Opinion for the Court by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
This is an appeal from the denial of attorneys fees under the Equal Access to
I.
On February 6, 2007, the FAA filed a complaint against Green Aviation Management Co., LLC, alleging that on a chartered flight from New Jersey to the Bahamas on December 30, 2005, returning January 2, 2006, its plane carried ten, rather than the approved nine, passengers. The tenth passenger was the daughter of the pilot, and the FAA alleged that she was either an unapproved tenth passenger or an untrained flight attendant and sought a civil penalty of $33,000 for violations of three FAA safety regulations. Green Aviation responded that the daughter was a non-required crew member, and as an employee of Green Aviation, she was permitted by FAA regulations to occupy the jump seat on the plane. On June 1, 2007, Green Aviation moved to dismiss, arguing that the daughter was an employee who only served food and drink during the flight, and noting that the FAA had already withdrawn its complaint in the certificate action against the pilots based on the same set of facts. The FAA opposed summary judgment because the daughter’s employment status was in doubt and there was no proof she was not simply coming along on vacation. On June 19, 2007, Green Aviation moved for dismissal of the complaint with prejudice on the ground, incorrectly, that the FAA failed to respond to the motion to dismiss. The ALJ denied the motions for summary disposition on June 28, 2007, finding that material disputed questions of fact remained regarding the daughter’s employment status.
Green Aviation sought reconsideration on August 3, 2007, submitting an affidavit from its customer service representative stating that the daughter functioned as a crew member on the subject flights, assigned only to serve food and drinks. The FAA responded with a newer affidavit from the customer service representative stating that her previous affidavit was incomplete and the daughter was expected to be trained to perform safety duties. The ALJ denied the motion for reconsideration and scheduled a hearing for October 16, 2007.
On September 18, 2007, Green Aviation moved to exclude the customer service representative’s testimony at the hearing, attaching an email between her and one of the flight captains in which she disclaimed knowledge of the daughter’s role on the flight. The FAA, on October 1, 2007, withdrew its complaint. In view of the withdrawal, Green Aviation moved the following day for dismissal of the proceedings with prejudice. Pursuant to 14 C.F.R. § 13.215 (2012), the ALJ dismissed the proceedings with prejudice on October 2, 2007.
Green Aviation filed an application for attorneys fees and other expenses pursu
II.
Green Aviation petitions for review, contending that Buckhannon’s interpretation of “prevailing party” does not necessarily apply to that phrase in EAJA claims under 5 U.S.C. § 504(a)(1) and that the Administrator’s analysis is contrary to precedent, inasmuch as Green Aviation obtained a court-ordered change in the legal relationship of the parties and the necessary judicial relief. We review
de novo
whether Green Aviation was a “prevailing party” under 5 U.S.C. § 504(a)(1),
see Turner v. Nat’l Transp. Safety Bd.,
A.
The EAJA provides that “[a]n agency that conducts an adversary adjudication shall award, to a prevailing party other than the United States, fees and other expenses incurred by that party ..., unless the adjudicative officer of the agency finds that the position of the agency was substantially justified or that special circumstances make an award unjust.” 5 U.S.C. § 504(a)(1). The Supreme Court interpreted the phrase “prevailing party” in a different fee-shifting statute in
Buckhannon,
holding that it was insufficient that a plaintiffs lawsuit may have led to “a nonjudicial alteration of actual circumstances,”
The court has not expressly decided that the
Buckhannon
interpretation of “prevailing party” applies to the EAJA’s administrative adjudication provision,
see Thomas v. Nat’l Sci. Found.,
Green Aviation contends that
Buckhannon
should not control the meaning of “prevailing party” in section 504(a)(1) civil penalty proceedings on the basis of several policy reasons, including the potential creation of a perverse incentive for the FAA to file unfounded complaints that it could later withdraw after the defendant has incurred monetary and other costs. As Green Aviation points out, unlike Fed.R.Civ.P. 41, which grants a judge discretion to dismiss with or without prejudice after approving a voluntary withdrawal of a complaint, the FAA regulation mandates dismissal with prejudice,
see
14 C.F.R. § 13.215 (2012). As a result, if the FAA is correct that Buckhannon’s interpretation of “prevailing party” turns on the judge’s discretion, then application of
Buckhannon
in this context would permit the FAA to avoid fees, regardless of whether the complaint was frivolous or otherwise not substantially justified, by withdrawing its complaint prior to or during a hearing. This circumstance, however problematic, is insufficient to prevent application of
Buckhannon
to the administrative provision of the EAJA, 5 U.S.C. § 504(a)(1). First, the court has applied
Buckhannon
to attorneys fee applications in another administrative setting,
see Alegría,
B.
Upon the FAA’s withdrawal of its complaint against Green Aviation, the ALJ was required to dismiss the proceedings with prejudice. FAA regulations provide:
At any time before or during a hearing, an agency attorney may withdraw a complaint ... without the consent of the administrative law judge. If an agency attorney withdraws the complaint ..., the administrative law judge shall dismiss the proceedings under this subpart •with prejudice.
14 C.F.R. § 13.215 (2012). The FAA found that Green Aviation was not a “prevailing party” because the regulation did not provide any discretion to the ALJ in whether to dismiss the complaint with or without prejudice, and thus the dismissal order lacked the “judicial imprimatur” required by
Buckhannon,
In applying Buckhannon, the court considers a three-part test for determining whether one is a “prevailing party”:
(1) there must be a court-ordered change in the legal relationship of the parties; (2) the judgment must be in favor of the party seeking the fees; and (3) the judicial pronouncement must be accompanied by judicial relief.
Turner,
In recognizing that a defendant who obtains a favorable decision gains “prevailing party” status if “the judicial pronouncement [is] accompanied by judicial relief,”
Turner,
In
Turner,
the court was considering a certificate action against two pilots before the National Transportation Safety Board (“NTSB”).
Because the ALJ dismissed the cases without prejudice, there was nothing in th[e] case analogous to judicial relief. ... [T]he FAA had unilaterally ended the adversarial relationship between the parties, leaving them where they were before the complaint was filed. The order of the ALJ dismissing the cases was just an administrative housekeeping measure, not a form of relief, because the FAA did not need the ALJ’s permission to withdraw a complaint.
Id.
at 16 (internal citations omitted). Here, by contrast, Green Aviation and the FAA are not “where they were before the complaint was filed.”
Id.
Instead Green Aviation is “protected ... from having to pay damages,”
Straus,
Further, unlike in
Thomas,
where the grant of a preliminary injunction and partial summary judgment were “not the end but the means of the litigation,”
The FAA’s focus on the ALJ’s lack of discretion mistakes the clear import of
Buckhannon,
which is about whether the party seeking fees has “obtain[ed] any judicial relief.”
Because the October 16, 2007 dismissal order has res judicata effect and brought the February 6, 2007 proceedings against Green Aviation to an end, Green Aviation obtained sufficient judicial relief to be a prevailing party. Accordingly, we grant the petition and remand the case to the FAA Administrator to determine whether the filing of the February 6, 2007 complaint against Green Aviation was substantially justified, and if not, to determine the amount of fees to which it is entitled.
Notes
. The FAA contends that the first prong should also apply to a defendant. In
Turner,
the court noted that it need not decide whether a defendant must also establish the first prong, because in that case, the defendants did not meet the third.
