OPINION OF THE COURT
Dale Cunningham, who is not a lawyer, filed and prosecuted on his own behalf a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit against the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). Shortly after the suit was filed, the FBI released to Cunningham 860 pages of requested documents. The district court therefore found that Cunningham had “substantially prevailed” in the case despite an advеrse summary judgment as to most of the remaining documents. The court awarded Cunningham, as the prevailing party, $523 in reimbursement for out-of-pocket disbursements and an additional $750 “in lieu of attorney’s fees.” On appeal the FBI seeks review only of the $750 award and raises a single narrow statutory question: whether a prevailing pro se litigant who is not an attorney may recover attorney’s fees under the FOIA.
Although this question has not until now been squarely before this Court, it has been
II.
In the absence of any express waiver of sovereign immunity, costs and expenses of litigation are not recoverable from the United States. See, e. g., Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. Wilderness Society,
The Court may assess against the United States reasonable attorney fees and other litigation costs reasonably incurred in any case under this section in which the complainant has substantially prevailed.
5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(E).
As an initial matter this statutory provisiоn for “attorney fees” would appear by its own terms to be predicated on the presence of an attorney. Indeed, the restrictive nature of the statutory language is reflected in the award of the district court, which provided Cunningham with $750 “in lieu of attorney’s fees” [emphasis added]. This phrasing demonstrates an apparent recognition that the award does not come within the explicit language of the statute. Yet if the statute does not provide explicitly for such an award, some clearly implicit authorization must be found for whát is in effect a waiver of sovereign immunity. And this authorization must derive directly from the language employed by Congress in providing for the award of fees, or the plain meaning of the statute will bar recovery regardless of other concerns. See, e. g., United States v. Rutherford,
Although the term “attorney fees” by itself does not admit of substantial ambiguity, the complete phrase “reasonable attorney fees and other litigation costs reasonably incurred” may be more amenable to differing interpretations. The District of Columbia Circuit has read that phrase to mean that only litigation costs need be “reasonably incurred,” while attorney fees may be awarded even when a pro se litigant has not incurred any such fees. Cuneo v. Rumsfeld,
The situation of a pro se litigant differs from that of a person represented by a lawyer in several material respects. First, it is far from clear that proceeding as a pro se litigant involves the same sorts of financial burdens and оbstacles as those inherent in retaining a lawyer. This is not to minimize the difficulty and effort involved in proceeding pro se. A person may devote considerable time and energy to such an enterprise, foregoing other possible endeavors to which that time could be applied. Yet it cannot be said that this burden entails the same financial liаbilities as those borne by one who retains an attorney and becomes indebted for substantial sums of money. Although pro se litigants are likely to incur non-monetary costs that might serve as the basis for compensation, the same may be said for litigants who retain counsel. The latter group must still devote time and energy to their cases, yet the statute doеs not compensate them for any more than the actual attorney fees and litigation costs incurred. A second consideration is that pro se representation may not serve the aims of FOIA to the extent that representation by an attorney does. As several courts have noted, self-representation does not supply the оbjectivity and detachment that an outside attorney can provide as a check against groundless or unnecessary litigation. See Barrett v. Bureau of Customs,
An additional difficulty with a rule permitting fee awards to pro se parties is exemplified by the situation in Crooker v. Department of Justice,
The Second Circuit resolved this difficulty by suggesting that attorney fees might be available to some pro se litigants, but only those who could demonstrate that they had foregone some other income-producing activity in prosecuting their FOIA lawsuits. See id. But this proposed line — between those who forfeit income and those who do not — however initially appealing as a way to meet the concern, ultimately creates its own anomalous result. If Congress actually intended that pro se litigants were to re
It may be that such awards, if available, might nevertheless serve some of the policies that Congress had in mind when it authorized attorney fee awards for FOIA litigants. Payment of such awards to pro se parties would offer affirmative incentives, in the form of financial gain, to the vindication of individual rights under the Act, and might provide additional deterrence to violation by government agencies of their statutory obligations.
This congressional choice not to authorize awards other than those to compensate for costs actually incurred must be seen as reflecting a balance among several competing concerns likely to be of importance to Congress: enforcement of individual rights under the Act, encouragement of compliance by government agencies and officials, avoidance of frivolous lawsuits, and the protection of the public fisc against unwarranted expenses. Although providing attorney fees to pro se litigants may serve some of these interests by increasing enforcement of legitimate rights, it may disserve others by encouraging lawsuits aimed more at recovering fees than at uncovering the requested documents. The best accommodation of these competing interests is a proper subject for political debate. But where, as here, Congress has set out its proposed balance of these concerns with reasonable clarity, judicial deviation from the resolution articulated by Congress cannot be justified simply because a different outcome would further one of the several policies that Congress had taken into account.
III.
Guided by the language employed by Congress to allow attorney fee awards to
Notes
. We do not mean by this interpretation of the statute to foreclose an attorney fee award for a litigant represented by an attorney who, for whatever reason, does not charge the litigant for the services rendered. This Court has held that attorney fees may be awarded under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634 (ADEA), even when the litigant has been represented by a non-profit legal services organization that provided its services free of charge. Rodriquez v. Taylor,
As a general matter, awards of attorneys’ fees where otherwise authorized are not obviated by the fact that individual plaintiffs are not obligatеd to compensate their counsel. The presence of an attorney-client relationship suffices to entitle prevailing litigants to receive fee awards. ... Of course, since the object of fee awards is not to provide a wind-fall to individual plaintiffs, fee awards must accrue to counsel.
Id. at 1245, citing Hairston v. R & R Apartments,
Similarly, we do not decide here whether a litigant represented by salaried in-house counsel may recover an award for attorney fees, see Consumers Union v. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
. This problem does not arise to the sаme extent when, as in Rodriquez v. Taylor,
It is true, of course, that even if a cash award were available to the pro se litigant, its availability would be subject to the discretion of the trial court. See Lindy Bros. Builders, Inc. v. American Radiator & Standard Sanitary Corp.,
. It should be noted that no class of persons is necessarily limited to pro se status. The statutory provision for attorney fees provides an incentive for private attorneys to take FOIA cases on a contingent basis, so long as the case appears to be meritorious. In addition, legal services organizations may be available to service indigent claimants.
. Even in the absence of attorney fees, however, nothing in the statute precludes a pro se litigant from recovering litigatiоn costs actually incurred. Indeed, Cunningham has been awarded $523 in such costs. Even in the case of pro se litigants, therefore, the government faces the prospect of a financial penalty if its resistance to a FOIA request is deemed unwarranted. It does not appear likely that the deterrent effect on a government agency of a $500 award would be significantly less than that of a $1200 award.
