Joseph Tilghman Brice, Laurajean Councill Brice, and Joseph Osier Brice (collectively “the Brices”) appeal the deci
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sion of the Court of Federal Claims denying their motion for attorneys’ fees and costs made during proceedings under the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986 (the “Vaccine Act”), Pub. L. No. 99-660, tit. Ill, 100 Stat. 3755 (codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. §§ 300aa-l through 300aa-34).
See Brice v. Sec’y of Health & Human Servs.,
I
This is the second time we have been asked to review a decision of the Court of Federal Claims concerning the Brices’ claim for compensation under the Vaccine Act. Joseph Tilghman Brice, a minor child, received a Measles, Mumps, and Rubella (“MMR”) vaccination on April 30, 1992.
See Brice v. Sec’y of Health & Human Servs.,
The Special Master assigned to the Brices’ case dismissed their claim for lack of jurisdiction, because it was filed more than seven months after the statutorily prescribed date by which they were required to file a petition for compensation. Id. The Brices sought review of the Special Master’s decision in the Court of Federal Claims. Id. That court determined that the Brices’ untimely filing might be excusable under the doctrine of equitable tolling and remanded the case to the Special Master to determine whether, in fact, their untimeliness was excusable in light of the circumstances surrounding the prosecution of them claim. Id. Ultimately, the Special Master determined that the Brices’ untimeliness was not excusable under the doctrine of equitable tolling. The court affirmed the Special Master’s decision to dismiss. Id. at 1370.
The Brices timely appealed that decision to this court. Joseph’s parents, who are not attorneys, wished to represent themselves as well as their minor son in proceedings before this court. However, citing Federal Circuit Rule 47.3, 1 the Clerk of the Court informed Joseph’s parents that they could not represent their son’s interests because' “[a] nonattorney ... may not represent another person[]” in this court and that “in order for [the appeal] to proceed, [Joseph] must be represented by counsel.” (J.A. at 16.) As a result, the Brices retained the services of present counsel to represent their son’s interests in the appeal.
We affirmed the decision of the Court of Federal Claims. We rejected the argument, advanced on appeal, that an untimely filed claim for compensation could still be within the jurisdiction of the Court of Federal Claims under the doctrine of equitable tolling and held that equitable tolling is never available for claims arising under section 16(a)(2) of the Vaccine Act. Id. at 1372-74.
On May 17, 2002, the Brices moved the Court of Federal Claims for attorneys’ fees and costs incurred in connection with their first appeal to this court. The Special Master concluded that she lacked jurisdiction to award attorneys’ fees because the Brices were unable to cure the jurisdictional defects that prevented her from
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considering their petition on the merits.
Brice v. Sec’y of Health & Human Servs.,
No. 95-835V,
On September 5, 2002, the Brices moved the Court of Federal Claims to review the Special Master’s decision denying their motion for attorneys’ fees. In reviewing the Special Master’s decision, the Court of Federal Claims determined that, in our decision in
Martin v. Secretary of Health and Human Services,
II
On appeal, the Brices argue anew for “a narrow ‘Rule of Necessity’ exception to the holding of
Martin,
so that pro se parents in Vaccine Act cases dismissed on jurisdictional grounds can obtain legal counsel in this Court, and therefore obtain judicial review in this Court, of claims involving their minor children.” Courts have historically invoked the Rule of Necessity to permit judges, under limited circumstances, to participate in cases in which they might otherwise be disqualified.
See United States v. Will,
Although the facts of this case are not those which historically lend themselves to application to the Rule of Necessity, we perceive the Brices to propose a rule that would require us to revisit and redefine the contours of jurisdiction under the Vaccine Act. As such, the Brices’ appeal presents issues of law that we review
de novo. See Martin,
Ill
The Vaccine Act contemplates that reasonable attorneys’ fees and other costs shall comprise part of the compensation awarded to a successful claimant. 42 U.S.C. § 300aa-15(e)(l)(A), (B) (2000). Even unsuccessful claimants, whose claims do not warrant the award of any compensation, may receive reasonable attorneys’ fees and other costs if the Special Master *868 or the court “determines that the petition was brought in good faith and there was a reasonable basis for the claim for which the petition was brought.” 42 U.S.C. § 300aa-15(e)(l)(B) (2000).
The jurisdiction of the Court of Federal Claims to-award attorneys’ fees under the Vaccine Act is not unlimited. The court must have jurisdiction over a petitioner’s claim for compensation before it can award attorneys’ fees.
See Martin,
At oral argument, counsel for the appellants proposed a construction of section 15(e)(3) that would have unfortunate consequences in light of our decision in Martin. Counsel asserted that section 15(e)(3) precludes an attorney from ever entering into a fee agreement with a claimant’s family that contemplates the collection of a fee in the event that the claim is dismissed for- want of jurisdiction. This is so, because .the preclusive effect of section 15(e)(3) purportedly applies in cases, like the one at bar, where a claim for compensation is dismissed for want of jurisdiction as well as those in which the claim is decided on the merits. Thus, where a claim is dismissed as time-barred, as it was here, an attorney could never collect a fee.
The Brices suggest that the confluence of section 15(e)(3), so construed, with our decision in MaHin and the prohibition in this court on nonlawyer parents from representing the interests of their children, puts them and other similarly situated families in an unfortunate position. Faced with any risk of dismissal on jurisdictional grounds in the Court of Federal Claims, such families are at the mercy of attorneys willing to litigate their appeal before us pro bono publico. The appellants’ counsel suggested that fee agreements that contravened section 15(e)(3) would be unenforceable as against public policy and might even subject the attorney to sanctions as well as disbarment. Thus, the Brices argue, the Rule of Necessity militates in favor of a narrow exception to our decision in Martin permitting the award of attorneys’ fees in cases where Vaccine Act *869 claims are dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
We are not persuaded that an exception to our holding in
Martin
is necessary to further the goals of the Vaccine Act. As an initial matter, it is not entirely certain, as the Brices argue, that the Court of Federal Claims would have continuing jurisdiction to disapprove a fee agreement after it has dismissed a compensation claim for want of jurisdiction.
See Beck,
Moreover, we think the Brices have overlooked a key limitation on the scope of section 15(e)(3), and have consequently misconstraed that provision of the Vaccine Act. Section 15(e)(3), by its very terms, only regulates attorneys’ fees “charge[d] ... for services in connection with a petition filed under section 300aa-ll.” 42 U.S.C. § 300aa-15(e)(3) (2000) (emphasis added). We hold that a petition for compensation filed under the Vaccine Act that is dismissed for want of jurisdiction is not “a petition filed under section 300aa-ll” as provided in section 15(e)(3). Therefore, section 15(e)(3) does not preclude an attorney from charging a fee for litigating an appeal of a decision of the Court of Federal Claims dismissing a claim for Vaccine Act compensation for want of jurisdiction.
We were confronted with a similar issue in
Martin,
where it was argued that the Vaccine Act gave the Court of Federal Claims jurisdiction to award attorneys’ fees to a claimant whose petition was dismissed on jurisdictional grounds.
See Martin,
Our construction of section 15(e)(3) obviates the concerns the Brices raise regarding access to legal representation in this court in appeals that raise jurisdictional questions under the Vaccine Act. In the future, families such as the Brices, whose claims for compensation present jurisdictional questions, are free to conclude fee agreements with attorneys willing to represent them at any stage of the prosecution of their claim. In the event their claims are finally dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, section 15(e)(3) would not stand in the way of an attorney’s efforts to collect on such an agreement a reasonable fee for representing the family in the appeal of the dismissal to us.
IV
For the reasons stated above, we affirm the decision of the Court of Federal Claims affirming the Special Master’s dis *870 missal of the Brices’ motion for attorneys fees and costs.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Federal Circuit Rule 47.3 states in pertinent part: "An individual (not a corporation, partnership, organization, or other legal entity) may choose to be represented by counsel or to represent himself or herself pro se, but may not be represented by a nonattorney. ”
. Section 300aa-ll of the Vaccine Act, entitled "Petitions for compensation,” sets forth,
inter alia,
the prima facie elements for a Vaccine Act claim. -
See
42 U.S.C. § 300aa-11(c)(1) (setting forth the required contents of a petition for compensation for a vaccine-related injury or death under the Vaccine Act);
Martin,
