Thе Idaho Supreme Court has held that attorney fees may not be awarded to parties who appear
pro se
in civil litigation.
O’Neil v. Schuckardt,
The issue is framed by a law firm’s suit against its former clients. The firm of Swanson & Setzkе, Chtd., acting through one of its principals, sued Greg and Sharron Henning to collect a debt of $342.92 owed on open account for legal services. The complaint also prayed for costs and an award of attorney fees under I.C. § 12-120. The case was assigned to the *200 mаgistrate division, albeit not to the small claims department, of the district court. When the Hennings failed to answer the complaint, the magistrate entered judgment for $342.92 plus costs. The law firm then requested the magistrate to increase the judgment by adding $200.00 in attorney fees. The magistrate deсlined to do so because the firm had appeared pro se. The firm appealed to the district court, which upheld the magistrate’s order. The firm appealed again, bringing the matter to us.
The law firm contends that I.C. § 12-120 mandates an attorney fee award to every prevailing рarty, regardless of pro se status. Alternatively, the firm argues that any prohibition against attorney fee awards to pro se litigants should be subject to an exception for pro se lawyers. We will examine these arguments in turn.
I
Under the so-called “American rule,” as distinguished from the practice in England, a successful litigant may receive an award of attorney fees if — but only if — the award is authorized by сontract, by statute or by an equitable principle such as the “common fund” doctrine. Idaho Code § 12-120 authorizes such a fee award. At subsection (3), the statute provides that “[i]n any civil action to recover on an open account ... the prevailing party shall be allowed a reasonable attorney fee to be set by the court____” This language contains no specific preclusion of an award to a
pro se
litigant. However, the phrase “attorney fee” may be interpreted to denote a monetary obligation (a fee) paid or owed from one person (a client) to another person who has provided legal representation (an attorney). Under this interpretation, an attorney fee “presupposes a relationship of attorney and client” which does not exist in
pro se
situations.
Davis v. Parratt,
Courts adopting this interpretation of “attorney fee” have further noted that if a fee-award statute is intended to bepefit
pro se
litigants, the legislature can say so expressly.
Burke v. Department of Justice,
These reasons for denying attorney fees to pro se litigants have been criticized by some commentators who advocate attorney fee awards for all prevаiling parties, whether or not they have been represented by counsel. See e.g., Note, Awarding Attorneys’ Fees to Prevailing Pro Se Litigants, 80 MICH.L.REV. 1111 (1982); Note, Pro Se Can You Sue?: Attorney Fees for Pro Se Litigants, 34 STAN.L.REV. 659 (1982). Nevertheless, a clear majority of courts hold that if a nonlawyer undertakes to represent himself in litigation, he is not entitled to an award of attorney fees. See generally 20 AM.JUR.2D Costs § 77 (1965 and current supplement).
In the
Curtis
and
O’Neil
cases cited above, the Idaho Supreme Court has adopted this general rule. The Court first applied the rule in
Curtis,
where a nonlawyer
pro se
litigant prevailed on appeal in an action on a promissory note. The action plainly fell within the subject-matter scope of I.C. § 12-120, and the note itself provided for an attornеy fee award to the prevailing party. Nevertheless, the Supreme Court declared: “Since Curtis has appeared in this appeal
pro se
[,] no attorney fees are allowed.”
Curtis v. Campbell,
Although the Court was sharply divided on substantive issues in Curtis and 0 ’Neil, there was no apparent division on the question of whether pro se parties could receive attorney fee awards. Indeed, all four members of the рresent Court who sat on those cases voted to deny such awards. Justices Shepard and Bakes voted to deny fees in Curtis; Justices Huntley and Bistline cast similar votes in O’Neil. Accordingly, we conclude that the general rule against attorney fee awards to pro se litigants is the law in Idaho. It precludes any automatic award in this cаse under I.C. § 12-120.
II
The next question is whether an exception to the general rule should be carved out for
pro se
litigants who happen to be lawyers. This is an issue apparently of first impression in Idaho.
2
Decisions from other jurisdictions are in conflict.
See
Annot.,
Attorneys Fees
— Appearance
in Propria Persona,
During the nineteenth century, the states of New Jersey and New York allowed
pro se
lawyer litigants to rеceive attorney fee awards, so long as the 'awards did not include retaining fees.
E.g., State v. Berry,
During the 1980s, the issue began to receive more intensive scrutiny. Two opposing trends emerged. On one hand, some state supreme court decisions precluding attorney fee awards were questioned by lower appellate courts.
Compare Renfrew v. Loysen,
Thus, as matters now stand, the cases are in disarray. In deciding which direction to follow, we have undertaken a two-part inquiry. As explained below, we *202 have inquired, first, whether a pro se litigant’s status as a lawyer alters any of the reasons earlier expressed for the general rule against attorney fee awards to pro se litigants. Second, we have inquired into additional policy considerations for or against creating an exception to this rule for lawyer litigants.
In оur view, none of the previously stated reasons for denying attorney fees to
pro se
litigants is significantly affected by a litigant’s status as a lawyer. If the phrase “attorney fees” denotes the existence of an attorney-client relationship, it matters not that the client also haрpens to be a lawyer. Moreover, if a legislative body enacting a fee-award statute desires to include
pro se
lawyer litigants, either as a distinct class or as a subcategory of
pro se
litigants in general, it can say so expressly. Finally, if the fundamental objective of fee-awаrd statutes is to help litigants obtain counsel by providing a potential source of fees in meritorious cases, then such assistance is available to lawyer and nonlawyer litigants alike. On this latter point, it might be argued that if the litigant is a lawyer, a separate attorney neеd not be engaged in order to obtain the benefit of counsel. However, the benefit of counsel is not limited to the delegation of work to another legally trained individual; it also includes the “detached and objective perspective” that a separate attorney brings to the litigation process.
Falcone v. Internal Revenue Service,
Our inquiry into additional policy considerations has disclosed two pertinent arguments. First, it may be contended that the general rule against awarding fees to
pro se
litigants is based upon a dubious perception that such awards are windfalls to pеrsons who have spent no money, and incurred no debt, for legal representation. Some cases do, indeed, suggest such a rationale.
E.g., Crooker v. United States Dept. of Justice,
The argument has some merit. In economic theory, there is no conceptual distinction between an out-of-pocket cost and an “opportunity” cost because, in either sense, a “cost” is the value of whatever an individual gives up in order to acquire goods or to pursue an activity. C. GOETZ, LAW AND ECONOMICS, CASES AND MATERIALS 51-55 (1984). In the real world, however, out-of-pocket costs are more readily perceived and measured than “opportunity” costs, and they have a correspondingly greater impact on decisionmaking. P. HAYNE, THE ECONOMIC WAY OF THINKING 39-53 (1983). Thus, the rule against awarding attorney fees to pro se litigants may reflect an unspoken view that fees should be shifted from one party to another only when they are readily perceived and measurable.
If this is true, such a rationale might militate аgainst attorney fee awards to nonlawyer pro se litigants, but not against awards to lawyers pro se. Typically, the successful lawyer litigant will submit an attorney fee affidavit based on time, charges and other factors similar to those that would appear in the affidavit of a lawyer representing a client. Thus, the lawyer litigant’s “opportunity” cost may closely resemble the actual cost of legal services incurred by a litigant who obtains counsel. For this reason, it has been suggested that
[i]t can make no difference to the defeated party, who is bound to pay the costs of the attorney оf the prevailing party ... whether that attorney is the prevailing party himself or another attorney employed by him. He, like any other professional ... is paid for his time and services, and if he renders them in the management and trial of his own cause it may amount to as much peсuniary loss or damage to him as if he paid another attorney for doing it.
Note,
Right of Party Appearing for Himself to Tax Attorney’s Fees as Costs,
5 A.
*203
& E. Annot.Cas. 834 (1907),
quoted in Winer v. Jonal Corp.,
Thus, it is contended that if the lawyer litigant’s “opportunity” cost can be as readily perceived and measured as a non-lawyer’s actual сost of legal representation, then, in deference to the lawyer’s decision to represent himself, an award of attorney fees should be allowed. However, this argument must be viewed in the context of a second additional policy consideration — maintaining рublic confidence in the even-handed administration of justice. It may be, as suggested above, that when a case has been decided and a fee has been awarded, the defeated party cares not whether the fee is retained by the prevailing party or рaid over to separate counsel. However, before the case is decided, it matters a great deal to each party whether, and to whom, a fee may be awarded. This is especially true in cases where the amount of a potential award is likely to be substantial in relation to the amount at stake in the litigation. In such cases, the burden of attorney fees will profoundly affect the choice of whether to file or defend a law suit and whether to engage counsel or to litigate pro se.
The system would be one-sided, and would be viewed by thе public as unfair, if one party (a lawyer litigant) could qualify for a fee award without incurring the potential out-of-pocket obligation that the opposing party (a nonlawyer) ordinarily must bear in order to qualify for a similar award. Moreover, if both parties opt to litigate
pro se,
it would be palpably unjust for one of them (the lawyer litigant) to remain eligible for an attorney fee award, while the other becomes ineligible. As noted in
Connor v. Cal-Az Properties, Inc.,
We cannot ... have one rule which provides for compensation to attorneys when acting on their own behalf and another rule for lay persons acting on their own behalf____ [T]he leverage which would be granted to attorneys appearing on their own behalf could easily become oppressive where the opposition is forced to incur legal expenses.
In our view, the public perception of fairness in the legal system is of greater moment than a lawyer litigant’s claim to an attorney fee award if he elects to represent himself. For this reason, and because the other rationales for the general rule against fеe awards are applicable to lawyer and nonlawyer litigants alike, we decline to carve out a special exception for lawyers pro se. 3
The decision of the district court, upholding the magistrate’s order which denied an award of attorney fees, is affirmed. The respondents having made no appearance, there are no costs to be awarded in this appeal.
Notes
. The implied benefit argument is even less persuasive in the present case because the fee-award statute at issue here, I.C. § 12-120, is policy-nеutral. It favors no claim or category of litigant.
DeWils Interiors, Inc. v. Dines,
. In
Kidwell & Heiser v. Fenley,
. The law firm in this case has not attempted to avoid
pro se
status by arguing that, as a professional service corporation, it has been represented by sepаrate counsel. However, we note that even if such an argument were made, it would not alter our conclusion. When a rule of law is enunciated on whether
pro se
lawyer litigants are entitled to attorney fee awards, that rule should be applied consistently. It should not turn on distinctiоns among proprietorships, partnerships, corporations or other modes of law practice.
Cf. Renfrew v. Loysen,
222 Cal. Rpt. 413, 415,
