Hymas v. Meridian Police Department , 159 Idaho 594 ( 2015 )


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  •                IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
    Docket No. 42626
    GRETCHEN HYMAS, BREANN                          ) 2015 Opinion No. 84
    HALOWELL, AND TRAVIS FORBUSH,                   )
    ) Filed: December 14, 2015
    Petitioners-Appellants,                  )
    ) Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
    v.                                              )
    )
    THE MERIDIAN POLICE                             )
    DEPARTMENT,                                     )
    )
    Respondent.                              )
    Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District, State of Idaho, Ada
    County. Hon. Melissa Moody, District Judge.
    Order denying motion for costs and attorney fees in action to disclose public
    records, affirmed.
    Gretchen Hymas, Breann Halowell, and Travis Forbush, pro se appellants.
    William L.M. Nary, City Attorney; Emily Davis Kane, Deputy City Attorney,
    Meridian, for respondent.
    ________________________________________________
    HUSKEY, Judge
    Gretchen Hymas, Breanna Halowell, and Travis Forbush (appellants) appeal from the
    district court’s order denying their request for costs and attorney fees. For the reasons set forth
    below, we affirm.
    I.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Hymas and Forbush are the parents of McQuen Forbush, who died of carbon monoxide
    poisoning while staying at a third party’s apartment. Halowell, who was present at the time of
    Forbush’s death, also suffered carbon monoxide poisoning. Within a month of Forbush’s death,
    1
    appellants made a public records request for any information relating to that death.1           The
    Meridian Police Department (respondent) denied the request pursuant to Idaho Code
    § 74-124(1)(a),2 asserting that the investigation was ongoing and that disclosure would interfere
    with enforcement proceedings. Appellants filed an action to compel respondent to disclose the
    requested records and requested attorney fees pursuant to I.C. § 74-116.
    Respondent concluded its investigation and, two days prior to the show cause hearing,
    provided appellants with the investigatory records. At the show cause hearing, the parties agreed
    that the records request was moot and only costs and attorney fees were still at issue. Without
    reviewing the withheld records, the district court determined that no costs or attorney fees should
    be awarded because there was no prevailing party. The district court also found that the refusal
    to disclose the requested records was appropriate because respondent “would have been justified
    in categorically denying all public records requests pertaining to an ongoing criminal
    investigation.” Appellants then appealed the district court’s denial of their request for costs and
    attorney fees.
    On appeal, this Court determined, “[t]he district court erred in finding that a law
    enforcement agency could claim a categorical public records exemption for active
    investigations.” Hymas 
    I, 156 Idaho at 748
    , 330 P.3d at 1106. We reversed and remanded,
    directing the district court to review the requested records and conduct the three-step analysis set
    forth in Wade v. Taylor, 
    156 Idaho 91
    , 
    320 P.3d 1250
    (2014), a case the Idaho Supreme Court
    decided during the pendency of the appeal.           We directed the district court to determine:
    (1) whether respondent was justified in its initial refusal to disclose the requested records;
    (2) whether there was a prevailing party; and (3) if a prevailing party was identified, “whether
    the refusal was so unjustified as to be frivolous, thereby requiring an award of costs and attorney
    fees.” Hymas 
    I, 156 Idaho at 747
    , 330 P.3d at 1105.
    On remand, the district court declined to award attorney fees on alternative grounds.
    First, although holding that appellants were the prevailing party, the district court held that
    1
    This is the second appeal arising out of this case. For a more thorough recitation of the
    factual background, see Hymas v. Meridian Police Dep’t, 
    156 Idaho 739
    , 
    330 P.3d 1097
    (Ct.
    App. 2014) (Hymas I).
    2
    On July 1, 2015, the legislature moved Public Records Act from title 9 to the newly
    created title 74, entitled Transparent and Ethical Government. This opinion will cite to title 74,
    as the substance of the statutes at issue has not been affected by the change in title designation.
    2
    appellants were not entitled to costs and attorney fees because they failed to specifically identify
    the records they believed were frivolously withheld. The district court reasoned as follows:
    On an active motion to compel the disclosure of public records, the district court
    obviously needs to review every single document to determine which are required
    by law to be produced. On a motion for attorney’s fees and costs, however,
    review should be limited to the records the moving party specifically identifies as
    having been frivolously withheld. Where no documents are identified by the
    moving party as having been frivolously withheld, no obligation to review should
    exist.
    Alternatively, the district court found that appellants were not entitled to costs or attorney
    fees because the investigative exemption was asserted non-frivolously with respect to all
    requested documents. The district court found that although it would have ordered respondent to
    produce ten of the sixty documents available at the time of the denial, the investigatory
    exemption was not asserted frivolously as to any of the records, including the ten it would have
    ordered respondent to produce. Appellants appealed from the district court’s order denying their
    motion for costs and attorney fees.
    II.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    When considering an appeal from a public records request, this Court will not set aside a
    district court’s findings of fact unless they are “clearly erroneous, which is to say that findings
    that are based on substantial and competent, although conflicting, evidence will not be disturbed
    on appeal.” Bolger v. Lance, 
    137 Idaho 792
    , 794, 
    53 P.3d 1211
    , 1213 (2002). “This Court
    exercises free review over questions of law, including the interpretation of a statute.” Ward v.
    Portneuf Med. Ctr., Inc., 
    150 Idaho 501
    , 504, 
    248 P.3d 1236
    , 1239 (2011). Whether to award
    costs and attorney fees pursuant to a statute is within the discretion of the trial court and will not
    be overturned absent an abuse of discretion. Hymas 
    I, 156 Idaho at 743
    , 330 P.3d at 1101.
    When a trial court’s discretionary decision is reviewed on appeal, the appellate court
    conducts a multi-tiered inquiry to determine: (1) whether the lower court correctly perceived the
    issue as one of discretion; (2) whether the lower court acted within the boundaries of such
    discretion and consistently with any legal standards applicable to the specific choices before it;
    and (3) whether the lower court reached its decision by an exercise of reason. State v. Hedger,
    
    115 Idaho 598
    , 600, 
    768 P.2d 1331
    , 1333 (1989).
    3
    III.
    ANALYSIS
    The district court determined that appellants were not entitled to costs and attorney fees
    in two alternative holdings. First, the district court held that appellants were not entitled to costs
    and attorney fees because they failed to identify documents they believed were frivolously
    withheld. Alternatively, the district court held that respondent non-frivolously asserted the
    investigative exemption with respect to all documents requested by appellants. We will address
    both of these holdings.
    A.     The District Court Erred When It Held Appellants Must Identify Frivolously
    Withheld Records
    The district court held that appellants were required to identify specific records that were
    frivolously withheld. We disagree.
    In its order, the district court noted that because appellants received the requested records
    prior to the show cause hearing, the only pending motion before the court was the motion for
    costs and attorney fees. The court stated that in such a situation, “review should be limited to the
    records the moving party specifically identifies as having been frivolously withheld” and, “where
    no documents are identified by the moving party as having been frivolously withheld, no
    obligation to review should exist.” The court ruled that because appellants “failed to specifically
    identify for the District Court the records that [they believed] were frivolously withheld,” they
    were not entitled to costs and attorney fees. In so ruling, the district court improperly shifted the
    burden to appellants by requiring them to identify which specific records the respondent
    frivolously withheld.
    On a motion to compel, the withholding party carries the burden of proof as to why it
    withheld specific records. 
    Wade, 156 Idaho at 100
    , 320 P.3d at 1259. Even if the agency
    discloses the requested records before a hearing is held, the burden of proof remains with the
    withholding party to justify its denial. Hymas 
    I, 156 Idaho at 747
    , 330 P.3d at 1105. Thus,
    where an agency denies a public records request in whole and then subsequently discloses the
    records after its denial is legally challenged, the moving party need only make a good-faith claim
    that the agency’s conduct in denying the request was frivolous and the withholding party must
    then articulate the statutory basis for withholding the documents. Therefore, we conclude that
    the district court erred in finding that appellants did not meet their burden of proof.
    4
    Where a judgment of the trial court is based upon alternative grounds, the fact that one of
    the grounds may be in error is of no consequence and may be disregarded if the judgment can be
    sustained upon one of the other grounds. MacLeod v. Reed, 
    126 Idaho 669
    , 671, 
    889 P.2d 103
    ,
    105 (Ct. App. 1995). Here, the district court’s judgment can be sustained on other grounds.
    B.      Respondent’s Refusal to Disclose Investigative Records Was Not Frivolous
    Appellants seek costs and attorney fees under I.C. § 74-116(2), arguing that respondent’s
    refusal to provide public records was frivolous because the denial was based on an
    institutionalized disregard for the law and because respondent had already released the
    information to an individual not affiliated with a government agency. To resolve this issue, we
    must:    (1) clarify the standard for awarding attorney fees under the Public Records Act,
    (2) determine whether appellants are the prevailing party, and (3) determine whether an award of
    costs and attorney fees is appropriate in this case.
    1.      Idaho Code § 74-116(2) is not the exclusive basis for an award of costs and
    attorney fees under the Public Records Act
    Here, appellants seek an award of costs and attorney fees under I.C. § 74-116(2). Under
    I.C. § 74-116(2), a court “shall award reasonable costs and attorney fees to the prevailing party
    or parties, if it finds that the request or refusal to provide records was frivolously pursued.” In
    Hymas I, this Court stated that I.C. § 74-116(2) is the “sole basis for awarding attorney fees in
    actions pursuant to the Idaho Public Records Act.” Hymas 
    I, 156 Idaho at 746
    , 330 P.3d at 1104.
    This statement is somewhat overbroad and in need of clarification.
    In Henry v. Taylor, the Supreme Court of Idaho was asked to determine whether records
    relating to a county contract were subject to disclosure under the Public Records Act. Henry v.
    Taylor, 
    152 Idaho 155
    , 
    267 P.3d 1270
    (2011). After determining that the documents sought
    were public records, the Court turned to the issue of costs and attorney fees. The appellant
    sought costs and attorney fees under three separate statutes: I.C. § 12-117; and I.C. § 12-121;
    I.C. § 74-1163. 
    Henry, 152 Idaho at 161
    , 267 P.3d at 1276. After analyzing the statutes before
    it, the Court stated:
    Idaho Code section [74-116(2)] sets forth the standard for awarding reasonable
    costs and attorney fees in actions pursuant to the Public Records Act. To base an
    award on some other statute would be contrary to the legislature’s intent in
    including in the Act an attorney fee provision with a specified standard for
    awarding attorney fees in proceedings to enforce compliance with the Act. That
    3
    Formerly, I.C. § 9-344.
    5
    statute is the exclusive basis for such an award. Therefore, Idaho Code sections
    12-117 and 12-121 do not apply.
    
    Henry, 152 Idaho at 162
    , 267 P.3d at 1277 (emphasis added).
    In Wade, the appellant requested investigatory records under the Public Records Act. On
    appeal, the appellant sought an award of costs and attorney fees under I.C. § 74-124(4), I.C.
    § 74-116(2), I.C. § 12-121, and I.R.C.P. 54(e)(1). 
    Wade, 156 Idaho at 102
    , 320 P.3d at 1261.
    The Court cited Henry and then stated, “Idaho Code section [74-116(2)] is the only statute that
    applies to Wade’s request for attorney fees.” 
    Wade, 156 Idaho at 102
    , 320 P.3d at 1261.
    Relying on that statement in Hymas I, we held that I.C. § 74-116(2) “is the sole basis for
    awarding attorney fees in actions pursuant to the Idaho Public Records Act, including on
    appeal.” Hymas 
    I, 156 Idaho at 747
    -48, 330 P.3d at 1105-06.
    The above cited cases correctly held that I.C. §§ 12-117 and 12-121 do not apply to
    public records requests. However, they are incorrect to the extent that they hold that I.C. § 74-
    116(2) is the sole basis for awarding costs and attorney fees under the Public Records Act. In
    fact, the following six statutes authorize costs and attorney fees under the Public Records Act:
    I.C. §§ 74-113(2)(b), 74-114(7), 74-116(2), 74-121(8), 74-123(5), and 74-124(4). Therefore, it
    appears that the holding in Henry only meant to preclude parties from seeking an award of costs
    and attorney fees based on statutes outside the Public Records Act. Neither Henry nor its
    progeny intended to foreclose a party from seeking an award of costs and attorney fees based on
    a statute within the Public Records Act.
    Here, appellants could have sought an award of costs and attorney fees under two
    separate statutes within the Public Records Act. The first, discussed above, is I.C. § 74-116(2).
    The second statute, I.C. § 74-124(4), pertains specifically to investigatory records and allows a
    court, in its discretion, to award costs and attorney fees to the prevailing party, regardless of
    whether the denial was frivolous. However, appellants never requested costs and attorney fees
    under I.C. § 74-124(4) and generally, issues not raised below may not be considered for the first
    time on appeal. State v. Fodge, 
    121 Idaho 192
    , 195, 
    824 P.2d 123
    , 126 (1992). Therefore,
    because appellants requested costs and attorney fees pursuant to I.C. § 74-116(2) only, we need
    not address whether they would have been entitled to costs and attorney fees under any other
    statute. See Crea v. FMC Corp., 
    135 Idaho 175
    , 181, 
    16 P.3d 272
    , 278 (2000).
    6
    2.      Appellants were the prevailing party on remand
    To determine a prevailing party, the district court must consider the extent to which each
    party prevailed relative to the final judgment or result. Hymas 
    I, 156 Idaho at 747
    , 330 P.3d at
    1105. The prevailing party question is examined and determined from an overall view of who
    prevailed in the action, not a claim-by-claim analysis. Id.; Shore v. Peterson, 
    146 Idaho 903
    ,
    914, 
    204 P.3d 1114
    , 1125 (2009). Before the district court can identify a prevailing party, it
    must determine whether the agency was justified in initially withholding the requested
    documents. Hymas 
    I, 156 Idaho at 747
    , 330 P.3d at 1105. Here, the district court found that
    appellants were the prevailing party because it would have ordered respondent to produce ten of
    the sixty requested documents. Although the district court correctly determined that appellants
    were the prevailing party, it erred in determining that respondent was justified in refusing to
    disclose any of the documents.
    All public records are presumed open at all reasonable times for inspection except as
    otherwise provided by statute. I.C. § 74-102(1). A law enforcement agency is not required to
    disclose investigatory records compiled for law enforcement purposes if disclosure would
    interfere with enforcement proceedings or disclose investigative techniques and procedures. I.C.
    § 74-124(1). The Court narrowly construes these exceptions. 
    Wade, 156 Idaho at 97
    , 320 P.3d
    at 1256. “[T]he withholding agency has the burden to demonstrate a reasonable probability that
    disclosure of the requested records would result in a harm listed in Idaho Code section [74-
    124(1)(a)-(f)].” Id. at 
    100, 320 P.3d at 1259
    . “The district court is to make [its] determination in
    light of the record before it, not based on a generalization of the types of documents withheld.”
    
    Id. at 99-100,
    320 P.3d at 1258-59.
    At the show cause hearing, two witnesses testified regarding the records.                  The
    investigating officer testified that he did not personally go through the file, but that the disclosure
    potentially could have interfered with enforcement proceedings, generally, because he had not
    yet spoken to all witnesses. Similarly, the city attorney cited general concerns, such as witnesses
    changing stories, destruction of relevant evidence, and suspects fleeing if they learned the
    direction of the investigation.
    The district court found that had respondent failed to disclose the records prior to trial, it
    would have ordered respondent to produce ten of the sixty documents.                  To support its
    conclusion, the district court created a spreadsheet with a description of each document, the
    7
    applicable statute, and a section showing whether the investigatory exemption applied. The
    district court’s finding is not supported by the record.
    Hymas I states, “Law enforcement agencies must still show a reasonable probability that
    disclosure of each requested document in investigatory records may result in one of the
    enumerated harms and they must disclose all documents in investigatory records for which this
    showing cannot be made.” Hymas 
    I, 156 Idaho at 746
    , 330 P.3d at 1104 (emphasis added). If
    the withholding agency fails to meet its burden, it has not shown cause for withholding the
    records and should be ordered to disclose them. Although the district court is required to review
    the records and consider the exemptions, it does so only after the withholding agency provides
    sufficient evidence to meet the relevant standard, i.e. establishing a reasonable probability that
    disclosure of the record would result in an enumerated harm. 
    Id. While individual
    documents
    themselves may tend to evidence the reasonable probability of harm from disclosure, the agency
    must nonetheless satisfy its burden with evidence demonstrating the harm that might result from
    disclosure of each document. And, while the evidence showing the likelihood of harm from
    disclosure of a document may be the same or similar for all or a number of the subject
    documents, the evidence must not be generalized or categorical.
    In this case, respondent put on its evidence regarding the exemptions before it had the
    benefit of the Wade Court’s preclusion of a categorical approach to exemptions. The evidence
    which was presented was generalized as to the problems which can occur when producing
    documents at a time when the investigation was ongoing. Counsel even argued that “we’re
    trying to protect everything until we get done” and “when it’s complete, we will provide it, as we
    did.” While the concerns expressed are well taken, they are categorical. After remand from the
    first appeal, while the district court analyzed each document, the respondent did not put on
    individualized evidence of the likelihood of harm from production. Therefore, with only the
    generalized and categorical explanations of potential harm in the record, the district court did not
    have evidence sufficient to connect a risk of harm to the production of each document and erred
    in deciding that only ten of the sixty documents should have been disclosed.
    However, because the district court ultimately found that appellants were the prevailing
    party, the error was harmless. State v. Stoddard, 
    105 Idaho 169
    , 171, 
    667 P.2d 272
    , 274 (Ct.
    App. 1983) (holding that error is not reversible unless it is prejudicial).
    8
    3.      Respondent did not act frivolously
    Appellants are not entitled to attorney fees solely because respondent was unjustified in
    withholding the documents.      Before awarding costs and attorney fees, we must determine
    whether respondent’s position was frivolously asserted.           The district court found that
    respondent’s failure to disclose the requested public records was not frivolous. We agree.
    A court shall award reasonable costs and attorney fees to the prevailing party if it finds
    that the request or refusal to provide records was frivolously pursued. I.C. § 74-116(2). Under a
    separate title, the Idaho Code defines frivolous as conduct “not supported in fact or warranted
    under existing law and cannot be supported by a good faith argument for an extension,
    modification, or reversal of existing law.” I.C. § 12-123(1)(b)(ii); see also BLACK’S LAW
    DICTIONARY 451 (8th ed. 2004) (defining a “frivolous defense” as one that has no basis in law or
    fact). However, a party’s position is not frivolous simply because the district court concludes
    that it fails as a matter of law. Garner v. Povey, 
    151 Idaho 462
    , 468, 
    259 P.3d 608
    , 614 (2011).
    Courts have found that where an agency ignored the plain and unambiguous language of
    a statute or ordinance, its conduct was unreasonable and not in conformance with applicable law.
    See, e.g., Gardiner v. Boundary Cnty. Bd. of Comm’rs, 
    148 Idaho 764
    , 769, 
    229 P.3d 369
    , 374
    (2010), overruled on other grounds by City of Osburn v. Randel, 
    152 Idaho 906
    , 
    227 P.3d 353
    (2012). On the other hand, courts have found that where an agency’s improper application of a
    statute was nonetheless reasonable, the agency acted in conformance with applicable law. See
    
    Randel, 152 Idaho at 909
    , 227 P.3d at 356 (2012).
    Therefore, we examine whether respondent ignored plain and unambiguous statutory
    language or whether it acted reasonably in the face of statutory ambiguity. As set forth in the
    Idaho Code, there is a presumption that all public records are open for inspection. I.C. § 74-102.
    If a requested record is an investigatory record, the agency may refuse to disclose the record if it
    fits within one of the exemptions set forth in I.C. § 74-124.4 The agency must, “upon receipt of a
    4
    These exemptions apply to the extent that production of a record would: (1) interfere
    with enforcement proceedings; (2) deprive a person of a right to a fair or an impartial
    adjudication; (3) constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy; (4) disclose the identity
    of a confidential source and, in the case of a record compiled by a criminal law enforcement
    agency in the course of a criminal investigation, confidential information furnished only by the
    confidential source; (5) disclose investigative techniques and procedures; or (6) endanger the life
    or physical safety of law enforcement personnel.
    9
    request for disclosure, separate the exempt and nonexempt material and make the nonexempt
    material available for examination.” I.C. § 74-112. Further, the agency must “show cause” that
    exempt records fit within one of the narrowly construed exemptions. 
    Bolger, 137 Idaho at 796
    ,
    53 P.3d at 1215.
    Here, there is substantial and competent evidence that respondent did not frivolously
    claim that producing investigatory records would interfere with enforcement proceedings or
    disclose investigative techniques and procedures. At the show cause hearing, the city attorney
    testified that he made a page-by-page determination with respect to appellants’ records request.
    Respondent also provided each of the records at issue for the court’s inspection. Additionally,
    much of the law on public records requests was unsettled at the time of the show cause hearing.
    Respondent did not have the benefit of Wade or Hymas I, which stated that there is no
    categorical exemption for investigatory records. See 
    Wade, 156 Idaho at 99
    , 320 P.3d at 1257;
    see also Hymas 
    I, 156 Idaho at 746
    , 330 P.3d at 1104. Wade and Hymas I also clarified that
    respondent must show a reasonable probability that disclosure of each investigatory record may
    result in an enumerated harm. Therefore, because the law was unsettled, the district court
    appropriately concluded that it was not unreasonable for respondent to take the position that the
    records were protected by the investigative exemption.
    We do, however, find some of respondent’s conduct concerning. At the show cause
    hearing, respondent’s witness admitted to releasing a state inspector’s report to a third-party
    insurance investigator because that investigator was present in the apartment when the state
    inspector was performing his testing.     Additionally, respondent released certain requested
    documents, which it previously refused to produce, to appellants’ attorney after he sent emails
    and made phone calls to respondent’s attorney. Although we are concerned with respondent’s
    inconsistent procedures, denying formal public records requests to one party but then releasing
    the documents to parties through back channels, such actions did not persuade the district court
    that the denial was frivolous.
    We must note, however, that had the show cause hearing taken place after Wade and
    Hymas I were issued, the result could have been different. As discussed above, respondent did
    not show a reasonable probability that disclosure as to each requested document would result in
    an enumerated harm. Case law now makes clear that there is no categorical exemption, and any
    10
    party asserting a categorical exemption going forward does so at its own risk. However, in the
    case before us, we cannot find that the district court abused its discretion.
    C.     Costs and Attorney Fees on Appeal
    On appeal, both parties seek attorney fees under I.C. § 74-116(2). To award costs and
    attorney fees, we must determine whether either party frivolously pursued or defended the
    appeal. I.C. § 74-116(2).
    On appeal, respondent is the prevailing party. However, appellants did not frivolously
    pursue this appeal. Appellants presented good faith arguments based on existing law, and
    prevailed on certain claims, but not the ultimate issue. Therefore, we decline to award costs and
    attorney fees on appeal.
    IV.
    CONCLUSION
    Based on the foregoing, the district court’s order denying petitioner costs and attorney
    fees is affirmed.
    Judge GUTIERREZ and Judge GRATTON CONCUR.
    11