MICHAEL ROLDAN v. CITY OF HALLANDALE BEACH ( 2023 )


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  •             DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
    FOURTH DISTRICT
    MICHAEL ROLDAN,
    Appellant,
    v.
    CITY OF HALLANDALE BEACH,
    Appellee.
    No. 4D22-103
    [April 5, 2023]
    Appeal from the Circuit Court of the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit, Broward
    County; Keathan B. Frink, Judge; L.T. Case No. CACE19-021252.
    Faudlin Pierre of Pierre Simon, LLC, Fort Lauderdale, for appellant.
    Jennifer Merino, City Attorney, City of Hallandale Beach, for appellee.
    Andrea Flynn Mogensen of Law Office of Andrea Flynn Mogensen, P.A.,
    Sarasota, for Amicus Curiae The Florida Center for Government Accountability,
    in support of appellant.
    Ashley H. Lukis, GrayRobinson, P.A., Tallahassee, for Amicus Curiae Florida
    League of Cities, Inc., in support of appellee.
    FORST, J.
    Appellant Michael Roldan appeals from the trial court’s final judgment
    wherein the trial court failed to award him attorney’s fees in his public record
    enforcement action against Appellee City of Hallandale Beach (“the City”). On
    appeal, Roldan argues the trial court: (1) erred in finding Roldan’s written public
    record request to the City’s records custodian, standing alone, was not sufficient
    to serve as the “written notice identifying the public record request” required for
    entitlement to attorney’s fees under section 119.12(1)(b), Florida Statutes (2019);
    and (2) erred in entering final judgment in the City’s favor on Roldan’s
    enforcement action, despite the City’s concession that it unjustifiably delayed in
    producing the requested public records.
    On the first argument, we affirm the trial court’s finding that section
    119.12(1)(b) requires a complainant to provide a separate “written notice
    identifying the public record request” before the plaintiff may recover attorney’s
    fees in an enforcement action. However, to the extent the City conceded that it
    unjustifiably delayed in producing the requested public records, which required
    Roldan to file his enforcement action, we agree with Roldan that the final
    judgment should indicate the City’s violation of the Public Records Act and that
    final judgment therefore should be entered in Roldan’s favor. Thus, we vacate
    the final judgment and remand for entry of a new final judgment which includes
    these modifications.
    Background
    In May 2019, Roldan requested public records from the City of Hallandale
    Beach related to a law enforcement matter. Roldan emailed this request to the
    City’s Police Department and the City Clerk, who serves as the City’s records
    custodian. After five months without response, Roldan filed suit to enforce his
    request. Only then did the City produce the requested public records.
    Even though the City had produced the requested public records, Roldan
    nevertheless pursued his enforcement action by filing a summary judgment
    motion arguing the City’s unjustified delay in producing the requested public
    records violated the Public Records Act. Roldan also argued he was entitled to
    recover his attorney’s fees under section 119.12(1), Florida Statutes (2019).
    Section 119.12(1)—titled “Attorney fees”—provides in pertinent part:
    (1) If a civil action is filed against an agency to enforce the
    provisions of this chapter, the court shall assess and award the
    reasonable costs of enforcement, including reasonable attorney fees,
    against the responsible agency if the court determines that:
    (a) The agency unlawfully refused to permit a public record to be
    inspected or copied; and
    (b) The complainant provided written notice identifying the public
    record request to the agency’s custodian of public records at least 5
    business days before filing the civil action, except as provided under
    subsection (2). The notice period begins on the day the written
    notice of the request is received by the custodian of public records,
    excluding Saturday, Sunday, and legal holidays, and runs until 5
    business days have elapsed.
    § 119.12(1), Fla. Stat. (2019).
    The City conceded that its unjustified delay in producing the requested public
    records was unlawful, but argued that Roldan was not entitled to recover his
    attorney’s fees under section 119.12(1). Specifically, the City argued that Roldan
    had failed to provide the City with a separate “written notice identifying the
    2
    public record request” at least five days before filing suit, as section 119.12(1)(b)
    requires.
    The trial court entered an order granting Roldan’s summary judgment
    motion, but only to the extent of finding that the City’s unjustified delay in
    producing the requested public records violated the Public Records Act.
    Specifically, the trial court found the City’s failure to produce the requested
    public records until after the plaintiff had filed the lawsuit “constitute[d] an
    unlawful refusal to permit a public record to be inspected or copied.” The trial
    court’s order did not comment on Roldan’s request for entitlement to recover his
    attorney’s fees under section 119.12(1).
    Roldan then filed a motion for final judgment requesting entitlement to
    recover his attorney’s fees under section 119.12(1). Subsequently, the City filed
    its own summary judgment motion, arguing Roldan was not entitled to recover
    his attorney’s fees under section 119.12(1).
    At the hearing on the competing motions, the parties agreed that whether
    Roldan was entitled to recover his attorney’s fees under section 119.12(1) hinged
    on a question of statutory interpretation, namely whether Roldan’s sole
    communication with the City—his emailed public record request itself—satisfied
    section 119.12(1)(b)’s requirement that he provide “written notice identifying the
    public record request.”
    Roldan argued that his emailed public record request satisfied this notice
    requirement. The City contended that section 119.12(1)(b) requires a later
    written notice that identifies a prior unsatisfied public record request. Thus, the
    City argued, Roldan’s sole communication—his emailed public record request
    itself—was insufficient.
    The trial court agreed with the City, holding that Roldan’s email could not
    serve as both the public record request and the required “written notice
    identifying the public record request.” Specifically, the trial court found:
    [A] plain reading of [section 119.12(1)(b)] requires [Roldan] to
    establish that a written notice identifying the public record request
    was sent to the City. The Court further finds that [Roldan’s] May
    21, 2019[,] communication constitutes the public record request
    and is not the required [“]written notice identifying the public record
    request[”] at least five days prior to filing of the suit.
    This reading of the statute is further required when one considers
    subsection (2) which states, “[t]he complainant is not required to
    provide written notice of the public record request to the agency’s
    custodian of public records as provided in paragraph (1)(b) if....”
    Since a request must be made in order for a plaintiff to have a cause
    3
    of action in a civil complaint, there is no logical reading of
    [subsection] (2) that would permit [subsection] (1)(b) to be read as
    meaning that the written notice referenced is merely the public
    records request itself.
    The Court then entered an order denying Roldan’s motion for final judgment,
    granting the City’s motion for summary judgment, and entering final judgment
    for the City. This appeal timely followed.
    Analysis
    This dispute requires us to determine whether a written public record
    request—without a separate later notice—satisfies section 119.12(1)(b)’s
    requirement to “provide[] written notice identifying the public record request to
    the agency’s custodian of public records at least 5 business days before filing the
    civil action” in order to recover attorney’s fees under section 119.12(1). “Because
    the question presented solely involves interpretation of a statute, it is subject to
    de novo review.” Sch. Bd. of Palm Beach Cnty. v. Survivors Charter Sch., Inc., 
    3 So. 3d 1220
    , 1232 (Fla. 2009).
    No court has interpreted section 119.12(1)(b). “In interpreting the statute, we
    follow the ‘supremacy-of-text principle’—namely, the principle that ‘[t]he words
    of a governing text are of paramount concern, and what they convey, in their
    context, is what the text means.’” Ham v. Portfolio Recovery Assocs., LLC, 
    308 So. 3d 942
    , 946 (Fla. 2020) (quoting Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading
    Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 56 (2012)). “[J]udges must ‘exhaust “all
    the textual and structural clues”’ that bear on the meaning of a disputed text.”
    Conage v. United States, 
    346 So. 3d 594
    , 598 (Fla. 2022) (quoting Alachua County
    v. Watson, 
    333 So. 3d 162
    , 169 (Fla. 2022)). “The plainness or ambiguity of
    statutory language is determined by reference to the language itself, the specific
    context in which that language is used, and the broader context of the statute
    as a whole.” Robinson v. Shell Oil Co., 
    519 U.S. 337
    , 341 (1997).
    The purpose of the Public Records Act’s attorney’s fees provisions “is to
    encourage voluntary compliance with Florida’s public records law, which gives
    effect to the state’s policy ‘that all state, county, and municipal records shall be
    open for personal inspection by any person.’” Office of State Att’y for the
    Thirteenth Jud. Cir. v. Gonzalez, 
    953 So. 2d 759
    , 763 (Fla. 2d DCA 2007) (quoting
    § 119.01(1), Fla. Stat. (2002)).
    Before 2017, plaintiffs seeking to enforce the Public Records Act could recover
    their reasonable attorney’s fees and costs merely upon a court finding that an
    agency defendant had unlawfully withheld public records. See § 119.12, Fla.
    Stat. (2016).
    4
    In 2017, the legislature amended section 119.12 to add a second criterion—
    the plaintiff must have provided written notice identifying the public record
    request to the agency’s custodian of public records at least five business days
    before filing the civil action, except under limited circumstances. See Ch. 2017-
    21, Laws of Fla. As presented above, the amended section 119.12(1) provides:
    (1) If a civil action is filed against an agency to enforce the
    provisions of this chapter, the court shall assess and award the
    reasonable costs of enforcement, including reasonable attorney fees,
    against the responsible agency if the court determines that:
    (a) The agency unlawfully refused to permit a public record to be
    inspected or copied; and
    (b) The complainant provided written notice identifying the public
    record request to the agency’s custodian of public records at least 5
    business days before filing the civil action, except as provided under
    subsection (2). The notice period begins on the day the written
    notice of the request is received by the custodian of public records,
    excluding Saturday, Sunday, and legal holidays, and runs until 5
    business days have elapsed.
    § 119.12(1), Fla. Stat. (2019).
    Both parties agree that section 119.12(2)’s exception is not applicable in this
    case. They also agree that “[t]he agency unlawfully refused to permit a public
    record to be inspected or copied,” with the refusal extending from the receipt of
    the plaintiff’s emailed public record request to a date after the filing of the suit,
    a period of about five months. The parties’ dispute is focused on the meaning to
    be given to the phrase “written notice identifying the public record request.”
    The City argues that section 119.12(1)(b)’s reference to the “written notice
    identifying the public record request”—which commences the five-day “notice
    period”—is separate from section 119.12(1)(b)’s reference to the “public record
    request” itself.
    Roldan urges a different interpretation. Roldan contends that any written
    communication containing a public record request and submitted to an agency’s
    records custodian—such as his emailed public record request here—is sufficient
    to serve as both the public record request and as section 119.12(1)(b)’s required
    “written notice identifying the public record request,” as long as the written
    public record request was provided to the agency’s public records custodian at
    least five business days before filing the civil action.
    We do not adopt Roldan’s interpretation. “[T]he meaning of a word cannot be
    determined in isolation, but must be drawn from the context in which it is used.”
    5
    Lab’y Corp. of Am. v. Davis, 
    339 So. 3d 318
    , 324 (Fla. 2022) (quoting Deal v.
    United States, 
    508 U.S. 129
    , 132 (1993), superseded by statute as recognized in
    United States v. Davis, 
    139 S. Ct. 2319
    , 2324 n.1 (2019)). “‘Context is a primary
    determinant of meaning.’ Under the whole-text canon, proper interpretation
    requires consideration of ‘the entire text, in view of its structure and of the
    physical and logical relation of its many parts.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Antonin Scalia &
    Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 167 (2012)).
    Accordingly, we consider the relationship between section 119.12(1)(a) and
    section 119.12(1)(b). There is an “and” between the two subsections. Thus,
    entitlement to fees requires meeting criteria (a) and (b). The first criterion, found
    in section 119.12(1)(a), requires a finding that the agency “unlawfully refused to
    permit a public record to be inspected or copied.” § 119.12(1)(a), Fla. Stat.
    (2019). “Unlawful refusal under section 119.12 includes not only affirmative
    refusal to produce records, but also unjustified delay in producing them.”
    Jackson v. City of S. Bay, 4D21-3503, 
    2023 WL 2027556
    , at *2 (Fla. 4th DCA
    Feb. 15, 2023) (quoting Citizens Awareness Found., Inc. v. Wantman Grp., Inc.,
    
    195 So. 3d 396
    , 399 (Fla. 4th DCA 2016)). “‘Where delay is at issue . . . the court
    must determine whether the delay was justified under the facts of the particular
    case.’ It is only an ‘[u]njustified delay in making nonexempt public records
    available [that] violates Florida’s public records law.’” Citizens Awareness, 
    195 So. 3d at 399
     (second and third alteration in original) (first quoting Lilker v.
    Suwannee Valley Transit Auth., 
    133 So. 3d 654
    , 655–56 (Fla. 1st DCA 2014); and
    then quoting Promenade D’Iberville, LLC v. Sundy, 
    145 So. 3d 980
    , 983 (Fla. 1st
    DCA 2014)).
    Because no refusal or delay can occur before a request is made, it follows that
    the request must occur before the second criterion is met—the complainant
    providing “written notice identifying the public record request to the agency’s
    custodian of public records,” thus commencing a five-day “notice period,” as
    explained in section 119.12(1)(b). Otherwise, the notice could not alert the
    records custodian of noncompliance with the earlier public record request.
    Roldan would have us read section 119.12(1)(b)’s references to a written
    notice and five-business days deadline be permitted as simultaneous with any
    request, and before any refusal or delay—unlawful or otherwise—in producing
    the requested public records. That approach is both illogical and renders the
    notice ineffective in “encourag[ing] voluntary compliance with Florida’s public
    records law” consistent with section 119.12’s purpose. See Gonzalez, 
    953 So. 2d at 763
    . That approach also impermissibly converts section 119.12(1)(b)’s text
    from “[t]he complainant provided written notice identifying the public record
    request” (emphasis added) to “[t]he complainant provided written notice
    identifying the public record request[ed].” See Fla. Dep’t of Revenue v. Fla. Mun.
    Power Agency, 
    789 So. 2d 320
    , 324 (Fla. 2001) (“A court’s function is to interpret
    statutes as they are written . . . .”); Porsche Cars N. Am., Inc. v. Copans Motors
    6
    Inc., 
    343 So. 3d 576
    , 583 (Fla. 4th DCA 2022) (“The judiciary . . . is without
    power to rewrite a plainly written statute . . . .” (first and second alterations in
    original) (quoting Westphal v. City of St. Petersburg, 
    194 So. 3d 311
    , 313–314
    (Fla. 2016))).
    Further, applying Roldan’s interpretation would appear to transform the five-
    day notice period under section 119.12(1)(b) into a five-day deadline for agency
    compliance with all public record requests. Indeed, if section 119.12(1)(b)’s
    written notice is the only required contact with the agency, then the failure to
    provide the requested public records within five business days is always
    “unlawful.” This would contradict well-established case law holding that
    government agencies must be afforded a reasonable period to comply with a
    given request. See, e.g., Consumer Rts., LLC v. Bradford County, 
    153 So. 3d 394
    ,
    397 (Fla. 1st DCA 2014).
    The City’s construction of section 119.12(1)(b), however, harmonizes the
    notice requirement with the exception provided in section 119.12(2):
    (2) The complainant is not required to provide written notice of the
    public record request to the agency’s custodian of public records as
    provided in paragraph (1)(b) if the agency does not prominently post
    the contact information for the agency’s custodian of public records
    in the agency’s primary administrative building in which public
    records are routinely created, sent, received, maintained, and
    requested and on the agency’s website, if the agency has a website.
    § 119.12(2), Fla. Stat. (2019) (emphasis added).
    Section 119.12(2) also refers to the additional requirement of “written notice
    of the request” if the agency has properly posted its records custodian’s contact
    information. Thus, under both section 119.12(1) and section 119.12(2), a public
    record request must have been served before an unlawful refusal to produce the
    requested public records can occur.
    For these reasons, we reject Roldan’s interpretation of section 119.12(1)(b)
    and affirm the trial court’s denial of Roldan’s request for attorney’s fees.
    However, as the City concedes that it unjustifiably delayed in producing the
    requested public records, the trial court must modify the final judgment to
    indicate the City violated the Public Records Act, and that final judgment is
    entered in Roldan’s favor on his enforcement action.
    Conclusion
    Under the “ordinary meaning” canon of construction, “[w]ords are to be
    understood in their ordinary, everyday meanings—unless the context indicates
    7
    that they bear a technical sense.” Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading
    Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 69 (2012). Roldan’s emailed public record
    request was his sole communication to the City’s records custodian before filing
    suit. For purposes of determining eligibility for an award of attorney’s fees, that
    public record request did not, by itself, satisfy section 119.12(1)(b)’s requirement
    that the complainant provide “written notice identifying the public record
    request,” triggering the five-day notice period before a civil enforcement action
    could be filed.
    Therefore, although Roldan was entitled to final judgment in his favor on his
    enforcement action, he was not entitled to recover his attorney’s fees under
    section 119.12(1). Accordingly, we vacate the trial court’s final judgment and
    remand for entry of a new final judgment which indicates: (1) the City violated
    the Public Records Act by its unjustified delay in producing the requested public
    records; (2) final judgment is entered in Roldan’s favor on his enforcement action;
    but (3) Roldan is not entitled to recover his attorney’s fees under section
    119.12(1).
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded with instructions.
    DAMOORGIAN, J., concurs.
    GERBER, J., concurs specially with opinion.
    GERBER, J., concurring specially.
    I concur in the majority opinion’s conclusion that section 119.12(1)(b), Florida
    Statutes (2019), requires a public records requestor to provide a later written
    notice—identifying a prior public records request—to the responsible agency’s
    public records custodian at least five business days before filing a civil action in
    order for the requestor to recover reasonable attorney fees against the
    responsible agency which unlawfully refused to permit a public record to be
    inspected or copied. As the majority opinion points out, that conclusion can be
    reached only by reading section 119.12(1)(b)’s two sentences together, whereby
    section 119.12(1)(b)’s second sentence provides the necessary context to
    interpret section 119.12(1)(b)’s first sentence.
    I write separately to note that—contrary to the City’s and its amicus’s position
    here—section 119.12(1)(b)’s first sentence, when viewed in isolation, does not
    necessarily result in that same conclusion by itself. As Roldan argued to the
    trial court and to us, section 119.12(1)(b)’s first sentence, when viewed in
    isolation, can easily be read to mean that the “written notice identifying the
    public record request” may be the public records request itself. Indeed, in this
    case, Roldan’s written notice by e-mail identifying his public records request to
    the City’s records custodian was a “written notice identifying the public record
    request.” Again, only when reading section 119.12(1)(b)’s two sentences together
    can we reach the conclusion which the majority opinion articulates.
    8
    I also believe that—contrary to the City’s and its amicus’s position here—a
    public records requestor’s later written notice—merely identifying a prior public
    records request, without more—would not reasonably convey to a public records
    custodian that: (i) the responsible agency had not complied with the prior public
    records request, (ii) unless the responsible agency complies with the prior public
    records request within five days, the requestor intended to file a civil action to
    enforce the public records request, and (iii) the requestor intended to seek to
    recover the attorney’s fees incurred in pursuing the civil action to a final
    judgment. According to the City and its amicus, all three of those elements
    would simply be “understood,” even though section 119.12(1)(b) does not require
    any of those three elements to be stated in the requestor’s later written notice.
    That is why I believe section 119.12(1)(b)’s first sentence was not written as
    clearly as possible—and as necessary—to: (1) convey to a public records
    requestor that the requestor must provide a later written notice identifying a prior
    public records request to the responsible agency’s public records custodian at
    least five business days before filing a civil action in order for the requestor to
    recover reasonable attorney fees against the responsible agency which
    unlawfully refused to permit a public record to be inspected or copied; and (2)
    convey to a public records custodian that (i) the responsible agency had not
    complied with the prior public records request, (ii) unless the responsible agency
    complies with the prior public records request within five days, the requestor
    intended to file a civil action to enforce the public records request, and (iii) the
    requestor intended to seek to recover the attorney’s fees incurred in pursuing
    the civil action to a final judgment.
    To convey those points as clearly as possible, I would encourage the
    Legislature to consider amending section 119.12(1)(b)’s first sentence to read as
    follows (with certain existing portions of section 119.12(1) being repeated to
    better provide context, and with my proposed amendment being underlined):
    119.12 Attorney fees.–
    (1) If a civil action is filed against an agency to enforce the
    provisions of this chapter, the court shall assess and award the
    reasonable costs of enforcement, including reasonable attorney fees,
    against the responsible agency if the court determines that:
    (a) The agency unlawfully refused to permit a public record to be
    inspected or copied; and
    (b) The complainant provided later written notice identifying the
    prior public record request to the agency’s custodian of public
    records at least 5 business days before filing the civil action, except
    as provided under subsection (2). The later written notice must
    9
    inform the agency’s custodian of public records that: (i) the
    responsible agency had not complied with the prior public records
    request; (ii) unless the responsible agency complies with the prior
    public records request within 5 days, the complainant intends to file
    a civil action to enforce the public records request; and (iii) the
    complainant intends to seek to recover the attorney’s fees incurred
    in pursuing the civil action to a final judgment. The notice period
    begins on the day the written notice of the request is received by the
    custodian of public records, excluding Saturday, Sunday, and legal
    holidays, and runs until 5 business days have elapsed.
    This amendment would provide clarity to both public records requestors and
    public records custodians and, more importantly, would eliminate the need to
    rely upon our judicial interpretation of section 119.12(1)(b) in order to fully
    understand section 119.12(1)(b)’s requirements and ramifications.
    *         *         *
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
    10