Plaintiff-Appellants, small boat fishermen of the Louisiana bayou country (the “Fishermen”), brought suit under The Administrative Procedures Act, 5 U.S.C. § 701 et seq., to challenge permits, granted by the Army Corps of Engineers (the “Corps”), allowing Lafourche Realty Co. (“Lafourche Realty”) to erect barriers on its own property, which effectively barred Appellants from their traditional fishing grounds. In the district court, the Fishermen demonstrated that the Corps had failed to consider possible public rights of access when it decided to grant the permits. The district court found that the Corps’ decision to grant the permits was “arbitrary and capricious,” and issued an injunction ordering the Corps to engage in additional fact-finding. The Fishermen now appeal the district court’s denial of their motion for interim attorney’s fees.
Because this is not an appeal from a final order, we do not have subject matter jurisdiction. We therefore dismiss this appeal, without prejudice to a renewed application for fees at the close of the suit on the merits.
See, e.g., Baker v. Bowen,
I. Facts
Since 1921, Lafourche Realty has owned a tract of land east of Bayou Lafourche. In 1948, Lafourche Realty’s oil and gas lessee obtained a permit from the Corps to dredge and construct the Tidewater Canal, a six-mile canal connecting Lafourche Realty’s property to Bayou Lafourche. Since that time, Lafourche Realty has constructed an extensive network of artificial canals on its property known as the Tidewater Canal System.
In 1983 Lafourche Realty applied to the Corps for an additional permit to erect fences at the entrances to the Tidewater Canal System. Lafourche Realty sought to restrict access to the canal system in order to prevent vandalism, poaching, and erosion of their land.
In an unfortunate example of agency decision making, 2 the Corps granted the requested permits. Lafourche Realty then installed the fences, thereby excluding all unauthorized traffic from the canal system. Small boat fishermen, barred from their traditional fishing grounds brought this suit. 3
After trial, the district court found the Corps’ decision to be “arbitrary and capricious.” The court found that the Corps had based its decision on inadequate fact-finding procedures and an inadequate record. As the district court noted, “The administrative record [was] devoid of evidence that the Corps researched the facts to support its conclusion. There is no suggestion that historical, geographical, or top[o]graphical data were compiled or studied to determine whether The Tidewater System obstructed or diverted natural navigable waterways.” 4 Without invalidating *957 the permits, the court ordered the Corps to engage in fact-finding procedures, to determine whether the Tidewater Canal System obstructed or diverted preexisting natural navigable waterways.
The Corps immediately sought review of the district court’s order. The Fishermen moved for dismissal of the appeal. A panel of this court, in an unreported decision, held that the order was injunctive in nature and therefore constituted an appealable interlocutory order under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). Notwithstanding this decision, the Corps voluntarily dismissed its appeal. The Fishermen then submitted a motion seeking attorney’s fees. The district court denied fees without reasons. The Fishermen now appeal that denial of interim fees.
II. Discussion
Federal Circuit Courts only have jurisdiction over three types of appeals: (1) final orders, 28 U.S.C. § 1291; (2) certain specific types of interlocutory appeals, such as those where injunctive relief is involved, 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1); and (3) appeal where the district court has certified the question as final pursuant to Federal Rule 54(b), 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b).
A denial of attorney’s fees, however, is not injunctive or within any of the specific exceptions stated in § 1292, nor has the district court certified the question. We therefore must determine whether the denial of attorney’s fees in this case constitutes a final order.
Denials and awards of attorney’s fees may be appealed separately as final orders after a final determination of liability on the merits. 5 Where, however, the case has yet to be heard on the merits, 6 or the amount and or propriety of the attorney’s fees themselves have not yet been decided, 7 an award or denial is not yet final and is therefore unappealable as a strictly final order. Here, the district court had not yet disposed of the merits at the time appeal was taken, and consequently neither the propriety nor the amount of attorney’s fees have been determined with finality. This case instead involves a request for interim attorney’s fees during the penden-cy of the case.
Section 1291 is not limited exclusively to orders which dispose of entire cases. There is a small class of orders, which finally determine issues separate from the merits of the case, which have been deemed appealable as collateral orders.
Cohen v. Beneficial Loan Corp.,
Whether an order fits within the Cohen doctrine necessarily turns on the facts of the specific case, and different cases in different circuits have reached differing results. 8 Not all of the cases can be *958 easily reconciled, many because they were decided prior to Coopers & Lybrand, and many because the court has not examined all three prongs of the test articulated in that case. 9
Courts applying the test have generally found attorney’s fee awards sufficiently separate from the merits of the case to be deemed collateral.
White v. New Hampshire Dept. of Employment Security,
Two cases in the Second Circuit demonstrate the structure of the analysis. Their differing results demonstrate the focus on conclusiveness and reviewability. In
Hastings v. Maine-Endwell Central School District,
In this circuit as well, reviewability and conclusiveness have proven dispositive. Furthermore, we apply the three prong test more stringently than the Second Circuit. In
Ruiz v. Estelle,
Judge Rubin examined the history of the “collateral order doctrine” and noted that the exception should not be allowed to swallow the rule, saying;
After [its] birth the Cohen doctrine, spawned by a desire to avoid the rigidity *959 of the final judgment rule and nurtured by the maternal tendency of appellate courts to protect youthful litigation from early trauma, grew to a strapping youth that threatened to master the statute of its genesis. Many appellate decisions pointed toward the destruction of a genuine finality rule, to be supplanted by “an ad hoc balancing of the needs and perils of review on a case by case basis.” 15 C. Wright, A. Miller, E. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3913, at 524 (1976). However, appellate courts have recently evidenced a tendency toward less interlocutory cossetting ...
Id. at 119. Judge Rubin pointed to the three prong test articulated by the Supreme Court in Coopers and Lybrand as the authoritative hemming in of the Cohen doctrine, and applied it carefully.
The panel recognized that the order granting attorney’s fees was neither conclusive nor unreviewable, noting that it
was manifestly subject to later reconsideration by the Court. Counsel in whose favor the award was made has now returned to the litigation and participated in the trial on the merits. All of the parties agree that at least some components of the award are subject to reconsideration on determination of the mer-its____Moreover, all of the issues affecting the propriety of the award may appropriately be reviewed after the final judgment is rendered.
Id. Accordingly the court dismissed the appeal. 11
Applying the three prong test to the facts of this case, we find the order denying attorney’s fees distinct from the merits of the case. However, we fail to see how a denial of interim fees is conclusive. Though the district court denied fees in the interim, the propriety and amount of fees will again be open for consideration. If at the close of the case on the merits, or after appeal from the district court, plaintiffs prevail, they will be entitled to compensation “for all time spent in federal court on the prevailing issues both before and after remand.”
Baker v. Bowen,
The district court in this case has not attempted to certify the question under Rule 54(b). As such, Ruiz controls and the appeal is DISMISSED.
Notes
. Since oral argument the district court has considered the augmented record created by the Corps and has let the permits stand. Nothing we say today has any bearing on whether the district court’s order requiring additional fact-finding, taken alone, qualifies Appellants as prevailing parties and entitles Appellants to fees for work done prior to the remand, or on whether the position of the government was substantially justified.
. The Corps mailed notice of the permit application to interested parties. The Corps received numerous letters of protest but lost or destroyed many of them, thereby omitting them from the administrative record. In addition, the Corps made no independent investigation of any possible public right of access to the Tidewater Canal System. Instead, it relied primarily on an opinion issued by the Louisiana Attorney General in a "similar matter."
. The State of Louisiana joined the lawsuit as well, raising issues similar to those of the private plaintiffs.
. In
Vaughn v. Vermilion,
.
See, e.g., Texas State Teacher’s Ass’n v. Garland Independent School Dist.,
.
Ruiz v. Estelle,
.
Williams v. Ezell,
. Awards of interim attorney’s fees have been held appealable under the collateral order exception in
Angoff v. Goldfine, 270
F.2d 185 (1st Cir.1959);
Seigal v. Merrick,
. For example, the law of the Third Circuit is unclear. In
Yakowicz v. Pennsylvania,
. Dissenting in Cheng, Judge Timbers argued that the order awarding interim fees in that case was neither conclusive nor unreviewable on appeal. Some of the arguments raised apply equally to McGill. We take no position on this dispute, or on whether the court in McGill actually had jurisdiction. We cite these cases only to demonstrate that the dispositive questions are whether a given order is in fact conclusive and unreviewable.
. In
Lowe v. Pate Stevedoring,
More recently, the only denials of interim attorney's fees which have been successfully appealed have been certified as final by the district court under Rule 54(b) and appealed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b).
See Young
v.
Pierce,
. In this circuit, a plaintiff is considered a prevailing party for attorney’s fees purposes, only if he or she prevails on "the central issue[,] by acquiring the primary relief sought."
Texas State Teachers Ass’n v. Garland Independent School District,
