Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge HARRY T. EDWARDS.
In 1995, the National Science Foundation (“NSF”), the sole appellant before this court, and Network Solutions, Inc. (“NSI”), a private contractor, entered into an agreement which permitted NSI to collect fees for Internet registration services. NSI and NSF divided the fees 70%-30%, with NSF’s 30% share deposited into an Intellectual Infrastructure Fund (“Fund”) for future Government use on Internet projects. In 1997, William Thomas and other parties (collectively, “appellees”), filed a suit in District Court seeking to enjoin NSF and NSI from spending monies in the Fund and claiming restitution of fees collected from domain name registrants on the Internet. The District Court issued a preliminary injunction temporarily barring NSF and NSI from spending any money in the Fund.
See Thomas v. Network Solutions, Inc.,
No. 97-02412 (D.D.C. Feb. 2, 1998)
(“Injunction Order"), reprinted in
Appendix (“App.”) 71-83. Subsequently, the District Court dismissed all counts of the Amended Complaint except Count One and dismissed NSI from the lawsuit (because Count One concerned only NSF.)
See Thomas v. Network Solutions, Inc.,
Before the District Court was able to render final judgment or issue an order for specific relief in the case, the President signed into law H.R. 3579, the Fiscal Year 1998 Supplemental Appropriations and Re-scissions Act. Section 8003 of the statute “legalized and ratified” the registration fee and the monies held by NSF in the Fund, thus rendering moot appellees’ claim before the District Court. The District Court then vacated the preliminary injunction and dismissed the case.
Thomas v. Network Solutions, Inc.,
No. 97-02412 (D.D.C. Aug. 28, 1998)
(“Dismissal Order"), reprinted in
App. 84-98. The District Court’s judgment was affirmed by this court in
Thomas v. Network Solutions, Inc.,
Appellees then filed a motion for attorney’s fees and costs against NSF under the Equal Access to Justice Act (“EAJA”), 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A) (1982). The District Court, held that, because they had succeeded in securing a preliminary injunction and a partial summary judgment, appellees were “prevailing parties” under EAJA and, thus, entitled to fees and costs. Thomas v. Network Solutions, Inc., No. 97-02412 (D.D.C. Mar. 22, 2002) (“Fee Award”), reprinted in App. 551-59; Thomas v. Network Solutions, Inc., No. 97-02412 (D.D.C. Mar. 23, 2001) (“Fee Decision”), reprinted in App. 399-422. NSF appeals from these judgments.
In
Buckhannon Board & Care Home, Inc. v. West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources,
I. Background
Many of the details relating to the underlying litigation in this case are set forth in
Thomas II,
NSF is an independent federal agency whose authority extends to “coordinating and funding the management of the nonmilitary portion of the Internet infrastructure.” Id. at 504. In 1993, NSF signed a Cooperative Agreement with NSI. The agreement called for NSI to design and manage a system for individuals and companies to register their Internet domain names. In addition, NSF agreed to compensate NSI for the costs of offering this service to the public and to provide the company an additional fixed fee for each completed domain name registration.
In 1995, NSF and NSI amended their Cooperative Agreement. Under the revised arrangement, the cost of an Internet domain name would be $100 for new registrations and $50 for yearly renewals. The amended contract allotted 70% of the fees to NSI as consideration for the services provided, with the remaining 30% to be deposited in the Intellectual Infrastructure Fund for future Government use in connection with Internet projects. The fee arrangement under the revised Cooperative Agreement was adopted by NSF and NSI without prior authorizing legislation from Congress.
In October, 1997, appellees, various parties who had paid the Internet registration fees, filed a civil lawsuit against NSF and NSI in the District Court. They claimed that NSF’s share of the registration fees (the so-called “Preservation Assessment”) was an unconstitutional tax, because Congress never authorized the agency to collect and deposit monies into the Fund. Appellees sought an injunction barring NSF from collecting any further fees or spending any monies in the Fund and a refund of the money that had been deposited in the Fund. Shortly after appellees filed suit, the District Court issued a limited preliminary injunction preventing NSF from “crediting, spending, obligating or using any of the money collected for, placed into, or taken from” the Fund pending final adjudication of the case. Injunction Order, App. 83.
On April 6, 1998, the District Court dismissed all counts of the Amended Complaint, except Count One; granted a partial summary judgment in favor of ap-pellees against NSF on Count One of the Amended Complaint; and dismissed NSI from the case.
SJ Decision,
Before the District Court entered final judgment or addressed appellees’ claims for relief, Congress passed and the President signed into law Section 8003 of the Fiscal Year 1998 Supplemental Appropriations and Recessions Act:
RATIFICATION OF INTERNET INTELLECTUAL INFRASTRUCTURE FEE. (a) The 30 percent portion of the fee charged by Network Solutions, Inc., *490 between September 14, 1995 and March 31, 1998, for registration and renewal of an Internet second-level domain name, which portion was to be expended for the preservation and enhancement of the intellectual infrastructure of the Internet under a cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation ... is hereby legalized and ratified and confirmed fully as to all intents and purpose as if the same had, by prior Act of Congress, been specifically authorized and directed.
Pub. L. No. 105-174, 112 Stat. 58, 93. This statutory provision had the clear purpose and effect of legalizing and ratifying NSF’s Preservation Assessment scheme.
Following enactment of § 8003, NSF filed a motion to vacate the preliminary injunction and dismiss the case as moot. On August 28, 2000, the District Court concluded that Section 8003 was “sufficient to effect a valid ratification of the [Preservation Assessment].”
Dismissal Order
at 13, App. 96;
see also U.S. v. Heinszen,
On February 17, 2000, appellees filed a motion in District Court seeking an award of attorney’s fees and costs under EAJA. See Plaintiffs’ Application in Support of Motion for Award of Attorney’s Fees and Costs (“Fee Motion”), reprinted in App. 99-276. EAJA provides that:
Except as otherwise specifically provided by statute, a court shall award to a prevailing party other than the United States fees and other expenses ... incurred by that party in any civil action ... brought by or against the United States ... unless the court finds that the position of the United States was substantially justified or that special circumstances make an award unjust.
28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A). Appellees cited three reasons to support their claim as “prevailing parties” under EAJA: (1) the District Court’s preliminary injunction “prohibiting [NSF’s] dissipation of the tens of millions of dollars in unlawful taxes they exacted”; (2) the court’s partial summary judgment on “the 'central issue’ in the litigation”; and (3) the fact that the lawsuit was the catalyst for NSF to “do away with the Preservation Assessment collections altogether.” Fee Motion at 20, App. 120. In opposition to the motion, NSF argued that appellees were “not ‘prevailing parties’ for purposes of EAJA, and their claim fails on that basis alone.” See Defendant NSF’s Opp. to Plaintiffs’ Motion for Award of Attorneys’ Fees and Costs at 3 (“NSF Opposition”), reprinted in App. 279. NSF also argued that appellees could not prevail under EAJA because NSF’s legal position in the case was “substantially justified.” Id. at 13-21, App. 289-97.
The District Court concluded that a fee award for appellees was appropriate under EAJA. The court rejected the “catalyst theory” as a basis for fees, but found that the preliminary injunction and partial summary judgment were sufficient to make appellees “prevailing parties.”
Fee Decision
at 15-17, App. 412-14. While the District Court was considering supplemental pleadings to determine the exact amount of money that appellees were due, the Supreme Court decided
Buckhannon.
There, the Court rejected a fee request pursuant to the Fair Housing Amend
*491
ments Act and the Americans with Disabilities Act where the underlying lawsuit became moot when the state passed legislation to resolve the case.
NSF then filed a “Notice of Filing” -with the District Court on June 13, 2001, suggesting that Buckhannon was relevant to the legal construction of the term “prevailing parties” in fee-shifting statutes. The District Court held to its position that appellees had “prevailed,” stating that the decision in Buckhannon was largely inap-posite to the present case:
[Wjhile Buckhannon may bolster this Court’s prior rejection of Plaintiffs catalyst theories by providing a wholly new basis for doing so, the Court can find nothing in Buckhannon and its limited progeny thus far necessitating a different result; the preliminary injunction and summary judgment awarded to [ap-pellees] certainly constitute a “judicial imprimatur,” and there was nothing “voluntary” about [NSFJ’s compelled compliance with such ordered relief.
Fee Award at 2 n.l, App. 552. The District Court then awarded $268,070 in attorney’s fees and $38,585 in costs to appel-lees. Id. at 7, App. 557. NSF then filed a Notice of Appeal with this court.
II. Discussion
NSF claims that the District Court committed legal error in construing EAJA’s “prevailing party” requirement. We review this claim
de novo. See Nat’l Ass’n of Mfrs. v. Dep’t of Labor,
A. Appellees’ Forfeiture Claim
Before addressing the merits of NSF’s appeal, we must first consider whether NSF’s claim that appellees are not “prevailing parties” under EAJA is properly before- this court. Appellees contend that we should dismiss the appeal, because NSF never argued before the District Court that appellees were not “prevailing parties.” Br. of Appellees at 18-21. Thus, according to appellees, this claim has been forfeited. We disagree.
We need not dwell long on this issue, because NSF’s reply brief to this court convincingly refutes appellees’ claim:
[T]he issue of “prevailing party” status was raised by NSF below. Although NSF’s opposition to plaintiffs’ motion for attorney’s fees concentrated on the issue of substantial justification, the opposition preliminarily stated that “[pjlaintiffs are ... not ‘prevailing parties’ for purposes of EAJA, and their claim fails on that basis alone.” Def. NSF’s Opp’n to Pis.’ Mot. for Award of Atty’s Fees and Costs at 3 (App. 279). NSF argued that the district court’s “April 6th ruling was not merged into any final judgment, and the ‘unconstitutional tax’ issue was never litigated to finality,” depriving it of the opportunity to “exercise the right enjoyed by ‘non-prevailing’ parties to appeal.” Id. at 1 (App. 277).
NSF also subsequently filed a “Notice of Filing” with the district court, noting that Buckhannon “ ‘bears upon the construction of “prevailing party” for purposes of attorney fee-shifting statutes.’ ” See Dis. Ct. Op. (Mar. 22, 2002) at 2 n.l (App. 552). Indeed, the district court specifically addressed and decided the issue of “prevailing party” status in its opinion, holding that “the preliminary injunction and summary judgment awarded to Plaintiffs certainly constitute *492 a ‘judicial imprimatur,’ and there was nothing ‘voluntary’ about Defendants’ compelled compliance with such ordered relief.” Ibid.
Reply Br. of Appellant at 7-8. .
In short, the record is clear that NSF raised the “prevailing party” issue with the District Court, the District Court addressed the issue, and NSF preserved the issue in its appeal to this court. Accordingly, we reject the contention that NSF forfeited its right to challenge appellees’ prevailing party status on appeal.
B. The Merits
The central issue in this case is whether, in light of Buckhannon and Hewitt, the District Court erred in holding that the vacated preliminary injunction and partial summary judgment were sufficient to make appellees eligible for attorney’s fees under the EAJA.
The District Court found
Buckhannon
to be inapposite, because, in the trial court’s view, the principal thrust of
Buck-hannon
is the Supreme Court’s judgment rejecting the “catalyst theory.” The plaintiffs argument for fees in
Buckhannon
rested on the theory that the lawsuit led the state to adopt intervening legislation that ultimately resolved the legal dispute. The Court held that the litigant was not a “prevailing party,” because the lawsuit was resolved by virtue of what the defendant did, not what the court ordered. In other words, the enactment of the legislation “lack[ed] the necessary judicial
imprimatur.”
Buckhannon is, first and foremost, about the meaning of the term “prevailing party” in civil litigation under certain fee-shifting statutes. 1 The first two sentences of the majority opinion for the Court make this clear:
Numerous federal statutes allow courts to award attorney’s fees and costs to the “prevailing party.” The question presented here is whether this term includes a party that has failed to secure a judgment on the merits or a court-ordered consent decree, but has nonetheless achieved the desired result because the lawsuit brought about a voluntary change in the defendant’s conduct.
the term “prevailing party[ ]” [is] a legal term of art. Black’s Law Dictionary 1145 (7th ed. 1999) defines “prevailing party” as “[a] party in whose favor a judgment is rendered, regardless of the amount of damages awarded <in certain cases, the court will award attorney’s fees to the prevailing party>. - Also termed successful party.” This view that a “prevailing party” is one who has been awarded some relief by the court can be distilled from our prior cases.
These principles underscore the Court’s judgment in Buckhannon rejecting the “catalyst theory,” but they also establish a framework for construing and applying the “prevailing party” requirement more broadly. In applying these principles to the instant case, it is clear that appellees are not “prevailing parties” under EAJA, for neither the preliminary injunction nor the partial summary judgment changed the legal relationship between appellees and NSF in a way that afforded appellees the relief that they sought.
As appellees concede, the sole effect of the preliminary injunction was to prevent NSF from appropriating any money already collected from the registration assessment. In other words, the relief merely preserved the status quo pending final adjudication of the case. And upon granting NSF’s motion to dismiss the case, the District Court vacated the preliminary injunction. In short, the preliminary injunction did not change the legal relationship between the parties in a way that afforded appellees the relief they sought in their lawsuit.
The facts in this case are easily distinguishable from cases in which we have found that “the subsequent mootness of the case [did not] necessarily alter the plaintiffs’ status as prevailing parties.”
Nat’l Black Police Ass’n v. D.C. Bd. of Elections,
Appellees’ claim fares no better with respect to the partial summary judgment. That order merely declared that the disputed Preservation Assessment was an unconstitutional tax. The partial summary judgment did not afford appellees any concrete relief, beyond this mere legal decla
*494
ration. As noted above,
Buckhannon
and
Hewitt
make it clear that a mere “judicial pronouncement that the defendant has violated the Constitution,” unaccompanied by
“judicial
relief,” is not sufficient to make a claimant a “prevailing party.”
Buckhannon,
In sum, neither the vacated preliminary injunction nor the vacated partial summary judgment can justify an award of fees in this case.
III. Conclusion
For the reasons given above, the judgments of the District Court in favor of appellees are hereby reversed and the case is dismissed.
Notes
. In
Oil, Chemical & Atomic Workers International Union v. Department of Energy,
we held that "eligibility for an award of attorney's fees [under one statute] should be treated the same as eligibility determinations made under other fee-shifting statutes
unless there is some good reason
for doing otherwise.”
. We do not address here the application of
Buckhannon
to administrative proceedings provided for by certain statutes.
See Moore v. District of Columbia,
