
    suggested that the federal issues alleged in the 1983
    action were so wholly unsubstantial or frivolous as to render
    that action a jurisdictional nullity. See Hagans v. Lavine, ___ ______ ______
    415 U.S. 528, 538 (1974); Exeter-West Greenwich, 788 F.2d at _____________________
    53.


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    F.2d 275, 280-81 (1st Cir. 1978)). See also Paris, 988 F.2d ___ ____ _____

    at 241.12 The lawsuit need not be the sole cause of the fee-

    target's remedial actions, but it must be a "competent

    producing cause of those actions," or play a "provocative

    role in the calculus of relief." Guglietti, 900 F.2d at 401. _________

    See also Paris, 988 F.2d at 241. ___ ____ _____

    Here there is an undoubted causal connection

    between the 1983 lawsuit and the favorable change in

    Section 8 portability policy. The district court conceded

    that plaintiffs' suit "had some salutary effect." Williams, ________

    926 F. Supp. at 14. More significantly, it found that HUD

    had accepted the court's ruling "as an authoritative

    declaration of state law," id. at 12, leading HUD and the ___

    Authorities to abandon the EOCD's ruling that had led

    plaintiffs to seek 1983 relief. The end result cannot,

    therefore, be thought to have come about independently of the

    underlying litigation, nor can it be said to be unclear that

    the lawsuit was significantly responsible for the relief

    obtained by the plaintiffs. Compare Paris, 988 F.2d at 241 _______ _____

    ("Congress specifically mentioned the case in the legislative

    history [of the amendment] as being the 'necessary' force

    ____________________

    12. Other panels have worded the two-prong test
    differently, holding that, to be a catalyst, the lawsuit (1)
    must be a "necessary and important factor" in achieving an
    end result favorable to the plaintiffs, and (2) must not be
    "frivolous, unreasonable, or groundless." See Exeter-West ___ ___________
    Greenwich, 788 F.2d at 52; Coalition For Basic Human Needs v. _________ _______________________________
    King, 691 F.2d 597, 599 (1st Cir. 1982). ____

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    behind its enactment.") with Guglietti, 900 F.2d at 402 ____ _________

    ("[I]t seems naive in a run-of-the-mine case like this one to

    credit the change in the law to the [plaintiff's] appeal.").



    Before this action was filed, both HUD and the

    Authorities had taken a firm position towards the plaintiffs'

    plight: for the first twelve months of the Section 8

    tenancy, the plaintiffs were only entitled to housing located

    within the municipal boundaries of the public housing

    Authority issuing their Section 8 certificates. It was only

    in the wake of the district court's announced decision to the

    contrary that HUD reversed this policy by notifying all

    Massachusetts public housing authorities that their

    "jurisdiction," for purposes of Section 8, extended to any

    community within the Commonwealth, and by granting the

    plaintiffs full portability rights under 1437f(r)(1).

    There is no suggestion that without the filing of the

    underlying action, and the proceedings spawned by it, this

    change in Section 8 portability policy would have occurred.

    Plaintiffs' lawsuit was not only a "necessary and important

    factor" in achieving the desired result, it seems to have

    been the key factor.

    While acknowledging that the plaintiffs got what

    they wanted in their lawsuit, the Authorities attribute this

    "practical" success to HUD's "voluntary" agreement to change



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    its Section 8 portability policy, a "gratuitous gesture" by

    the fee-target. But for reasons already stated, there is no

    reasonable way that HUD's and the defendant Authorities'

    change of heart can be disassociated from the lawsuit. We

    accept that HUD and the Authorities were cooperative once the

    court had expressed its interpretation of state law. They

    might have continued to fight. One may applaud their good

    sense and good will. Still, a ruling even as to state law by

    an experienced district judge is a significant matter, as

    these events showed, and the court's ruling was backed by the

    pending certification to the highest state court. HUD and

    the Authorities would hardly have accepted the ruling had

    they doubted its correctness. The filing of this case

    triggered a process before the district court (i.e. the

    submission of papers, the holding of hearings, the

    presentation of arguments, etc.) that led to the district

    court's decision. It was in response to that decision that

    HUD, and the Authorities, changed their Section 8 portability

    policy in Massachusetts. Plaintiffs are thus prevailing

    parties as that term is used in 42 U.S.C. 1988.

    IV. IV.

    Having found that the plaintiffs are "prevailing

    parties" for purposes of 1988, we now turn to the second

    issue presented for review, to wit, whether there were

    "special circumstances" in this case meriting the district



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    court's denial of attorneys' fees on discretionary grounds.

    While 1988 provides that attorneys' fees may be granted to

    the prevailing party in the district court's discretion, both

    the legislative history and case law since enactment of

    1988 indicate that prevailing parties may not ordinarily be

    denied fees except in special circumstances making the award

    unjust. The district court's "broad discretion" to award

    fees to "prevailing parties" under 1988, see Sargeant v. ___ ________

    Sharp, 579 F.2d 645, 647 (1st Cir. 1978), must be guided by _____

    the statutory presumption that fees should be awarded to

    successful plaintiffs absent unusual situations. See ___

    generally S. Rep. No. 94-1011 (1976), reprinted in 1976 _________ ____________

    U.S.C.C.A.N. 5908. A prevailing plaintiff, the Supreme Court

    has said, "should ordinarily recover an attorney's fee unless

    special circumstances would render such an award unjust."

    Hensley v. Eckerhart, 461 U.S. 424, 429 (1983) (citation _______ _________

    omitted) (footnote omitted); Newman v. Piggie Park Enters. ______ ____________________

    Inc., 390 U.S. 400, 402 (1968). See also David v. Travisono, ____ ___ ____ _____ _________

    621 F.2d 464, 468 (1st Cir. 1980) (citations omitted);

    Sargeant, 579 F.2d at 647 (citations omitted). With this in ________

    mind, we review for abuse of discretion the district court's

    discretionary determination, asking whether the court

    identified appropriate "special circumstances" that justify

    the denial of fees.





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    In this circuit, "special circumstances" warranting

    a denial of attorneys' fees under 1988 have been found if

    there is a showing of "outrageous" or "inexcusable" conduct

    by plaintiffs (or plaintiffs' counsel) during the litigation

    of the case. Lewis v. Kendrick, 944 F.2d 949, 956 (1st Cir. _____ ________

    1991). In Lewis, this court reversed an award of attorneys' _____

    fees noting that the plaintiff had "failed entirely, or

    largely, in everything" and that her lawyers' subsequent

    failure to adjust their billing accordingly was, thus,

    "inexcusable." Id. at 955-56. In a case where a fee award ___

    was affirmed, but its amount reduced, this court reiterated

    that, under Lewis, "special circumstances" exist where the _____

    fee application reflects "(1) no 'good faith' effort to

    exclude excessive, redundant, or otherwise unnecessary hours,

    (2) no reduction for time spent on unsuccessful claims, and

    (3) no allowance for the limited 'degree of success' achieved

    by the plaintiff." Domegan, 972 F.2d at 419 (citing to _______

    Lewis, 944 F.2d at 957-58). In the instant case, there is no _____

    indication from the record below that any of the parties (or

    their lawyers) engaged in "outrageous" or "inexcusable"

    conduct of this nature, nor does the court suggest as much.

    Compare Lewis, 944 F.2d at 955-56, with, e.g., Domegan, 972 _______ _____ ____ ____ _______

    F.2d at 419-20.

    The district court seems rather to have employed a

    "balancing of the equities" test not accepted in this



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    circuit, see Stefan v. Laurenitis, 889 F.2d 363, 370-71 (1st ___ ______ __________

    Cir. 1989), in finding "special circumstances" in the instant

    case. The district court first found that the defendants in

    this case had acted in good faith.13 The district court went

    on to acknowledge that "good faith alone on the part of the

    Authorities is insufficient to deny the Williams Plaintiffs

    attorneys' fees . . .", Williams, 926 F. Supp. at 14 ________

    (citation omitted), the rule in this and apparently every

    other circuit that has considered the issue. Indeed, in the

    First Circuit,

    "[T]he good faith of defendants is not a
    controlling factor in determining whether
    or not plaintiffs merit an award...This
    conforms to the policy underlying the
    award of attorney's fees in civil rights
    cases...[I]t makes no difference whether
    plaintiff's suit yields favorable out of
    court results because a good faith
    defendant is brought to understand the
    illegality of his conduct and alters his
    behavior or because an unrepentant
    defendant grudgingly signs a consent
    decree to avoid continued litigation
    expenses in a lost cause. The key issue _____________
    is the provocative role of the _________________________________________
    plaintiff's lawsuit, not the motivations _________________________________________
    of the defendant." ________________




    ____________________

    13. The district court stated:
    "In interpreting their jurisdiction as prohibiting
    their contracting for housing outside of their town
    boundaries, the Authorities acted in good faith and appear to
    have made significant efforts to assist the Williams
    Plaintiffs in securing housing consistent with their
    interpretation of the restriction on their jurisdiction."
    Williams, 926 F. Supp. at 13-14. ________

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    Nadeau, 581 F.2d at 280 (citations omitted) (emphasis added). ______

    See also Burke v. Guiney, 700 F.2d 767, 772 (1st Cir. 1983) ___ ____ _____ ______

    ("'Good faith by itself is not a special circumstance

    justifying a denial of attorney's fees.'") (quoting

    Teitelbaum v. Sorenson, 648 F.2d 1248, 1250 (9th Cir. 1981)). __________ ________



    Although the defendants' good faith, in and of

    itself, was not enough to justify the denial of attorneys'

    fees, the district court found "something more" in this case,

    Williams, 926 F. Supp. at 14, to wit, the defendants' good ________

    faith reliance on the EOCD's interpretation of Massachusetts

    law.14 The circuits are in agreement, however, that

    defendants' good faith reliance even on settled law (which

    was scarcely the case here) is not a "special circumstance"

    ____________________

    14. The Authorities suggest that the district court also
    took into account what they regard as the plaintiffs' limited
    success in the underlying litigation in denying an award of
    attorneys' fees under 1988. It is true that, towards the
    end of its opinion, the district court notes:
    "[I]n this case a balancing of the equities weighs
    against the award of attorney's fees. This is particularly
    so given the relatively arcane point of state law upon which
    the Williams Plaintiffs prevailed." Williams, 926 F. Supp. ________
    at 14.
    Whether the district court meant to identify another
    "special circumstance" we need not decide here, as it is
    well-established that ordinarily "the degree of the
    plaintiff's success in relation to the other goals of the
    lawsuit is a factor critical to the determination of the size
    of a reasonable fee, not to eligibility for a fee award at
    all." Texas State Teachers Ass'n v. Garland Indep. Sch. ____________________________ ____________________
    Dist., 489 U.S. 782, 790 (1989). We add that where, as here, _____
    the goal of the 1983 action was to alter the earlier state
    law ruling, and where that occurred, we have difficulty
    understanding how plaintiffs' success can be termed partial.

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    warranting a denial of attorneys' fees under 1988. In

    Coalition For Basic Human Needs v. King, 691 F.2d 597, 602 ________________________________ ____

    (1st Cir. 1982), where appellees claimed that "state law

    required them under threat of criminal penalties to

    deny" plaintiffs the Aid to Families with Dependent Children

    ("AFDC") payments they sought, this court said:

    "If the appellees mean this fact to show
    that they acted in good faith that
    they felt obliged to withhold the funds
    and obliged to contest the Coalition's
    suit we agree that they may have had
    good-faith reasons for their acts, but
    that is no reason to deny the Coalition
    attorney's fees. The Civil Rights
    Attorney's Fees Awards Act is not meant
    as a 'punishment' for 'bad' defendants
    who resist plaintiffs' claims in bad
    faith. Rather, it is meant to compensate
    civil rights attorneys who bring civil
    rights cases and win them. The need for
    such law suits, and such payment, may
    well be greatest in just those instances
    in which lawyers and officials, in
    totally good faith, have opposing views
    about what state and federal law requires
    of them."


    The underlying theme in all of these "good faith" cases,

    then, is that the analysis under 1988 must focus, not on

    the defendants' conduct, but on the harm suffered by the

    plaintiffs and the relief obtained through their lawsuit.

    Having done so, we are unable to find that any of the

    circumstances identified by the district court meet the

    criteria for "special circumstances" adequate to deny fees

    under the law as it has developed. We hold, therefore, that



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    the district court exceeded its discretion in denying any

    fees on the discretionary basis set forth in its opinion.

    V. V.

    For all of the foregoing reasons, we vacate the

    district court's order denying the plaintiffs' motion for

    attorneys' fees under 1988. We remand the case to the

    district court for consideration of the fee application in a

    manner not inconsistent with this opinion.

    It is so ordered. Costs for appellant. ________________ ___________________



































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