Payment of Attorney Fee Awards Against the
United States Under 28 U.S.C. § 2412 (b)
The U nited States is liable under 28 U.S.C. § 2412(b) for a court award of attorney fees in civil
cases “to the sam e extent any p arty would be liable under the common law or under the terms
o f any statute.” Attorney fees aw arded by a court under § 2412(b) are to be paid from the
judgm ent fund, and not from agency appropriations, unless an award is based on a finding of
bad faith.
Although the term s o f § 207 of the E qual Access to J ustice Act, T itle n o f Pub. L. No. 9 6 -4 8 1 ,9 4
Stat. 2325 (1980), prohibit the paym ent of aw ards from the judgm ent fund without a specific
congressional appropriation for that purpose, the legislative history o f § 207 reveals that
C ongress only intended § 207 to apply to aw ards under 5 U.S.C. § 504 and 28 U.S.C.
§ 2412(d), and not to apply to attorney fee aw ards under § 2412(b). Thus, § 207 does not bar
the Com ptroller G eneral from certifying awards o f attorney fees under 28 U.S.C. § 2412(b).
December 15, 1983
M em orandum O p in io n fo r th e A s s is t a n t A ttorney G eneral,
O f f ic e of L e g a l P o l ic y
This responds to your request for our opinion concerning the effect of § 207
of the Equal Access to Justice Act, Title II of Pub. L. 96-481, 94 Stat. 2325
(1980) (the Act), on the payment of attorney fee awards against the United
States made under authority o f 28 U.S.C. § 2412(b). Specifically, you wish to
know whether § 207 bars payment of such awards from the judgment fund,
and, if so, whether such awards may be paid from an agency’s general appro
priation.1The General Accounting Office has refused to certify such awards for
payment from the judgment fund, apparently on grounds that § 207 bars
payment of any awards authorized by the Act from this source. For reasons
discussed below, we believe that awards made under authority of 28 U.S.C.
§ 2412(b) are not subject to § 207, and that § 207 therefore does not preclude
their being certified for payment from the judgment fund. Furthermore, we
1 S ections 2414 and 2517 o f Title 28 s e t forth procedures for paym ent o f final judgm ents or com prom ise
settlem ents a g ain st the U nited States from th e general fund o f the T reasury, under authority o f the permanent,
indefinite appropriation established by 31 U.S.C. § 1304. The term “judgm ent fund” is generally used as a
shorthand rendition o f that process. U nder 31 U.S.C. § 1304, the C om ptroller G eneral m ust “certify” all final
court ju d g m en ts and com prom ise settlem ents before they may be paid from the judgm ent fund. Because all
final ju d g m en ts m ust be paid from the ju d g m e n t fund unless they are “otherw ise provided for,” the C om ptrol
le r G eneral has no d iscretio n to refuse to certify a final judgm ent w hich is properly payable from the
ju d g m en t fund and w hose payment is n o t governed by another statute. See General Accounting Office,
Principles o f Federal Appropriations Law 12-13 (1981).
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believe that the judgment fund is the only available source of payment of
awards made under authority of § 2412(b), except those based on a finding of
bad faith.
Section 2412(b), enacted by § 204(a) of the Act, makes the United States
liable for a court award of attorney fees in civil cases “to the same extent that
any other party would be liable under the common law or under the terms of
any statute.”2 Fees awarded by a court under authority of § 2412(b) are to be
paid in accordance with the provisions of § 2412(c)(2):
Any judgment against the United States or any agency and
any official of the United States acting in his or her official
capacity for fees and expenses of attorneys pursuant to subsec
tion (b) shall be paid as provided in sections 2414 and 2517 of
this title, except that if the basis for the award is a finding that
the United States acted in bad faith, then the award shall be paid
by any agency found to have acted in bad faith and shall be in
addition to any relief provided in the judgment.
With the text of § 2412(c)(2) before us, we turn first to your question whether
general agency appropriations are available to pay an award made under
authority of 28 U.S.C. § 2412(b). Unless an award is based on a finding of bad
faith, we think they are not.
By its terms, § 2412(c)(2) specifies that an award made under § 2412(b)
“shall” be paid from agency funds in cases where an award is based on a
finding of bad faith; in all other cases, awards “shall” be paid from the
judgment fund. There is no indication in the legislative history of the Act of an
intention to depart from the plain directive of the statutory text by making
agency appropriations available for payment of awards in cases other than
those involving bad faith. It is an elementary principle of appropriations law
that an agency may expend its general appropriations in a particular manner
only if it has statutory authority to do so. Section 2412(c)(2) does not authorize
the use of an agency’s general appropriation to pay any but bad faith awards,
and we know of no other authority which would permit such a disposition of an
agency’s general appropriation. Compare 5 U.S.C. § 504(d)(1)(A) (fee awards
“may be paid by any agency over which the party prevails from any funds made
available to the agency”). Moreover, under 31 U.S.C. § 1304, all final judg
ments must be paid from the judgment fund, unless “otherwise provided for.”
See Principles o f Federal Appropriations Law, supra note 1, at 12-13 (“[I]f a
judgment is properly payable from the permanent appropriation, then payment
2 Section 2412(b) provides in full as follows:
U nless expressly prohibited by statute, a court may award reasonable fees and expenses of
attorneys, in addition to the costs which may be aw arded pursuant to subsection (a), to the
prevailing party in any civil action brought by or against the United States o r any agency and any
official o f the U nited States acting in his o r her official capacity in any court having jurisdiction
o f such action. T he U nited States shall be liable for such fees and expenses to the same extent that
any other party w ould be liable under the common law or under the term s o f any statute which
specifically provides for such an award.
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of that judgment from agency funds violates 31 U.S.C. § 1301 (restricting
appropriations to the objects for which made) and is an improper payment.”).
Accordingly, we conclude that an agency’s general appropriation is not
available to pay awards made under authority of § 2412(b), except where such
an award is based on a finding of bad faith. Thus, in the absence of some
specific statutory directive to the contrary, § 2412(b) awards can be paid only
from the judgment fund.3
Before turning to an examination of the text of § 207 of the Act, we make
several observations regarding other provisions of the Act which we believe
are relevant to an understanding of the effect of § 207. In addition to the
authority contained in § 2412(b), the Act also authorizes an award of attorney
fees in certain administrative and judicial actions, where the position of the
United States cannot be shown to be “substantially justified.” These authori
ties, enacted on a temporary and experimental basis, are codified at 5 U.S.C.
§ 504 and 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d).4 Awards made under authority of these provi
sions are to be funded in the following manner:
Fees and other expenses . . . may be paid by any agency over
which the party prevails from any funds made available to the
agency, by appropriation or otherwise, for such purpose. If not
paid by any agency, the fees and other expenses shall be paid in the
same manner as the payment of final judgments is made pursuant to
section 2412 [and section 2517] of title 28, United States Code.
See 5 U.S.C. § 504(d)(1); 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(4)(A). In contrast to awards
made under the permanent authority of § 2412(b), all awards made under the
experimental authorities in § 504 and § 2412(d) are to be paid in the first
instance from agency budgets. Only in very limited circumstances may awards
made under authority of § 504 and § 2412(d) be paid from the judgment fund.5
3 O ne such contrary statutory d irectiv e appears in 39 U .S.C. § 409(e), which provides that judgm ents
arising out o f activ ities o f the United States Postal Service shall be paid by the Postal Service from its own
funds. Judgm ents under th is provision are payable directly by the Postal Service and do not require the
C om ptroller G en eral’s certification. O th e r exam ples o f statutes providing alternative sources of funding for
jud g m en ts are cited in Principles of Federal Appropriations Law, supra note 1, at 12-13.
4 Section 504(a)(1) o f T itle 5 provides for an award o f fees in agency adjudications in the following terms:
An agency that conducts an ad v ersary adjudication shall award to a prevailing party other than
the U nited States, fees and o th e r expenses incurred by that party in connection with that
proceeding, unless the adjudicative officer o f the agency finds that the position o f the agency as
a party to the proceeding was substantially ju stified o r that special circum stances make an award
unjust.
Section 2412(d)(1)(A ) o f T itle 28 provides for fee awards in certain ju dicial proceedings involving the United
States in sim ilar term s:
E xcept as otherw ise specifically provided by statute, a court shall award to a prevailing party
o ther than the U nited States fees an d other expenses, in addition to any costs aw arded pursuant to
subsection (a), incurred by that party in any civil action (other than cases sounding in tort)
b rought by o r against the U nited States in any court have jurisdiction of that action, unless the
court finds that the position o f the U nited States w as substantially justified or that special
circum stances m ake an award unjust.
U n d er §§ 203(a)(2) and 204(c) of the A ct, both o f these authorities are repealed effective O ctober 1, 1984.
5 In brief, aw ards under 5 U.S.C. § 5 0 4 and 28 U.S.C. § 2 4 12(d) may be paid from the judgm ent fund only
w hen th eir paym ent from agency funds w ould be a very heavy financial blow to the agency.
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We must now determine what effect, if any, § 207 has upon the payment of
awards made under authority of § 2412(b) from the judgment fund. Section 207
provides that
The payment of judgments, fees and other expenses in the same
manner as the payment of final judgments as provided in this
Act is effective only to the extent and in such amounts as are
provided in advance in appropriations acts.
See 5 U.S.C. § 504 note. The effect of § 207, where it applies, is to prohibit the
payment of awards from the judgment fund unless and until Congress makes a
specific appropriation for that purpose. If § 207 applies to fee awards made
under § 2412(b), then those awards may not be certified by the Comptroller
General for payment from the judgment fund. Because of our conclusion that
§ 2412(b) awards not based on bad faith may not be paid from an agency’s
appropriated funds, the result would be that such awards could not be paid at all
without a specific new appropriation. However, for reasons discussed below,
we do not believe that Congress intended § 207 to apply to awards made under
§ 2412(b).
The terms of § 207 are ambiguous. On the one hand, they mirror the wording
in 5 U.S.C. § 504(d)(1) and 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(4)(A), which govern the
funding of awards made under 5 U.S.C. § 504 and 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d), both of
which provide for payment of awards “in the same manner as the payment of
final judgments.” By its terms, therefore, § 207 could be construed to apply
only to awards made under authority of § 504 and § 2412(d). On the other
hand, § 207 could also be more broadly interpreted to govern all awards newly
authorized by the Act to be paid from the judgment fund, including awards
made under authority of § 2412(b).
Because the language of § 207 admits of more than one reasonable construc
tion, we turn to the legislative history to ascertain whether Congress intended
§ 207 to apply to all awards made under the new authorities contained in the
Act, or only to awards made under § 504 and § 2412(d).
Section 207 was added to the Act on the House floor in response to a point of
order to the Conference Report. The point of order, made by Representative
Danielson, was
that the conferees have agreed to a provision in the Senate
amendment which constitutes an appropriation on a legislative
bill, in violation of clause 2 of rule XX of the rules of the House
of Representatives. The conferees have included, as an amend
ment to the bill, a title II, which provides for the award of
attorneys’ fees and other expenses to the prevailing party other
than the United States, in certain actions or administrative pro
ceedings in which the judgment or adjudication has been ad
verse to the United States, unless the court or adjudicative
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officer of the agency finds that the position of the United States
was substantially justified or that special circumstances make
the award unjust.
126 Cong. Rec. 28638 (1980). Clause 2 of House Rule XX provides that
conferees may not agree to Senate amendments which provide for an appro
priation in any bill other than a general appropriation bill “unless specific
authority to agree to such amendment is first given by the House by a separate
vote on every such amendment.” Because the Act had never been considered
by the full House as an independent piece of legislation, reaching the House
floor for the first time as Title II of the conference bill to amend the Small
Business Act, H.R. 5612, Representative Danielson’s point of order under
House Rule XX could have applied to all of the fee-shifting authorities con
tained in the Act, including that under § 2412(b). However, it appears that the
only specific fee-shifting authorities contained in the Act about which Repre
sentative Danielson was concerned, and to which he directed his point of order,
were those which authorized fee awards in civil cases in which “the court or
adjudicative officer of the agency [does not find] that the position of the United
States was substantially justified.” This reference clearly contemplates the
authorities codified at 5 U.S.C. § 504 and 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d), but does not
encompass that codified at 28 U.S.C. § 2412(b). In a word, even if the point of
order could have been directed at all of the new fee-shifting authorities under
the Act, it appears in fact to have been directed only at those contained in § 504
and § 2412(d).
As sustained by the Speaker p ro tempore, the point of order was narrowly
focused on certain provisions of Title II:
The provisions in title II [in] question authorize appropria
tions to pay court costs and fees levied against the United States,
but also provide that if payment is not made out of such autho
rized and appropriated funds, payment will be made in the same
m anner a s the paym ent o f fin al judgm ents under sections 2414
and 2517 of title 28, United States Code.
126 Cong. Rec. 28638 (1980) (emphasis added). The funding provisions to
which the Speaker pro tempore was necessarily referring were § 504(d)(1) and
§ 2412(d)(4)(A), which provide for payment of awards “in the same manner as
the payment of final judgments.”
After the Speaker pro tem pore had sustained Representative Danielson’s
point of order, Representative Smith offered an amended version of the bill to
cure the defect. That amended version was identical to the conference version
except that it contained a new section, § 207. Representative Smith explained
that the proposed new section “modifies those provisions which had been ruled
to be an appropriation on an authorization bill.” The terminology chosen for
§ 207 is consistent with this narrow purpose to block payment of awards made
under § 504 and § 2412(b) from the judgment fund.
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The limited construction of § 207 that is suggested by its legislative history
better effectuates the purpose of the several fee-shifting authorities enacted by
the Act than does a broad construction of that section, and leads to a far more
sensible result. One of the primary purposes of the fee-shifting authorities in
§ 504 and § 2412(d) was to ensure greater agency accountability. And, in early
versions of the legislation, agency budgets had been made the sole source of
payment for awards made under § 504 and § 2412(d).6 This somewhat uncon
ventional approach reflected the hope and expectation of some legislators that
the experimental fee-shifting provisions in § 504 and § 2412(d) would provide
a mechanism for holding agencies accountable for their activities. See, e.g.,
126 Cong. Rec. 28106 (1980) (remarks of Sen. Thurmond) (“affecting the
‘pocketbook’ of the agency is the most direct way to assure more responsible
bureaucratic behavior”). When the bill finally reached the House floor, how
ever, the conferees had agreed to make the judgment fund, as well as agency
budgets, available to pay fees awarded under § 504 and § 2412(d). It is very
likely that some Members of the House would have been concerned over the
possibility that shifting the onus of paying these particular fee awards away
from agency budgets to the judgment fund would cancel out whatever prophy
lactic effect the prospect of incurring adverse fee awards might otherwise have
on “bureaucratic behavior.” Section 207 can thus be best understood as in
tended to reinstate the requirement in previous versions of the legislation that
awards under the experimental provisions of the bill should be paid from an
agency’s budget rather than the alternative source of the judgment fund.
There is no analogous reason why the House Members sponsoring § 207
should have wished to impair the conventional and uncontroversial funding
mechanism for awards under § 2412(b). Indeed, applying §207 to awards
under § 2412(b) serves only to frustrate Congress’ goals in enacting the latter
provision. The purpose of § 2412(b) was to hold the United States “to the same
standards in litigating as other parties,” and to “plac[e] the Federal Government
and civil litigants on a completely equal footing.” See H.R. Rep. No. 1418,96th
Cong., 2d Sess. 9 (1980) (Report of the House Committee on the Judiciary); S.
Rep. No. 253, 96th Cong. 2d Sess. 4 (1980). If § 207 applied to awards made
under § 2412(b), such awards could not be paid at a ll under existing law,
except in cases involving agency bad faith.7 It would hardly be consistent with
6 The funding provisions o f the version o f the bill passed by the Senate, identical to those reported o u t by
the H ouse C om m ittee on Small B usiness, would have placed fiscal responsibility for paying awards m ade
under § 504 and § 2412(d) exclusively on individual agencies. See Senate R eport at 18; H .R. Rep. No. 1005,
96th C ong., 2d Sess. (Part 1) 11 (1980) (H ouse Com m ittee on Small B usiness). The funding provisions
agreed to in conference, which gave prevailing parties access to the judgm ent fund, derived from the version
of the bill reported out by the H ouse C om m ittee on the Judiciary. See H.R. Rep. No. 1005 (Part 1), 96th
Cong., 2d Sess. 12(1980).
7 In the absence o f a specific appropriation to pay an aw ard m ade under § 2412(b), it w ould rem ain an
obligation o f the U nited States until satisfied by legislative action to authorize its paym ent. Such an
obligation could rem ain unsatisfied forever if Congress never acted to authorize its paym ent, but history
suggests that such obligations usually are paid, and uncertainty as to the source o f funding fo r such aw ards in
no way restricts the authority o f ju d g es to make them.
185
the purpose of creating new liability simultaneously to cut off the only means
of enforcing it short of new appropriations legislation.
In sum, we conclude that awards made under authority of § 2412(b) are
payable from the judgment fund and not from agency appropriations. More
over, § 207 of the Act applies only to fee awards authorized by 5 U.S.C. § 504
and 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d), and not to awards authorized by 28 U.S.C. § 2412(b).
That section therefore does not prevent the payment of such awards from the
judgment fund, and we know of no reason why they should not be certified by
the Comptroller General in accordance with the procedure called for in 28
U.S.C. §§2414 and 2517.
Larry L. S im m s
D eputy Assistant Attorney General
Office o f Legal Counsel
186