Edmo v. Corizon, Inc., No. 22-35876 (9th Cir. 2024)
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The case involves Adree Edmo, a transgender woman incarcerated in Idaho, who sued the State of Idaho, private prison company Corizon, and individual prison officials for failing to provide her with adequate medical care, including gender-confirmation surgery. Edmo alleged violations of the Eighth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause, the Affordable Care Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and negligence under Idaho law. The district court granted an injunction on Edmo’s Eighth Amendment claim and ordered the defendants to provide her with adequate medical care, including gender-confirmation surgery. The court denied preliminary injunctive relief on Edmo’s Fourteenth Amendment and ACA claims because the record had not been sufficiently developed.
The district court's decision was appealed, and the injunction was stayed. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the district court’s decision except as it applied to five defendants in their individual capacities. After the Supreme Court denied a writ of certiorari, the parties engaged in settlement negotiations that led to Edmo voluntarily dismissing the remainder of her claims. The district court awarded Edmo $2,586,048.80 for attorneys’ fees incurred up until the injunction became permanent and all appeals were resolved.
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed in part, affirmed in part, and vacated in part the district court’s award of attorneys’ fees to Edmo. The court held that Edmo was entitled to fees incurred litigating her successful Eighth Amendment claim. However, the court found that the district court erred in calculating the lodestar amount to include fees incurred litigating unsuccessful claims advanced in the complaint, even if those claims were premised on the same facts that supported Edmo’s Eighth Amendment claim. The court also held that the district court did not err by applying an enhancement to the lodestar amount given that Edmo’s counsel operated under extraordinary time pressure and that the customary fee for counsel’s services is well above the PLRA cap. The case was remanded for recalculation of the lodestar amount to include only fees incurred litigating Edmo’s successful claim against the defendants who remained in the case.
Court Description: Prisoner Civil Rights/Attorneys’ Fees The panel reversed in part, affirmed in part, and vacated in part the district court’s award of $2,586,048.80 in attorneys’ fees to plaintiff Adree Edmo, and remanded, in an action in which Edmo obtained an injunction requiring defendants the State of Idaho, private prison company Corizon, and individual Idaho prison officials to provide her with adequate medical care, including gender-confirmation surgery.
The panel held that Edmo was entitled under 42 U.S.C.
§ 1988 to fees incurred litigating her successful Eighth Amendment claim. Pursuant to the Prison Litigation Reform Act (“PLRA”), however, the district court erred in * The Honorable Robert S. Lasnik, United States District Judge for the Western District of Washington, sitting by designation.
calculating the lodestar amount to include fees incurred litigating unsuccessful claims advanced in the complaint, even if those claims were premised on the same facts that supported Edmo’s Eighth Amendment claim. Similarly, Edmo should not have been awarded fees on the Eighth Amendment claim against individual defendants who were dismissed from the action in a prior appeal. The panel vacated the district court’s fee award and remanded for recalculation of the lodestar amount to include only fees incurred litigating Edmo’s successful claim against the defendants who remained in the case.
The panel held that the district court did not err by applying an enhancement to the lodestar amount given that Edmo’s counsel operated under extraordinary time pressure and that the customary fee for counsel’s services is well above the PLRA cap. The district court also reasonably found that Edmo’s counsel achieved excellent results in what may properly be viewed as a landmark case. Because the panel vacated the underlying lodestar amount, however, the panel deferred ruling on whether the district court’s use of 1.7 and 2.0 multipliers to enhance the lodestar was proper. The panel instructed the district court to reconsider on remand the amount of the enhancement after it recalculates the lodestar amount.
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