I.
A.
Michael W. Gahagan is an immigration attorney. He uses FOIA to obtain government documents. In these consolidated cases, he requested documents from various federal agencies. Gahagan requested some of these documents to assist immigration clients. Others he requested for personal reasons. He made each request in his own name.
Gahagan was unsatisfied with the Government's response to his requests. So he filed three separate pro se lawsuits. In each case, Gahagan was considered the prevailing party and moved for an award of costs and fees. Each district judge awarded Gahagan costs. But each judge also held Gahagan was ineligible for attorney fees under FOIA.
B.
"Our basic point of reference when considering the award of attorney's fees is the bedrock principle known as the American Rule: Each litigant pays his own attorney's fees, win or lose, unless a statute or contract provides otherwise." Baker Botts L.L.P. v. ASARCO LLC , --- U.S. ----,
FOIA authorizes courts to "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."
Three precedents bear on that question. The first is our decision in
The second key precedent is Kay v. Ehrler ,
The third precedent is Texas v. ICC ,
In the consolidated cases before us today, three different district judges rejected Gahagan's claims for fees. The lead opinion, by Judge Feldman, is thoughtful and well-reasoned. It notes every other court of appeals to consider the question after Kay has held FOIA disallows prevailing-party fees for pro se attorneys. And it notes ICC -which we decided just three months after Kay -says nary a word about the Supreme Court's unanimous holding in that case. Judge Feldman therefore followed Kay and denied Gahagan's fee request. See Gahagan v. U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Servs. , No. 16-cv-15438,
II.
Everyone agrees we must reverse if Cazalas remains binding precedent. Whether Cazalas is still binding turns on first- and second-order questions under the rule of orderliness. The first question is whether ICC requires us to follow Cazalas . It does not. The second question is whether Kay requires us to abandon Cazalas . It does.
In considering these questions, we follow the well-settled rule of orderliness: "[T]hree-judge panels ... abide by a prior Fifth Circuit decision until the decision is overruled, expressly or implicitly, by either the United States Supreme Court or by the Fifth Circuit sitting en banc." Cent. Pines Land Co. v. United States ,
The question at the heart of this case is whether Cazalas remains precedential after Kay . Before we reach that question, however, we must satisfy ourselves that ICC did not already answer it. After all, "whether [ Cazalas ] has been abrogated is itself a determination subject to the rule of orderliness." Stokes v. Sw. Airlines ,
ICC , however, said no such thing. At no point did ICC even cite Kay , much less analyze whether it overruled Cazalas . That is hardly surprising. Although one party cited Kay in a letter filed under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(j), neither party argued Kay had overruled Cazalas . And ICC considered an altogether different question from both Kay and Cazalas -namely, whether a state could recover fees. All ICC did was cite Cazalas on the way to answering that question.
An opinion restating a prior panel's ruling does not sub silentio hold that the prior ruling survived an uncited Supreme Court decision. See Cooper Indus., Inc. v. Aviall Servs., Inc. ,
B.
The question then is whether Cazalas survives of its own accord. Whether a Supreme Court decision implicitly overrules a prior Fifth Circuit decision depends on context. That two decisions involve different statutes is not dispositive. Sometimes a Supreme Court decision involving one statute implicitly overrules our precedent involving another statute. See Stokes ,
Here, Cazalas and Kay confronted very similar issues. They both interpreted the word "attorney" in a statute authorizing attorney fees. See
The Supreme Court has repeatedly instructed us to apply consistent interpretations to federal fee-shifting statutes. See Buckhannon Bd. & Care Home, Inc. v. W. Va. Dep't of Health & Human Res. ,
All of our sister circuits have heeded those instructions. Before Kay , the eligibility of pro se attorneys for fee awards under FOIA split the circuits. Compare Aronson v. HUD ,
Were we to hold that a pro se attorney is eligible for fees, we would be the only court of appeals to do so after Kay . "We are always chary to create a circuit split," United States v. Graves ,
Of course, the principle that federal fee-shifting statutes are interpreted consistently is not limitless. We would not apply it when statutes have materially different texts. See Buckhannon ,
Thus, the background principle-federal fee-shifting statutes should be interpreted consistently-applies with full force to the eligibility of pro se attorneys for fee awards. For that reason, Kay provided more than "mere illumination"; it "unequivocally overrule[d]" Cazalas . Petras ,
III.
The parties appropriately focus on precedent. As do we. It is nonetheless appropriate to note FOIA's text supports the result precedent commands. To paraphrase Chief Justice Marshall, it is after all a statute we are expounding. Cf. McCulloch v. Maryland ,
Kay considered the meaning of "attorney" in § 1988 's use of "a reasonable attorney's fee."
Unlike § 1988, FOIA limits awards to those fees "reasonably incurred."
Therefore, the textual argument for denying fee awards to pro se attorneys is even stronger under FOIA than under § 1988, which does not contain the independent requirement that fees be "incurred." As we noted in Claro , other courts "have recognized exceptional situations for which an award of attorney's fees is not contingent upon an obligation to pay counsel," despite the "incurred" requirement.
* * *
In the end, we have (1) Kay 's ruling that pro se attorneys cannot recover fees under § 1988 ; (2) Supreme Court instructions that federal fee-shifting statutes should be interpreted consistently; (3) the uniform agreement of our sister circuits that pro se attorneys cannot recover attorney fees under FOIA after Kay ; and (4) statutory text supporting that result. For these reasons, we hold pro se attorneys are ineligible for fee awards under FOIA. The judgments are AFFIRMED.
Notes
There are at least eleven competing terms we could use instead of "attorney fees." See Haymond v. Lundy ,
We do not understand Diaz-Esparza v. Sessions to suggest Supreme Court precedent never implicitly overrules Fifth Circuit precedent "involv[ing] different statutory provisions."
Gahagan notes this Court has described "[t]he history, language, and purpose of " FOIA as "differ[ing] significantly from those of the civil rights statutes" and treated "decisions under one of the statutes [as] inapposite to cases arising under the other." Cofield v. City of Atlanta ,
For example, after the Supreme Court rejected the "catalyst theory" of "prevailing party" status, Congress amended FOIA to make it easier for a plaintiff to recover fees. See Batton v. IRS ,
