Griswold v. Homer City Council ( 2018 )


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    Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,
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    THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
    FRANK GRISWOLD,                                )
    )        Supreme Court No. S-16236
    Appellant,               )
    )        Superior Court No. 3HO-15-00009 CI
    v.                                       )
    )        OPINION
    HOMER CITY COUNCIL and                         )
    WALT WREDE,                                    )        No. 7297 – September 14, 2018
    )
    Appellees.               )
    )
    Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third
    Judicial District, Homer, Charles T. Huguelet, Judge.
    Appearances: Frank Griswold, pro se, Homer, Appellant.
    Holly C. Wells and Katie S. Davies, Birch Horton Bittner &
    Cherot, Anchorage, for Appellees.
    Before: Stowers, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, Bolger,
    and Carney, Justices.
    STOWERS, Chief Justice.
    I.    INTRODUCTION
    Frank Griswold submitted public records requests to the City of Homer. He
    requested all records of communications between members of the Homer Board of
    Adjustment, City employees, and attorneys for the City leading up to the Board’s decision
    in a separate case involving Griswold. He also requested attorney invoices to the City for
    a six-month period. Citing various privileges, the City Manager refused to provide any
    records of communications surrounding the Board’s decision; the Manager provided
    some complete invoices but provided only redacted versions of some invoices and
    completely withheld some invoices. Griswold appealed the partial denial of his records
    request to the City Council; the Council affirmed, and Griswold appealed to the superior
    court. The superior court substantially affirmed, and Griswold now appeals to us. We
    affirm with respect to the communications relating to the Board’s decision, but we vacate
    and remand the attorney invoices issue for further analysis.
    II.    FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
    A.     Griswold’s Public Records Request
    In November 2014 Griswold submitted two public records requests to the
    City. The first request was for documents related to a separate case involving Griswold
    before the Board.1 Griswold asked for “[a]ll emails, invoices, documents[,] and other
    records that reveal who provided non-procedural legal advice to the Board regarding the
    appeal [in the prior case] and who assisted the Board in writing its June 6, 2014 Decision
    on Appeal.” His second request was for “[a]ll invoices for legal services provided to the
    city between May 16, 2014 and November 11, 2014.”
    These requests resulted in a considerable number of emails back and forth
    between Griswold, City Manager Walt Wrede, and City Clerk Jo Johnson. Wrede’s
    ultimate response to Griswold’s requests can be divided into two categories —
    communications relating to the Board’s June 6, 2014 decision and attorney invoices.
    With respect to the communications, Wrede informed Griswold that attorney Holly Wells
    had assisted the Board in drafting the decision; Wrede did not provide any of the
    documents or communications involved in this process, explaining that these documents
    1
    This case is currently on appeal before us and will be addressed in a separate
    decision. See Griswold v. Homer Bd. of Adjustment, No. 3HO-15-00021 CI (Alaska
    Super., Jan. 17, 2017), appeal docketed, No. S-16660 (Alaska Mar. 24, 2017).
    -2-                                       7297
    and communications were subject to the attorney-client and deliberative process
    privileges.2 Wrede stated, “After the Board made its decision, it passed that decision,
    along with its reasons and findings, to Ms. Wells and requested that she draft the final
    [d]ecisional document. The communications were related to clarification of the Board’s
    intent and making sure the decisional document accurately reflected the Board’s
    decision.”
    With respect to the invoices, Wrede provided Griswold copies of some of
    the requested invoices, but some of the invoices were partially redacted and others were
    completely withheld. The invoices were from two law firms: Wells’s firm, Birch Horton
    Bittner & Cherot (Birch Horton), and Levesque Law Group, LLC (Levesque). Wrede
    provided a Birch Horton invoice dated June 18, 2014, with two lines describing services
    redacted and a Birch Horton invoice dated September 17, 2014, with five lines describing
    services and the number of hours billed for services redacted. Levesque redacted parts
    of 48 lines describing services from the invoice dated October 7, 2014, parts of 13 lines
    describing services from the invoice dated November 7, 2014, and parts of 8 lines
    describing services from the invoice dated December 8, 2014. Wrede provided these
    redacted records to Griswold. Wrede also stated, “All time entries for litigation matters
    are omitted due to Attorney-Client privilege.”
    2
    Attorney-client privilege allows a client “to refuse to disclose and to prevent
    any other person from disclosing confidential communications between the client and the
    attorney.” Privilege, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014); see also Alaska R.
    Evid. 503.
    Deliberative process privilege allows public officials to “withhold
    documents when public disclosure would deter the open exchange of opinions and
    recommendations between government officials.” Gwich’in Steering Comm. v. State,
    Office of the Governor, 
    10 P.3d 572
    , 578 (Alaska 2000).
    -3-                                       7297
    Griswold appealed Wrede’s decisions to the Homer City Council. Griswold
    argued that invoices and time entries were not subject to attorney-client privilege and that
    Wells’s communications with the Board were not subject to attorney-client privilege or
    deliberative process privilege because Wells was acting as a neutral advisor to the Board
    and not as an advocate for the Board. He also argued that Wrede’s reasons for
    withholding records and his explanations were insufficient under the Homer City Code.
    B.     City Council Proceedings
    The City Council held a hearing on Griswold’s appeal. In addition to his
    arguments about Wrede’s decisions, Griswold argued that the Homer Mayor and City
    Attorney had conflicts of interest and should not participate in the appeal. At the hearing,
    City Councilmember Bryan Zak disclosed that he received a call about the appeal about
    a half hour before the hearing but said that he did not discuss the appeal with the caller.
    After reviewing the documents in camera, the City Council affirmed
    Wrede’s decisions. It stated that there was no ex parte communications issue because
    Zak did not participate in deliberations on the appeal. And it ruled that there were no
    disqualifying conflicts of interest.
    Griswold appealed the decision of the City Council to the superior court.
    C.     Superior Court Proceedings
    After reviewing the invoices in camera, the superior court determined that
    the hours billed and names of clients on the two invoices redacted by Wrede were not
    protected by attorney-client privilege under Homer City Code 2.84.040 and Alaska
    Evidence Rule 503(b). The court ruled that the rest of the redacted material on these two
    invoices was protected under the Homer City Code, the Alaska Evidence Rules, and the
    work-product doctrine.3 Regarding the invoices that Levesque redacted, the court
    3
    The work-product doctrine “provid[es] for qualified immunity of an
    (continued...)
    -4-                                       7297
    incorrectly stated that Levesque had “substantially waived the attorney-client privilege
    by later apparently providing [Griswold] with unredacted versions.” The court further
    ruled that Wrede’s response to Griswold’s public records requests complied with the
    Homer City Code, that Griswold was not prejudiced by any ex parte communications
    because Councilmember Zak did not participate in deliberations, and that the Mayor and
    City Attorney had no conflicts of interest. The court did not discuss the withheld invoices
    or the communications surrounding the Board’s decision, except to say that Wrede
    provided an adequate justification for withholding them. The court affirmed the City
    Council’s decision in part and remanded with instructions to “provide [Griswold] with
    versions of the public records he requested in November of 2014, with redactions . . .
    consistent with [the court’s] Order.”
    Griswold filed a motion for clarification and reconsideration, arguing,
    among other things, that the court was mistaken in believing that he had received
    unredacted versions of the Levesque invoices. He requested that the court order the City4
    to disclose the unredacted versions of those invoices. The City opposed the motion with
    one exception. It conceded that unredacted versions of the Levesque invoices had not
    been provided to Griswold. But the City suggested that the redacted portions of these
    3
    (...continued)
    attorney’s work product from discovery or other compelled disclosure. The exemption
    was primarily established to protect an attorney’s litigation strategy.” Work-Product
    Rule, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014) (first citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(3);
    then citing Hickman v. Taylor, 
    329 U.S. 495
    (1947)); see also Alaska R. Civ. P. 26(b)(3);
    Langdon v. Champion, 
    752 P.2d 999
    , 1004-05 (Alaska 1988). The work-product doctrine
    is also called the work-product rule or work-product privilege. Work-Product Rule,
    BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014).
    4
    We will refer to Wrede and the City Council collectively as “the City.”
    -5-                                      7297
    invoices were properly withheld as privileged.         The court denied the motion for
    clarification and reconsideration.
    Both Griswold and the City argued that they were the prevailing party for
    the purposes of an attorney’s fees award. The court ruled that the City was the prevailing
    party, and the City requested attorney’s fees. Griswold opposed, arguing that he was a
    public interest litigant, that some of the City’s fees did not qualify for an attorney’s fees
    award, and that the City’s fees were excessive. The court applied the pre-2003 public
    interest litigant analysis and concluded that Griswold was not a public interest litigant.
    It awarded the City 20% of its attorney’s fees.
    The superior court’s order on the merits, discussed above, was issued on
    January 22, 2016. On April 26 Griswold filed a motion for contempt, arguing that it had
    been over three months since the court remanded the case to the City Council but that the
    Council had not held any proceedings and the City had not provided him any records. He
    also argued that the court’s order required the City to disclose to him the previously
    withheld invoices. Griswold informed the court that Levesque had recently provided him
    unredacted copies of its invoices. The City responded by providing a less-redacted
    version of the September 17, 2014 Birch Horton invoice. The court ruled that “the City
    did not willfully disregard or disobey the court’s January order” and denied Griswold’s
    motion.
    Griswold appeals, arguing that all the redacted and withheld records should
    be disclosed; that he was the prevailing party; that he was a public interest litigant exempt
    from an attorney’s fees award; that if a fee award is to be permitted, a 20% attorney’s fees
    award is onerous; and that the City did not comply with the superior court’s order. He
    does not appeal the superior court’s rulings on Wrede’s response to Griswold’s public
    records request, Zak’s ex parte communications, or the Mayor’s and City Attorney’s
    potential conflicts.
    -6-                                       7297
    III.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “When the superior court is acting as an intermediate court of appeal in an
    administrative matter, we independently review the merits of the agency or administrative
    board’s decision.”5 “[W]hether a privilege applies is a question of law”6 that does not
    require deference to the agency or administrative board.7 “We therefore apply our
    independent judgment in deciding the legal issues presented.”8
    “We review for clear error factual findings a court makes in deciding
    whether to hold a respondent in contempt.”9
    IV.    DISCUSSION
    A.     The Public Records Act
    Alaska’s Public Records Act provides in relevant part, “Every person has
    a right to inspect a public record in the state, including public records in recorders’
    offices, except . . . records required to be kept confidential by a federal law or regulation
    5
    Griswold v. Homer City Council, 
    310 P.3d 938
    , 940 (Alaska 2013) (quoting
    Shea v. State, Dep’t of Admin., Div. of Ret. & Benefits, 
    267 P.3d 624
    , 630 (Alaska 2011)).
    6
    Capital Info. Grp. v. State, Office of the Governor, 
    923 P.2d 29
    , 33 n.2
    (Alaska 1996).
    7
    Gwich’in Steering 
    Comm., 10 P.3d at 577-78
    .
    8
    
    Id. 9 Anchorage
    Police & Fire Ret. Sys. v. Gallion, 
    65 P.3d 876
    , 890 (Alaska
    2003) (citing Matanuska Elec. Ass’n v. Rewire the Bd., 
    36 P.3d 685
    , 700-01 (Alaska
    2001)); see also Czaja v. Czaja, 
    537 S.E.2d 908
    , 917 (W. Va. 2000) (“In reviewing the
    findings of facts and conclusions of law of a circuit court supporting a civil contempt
    order, we apply a three-pronged standard of review. We review the contempt order
    under an abuse of discretion standard; the underlying factual findings are reviewed under
    a clearly erroneous standard; and questions of law and statutory interpretations are
    subject to a de novo review.”).
    -7-                                       7297
    or by state law.”10 The Public Records Act applies to all public records in the state
    including public records of municipalities.11 The Act codified the common law rule that
    “every interested person [is] entitled to the inspection of public records . . . with the added
    intent, perhaps, of eliminating the requirement that the person seeking inspection have an
    interest.”12 We have explained that “[t]he legislature has expressed a bias in favor of
    public disclosure,”13 and in 1990 the legislature added findings that “public access to
    government information is a fundamental right that operates to check and balance the
    actions of elected and appointed officials and to maintain citizen control of
    government.”14
    1.	    Exceptions to the disclosure of information under the Public
    Records Act
    Although the Public Records Act provides a bias in favor of public
    disclosure, it contains multiple exceptions. “[E]xceptions to the disclosure requirement
    should be construed narrowly to further the legislature’s goal of broad public access.”15
    At issue in this case is the exception for “records required to be kept confidential . . . by
    10
    AS 40.25.120(a)(4).
    11
    City of Kenai v. Kenai Peninsula Newspapers, Inc., 
    642 P.2d 1316
    , 1318-23
    (Alaska 1982).
    12
    
    Id. at 1319-20;
    see also Municipality of Anchorage v. Anchorage Daily
    News, 
    794 P.2d 584
    , 589 (Alaska 1990) (“Alaska’s public records statutes . . . codify the
    common law right of the public to access to government records.” (citing City of 
    Kenai, 642 P.2d at 1320-21
    )).
    13
    City of 
    Kenai, 642 P.2d at 1323
    .
    14
    Capital Info. Grp. v. State, Office of the Governor, 
    923 P.2d 29
    , 33 (Alaska
    1996) (quoting ch. 200, § 1, SLA 1990).
    15
    
    Id. -8- 7297
    state law.”16 This provision applies both to express exceptions contained in state law and
    to common law exceptions, which we consider to be within “state law.”17
    The City argues that the documents in question should be excepted from
    disclosure under attorney-client privilege and attorney work-product privilege. The City
    had previously invoked the deliberative process privilege as well, and Griswold discusses
    this privilege in his briefing.
    a.     Deliberative process privilege
    “The deliberative process privilege is one of the judicially recognized ‘state
    law’ exceptions under [the Public Records Act]. Public officials may assert this privilege
    and withhold documents when public disclosure would deter the open exchange of
    opinions and recommendations between government officials.”18 “[T]he question is . . .
    whether disclosure of the communication sought would affect the quality of
    governmental decisionmaking.”19
    “[T]he deliberative process privilege is a qualified privilege.”20         To
    withhold a communication under the deliberative process privilege, the City “must show
    as a threshold matter that the communication is both ‘predecisional’ and ‘deliberative.’
    16
    AS 40.25.120(a)(4).
    17
    See Fuller v. City of Homer, 
    75 P.3d 1059
    , 1063 (Alaska 2003) (“Alaska’s
    statutory definition of ‘state law’ encompasses common law as well as positive law . . . .”
    (citing Gwich’in Steering Comm. v. State, Office of the Governor, 
    10 P.3d 572
    , 578
    (Alaska 2000)).
    18
    Gwich’in Steering 
    Comm., 10 P.3d at 578
    (citing Capital Info. 
    Grp., 923 P.2d at 33
    ).
    19
    
    Id. at 579.
           20
    Capital Info. 
    Grp., 923 P.2d at 36
    (quoting Russell L. Weaver & James T.R.
    Jones, The Deliberative Process Privilege, 54 M O. L. REV. 279, 315 (1989)).
    -9-                                       7297
    Once those requirements have been met, the court balances the public’s interest in
    disclosure against the agency’s interest in confidentiality.”21
    “To qualify as predecisional, a communication must have been made before
    the deliberative process was completed.           The privilege protects predecisional
    communications because the quality of the communications received by the
    decisionmaker clearly affects the quality of the decisionmaking process.”22
    “Postdecisional communications are not protected; however, a predecisional
    communication does not automatically lose the privilege after the decision has been
    made, for fear that even disclosure of past communications could harm future
    deliberations. Each case must be considered independently and on its own merits.”23
    To qualify as deliberative a communication “must reflect a ‘give-and-take’
    of the decisionmaking process and contain opinions, recommendation, or advice about
    agency policies.”24 “Concomitant with this requirement, purely factual material is not
    protected, and must be disclosed unless ‘the manner of selecting or presenting those facts
    would reveal the deliberative process, or if the facts are “inextricably intertwined” with
    the policymaking process.’ ”25
    21
    Gwich’in Steering 
    Comm., 10 P.3d at 579
    (citation omitted).
    22
    
    Id. (citation omitted).
          23
    Capital Info. 
    Grp., 923 P.2d at 35-36
    (citation omitted).
    24
    Gwich’in Steering 
    Comm., 10 P.3d at 579
    .
    25
    Capital Info. 
    Grp., 923 P.2d at 36
    (quoting Paisley v. CIA, 
    712 F.2d 686
    ,
    699 (D.C. Cir. 1983)).
    -10-                                     7297
    “If a communication is not shown to be both predecisional and deliberative,
    then the public records statute applies and the document will likely be disclosed.”26 “If
    the privilege attaches, however, instead of there being a presumption in favor of
    disclosure, with doubtful cases being resolved by permitting public inspection, there is
    a presumption in favor of nondisclosure and the party seeking access to the document
    must overcome that presumption.”27 “[I]n balancing the interests . . . the scales must
    reflect the fundamental right of a citizen to have access to the public records as
    contrasted with the incidental right of the agency to be free from unreasonable
    interference.”28
    The balancing of interests under the deliberative process privilege is closely
    related to the balancing test that we apply in cases where there is no assertion of a specific
    privilege.29 In those cases we “balance the interest of the citizen in knowing what the
    servants of government are doing and the citizen’s proprietary interest in public property,
    against the interest of the public in having the business of government carried on
    efficiently and without undue interference.”30 “The deliberative process privilege affects
    th[is] balance . . . primarily by identifying more specifically what interest the government
    may have in maintaining confidentiality, in the form of the threshold showing that the
    26
    
    Id. 27 Id.
    at 37 (citation omitted).
    28
    Gwich’in Steering 
    Comm., 10 P.3d at 579
    (ellipsis in original) (quoting
    Capitol Info. 
    Grp., 923 P.2d at 37
    ).
    29
    Capital Info. 
    Grp., 923 P.2d at 36
    -37.
    30
    
    Id. at 36
    (quoting City of Kenai v. Kenai Peninsula Newspapers, Inc., 
    642 P.2d 1316
    , 1323 (Alaska 1982)).
    -11-                                      7297
    communication is predecisional and deliberative. It also outlines fairly rigid procedural
    requirements that the government must meet in order to claim the privilege.”31
    b.     Attorney-client privilege and work-product privilege
    We have never addressed how the attorney-client and work-product
    privileges interact with the Public Records Act. But the common law has long recognized
    the privileged nature of attorney-client communications and attorney work-product.32
    And it is clearly in the public interest for a governmental agency to be able to receive
    confidential advice from its attorneys.33          We hold that the attorney-client and
    work-product privileges constitute state law exceptions to the Public Records Act.
    31
    
    Id. at 37
    .
    32
    See Upjohn Co. v. United States, 
    449 U.S. 383
    , 389 (1981) (“The attorney-
    client privilege is the oldest of the privileges for confidential communications known to
    the common law.” (citing 8 J. W IGMORE, EVIDENCE § 2290 (McNaughton rev. ed.
    1961))); Hickman v. Taylor, 
    329 U.S. 495
    (1947) (recognizing the work-product privilege
    for litigation); Langdon v. Champion, 
    752 P.2d 999
    , 1004 (Alaska 1988) (explaining that
    “[t]he ‘work product doctrine,’ first recognized [in Hickman], is part of Alaska’s Civil
    Rule 26(b)(3).” (footnote omitted)); United Servs. Auto. Ass’n v. Werley, 
    526 P.2d 28
    , 31­
    33 (Alaska 1974) (applying common law attorney-client privilege); Killington, Ltd. v.
    Lash, 
    572 A.2d 1368
    , 1376-80 (Vt. 1990) (applying the common law work-product
    privilege to the Vermont Access to Public Records Act, Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 1, § 317(b)(4)
    (1989)).
    33
    See Gwich’in Steering 
    Comm., 10 P.3d at 578
    (recognizing that certain
    disclosures “would deter the open exchange of opinions and recommendations” and that
    certain privileges are necessary “to protect the executive’s decisionmaking process, its
    consultative functions, and the quality of its decisions”); City of 
    Kenai, 642 P.2d at 1323
    (recognizing “the interest of the public in having the business of government carried on
    efficiently and without undue interference” (quoting MacEwan v. Holm, 
    359 P.2d 413
    ,
    421 (Or. 1961) (en banc))); City of Orlando v. Desjardins, 
    493 So. 2d 1027
    , 1029 (Fla.
    1986) (noting “the imbalanced posture and the disadvantaged status of public entities”
    without the benefit of attorney-client privilege); 
    Killington, 572 A.2d at 1379
    (stating that
    not recognizing work-product privilege “would produce an anomalous and unfair result”).
    -12-                                       7297
    In In re Mendel we discussed “the appropriate procedure for the superior
    court to follow” when determining whether attorney billing records are subject to the
    work-product privilege: the court should conduct an in camera review of the billing
    records, and
    in conducting its in camera review[,] [t]he trial judge should
    redact the attorney’s mental impressions, conclusions,
    opinions or legal theories . . . . The court should then give the
    attorney the opportunity to examine the redacted records and
    make any arguments as to why any of the unredacted material
    is subject to the [work-product privilege]. Only at this point
    should the relevant, unprivileged information be produced.[34]
    This is the procedure the City Council and the superior court should have followed in this
    case. As with all exceptions to the Public Records Act, the attorney-client and work-
    product privileges should be “construed narrowly to further the legislature’s goal of broad
    public access.”35
    34
    
    897 P.2d 68
    , 75 (Alaska 1995).
    35
    Capital Info. 
    Grp., 923 P.2d at 33
    . In Cool Homes, Inc. v. Fairbanks North
    Star Borough we commented on the application of the attorney-client privilege to
    Alaska’s Open Meetings Act, AS 44.62.310, saying, “The privilege should not be applied
    blindly. . . . Rather, the rationale for the confidentiality of the specific communication
    at issue must be one which the confidentiality doctrine seeks to protect . . . .” 
    860 P.2d 1248
    , 1262 (Alaska 1993). Griswold argues that Cool Homes makes the exceptions to
    the Open Meetings Act for attorney-client and work-product privilege narrower than their
    litigation counterparts — Alaska Evidence Rule 503 for attorney-client privilege; Alaska
    Civil Rule 26(b)(3) for work-product privilege — and he argues that this narrower
    privilege should be used for the exceptions to the Public Records Act. The City
    disagrees. It argues that Cool Homes does not apply to the Public Records Act and that
    if Cool Homes does apply, it does not require any further disclosure of the invoices. We
    need not decide the degree to which Cool Homes applies to the Public Records Act, and
    we need not address the scope of Cool Homes other than in the attorney invoices context.
    Assuming without deciding that Cool Homes applies to the Public Records Act, we
    (continued...)
    -13-                                      7297
    2.     Communications relating to the Board’s decision
    Griswold argues that Holly Wells’s communications regarding the Board’s
    June 2014 decision are not privileged because Wells was acting as a neutral advisor to the
    Board. We disagree.
    The deliberative process privilege applies to these communications.36 They
    occurred before the decision was issued and contain give-and-take on the wording of the
    decision. They therefore qualify as predecisional and deliberative, establishing a
    35
    (...continued)
    conclude that it requires no further disclosure of invoices than would otherwise be
    required. In re Mendel provides the proper standard for the disclosure of invoices under
    the Public Records Act, with the privileges “construed narrowly to further the
    legislature’s goal of broad public access.”
    36
    The City does not argue here that deliberative process privilege applies to
    the communications. But the City does argue that the communications fall within the
    state law exception to the Public Records Act. This exception includes the balancing test
    that we apply if we determine that no more specific exception applies. See Capital Info.
    
    Grp., 923 P.2d at 36
    -37. As explained above, the deliberative process privilege is a
    specific application of this balancing test and “affects the balance . . . primarily by
    identifying more specifically what interest the government may have in maintaining
    confidentiality, in the form of the threshold showing that the communication is
    predecisional and deliberative,” as well as “outlin[ing] fairly rigid procedural
    requirements that the government must meet in order to claim the privilege.” 
    Id. at 37
    .
    Because the communications relating to the Board’s decision fall squarely within the
    ambit of the deliberative process privilege, we choose to apply the more specific
    deliberative process privilege framework rather than the catch-all balancing test. Doing
    so does not prejudice Griswold because the deliberative process privilege is a more
    specific application of the balancing test, because Wrede identified the deliberative
    process privilege as a ground for withholding these communications in his denial of
    Griswold’s public records request, and because Griswold briefed the deliberative process
    privilege in his opening brief on appeal in this court.
    -14-                                      7297
    presumption of nondisclosure.37 And balancing supports nondisclosure. As Griswold
    notes, Wells was acting as a neutral advisor to the Board sitting as a quasi-judicial body.
    Her role in drafting the Board’s decision was analogous to that of a staff attorney for a
    court. A body making factual and legal determinations must be able to discuss freely its
    thoughts on a case. Disclosure of predecisional communications between members of
    judicial or quasi-judicial bodies and their supporting staff could undermine public
    confidence in the judicial process and “affect the quality of governmental
    decisionmaking.”38 Further, disclosure of the documents Griswold requested would serve
    little public purpose. The Board issued its decision and that decision was appealed.39
    Making public previous drafts of the decision or communications discussing those drafts
    would not change the decision or the appellate process.
    We affirm the superior court’s decision that the communications relating to
    the Board’s decision are protected from public disclosure.
    3.     Attorney invoices
    Griswold argues that none of the requested attorney invoices contain
    privileged information and that they should be fully disclosed. The City responds that all
    the invoices that were not disclosed, either initially by City Manager Wrede or by either
    the City or Levesque after the superior court’s order, are privileged under attorney-client
    and work-product privileges and that the City should not have to disclose them.
    The superior court’s decision addressed only the two invoices that Wrede
    redacted. The City also submitted for in camera review 22 pages of invoices that it
    37
    See 
    id. at 36.
           38
    Gwich’in Steering 
    Comm., 10 P.3d at 579
    .
    39
    See Griswold v. Homer Bd. of Adjustment, No. 3HO-15-00021 CI (Alaska
    Super., Jan. 17, 2017), appeal docketed, No. S-16660 (Alaska Mar. 24, 2017).
    -15-                                      7297
    withheld from Griswold. The court’s decision did not address these withheld invoices.
    And in addressing the two redactions that Wrede made, it is not clear that the court
    applied the procedure we set out in In re Mendel or the narrow construction of attorney-
    client privilege and work-product privilege that the Public Records Act requires. We
    therefore vacate the order of the superior court with respect to the attorney invoices and
    remand for the court to review all attorney invoices in light of our discussion in this
    opinion.
    On remand the superior court should follow the procedure set out in In re
    Mendel: it should review the invoices in camera and redact the attorneys’ mental
    impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal theories; it should then give the attorneys for
    the City the opportunity to examine the redacted records and make any arguments why
    any of the unredacted material is subject to either the attorney-client privilege or the
    work-product privilege as it applies to the Public Records Act.40 The court should then
    make its final decision, and the relevant, unprivileged information should be produced.41
    When reviewing the attorney invoices, the superior court should construe the privileges
    narrowly.42
    B.     Homer City Code
    Griswold also argues that provisions of the Homer City Code (HCC or
    Code) require disclosure of the records he requested. The Code, like the Public Records
    Act, provides for the disclosure of records with a list of exceptions.43 Because the Public
    40
    In re 
    Mendel, 897 P.2d at 75
    .
    41
    
    Id. 42 Capital
    Info. 
    Grp., 923 P.2d at 33
    .
    43
    HCC 2.84.030, .040 (2017).
    -16-                                       7297
    Records Act applies to municipalities,44 the Code applies only to the extent it narrows the
    exceptions to disclosure and requires that more records be disclosed. The question then
    is whether the Code requires the disclosure of any information that could be withheld
    under the Public Records Act. We conclude the Code does not require any additional
    disclosure.
    Homer City Code 2.84.030 provides that “[e]xcept as provided by HCC
    2.84.040, or by other provisions of City, State, or Federal law, all nonexempt public
    records shall be open to inspection by any person during business hours, subject to any
    applicable regulations that may be adopted by the City Manager.” Homer City Code
    2.84.040 lists the following exceptions relevant to this case:
    a. Communications between an attorney for the City
    and the City, or any agency, officer, employee, or
    representative of the City, that are made confidentially in the
    rendition of legal services to the City or to a City agency,
    officer, or employee;
    b. Records prepared by any attorney for the City in the
    rendition of legal services or legal advice to the City or any
    agency, officer, employee or representative of the City . . . ;
    c. The work product of an attorney for the City . . . ;
    ....
    n. Records that are required or authorized to be kept
    confidential by a privilege, exemption or other principle
    recognized by law or the courts; [and]
    ....
    r. Records concerning deliberations and drafts of
    decisions in quasi-judicial proceedings conducted by the City
    or any City agency.
    44
    City of Kenai v. Kenai Peninsula Newspapers, Inc., 
    642 P.2d 1316
    , 1318-23
    (Alaska 1982).
    -17-                                      7297
    The plain language of HCC 2.84.040 excepts from disclosure the communications
    surrounding the Board’s decision and those portions of the attorney invoices subject to
    the attorney-client and work-product privileges. The Code thus does not require the
    disclosure of any records that the Public Records Act excepts from disclosure.
    C.     Attorney’s Fees And Contempt
    The superior court found that the City was the prevailing party and awarded
    it 20% of its attorney’s fees under Alaska Appellate Rule 508(e)(4). Griswold argues that
    the superior court erred in awarding the City 20% of its attorney’s fees because he, and
    not the City, was the prevailing party on appeal in superior court; because he was a public
    interest litigant; and because the award would deter similarly situated litigants. Because
    we vacate part of the superior court’s decision, we also vacate its prevailing party
    decision and its attorney’s fees award. We remind the superior court that the Alaska
    Legislature abrogated and replaced the common law public interest litigant doctrine with
    a constitutional claimant provision in AS 09.60.010.45
    Griswold also argues that the City did not comply with the superior court’s
    order when the City disclosed only one part of one redacted invoice. We construe this
    as an appeal of the court’s denial of Griswold’s motion for contempt. “In order for there
    to be contempt it must appear that there has been a willful disregard or disobedience of
    the authority or orders of the court.”46 The court’s order directly addressed only the two
    redacted Birch Horton invoices, ruling that the hours billed and names of clients should
    not have been redacted but that the other items were properly redacted. In response, the
    City provided Griswold a new, less-redacted copy of the one Birch Horton invoice on
    45
    Alaska Conservation Found. v. Pebble Ltd. P’ship, 
    350 P.3d 273
    , 280-81
    (Alaska 2015).
    
    46 Taylor v
    . District Court, 
    434 P.2d 679
    , 681 (Alaska 1967).
    -18-                                      7297
    which hours billed and names of City employees had been redacted. This was a
    reasonable response to the court’s order. The court did not clearly err in finding that the
    City did not willfully disregard or disobey its order.
    V.     CONCLUSION
    We AFFIRM that portion of the superior court’s order that held the
    communications relating to the Homer Board of Adjustment’s June 2014 decision were
    excepted from disclosure under the Public Records Act and the Homer City Code. We
    also AFFIRM the superior court’s denial of Griswold’s motion to hold the City in
    contempt. We VACATE that portion of the court’s order that held the attorney invoices
    Griswold requested were exempt from disclosure under the Public Records Act and the
    Homer City Code, and we VACATE the court’s prevailing party determination and its
    attorney’s fees award. We REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
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