We have consolidated for decision three appeals, argued before the same panel on consecutive days, that require interpretation of the Equal Access to Justice Act. The Act entitles a party that prevails in litigation with the United States (including proceedings for judicial review of agency action) to attorneys’ fees “unless the court finds that the position of the United States was substantially justified.” 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A). The issue in each appeal is whether the government’s position was “substantially justified,” but in No. 09-2421, with which we begin, there is an additional issue — whether attorneys’ fees paid to a defendant’s liability insurer can be awarded under the Act. The district judge awarded TWM (Thouvenot, Wade & Moerschen) some $200,000 in attorneys’ fees; its liability insurer paid for its defense and so will receive $150,000 because the policy specified a $50,000 deductible.
The United States sued TMW, the project site engineer of an apartment complex, along with others (who are not parties to the appeal), for having designed and built a project that violated the Federal Housing Act because it wasn’t accessible to persons having a disability: the ground floor was sunk four feet below the level of the parking lot and there was no ramp, just steps. The lack of access to disabled persons was apparent from plans prepared *381 by TWM. Though they were marked “for construction,” the company denied that they had been intended for use in construction and moved for summary judgment, which was denied. The case was tried to a jury. At the close of the government’s case, and again at the end of the entire trial, the defendant moved for entry of judgment as a matter of law. The judge denied the motions. He said “the jury could believe that throughout this construction, these plans were used by everyone. We have a jury who could clearly believe that TWM was involved in both the design and the construction and given the Fair Housing Act, could believe that they are culpable.” But the jury returned a verdict for the defendant.
In justifying his award of attorneys’ fees despite having refused to take the case from the jury, the district judge said that “upon reviewing the evidence, Plaintiffs position was not substantially justified and the jury ruled accordingly.” This is a mysterious statement because of course the jury had not been asked to decide whether the position of the United States had been substantially justified, and did not offer an opinion on the issue. The judge later amplified his grounds slightly, saying that “after reviewing all of the evidence presented at trial, the Court finds that Defendant TWM clearly did not belong in this case. As Defendant TWM points out, the evidence showed that TWM was only involved in the zoning process and had no role in designing the complex, nor were its drawings prepared as building plans.”
The key statutory term, “substantially justified,” is neither defined nor self-evident. If it just meant not frivolous, there would be no problem because usually it’s pretty easy to distinguish a frivolous from a nonfrivolous case. But the courts have not taken that road.
Pierce v. Underwood,
Between frivolous and meritorious lie cases that are “ ‘justified in substance or in the main’ — that is, justified to a degree that could satisfy a reasonable person [and hence has a] ‘reasonable basis both in law and fact.’ ”
Pierce v. Underwood, supra,
But, consistent with this standard, there is a presumption that a government case strong enough to survive both a motion to dismiss and a motion for summary judgment is substantially justified. See
EEOC v. Liberal R-II School District,
Of course something might emerge at trial that showed that the government really had no case at all. Or the district judge might on reflection decide that he had erred grievously in refusing to grant the defendant’s motion to dismiss or motion for summary judgment. But in this case the presumption stands unrebutted. See
Wilfong v. United States,
In deciding to award fees the district judge gave no weight to his rulings denying TWM’s motions for summary judgment, for judgment as a matter of law at the close of the government’s evidence, and for judgment as a matter of law at the close of all the evidence. After hearing all the evidence he had decided that the government had a substantial case and therefore the jury would be permitted to decide it, and the only thing that happened afterward was that the jury rendered a verdict for TWM. This impelled the judge to review the evidence after the defendant filed its motion for an award of attorneys’ fees. But all he found in his review, judging from his cryptic discussion, was that the jury’s verdict was justified by the evidence, which no one questions. He pointed to nothing that suggested that the trial had revealed profound weaknesses in the government’s case that, had he known about them earlier, would have moved him to grant one of TWM’s dispositive motions. Nor can we find anything.
There was evidence that TWM did not think that its drawings, which depicted sewer lines, water lines and other subdivision improvements, and were preliminary and unsigned, would be used to construct the apartment complex — evidence that they were subdivision-improvement plans rather than building plans and that, being intended to be used to obtain a building permit and the Village Planning Commission’s approval for the project, they merely illustrated the project’s general conception and contours and omitted technical details. Yet the plans showed the difference in elevation between the parking lot and the ground floor; a ramp had been included but was later deleted; and TWM went on site to “stake” the first six buildings and did so in a manner that indicated that the entrances would indeed be below ground level. Thus there was evidence that TWM knew that regardless of the original purpose of the plans, they were being used as *383 building plans, at least with regard to how the buildings would be entered. So the government had a substantial though not winning case, and TWM therefore failed to establish its right to an award.
But we agree with the district judge that an award of attorneys’ fees under the Equal Access to Justice Act can include fees incurred by the party’s liability insurer. It is not strictly necessary for us to decide the issue, since we have just held that TWM was not entitled to an award, whether to share with its insurer or not. But the issue is a recurrent one that has divided the circuits to have considered it: compare
United States v. Paisley,
The case for inclusion is compelling. Suppose a party seeking an award of fees had been uninsured and had agreed to pay a lawyer’s fee as he had to do in order to induce the lawyer to take his case; but, being worried that if he lost he wouldn’t be able to afford the fee, he borrowed $150,000 from his rich uncle, promising to pay it back if he won his case and received a fee award. Suppose the rich uncle has a net worth in excess of $2 million and therefore would not be entitled to an award of attorneys’ fees if he were the prevailing party in the case; and anyway he is not a party. But the award is not to him, it is to his nephew, who is the party; what the party does with the money — buy a Rolls Royce or repay his uncle — is his business.
Liability insurance is the same; it is a contingent loan. The insured pays premiums and in exchange is promised that the insurance company will bear the cost of the insured’s defense (subject to a deductible) if he is sued on a claim that the policy covers. But to minimize his premiums the insured agrees to repay that cost to the extent it is covered by a court award of attorneys’ fees. Nothing in the Equal Access to Justice Act suggests a purpose to prevent such a contractual arrangement, or, more broadly, to discourage the purchase of liability insurance.
Another way to look at the insurance contract — but it leads to the same conclusion — is that the insurance premiums are the fee that the insured pays for the insurance company’s defense of his ease.
Ed A Wilson, Inc. v. General Services Administration, supra,
There is a legitimate concern with what has been called the problem of the “stand-in litigant,”
SEC v. Comserv Corp., supra,
We move on to our next two cases, both of which involve claims by persons who prevailed in litigation with the Social Security Administration over their claims for social security disability benefits. The difference between such cases and TWM’s case is that in an appeal from the decision of an administrative agency the court has to decide not whether the government lacked substantial justification for bringing the case — for a social security case begins as an application for benefits — but whether the agency had a substantial justification for turning down the application.
Stewart v. Astrue,
The appeal in a social security case goes from the agency to the district court rather than directly to the court of appeals, but the loser in the district court can appeal to the court of appeals. In No. 09-1232, the district court affirmed the denial of Christine Bauer’s application for benefits, but we reversed,
Bauer v. Astrue,
A district judge who has been reversed for ruling against the party that the court of appeals decides should have prevailed must be careful not to let his superseded view of the merits color his determination of whether there was a substantial justification for the government’s position.
United States v. Real Property at 2659 Roundhill Drive,
This is such a case; the district court’s evaluation of substantial justification is inconsistent with our merits opinion. Bauer based her claim of disability on the fact
*385
that she is afflicted with bipolar disorder; in an older vocabulary, she is manic-depressive. Our opinion explained that “a consultant who has a Ph.D. in an unspecified field examined the plaintiffs medical records and concluded that although she indeed has bipolar disorder, it only moderately limits her ability to work.”
We went on to say that “many of the reasons offered by the administrative law judge for discounting the evidence of [the two treating physicians] suggest a lack of acquaintance with bipolar disorder. For example, the judge noted that the plaintiff dresses appropriately, shops for food, prepares meals and performs other household chores, is an ‘active participator [sic] in group therapy,’ is ‘independent in her personal hygiene,’ and takes care of her 13-year-old son. This is just to say that the plaintiff is not a raving maniac who needs to be locked up. She is heavily medicated, and this enables her to cope with the challenges of daily living, and would doubtless enable her to work on some days.... What seems to have made the biggest impression on the administrative law judge, but suggests a lack of understanding of bipolar disorder, was that [the] treatment notes [of one of the treating physicians], which back up the report in which she concludes that the plaintiff cannot work full time, contain a number of hopeful remarks ... the plaintiffs memory was ‘ok,’ her sleep fair, she was doing ‘fairly well,’ her ‘reported level of function was found to have improved,’ she had ‘a brighter affect and increased energy,’ she ‘was doing quite well.’ On the basis of such remarks the administrative law judge concluded: ‘little weight is given the assessment of [that treating physician].’ A person who has a chronic disease, whether physical or psychiatric, and is under continuous treatment for it with heavy drugs, is likely to have better days and worse days; that is true of the plaintiff in this case.” Id. at 608-09.
The basis for the district court’s refusal to award fees to Bauer is found in two sentences in his order: “Despite the ALJ’s misapprehension of bipolar disorder, there was evidence in the record that contradicted the reports of the treating physicians, and the Seventh Circuit acknowledged as much. [532 F.3d] at 608. Many of the notes from the treating physicians contained conflicting evidence regarding Bauer’s conditions and symptoms.” That is a misreading of this court’s opinion, as should be apparent from the passages that we quoted from it. Because the consultant — he of the Ph.D. in an unidentified subject — disagreed with the two treating physicians, the administrative law judge could not just rely on those physicians’ evidence but had to decide how much weight to give it.
*386
The evidence that she was totally disabled was essentially uncontradicted. The consultant’s evaluation was entitled to no weight, and the “conflicting evidence” was consistent with a condition that had convinced the treating physicians that she could not hold down a full-time job. (For two very similar cases, see
Brownawell v. Commissioner of Social Security,
It could be argued that whatever the deficiencies of the district court’s ruling on the merits of the agency’s denial of benefits, the fact that the government was able to persuade a federal judge that it had not only a reasonable case, but a winner, should create an irrebuttable presumption that the government’s position was substantially justified. We disagree. The concept of “abuse of discretion” recognizes the possibility that a judge will at times reach a result that persuades the appellate court that he made an unreasonable ruling, rather than a ruling that was at least arguably correct. No doubt the government like other litigants occasionally prevails, at least at the trial level, when its position is not substantially justified; and that is what happened in the Bauer case.
We come last to No. 09-2574 (Park). Park was denied disability benefits, like Bauer, and appealed to the district court, which reversed (and the government did not appeal the reversal) but denied Park’s application for an award of fees under the Equal Access to Justice Act. The reversal of the denial of benefits had been based on two features of the administrative law judge’s opinion. The first was his possible mischaracterization of the testimony by a friend of Park’s named Nicholson concerning Park’s ability to work, and specifically whether Nicholson had testified that he allowed Park to live rent-free in a trailer that Nicholson owned in exchange for Park’s doing odd jobs for him. The administrative law judge thought so, but the transcript of the hearing provides only scanty support. In response to his question, “He [Park] does help out and that’s why you’re so willing to let him use the trailer, otherwise you could run him out, right?” Nicholson responded ambiguously, “Well, yeah, I could.” He may just have been confirming that he could expel Park at any time because it was Nicholson’s trailer and Park had no lease, consistent with Nicholson’s testimony that he let him stay in the trailer for free.
The district court thought that the administrative law judge had unfairly hectored Park’s lawyer when he was questioning Nicholson, and, in reversing, the court ordered the Social Security Administration to assign the case to a different administrative law judge. That was error. Courts can suggest but cannot require a change of administrative law judges,
Sarchet v. Chater,
Second, the district court faulted the administrative law judge for failing to explain adequately how Park’s breathing difficulties affected his ability to work. Park had been diagnosed with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), an umbrella term for a group of lung diseases, principally chronic bronchitis and emphysema. National Heart, Lung, & Blood *387 Institute, Department of Health & Human Services, “What is COPD?”, www.nhlbi. nih.gov/health/dci/Diseases/Copd/Copd_ Whatls.html (visited Jan. 31, 2010); Mayo Clinic, “COPD: Definition”, www. mayoclinic.com/health/copd/ds00916 (visited Jan. 31, 2010). The record does not reveal which Park suffers from.
These deficiencies in the administrative law judge’s opinion do not establish (or so at least the district court could find without abusing its discretion, the proper standard,
Pierce v. Underwood, supra,
Although the administrative law judge did not name Park’s breathing problems COPD, she did discuss them; Park’s lawyer has not indicated what specific disease (for remember that COPD is a portmanteau term) his client suffers from. The administrative law judge’s most serious errors in considering the medical evidence were a failure to mention that Park takes oxygen for his breathing problem and, more broadly, to relate those problems to his ability to work. But there was other evidence concerning his physical capabilities, and without greater specification by Park’s lawyer as to what exactly his client’s breathing problems were — their cause and severity — we cannot say that the district court was wrong to conclude that the administrative law judge’s analysis, though cursory and inadequate, did not lack substantial justification.
The posture of our review is different from what it was in Bauer’s case. There the district judge had initially thought the government’s position not only substantially justified but correct, and we have warned against allowing such a judgment, if reversed, to infect the determination of whether to award fees. In Park’s case, in contrast, the district court, having emphatically reversed the denial of benefits, nevertheless was persuaded that the agency’s position had been substantially justified; that decision is entitled to substantial weight.
To summarize, the grant of fees is reversed in TWM; the denial of fees is reversed in Bauer and affirmed in Park.
