The plaintiff in this suit under the Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552a, obtained a judgment in the district court for $1,000 in damages and some $6,000 in attorney’s fees and costs. The government filed a timely notice of appeal to this court but two and a half months later announced that it was “withdrawing” its appeal. The plaintiff responded with a motion for some $800 in attorney’s fees incurred in preparing to defend the appeal and in preparing the mo *37 tion for fees. . The motion mentions costs but contains no specific request for them, so we shall treat it as seeking just attorney’s fees.
The Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure make no provision for an appellant’s withdrawing his appeal without either the agreement of the appellee or leave of the court of appeals. Rule 42(b), however, authorizes the court of appeals to dismiss an appeal on the appellant’s motion “upon such terms as may be agreed upon by the parties or fixed by the court,” so we shall treat the government’s March 4 submission as a Rule 42(b) motion and the plaintiff’s response as a motion (also under Rule 42(b)) to condition the grant of the government’s motion on payment of the plaintiff’s attorney’s fees.
The question we must decide — surprisingly, it is one of first impression — is whether the phrase “upon such terms as may be ... fixed by the court” is a general authorization to the courts of appeals to require appellants to pay appellees’ appellate legal fees. No court has gone so far.
Shellman v. United States Lines, Inc.,
We are unwilling to read into the undefined and unelaborated word “terms” in Rule 42(b) a general power to award attorney’s fees to appellees. The award of such fees to a prevailing party is still exceptional in the American legal system; it should not be presumed lightly from general language. And in the context of Rule 42(b) it would be a curiously asymmetrical result: only appellees would ever benefit from it. Statutes providing expressly for the award of attorney’s fees frequently are asymmetrical (e.g., Clayton Act, § 4, 15 U.S.C. § 15), but the asymmetry is invariably in favor of prevailing plaintiffs and many prevailing appellees are, of course, defendants.
A power to condition dismissal of an appeal on the award of attorney’s fees to the appellee would also either duplicate or clash with Rule 38 of the appellate rules. This rule (which is based on and is largely interchangeable with 28 U.S.C. § 1912, see
Exhibitors Poster Exchange, Inc. v. National Screen Service Corp.,
A power to condition a Rule 42(b) dismissal on payment of the appellee’s attorney’s fees which could be exercised only in accordance with the standard of Rule 38 (frivolousness) would be redundant, since *38 after an appeal is dismissed under Rule 42(b) the appellee can always move for attorney’s fees under Rule 38 if he thinks the appeal was frivolous. On the other hand, a power to condition dismissal on payment of attorney’s fees which was broader than the power to award fees under Rule 38 would create an inexplicable difference in the standards under the two rules — a difference moreover that would discourage voluntary dismissals. No appellant, unless his appeal was frivolous, would move to dismiss it if he thought that by doing so he was making himself liable to pay the appellee’s attorney’s fees. His rational course would be to wait for the appellee to move to dismiss. Since the appellee’s motion would not be governed by Rule 42(b), which is limited to voluntary dismissals, the appellee could not ask for attorney’s fees under it; and if he asked for fees under Rule 38 he would have to show that the appeal was frivolous.
Rule 38, of course, is not the only basis on which appellate attorney’s fees can be awarded to a litigant. Apart from specific statutes, such as 28 U.S.C. § 1912 and the Privacy Act itself, of which more later, there is judicial authority for awarding fees when an appeal has been filed in bad faith. See, e.g.,
Satoskar v. Indiana Real Estate Comm’n,
' The plaintiff has another string to her bow. The Privacy Act contains provisions authorizing the award of attorney’s fees in various types of suits under the Act, and the plaintiff quotes from one of these provisions, 5 U.S.C. § 552a(g)(4)(B), in an effort to establish an alternative basis for an award of her fees in this court. Other statutory provisions for attorneys’ fees have been understood to make both fees on appeal and fees incurred in proving a previous request for fees recoverable in an appropriate case (the plaintiff’s motion seeks both), see
Bond v. Stanton,
Therefore, we shall grant the government’s motion to dismiss but as a condition of granting it we shall exercise our powers under Rule 42(b) to order the government to agree to the reopening of the case in the district court for the limited purpose of determining the plaintiff’s statutory right, if any, to a supplemental award of attorney’s fees, to cover the fees she incurred in these appellate proceedings.
So Ordered.
