1.12.2007

U.S. Supreme Court To Consider Whether Movant Obtaining Preliminary Injunction Is “Prevailing Party” Entitled To Attorneys’ Fees

The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to resolve an apparent conflict in the federal appellate courts concerning whether a plaintiff who successfully obtains a preliminary injunction is a “prevailing party” for purposes of fee-shifting statutes. Struhs v. Wyner, 127 S. Ct. 1055 (granting cert. Jan. 12, 2007).

The Eleventh Circuit ruled in Wyner v. Struhs, 179 Fed. Appx. 566 (2006), that plaintiffs who sued under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and obtained a preliminary injunction against enforcement of state rules that would have interfered with their public performance art that featured nudity, but did not prevail on the later facial challenge to those rules, were still “prevailing parties” entitled to attorneys’ fees. In contrast, the Fourth Circuit held in Smyth v. Rivero, 282 F.3d 268 (2002), that a preliminary injunction is not a ruling on the merits and therefore cannot be the basis for considering the movant a “prevailing party.”

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