Argument analysis: What does it take to satisfy an award of attorneys fees?


In Murphy v. Smith, the Supreme Court is charged with interpreting statutory language that on its face appears straightforward. In prisoners federal civil-rights cases that result in an award of money damages and attorneys fees, the Prison Litigation Reform Act requires that a portion of the judgment (not to exceed 25 percent) shall beapplied to satisfy the amount of attorneys fees awarded against the defendant. But that language turned out to be anything but simple, as evidenced by Justice Samuel Alitos lament early in Wednesdays argument that I mean, this language can be read either way, and its very difficult.
Here is the crux of the difficulty: Plaintiff Charles Murphy argues that the phrase not to exceed 25 percent grants district courts discretion to order that any amount, from a nominal sum up to a maximum of 25 percent of a prisoners award, be devoted to attorneys fees. But the defendants, two prison guards, argue that the PLRA requires prisoners to pay attorneys fees in full unless those fees exceed 25 percent of the damages award. That means that, in their view, prisoners must contribute toward attorneys fees 25 percent of their money judgment or 100 percent of awarded attorneys fees, whichever is less.
Stuart Banner, representing Charles Murphy, began by urging the justices to interpret literally the statutory phrase not to exceed 25 percent. But that led quickly to an exchange about the meaning of the word satisfy, with Alito offering a Dickensian hypothetical:
Suppose a teacher said to the parent: Your child cant function at school because the child is hungry. Would you give the child a portion of food for breakfast to satisfy the childs hunger?
You wouldnt say, well, you know, if I give the child a tiny crumb, that would satisfy the hunger.
It was unclear if Alito was satisfied by Banners answer that depending on context, satisfy may mean either satisfy in full or satisfy in part because Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg then asked about how courts that read the statute as Murphy urges divide responsibility for attorneys fees in prisoners civil-rights cases. According to Banner, courts weigh the seriousness of the conduct, often limiting plaintiffs contributions toward fees to a negligible amount in really egregious cases. This response prompted some puzzlement from Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Anthony Kennedy, both of whom suggested that it would at least be unusual for Congress to have used fee apportionment as a way of punishing serious violations of plaintiffs civil rights.
The argument then turned to the purpose of the PLRA in general, and its fee-allocation provision specifically. For example, Justice Elena Kagan observed that several provisions of the PLRA seemed to be aimed at reducing district courts discretion in prisoners civil-rights cases, suggesting that it would have been incongruous for Congress to leave district courts with substantial discretion over fee allocation. However, Justice Sonia Sotomayor offered a contrary reading that Banner was quick to endorse, reasoning that whereas many of the discretion-limiting provisions in the PLRA sought to curb frivolous lawsuits, the attorneys fee provision comes into play only in cases in which the prisoner plaintiff has prevailed.
Banners argument ended with an extended exchange over whether the PLRA sought to put prisoners in the same position as plaintiffs in cases to which no fee-shifting statute applies. Roberts suggested that the defendants reading of the statute would make sense if Congress was trying to place prisoner plaintiffs in a similar position to plaintiffs proceeding under a contingent fee arrangement. However, Justice Stephen Breyer asked whether those litigants were really the correct comparators, or whether the Supreme Court should instead consider the PLRA against the baseline of victorious civil-rights plaintiffs who are eligible to have their attorneys fees paid in full by defendants.
Arguing for the defendants, Brett Legner began where Roberts left off, arguing that Congress intent in enacting the fee-allocation provision of the PLRA was to replicate a contingent fee arrangement; he later added that Congress also sought to make prison litigation less expensive for defendants. However, Breyer suggested that Congress could have had a different calculation in mind: You can have a reasonable attorney fee here … and the prisoner doesnt pay the whole 25 percent. We put some of it on the prison guard, the state, thats acted so abominably. Breyer posited that Congress could have feared that, under the defendants interpretation of the statute, district courts might shrink fee awards in order to avoid eating into a badly mistreated prisoners judgment. In contrast, Murphys interpretation would allow district courts to achieve two goals awarding a reasonable attorneys fee, and allowing prisoners to keep a substantial amount of the judgment awarded.
Legners argument also included substantial discussion of the text of the statute, ultimately circling back to the definition of the word satisfy. Here, Kagan tipped her hand, stating that what Im suggesting is that this language should be read … to say … shall go towards satisfying. So a dollar would go a small way towards satisfying. Legner responded that this interpretation made superfluous the phrase to satisfy the amount of attorneys fees. Later, Alito returned to this point (and to food analogies) by pointing out that a single carrot wouldnt satisfy his hunger for dinner, even if he could later augment his diet with other food in the refrigerator. The ensuing discussion of Alitos dinner requirements ended with a reference to 17 percent of [a] casserole, but no mention of what kind.
Toward the end of the argument, Ginsburg asked a question that seemed to encapsulate the heart of the dispute: [I]f … we conclude that the statute is ambiguous … why shouldnt we take [42 U.S.C. ] 1988 as the closest [baseline], rather than … the American rule? In other words, should the Supreme Court assume, as Ginsburg was suggesting, that Congress was attempting to make a relatively minor modification to the fee-shifting provision that routinely applies to civil-rights plaintiffs? Or should it assume that Congress was trying to place prisoners in a position very similar to tort plaintiffs, who must pay their own lawyers? The justices seem divided on that question, which is likely to inform their assessment of what Congress meant by satisfy.
Posted in Merits Cases
Cases: Murphy v. Smith