Arthur West, V Christine Gregoire, State Of Washington ( 2014 )


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    2014 OCT 2 I             AN ^:       3
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    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHING                                                CI `` "'!
    DIVISION II
    ARTHUR WEST,                                                              No. 45812 -8 -I1
    Appellant.
    v.
    PUBLISHED OPINION
    CHRISTINE           GREGOIRE,       GOVERNER        OF
    THE STATE OF WASHINGTON, STATE OF
    WASHINGTON,
    Respondents.
    MAxA, J. —         Arthur West appeals the trial court' s dismissal, following show cause
    proceedings under        former RCW 42. 56. 550 ( 2005),'   of his complaint alleging that then
    Governor Christine Gregoire         violated   the Public Records Act ( PRA), chapter 42 RCW,
    by refusing to produce numerous records under a claim of executive privilege. West
    initially argued that the trial court erred in recognizing an executive privilege as a PRA
    exemption. However, our Supreme Court resolved this issue in Freedom Foundation v.
    Gregoire, 
    178 Wn.2d 686
    , 
    310 P. 3d 1252
     ( 2013),          holding that a qualified executive
    communications privilege operates as a PRA exemption. West now asserts that the trial
    court erred in dismissing his lawsuit based on the executive privilege because he also
    asserted additional PRA claims relating to Gregoire' s alleged unreasonable delay in
    1 RCW 42. 56. 550 was amended in 2011, but the provisions at issue here were unchanged. LAWS
    OF   2011,   ch.   273, § 1.
    45812 -8 -II
    producing records and other grounds, and because the trial court should have deferred
    ruling on whether West could show a particularized need for the records requested under
    the second part of the Freedom Foundation test.
    We hold that ( 1) the trial court did not err in dismissing all West' s claims
    following the former RCW 42. 56. 550 show cause proceedings because West abandoned
    all claims other than those based on his argument that the executive privilege was not a
    valid PRA exemption, and (2). the trial court properly ruled that the executive privilege
    precluded disclosure because West failed to submit any evidence that he had a
    particularized need for the records requested. Accordingly, we affirm.
    FACTS
    In January 2010, West made a PRA request to Gregoire for all records for which she had
    asserted executive privilege since 2007. The governor' s office responded within five business
    days, as required by RCW 42. 56. 520, explaining that it would take three to four weeks to process
    the request and provide the responsive records and an exemption log listing records covered by
    any exemptions. However, the governor' s office did not communicate further with West for
    over eight months.
    On September 3, the governor' s office prepared a letter notifying West that the records
    and exemption log were available for inspection and copying. West claims he never received
    this letter. On September 24, West filed suit against Gregoire to compel production of all
    records for which Gregoire had " wrongfully asserted an executive privilege exemption where
    none exists under   the [ PRA]," Clerk' s Papers ( CP)   at   5.   West also sought penalties under the
    PRA and a declaratory ruling that the privilege itself was not a valid PRA exemption. On
    2
    45812 -8 -II
    September 27, West appeared at the governor' s office to inspect the records, and he received
    copies of numerous records and the exemption log.
    More than five months later, West moved for a show cause order. He requested that
    Gregoire appear and show cause why she should not be found in violation of the PRA for failing
    to ( 1)   produce records       in   a reasonable   time, ( 2)   produce an exemption log citing to a recognized
    exemption, and ( 3) produce public records in response to his request. In a supporting declaration
    West alleged that the governor' s office " failed to produce the records in a reasonable time (over
    8   months)."   CP     at   46. Gregoire did not file a separate motion to dismiss West' s PRA lawsuit.
    However, in her response brief Gregoire requested that the trial court dismiss the lawsuit because
    the only claim Mr. West has made in this matter is that executive privilege is not recognized in
    this   state as a   basis for   exemption    from disclosure          under   the [ PRA]."   CP at 1044.
    In support of his show cause motion, West filed an initial brief and a supplemental
    memorandum —both              obviously    copied    from briefs in     other cases —   which focused only on
    whether the executive privilege was an exemption to the PRA and provided no reference to the
    facts of West' s claim against Gregoire. West did not argue in either of his briefs or in his
    supporting declarations that he had additional PRA claims based on Gregoire' s delay in
    responding to the PRA request or any other grounds.
    In June 2011, after the parties had filed their briefs but before the court heard oral
    argument, the governor' s office disclosed another batch of records not previously identified that
    were responsive to West' s request. The governor' s office also produced an additional exemption
    log asserting executive privilege for some of these newly disclosed documents. West moved to
    supplement the record with copies of the new log and the " silently withheld" documents the
    3
    45812 -8 -I1
    governor' s office      had just   produced, "[   f]or the court to rule in an informed manner on the
    propriety   of   the   executive privilege exemption."      CP at 697. But he did not move to amend his
    complaint to assert new PRA claims related to the disclosure or request a continuance of the
    show cause hearing.
    On June 17, the trial court held a hearing on West' s show cause motion. West argued
    only that Gregoire unlawfully withheld certain records because the executive privilege was not a
    PRA exemption. He did not argue that he had PRA claims based on Gregoire' s delay in
    responding to his request or any other grounds. After oral argument the trial court ruled in
    Gregoire' s favor on the executive privilege issue and dismissed West' s lawsuit. West objected
    to the dismissal on the grounds that because Gregoire had produced some records after he filed
    suit, he had prevailed and was entitled to relief under his complaint. West did not argue that the
    trial court could not dismiss his complaint because he had raised additional PRA claims resulting
    from Gregoire' s delay in responding to his request or any other grounds.
    The parties submitted proposed orders memorializing the trial court' s oral ruling. West' s
    proposed order included language expressly denying claims for failure to produce records and
    exemption logs in a reasonable time. But the trial court signed the State' s proposed order, which
    did not include this language. The trial court noted that it had ruled only on the executive
    privilege issue and that West had not presented any other issues to the court. The trial court' s
    final order included a conclusion of law that the only issue before the court was Gregoire' s
    ability to assert the executive privilege. West moved for reconsideration, arguing that the court
    erred in dismissing his additional claims sua sponte. The trial court denied the motion.
    4
    45812 -8 -II
    West filed a notice of appeal in the Supreme Court, which included a reference to a PRA
    claim related to Gregoire' s delay in responding to the PRA request and " silent withholding" of
    the documents produced in June 2011. 2 CP at 999. At the time West filed his appeal,
    Washington law still was unsettled as to whether executive privilege could be claimed as an
    exemption to the PRA. West sought to consolidate his case on appeal with Freedom
    Foundation, which was then before the Supreme Court and involved the same underlying
    challenge to the executive privilege exemption. The Supreme Court denied consolidation and
    stayed West' s case.
    The Supreme Court ultimately held in Freedom Foundation that the executive privilege
    operated as a constitutional exemption to the PRA disclosure requirements and laid out the
    applicable     test for   deciding   whether   the    exemption applies.    
    178 Wn.2d at
    699 -705. The court
    then remanded West' s case to this court for a decision in light of its holding in Freedom
    Foundation.
    ANALYSIS
    We review challenges to an agency action under the PRA de novo. Former RCW
    42. 56. 550( 3); Resident Action Council             v.   Seattle Hous. Auth., 
    177 Wn.2d 417
    , 428, 
    300 P. 3d 376
    2013).    The PRA requires disclosure of public records upon request, unless an exemption
    applies.   RCW 42. 56. 070( 1).        The burden is on the agency to show that such an exemption
    applies, former RCW 42. 56.550, and we narrowly construe exemptions. RCW 42. 56. 030.
    2 West actually filed the notice of appeal before the trial court entered written findings and
    conclusions on his show cause ruling
    5
    45812 -8 -II
    A.      WEST' S ADDITIONAL CLAIMS FOR PRA VIOLATIONS
    West argues that even if executive privilege constitutes an exemption to the PRA, the
    trial court erred in dismissing his lawsuit because he had asserted additional claims that Gregoire
    violated the PRA by failing to promptly respond to his requests, failing to produce or identify in
    exemption logs some documents responsive to his requests, improperly claiming other PRA
    exemptions for records not subject to an assertion of executive privilege, and silently
    withholding       a second set of records until      June 2011.      We hold that even assuming West raised
    these claims in his initial pleadings, he abandoned the claims by failing to argue them in the
    show cause proceedings.
    West consistently characterized his lawsuit as one challenging the assertion of executive
    privilege.     For instance, he began his         complaint   by   stating that "[ t] his is   an action ...    resulting
    from ( 1)   an   improper   assertion of an executive privilege exemption."               CP     at   3.   But West did
    assert at least an unlawful delay claim in his initial pleadings. West' s complaint alleges that
    Gregoire failed to reasonably disclose records in a timely manner and failed to promptly respond
    or disclose relevant records. And in his motion for a show cause order, West requested an order
    compelling Gregoire to appear and show cause why she should not be found in violation of the
    PRA for, among other things, failing to produce records in a reasonable time. In a supporting
    declaration, West stated that the governor' s office had " failed to produce the records in a
    reasonable       time ( over 8   months)"   and had improperly asserted an executive privilege. 3 CP at 46.
    3 Later, West referenced " secondary issues" related to the governor' s assertion of exemptions
    other   than   executive privilege.    CP    at   661. However, he did not plead this issue in his complaint
    or reference it in his motion for a show cause order.
    6
    45812 -8 -II
    However, during the show cause process West did not argue any claims other than those
    involving the executive privilege. His two briefs focused solely on whether executive privilege
    was a valid PRA exemption. West did not address additional claims in oral argument. On this
    basis, the trial court expressly concluded that West did not present any other issues to the court
    besides whether Gregoire could assert an executive privilege as an exemption to the PRA. West
    did not assign error to this conclusion.
    Whether a requestor in a PRA action abandons claims by failing to argue them at the
    show cause hearing is a matter of first impression. But had West failed to present his claims in a
    formal trial or in response to a summary judgment motion, there is no question that those claims
    would be deemed abandoned. When a party asserts a claim in pleadings but at trial does not
    press" the claim in any way or present evidence to support it, the party abandons that claim.
    See Rainer Nat' l   Bank v. McCracken, 
    26 Wn. App. 498
    , 508, 
    615 P. 2d 469
     ( 1980) ( affirming
    dismissal   of counterclaim).   Similarly, a plaintiff abandons a:claim asserted in a complaint by
    failing to address the claim in opposition pleadings, present evidence to support the claim, or
    argue the claim in response to a summary judgment motion seeking dismissal of the entire
    complaint. Cano -Garcia v. King County, 
    168 Wn. App. 223
    , 248, 
    277 P. 3d 34
    , review denied,
    
    175 Wn.2d 1010
     ( 2012). 4 The question here is whether we should treat a show cause proceeding
    under former RCW 42. 56. 550( 1) like a trial or summary judgment motion when determining
    whether a claimant has abandoned PRA claims.
    And as a general rule, we will not address abandoned issues on appeal. Gronquist v. Dep' t of
    Corr., 
    177 Wn. App. 389
    , 401, 
    313 P. 3d 416
     ( 2013), review denied, 180 Wn.2nd 1004 ( 2014).
    7
    45812 -8 -II
    Under the PRA, a requester may seek judicial review of an agency' s refusal to produce
    the   requested records via "    any kind   of civil action."    Spokane Research &     Def.Fund v. City of
    Spokane, 
    155 Wn. 2d 89
    , 104, 
    117 P. 3d 1117
     ( 2005). Former RCW 42. 56. 550( 1) also provides
    that a requestor denied the opportunity to inspect or copy a public record may move for an order
    requiring the agency to show cause why it has refused to allow inspection or copying. In this
    show cause proceeding the agency bears the burden of establishing that its refusal to produce the
    records   did   not violate   the PRA. Former RCW 42. 56. 550( 1).          The show cause hearing may be
    held   on affidavits,   former RCW 42. 56. 550( 3),        or as a trial -type hearing involving oral argument
    and    live testimony. Wood      v.   Thurston   County,   
    117 Wn. App. 22
    , 28, 
    68 P. 3d 1084
     ( 2003).   The
    court may completely resolve PRA claims in the show cause proceeding. See O'Neill v. City of
    Shoreline, 
    170 Wn.2d 138
    , 154, 
    240 P. 3d 1149
     ( 2010);              Zink v. City ofMesa, 
    140 Wn. App. 328
    ,
    335, 
    166 P. 3d 738
     ( 2007).
    Given this procedure, a former RCW 42. 56. 550( 1) show cause proceeding is, in effect,
    the PRA claimant' s trial. At the very least, it operates like a motion for summary judgment on
    the claimant' s PRA claims. Therefore, as in a trial or summary judgment motion, West was
    required to address all the claims that he wanted to pursue against Gregoire in the show cause
    proceedings that he initiated. Because he did not even mention any claims not involving the
    executive privilege in his briefs or in oral argument, he is deemed to have abandoned those
    claims.
    Requiring a PRA claimant to address all PRA claims during show cause proceedings in
    order to avoid abandonment promotes the orderly administration of PRA requests and is
    consistent with the purposes of the PRA. To hold otherwise would allow PRA claimants to
    8
    45812 -8 - II
    assert their claims in a piecemeal fashion, which would delay the ultimate resolution of disputes
    involving PRA requests and result in judicial inefficiency. See Brown v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
    67 Wn.2d 278
    , 282, 
    407 P. 2d 461
     ( 1965) ( "[ p] iecemeal litigation is   not   to be   encouraged. ");   State ex
    rel. Lemon v. Coffin, 
    52 Wn.2d 894
    , 898, 
    332 P. 2d 1096
     ( 1958).
    We hold that unless the parties agree or the trial court rules otherwise, a PRA claimant
    abandons all PRA claims if the claimant does not address those claims in briefing or argument in
    a   former RCW 42. 56. 550( 1)   show cause   proceeding. 5   Because West argued only his executive
    privilege claim in the show cause proceedings, we hold that he abandoned any other PRA claims.
    B.      APPLICATION OF EXECUTIVE PRIVILEGE TEST
    West argues that the trial court erred in dismissing his PRA claim based on executive
    privilege without first giving him the opportunity to show a " particularized need" for the
    privileged records under the second part of what became the Freedom Foundation test. We
    disagree. West had the opportunity to show that he had a particularized need for the documents
    protected by the executive privilege, but failed to submit any such evidence or argument.
    Although our Supreme Court had not yet decided Freedom Foundation when the trial
    court ruled, Gregoire argued in the show cause proceedings that the trial court should apply the
    three -part test for analyzing the privilege that the Supreme Court ultimately adopted. Gregoire
    specifically argued that if the privilege applied, West could obtain the protected records only if
    he could show a particularized need for them. As a result, West knew that if the trial court
    5 Our holding should not be interpreted as preventing a PRA claimant or an agency from
    requesting that the trial court address multiple claims in separate show cause proceedings, or
    preventing a trial court from conducting separate proceedings for different claims.
    9
    45812 -8 -II
    accepted the three -part test, he had to come forward with some evidence on his need for the
    records. But he made no effort to show that he had a particularized need for the records he had
    requested.
    As noted above, the trial court ruled that Gregoire could assert executive privilege as an
    exemption to the PRA and adopted the three -part test for analyzing the privilege. The trial court
    indicated that the withheld documents appeared to fall within the privilege. This required the
    trial court to   address   the   second part of   the test —whether West could overcome the presumption
    of privilege.    The trial   court   then   concluded   that " Mr. West offered no   basis to find that ...   the
    presumption of privilege should         be    overcome."    CP at 1008. Because he presented no evidence
    or argument on the issue, the trial court necessarily ruled that West did not satisfy the second part
    of the test eventually adopted in Freedom Foundation.
    West argues that the trial court unfairly applied a new test to his PRA claim without
    providing adequate notice, which violated his right to due process. However, West had adequate
    notice of the requirements of the three -part test. The test has been used in federal courts since
    the U.S. Supreme Court decision in United States v. Nixon, 418, U.S. 683, 
    94 S. Ct. 3090
    , 
    41 L. Ed. 2d 1039
     ( 1974).       And in her response to the show cause motion, Gregoire specifically argued
    that the trial court should apply the three -part test and that West had made no attempt to show a
    particularized need. West responded to this argument in his supplemental brief and argued
    against adoption of the three -part test, but he did not advance any claim at that time that he had a
    particularized need for the records requested.
    West cites no authority for the proposition that a trial court cannot adopt and apply a legal
    analysis as a matter of first impression when the parties have fully briefed the issue. West had
    10
    45812 -8 -II
    every opportunity to present an argument that he did have a particularized need for the records
    requested, and he should not be allowed to benefit from his failure to do so. We hold that under
    these circumstances the trial court did not err in applying the three -part test to West' s claims and
    did not infringe on his right to due process. 6
    C.      ATTORNEY FEES
    West   requests   attorney fees for his   appeal.   See RAP 18. 1.   A prevailing plaintiff in a
    PRA action is entitled to reasonable attorney fees and all costs associated with the litigation, in
    addition   to any   penalties assessed against    the agency. Former   RCW 42. 56. 550( 4). Because
    West does not prevail, we deny West' s request for attorney fees.
    We affirm the trial court' s dismissal of West' s complaint.
    We concur:
    6 West also challenges the evidentiary sufficiency for findings of fact 2, 3, and 8 in the trial
    court' s final order. These findings indicate that West received the September 3, 2010 letter from
    the governor' s office. Because of our holding above, these findings are immaterial and we need
    not address West' s challenges.
    11