Morrison v. Ayoob
Morrison v. Ayoob
Opinion of the Court
I vote for rehearing because of two primary concerns.
First, I am disturbed by the fact that a law firm will be awarded over $5,000.00 solely for preparing and advancing a fee petition covering legal services alleged to be worth approximately $17,000.00. The preparation of that petition had nothing to do with the merits of the plaintiffs’ original claim or with the social policy of encouraging lawyers to counsel clients who would otherwise go unrepresented. Aside from the question whether, absent special circumstances, one group of lawyers should file a fee petition for lawyers who have actually litigated a controversy, I do not believe that we should sanction such a large award of fees when counsel hires more expensive counsel to advance a fee petition.
Second, and perhaps more important, I note that the Supreme Court has recently heard argument in a case involving the fundamental question presented by this appeal: whether judicial immunity bars the award of attorneys’ fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 against members of the judiciary who have acted in their official capacity. Pulliam v. Allen, 51 U.S.L.W. 3770 (U.S.
Judges HUNTER, WEIS, and BECKER join in this statement.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Patricia MORRISON, Blanche Lowe, Rachel Dawkins, George Black, and all other similarly situated v. John J. AYOOB, Hugo R. Iorfido, Ross M. Keefer, Lewis E. Kirchner, Joseph J. Liberati, Stephen Mihalic, Arthur L. Schlemmer, George L. Shaffer, Milton H. Richael, individually and as District Magistrates in the County of Beaver and their successors in office
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published