The United States appeals from the district court’s 1 аward of attorney’s fees to defendants in this condemnation action, arguing that its position was substantially justified. The Government’s various offers of compensation for the condemnation matched the estimates of its qualified appraisers. We agree that the Government showed its position with respect to land compensation to be substantially justified within the meaning of the Equal Access to Justiсe Act, 28 U.S.C.A. § 2412 (West Supp.1986) (the Act), and reverse the district court’s award.
I.
The defendants, Laurance Phister, Alice Phister, and the testamentary trust of Harriet Phister (collectively the Phisters) each own undivided partial interests in approximately 3,000 acres of land situated near Horton, Missouri. Nearly half the land, some 1,379 acres, will be subject to occasional flooding on completion of the Truman Dam аnd Reservoir Project. The Phis-ters do not reside on the property but use tenant farmers to raise grain and commercial loggers to harvest and remove timber on the land. The parties stipulate that although the Phisters had a combined net worth in excess of $2,000,000, their combined net worth was less than $5,000,000 and they had fewer than 500 employees working the land at the time of the taking, as required to qualify under the Act, 28 U.S.C.A. § 2412(d)(2)(B) (Wеst Supp.1986) (applicable maximum now $7,000,000).
In 1978, the Government sought to purchase a flowage easement over the land for $140,000, its value according to an appraisal performed by Oliver Dane, a retired Corps of Engineers employee. Some eight months later, based on Dane’s revised appraisal, the Government raised its offer to $211,000. The Phisters refused the Government’s second offer, stаting that they believed they could secure $100,000 more through a court proceeding.
See United States v. 1,378.65 Acres of Land,
Sawyers and Riebold are members of the American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers and recipients of the Institute’s highest designation, the MAI. It is undisputed that Sawyers made his appraisal without knowing what Dane’s prior appraisals had been. Dane had requested after a previous trial appearance as an expert witness that the Government not use his services as an expert witness in the future. Dane had been accepted as a qualified expert appraiser in many prior condemnation proceedings.
*1315 Sawyers and Riebold used similar appraisal methods. To evaluate the loss in value of the land caused by the greater risk of flooding following construction of the dam, they calculated separately the value оf the land without and with the risk of flooding. To arrive at each value, they compared the prices similar plots of land had brought at sale, adjusting these to take account of the advantages and disadvantages of the land in question. The Commission also adopted the same method.
Riebold estimated the value of the Phis-ters’ land at $2,660,000 before the Government’s easement increased the risk of flooding. Sawyers estimated the value at $2,075,000, and the Commission found a value somewhat close to Sawyers’, $2,301,-000. If the Commission had averaged the two figures, it would have calculated the before-taking value at $2,362,000. Riebold estimated the after-taking value at $2,175,-000. Sawyers estimated $1,960,000, and the Commission largely agreed with Sawyers, finding an after-taking value of $1,976,000. As a result of these calculations, the Commission awarded the Phis-ters $325,000, or $25,000 more than the average of the $115,000 amount of just compensation proposed by Sawyers and the $485,000 compensation proposed by Rie-bold.
In reviewing the two appraisals, the Commission repeatedly found Riebold’s estimates “somewhat high” and Sawyers’ “somewhat low” without ever questioning their competence or honesty. The Commission’s separate calculation of bеfore and after prices was generally less critical of Sawyers’ conclusions than Riebold’s. It found Riebold’s estimate of damage to irrigation equipment “unsupported by the evidence,” for instance, and noted that Sawyers “has slightly overvalued the timberland” but also “slightly underestimated” the value of the cropland and structural improvements after the taking.
After the district court approved the Commissiоn’s award, the Phisters applied in the district court for attorney’s fees under the Act, which awards fees to private parties who prevail in a civil action against the United States in certain circumstances where the Government’s position was not “substantially justified.”
See
28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A). The parties stipulated that $22,380 in fees are at issue. Because the applicability of the Act to condemnation actions wаs an unclear question then pending in this court, the district court stayed its disposition until this court’s decision in
United States v. 341.45 Acres of Land,
Following
341 Acres,
the district court held that the Act applied to this case, that the Phisters were a prevailing party, and that the Government’s position was not substantially justified.
1,378 Acres,
II.
Congress passed the Act to encourage relatively impecunious private parties to challenge abusive or unreasonable governmental behavior by relieving such parties of the fear of incurring large litigation
*1316
expenses.
Spencer v. NLRB,
[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.
28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A). Unlike most fee-shifting schemes provided by statute, the Act relieves the Government from liability for the fees of a prevailing opponent if it shows its position to be substantially justified.
See Spencer,
When Congress enacted the Act in 1980, it was made applicable to all suits pending on October 1, 1981, as was this suit. Congress renewed the Act retroactively in amended form last year. Pub.L. No. 99-80, 99 Stat. 183 (1985) (the Amendments). The Amendments “apply to cases pending on ... the date of enactment of this [amending] Act.” Pub.L. No. 99-80 § 7(a),
The Government’s principal grounds before the district court for opposing fees under the Act were that the Act did not provide for awards in condemnation actions, that the Phisters had not prevailed, and that the Phisters were not the sort of party entitled to fees under the Act. After similar arguments were largely rejected by 341 Acres, the focus of argument before the district court in this case turned to whether the Government’s position was substantially justified.
This court found in
341 Acres
and the Amendments confirmed that the Act allowed fee awards for prevailing landowners in condemnation actions.
Under 341 Acres, the Phisters would be deemed prevailing parties by a decisive margin, as would be landowners in almost every condemnation action brought to trial, because from the cases collected in the district court’s opinion and our own observation it would appear that most adjudicated condemnation awards represent a compromise of reasoned appraisals. Following the Amendments, however, the *1317 Phisters have prеvailed by only a narrow margin. Their award of $315,000 is only $25,000 greater than the average of Rie-bald’s and Sawyers’ appraisals, and any award less than that average would not entitle them to attorney’s fees.
If the Government shows that its position was substantially justified, the Phis-ters will not be entitled to attorney’s fees under the Act even though they prevailed before the Commission. 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A). This court found in
341 Acres,
and the Amendments confirmed, that in evaluating the Government’s claimed substantial justification, both its prelitigation action in seeking a settlement and its posture at trial should be considered.
This court discussed at length how a district court should evaluate substantial justification:
If the government’s appraisers are qualifiеd or the other evidence of valuation is sufficient, the government’s prelitigation position or offer is substantially justified if it is based upon and consistent with the appraisals or other evidence of valuation. Similarly, the government’s litigation position is substantially justified if the amount established by the govemment during trial is based upon and consistent with the appraisals or other evidence of valuation. The district court should focus upon the relationship between the government’s offer, the appraisals, and the valuations established by the government’s expert witnesses during trial, rather than the relationship between the government’s offer or deposit and the property owner’s counteroffer, if any, or the jury award____
The congressional report accompanying the Amendments alters our understanding of substantial justification in another respect. In the original legislative history of the Act, the House Judiciary Committee stated that “[t]he test of whether or not a government action is substantially justified is essentially one of reasonableness.” H.R.Rep. No. 1418,
supra
at 13,
reprinted in
1980 U.S. Code Cong. & Ad. News at 4992. Although we have recognized that Congress by rejecting an amended standard of “reasonable justification” had suggested that a slightly higher standard might apply, we have followed the reasonableness standard in
341 Acres
and in many other decisions.
See
With these considerations in mind we turn to the facts of this particular case and consider the circumstances if any in which the Government might not be substantially justified in relying on the valuations of competent, experienced, qualified appraisers for its settlement and trial positions. Our review is limited to determining whether the district court abused its discretion by finding that the Government’s position was not substantially justified.
Keasler v. United States,
Following the approach of 341 Acres, we evaluate the substantial justification of the Government’s settlement and trial positions by considering the appraisals on which they are based. We place no significance on Riebold’s higher appraisal for the Phisters or on the Commission’s final award, except to notice that the differences between the various аmounts are not outrageous. The Commission found a before-taking value that was somewhat closer to Sawyer’s than to Riebold’s appraisal, and an after-taking value that was substantially closer to Sawyers’ appraisal, although its compensation award was closer to that Riebold proposed. The Commission’s award of $325,000 exceeds by only $25,000 the average of Sawyers’ and Riebold’s appraisals, and if it had awarded any amount less than that average, the Phisters would not have prevailed under the amended Act. The Phisters also would not have prevailed if the Commission had considered the Government’s earlier $211,000 offer based on Dane’s estimate and still chose to award $325,000. We cannot say that the Government’s appraisals on their face are so out of line with the оutcome of the litigation — the Commission’s award — as to suggest that the Government’s offers in reliance on them were not substantially justified.
The Government adequately explained the difference between its settlement offer and its evidence at trial, as required by 341 Acres. Appraising real estate is more an art than a science; it is incapable of mathematical precision and implicatеs methods of *1319 judgment. As we have noted above, the valuation of a flowage easement is particularly difficult. It is understandable that the conclusions of absolute value drawn by Dane and Sawyers would differ. There is no hint that Sawyers knew of Dane’s appraisal, had been instructed to reach a less generous conclusion or otherwise acted in bad faith. Most significantly, both the Government’s pre-triаl settlement offer and its trial evidence matched its concurrent appraisals.
The district court offered no specific criticisms of the Government’s appraisals, aside from a chiding reference to Dane’s personal record of appraisals in other cases.
The district court also considered the record in other federal condemnation actions involving other appraisers in reaching its decision. It appeared to draw from a wide-ranging comparison with other cases that the Govеrnment’s position in virtually all condemnation actions is not substantially justified.
See
When in a condemnation action the Government selects experienced, qualified, competent appraisers, and consistently relies on their valuations in its offers of just compensation, without any evidence of bad faith on its part, its course of conduct is solid, well founded, and clearly reasonable. Its position, therefore, is substantially justified.
III.
We conclude that fees should not have been awarded to the Phisters under the Act. The judgment of the district court awarding fees is reversed.
Notes
. The Honorable John W. Oliver, Senior District Judge, United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri.
. The report cited approvingly four court decisions applying a test slightly more stringent than reasonableness for substantial justification. H.R.Rep. No. 120,
supra
at 9 n. 15,
reprinted in
1985 U.S. Code Cong. & Ad. News at 18 n. 15;
see, e.g., Spencer,
. “Substantial justification is a different and a lesser standard than the substantial evidence standard applied in a review of administrative proceedings. The Government may still prove that its position was substantially justified even if the court does not believe that the case on the merits was supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole.” 131 Cong. Rec. H4763 (daily ed. June 24, 1985) (statement of Congressman Kindness).
