Opinion PER CURIAM.
On July 22, 1983, this court issued an opinion in
Paisley v. Central Intelligence Agency,
We have extremely serious doubts about the wisdom of granting post-judgment intervention to a nonparty for purposes of contesting decisions reached by this court. 1 To be sure, the Committee has an interest in the subject matter of the case, since the *203 documents at issue were created in connection with one of its investigations. And the provisions of Section 2881 (a) (1982) require a court to permit Senate intervention unless such intervention is “untimely and would significantly delay the pending action.” 2 But, just as the Senate expects representatives of other branches of government to respect the processes it has established for carrying out its lawmaking functions, this court expects representatives of the Senate to respect the procedures that courts have developed to assure fair, just, and final resolution of disputes. A crucial element of these procedures is the principle that interested parties should assert their interests in ongoing judicial proceedings before — -not after — the court reaches judgment.
Although the Committee was well aware that the appellant in this case was litigating access to FBI Documents Nos. 26 and 27, it made no attempt to protect its interests in the District Court. It was thus apparently perfectly satisfied to have the government represent its interests, as well as those of the Executive Branch agencies. When appellant lost in the District Court and perfected this appeal, the Committee still made no effort to intervene. On February 22, 1983, when the government filed its supplemental brief, see
This case illustrates the evils of permitting post-judgment intervention. By delaying its intervention until after we had issued our decision, the Committee has reaped the benefits of waiting to see whether our judgment would be adverse, while imposing serious costs upon the parties and upon the courts. For instance, appellant— who has already had to wait over four years to learn how her husband died — may be forced to expend further time and resources relitigating the agency records issue — an issue that appellant had good reason to believe she had finally won. The District Court will have to spend its time hearing new evidence — evidence that was perfectly available and accessible at the time it first heard this case. And we have had to waste our time and effort deciding parts of this case on facts that we are now told may be inaccurate.
The Committee’s only explanation in defense of its delay seems to be that it thought it could win the case by relying on other parties, thereby avoiding the cost of intervening. This is not a very compelling explanation. If this court accepted similar “justifications” from private parties, it would make a mockery of traditional elements of judicial procedure designed to bring relevant facts and parties to the attention of the court so that it can reach a just — and final — resolution of the dispute before it.
In spite of all this, we recognize that the Committee may have been misled by our previous liberality in granting rehearings in FOIA cases, see,
e.g., McGehee
v.
CIA,
Having granted the Committee’s motion to intervene, we hereby vacate Section III — B of our earlier opinion,
Finally, because the Committee alleges that the record was seriously incomplete and inaccurate concerning FBI Documents Nos. 26 and 27, we modify our previous opinion to exclude these documents from the discussion in Section III-A-2-a of that opinion,
For these reasons, it is ordered:
1. The motion of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence to intervene is granted.
2. The petitions for rehearing of appel-lees and intervenor are granted.
3. The District Court’s application of the Speech or Debate Clause is vacated.
4. Part III — B of this court’s July 22, 1983 opinion is vacated.
5. Part III-A-2-a of this court’s July 22, 1983 opinion is vacated insofar as it applies to FBI Documents Nos. 26 and 27.
6. On remand the District Court shall consider whether FBI Documents Nos. 26 and 27 are congressional records outside the scope of the Freedom of Information Act.
7. On motion of appellant, the District Court shall also consider whether FBI Documents Nos. 23, 51, 92, 41, and 20 (attachments) are congressional records outside the scope of the Freedom of Information Act.
Notes
. We wish to make it clear that the Committee does not seek to intervene in this case to perfect further appeals when the parties themselves have decided not to do so or to bring to the court’s attention newly-discovered evidence that could not have been previously brought before the court. Intervention for these purposes may raise issues somewhat different from the intervention sought here.
. The full text of § 2881(a) reads as follows: “Permission to intervene as a party or to appear as amicus curiae under section 288e of this title [giving Senate Legal Counsel power to move for intervention on behalf of a Senate committee] shall be of right and may be denied by a court only upon an express finding that such intervention or appearance is untimely and would significantly delay the pending action or that standing to intervene has not been established under section 2 of article III of the Constitution of the United States.”
