Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge TATEL.
Pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act, appellant Judicial Watch obtained two court orders directing the government to release by specified dates videotapes relevant to the tragic events of September 11, 2001. After receiving the tapes, Judicial Watch moved for attorneys’ fees. The government argued, and the district court agreed, that the organization was ineligible for an award of fees because it had failed to “substantially prevail[]” as FOIA requires. 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(E). Because we have thrice held that court orders like the ones at issue here fender plaintiffs prevailing parties for purposes of FOIA’s attorney fee provision, we reverse.
I.
Designed “to facilitate public access to Government documents,”
Dep’t of State v. Ray,
Less than a month after Judicial Watch filed suit, the parties entered into a “Stipulation and Agreed Order” whereby the FBI acknowledged that it possessed the final videotape and agreed to disclose it, but requested additional time to redact the tape to protect personal privacy. Judicial Watch raised no objection, and the order concluded: “Upon completion of the redaction, Defendant shall produce the videotape to Plaintiff without any other re-dactions and without imposing search or duplication fees on Plaintiff in this case.” Stipulation and Agreed Order ¶ 5, Judicial Watch v. FBI, No. 06-1135 (July 19, 2006). Two days after the parties reached agreement the district court approved the order, which set an October 18 disclosure deadline. Pursuant to this order, the FBI produced a redacted version of the videotape.
About a week after bringing suit, Judicial Watch filed a second and related FOIA request with the FBI. This request sought another videotape showing the attack on the Pentagon, which was recorded by a nearby Doubletree Hotel’s security camera. Having received no response from the Bureau regarding this second request, Judicial Watch amended its complaint, then pending in district court, to include a demand for the Doubletree tape. Once again, the FBI and Judicial Watch reached agreement, entering into a second “Stipulation and Agreed Order.” And once again, the FBI acknowledged that it possessed the requested videotape and agreed to disclose it after making certain redactions. The order commanded, “Defendant shall have until and including November 9, 2006 in which to complete its redaction of the Doubletree Hotel videotape and to produce the videotape to Plaintiff without any other redactions and without imposing any search or duplication fees on Plaintiff in this case.” Stipulation and Agreed Order ¶ 7, Judicial Watch, No. 06-1135 (Aug. 14, 2006). Four days later, the district court signed off on the order. After a final stipulation and order granting the FBI additional time to complete its redactions, Judicial Watch received the Doubletree tape.
With the records it sought in hand, Judicial Watch requested approximately $12,000 in attorneys’ fees pursuant to 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(E), which allows 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.” Judicial Watch argued that it had “substantially prevailed” by securing enforceable court orders requiring the videotapes’ release by
II.
In a string of recent cases, we have considered whether plaintiffs have “substantially prevailed” for purposes of FOIA’s attorney fee provision.
See Campaign for Responsible Transplantation v. FDA,
This court once followed the so-called “catalyst theory” for attorneys’ fees in FOIA cases, meaning that “[s]o long as the ‘litigation substantially caused the requested records to be released,’ [a] FOIA plaintiff could recover attorney’s fees even though the district court had not rendered a judgment in the plaintiffs favor.”
OCAW,
We need not dwell long on this question, for
Davy v. CIA
answers it for us. There, an author filed a FOIA request seeking documents related to the CIA’s alleged role in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
This should sound familiar. If not, consider our even more recent opinion in
CRT,
a case concerning another district court order requiring an agency to disclose certain records to a requesting plaintiff.
Judicial Watch argues that “this case is factually indistinguishable from
Davy
” because here, as there, “the parties had stipulated that the defendant agency would produce the requested records by a date certain and the trial court approved the parties’ joint stipulation.” Appellant’s Opening Br. 12. We agree. The first joint stipulation and order, duly signed by the district court, stated that “[u]pon completion of the redaction, [the FBI]
shall produce
the videotape to Plaintiff’ by October 18, 2006. Stipulation and Agreed Order ¶ 5,
Judicial Watch,
No. 06-1135 (July 19, 2006) (emphasis added). Similarly, the second agreed-upon order stated that the FBI
“shall have until and including November 9, 2006
in which to complete its redaction of the Doubletree Hotel videotape and
to produce the videotape to
Plaintiff....” Stipulation and Agreed Order ¶ 7,
Judicial Watch,
No. 06-1135 (Aug. 14, 2006) (emphasis added). Merely recapitulating these terms, the third stipulation and order extended the disclosure deadline by some seven weeks. Stipulation and Agreed Order ¶¶ 7-9,
Judicial Watch,
No. 06-1135 (Nov. 8, 2006). As we said in
CRT,
“[g]iven this record, our decision in
Davy
controls the disposition here.”
CRT,
In spite of all this, the FBI argues that
OCAW
rather than
Davy
controls this case.
OCAW
involved an order, dated August 23, 1999, that the court characterized as a “status report” directing the Department of Energy to search its files and release any nonexempt records to a FOIA
Given that three post-OCAW decisions have rejected the FBI’s proposed reading of that case, we must deny the Bureau’s request that we revisit
OCAWs
underlying facts and resurrect the dispute between the dissent and majority in that case. The
OCAW
majority, focusing exclusively on the order’s “requirement that the [agency] complete its record review in 60 days,” explained: “Before August 23, the court had not ordered the Energy Department to turn over any documents; after August 23, the Energy Department still had no obligation to do so.”
Like the rest of this case, the government’s entreaty that we jettison
Davy
for
OCAW
sparks a certain sense of déjá vu. After we handed down our decision in
Davy,
the government made this precise request in its petition for panel rehearing and rehearing en banc.
See
Appellee’s Pet. for Panel Reh’g and Pet. for Reh’g En Banc,
Davy v. CIA
No. 05-5151 (D.C.Cir. Aug. 25, 2006). There, in a brief authored less than two years ago, the government argued that “[t]he order at issue here and the order in
OCAW
are materially indistinguishable.”
Id.
at 9. No judge having called for a vote on the petition, this court unanimously denied the government’s re
The FBI does make a passing attempt to distinguish this case from Davy, arguing in its brief that unlike the order there, the order here allowed the FBI to redact images for privacy reasons before turning over the requested videotapes. But at oral argument, counsel backed away from this distinction, explaining that the government would have made the same argument even if the order had required immediate disclosure. See Oral Arg. 15:00-:50. It matters little, for our conclusion would be the same in either case. Davy controls.
We return, in the end, to
Buckhannon,
under which a plaintiff becomes a prevailing party once “awarded some relief by [a] court.”
Buckhannon,
Before concluding, we note that the parties spent a significant amount of time debating the effect of a recent congressional enactment — the OPEN Government Act of 2007 — that reinstates the catalyst theory in FOIA actions. See OPEN Government Act of 2007, Pub L. No. 110-175, § 4(a)(2), 121 Stat. 2524, 2525 (2007). Under the amended FOIA, a plaintiff “has substantially prevailed if the complainant has obtained relief through either (I) a judicial order, or an enforceable written agreement or consent decree; or (II) a voluntary or unilateral change in position by the agency, if the complainant’s claim is not insubstantial.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(E)(ii) (emphasis added). Because Judicial Watch “substantially prevailed” by securing court orders requiring the government to disclose documents, we need not interpret the new statute or decide whether Congress intended it to apply to pending cases.
III.
Because Judicial Watch “substantially prevailed” in its FOIA action, it
So ordered.
