Getz v. Superior Court CA3 ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 11/17/21 Getz v. Superior Court CA3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    (El Dorado)
    ----
    DEAN GETZ,
    C091337
    Petitioner,
    (Super. Ct. No. PC20190335)
    v.
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF EL DORADO
    COUNTY,
    Respondent;
    COUNTY OF EL DORADO et al.,
    Real Parties in Interest.
    California has declared, in terms as clear as the English language permits, that
    government business is the people’s business whether conducted in proceedings by
    deliberative bodies (Gov. Code, § 54950 et seq.)1 or discussed in records of any form,
    1   All undesignated statutory references are to the Government Code.
    1
    and must be accessible to the public, though access can be regulated to reduce the
    administrative burden imposed on government agencies and in rare instances can be
    denied altogether to prevent the disclosure of records exempt from disclosure.
    Computers have led to an enormous increase in the volume of information collected and
    retained by government and made identification and access to such information easier.
    But the rules providing for public access have not changed.
    In this case we consider the application of rules calculated to reduce the
    administrative burden posed by public records requests—rules requiring clarity and
    specificity—to a request for electronic records made by petitioner Dean Getz to real party
    in interest the County of El Dorado (the County), 2 under the California Public Records
    Act (Gov. Code, § 6250 et seq.) (the Act).
    Concerned about the management of a homeowners association, of which he is a
    member, by a local development company, Getz sought records regarding the County’s
    contacts with the homeowners association and the development company. Getz initially
    requested “all development plans, proposals, reports and applicable correspondence
    including electronic (e.g. email) ‘records’ by and between El Dorado County (EDC) and
    any other party pertaining to” a planned development. In the days before computer
    technology, identification and transmittal of paper documents meeting the description in
    the request might have imposed an enormous burden, but technology has greatly
    simplified identification and transmittal of electronic documents. Employing computer
    technology, the County was able to quickly locate e-mails potentially responsive to the
    request.
    2Real parties in interest include the County; El Dorado County Community
    Development Services, Planning and Building Department, Planning Division; and El
    Dorado County District Attorney’s Office.
    2
    Believing he had not obtained all the information available, Getz thereafter
    expanded the scope of the request to include all e-mails from January 2013 to August 1,
    2018, between four e-mail domain names associated with the development company and
    its representatives and any department of the County.
    The County complains about the volume of e-mails responsive to the request, and
    speculates many of the documents are not likely to relate to the conduct of official
    business, and thus would not be “public” records, and indeed might fall within various
    exemptions from disclosure. According to the County, the need to review all of the e-
    mails to determine if they contain privileged information and to verify they are public
    documents will impose an enormous burden.
    The trial court agreed with the County that the request was overbroad and unduly
    burdensome. We will conclude it can reasonably be assumed that records in the custody
    of a public agency are public records; a claim to the contrary must be made by the agency
    and be supported by substantial evidence. Further, the burden to assert and establish
    exemption from disclosure is on the agency, which would be well advised to segregate
    privileged documents from others. An agency cannot resist disclosure based on the
    burden stemming from actions needed to assuage an abstract fear of improvident
    disclosure, a fear that could be avoided by simply setting privileged documents apart.
    Getz also seeks review of an order of respondent court denying his request for
    records regarding the County District Attorney’s review of a false police report
    misdemeanor charge involving Getz. We agree with the trial court that the misdemeanor
    charge records were investigative files exempt from production under section 6254,
    subdivision (f) of the Act.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    County’s Demurrer and Request for Judicial Notice
    Preliminarily, we address a procedural issue. In response to Getz’s petition, this
    court issued an order to show cause. In response to the order to show cause, the County
    3
    filed a demurrer. “If the court issues an alternative writ or order to show cause, the
    respondent or any real party in interest, separately or jointly, may serve and file a return
    by demurrer, verified answer, or both.” 3 (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.487(b)(1); see also
    Code Civ. Proc., § 1089; Agricultural Labor Relations Bd. v. Superior Court (2016)
    
    4 Cal.App.5th 675
    , 681 (Agricultural Labor Relations Bd.).) “[A] demurrer admits the
    facts pleaded in a writ petition. [Citation.]” (Agricultural Labor Relations Bd., supra, at
    p. 682.) Therefore, we take the facts from the well-pleaded, verified allegations in the
    petition. (Ibid.)
    In addition, the County requested judicial notice of certain factual findings the trial
    court made in denying the petition and three declarations of County officials submitted to
    the trial court.4 Getz opposed the request as “cumulative” because this court “already has
    notice of the record, which includes the same records in Respondent’s request for judicial
    notice,” i.e., the superior court’s order and the three declarations. We agree. Getz
    submitted as exhibits to the petition documents filed with the superior court, as well as
    the transcript of the hearing the court conducted. We also draw some facts that follow
    from these records. (Agricultural Labor Relations Bd., supra, 4 Cal.App.5th at p. 682,
    fn. 3.) Accordingly, the County’s request for judicial notice is denied.
    3 The County’s response also included a proposed answer setting forth the County’s
    response to the allegations in Getz’s petition and affirmative defenses.
    4 The findings made by the trial court may be judicially noticeable but not the truth of
    those findings. (See Gerawan Farming, Inc. v. Agricultural Labor Relations Bd. (2018)
    
    23 Cal.App.5th 1129
    , 1149, fn. 24 [“[W]hile we judicially notice what the [administrative
    law judge’s] decision was (i.e., what findings were made), we do not take judicial notice
    of the truth of those findings”]; see also Lockley v. Law Office of Cantrell, Green, Pekich,
    Cruz & McCort (2001) 
    91 Cal.App.4th 875
    , 886-887; Steed v. Department of Consumer
    Affairs (2012) 
    204 Cal.App.4th 112
    , 122.)
    4
    Request for E-mails Between Certain E-mail Domains and County Personnel
    Getz is a member of the Serrano El Dorado Owners Association (Serrano),
    developed and managed by Parker Development Company (Parker). Getz alleges that he
    is concerned about the management of Serrano, Parker’s role in managing Serrano, and
    the County’s contacts with Serrano and Parker.
    On March 29, 2018, Getz submitted a request under the Act to the County to
    produce, “including drafts—all development plans, proposals, reports and applicable
    correspondence including electronic (e.g. email) ‘records’ by and between El Dorado
    County (EDC) and any other party pertaining to the application listed on EDC’s website
    as ‘SP 12 002 CENTRAL EL DORADO HILLS SPECIFIC PLAN’ since its last entry
    titled, ‘8/25/20[1]6 Informational Workshop’ to date.”5
    In response, the County produced an index of responsive documents, including e-
    mails, on a CD with hyperlinks to the text of the e-mails or documents.6 County
    Planning Manager Rommel Pabalinas created the index using searching software and
    search terms. Pabalinas opened and reviewed each e-mail and document to determine
    5  The County numbered this request P001635-032918. Getz alternatively describes this
    request as follows: “Before August 1, 2018, I submitted a California Public Records Act
    (CPRA) request, EDC Request No. P001635-032918 seeking emails between the
    Respondents’ Planning Division and the email domains ‘@serranohoa.org’,
    ‘@parkerdevco.com’, @hsmlaw.com’ and/or ‘mcnallytemple.com’ from January 1, 2013
    to the date of the request.” The County contends that Getz “incorrectly describes Request
    P001635-032918 . . . .” The record appears to support the County. At the hearing on the
    petition, Getz’s legal counsel stated: “The first request [by] Mr. Getz sought documents
    related to something called the El Dorado Hills specific plan and he did not only seek e-
    mails.”
    6 A hyperlink is “an electronic link providing direct access from one distinctively
    marked place in a hypertext or hypermedia document to another in the same or a different
    document . . . .” (Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (11th ed. 2003) p. 611;
    Gilbert v. Sykes (2007) 
    147 Cal.App.4th 13
    , 19 [“hyperlinks” are “links that take the
    reader to an additional page of information”].)
    5
    responsiveness to the request. Pabalinas also had to determine that the records contained
    information relating to County business and ensure that no draft documents concerning
    the development project were included since the public hearing process had yet to start.
    Pabalinas worked with county counsel to review the responsive records for exemptions to
    disclosure or information protected from disclosure by privilege or work product.
    Pabalinas estimated that this process required 80 hours of his time.
    After reviewing the e-mails produced, Getz believed that not all responsive
    records were produced. On August 1, 2018, Getz submitted another request: “I am
    seeking electronic copies of any/all emails by or between ANYONE (i.e. any department)
    within the County of El Dorado and anyone at the email domains of ‘serranohoa.org’,
    ‘@parkerdevco.com’, @hsmlaw.com’ and/or ‘@mcnallytemple.com’ from January 1,
    2013 to date in the County’s possession. This is [a] follow up (or expanded) request in
    connection with previously filed request, P001635-032918, for which I have reason to
    suspect that all the responsive information hasn’t been produced. With that in mind, this
    request should be easily fulfilled with a simple query of the County’s electronic records
    without concern to subject matter and should include queries of any personal devices
    used by County representatives. To that end, this request also seeks any corresponding
    metadata sent or received pertaining to any of the responsive records.”7
    The County acknowledged the request and assigned it number P001818-080118.
    On August 28, 2018, the County notified Getz that approximately 47,000 e-mails were
    potentially responsive to the request, of which 42,582 e-mails were newly identified. The
    7  According to Getz, (1) “ ‘serranohoa.org’ ” was associated with “Serrano El Dorado
    Owner’s Association,” (2) “ ‘parkerdevco.com’ ” with “Parker Development Company—
    development company which built the Serrano El Dorado Owners’ Association,” (3)
    “ ‘hsmlaw.com’ ” with “Hefner Law—land use counsel retained by Parker Development
    Company, not the County,” and (4) “ ‘mcnallytemple.com’ ” with “McNally Temple
    Associates, Inc.—Communications and public relations consultants retained by Parker
    Development Company.”
    6
    County asked Getz to “further refine your request in order to allow for a more focused
    search and to reduce the County’s burden in reviewing the responsive records prior to
    production.” Getz responded that he did not believe he was required to narrow the focus
    of the request, but that the County was required to produce all requested documents.
    Using the same reviewing process as for Getz’s prior request, Pabalinas estimated
    40 to 50 business days would be required to review and sort responsive records. He
    noted that “there are no search terms other than the email domains listed” and concluded
    therefore that “the emails returned from the search are less likely to relate to the conduct
    of official business.”
    Pabalinas also noted that one of the e-mail domains is for a law office that county
    counsel works with on the defense of one or more lawsuits, including exchanging drafts.
    Deputy County Counsel Breann Moebius stated that the County is the respondent and
    Parker the real party in interest in a petition for writ of mandate challenging the County’s
    approval of a Parker development. Moebius stated the County and Parker “were aligned
    in this lawsuit, and we intended to work together on a common defense thereto.”
    Moebius further stated that in resolving the suit, the County and Parker “maintained a
    joint defense relationship and shared a common interest with Hefner Law in the course
    and scope of their representation of their client Parker Development Company.”
    Deputy County Counsel Roger Runkle echoed Pabalinas that counsel would need
    to review all e-mails and attachments for privilege, as well as to ensure that draft
    documents or private information not involving County business is not produced. Runkle
    noted that the County has over 1,800 employees. Runkle estimated that it would require
    hundreds of hours to review documents and redact privileged or exempt information.
    Getz suggested the County provide an index of the 42,582 e-mails. Getz believed
    the County would provide an index with hyperlinks as it did in response to request
    P001635-032918. On February 15, 2019, the County informed Getz: “We are currently
    7
    preparing that index and will provide it to you next week. After you have reviewed the
    index, please let us know which e-mails you would like produced.”8
    On March 25, 2019, the County produced the index of 42,582 e-mails and asked
    Getz to narrow his focus to describe identifiable public records relevant to his inquiry.
    The index identified the sender, recipient, subject, date and whether the e-mail had an
    attachment. Unlike the prior index, the e-mails were not readable; the index contained no
    hyperlinked text.
    On April 15, 2019, Getz informed the County that, having reviewed the index, it
    reinforced his need for the text of all responsive e-mails. Getz stated that he could not
    find a way to reduce the request (e.g., by domain name or date), because the information
    he sought seemed prevalent throughout the index. Getz reiterated his request that the
    42,582 e-mails be produced without further delay. Getz stated “the County has
    previously provided an [sic] similar index . . . whereby the index hyperlinks to the text of
    each of the responsive emails—so, there should be little additional work to complete this
    request at this point.” The County did not respond.
    Request for District Attorney’s Review of False Police Report Investigation
    On April 2, 2019, Getz submitted a request to the County for “all records (paper
    and electronic) in connection with the District Attorney’s effort(s) to review this matter
    [alleged misdemeanor by Getz of filing a false police report in 2016] over the course of
    the past year (April 2, 2018 to April 2, 2019) . . . .” Getz states in his petition to this
    8  Pabalinas stated that the index was provided “pursuant to Government Code
    § 6253.1 . . . .” This statute requires a public agency to take certain reasonable steps to
    assist members of the public to “make a focused and effective request that reasonably
    describes an identifiable record or records . . . .” (§ 6253.1, subd. (a).) However, this
    requirement does not apply, inter alia, if “[t]he public agency makes available an index of
    its records.” (Id., subd. (d)(3).)
    8
    court that “[t]he request sought, for example, non-confidential witness statements from
    2018.”
    In a March 19, 2019 letter to Getz, Chief Assistant District Attorney William
    Clark described an investigation arising out of complaints made to the sheriff and district
    attorney about “mean-spirited and vulgar” Twitter messages posted by an unknown
    person in 2016 concerning various people involved in a contentious election for the board
    of Serrano. The County sheriff investigated and concluded there was insufficient
    evidence of a crime and the investigation was closed.
    As described in Clark’s letter, Getz, Jeff Baker and Erin Walsh contacted the
    district attorney expressing frustration with the investigation and asked the district
    attorney to look into the matter. According to Getz, the review involved “an alleged
    misdemeanor about me of filing a false police report in 2016,” for which he was never
    charged. The district attorney’s office reviewed the sheriff’s reports, interviewed Getz
    and Baker, as well as Nadine Lauren, Walsh, John Yoffie and Jim Pridemore, and looked
    at a video provided by Getz. 9 The district attorney concluded there was not sufficient
    evidence to support charges regarding the Twitter harassment nor charges of filing a false
    police report. Also, Clark noted that filing a false police report is a misdemeanor and the
    statute of limitations on that offense passed in 2017.
    9  The County contends that Getz has not challenged the trial court’s ruling sustaining the
    County’s hearsay and legal conclusion objections to the portion of the letter identifying
    the witnesses, thereby depriving Getz of evidence to support a contention “either that the
    named individuals actually were interviewed or that they were not confidential
    witnesses.” Review of the record shows that the County only objected to Getz’s
    declaration characterizing Clark’s statements. The County did not object to the letter
    itself attached to the declaration, which was potentially admissible under Evidence Code
    section 1280, the public employee record exception to the hearsay rule. (See Gananian v.
    Zolin (1995) 
    33 Cal.App.4th 634
    , 639-640.)
    9
    The County acknowledged receipt of the request and numbered it P002113-
    040219. On April 12, 2019, Runkle responded: “To the extent there are records
    responsive to this request with the District Attorney’s Office, they are not provided
    because they are records in investigatory files and those records are completely exempt
    from disclosure under California Government Code 6245(f) which applies to law
    enforcement investigatory files and records, including DA files, and continues to apply
    even if the investigation is closed.” On April 13 and 22, 2019, Getz replied that the
    County District Attorney confirmed on March 26, 2019, that the statute of limitations had
    run on the charge, therefore the exemption did not apply because there was no prospect of
    law enforcement. The County did not respond further.
    The Petitions for Writ of Mandate
    On June 25, 2019, Getz filed a petition for writ of mandate directing the County to
    produce the records sought by request P001818-080118 (e-mails between the County and
    four e-mail domains) and P002113-040219 (the false police report investigation). Getz
    and the County submitted briefs. On December 5, 2019, the trial court issued a tentative
    ruling and the following day conducted a hearing. On December 10, 2019, the court
    issued a decision denying the petition.
    Regarding the request for e-mails, the court agreed with the County that Getz’s
    “request is not ‘specific and focused’ and is overbroad.” The court reasoned:
    “[Petitioner] not only seeks emails from separate email domains—not any specific email
    address—his request was also directed to both the Planning Division and to the County as
    a whole, which includes some 1,800 officers, employees, and representatives. Petitioner
    apparently did not provide the County with even a general description of any particular
    content in which he was interested. Moreover, the request seeks records over a period of
    approximately six years. It is no surprise, then, that the County’s search turned up some
    47,000 emails that are potentially responsive to the request.”
    10
    The trial court observed “this is a case where the County’s efforts to date, have
    extended well beyond what is reasonable to expect in complying with a [California
    Public Records Act] request.” The court found “that petitioner’s request, as currently
    framed, is overbroad and unduly burdensome.”
    Regarding Getz’s request for documents related to review of the misdemeanor
    investigation, the court found that the County and district attorney had met their burden
    of demonstrating that the records in question were exempt under section 6254,
    subdivision (f). The court noted that Getz “does not seriously dispute that the records
    request pertains to a law enforcement agency’s investigative records,” but “contends the
    records are disclosable because the statute of limitations has lapsed for criminally
    charging anyone at this point.” The court found that the exemption was not limited to
    pending investigations.
    The court did not award attorney fees and costs to the County as the prevailing
    party, finding that Getz’s case was not clearly frivolous.10
    Getz filed a petition for writ of mandamus in this court seeking a direction to the
    superior court to vacate its decision and require the County to produce (1) “the responsive
    records identified in the index,” and (2) “the records relating to the five nonconfidential
    witness statements previously disclosed by the District Attorney.”
    DISCUSSION
    Standard of Review
    A trial court order supporting the decision of a public agency refusing to disclose
    records, “shall be immediately reviewable by petition to the appellate court for issuance
    10  Section 6259, subdivision (d), requires the court to award costs and reasonable
    attorney fees to a requester who prevails in litigation under the Act but only to a
    prevailing public agency if the requester’s case is “clearly frivolous.”
    11
    of an extraordinary writ.” (§ 6259, subd. (c); Becerra v. Superior Court (2020)
    
    44 Cal.App.5th 897
    , 913 (Becerra.))
    “The standard of review is mixed. We accept the trial court’s factual
    determinations if supported by substantial evidence, ‘ “but we undertake the weighing
    process anew.” ’ [Citation.]” (Golden Door Properties, LLC v. Superior Court (2020)
    
    53 Cal.App.5th 733
    , 790 (Golden Door Properties); Becerra, supra, 44 Cal.App.5th at
    p. 913 [“This court ‘conduct[s] an independent review of the trial court’s ruling; factual
    findings made by the trial court will be upheld if based on substantial evidence’ ”].)
    “ ‘[E]xemptions are construed narrowly, and the burden is on the public agency to
    show that the records should not be disclosed.’ ” (California First Amendment Coalition
    v. Superior Court (1998) 
    67 Cal.App.4th 159
    , 167 (California First), quoting Rogers v.
    Superior Court (1993) 
    19 Cal.App.4th 469
    , 476 (Rogers).)
    Requested E-mails
    Getz maintains the trial court erred in a number of ways in denying his petition for
    an order directing the County to produce the e-mails requested. We conclude that one
    such claim of error is sufficient, i.e., that the County had already identified the records
    responsive to the request in the index of 42,582 e-mails but simply refused to produce
    them. Put another way, the trial court’s finding that the request was “overbroad and
    unduly burdensome” is not supported by substantial evidence, because the County had
    already located and indexed the responsive documents using the criteria in Getz’s request
    before he filed a petition for writ of mandate.
    To be sure, Getz was required to present a “specific and focused request” to the
    County. (Rogers, supra, 19 Cal.App.4th at p. 481; California First, supra,
    67 Cal.App.4th at p. 165.) In California First, we said: “Unquestionably, public records
    must be described clearly enough to permit the agency to determine whether writings of
    the type described in the request are under its control. Section 6257 compels an agency
    to provide a copy of nonexempt records upon a request ‘which reasonably describes an
    12
    identifiable record, or information produced therefrom . . . .’ However, the requirement
    of clarity must be tempered by the reality that a requester, having no access to agency
    files, may be unable to precisely identify the documents sought. Thus, writings may be
    described by their content. The agency must then determine whether it has such writings
    under its control and the applicability of any exemption. An agency is thus obliged to
    search for records based on criteria set forth in the search request.” (California First,
    supra, at pp. 165-166.)
    The criteria set forth in Getz’s request were quite specific, albeit expressly not
    based on content, and did not require interpretation to determine responsiveness. Any e-
    mail between County personnel and any e-mail address utilizing the domains specified by
    Getz was responsive. The process of determining responsiveness did not require
    reviewing the contents of the e-mail or any attachment. In that sense, recovering e-mails
    that fit the criteria of the request was not unduly burdensome (and perhaps even less
    burdensome than Getz’s first request).
    As we said in California First, “[t]he claim of overbreadth raises a separate issue.
    A clearly framed request which requires an agency to search an enormous volume of data
    for a ‘needle in the haystack’ or, conversely, a request which compels production of a
    huge volume of material may be objectionable as unduly burdensome. [Citation.]
    Records requests, however, inevitably impose some burden on government agencies. An
    agency is obliged to comply so long as the record can be located with reasonable effort.
    [Citation.]” (California First, supra, 67 Cal.App.4th at p. 166.)
    In Bertoli v. City of Sebastopol (2015) 
    233 Cal.App.4th 353
    , 372 (Bertoli), the
    court said that disclosure of public records “may be blocked as overly burdensome”
    under section 6255, subdivision (a). 11 This “catch-all exception” provides that a public
    11 “Section 6255 provides in full: ‘The agency shall justify withholding any record by
    demonstrating that the record in question is exempt under express provisions of this
    13
    agency may justify nondisclosure where “ ‘on the facts of the particular case the public
    interest served by not disclosing the record clearly outweighs the public interest served
    by disclosure of the record.’ ” (CBS, supra, 42 Cal.3d at p. 652.) “When weighing the
    benefits and costs of disclosure, any expense or inconvenience to the public agency may
    properly be considered.” (Bertoli, supra, 233 Cal.App.4th at p. 372, citing American
    Civil Liberties Union Foundation v. Deukmejian (1982) 
    32 Cal.3d 440
    , 452-453.)12
    The County’s response to Getz’s request essentially established that the request
    was not “overbroad and unduly burdensome.” The County produced without objection
    an index of 42,582 e-mails that fit the criteria of the request, thereby demonstrating that
    the records could be located with reasonable effort and the volume of material was not
    unmanageable.
    However, the County and the trial court focused on the task of reviewing the
    collected and indexed e-mails to determine which were responsive to the request. The
    trial court referred to the e-mails as “47,000 emails that are potentially responsive to the
    request.” (Italics added.) Pabalinas declared that “[t]he majority of the documents which
    I reviewed which had been recovered were not responsive to Mr. Getz’s request.”
    Pabalinas’s estimate of “40-50 business days” to produce the records was based on the
    “cumbersome and lengthy” process to “sort and review those records.”
    Pabalinas acknowledged, however, that “[t]his request does not contain any search
    terms at all, nor does it make any attempt to identify the records which Mr. Getz seeks.”
    It was in the second half of that sentence where Pabalinas went astray. Getz’s request
    chapter or that on the facts of the particular case the public interest served by not making
    the record public clearly outweighs the public interest served by disclosure of the record.’
    [Italics added.]” (CBS, Inc. v. Block (1986) 
    42 Cal.3d 646
    , 652, fn. 8. (CBS).)
    12 As Getz points out, the trial court cited section 6255 but did not engage in “the
    balancing of interests required by section 6255.” (California First Amendment Coalition,
    supra, 67 Cal.App.4th at p. 166, fn. 3.)
    14
    identified the records sought in terms of e-mail traffic between the four specified e-mail
    domains and the e-mails of County personnel. Any e-mail fitting these criteria was
    responsive. No further inquiry was required to determine responsiveness. Getz stated
    expressly in the request that he sought e-mails “without concern to subject matter. . . .”
    Pabalinas did not disagree, referring to Getz as “simply request[ing] all of the
    emails over a six-year period between any of the County’s representatives and four
    separate email domains, each of which I am informed and believe have a number of email
    addresses associated with it.” But rather than respond to the request as framed, Pabalinas
    formulated additional criteria for responsiveness, which he did not actually articulate but
    maintained would require further review. 13 However, the County’s obligation was clear,
    i.e., “to search for records based on criteria set forth in the search request.” (California
    First Amendment, supra, 67 Cal.App.4th at p. 166.)
    Pabalinas alluded to another basis for review of the content of the e-mails
    collected, i.e., the records Getz requested were not “public records” subject to disclosure
    under the Act. (§ 6253, subd. (a); Anderson-Barker v. Superior Court (2019)
    
    31 Cal.App.5th 528
    , 538 [to establish a duty to disclose under § 6253, subd. (c), of the
    Act, the petitioner must show the record (1) is a public record as defined in § 6252, subd.
    (e), and (2) is in the possession of the public agency].) Pabalinas declared that “[b]ecause
    there are no search terms other than email domains listed, the emails returned from the
    search are less likely to relate to the conduct of official business.” 14 This was an
    13 To the extent that Pabalinas limited the universe of “responsive” e-mails and
    documents to those related to the specific plan that was the subject of Getz’s first request,
    any review would be duplicative, as well as contrary to the stated purpose of Getz’s
    second request, i.e., to expand on the first request which he believed did not produce all
    the documents he sought.
    14 Runkle also declared that county counsel generally “may be responsible” for
    reviewing the records sought under the Act to determine whether they are “public
    15
    apparent reference to the definition of “ ‘Public records’ ” in section 6252, subdivision
    (e), as including “any writing containing information relating to the conduct of the
    public’s business prepared, owned, used, or retained by any state or local agency
    regardless of physical form or characteristics.” As the trial court correctly observed, the
    Act “defines its terms very broadly.” (See Community Youth Athletic Center v. City of
    National City (2013) 
    220 Cal.App.4th 1385
    , 1418 [“ ‘The definition is broad and
    “ ‘ “intended to cover every conceivable kind of record that is involved in the
    governmental process.” ’ ” ’ [Citation]”].)
    There was no evidence before the trial court that the County’s e-mail exchanges
    with e-mail addresses in domains owned by a real estate developer, its legal counsel, and
    public relations consultants would contain anything but information regarding the
    County’s business with these entities. The County relies on City of San Jose v. Superior
    Court (2017) 
    2 Cal.5th 608
     (San Jose), where the California Supreme Court observed
    that “[w]hether a writing is sufficiently related to public business will not always be
    clear,” offering as an example that “depending on the context, an e-mail to a spouse
    complaining ‘my coworker is an idiot’ would not likely be a public record,” while “an e-
    mail to a superior reporting the coworker’s mismanagement of an agency project might
    well be.” (Id. at p. 618.) It is highly unlikely that the County’s e-mails Getz sought
    would fit the first example of an e-mail exchange between individuals in a personal
    relationship. The four e-mail domains specified in Getz’s request are manifestly work-
    related accounts. The County’s email correspondence with e-mail addresses in these
    domains would naturally deal with work-related matters, e.g., the developer’s business
    with the County in which the developer builds and manages developments. In any event,
    Pabalinas offered nothing but speculation that the e-mails Getz requested, and the County
    records.” In this particular case, he stated he would need to review the e-mails and
    attachments collected to ensure that “private information which has nothing to do the
    County’s business” is not “inadvertently produced.”
    16
    collected and indexed, contained information about anything other than the County’s
    business. (See 81 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 383 (1998) [speculation is not a basis for denying
    disclosure under the Act]; CBS, supra, 42 Cal.3d at p. 652.)
    To be sure, Getz requested a search of personal devices used by County personnel,
    but there was no evidence that the County did so. 15 As outlined by Runkle, the County’s
    general procedure involves sending a public records request to the County departments
    most likely to have the information to locate and segregate the records. Neither Pabalinas
    nor Runkle stated that the departments in this case were directed to search employees’
    personal devices or undertook such a search. The County did not provide any evidence
    that the 42,852 e-mails involved personal accounts or contained personal information.
    Absent some evidence that any of the e-mails requested were “primarily personal,
    containing no more than incidental mentions of agency business” (San Jose, supra,
    2 Cal.5th at pp. 618-619), we do not find an assertion that all 42,852 must be reviewed to
    make that determination supported by substantial evidence.
    The County also makes a passing reference to various statutory exemptions from
    disclosure in the Act, including “certain types of preliminary drafts, notes or memoranda
    (Gov. Code § 6254(a)), personal financial data (Gov. Code § 6254(n)), personnel and
    medical files (Gov. Code § 6254(c)), and material protected by evidentiary privileges
    (Gov. Code § 6254(k)) . . . .”16 However, more than vague suggestions and statutory
    15  The high court in San Jose observed that resolution of whether a record requested is a
    public record “particularly when writings are kept in personal accounts, will often
    involve an examination of several factors, including the content itself; the context in, or
    purpose for which, it was written; the audience to whom it was directed; and whether the
    writing was prepared by an employee acting or purporting to act within the scope of his
    or her employment.” (San Jose, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 618, italics added.)
    16 The trial court also observed “[c]ertain records and information must be withheld from
    public inspection; e.g., to protect personal privacy or to obtain confidential legal advice.”
    However, the court did not make a finding that Getz’s request called for e-mails that
    should be withheld from disclosure on that basis.
    17
    references are needed to invoke a privilege. We conclude the County has failed to
    provide sufficient evidence to require review of the 42,852 e-mails to determine that any
    of these exemptions might apply.
    Regarding section 6254, subdivision (a), Runkle referred in his declaration to
    reviewing the e-mails and attachments to ensure that “draft documents” are not
    produced.17 Section 6254, subdivision (a), exempts from disclosure “[p]reliminary
    drafts, notes, or interagency or intra-agency memoranda that are not retained by the
    public agency in the ordinary course of business, if the public interest in withholding
    those records clearly outweighs the public interest in disclosure.” To apply this
    exemption, the burden is on the public agency to establish three statutory conditions:
    “(1) The record sought must be a preliminary draft, note, or memorandum; (2) which is
    not retained by the public agency in the ordinary course of business; and (3) the public
    interest in withholding must clearly outweigh the public interest in disclosure.” (Citizens
    for a Better Environment v. Department of Food & Agriculture (1985) 
    171 Cal.App.3d 704
    , 711-712.)
    Neither Pabalinas nor Runkle furnish any evidence that the County does not retain
    “drafts” of any of the indexed e-mails or attachments or describe the public interest in
    nondisclosure that clearly outweighs public interest in disclosure in this case. (Golden
    Door Properties, supra, 53 Cal.App.5th at p. 790 [county’s declarations insufficiently
    17  The County provides no explanation why e-mails between the County and a real estate
    developer and its representatives would contain “[p]ersonnel, medical, or similar files, the
    disclosure of which would constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy”
    (§ 6254, subd. (c)) or “[s]tatements of personal worth or personal financial data required
    by a licensing agency” (§ 6254, subd. (n)). In keeping with the principle that exemptions
    are construed narrowly and the burden is on a public agency to justify them, the County
    cannot resist disclosure merely by citing exemptions and claiming that the requested e-
    mails must be reviewed to “ensure” that exempted materials are not present. (California
    First Amendment Coalition, supra, 67 Cal.App.4th at p. 167.)
    18
    specific for reviewing court to weigh public’s interest in nondisclosure]; see also Register
    Division of Freedom Newspapers, Inc. v. County of Orange (1984) 
    158 Cal.App.3d 893
    ,
    908 [court could not determine if § 6254, subd. (a), applied because there was no
    indication documents were not retained by public agency and “the record is silent
    regarding the competing considerations in balancing disclosure versus nondisclosure
    interests”].)
    Pabalinas and Runkle also maintained that the indexed e-mails must be reviewed
    for attorney-client privilege. Section 6254, subdivision (k), “allows agencies to withhold
    ‘[r]ecords, the disclosure of which is exempted or prohibited pursuant to federal or state
    law, including, but not limited to, provisions of the Evidence Code relating to privilege.’
    [Citation.] By ‘its reference to the privileges contained in the Evidence Code,’ section
    6254(k) ‘has made the attorney-client privilege applicable to public records.’ [Citation.]”
    (Los Angeles County Bd. of Supervisors v. Superior Court (2016) 
    2 Cal.5th 282
    , 291,
    fn. omitted (Los Angeles County Supervisors).) This exemption affords “ ‘public entities
    the attorney-client privilege as to writings to the extent authorized by the Evidence
    Code.’ [Citation.]” (Ibid.)
    The request specified that County e-mails sought were exchanged with four
    outside e-mail domains. “[A] privilege is waived upon voluntary disclosure of the
    privileged information to a third party.” (Golden Door Properties, supra, 53 Cal.App.5th
    at p. 781, citing OXY Resources California LLC v. Superior Court (2004)
    
    115 Cal.App.4th 874
    , 888 (OXY Resources).) However, Pabalinas stated in his
    declaration that “one of the email domains listed is that of a law office with which
    County Counsel and my office worked closely on the defense of one or more lawsuits in
    which the County was named as a Defendant. I believe this resulted in the exchange of
    drafts between my office and that office.” “Persons who possess common legal interests
    may share attorney-client privileged information without waiving the privilege. This
    principle ‘has been variously referred to as the “joint defense” doctrine, the “common
    19
    interest” doctrine, and the “pooled information” doctrine.’ [Citation.]” (Golden Door
    Properties, supra, at p. 781.) “ ‘ “ ‘[F]or the common interest doctrine to attach, most
    courts seem to insist that the two parties have in common an interest in securing legal
    advice related to the same matter—and that the communications be made to advance their
    shared interest in securing legal advice on that common matter.’ ” ’ [Citation.]” (Id. at
    pp. 781-782.)
    The County attempted to flesh out its contention that the common interest doctrine
    might apply with the declaration of Moebius. Moebius stated that, on June 21, 2018, the
    Friends of El Dorado County Oaks filed a petition for writ of mandate naming the County
    as respondent and Serrano (i.e., Parker) as real party in interest. 18 Moebius declared that
    “the interests of El Dorado County and Parker Development Company were aligned in
    this lawsuit, and we intended to work together on a common defense thereto. [¶] . . . In
    working towards a resolution in the matter [of] Friends of El Dorado County, the County
    of El Dorado maintained a joint defense relationship and shared a common interest with
    Hefner Law in the course and scope of their representation of their client Parker
    Development Company. During this relationship, we intended that any correspondence
    or communication relating to the subject matter of that case made between the two parties
    would retain any privileged status that it might originally have had. [¶] . . . In particular,
    any correspondence shared between my office and the attorneys for Parker Development
    at Hefner, Stark, would be considered work product. Additionally, to the extent that
    18  Getz contends that, regarding “the alleged common interest with Hefner law, that
    review would be quite limited, from June 21, 2018 forward, which is the date of the
    alleged joint defense relationship with the Hefner law firm.” However, the common
    interest doctrine protects prelitigation communications between codefendants on matters
    at issue in subsequent litigation. (California Oak Foundation v. County of Tehama
    (2009) 
    174 Cal.App.4th 1217
    , 1222-1223; OXY Resources, supra, 115 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 890.)
    20
    attorney-client documents were shared, we intended they would remain privileged and
    confidential.”
    Thus, the County asserts a basis for the common interest doctrine limited to e-
    mails (1) with the Hefner law firm, which owns one of the four domains defining the
    scope of Getz’s request, (2) regarding the suit involving Friends of El Dorado County and
    the Serrano Village J Lot H Project. The common interest doctrine is not asserted as a
    basis to exempt e-mails with any of the other three domains or on any other subject
    matter. Assuming that attorney-client privileged materials were shared between the
    County and the Hefner firm in defense of the suit, this evidence does not support a
    claimed need to review all 42,852 indexed e-mails. The subset of e-mails that might be
    exempt should be readily identifiable by Hefner appearing as sender or recipient and the
    subject matter line of the e-mail referencing the litigation.
    Further, Moebius stated that Parker and the County “intended to work together on
    a common defense,” (italics added) suggesting that a common defense of the suit was not
    actually undertaken and privileged information was not shared or not shared to the extent
    it might have been if the case were fully litigated. This suggestion is reinforced by
    Moebius’s statement that the County and Hefner maintained a joint defense and common
    interest while “working toward a resolution” of the petition, indicating the suit was
    resolved without extensive litigation. 19 Further, Moebius carefully referred to “any
    correspondence” (italics added) shared by the Hefner firm and the County as covered by
    19  This circumstance may explain why the County did not assert the exemption under
    section 6254, subdivision (b), for “[r]ecords pertaining to pending litigation to which the
    public agency is a party . . . until the pending litigation or claim had been finally
    adjudicated or otherwise settled.” (See Board of Trustees of California State University
    v. Superior Court (2005) 
    132 Cal.App.4th 889
    , 899 (“[S]ection 6254(b) only applies to
    litigation-related documents while litigation is pending. Documents exempt from
    disclosure while litigation is pending are subject to disclosure under the [Act] once the
    litigation has ended”].)
    21
    a common interest, but did not identify any shared correspondence and did not state that
    e-mail correspondence between Hefner and the County existed or to what extent it
    existed. Regarding “attorney-client documents,” Moebius stated only that “to the extent”
    they “were shared,” they would remain privileged and confidential.
    The Moebius declaration falls short in carrying the County’s burden to show that a
    review of the 42,852 e-mails on the index was necessary to determine if the privilege
    exemption under section 6254, subdivision (k), applied. Getz’s request defined a
    universe of documents in which any privilege held by the County ordinarily would be
    waived by disclosure in an e-mail with the third parties utilizing the four domains. The
    County’s evidence that the privilege was not waived by application of the common
    interest doctrine only extended to a discrete subset of the e-mails requested, failed to
    identify any e-mails or documents covered by the doctrine, and was equivocal regarding
    whether such e-mails or documents even existed.
    Moreover, the common interest doctrine extends only to communications
    “ ‘ “ ‘made to advance [a] shared interest in securing legal advice on that common
    matter.’ ” ’ ” (Golden Door Properties, supra, 53 Cal.App.5th at p. 782.) The California
    Supreme Court in Los Angeles County Supervisors emphasized that the attorney-client
    privilege “does not apply to every single communication transmitted confidentially
    between lawyer and client. Rather, the heartland of the privilege protects those
    communications that bear some relationship to the attorney’s provision of legal
    consultation.” (Los Angeles County Supervisors, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 294; see also
    Wood v. Superior Court (2020) 
    46 Cal.App.5th 562
    , 581 [the attorney-client privilege
    “requires something more than simply speaking to an attorney about a legal matter”].)
    Thus, not every communication between the Hefner law firm and the County about the
    project would fall under the exemption in section 6254, subdivision (k), by application of
    the common interest privilege.
    22
    For these reasons, we conclude the trial court erred in finding that the County’s
    refusal to produce the text of the 42,852 indexed e-mails was justified because Getz’s
    request was “overbroad and unduly burdensome.”20
    Our dissenting colleague asserts that the “relevant inquiry” is not whether the
    County can show the request under the Act calls for exempt or privileged material but
    how burdensome it is for the County to make that determination. (Dis. opn., post, at
    p. 5.) We disagree. The County must make some showing that exempt or privileged
    information exists in the records requested, especially, where, as here, that seems
    unlikely. The County cannot simply declare that it must always review every responsive
    e-mail to determine if any, or part of any, contain exempt or privileged information.
    Since the volume of e-mail correspondence in the modern era will always be an order of
    magnitude greater than notes, memoranda and correspondence by letter formerly sought
    in a request under the Act, the argument that the County must review every e-mail
    furnishes a ready-made “overly burdensome” response justifying a public agency’s
    refusal to respond to a request under the Act for e-mails. Perhaps the Legislature should
    consider the ease with which electronic records such as e-mails can be identified and the
    burden imposed when such records are requested in volume, but existing statutes do not
    make such burden a basis for refusing disclosure. Absent statutory changes, public
    agencies can reduce the potential burden by identifying and segregating potentially
    exempt records when they are created.
    The dissent also maintains that the County’s declarations establish the need to
    review each e-mail for exempt or attorney-client or common interest privileged
    information. (Dis. opn., post, at p. 6.) Again, we disagree. The County’s declarations
    20 Because we conclude that the e-mails on the County’s index must be produced, we do
    not address Getz’s request for remand to conduct discovery on the County’s claim of
    undue burden in making the indexed e-mails readable.
    23
    fall short, not even providing a single example of exempt or privileged information in
    responsive e-mails. Moreover, the dissent fails to acknowledge that the County’s
    declarations regarding privilege hedge whether any privileged e-mails or attachments
    exist, acknowledging that the matter on which the County’s and the developer’s interests
    “were aligned” did not proceed to litigation.
    Finally, the dissent diminishes the importance to the public of the issue Getz’s
    request addresses, i.e., improper cooperation between County government and officials
    and a prominent real estate developer in the County. (Dis. opn., post, at p. 5.) Land use
    decisions by county government are of great, not hypothetical, interest to the relevant
    public, county residents. (See County of Santa Clara v. Superior Court (2009)
    
    170 Cal.App.4th 1301
    , 1323-1324 [catchall exemption did not apply to request for
    disclosure of county’s geographic information system basemap data, which would
    contribute to comparisons of property tax assessments, permit issuance, treatment of tax
    delinquent properties, equitable deployment of public services, and zoning variances].)
    False Police Report Investigation
    We conclude the trial correctly found that the County met its burden of
    establishing that records related to the district attorney’s review of an investigation of
    Getz’s involvement in filing a false police report were exempt under section 6254,
    subdivision (f), of the Act. This provision exempts from disclosure the records of
    “investigations conducted by . . . any state or local police agency” or “any investigatory
    or security files compiled by any state or local police agency, or investigatory or security
    files compiled by any other state or local agency for correctional, law enforcement, or
    licensing purposes.” (§ 6254, subd. (f).)
    In the trial court, Getz contended that section 6254, subdivision (f), did not apply
    because the statute of limitations had run so there was no prospect that anyone would be
    charged with a misdemeanor. In applying the exemption, the trial court cited Williams v.
    Superior Court (1993) 
    5 Cal.4th 337
     (Williams), where the California Supreme Court
    24
    held “the exemption for law enforcement investigatory files does not end when the
    investigation ends.” (Id. at p. 355; see also Rivero v. Superior Court (1997)
    
    54 Cal.App.4th 1048
    , 1059; Rackauckas v. Superior Court (2002) 
    104 Cal.App.4th 169
    ,
    175-176.)
    On appeal, Getz has abandoned this argument and now cites the portion of section
    6254, subdivision (f), providing that “local law enforcement agencies shall disclose . . .
    the statements of all witnesses, other than confidential informants, to the victims of the
    incident, or an authorized representative thereof, an insurance carrier against which a
    claim has been or might be made, and any person suffering bodily injury or property
    damage or loss, as the result of the incident caused by arson, burglary, fire [etc.] . . .
    unless the disclosure would endanger the safety of a witness or other person involved in
    the investigation, or unless disclosure would endanger the successful completion of the
    investigation or a related investigation.”
    Getz omits the portion of this subdivision regarding disclosure of witness
    statements to the “victim” of the “incident.” Getz reads this provision as a broad
    exception to the exemption for any nonconfidential witness statement sought by any
    requester under the Act. Since the district attorney disclosed the names of witnesses
    interviewed in his review of the false police report investigation, Getz argues that
    statements obtained from these witnesses—assuming such statements exist—must be
    disclosed to him.
    The California Supreme Court observed that “[t]hese provisions for mandatory
    disclosure from law enforcement investigatory files represent the Legislature’s judgment,
    set out in exceptionally careful detail, about what items of information should be
    disclosed and to whom.” (Williams, supra, 5 Cal.4th at p. 361, italics added.) Getz
    makes no attempt to argue that he falls within the group of persons enumerated in section
    6254, subdivision (f), as entitled to witness statements.
    25
    In any case, Getz failed to raise this exception to the exemption in the trial court. 21
    Thus, the trial court had no opportunity to apply the statute to evidence regarding whether
    Getz qualified as a person to whom witness statements must be disclosed. “ ‘As a
    general rule a party is not permitted to change its position on appeal and raise new issues
    not presented in the trial court. [Citation.] This is particularly true “when the new
    theory depends on controverted factual questions whose relevance thereto was not made
    to appear” in the trial court. [Citation.]’ ” (Alfaro v. Community Housing Improvement
    System & Planning Assn. (2009) 
    171 Cal.App.4th 1356
    , 1396.) This rule applies to a
    request under the Act. (Humane Society of U.S. v. Superior Court (2013)
    
    214 Cal.App.4th 1233
    , 1272 [“It would be unfair to allow [the requester] to change
    theories on appeal by asserting new interests in disclosure”].)
    In addition, we observe that if Getz claimed that he was a victim of the “incident,”
    i.e., that he was victimized by a false police report, the record appears to be the other way
    around. Getz was apparently investigated for filing a false police report.
    We conclude the trial court properly denied Getz’s petition for production of
    documents related to the district attorney’s review of the investigation of a false police
    report involving Getz.
    DISPOSITION
    The petition is granted in part and respondent court is ordered to vacate that
    portion of its order denying Getz’s request under the Act for production of e-mails to and
    from four enumerated e-mail domains and order the County to produce the text of e-mails
    21  In two sentences in his reply brief submitted below, Getz contended: “Specifically,
    the March 2019 letter identifies documents that must be produced. These include, at a
    minimum, interviews with Nadine Lauren, Erin Walsh, John Yoffie, and Jim Pridemore.”
    However, Getz did not mention section 6254, subdivision (f), regarding disclosure of
    witness statements. At the hearing, his legal counsel confined his discussion to the
    statute of limitations argument.
    26
    and any attachments on the County’s index of 42,852 responsive e-mails. The County
    shall pay Getz’s “costs and reasonable attorney fees” in an amount to be determined by
    the trial court. (§ 6259, subd. (d); see also Pacific Merchant Shipping Assn. v. Board of
    Pilot Commissioners etc. (2015) 
    242 Cal.App.4th 1043
    , 1053 [partially prevailing
    petitioner entitled to attorney fees and costs]; accord Los Angeles Times v. Alameda
    Corridor Transportation Authority (2001) 
    88 Cal.App.4th 1381
    , 1391-1392.) Getz is
    also entitled to costs in this original proceeding. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.493.)
    /s/
    RAYE, P.J.
    I concur:
    /s/
    BLEASE, J.
    27
    KRAUSE, J., Concurring and Dissenting.
    I concur in part and dissent in part.
    I respectfully disagree with the conclusion reached by my colleagues that it is not
    unduly burdensome to require the County of El Dorado (County) to review more than
    42,000 e-mails, spanning nearly six years, that are potentially responsive to petitioner
    Dean Getz’s (Getz) unfocused request for “any/all emails” by or between “anyone”
    employed by the County of El Dorado and “anyone” at one of four e-mail domains
    associated with a real estate developer, its legal counsel, and its public relations
    consultants. I instead would conclude that, when properly balanced, the burden on the
    County clearly outweighs the public interest underlying this request.
    Legal Background
    The California Public Records Act (Gov. Code, § 6250 et seq.)1 (the Act) creates
    “ ‘a presumptive right of access to any record created or maintained by a public agency
    that relates in any way to the business of the public agency.’ ” (City of San Jose v.
    Superior Court (2017) 
    2 Cal.5th 608
    , 616, italics omitted.) But the basic rule requiring
    disclosure of public records is subject to a number of specific exemptions. (§ 6254.) The
    Act also includes a catchall provision, invoked by the County here, exempting records
    from disclosure if “the public interest served by not disclosing the record clearly
    outweighs the public interest served by disclosure.” (§ 6255, subd. (a).)
    In reviewing a trial court’s ruling under section 6255, we examine the facts of the
    case as found by the trial court and determine independently from those facts whether the
    public interest in nondisclosure clearly outweighs the public interest served by production
    of the records. (Michaelis, Montanari & Johnson v. Superior Court (2006) 
    38 Cal.4th 1
     Undesignated statutory references are to the Government Code.
    1
    1065, 1072 [“a reviewing court should weigh the competing public interest factors
    de novo, [accepting] as true the trial court’s findings of the ‘facts of the particular case’
    [citation], assuming those findings are supported by substantial evidence”].)
    This court previously has addressed how to weigh the public interest in the
    balance under section 6255. “If the records sought pertain to the conduct of the people’s
    business there is a public interest in disclosure. The weight of that interest is
    proportionate to the gravity of the governmental tasks sought to be illuminated and the
    directness with which the disclosure will serve to illuminate.” (Citizens for a Better
    Environment v. Department of Food & Agriculture (1985) 
    171 Cal.App.3d 704
    , 715
    (Citizens).) “[I]n assigning weight to the general public interest in disclosure, courts
    should look to the ‘nature of the information’ and how disclosure of that information
    contributes to the public’s understanding of government.” (Humane Society of U.S. v.
    Superior Court (2013) 
    214 Cal.App.4th 1233
    , 1268, original italics; see also Connell v.
    Superior Court (1997) 
    56 Cal.App.4th 601
    , 616 [“The existence and weight of [the]
    public interest are conclusions derived from the nature of the information”].)
    These cases reveal that the “breadth of a request may affect the balancing of
    interests required by section 6255. The public interest in nondisclosure may be less
    where the request is carefully focused and confined to a few documents.” (California
    First Amendment Coalition v. Superior Court (1998) 
    67 Cal.App.4th 159
    , 166, fn. 3
    (California First).) Hence, “[t]he request to the agency must itself be focused and
    specific.” (Rogers v. Superior Court (1993) 
    19 Cal.App.4th 469
    , 481, fn. omitted.)
    Requests made under the Act “inevitably impose some burden on government
    agencies.” (California First, supra, 67 Cal.App.4th at p. 166.) However, a request may
    be unduly burdensome under section 6255 if it “compels the production of a huge volume
    of material.” (California First, at p. 166.)
    “When weighing the benefits and costs of disclosure, any expense or
    inconvenience to the public agency may properly be considered. [Citation.]” (Bertoli v.
    2
    City of Sebastopol (2015) 
    233 Cal.App.4th 353
    , 372.) As our Supreme Court has
    recognized, “[s]ection 6255 speaks broadly of the ‘public interest,’ a phrase which
    encompasses public concern with the cost and efficiency of government. To refuse to
    place such items on the section 6255 scales would make it possible for any person
    requesting information, for any reason or for no particular reason, to impose upon a
    governmental agency a limitless obligation. Such a result would not be in the public
    interest.” (American Civil Liberties Union Foundation v. Deukmejian (1982) 
    32 Cal.3d 440
    , 453 (American Civil Liberties Union Foundation), fn. omitted; see also State Bd. of
    Equalization v. Superior Court (1992) 
    10 Cal.App.4th 1177
    , 1188-1189.) The “burden of
    segregating exempt from nonexempt materials,” in particular, is a valid consideration
    which the court may take into account in weighing the benefits and costs under section
    6255. (American Civil Liberties Union Foundation, supra, at p. 453, fn. 13.)
    Analysis
    The evidence before the trial court established that Getz is “concerned about the
    management of Serrano [El Dorado Owners Association] and Parker[ ] [Development
    Company’s] management role,” as well as the County’s “potential involvement in the
    doings of Serrano and contact with Serrano and/or contact with Parker.” However, this
    legitimate government integrity concern morphed into an unfocused request for almost
    six years’ worth of communications between any of the County’s 1,800 employees,
    including attorneys within the offices of the county counsel and district attorney, and any
    one of four external e-mail domains, including that of a law firm which had a common
    interest or joint defense arrangement with the County for a portion of the relevant time
    period.
    For its part, the County introduced evidence that it expended substantial time and
    effort trying to identify responsive records, as it had on Getz’s previous request, and
    worked with Getz to satisfy or narrow his request under the Act, but Getz refused to
    refine or limit his request in any way, insisting that all 42,582 e-mails on a preliminary
    3
    index prepared by the County were responsive and must be produced, notwithstanding
    the burden this would impose on County employees who would have to spend 40 to 50
    business days, or hundreds of hours, reviewing those records to segregate any exempt or
    privileged communications.2
    The majority concludes that as long as records can be “located with reasonable
    effort and the volume of material [is] not unmanageable,” a public records request is not
    overbroad or unduly burdensome. 3 (Maj. opn. ante, at p. 14.) In reaching their
    conclusion, they criticize the trial court’s focus on the burden of “reviewing the collected
    and indexed e-mails to determine which were responsive to the request.” (Maj. opn. ante,
    at p. 14.) The majority finds that the public agency opposing disclosure bears the burden
    of proving that an exemption applies, and that it cannot resist disclosure based on the
    burden of reviewing potentially responsive documents to segregate exempt from
    nonexempt materials. (Maj. opn. ante, at pp. 12-14 & p. 18, fn. 16.) My colleagues also
    opine that “existing statutes do not make such burden a basis for refusing disclosure” and
    suggest that the Legislature could address this issue. (Id. at p. 23.)
    There is no need for legislative intervention, however. Our Supreme Court
    already has told us that “[t]he burden of segregating exempt from nonexempt materials
    . . . remains one of the considerations which the court can take into account in
    determining whether the public interest favors disclosure under section 6255.”
    (American Civil Liberties Union Foundation, supra, 32 Cal.3d at p. 453, fn. 13; see also
    Times Mirror Co. v. Superior Court (1991) 
    53 Cal.3d 1325
    , 1345 [“whatever merit
    2     These time estimates were based in part on experience gained in fulfilling Getz’s
    previous records request.
    3     My colleagues find that this test is met here because the “County produced
    without objection an index of 42,582 e-mails that fit the criteria of the request, thereby
    demonstrating that the records could be located with reasonable effort and the volume of
    material was not unmanageable.” (Maj. opn. ante, at p. 14.)
    4
    disclosure might otherwise warrant in principle is simply crushed under the massive
    weight of the Times’s request in this case: the newspaper seeks almost five years of the
    Governor’s calendars and schedules, covering undoubtedly thousands of meetings,
    conferences and engagements of every conceivable nature. We are not persuaded that
    any identifiable public interest supports such a wholesale production of documents”].)
    Here, the trial court considered the burden of reviewing nearly six years of e-mails and
    reasonably concluded that Getz’s request was “overbroad and unduly burdensome.” The
    trial court’s conclusion is supported by substantial evidence.
    The majority faults the County for failing to provide sufficient evidence that
    specific exemptions will apply, but the evidence shows that the exempt and privileged e-
    mails have not yet been identified and segregated. Thus, the relevant inquiry at this stage
    is not whether the County can show particular exemptions or privileges necessarily will
    apply, but how burdensome it will be, on balance, for the County to determine whether
    all 42,582 e-mails are in fact “public records,” and whether specific exemptions or
    privileges may be asserted. In short, my colleagues fail to measure the weight of the
    public interest or to balance it against the burden of review.
    Even assuming for the sake of argument that all of the e-mails at issue relate to
    County business, a fact which is not at all clear, substantial evidence supports the need
    for predisclosure review of all the e-mails and their attachments to ensure that any
    records produced are responsive,4 nonexempt, and nonprivileged public records—a
    function that our Supreme Court has said may be placed on the scale under section 6255.
    (See American Civil Liberties Union Foundation, supra, 32 Cal.3d at pp. 452-453 [trial
    4       Only one page of the e-mail index that Getz received was included in the record,
    but 17 of the 29 e-mails listed on that page appear to be internal county communications
    rather than e-mails to or from one of the four domains that Getz identified in his request.
    It is therefore possible that the majority’s ruling will result in the production of numerous
    e-mails that are not even responsive to Getz’s request.
    5
    courts may weigh “any expense and inconvenience involved in segregating nonexempt
    from exempt information”].) Specifically, the County’s declarations establish the need to
    assess the applicability of exemptions under section 6254, including the attorney-client or
    common interest privilege, and thoroughly document the burden, expense, and
    inconvenience to the County associated with sorting and reviewing such a significant
    volume of records.
    On the other side of the scale, Getz speculates, but offers no evidence to show, that
    the 42,582 e-mails sought will serve to illuminate collusion between County officials and
    private developers. The mere existence of communications between County employees
    and a developer and its public relations or legal counsel does not ipso facto establish the
    existence of “grave public matters in which the public has a substantial interest in
    disclosure.” (Citizens, supra, 171 Cal.App.3d at p. 715.) And Getz fails to explain how
    his demand for almost six years’ worth of communications with any County department
    on any topic, no matter how mundane or routine, will contribute to the public’s
    understanding of government. His rationale seems to be that if he casts his net wide
    enough, he will uncover evidence of collusion or corruption. This is a very indirect path
    to Getz’s government integrity objective, significantly reducing the weight of the public
    interest in the balance under section 6255. (See Citizens, at p. 715.)
    Where the documented burden of segregating exempt material from nonexempt is
    substantial, and the public interest in disclosure is speculative and ill-defined, the public
    agency appropriately may conclude that the public interest served by not disclosing the
    record clearly outweighs the public interest served by disclosure. Under the rule
    articulated by the majority, however, there would be nothing to stop a requestor from
    demanding several years’ worth of e-mails from a public entity broadly relating to any
    topic, regardless of the “limitless obligation” the request might impose, as long as the
    agency’s computer software could identify e-mails that fit the criteria of the request.
    6
    (American Civil Liberties Union Foundation, supra, 32 Cal.3d at p. 453.) I do not find
    statutory or case law support for such a rule.
    Based on the foregoing, I agree with the trial court that Getz’s request is overbroad
    and unduly burdensome. The substantiated burdens on the County—expense, time, and
    inconvenience—to review the initial batch of potentially responsive e-mails clearly
    outweigh the speculative benefit underlying Getz’s unfocused records request. Thus, I
    would affirm the trial court’s ruling on this issue. (See Times Mirror Co. v. Superior
    Court, supra, 53 Cal.3d at p. 1345; see also Bertoli v. City of Sebastopol, supra, 233
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 361, 371-372.)
    /s/
    Krause, J.
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: C091337

Filed Date: 11/17/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/17/2021