Lead Opinion
Opinion for the Court by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
Concurring opinion by Circuit Judge TATEL.
Dissenting opinion by Senior Circuit Judge RANDOLPH.
This is thе second time William Davy has appealed the denial of his request for an award of attorney’s fees and costs under the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”). Davy first appealed the district court’s finding that he was ineligible, and this court reversed, holding that he was eligible as a prevailing party and remanding the case for the district court to determine whether Davy was entitled to fees upon applying a familiar four-factor test. Davy v. CIA (“Davy I”),
I.
The details of Davy’s two FOIA requests are set forth in Davy I. Suffice it to say, in 1999, six years after Davy, acting pro se, filed his first FOIA request, the agency responded by refusing disclosure, stating that it could neither confirm nor deny the existence of responsive records due to national security reasons, citing FOIA exemptions (1) and (3).
Davy thereafter timely filed a motion for attorney’s fees under 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(E),
II.
This court, drawing on the Senate and House Committee reports for FOIA and its amendments,
The touchstone of a court’s discretionary decision under section 552(a)(4)(E) must be whether an award of attorney fees is necessary to implement the FOIA. A grudging application of this provision, which would dissuade those who have been denied information from invoking their right to judicial review, would be clearly contrary to congressional intent.
Id. at 715; see also LaSalle Extension Univ. v. FTC,
The first factor assesses “the public benefit derived from the case,” Tax Analysts,
The information Davy requested — about individuals allegedly involved in President Kennedy’s assassination — serves a public benefit. See, e.g., Allen v. CIA,
The agency’s position — that the district court erred by failing to focus on the value of the litigation — presents a variation on its position, rejected in Davy I, that Davy did not “substantially prevail” in his litigation and so was not eligible for fees. Davy I,
Although the district court’s determination that the first factor weighed in Davy’s favor was not an abuse of discretion, we reach a different conclusion regarding its determination of the other factors. The second and third factors, which are often considered together, assess whether a plaintiff has “sufficient private incentive to seek disclosure” without attorney’s fees. See Tax Analysts,
First, the mere intention to publish a book does not necessarily mean that the nature of the plaintiffs interest is “purely commercial.” See S. Rep. No. 93-854, at 19. Surely every journalist or scholar may hope to earn a living plying his or her trade, but that alone cannot be sufficient to preclude an award of attorney’s fees under FOIA. “If newspapers and television news shows had to show the absence of commercial interests before they could win attorney’s fees in FOIA cases, very few, if any, would ever prevail.” Tax Analysts,
Essentially, the first three factors assist a court in distinguishing between reques-ters who seek documents for public informational purposes and those who seek documents for private advantage. The former engage in the kind of endeavor for which a public subsidy makes some sense, and they typically need the fee incentive to pursue litigation; the latter cannot deserve a subsidy as they benefit only themselves and typically need no incentive to litigate. Thus, on the one hand, the court has reversed an award of attorney’s fees where the plaintiff was an attorney requesting information in preparation of private litigation for a client, Cotton,
Second, in finding that Davy’s interest was “purely commercial, the district court relied exclusively on the fact that Davy is the author of Let Justice Be Done, a book about the investigation by New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison and the trial of Clay Shaw for conspiracy to assassinate President Kennedy.” Yet this book was published in 1999, prior to the release of documents by the agency. This alone suffices to show that the district court abused its discretion. But even if the district court had been correct about the book, such scholarly interests are not “clearly commercial” under this circuit’s precedents. Davy’s FOIA requests for information related to the agency’s QKEN-CHANT and ZRCliff projects, which were based on his interest in the agency’s alleged involvement in the assassination, Davy I,
Additionally, Davy states in his sworn declarations that his “primary motivation was to obtain records which would shed light on [the Garrison] investigation, ... and present an accurate historical record regarding it,” and that his book made a “miniscule” amount of money. Davy Supp. Deck ¶ 4. Contrary to the district court’s speculation and the agency’s suggestion that because his book, out of print since 2004, was for sale on Amazon.com he must be commercially profiting, Davy stated that he received no money from such second-hand sales. Davy Supp. Deck ¶¶ 4-5. These are not the circumstances indicative of private, self-interested motivation or commercial pecuniary benefit that the court has recognized “will be sufficient to insure the vindication of the rights given in the FOIA.” Fenster,
To the extent that Davy has a scholarly interest in publishing publicly valuable information in a book, his interest is at most “quasi-commercial,” Campbell v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice,
Davy was thus much like a journalist who “gathers information of potential interest to a segment of the public, uses [his]
The fourth factor considers whether the agency’s opposition to disclosure “had a reasonable basis in law,” Tax Analysts,
The agency did not reach an agreement to disclose the requested documents until March 2001, after Davy filed his lawsuit and four months after he filed his second FOIA request. Davy observes on appeal that the agreement coincided with the filing date for meet-and-confer statements under Local Rule 16 of the district court, and that it took more than a year for the agency to process and release a moderate quantity of documents. That aside, although the agency invoked FOIA Exemptions 1 and 3 when it finally responded to Davy’s first FOIA request, it provided no such legal basis in response to Davy’s second FOIA request. Failing to explain the basis for deferring its response to his second request until after he filed suit is exactly the kind of behavior the fee provision was enacted to combat. For the agency to receive the benefit of the fourth factor it must present at least a “colorable basis in law” for its failure to respond to Davy’s second request, and it has not done so. See Nationwide,
Accordingly, because the record reflects that he is the type of requester Congress contemplated when it sought “to lower the ‘often ... insurmountable barriers presented by court costs and attorney fees to the average person requesting information under the FOIA,’ ” Tax Analysts,
Notes
. Under FOIA, ‘‘[t]he 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)(i).
. See S.Rep. No. 93-854, at 17-20 (1974), reprinted in H. Comm, on Gov’t Operations, S. Comm, on Judiciary, 94th Cong., Freedom of Information Act and Amendments of 1974, Source Book II 151, 169-72 (1975).
. Our dissenting colleague inappropriately shifts the focus from the request's topic and purpose to the specific content of the released documents. The dissent ignores both Davy's four-page sworn description of the newly released information and its significance to scholars in understanding events relating to the assassination of President Kennedy, and the fact that the government never challenged his description of the value of this information. Even on appeal the agency never takes issue with the point-by-point substantive analysis Davy presented, and instead asserts only that to be entitled to fees Davy must show that "his current work [is] likely to have an impact comparable to a widely circulated journal” or "significantly advances the public understanding of an issue important to ‘making vital political decisions,’ per Fenster," Appellee's Br. at 13. Putting aside the fact that the court does not typically rehabilitate such an "asserted but unanalyzed argument,” Duncan’s Point Lot Owners Ass’n v. FERC,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
Agreeing completely with Judge Rogers’s application of our long-standing test for FOIA fee eligibility, I join her opinion in full. I write only to clarify a single point: that William Davy presents a paradigmatic case for the award of attorney’s fees even if we step back from the particulars of the test the dissent so maligns and focus instead on FOIA’s purposes. While recognizing the test as binding precedent, the dissent nonetheless casts aspersions on Davy’s case and subjects it to newly minted standards inconsistent with the very purpose of FOIA’s fees provision. Indeed, because the barriers the dissent would erect appear insuperable, I read it not as a dissent from this Court’s opinion, but from
Begin with the first factor, which asks whether the FOIA requester pursued the litigation in the public interest. Maj. Op. 1159. The purpose of this inquiry is obvious: Congress meant to incentivize the pursuit of public informational interests, not the mining of government records for private advantage. E.g., Tax Analysts v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice,
The dissent disagrees with this view of both the law and the facts. As to the law, the dissent argues that a FOIA request’s purpose is irrelevant, Dis. Op. 1167-68, citing our standard in Cotton v. Heyman,
In this case, no evidence exists that the release of the two non-exempt documents will contribute to the public’s ability to make vital political choiсes. Plaintiff does not even argue this point. Rather, she sought these documents for the sole purpose of facilitating her employment discrimination suit.
This brings us to the second and third factors, which inquire into the nature of the requester’s interest in the records and whether the requester can be expected to benefit commercially from obtaining the documents. Maj. Op. 1159-60. The reason for these inquiries is obvious as well: Congress did not intend to subsidize those who stand to profit from pursuing litigation and so need no subsidy. See, e.g., Cuneo v. Rumsfeld,
That said, it is worth pausing to consider why we ask whether a requester pursues information in a journalistic capacity. Scholars, authors, and journalists straddle the incentive inquiry framed by the first three factors of the entitlement test. Always searching for information that the public will want to consume, journalists must surely be thought of as pursuing records in the public interest. At the same time, because they have a strong profit motive in that pursuit, they need fees less than most. Echoing the judgment of Congress as expressed in the legislative history, we have long resolved the tension by considering scholarly or journalistic interests to be public rather than private. See Maj. Op. 1160, 1161-62 (collecting authorities). The dissent faults that judgment, but in reality, it cannot itself decide which side of the debate to join. In one breath it decries awarding fees to large media organizations that profit from obtaining and reselling informatiоn, Dis. Op. 1166 & n. 1; in the next it faults Davy for his inability to prove that he had already revealed the information he obtained to the public, hypothesizing that the records went straight from some government file cabinet to Davy’s closet, id. at 1167. Of course, the only kinds of FOIA requesters who can prove that they almost immediately circulate the information they obtain belong to “the group that is in the business of profiting from the information when it winds up in their newspapers and magazines and TV shows.” Id. at 1166 n. 1. So in the dissent’s world no one can obtain fees: journalists circulate their information too successfully and so are excluded, while independent scholars such as Davy fail to circulate their information quickly or widely enough.
This Catch-22 is completely at odds with the intent of Congress’s fees provision. Scholars like Davy often lack resources and need more time to research their
A brief word on the entitlement test’s final element, which serves a different purpose from the first three. Asking whether the government had a reasonable basis for withholding documents, this fourth factor is intended to disincentivize requesters from complaining about reasonable with-holdings while incentivizing the government to promptly turn over — before litigation is required — any documents that it ought not withhold. That purpose will be ill-served if the government can prevail on this factor by saying nothing and forcing the requester to sue, only then to offer “no resistance,” Appellant’s Br. 19, as it did here. As we explained in Nationwide,
In short, our four-factor test is a heuristic, a somewhat crude mechanism for testing whether fees in a particular case are consistent with the purposes for which Congress subsidized FOIA litigation. We hardly need such a divining rod for Davy, whose entitlement to fees is clear as day. The dissent accuses us of rendering the test “more senseless,” Dis. Oр. 1166, yet it is the dissent’s requirements that would divorce the test from the ends Congress intended FOIA fees to serve.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
Precedent forces the majority to apply a longstanding test for determining whether to award attorney’s fees. It is time to recognize that this test is a legal relic. It is derived not from the statute but from statements in committee reports, it is inconsistent with now-settled FOIA law that the identity of the requester is irrelevant, see, e.g., NLRB v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
The majority holds that Davy should be treated as a journalist and is entitled to attorney’s fees because he provided a public benefit by gathering valuable information through this lawsuit. This is unsupported and unsupportable. Davy wrote a book a few years before the government complied with his FOIA request. I do not know if that makes him a “journalist.” I
Even if his documents amounted to anything, Davy failed to show that “the public” — whoever that might be — was somehow better off as a result оf his FOIA request. Davy obtained the documents in 2001, two years after his book was published. He submitted no evidence that he showed the documents to anyone else (other than his lawyer and the court) or that he posted them online or that he published anything about them or that he plans to do so in the future. For all we know the documents are gathering dust in the corner of his closet. Tax Analysts stressed that the very small circulation of a publication was a reason for denying fees, see Tax Analysts v. Dep’t of Justice,
In short, Davy did not even come close to satisfying his burden of showing that his lawsuit produced somеthing of value. See Hensley v. Eckerhart,
I will end with a few words about the concurring opinion. Judge Tatel says that what matters in terms of public benefit are “the reasons [the documents] were requested.” Op. of Judge Tatel 1. He caps this off by telling us that Davy “sought records regarding the assassination of an American president.” Id. at 2. Judge Ta-tel’s first proposition misstates the law; his second misstates the facts. As I have already said, the law of the circuit is clear: the public benefit criterion favors awarding fees only when “the complainant’s victory is likely to add to the fund of information that citizens may use in making vital political choices.” Cotton,
. If there is any group that does not need an extra incentive — in the form of attorney’s fees — to bring FOIA cases, it is the group that is in the business of profiting from the information when it winds up in their newspapers and magazines and TV shows.
