Lead Opinion
Appellant appeals a ruling denying him attorney fees and costs and other relief in an action seeking documents pursuant to the District of Columbia Freedom of Information Act (hereinafter “DC FOIA”). The following issues are presented in this appeal: (1) whether a prevailing pro se attorney is eligible to receive attorney fees and costs,' (2) whether appellant prevailed in whole or in part in his action in the trial court, and (3) whether the trial judge erred in denying appellant’s various motions for sanctions and contempt. We conclude that: (1) under the DC FOIA, a prevailing pro se attorney
I.
This matter began in 1986 when both appellant, who is an attorney and an accountant, and another accountant (Moss) were employed at a local university. Appellant was terminated from that employment. Believing Moss was responsible for that action, appellant filed a complaint with the Board of Accounting (“the Board”) of the District of Columbia Department of
In July 1987, appellant submitted a Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”) request to DCCRA for documents relating to the investigation of Moss. In response, a small portion of the documents requested were provided. In September 1987, appellant submitted a second FOIA request seeking all documents relating to the Board’s investigation of Moss. Production of those documents was denied on privacy grounds in January 1988.
In mid-1988 the Board requested that the Corporation Counsel reconsider its decision not to proceed with disciplinary action against Moss. The Corporation Counsel responded that the Superior Court had issued a protective order, in the civil action appellant had brought against the university, designating certain documents involved in that litigation as confidential. The Corporation Counsel concluded that some of those documents would be needed for any administrative action against Moss, and that, therefore, any disciplinary action would have to be deferred until after resolution of the civil suit when it was expected that the documents would become available.
In the meantime, the administrative appeal of the denial of the appellant’s FOIA request had been referred by the Mayor to Dr. Herbert Reid, Sr., for resolution.
In November 1988, appellant filed the instant action in the Superior Court seeking the documents in question. The trial judge granted appellee’s motion to stay the proceeding pending the outcome of the review by Dr. Reid. In April 1989, Dr. Reid issued a comprehensive Memorandum of Decision (“M.O.D.”) in which he determined that nine (“exemption (2) documents”) of the twenty-eight requested documents were exempt from disclosure for personal privacy reasons because of the ongoing investigation of Moss.
In September 1989, appellant made a third FOIA request seeking all documents that came into existence after August 1988, i.e., any documents created after the documents that were the subject of Dr. Reid’s M.O.D. All but one of those documents were made available. In December 1989, appellant filed a fourth FOIA request with the Board for documents relating to events involving Moss that occurred in April 1989.
In December 1989, the District filed a motion for summary judgment in this ease defending the withholding of the exemption (2) documents on privacy grounds. It offered to submit the documents for in camera review, and the trial judge agreed. After examining the documents, Judge Huhn granted the District’s motion for judgment and placed the documents under seal in an order dated March 12, 1990. A notice of appeal from that determination was filed and the case was designated appeal No. 90-445.
In July 1990, appellant filed two new FOIA requests seeking other documents. A separate action has been filed in the Superior Court with respect to these re
Thereafter, in February 1991, the District moved this court to remand No. 90-445 to the trial court. That motion was granted and the trial judge then conducted a hearing to determine whether the case had become moot. The trial judge found the case was moot because all of the documents previously withheld had been provided in response to new DC FOIA requests.
Earlier appellant had moved for Rule 11 sanctions, Super.Ct.Civ.R. 11, claiming that counsel for the District had violated the rule in filing two pleadings, viz, a motion for summary judgment and the motion to dismiss. In addition, appellant sought contempt sanctions against those responsible for releasing the documents on the grounds that releasing them violated the March 12, 1990 sealing order. Finally, in a separate motion, appellant moved for Rule 11 sanctions on the grounds that DCCRA had previously failed to submit all required documents to the trial court for in camera inspection. The trial judge denied all of the sanction motions.
After further briefing the trial judge ruled that appellant, a pro se attorney, was not entitled to receive attorney fees under the DC FOIA. She also concluded that since appellant had not prevailed, within the meaning of the statute, he was not entitled to attorney fees on that ground as well. For the same reason he was not entitled to an award of costs. This appeal followed.
II.
The question of whether a pro se attorney who prevails in a DC FOIA action is eligible for an award of attorney fees has never been decided by this court. The provision authorizing an award of fees is set forth in the margin.
In Kay the Supreme Court unanimously held that an attorney, acting pro se, who prevailed as a litigant in a civil rights action was not eligible for an award of attorney fees under The Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Awards Act of 1976, 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1988).
The Court of Appeals [in Falcone] reasoned that attorney’s fees [to an attorney acting pro se] in FOIA actions were inappropriate because the award was intended "to relieve plaintiffs with legitimate claims of the burden of legal costs” and “to encourage potential claimants to seek legal advice before commencing litigation.” The court relied on the fact that “[a]n attorney who represents himself in litigation may have the necessary legal expertise but is unlikely to have the ‘detached and objective perspective’ necessary to fulfill the aims of the Act.”
Kay, supra, — U.S. at - n. 4,
Even a skilled lawyer who represents himself is at a disadvantage in contested litigation. Ethical considerations may make it inappropriate for him to appear-as a witness. He is deprived of the judgment of an independent third party in framing the theory of the case, evaluating alternative methods of presenting the evidence, cross-examining hostile witnesses, formulating legal arguments, and in making sure that reason, rather than emotion, dictates the proper tactical response to unforeseen developments in the courtroom. The adage that “a lawyer who represents himself has a fool for a client” is the product of years of experience by seasoned litigators.
A rule that authorizes awards of counsel fees to pro se litigants — even if limited to those who are members of the bar— would create a disincentive to employ counsel whenever such a plaintiff considered himself competent to litigate on his own behalf. The statutory policy of furthering the successful prosecution of meritorious claims is better served by a rule that creates an incentive to retain counsel in every such case.
Id. at -,
In reaching that conclusion we endorse the Sixth Circuit’s observation that an attorney representing himself or herself is not likely to be sufficiently objective or to maintain the detached perspective necessary to fulfill the aims of the statute. Falcone, supra,
In sum, we note that the fee award provision of the DC FOIA is patterned after, and substantially the same as, that contained in the federal FOIA. See Dunhill v. Director, District of Columbia Department of Transportation,
Before turning to an examination of possible expressions of legislative intent on this point, we think it appropriate to address some aspects of the dissenting opinion filed in this case. The dissent places great reliance upon Alexander v. District of Columbia Rental Housing Commission,
Kay, of course, had not been decided when we considered Alexander. In Alexander, both the Rental Housing Commission and this court relied solely
Our dissenting colleague also maintains that we should not adopt the reasoning of Kay, which interprets a civil rights provision, since Congress intended that the federal FOIA. fee award provision would provide broader coverage than that provided under § 1988. In short, the dissent concludes that the federal FOIA was intended to encourage litigation that benefitted both the public at large, as well as the individual litigant, whereas § 1988 was designed primarily to provide victims of civil rights violations with a means of redress. This ignores the oft repeated reminder that when a civil rights plaintiff seeks relief, he or she does so not for himself or herself alone “but also as a ‘private attorney general,’ vindicating a policy Congress considered of the highest priority.” Newman v. Piggie Park Enterprises,
As noted above, we conclude that there are sound reasons for adopting the fee awards rulings in Falcone and Kay in DC FOIA actions. We have carefully examined the legislative history of that provision and have found no expression of a contrary intent on the part of the Council of the District of Columbia (“Council”) when it was enacted. In Kay the Supreme Court observed that the word “attorney” is one that “assumes an agency relationship, and it seems likely that Congress contemplated an attorney-client relationship as the predicate for an award....” Kay, supra, — U.S. at -,
Furthermore, appellant concedes, as we noted earlier, that the DC FOIA was patterned after the federal FOIA. See Dunhill v. D.C. Department of Corrections, supra,
Appellant does cite the decision of a federal District Court judge that was decided on September 3,1976, holding that a pro se plaintiff who was not an attorney was eligible to receive fees under the federal FOIA. That decision was eventually published in the FEDERAL Rules Decisions on some unknown date in 1977.
When the provisions of a federal statute are substantially adopted by the Council, it is presumed that the Council intends to adopt the known and settled judicial interpretations of that statute as well. Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company v. Hoage,
Cuneo, of course, had not even been decided when the Council and Mayor gave their approval of DC FOIA and, although Holly had been decided, there is no indication that it had been published or that the Council or Mayor knew of its existence. Moreover, Holly was a trial court opinion, and we have observed that “with respect to borrowed statutes ... only the decisions of the court of last resort are normally adopted with the statute.” Lenaerts v. District of Columbia Department of Employment Services,
III.
Having concluded that appellant is not eligible for an attorney fee award, we would ordinarily have no reason to consider whether appellant prevailed in the matter in the trial court. Appellant, however, is seeking an award of costs as well as attorney fees, and such an award may be made only if he has prevailed on the points for which he seeks costs. See note 3, supra.
We are satisfied that appellant did not prevail in this matter, at least with
Appellant also contends that he prevailed with respect to the documents, other than the exemption (2) documents, that were in fact provided to him after the filing of the suit. The trial judge made no finding with respect to those documents and we remand for a determination of whether appellant is entitled to an award of costs with respect to them.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed in all respects; and the matter is remanded for a determination of whether appellant is entitled to receive costs related to documents, other than the exemption (2) documents, that were provided to him after the litigation was commenced.
So Ordered.
Notes
In Donahue v. Thomas,
. Dr. Reid, the mayor’s legal counsel, was responsible for deciding DC FOIA appeals.
. The documents were withheld under an exemption which provides:
(a) The following matters may be exempt from disclosure under the provision of this subchapter:
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(2) Information of a personal nature where the public disclosure thereof would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy!.]
D.C.Code § 1-1524(a)(2) (1987).
. We are satisfied that the trial judge did not abuse her discretion in finding no Rule 11 violations and in denying all sanction requests. See Stansel v. American Security Bank,
. The attorney fees and costs authorization provides:
(c) If a person seeking the right to inspect or to receive a copy of a public record prevails in whole or in part in such suit, he or she may be awarded reasonable attorney fees and other costs of litigation.
D.C.Code § l-1527(c) (1992 Repl.).
. The Act provides in pertinent part:
In any action or proceeding to enforce a provision of [specified civil rights statutes], the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party ... a reasonable attorney's fee as part of the costs.
42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1988).
.The federal FOIA fee award statute provides:
The court may assess against any party reasonable attorney fees and other litigation costs reasonably incurred by any other party who substantially prevails in any action brought in accordance with the provisions of this subsection....
5 U.S.C. § 552b(i) (1988).
. Our dissenting colleague also observes that the Alexander court could have relied on cases other than Duncan as a basis for its holding. See, e.g., Cazalas v. United States Department of Justice,
. Only one other authority was even cited by this court. Ellis v. Cassidy,
. The title page of the bound volume indicates the date of "1977."
Concurrence Opinion
with whom KING, Associate Judge, joins, concurring:
I join Judge King’s opinion for the court. I write separately, however, to explain why McReady’s contention that the Council of the District of Columbia “adopted” a judicial construction of the D.C. FOIA which would entitle him to recover counsel fees in this case is entirely specious.
Contrary to McReady’s position, there is no generalized doctrine that when the Council, in enacting a local law, has borrowed the language of a federal statute, it is presumed also to have approved the statute’s judicial construction even where, as here, there is no evidence that the legislature knew about that construction or intended to adopt it. The actual rule, one of long standing, was more precisely articulated by Justice Story, writing for the Supreme Court almost a century and three quarters ago, as follows:
It is doubtless true, as has been suggested at the bar, that where English statutes ... have been adopted into our own legislation, the known and settled construction of those statutes by courts of law, has been considered as silently incorporated into the acts, or has been received with all the weight of authority.
Pennock & Sellers v. Dialogue,
The emphasized words are critical. Seventy years after Pennock, the Court reiterated the same doctrine, with the same indispensable qualification, in Capital Traction Co. v. Hof,
By a familiar canon of interpretation, heretofore applied by this court, whenever Congress, in legislating for the District of Columbia, has borrowed from the statutes of a State provisions which had received in that State a known and settled construction before their enactment by Congress, that construction must be deemed to have been adopted by Congress together with the text which it expounded, and the provisions must be construed as they were understood at the time in the State.
(Emphasis added; citations omitted).
Like the Supreme Court, the courts of this jurisdiction apply the presumption which McReady invokes here only in situations where the judicial construction sought to be borrowed is both known and settled. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Hoage,
In the present case, there was no known or settled judicial construction of the federal FOIA for the Council to adopt. With what can most charitably be described as considerable chutzpah, McReady claims that
since, at the time of the enactment of the D.C. FOIA, i.e. March 29, 1992, there was only one federal FOIA [decision] as it applied to pro se plaintiff/attorneys, i.e. Cuneo v. Rumsfeld, [180 U.S.App. D.C. 184,553 F.2d 1360 (1977)], it must be presumed, as a well established rule of statutory construction, that the D.C. Government intended for the Cuneo principles to be applied to the D.C. FOIA fee shifting provision.
In fact, as Judge King points out in the lead opinion, the Council had adopted the District’s FOIA during the fall of 1976, half a year before March 24, 1977 — the date of the Cuneo decision — and the Mayor signed the legislation on November 19, 1976, four months before Cuneo.
McReady also relies on Holly v. Acree,
The question remains whether, even though the Council demonstrably did not adopt Cuneo and Holly in enacting the District’s FOIA, we should nevertheless follow the reasoning of these decisions in construing our statute. See Washington Post Co. v. Minority Business Opportunity Comm’n,
In any event, the Supreme Court’s emphasis on encouraging plaintiffs to employ independent counsel and on discouraging them from representing themselves — Justice Stevens cited with approval the old adage that “a lawyer who represents himself has a fool for a client, see Kay, supra, — U.S. at -,
. The court quoted United States v. Raynor,
. McReady represents in his brief that "[t]he D.C. FOIA was passed into law effective March 29, 1977.” This is, at best, a half-truth; the District government completed its action regarding the statute in November 1976, and its effective date was delayed to March 29, 1977 only as a result of the required Congressional layover. Unfortunately, McReady’s brief does not reveal this history and is so phrased as to convey the entirely misleading impression that the members of the Council were aware of Cuneo when they passed the FOIA legislation.
.An examination of the relevant volumes of the Daily Washington Law Reporter reveals that Holly was not reported in that publication at all.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
The majority decides this case — a Freedom of Information Act case — on the basis of Kay v. Ehrler, — U.S. -,
I.
Neither the attorney fees provision of the District of Columbia Freedom of Information Act, D.C.Code §§ 1-1521 to -1529 (1987) (District FOIA), nor the Act’s legislative history
The Act ... provides ... mechanisms for administering and enforcing its provisions and for assuring that right of the public to obtain information regarding the affairs of government and the actions of those persons who represent the public. Provisions in Section 7 will expedite the enforcement of the Act and free the courts from prior actions of agencies and determinations by the Corporation Counsel. Provisions in Section 7(D) encourage citizens to seek the release of information wrongfully with[h]eld by providing the award of attorney fees.2
This enforcement purpose distinguishes the attorney fees provision of the District FOIA, D.C.Code § l-1527(c), from the comparable civil rights attorney fees provision, 42 U.S.C. § 1988, rendering the Supreme Court’s analysis in Kay inapplicable to the case before us. Given that the purpose of § l-1527(c) is to “encourage” citizens to enforce the Act, it makes no sense to deny
Further support for this interpretation of the intended scope of § l-1527(c) can be found in three additional sources: [1] the legislative history of the analogous provision for attorney fees under the federal Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. §§ 552 to 552b (federal FOIA);
II.
In Kay, the Supreme Court found one overriding congressional purpose behind the Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Awards Act of 1976: to lower the cost barrier restricting access to the courts.
In discussing Kay’s procedural history, the Court noted that the district court had denied an attorney fee by relying on a federal FOIA case from its own circuit, Falcone v. I.R.S.,
Falcone is one of two cases — the other is Aronson v. U.S. Dep’t of Hous. and Urban Dev.,
III.
In contrast with the Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Awards Act of 1976, the legislative history of the federal FOIA shows that congressional enactment of the attorney fee provision had two significant purposes: “access” to the courts and “enforcement” of FOIA (including deterrence against noncompliance). As a consequence, Congress used a more comprehensive approach under the federal FOIA than the purpose it selected for the federal attorney fee legislation construed in Kay. Congress intended for attorney fees to be awardable, in the court’s discretion, not only to facilitate greater access to the courts but also to reward plaintiffs, without regard to financial need, for bringing successful litigation necessary to enforce the federal FOIA against the government.
The 1974 Amendments
More specifically, Congress suggested four factors for the courts to use in deciding whether to make a discretionary award of attorney fees in a FOIA case, most of which reflect the “enforcement” purpose:
These four factors are: “(1) the benefit to the public, if any, derived from the case; (2) the commercial benefit to the complainant; (3) the nature of the complainant’s interest in the records sought; and (4) whether the government’s withholding of the records had a reasonable basis in law.”
Aronson,
The first factor, focusing on the public benefit from FOIA litigation, reflects an enforcement purpose that transcends the individual’s interest in access to the court. Commenting on the second factor, the Senate Report stated that a fee award would be appropriate — even where the information was sought for a commercial purpose — if the agency officials had been “recalcitrant in their opposition to a valid claim or [had] otherwise engaged in obdurate behavior.”
In sum, in prescribing factors for the courts to use in awarding attorney fees under the federal FOIA, the Senate Report clearly expressed an intent to penalize agency recalcitrance, and thus to encour
This examination of the legislative history of the federal FOIA’s attorney fee provision demonstrates that Congress intended this provision to accomplish more than merely serving “the interest in obtaining independent counsel for victims,” the single dominant purpose of fee-shifting under the Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Awards Act of 1976. Kay, — U.S. at -,
Nothing from the Senate Report nor from any other source demonstrates congressional intent ... to limit coverage to complainants who cannot afford to litigate their rights under FOIA. Moreover, the goal of encouraging litigation of meritorious FOIA claims is doubtlessly furthered by reimbursing the legal fees of all complainants who substantially prevail and who meet the [four] traditional criteria — even those complainants ... who could finance their own lawsuit. The princip[le] is obvious: The greater the likelihood that one will be reimbursed for bringing a valid claim, the more willing one will be to bring it. The availability of judicial enforcement will in turn insure that proper disclosures are voluntarily made.
State of Texas v. I.C.C.,
I am convinced, therefore, that Kay does not dispose of McReady’s claim for attorney fees. The goals of both the District FOIA and the federal FOIA fee-shifting provisions include enforcement of the Act and are not limited to the principal “access” purpose of the comparable provision in the Civil Rights Attorney’s Fee Awards Act of 1976.
A.
As indicated earlier, two of the four federal circuit court cases that have addressed the particular issue now before us have concluded, based on legislative history, that the federal FOIA attorney fee provision authorizes discretionary awards of attorney fees to attorney-plaintiffs who have litigated pro se.
In the District of Columbia Circuit, Cu-neo recognized years ago the enforcement purpose of the federal FOIA’s attorney fee provision. The court held that “a complainant, who is otherwise eligible under [5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(E)] for an award of attorney fees, should not be denied those fees simply because he [or she] happens to be an attorney.” Cuneo,
Following Cuneo, the Fifth Circuit held in Cazalas that any attorney who, as pro se plaintiff, sues to force the government to comply with the federal FOIA is eligible for a fee award.
It is important to understand, therefore, that the federal circuits sustaining attorney fee awards under FOIA to pro se attorney-plaintiffs have made detailed use of the legislative history, see Cazalas; Cuneo; the circuits going the other way, and the decisions on which they rely, have not, see Aronson; Falcone.
B.
Courts holding that pro se attorney-plaintiffs are not eligible for fee awards have argued that pro se plaintiffs do not incur legal costs.
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. [Citations omitted.] Thus, we held in Wolfel [v. United States,711 F.2d 66 (6th Cir.1983) ] that those claimants who chose to proceed without legal representation were not entitled to be compensated for legal costs which were never incurred. The same reasoning applies to pro se plaintiffs who are also attorneys since no legal costs are incurred in such cases.
Falcone,
C.
Another argument against awarding fees to pro se attorney-plaintiffs is premised on a belief that the statute is designed to encourage litigants, even attorney-litigants, to consult with outside attorneys as a precaution against charging ahead, without objectivity, into ill-advised litigation. See Aronson,
D.
Still another argument against allowing fees to pro se attorney-plaintiffs is that “attorneys will abuse the FOIA by bring
E.
Some courts say that awarding attorney fees to pro se plaintiffs — whether or not they are attorneys — will overly encourage citizen suits and improperly increase the amount of FOIA litigation. See Falcone,
F.
Finally, the courts that have held pro se attorney-plaintiffs ineligible for fee awards are in jurisdictions where courts have previously held that pro se plaintiffs who are not attorneys are ineligible for fees under FOIA. Thus, as in Kay, these courts have asked, fundamentally, whether there is any reason to grant an exception for a pro se attorney-plaintiff. See Aronson,
In this jurisdiction, a division of this court has held today that non-attorney pro se plaintiffs are not compensable under the District FOIA’s attorney fee provision. See Donahue v. Thomas,
V.
Having reviewed federal legislative history and caselaw for insight into the intended scope of the District FOIA’s similar attorney fee provision, I believe it is useful and appropriate, finally, to look at the purposes the Council has invoked in adopting other attorney fee provisions authorizing awards against the government and at the ways in which this court has applied this legislative history to the situation of pro se attorney-plaintiffs.
This court has previously recognized that a provision for awarding attorney fees against the government serves an enforcement purpose, as well as an access purpose. Under the Rental Housing Act of 1980, the attorney fee provision effectively authorizes tenants to act “as private attorneys general.” Ungar v. D.C. Rental Hous. Comm’n,
In reaching this conclusion, moreover, we rejected arguments that attorneys, acting as pro se plaintiffs, will abuse attorney fee provisions and will not act with sufficient objectivity. We associated ourselves with courts that reject the notion that inactive
In sum, this court, in effect, already has held that when a local statute authorizing attorney fees against the government has an enforcement purpose — as does the District FOIA’s attorney fee provision — the arguments in favor of allowing fees for attorney-plaintiffs should prevail over arguments to the contrary. As I noted above, the legislative history of the District’s own FOIA makes it clear that the provision of attorney fees was intended as an enforcement mechanism to “encourage citizens to seek the release of information wrongfully with[h]eld.”
YI.
The District FOIA is grounded on the public policy of open government. “The Act begins from the premise that openness in government serves the public interest and from the further premise that members of the public have the right to know what government officials are doing.”
The majority today ties the hands of the trial court, denying it the discretion to effectuate the enforcement of this policy of
VII.
Finally, I must disagree with the majority’s ruling, sustaining the trial court, “that release of the exemption (2) documents was not prompted by the law suit,” ante at 616, and thus that costs are not awardable with respect to those documents.
The District’s FOIA requires an agency to respond to a FOIA request within ten days, either (1) by releasing the documents or (2) by notifying the requester that the documents will not be released and the reasons for that determination or (3) by notifying the requester that the agency needs more time to make the determination. D.C.Code §§ l-1522(c) and (d). DCRA fell far short of this mandate. Indeed, DCRA did almost nothing to comply with the statute until McReady filed suit in November 1988, fourteen months after McReady’s first FOIA request. There is every indication that, absent this lawsuit, DCRA would have continued to defy its FOIA obligations. Although the Mayor’s Legal Counsel, Dr. Reid, had ordered DCRA to supply him with a list of the requested documents in August 1988, McReady had no way of knowing — nor do we now know — whether DCRA would ever have complied with Dr. Reid’s order, let alone turned over requested documents, but for McReady’s lawsuit.
It took three years from the date of McReady’s first request, including 20 months after he filed suit, for the District to provide McReady with the exemption (2) documents. The fact that they “were released because the investigation of Moss had been completed,” ante at 612, many months after the District allegedly was obliged to have made them available, does not necessarily mean there was no causal connection between the lawsuit and required release of the documents. If the documents were not in fact exempt from disclosure, as McReady contends, he was entitled to them much earlier — a result he could not have achieved without his lawsuit. Moreover, on this record it appears to me that, without the lawsuit, DCRA probably never would have turned over the first 19 documents responding to McReady’s first FOIA request or the 14 documents responding to his third request. Accordingly, any remand on costs should include trial court scrutiny of McReady’s entitlement to all requested records.
VIII.
Respectfully, therefore, I dissent. I would reverse and remand for the trial court to exercise its discretion over appellant’s claim for attorney fees as the prevailing party, as well as to review again all costs to which McReady claims he is entitled as the prevailing party for all documents released.
. See Memorandum of Committee on Government Operations to Members of the District of Columbia Council with Regard to Bill No. 1-119, "The Freedom of Information Act of 1975” (July 23, 1975); Report of Committee on the Judiciary and Criminal Law to District of Columbia Council on Bill No. 1-119, D.C. Freedom of Information Act of 1975 (Sept. 1, 1976).
. Memorandum of Committee on Government Operations, supra note 1, at 8 (emphasis added). See also Report of Committee on the Judiciary and Criminal Law, supra note 1, at 1 (emphasis added): "this bill aims at providing the citizens of the District of Columbia with a mechanism for enforcing their right of access to certain government records.”
. The District FOIA is patterned after the federal FOIA. See Dunhill v. Director, D.C. Dep’t of Transp.,
. As Judge Schwelb ably demonstrates, there had been no judicial construction of the federal FOIA on which the Council of the District of Columbia could have relied in enacting the District FOIA’s attorney fee provision. Ante at 617 (Schwelb, J., concurring). In interpreting § 1-1527(c), however, we may still consider judicial construction of the federal FOIA after the adoption of the District FOIA. See Pendleton v. D.C. Bd. of Elections and Ethics,
. See Educators Ventures, Inc. v. Bundy,
. See also Cofield,
. See Cazalas,
. The Amendments passed Congress “overwhelmingly” and survived President Ford’s veto. See James T. O’Reilly, 1 Federal Information Disclosure § 3.08 at 3-30 -31 (2d ed. 1992). “All together, the amended Act reflects the power of frustration reflected in congressional distrust for agency withholding.” Id.
. Act of Nov. 21, 1974, Pub.L. No. 93-502, § (b)(2), 88 Stat. 1561, 1562 (1974) (codified at 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(E)). The 1974 amendments also established alternative venue in the District of Columbia for all FOIA actions. Id. at 1562 (codified at 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(B)).
. See Note, Fee Awards for Pro Se Attorney and Non-Attorney Plaintiffs under the Freedom of Information Act, 52 Fordham L.Rev. 374, 381 — 83 (1983) (hereinafter Note, FOIA Fee Awards).
. Id. at 383.
. The general purposes of the 1974 amendments, as stated in the Senate Report, were "to facilitate freer and more expeditious public access to government information, to encourage more faithful compliance with the terms and objectives of the FOIA, to strengthen the citizen’s remedy against agencies and officials who violate the Act, and to provide for closer congressional oversight of agency performance under the Act.” S.Rep. No. 854, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. 1 (1974) [hereinafter cited as Senate Report], reprinted in Freedom of Information Act and Amendments of 1974 (P.L. 93-5920) Source Book 153 (Joint Comm. Print 1975) [hereinafter cited as Amendments Source Book].
. See Senate Report at 50-51, reprinted in Amendments Source Book at 202-03.
. See H.R.Rep. No. 1380, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. 9 (1974) (Conference Report), reprinted in Amendments Source Book at 227.
. Senate Report at 19, reprinted in Amendments Source Book at 171.
. Senate version, reprinted in Senate Report at 51 and in Amendments Source Book at 203.
. Senate Report at 19, reprinted in Amendments Source Book at 171.
. A federal agency that unreasonably withholds information requested under FOIA must pay all costs and fees assessed against it from the agency's own budget. See Senate Report at 17, reprinted in Amendments Source Book at 169.
. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has identified the attorney fee provision as a central feature of the FOIA enforcement mechanism: under FOIA, “an award of attorney’s fees may be in part punitive, ‘a useful sanction for unfounded resistance to a disclosure request.’” Cofield,
. Senate Report at 19, reprinted in Amendments Source Book at 171. The House Report noted that in any case the citizen-plaintiff always pays, by way of federal taxes, the litigation costs of the non-complying agency. H.R.Rep. No. 1419, 92d Cong., 2d Sess. 74 (1972), reprinted in Amendments Source Book at 81. Without fee-shifting, then, the successful FOIA litigant pays his or her own litigations costs and, at least in part, the costs of the opposing party that has defied the law.
. 120 Cong.Rec. 6814 (1974) (remarks of Rep. Alexander).
. The Texas v. I.C.C. decision does not address Kay because the case dealt with a fee award to the state of Texas, not to a pro se litigant. I cite this case, however, as reconfirmation of the enforcement purpose of the federal FOIA’s attorney fee provision.
. The majority belittles, see ante at 614, the distinction I stress between the "overriding statutory concern” of the Civil Rights Attorneys’ Fees Awards Act — access to "independent coun
. Although Judge Schwelb, in his concurrence, concludes that Kay sounded the death knell for federal decisions allowing attorney fees for pro se attorney litigants, there is no evidence that Kay has had that effect in FOIA cases.
. Today, another division of this court has declined to follow these precedents from the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. In Donahue v. Thomas,
. In contrast with the District of Columbia Circuit, the Fifth Circuit has held that the federal FOIA precludes an attorney fee award to a pro se litigant who is not an attorney. See Barrett v. Bureau of Customs,
. Cazalas identified both a deterrent purpose and a punitive purpose for the attorney fee provision. Both deterrence and punishment are separate aspects of the "enforcement” purpose.
. Aronson relied on cases interpreting attorney fee provisions of other statutes. See Aronson,
. Senate Report at 1, reprinted in Amendments Source Book at 153 (statement of purpose for the 1974 amendments).
. This argument, of course, applies to all pro se litigants, not just to pro se attorney-plaintiffs. Nevertheless, the fact that Congress intended to encourage rather than deter prosecution of meritorious FOIA lawsuits adds strength to the argument that a pro se "attorney" should not be categorically denied eligibility for “attorney” fee awards.
. "[T]he plain and ordinary meaning of attorney's fees requires payment to an attorney for services as a legal agent_” Donahue, at 607. I fail to see how the fact that the attorney is representing himself in the instant case can make any difference in our reading of the plain language of the statute.
. The court took "no position” on the question whether lay pro se litigants are entitled to attorney fees under the Rental Housing Act. Alexander,
. The majority faults my reliance on Alexander because, according to my colleagues, Kay implicitly overruled the Eleventh Circuit's decision in Duncan, a civil rights case on which we relied in Alexander. That argument is misplaced, however, for there are other cases, indeed FOIA cases, on which this court could just as easily have relied for the same policy views that attracted this court in Duncan. See, e.g., Cazalas; Cuneo. In fact, presumably we would have relied on the reasoning of such other cases because in Alexander we perceived an enforcement purpose underlying the Rental Housing Act. See Alexander,
. Memorandum of Committee on Government Operations, supra note 1, at 8. See discussion supra in Part I. It is also interesting to note the legislative history of the “District of Columbia Family and Medical Leave Act” (D.C.Code § 36-1301 et seq. (1992 Supp.)). In a committee report on this Act, the Summary of Major Provisions states: “Providing for ... attorney’s fees is intended to deter employers from violating the law and to ensure that employees will be compensated for their actual losses." Report of the Committee on Housing and Economic Development to the District of Columbia Council on the “District of Columbia Family and Medical Leave Act of 1990" Bill 8-82 (May 30, 1990) at 17. Thus here as well, albeit in another context, the District's Council has specifically endorsed the position that there is an enforcement purpose in an attorney fee provision.
. Memorandum of Committee on Government Operations, supra note 1, at 3. Cf. Edward M. Kennedy, Foreword: Is the Pendulum Swinging Away from Freedom of Information? 16 Harv.C.R.-C.L.L.Rev. 311, 311 (1981) (federal'"FOIA is built upon the fundamental premise that government information should be available to the public, absent a compelling reason for nondisclosure").
. Quoted in Kennedy, Foreword, supra note 35, at 311 (citing quotation in House Comm, on Government Operations, A Citizen’s Guide on How To Use the Freedom of Information Act and the Privacy Act in Requesting Government Documents 2, H.Rep. No. 95-793, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. (1977)).
. On March 10, 1990, after in camera inspection of the exemption (2) documents, the trial court granted the District’s motion for summary judgment, holding that the documents were exempt from disclosure, and placed these documents under seal. McReady appealed to this court. In November 1990, however, the trial court vacated its order "for the purpose of presenting a written statement of the Court’s findings,” as required by Washington Post v. Minority Business Opportunity Comm’n,
