Judges: Robert A. Butterworth Attorney General
Filed Date: 8/3/2001
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Mr. Patrick G. Gilligan Ocala City Attorney 7 East Silver Springs Boulevard Suite 500 Ocala, Florida 34470
Dear Mr. Gilligan:
You ask substantially the following question:
Do the recent amendments to section
In sum:
The recent amendments to section
Section
"(3)(c) Crash reports required by this section which reveal the identity, home or employment telephone number or home or employment address of, or other personal information concerning the parties involved in the crash and which are received or prepared by any agency that regularly receives or prepares information from or concerning the parties to motor vehicle crashes are confidential and exempt . . . for a period of 60 days after the date the report is filed. However, such reports may bemade immediately available to the parties involved in the crash,
their legal representatives, their licensed insurance agents, their insurers or insurers to which they have applied for coverage, persons under contract with such insurers to provide claims or underwriting information, prosecutorial authorities, radio and television stations licensed by the Federal Communications Commission, newspapers qualified to publish legal notices under ss.
You ask whether the language above permits an owner of a vehicle involved in a crash to receive a copy of the crash report immediately, or whether the owner must wait 60 days before obtaining the report. You state that you are of the opinion that the vehicle owners, as well as the drivers and passengers, of vehicles involved in a crash are among those authorized to receive immediate access to the report.
It is well established that exceptions to the Public Records Law are to be narrowly construed and limited to their intended purpose.1 The purpose of Chapter 01-163, Laws of Florida, is "to protect the public from unscrupulous individuals who promote the filing of fraudulent insurance claims by obtaining such information immediately after a crash and exploiting the individual at a time of emotional distress.2 A review of law does not disclose an intent to restrict vehicle owners from immediate access to these reports. As your letter points out, an owner of a vehicle involved in an accident would need to have the crash report immediately in order to process insurance claims for any property damage to the vehicle.
In addition, while the legislation does not set forth which individuals constitute "parties involved in the crash," it would appear that the owners of the vehicle involved in the crash are encompassed within that term. Black's Law Dictionary notes that parties are "[t]he persons who take part in the performance of any act, or who are directly interested in any affair, contract, or conveyance. . . ."3
In Brown v. City of Lauderhill,4 the Fourth District Court of Appeal adopted a construction of the term "party" for the purposes of an exemption from the Sunshine Law that would include a real party in interest as well as a party to the pending litigation. The court declined to adopt a more narrow definition of the term because to do so would yield an "absurd result."5 Similarly, it would appear that an owner of the vehicle should be deemed a party who is entitled to immediate access to the report.
Accordingly, I am of the opinion that the recent amendments to section
Sincerely,
Robert A. Butterworth Attorney General
RAB/tjw/pg