Terry Petteway v. Mark Henry ( 2014 )


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  •      Case: 12-40856       Document: 00512474523          Page: 1     Date Filed: 12/17/2013
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT  United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    December 17, 2013
    No. 12-40856                         Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    THE HONORABLE TERRY PETTEWAY; THE HONORABLE DERREC
    ROSE; THE HONORABLE MICHAE MONTEZ; THE HONORABLE PENNY
    POPE; THE HONORABLE SONNY JAMES; THE HONORABLE STEPHE
    HOLMES; THE HONORABLE PATRIC DOYLE; ROOSEVELT
    HENDERSON,
    Plaintiffs - Appellees
    v.
    THE HONORABLE MARK HENRY; GALVESTON COUNTY, TEXAS,
    Defendants - Appellants
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas
    Before JOLLY, DeMOSS, and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
    E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:
    This appeal presents only the question of whether the Plaintiffs are
    prevailing parties in a voting rights case, entitling them to attorney’s fees. The
    underlying case arises from a dispute between the Plaintiffs – seven elected
    officials and one citizen of Galveston County, Texas – and Galveston County,1
    challenging the County’s redistricting following the 2010 census, on grounds that
    1
    The other nominal defendant in the case is Mark Henry. Henry is the County Judge
    and Chief Officer of Galveston County. Because he is sued only in his official capacity, we will
    refer to the County as the defendant.
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    No. 12-40856
    the County’s proposed electoral maps violated the Constitution and the Voting
    Rights Act. At the conclusion of the adversary proceeding, the Plaintiffs moved
    for the award of attorney’s fees in accordance with 42 U.S.C. § 1973l(e). The
    County opposed the award of attorney’s fees on the grounds that the Plaintiffs
    were not prevailing parties. The district court ruled in favor of the Plaintiffs and
    awarded fees. The County now appeals. For the reasons that follow, we hold
    that the Plaintiffs are not prevailing parties and accordingly, are not entitled to
    attorney’s fees. We therefore REVERSE the judgment of the district court and
    REMAND for entry of judgment for the County.
    I.
    The Voting Rights Act of 1965 requires that certain jurisdictions with
    histories of voting discrimination, known as “covered jurisdictions,” receive
    specified approval before implementing changes to any “standard, practice, or
    procedure with respect to voting. . . .” 42 U.S.C. § 1973c(a). The County is a
    covered jurisdiction. Before making changes to its election districts, the County
    must receive preclearance for those changes either by filing a declaratory
    judgment action in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia
    or by soliciting preclearance from the Attorney General of the United States. Id.
    In August 2011, the County drafted new election maps in response to the
    2010 population changes and the “one person, one vote” constitutional
    requirement. The proposed changes affected three county elections: county
    commissioner, constable, and justice of the peace. On August 30, after holding
    several public meetings and considering different plans, the County adopted two
    orders – one proposing new boundaries for the county commissioner election, and
    the other proposing new boundaries for the constable and justice of the peace
    elections. The county commissioner plan maintained the same number of
    districts (four), but reallocated voters among the districts to maintain conformity
    with the “one person, one vote” principle. The justice of the peace and constable
    2
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    plan reduced the number of constable and justice of the peace districts from
    eight to five.
    On October 14, the County submitted its redistricting plan for the county
    commissioners election to the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) for
    preclearance. The County’s plans for the constable and justice of the peace
    elections were submitted a few days later. The submissions contained all
    information required by the DOJ, including a provision that the new plans were
    “effective on the later of January 1, 2012, or when preclearance is obtained.”
    II.
    On November 14, 2011, one month after the County filed for preclearance
    of its plan, the Plaintiffs brought this action in the federal district court alleging
    that the redistricting plans violated the Constitution and the Voting Rights Act.
    The Plaintiffs sought a declaratory judgment that the proposed maps violated
    the Constitution as well as Sections 2 and 5 of the Voting Rights Act, an
    injunction to prevent the County from using the unprecleared maps, and an
    injunction to preclude the County from engaging in unlawful voter registration
    practices. The County assured the court, as it had the DOJ, that it would not
    implement any maps before receiving preclearance from the DOJ. The district
    court nevertheless granted the motion for a temporary restraining order (TRO)
    on November 21.
    Upon the entry of the TRO, the district judge notified the Chief Judge of
    the Fifth Circuit of the County’s request for a three-judge panel pursuant to
    42 U.S.C. § 1973c(a) and 
    28 U.S.C. § 2284
    . The Chief Judge, in accordance with
    § 2284, designated two other judges to make up the panel. The three-judge
    district court immediately held an evidentiary hearing on the TRO. At this
    hearing, the Plaintiffs presented their own set of maps, which they urged the
    court to adopt and implement as interim plans. Following the hearing, the court
    vacated the TRO. The majority of the three-judge district court held that the
    3
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    Plaintiffs were not entitled to a TRO because the County was already seeking
    preclearance from the DOJ. The dissenting judge made clear that not only
    would he keep the TRO in place, he would also implement the Plaintiffs’ maps.
    On December 19, the DOJ requested additional information from the
    County relating to the maps and their potential impact on minority voters.
    Contending that this request indicated a decreased likelihood of preclearance,
    the Plaintiffs asked the three-judge court to reconsider its decision vacating the
    TRO. The County again argued that injunctive relief was unnecessary because
    it would not take any action to implement the redistricting plans prior to
    preclearance. The County provided affidavits from relevant employees reflecting
    this commitment. Nonetheless, the court granted the Plaintiffs’ motion and
    enjoined the County from taking any steps to enforce the unprecleared plans.
    The court again, however, refused to implement the maps that the Plaintiffs
    proposed.
    In March 2012, the DOJ formally objected to both of the County’s
    redistricting plans, that is the commissioner plan, and the justice of the peace
    and constable plan. The DOJ found the plans retrogressive and raised concerns
    that the County did not meet “its burden of showing that the proposed plan was
    adopted with no discriminatory purpose.” Following the formal objection, the
    County promptly entered into direct discussions with the DOJ in an attempt
    speedily to obtain preclearance for a new set of maps. Shortly, on March 23, the
    County and the DOJ jointly presented to the court a new precleared set of county
    commissioner maps. Additionally, all parties agreed that the 2001 benchmark
    map would govern the upcoming justice of the peace and constable elections.2
    The three-judge court entered its final order directing that the elections be held
    2
    Because the justice of the peace and constable elections are not subject to the “one
    person, one vote” principle, the 2001 maps could be used notwithstanding the changes in
    population distribution.
    4
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    under these maps, permanently enjoining the County from implementing any
    plans for the 2012 elections that had not been precleared, and dissolving the
    three-judge court.
    Following the dissolution, the Plaintiffs filed a motion to recover attorney’s
    fees for the case before a single district court judge. The Plaintiffs contended
    that the suit had resulted in postponing any elections until the County received
    preclearance. Furthermore, the Plaintiffs asserted that their advocacy before
    the DOJ had led to the County’s initial submissions being rejected. The County
    opposed the grant of attorney’s fees on the grounds that the Plaintiffs were not
    prevailing parties and thus not entitled to attorney’s fees. Upon considering the
    arguments of the parties, the district judge entered an order awarding attorney’s
    fees for all of the work claimed by the Plaintiffs, including the lobbying done
    before the DOJ. The County appeals, challenging the award of attorney’s fees.
    III.
    The County raises two distinct challenges to the fee award. First, the
    County argues that the Plaintiffs are entitled to no attorney’s fees because the
    Plaintiffs have failed to satisfy the most fundamental requirement for a fee
    award – prevailing party status. Because the Plaintiffs are not prevailing
    parties, the County argues, the district court erred in awarding attorney’s fees.
    Second, the County argues that, assuming the Plaintiffs are prevailing
    parties in this injunction case, the district court erred in granting fees for
    lobbying the DOJ during the preclearance process because this work is not
    sufficiently related to the court litigation for fees to be awarded under
    
    42 U.S.C. § 1973
    .
    A.
    We turn first to the County’s challenge to the Plaintiffs’ prevailing
    party status under 42 U.S.C. § 1973l(e). In an action seeking to “enforce the
    voting guarantees of the fourteenth or fifteenth amendment, the court, in its
    5
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    discretion, may allow the prevailing party, other than the United States, a
    reasonable attorney’s fee, reasonable expert fees, and other reasonable
    litigation expenses as part of the costs.” 42 U.S.C. § 1973l(e). A district
    court’s judgment awarding fees is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Volk v.
    Gonzalez, 
    262 F.3d 528
    , 534 (5th Cir. 2001). That discretion does not arise,
    however, unless the claimant is a “prevailing party.” Whether a party is a
    “prevailing party” is a legal question that we review de novo. El Paso Indep.
    School Dist. v. Richard R., 
    591 F.3d 417
    , 422–23 (5th Cir. 2009).
    The Supreme Court has laid out the requirements for establishing
    prevailing party status. Buckhannon Bd. & Care Home, Inc. v. West Virginia
    Dep’t of Health & Human Resources, 
    532 U.S. 598
     (2001). The Court held
    that to achieve prevailing party status, a party must achieve some judicially
    sanctioned relief that either creates or materially alters a legal relationship
    between the parties. 
    Id. at 604
    . Building on Buckhannon, this court has
    established three requirements that must be satisfied for a plaintiff to
    demonstrate prevailing party status: (1) the plaintiff must achieve judicially-
    sanctioned relief, (2) the relief must materially alter the legal relationship
    between the parties, and (3) the relief must modify the defendant’s behavior
    in a way that directly benefits the plaintiff at the time the relief is entered.
    See Dearmore v. City of Garland, 
    519 F.3d 517
    , 521 (5th Cir. 2008). When
    moving for attorney’s fees, “the fee applicant bears the burden of establishing
    entitlement to an award. . . .” Hensley v. Eckerhart, 
    461 U.S. 424
    , 437 (1983).
    Under this test, a plaintiff need not receive a final judgment in its
    favor, but if the plaintiff’s success on a claim is purely technical or de
    minimis, it is not a prevailing party. See Jenevein v. Willing, 
    605 F.3d 268
    ,
    271 (5th Cir. 2010); see also, Dearmore, 
    519 F.3d at 521
    . A plaintiff’s success,
    however, need not address the central claim of the case; instead, a party may
    attain prevailing status by succeeding on “any significant issue in litigation
    6
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    which achieves some of the benefit the parties sought in bringing suit.” Texas
    State Teachers Ass’n v. Garland Indep. School Dist., 
    489 U.S. 782
    , 789 (1989)
    (internal quotation marks omitted). It is also clear that a defendant’s
    voluntary change in conduct, although perhaps achieving the relief that the
    plaintiff desired, lacks the necessary judicial imprimatur to support
    prevailing party status. Buckhannon, 
    532 U.S. at 605
    .
    The parties agree that the first prong of the prevailing party analysis has
    been satisfied – that is, the Plaintiffs achieved judicially-sanctioned relief
    flowing from their complaint – a temporary, and then a permanent injunction.
    The County, however, challenges whether the other two requirements
    have been satisfied. First, the County argues that the judicially sanctioned relief
    – the injunction – failed materially to alter the relationship between the parties;
    consequently, the injunctive relief was purely technical or de minimis. The
    County characterizes the relief as de minimis because the injunction only
    required that the County continue its previously established conduct – refraining
    from implementing any unprecleared redistricting plans.
    Second, the County contends that, irrespective of whether the lawsuit
    altered the relationship between the parties, it did not change the County’s
    behavior in a way that benefitted the Plaintiffs. Specifically, the County argues
    that notwithstanding this lawsuit, the County simply followed the routine
    required by the Voting Rights Act: it sought preclearance from the DOJ, and,
    when the electoral maps were questioned, it worked with the DOJ to resolve its
    concerns; and once these concerns were resolved and preclearance granted, it
    conducted the election under the precleared maps. Although this process and
    preclearance may have benefitted the Plaintiffs, the County argues, those
    benefits were the result of the County’s voluntary conduct, not the injunction.
    In response to the County, the Plaintiffs argue that this lawsuit did in fact
    materially alter the behavior of the County. They primarily emphasize that the
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    injunction prevented the County from implementing its redistricting plans prior
    to preclearance. Specifically, the Plaintiffs point to evidence that the County
    was taking steps to implement the unprecleared plans. The Plaintiffs also point
    to the DOJ’s initial denial of preclearance, which the Plaintiffs assert resulted
    from their lobbying the DOJ. More generally, the Plaintiffs highlight the
    undisputed relief granted from their original complaint: a temporary and
    permanent injunction enjoining the County from implementing any
    unprecleared redistricting plans.
    IV.
    Now that we have addressed the applicable law and set out the respective
    contentions of the parties, we will turn to consider, first, whether the injunction
    materially altered the legal relationship between the parties and, second,
    whether the injunction changed the County’s behavior in a way that benefitted
    the Plaintiffs.
    A.
    In arguing that the injunction was a material legal victory, the Plaintiffs
    contend that, before the injunction issued, the County was preparing to accept
    candidate filings for the 2012 primary, was preparing to accept filing fees for the
    2012 primary, and was preparing for precinct modifications. There is some
    disagreement about whether the County was engaged in these activities or
    whether the political parties in the County were responsible for them. The
    Plaintiffs assert that the distinction is irrelevant and maintain that even if the
    political parties have some role in the primaries, it is only as a subdivision of the
    County government. The Plaintiffs are clearly correct that the actions of a
    political party can be covered by Section 5 if the political parties “act under
    authority” of a covered jurisdiction.         See Morse v. Republican Party of
    Virginia,
    517 U.S. 186
    , 194–95 (1996).
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    Assuming, however, that the County was prepared to permit preliminary
    filings and was in the process of determining potential polling locations, an
    injunction to stop these activities is properly characterized as de minimis relief.
    To iterate what has been stated, the maps had already been submitted to the
    DOJ for preclearance; and the County had already committed to refrain from
    implementing the maps until they were precleared. This course of action was
    neither prompted nor changed by the injunction.             Although a new legal
    relationship between the parties was created by filing the injunction, there is no
    evidence that such a change materially affected the conduct of the County. It is
    true that the injunction postponed some preliminary procedural steps that the
    County (or the political parties) had undertaken to expedite the election once
    precleared, but the changes were never permanently implemented before
    preclearance.    Filing fees could be refunded, candidate filings could be
    resubmitted for the correct precinct, and new polling places could be found. In
    short, these tentative pre-election steps were de minimis considerations to the
    conduct of a future election and were amenable to a flexible response to conform
    with the preclearance process.
    In this way, this case is similar to Jenevein. Jenevein, a Texas state judge,
    was censured by the Texas State Commission on Judicial Conduct for holding a
    press conference in his courtroom while wearing his judicial robes. Jenevein, 
    605 F.3d at
    269–70. He challenged his censure on First Amendment grounds, and
    this court remanded, holding that the censure must be expunged to the extent
    that it addressed his action beyond the use of his courtroom and robe to send his
    message. 
    Id. at 270
    . On remand, Jenevein filed a motion for attorney’s fees on
    the basis that parts of his censure were ordered expunged. 
    Id.
     Despite the
    limited legal success of Jenevein’s appeal, this court held that he was not a
    prevailing party. 
    Id. at 272
    . We find the reasoning of Jenevein instructive in
    this appeal; the panel held that Jenevein was not a prevailing party because only
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    a few recurring sentences were stricken from the censure order, and all of the
    violations of the Code of Judicial conduct remained on Jenevein’s record. So
    despite Jenevein’s technical victory on some claims, that success did not change
    significantly the outcome of the censure proceedings against him.
    In the same manner here, the injunction had no effect on the
    implementation of the electoral map, either before or after preclearance.
    Preclearance had always been an express condition of any election, a position to
    which the County unequivocally had committed itself. Thus, postponing these
    preparatory activities for the eventual election under a precleared map cannot
    be characterized as a material legal success, and consequently, the Plaintiffs
    have failed to meet the test of prevailing parties.
    B.
    Alternatively, and of equal import to our decision today, we hold that if
    enjoining election preparations constituted a material change in the conduct of
    the County, the record nevertheless fails to establish that the injunction directly
    benefitted the Plaintiffs.3 The Plaintiffs argue, however, that by stymieing
    these initial preparatory steps, they were directly benefitted because the
    injunction prevented the County from taking even further steps toward
    executing its ultimate plan to conduct an election under the unprecleared maps.
    But the Plaintiffs engage in only speculation that this result – that is, that no
    unprecleared election was ever conducted – flowed from the injunction. Once
    again: The County voluntarily had, on the record, committed to the court and to
    the DOJ to forbear making any permanent changes in the electoral map until
    they were precleared by the DOJ. And the assurances were voluntarily made
    before the injunction was issued. So, the fact that the County may have been
    3
    The test for prevailing party status is conjunctive, but we nevertheless address both
    contested prongs to make clear that the judgment rendered herein, reversing the district court,
    rests on both.
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    enjoined from taking steps towards preparing for a precleared election did not
    directly or materially benefit the Plaintiffs. Nor have the Plaintiffs shown
    evidence of any benefit derived from the isolated act, in and of itself, of stopping
    the County from making preliminary plans for the election. By failing to provide
    any evidentiary support that the injunction prevented an illegal election – or
    otherwise benefitted the Plaintiffs – the Plaintiffs have failed to meet their
    burden of demonstrating that they are prevailing parties.4 See Dearmore, 
    519 F.3d at 521
     (recognizing that to achieve prevailing party status, the relief
    achieved must modify the defendant’s behavior in a way that directly benefits
    the plaintiff at the time the relief is entered).
    C.
    The Plaintiffs also rely on the outcome of the preclearance proceeding
    before the DOJ as evidence of their prevailing party status, even for purposes of
    this injunction litigation. They assert that because the DOJ objected to the
    County’s proposed maps and required further investigation of and ultimately
    modification of, the County’s proposed plan, they are a prevailing party in this
    litigation. Again, there is simply no evidence to support a causal connection
    between the court injunction and the DOJ’s conduct. Because the County had
    sought preclearance before this suit was filed, the preclearance process received
    no jump-start from the Plaintiffs’ injunction; nor did the injunction motivate the
    DOJ to act as far as this record shows. See Craig v. Gregg County, 
    988 F.2d 18
    ,
    4
    The Plaintiffs do argue that the entry of the injunction itself demonstrates that the
    three-judge district court felt that the County was moving towards holding an election under
    an unprecleared plan. The Plaintiffs assert that if this were not the case, the injunction would
    have been unnecessary and thus never entered. We do not see the need to speculate on the
    motivation of the three-judge district court in entering the injunction. Suffice it to say that
    the legal test for the appropriateness of an injunction is distinct from the test we are bound
    to apply in determining prevailing party status. Compare Dennis Melancon, Inc. v. City of
    New Orleans, 
    703 F.3d 262
    , 268 (5th Cir. 2012) (laying out the factors for determining whether
    a preliminary injunction is warranted) with Dearmore, 
    519 F.3d at 521
     (5th Cir. 2008)
    (providing the test for prevailing party status).
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    21 (5th Cir. 1993) (denying prevailing party status under the catalyst theory
    when suit was filed after preclearance was sought). Although it is true that the
    Plaintiffs lobbied the DOJ during the preclearance process, we have been shown
    no evidence of the substance of the Plaintiffs’ presentations to the DOJ.5
    Without such evidence, the Plaintiffs cannot meet their burden of demonstrating
    that they are prevailing parties in the injunction litigation simply based on the
    DOJ’s objection to the County’s proposed maps. In the absence of evidence to the
    contrary, we must assume that whatever aspects of the proposed maps the DOJ
    found objectionable under the Act would have been treated similarly by the DOJ
    without the intervention of the Plaintiffs.
    6 V. 5
    To the extent that we can divine from the record the effect that the Plaintiffs had on
    the DOJ’s decision, the concerns of the DOJ’s objections provide weak support for the
    Plaintiffs’ claims. Throughout the proceedings before the district court, the Plaintiffs
    requested that the district court use its power to adopt the Plaintiffs’ proposed maps. The
    district court consistently declined the invitation. In proposing these maps, the Plaintiffs
    focused their objections on the makeup of District One for the county commissioner elections.
    The Plaintiffs argued that the County’s proposed plan impermissibly decreased the Black and
    Hispanic voting age population of District One, while the Plaintiffs’ proposed plan would
    maintain an acceptable minority influence in the district. The DOJ’s objection letter, however,
    focused entirely on the makeup of District Three for the county commissioner elections; and
    in allaying the concerns of the DOJ, the County actually moved a predominantly Caucasian
    neighborhood from District Three to District One, further diluting the combined proportion
    of Blacks and Hispanics among the voting age population in District One. These actions do
    not support that the DOJ was influenced by the recommendations of the Plaintiffs.
    As to the justice of the peace and constable elections, the County did revert to using the
    2001 benchmark plan – the same map that the Plaintiffs asked the district court to adopt –
    after preclearance was initially denied, but the record contains no evidence that the Plaintiffs’
    efforts caused the DOJ to object to the County’s submission. The mere fact that the DOJ and
    the County, after negotiations, settled on the same preexisting map that the Plaintiffs
    suggested does not inform whether the Plaintiffs influenced the DOJ’s decision to object to the
    County’s plans.
    6
    Finally, the Plaintiffs appeal to the importance of attorney’s fees in civil rights
    litigation, particularly when that litigation can only lead to equitable relief and not monetary
    damages. We do not underestimate the importance of attorney’s fee awards to encourage
    potential plaintiffs to bring suit, but this general policy argument is irrelevant to the issue of
    this appeal.
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    To conclude: We hold that the Plaintiffs are not prevailing parties because
    the injunctive relief the Plaintiffs achieved was not material to the outcome of
    this case, and, alternatively, nor did this relief directly or materially benefit the
    Plaintiffs.7 Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is REVERSED and
    the case is REMANDED for entry of judgment for Galveston County.
    REVERSED and REMANDED for entry of judgment.
    7
    Because we hold that the Plaintiffs are not prevailing parties, we need not reach the
    County’s second argument regarding the awarding of fees for lobbying the DOJ.
    13