In
Wolfel v. United States,
The plaintiff, a tax attorney, obtained the release of certain Internal Revenue Service documents,
Falcone v. Internal Revenue Service,
Several courts which have denied attorney’s fees to
pro se
non-lawyer FOIA plaintiffs have raised but not decided the issue of whether such litigants who also happen to be attorneys should be treated differently.
See, e.g., Cunningham v. F.B.I.,
We hold that the same reasons which led us, and the majority of the other circuits, 2 to deny attorney’s fees to pro se non-lawyer FOIA plaintiffs apply with equal validity to pro se attorney plaintiffs.
The award of attorney’s fees to successful FOIA plaintiffs was intended to relieve plaintiffs with legitimate claims of the burden of legal costs; it was not intended as a reward for successful claimants or as a penalty against the government.
See Wolfel,
A second reason for denying fees to
pro se
FOIA plaintiffs is that the provision for attorney’s fees was intended to encourage potential claimants to seek legal advice before commencing litigation.
Barrett,
A final concern in denying attorney’s fees to
pro se
plaintiffs is the fear of creating a “cottage industry” for claimants using the Act solely as a way to generate fees rather than to vindicate personal claims.
Wolfel,
The Second Circuit has suggested that
pro se
plaintiffs, presumably including attorneys, could recover fees if they showed that prosecution of their FOIA claim diverted them from income-producing activity.
Crooker v. Dept. of Treasury,
In Wolfel, we rejected the minority view that successful pro se FOIA plaintiffs should be awarded attorney’s fees despite the fact that the public may have benefit-ted from the actions of those litigants. The fortuitous fact that such a FOIA plaintiff is also an attorney makes no difference. Both a client and an attorney are necessary ingredients for an award of fees in a FOIA case.
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The plaintiff in
Cuneo
was also represented without compensation by his law partners but the court’s reasoning appears to apply broadly to all
pro se
attorney plaintiffs.
See Cox v. United States Dept. of Justice,
.
See
cases cited at
Wolfel v. United States,
. We note that neither this case nor Wolfel involves the situation where the plaintiff obtains the services of a legal services organization or an attorney on a contingency basis. We express no view on the availability of attor- ' ney’s fees in such cases.
. In
Ellis v. Cassidy,
