DocketNumber: C.A. No. 95-491.
Judges: <underline>Savage, J.</underline>
Filed Date: 6/4/1997
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
The Council met, as advertised, on June 7, 1995. After calling this meeting to order, Councilman Beck moved that the Council go into executive session, closed pursuant to the litigation exception of the Act. The Council approved this motion unanimously, and the Council met in executive session. According to the testimony of Councilman Beck, during this closed session, the Council discussed the proposed social meeting with the Narragansett Indians and directed Charlestown Town Solicitor Philip M. Sloan Jr. to contact the Narragansett Indians. While the minutes do not reflect that a separate non-executive session occurred after the executive session, the minutes do reflect that at some point after certain matters had been discussed in closed session, the Council voted unanimously to return to an open meeting and to seal the minutes of the executive session.2 The minutes then state that "Attorney Sloan was requested by the Council to contact Attorney Killoy to inform him that the upcoming meeting with the Tribe will be held only as a social gathering, and no business will be discussed." The Council then adjourned the special meeting. After adjourning, the Council held an agenda workshop for the upcoming June 12, 1995 meeting of the Council.
It is undisputed that the public notice and agenda for the meeting of June 7, 1995 did not reference the topic of a proposed social meeting with the Narragansett Indians. In addition, while the minutes of this meeting do reflect that the Council would be meeting socially with the Narragansett Indians, the minutes available to the public do not reflect the Council's discussion or decisionmaking process in this regard, they do not indicate whether that social meeting was discussed and agreed upon in executive session or otherwise, nor do they indicate the views or votes of any particular Councilperson on that subject or the date of the proposed social meeting. In addition, there are no minutes of the agenda workshop. The minutes of the June 7, 1995 meeting only reference that "the Council met to prepare the agenda for the upcoming Council meeting on June 12, 1995." The only evidence of the content of the agenda workshop session is the agenda itself.
The Town Council and the Narragansett Tribal Council met for dinner, as planned, on June 9, 1995. The evening was a social gathering that was closed to the public, but the evidence indicates that no official matters were discussed. After this dinner, Councilman Beck and Tribal First Councilman Matthew Thomas remained in contact.
The Tribal Council subsequently invited the Town Council to meet with the Narragansett Indians at the Four Winds Community Center. The Council discussed that potential meeting at its June 12, 1995 open meeting and agreed to the meet with the Narragansett Indians on June 22, 1995. According to the meeting minutes, Councilman Beck commented that "as far as he knows [the meeting of June 22, 1995 with the Narragansett Indians would be] an open meeting." Councilwoman Dunn requested that Charlestown Assistant Solicitor Bruce N. Goodsell confirm this open status with the Narragansett Indians.3 In addition, Councilwoman Dunn and Charlestown citizens present at the meeting requested that the public be notified in advance if the meeting were to be closed. The Council, however, did not decide or vote on whether the meeting would be an open meeting for purposes of the Open Meetings Act.
After the June 12, 1995 meeting, the Narragansett Indians informed the Council, apparently through their respective attorneys, that they only would agree to meet on June 22, 1995 in a closed session. According to Councilman Beck, the Narragansett Indians wanted the meeting to be closed to avoid the need for police escorts and the general hostile atmosphere that had occurred at other meetings such as the "fiasco in West Greenwich" where gaming had been discussed with the community. As a result, the Council decided to convene a special meeting on June 19, 1995 to discuss again the meeting with the Narragansett Indians proposed for June 22, 1995 and the issues created by the Narragansett Indians' mandate that the June 22, 1995 meeting with the Council be closed. As certain members of the Council wished to meet with the Narragansett Indians, but were concerned about complying with the Open Meetings Act, the Council contacted Solicitor Goodsell, prior to the June 19, 1995 special meeting, to solicit advice on how to proceed. The Town Council also asked Solicitor Goodsell to contact the Attorney General's Office for advice regarding the planned meeting to try to ensure compliance with the Open Meetings Act.
On June 19, 1995, the Council convened the special meeting, open to the public, to discuss meeting with the Narragansett Indians in closed session. At the meeting, Solicitor Goodsell opined that the Council could not meet in closed session with the Narragansett Indians on June 22, 1995 by invoking the litigation exception to the Open Meetings Act because litigation would not be the exclusive issue discussed. Solicitor Goodsell also stated that, as requested, he had contacted the Attorney General's Office seeking guidance on the issue of the proposed meeting, but was informed that the Attorney General did not give advisory opinions and that as a result "there is no way one would find out until it is over whether it is an open meetings law issue".4 Solicitor Goodsell then advised the Council that if less than a quorum of the Council (i.e., no more than two out of its five members) met with the Narragansett Indians, as proposed by Councilman Beck, then the meeting would not be in violation of the Act.
After some discussion by the Council and members of the public at the June 19, 1995 meeting, members of the Council made a series of four motions. First, Councilwoman Dunn proposed seeking the assistance of the Governor to arrange a meeting with the Narragansett Indians on neutral ground with the full Council in attendance. This motion, however, did not carry; Councilpersons Dunn and Safford voted for the motion, while Councilpersons Craig, Hargraves and Beck voted against it.
Councilwoman Hargraves then made a motion that two members of the Council meet with the Narragansett Indians on June 22, 1995. This motion carried by a vote of three to two with Councilpersons Craig, Hargraves and Beck voting in the affirmative. The purpose of the meeting was not discussed.
Councilwoman Hargraves then made another motion to have Solicitor Goodsell draft a letter to Governor Almond explaining the Council's difficulty in meeting with the Narragansett Indians under the Open Meetings Act. This motion also carried with the support of Councilpersons Craig, Hargraves and Beck.
Councilman Beck then moved to have the Council appoint him, Councilman Craig and Solicitors Goodsell and Sloan to meet with the Narragansett Indians on June 22, 1995 and to report back to the Council at the June 26, 1995 meeting. This last motion also carried by the three votes of Councilpersons Craig, Hargraves, and Beck.
On June 22, 1995, Councilmen Beck and Craig and Solicitors Goodsell and Sloan met with most of the Narragansett Indian Tribal Council at the Four Winds Community Center. As the Narragansett Indians requested that this meeting be held privately on tribal lands, it was not open to the public. After dinner, the group toured the community center and looked at the Narragansett Indians' proposal for the expansion of its facilities to include a new health center and housing development. The evidence indicates that while the Narragansett Indians raised the issue of gaming, no substantive discussions on this issue took place. The parties agree that no independent notice of the June 22, 1995 meeting was posted, no agenda for this meeting was prepared and no Council minutes were taken.
On June 23, 1995, the day after the meeting, the Town and the Narragansett Indians issued a joint press release which by all accounts gave a fair description of the content of the June 22, 1995 meeting. The release stated that:
the Narragansett Indian Tribe hosted a first meeting and dinner with the representatives of the Charlestown Town Council, President Charles W. Beck and Councilman John O. Craig. The reception followed by dinner was held at the Narragansett Indian Tribe's new Four Winds Community Center. The meeting of over two hours afforded an opportunity for the tribal leaders and the councilmen to exchange concerns and ideas on upcoming tribal developments and plans. The basic strategy for phased development on [sic] its bingo facility, its Senior Meals and Child Day-Care Center were discussed, and its plans for the Indian Health Center were described.
The release also stated that both groups agreed to follow up "with future monthly meetings for which specific agendas will be prepared and where issues will be discussed in detail."
On June 26, 1995, the Town Council held its regularly scheduled open meeting. After calling the meeting to order, Councilwoman Hargraves made a motion to "add to the Agenda under Council Comments a report of the June 22nd meeting with the Narragansett Indian Tribe." The Council approved this motion unanimously, and Councilmen Craig and Beck reported on the June 22, 1995 meeting. Both Councilmen relayed to the Council the Narragansett Indians' continued unwillingness to meet in an open forum. Councilman Beck again attributed this refusal to meet openly to what had taken place in West Greenwich when controversial open meetings between the Narragansett Indians and the public had been held. Councilman Beck described the June 22, 1995 meeting as one at which he and Councilman Craig listened in an effort to establish a method of formal communication between the Council and the Narragansett Indians. According to the minutes of the June 26, 1995 meeting, Councilman Beck reported that at the June 22, 1995 meeting, the parties discussed certain aspects of litigation involving Narragansett Electric, Nynex, and the Narragansett Indians. In addition, the Narragansett Indians raised issues regarding community center construction, housing and schools. Lastly, the issues of a bingo hall and its effect upon the surrounding area were discussed.
At the June 26, 1995 Council meeting, Councilman Beck also introduced a draft letter from the Council to Governor Almond asking for his assistance in amending the Open Meetings Act so as to exempt a quorum of the Charlestown Town Council when meeting with the Narragansett Indians on tribal lands. Upon the request of Councilwoman Dunn, however, the Council took no action regarding the letter because there was a dispute as to whether the requested letter had been agreed upon at the June 19, 1995 meeting. The Council and members of the public then discussed the Town's future course of action. Councilman Beck announced July 18, 1995 as the next proposed date for a meeting with the Narragansett Indians. Councilman Craig added that an agenda would be passed back and forth so that the Council members would know the topic of meetings "weeks in advance". While Councilwoman Dunn reiterated her concern over only part of the Council attending the meetings, neither she nor any other Council member moved to discontinue the meetings with the Narragansett Indians. The minutes of this meeting also do not reflect any discussion regarding the agenda of the planned July 18, 1995 meeting with the Narragansett Indians or of possible discussion topics for that meeting.
Prior to the planned July 18, 1995 meeting, Tribal First Councilman Thomas informed Councilman Beck that he wanted to "present something" for Beck to bring back to the full Council. According to his testimony, Councilman Beck assumed that the presentation involved a proposed gaming facility. At the July 18, 1995 meeting between Councilmen Beck5 and Craig, the Town Solicitors and the Narragansett Indians, which was held in the Tribal Administration Office, the parties discussed the Narragansett Indians' proposed housing development. The Narragansett Indians expressed some concern to Councilmen Beck and Craig about building a road to the development. Councilmen Beck and Craig told the Narragansett Indians to submit a formal request to the Council. Toward the end of the meeting, Tribal Medicine Man Lloyd Wilcox took the floor and gave a short presentation outlining the Narragansett Indians' plans for a bingo facility. The Narragansett Indians requested input from the Council regarding the proposed bingo facility, such as concerns regarding public safety, to be presented formally to the Narragansett Indians on an expedited basis within fourteen to thirty days. Councilman Beck told the Narragansett Indians that he and Councilman Craig would take the request back to the Council. It is undisputed that the July 18, 1995 meeting between the two Councilmen and the Narragansett Indians was not noticed separately in advance, made the subject of an agenda or recorded in the form of minutes made available to the public.
Again, the parties issued a joint press release on July 19, 1995 which by all accounts accurately reflected the events of the previous day's meeting. According to the press release:
[t]he purpose of [the] meeting was to further the opening of a dialogue and to begin constructive work in addressing issues of current concern for both communities. The meeting was not a negotiating session, however it is the parties['] joint expectation that negotiation will commence in the near future. Each group brought limited agendas to the meeting and raised specific issues for consideration by the other.
The Tribal Council informed the Town Councilmen on the Tribe[']s plans to build a gaming facility offering Class II bingo and games otherwise permitted in the State of Rhode Island.
While describing proposed operations as reduced in scale from those developed for the West Greenwich site, the tribal council noted that, as the neighboring community, Charlestown should make its desires known to the [T]ribe and they suggested that, as part of an overall agreement on gaming matters, the [T]ribe would remunerate the Town for interim costs in providing services to the Tribe's gaming operation such as public safety, police, or fire protection, as may be required. The Town Councilmen responded that they would report on the meeting and bring the request to an upcoming meeting of the Town Council.
On another matter[,] the Tribe expressed a desire to acquire the Kingswood Court roadway and appurtenant easements for the Wetuomuck Community Housing Village. The town councilmen suggested that the [T]ribe make a formal request of the Town Council for this action. The Tribal Council indicated that it would consider and make the request.
The other elements of the Town's agenda presented to the Tribal Council included a brief discussion of the RI Open Meetings Law considerations in light of settlement of prior litigation, a request to exchange town and tribal staff and administrative department personnel and contact lists.
The urgency of the Narragansett Indians' request for input from the Town prompted the Council to schedule a special open meeting for July 25, 1995 to discuss the Narragansett Indians' proposal. Prior to this meeting, Solicitor Goodsell received a telephone call from the Governor's legal counsel, John Partridge, protesting any action by the Counsel to discuss gaming issues with the Narragansett Indians. After an hour-long discussion by telephone between Mr. Partridge, Councilman Beck and Town Solicitors Sloan and Goodsell, it was clear to all that the Governor did not want the Council to participate in any gaming discussions with the Narragansett Indians. The Governor encouraged the Council, however, to discuss non-gaming issues.
According to the testimony of Councilman Beck, prior to the meeting of July 25, 1995, no specific response to the Narragansett Indians' request had been drafted. Solicitors Goodsell and Sloan had prepared a memorandum dated July 24, 1995 which explained the Narragansett Indians' request and the July 27, 1995 deadline and contained a suggested list of Council concerns. At trial, Councilman Beck testified that he subsequently learned the underlying reason for the imperative nature of the Narragansett Indians' request for input from the Town made at the July 18, 1995 meeting. Under the Indian Gaming Commission Regulations, the Narragansett Indians needed the Town's support before they could proceed with their plans for a bingo facility.
At the beginning of the meeting of July 25, 1995, Councilman Beck explained his conversation with Attorney Partridge and suggested that the meeting be adjourned, as it had been convened only to discuss the Narragansett Indians' proposal and there was no need to proceed with that discussion in deference to the Governor's request that any dialogue with the Narragansett Indians regarding gaming be suspended. Councilman Craig then moved formally to adjourn the meeting, but that motion failed to carry upon a two-to-two vote of the Council, with Councilwoman Hargraves not present or voting.
Councilwoman Dunn then made a motion to "present a motion." Councilman Beck objected, stating that there was only one posted reason for the meeting (i.e., discussing the Narragansett Indians' proposal) and that any motion made on other issues would be inappropriate. Councilwoman Dunn's motion to allow a motion, however, carried. She then moved as follows:
that the Charlestown Town Council immediately suspend all actions to dilute the intent of the open meetings law and instead work to arrange public meetings with the Narragansett Tribal Council that are open to the citizens of Charlestown and Narragansett Tribal members alike that would allow the whole Charlestown Town Council to represent the Town of Charlestown in full view of its citizens.
This motion did not carry upon a two-to-two vote.
The meeting then was adjourned by unanimous vote upon the motion of Councilman Safford. The draft minutes of the July 25, 1995 meeting, which were the only minutes available to the public within two weeks of the meeting, did not include any reference to Councilman Craig's defeated motion to adjourn, Councilwoman Dunn's two motions or the votes taken or discussion on those motions. The final minutes prepared by the Council were complete and accurate in this regard. These final minutes also include a copy of minutes taken by Dinalyn Spears, the Narragansett Indians' Tribal Secretary, at the July 18, 1995 meeting between the Council and the Narragansett Indians. These minutes taken by the Tribal Secretary, however, are not alleged to be minutes kept by the Council for the purposes of the Act.
The Attorney General, as plaintiff, filed the instant Complaint in September of 1995, alleging in Count 1 that beginning on June 7, 1995 and continuing thereafter, defendant Charlestown Town Council held meetings to discuss meetings to be held with the Narragansett Indians that violated the Open Meetings Act. In Count 2, plaintiff alleges that the Council improperly noticed the June 7, 1995 Council meeting, discussed business at that meeting relating to the social meeting planned with the Narragansett Indians for June 9, 1995 which was not included in the notice or placed on the agenda, and otherwise conducted the meeting in violation of the Open Meetings Act. In Counts 3 and 4 of the Complaint, plaintiff originally alleged that in holding the closed social meeting with the Narragansett Indians on June 9, 1995, without independent notice to the public, an agenda or minutes, the Council willfully violated the Open Meetings Act. Plaintiff voluntarily dismissed both of these counts, however, on March 20, 1996, immediately prior to trial. In Count 5, plaintiff alleges that the Council, by majority vote of Council members Beck, Craig and Hargraves, authorized Councilmen Beck and Craig to meet on June 22, 1995 in closed session with the Narragansett Indians, that the meeting on June 22, 1995 constituted a meeting of the Council, and that the Council and its members violated the Open Meetings Act by discussing Council business in closed session at the June 22, 1995 meeting and by failing to post notice, prepare an agenda or keep minutes of that meeting. Count 6 of the Complaint alleges that the actions of Councilmen Beck and Craig in attending the June 22, 1995 meeting with the Narragansett Indians and the action of Councilpersons Beck, Craig and Hargraves in authorizing them to attend were willful violations of the Open Meetings Act. Count 7 of the Complaint, similar to Count 5, alleges that the Council and its members violated the Open Meetings Act by discussing Council business in closed session at the July 18, 1995 meeting between Councilmen Beck and Craig and the Narragansett Indians and by failing to post notice, prepare an agenda or keep minutes of that meeting. Count 8 of the Complaint, similar to Count 6, alleges that the actions of Councilmen Beck and Craig in attending the July 18, 1995 meeting and the actions of Councilpersons Beck, Craig and Hargraves in authorizing them to attend were willful violations of the Open Meetings Act. In Count 9 of the Complaint, plaintiff alleges that the Council violated the Open Meetings Act with regard to its July 25, 1995 special meeting by failing to make available to the public, within two weeks, accurate minutes of that meeting. Lastly, in Count 10, plaintiff alleges that the actions of the Council and its members in this regard were willful violations of the Act.
To remedy the violations of the Act asserted in Counts 1, 2, 5, 7 and 9, the Attorney General seeks: 1) an injunction preventing the Council from future violations of the Act; 2) a declaration that any actions or votes taken at the meetings in question are null and void; and 3) such other and further relief as this Court shall deem just and proper. To remedy the alleged willful violations of the Act by Councilpersons Beck, Craig and Hargraves contained in Counts 6, 8 and 10, plaintiff seeks to impose civil fines against them.6
This matter was heard by this Court sitting without a jury on March 20-21, 1996. At the conclusion of this non-jury trial, this Court reserved judgment and asked the parties to submit post-trial memoranda addressing the legal and factual issues in dispute. After a review of the testimony, evidence, and the parties respective post-trial memoranda, together with further research and review of the laws of Rhode Island and other jurisdictions, this matter is now ripe for decision.
The Attorney General first contends that the published notice of the June 7, 1995 special meeting was defective because it failed to identify that meeting as open to the public. The relevant notice, published on June 5, 1995, stated as follows:
A special meeting of the Town of Charlestown will be held on Wednesday, June 7, 1995 at 7:00 P.M. at Town Hall, 4540 South County Trail. Meeting will be held in Executive Session, closed pursuant to Open Meeting Law, Chapter 46, Section
42-46-4 5 (2) Litigation, followed by an Agenda Workshop.
Plaintiff's Ex. 22. The Charlestown Town Council denies that it is required to advertise a meeting as open, rather it asserts that it simply must notify the public when meetings are closed.
The notice provision of the Open Meetings Act, R.I. Gen. Laws §
As a public meeting cannot be closed until an open meeting is convened and the proper procedures are followed under the Act to close the meeting, it necessarily follows that it is improper to indicate to the public in advance that a scheduled meeting will be closed. Meetings are presumed to be open unless and until properly closed at an open meeting. The notice of any public meeting, therefore, should not suggest that a meeting will be held in closed session, as that might interfere with the public's ability, at an open meeting, to object to its closure and might result in the closure of meetings that otherwise would be held in open session if put to an open call and majority vote. While the notice provision of the Act does not explicitly require a public body to give affirmative notice that a meeting will be open, inclusion of such a statement in a notice certainly would be prudent. At a minimum, however, the notice cannot state, in advance, that a meeting will be closed (unless that matter has been decided previously in an open meeting by open call and majority vote) and, at most, may indicate that the public body may seek at an open meeting to go into closed executive session for a stated purpose.
The notice published by the Charlestown Town Council was defective and misleading in violation of the Act. It suggested to the public that the Council would be meeting only in closed executive session to discuss litigation matters when, in fact, the Council had not yet convened openly to vote on whether to go into executive session, as required by the Act. The notice suggested that there not only would be no open meeting for the purpose of voting by open call to go into executive session but that there would be no open meeting following the executive session. It is unclear from the notice whether the agenda workshop would be closed when in fact it had to be open unless and until closed in accordance with the Act. The notice could suggest to a citizen not familiar with the nature of an agenda workshop that even that portion of the meeting would be closed. The deficient notice undoubtedly had the effect of deterring public participation in a meeting open to the public, thereby thwarting the purposes of the Open Meetings Act.
The Attorney General next contends that this notice was further violative of the Act because it did not indicate that discussions would occur at the June 7, 1995 meeting regarding a proposed social meeting between the Council and the Narragansett Indians at Angel's Restaurant scheduled for June 9, 1995. Alternatively, plaintiff argues that even if the Council did not know of that agenda item as of the time it published notice of the June 7, 1995 meeting, it failed to vote at the June 7, 1995 meeting to amend the agenda to add the topic of the meeting with the Narragansett Indians, as required by the Act. Plaintiff contends that the Council improperly characterized the proposed social meeting as a litigation matter that it could discuss in executive session and which did not have to be noticed for discussion, included as part of the agenda for the public meeting or recorded in minutes available to the public. In its answer, the Council denied these alleged violations of the Act but failed to articulate its reasoning.
The notice provisions of the Act require that written notice of all regularly scheduled meetings should be supplied at the beginning of every calendar year and again forty-eight hours prior to the actual meeting. Id. §
The published notice regarding the June 7, 1995 meeting did not indicate that the Council would discuss the social meeting between the Charlestown Town Council and the Narragansett Indians proposed for June 9, 1995. From the evidence, it appears that the social meeting had been set up or at least was contemplated as occurring at the time the Council published notice of the June 7, 1995 meeting. Notice of the proposed social meeting and the Council's plans to discuss it thus could have been published in advance. Regardless, that topic could have been added to the agenda by majority vote at the June 7, 1995 meeting. Instead, the topic of the social meeting between the Council and the Narragansett Indians neither appeared in the published notice nor was it added by vote to the agenda.
It appears that the Council or certain of its members had decided in advance of the June 7, 1995 meeting to treat the proposed social meeting with the Narragansett Indians as a litigation matter to be discussed in closed session under §§
The provision of the Open Meetings Act regarding the closure of meetings by public bodies provides that:
By open call, a public body may hold a meeting closed to the public upon an affirmative vote of the majority of its members. A meeting closed to the public shall be limited to matters allowed to be exempt from discussion at open meetings by §
42-46-5 . . . . [T]he reason for holding a closed meeting, by a citation to a subdivision of §42-46-5 (a), and a statement specifying the nature of the business to be discussed, shall be recorded and entered into the minutes of the meeting. No public body shall discuss in closed session any public matter which does not fall within the citations to §42-46-5 (a) referred to by the public body in voting to close the meeting, even if these discussions could otherwise be closed to the public under this chapter.
R.I. Gen. Laws §
It is difficult to understand how the mere existence of ongoing litigation between the Town and the Narragansett Indians could convert a social meeting between the Council and the Narragansett Indians into a litigation matter. By definition, for the proposed meeting to be a "social" meeting, no business whatsoever could be discussed, regardless of whether the business involved ongoing litigation, pending proposals or any other Town Council matter. As such, the Council had no authority to close the meeting of June 7, 1995 to discuss that topic or to withhold notice of that topic in the published notice, at the open call prior to voting to go into executive session or by failing to add the topic to its agenda after coming out of executive session. The published notice of the June 7, 1995 special meeting should have referenced the social meeting as a topic to be discussed in open session. Alternatively, the published notice should have advertised a public meeting and that topic should have been added to the agenda by majority vote at the June 7, 1995 meeting. If the Council, at the open public meeting, wanted to discuss the proposed social meeting in closed executive session (believing it to fall under the litigation exception), then that topic should have been identified and been made the subject of an open call so the propriety of going into executive session to discuss the social meeting could have been discussed and voted upon. The Council's failure to comply with these notice requirements and its discussion of the proposed social meeting in closed session without advance public notice of its intention to do so violated §
The Attorney General further claims in Count 2 that the Council violated the Open Meetings Act by failing to record proper minutes of the Council meeting and the agenda workshop that followed it on June 7, 1995. The defendants offer no response regarding the minutes of the meeting but respond that the agenda produced at the agenda workshop constitutes the minutes required to be made and kept as to the work session.
The Open Meetings Act requires that all public bodies keep written minutes of all of their meetings. Id. §
The minutes of the June 7, 1995 meeting that were made available to the public reflect that certain matters discussed in executive session were redacted from the minutes, pursuant to the Council's unanimous vote to seal the minutes of the executive session. To the extent the Council improperly discussed and voted upon the social meeting with the Narragansett Indians in closed session, therefore, the public was deprived not only of the benefit of having any discussion and voting take place in a properly advertised open session but also of access to minutes of the executive session that would elucidate that discussion or voting, in violation of the Act.
In addition, the minutes that were not sealed implicitly suggest that the Council agreed to met with the Narragansett Indians socially as long as no business was discussed. The minutes do not make clear, however, when the Council agreed to meet socially, the date of the proposed meeting, whether that agreement was reached in executive or open session, whether all Council members were present and were parties to the agreement, what prompted the meeting with the Narragansett Indians and whether there was any discussion on the subject by the Council in executive and/or open session. The combined effect of the failures regarding notice, the improper closing of the meeting to discuss the social meeting in executive session and the deficiencies in the minutes is that the public was deterred from participating in the meeting and that only those citizens who did attend were privy to the discussion and votes, if any, regarding the proposed social meeting that took place in open session.
Moreover, this Court disagrees with defendants' assertion that the agenda created at the "agenda workshop" constituted the necessary minutes of that portion of the June 7, 1995 Council meeting. The Act expressly requires that the minutes include the date, time, and place of the meeting, the members of the body who are present, and a record of individual member votes. Id. §
In addition, the minutes kept for the portion of the June 7, 1995 meeting prior to the agenda workshop are also insufficient to qualify as the required minutes for the agenda workshop. While these minutes do contain the statement that "[the] Council met to prepare agenda for upcoming Council meeting on June 12, 1995," this statement is inserted after the more formal Council meeting had adjourned. At that time, members were free to leave, and a second separate meeting began. Thus the Council members present for the earlier executive session may not have been the same members present at the agenda workshop. Similarly, the location of the meeting may have changed. Lastly, there may have been a break in time between the adjournment of the formal session and the commencement of the agenda workshop. As a result, the Council failed to keep proper minutes of the June 7, 1995 meeting and agenda workshop in violation of §
Accordingly, judgment shall enter for plaintiff against the Council as to Counts 1 and 2 of the Complaint, in that the Charlestown Town Council failed to properly advertise the meeting, failed to add items to the agenda at the meeting for public discussion, improperly closed the meeting and allowed matters to be discussed improperly in closed session, and failed to record and make available to the public proper minutes of the meeting and the agenda workshop that followed it in violation of §§
The essential legal dispute between the parties is whether the Open Meetings Act applies to these meetings. The defendants argue that the Act is inapplicable because it requires a quorum of a public body to be present to constitute a meeting that is subject to the Act's requirements. Plaintiff counters that there is no quorum requirement imposed by the Act.
The preamble to the Open Meetings Act provides that "it is essential to the maintenance of a democratic society that public business be performed in an open and public manner and that the citizens be advised of and aware of the performance of public officials and the deliberations and decisions that go into the making of public policy." R.I. Gen. Laws §
For the Act to apply, therefore, two basic criteria are needed: first, there must be a "meeting"; and second, the meeting must be of a "public body." Id. §
the convening of a public body to discuss and/or act upon a matter over which the public body has supervision, control, jurisdiction, or advisory power. As used herein, the term "meeting" shall expressly include, without limiting the generality of the foregoing, so-called "workshop," "working," or "work" sessions.
Id. §
any department, agency, commission, committee, board, council, bureau, or authority or any subdivision thereof of state or municipal government.
Id. §
In determining whether the Act applies to the meetings held between less than a quorum of the Charlestown Town Council and the Narragansett Indians, the threshold question is whether these meetings involved a "public body." This question requires a preliminary determination as to whether the two Councilmen who met with the Narragansett Indians (Councilmen Beck and Craig) in and of themselves constituted a "public body" under the Act.
The definition of a "public body" contemplates defined entities within state and municipal government that are created as a result of state or municipal law, namely departments, agencies, commissions, committees, boards, councils, bureaus, authorities or other legal subdivisions of state or municipal government. Id. §
As such, Councilmen Beck and Craig cannot be said to have comprised, in and of themselves, a "public body" within the meaning of the Act. These two individuals together are not a publicly-created entity such as a department, agency, commission, committee, board, council, bureau, or authority of or subdivision thereof of municipal government. They are merely members of a "public body" namely the Charlestown Town Council. Indeed, the Attorney General premises its complaint entirely on the theory that the meetings between Councilmen Beck and Craig and the Narragansett Indians were meetings between the Charlestown Town Council and the Narragansett Indians. See Plaintiff's Complaint, Count 5 ¶ 5 ("The June 22, 1995 meeting with the Tribe constituted a "meeting" of the Council, pursuant to R.I. Gen. Laws §
The next question, therefore, is whether the meetings between the two Councilmen and the Narragansett Indians were meetings between the public body known as the Charlestown Town Council and the Narragansett Indians so as to be subject to the Open Meetings Act. It is undisputed that the two Council members did not constitute a quorum of the Charlestown Town Council for purposes of those meetings. The resolution of this question thus depends upon whether the Act's application is restricted to meetings where a quorum of the public body is present.
All parties acknowledge that while the term "quorum" is defined in the Act, it does not appear elsewhere in the body of the Act. As such, there is no explicit quorum requirement in the Open Meetings Act. It must be determined, therefore, whether the legislature's intent to impose a quorum requirement can be inferred, as defendants' suggest, from the language of the Act.
In interpreting the Open Meetings Act to divine the intent of the General Assembly, several tenets of statutory construction must be considered. The Court must examine the entire statute as a whole and its individual sections must be viewed in the context of the entire statutory scheme and not as if each section were independent of all other sections. Sorenson v. Colibri,
The analysis of whether the Act imposes an implicit quorum requirement must begin with a review of how the Act defines a meeting. A "meeting" is the "convening of a public body." Id.
§
It is a basic tenet of state and municipal law that a public body does not exist and cannot meet or act as a body unless a quorum of its members is present. McQuillin, MunicipalCorporations § 13.01 at 757 and § 13.26 at 814 (3rd ed. 1987). The public body known as the Charlestown Town Council cannot convene itself or act unless it has a quorum present. Id.; seealso Robert's Rules of Order Newly Revised § 3 at 24 (9th ed. 1990), as adopted by the Charlestown Town Code § 15-32. Absent a quorum, therefore, a public body cannot "convene" itself and, if not convened, the public body is not "meeting" so as to be subject to the strictures of the Open Meetings Act. As such, the definition of the term "meeting" as "the convening of a public body" alone gives rise to the inference of a quorum requirement.
This interpretation is supported by the presence of the word "quorum," as a defined term, in the definitional section of the Act. Its placement within the definitional section of the Act is significant and suggests that the term "quorum" bears some relationship to the other defined terms. That definition states:
Quorum, unless otherwise defined by the applicable law, means a simple majority of the membership of a public body.
Id. §
Moreover, implying a quorum requirement is also in accord with other provisions of the Open Meetings Act. As previously mentioned, the Act, notwithstanding its broadly-stated purpose in the preamble, applies not to all meetings of all public officials (where arguably a quorum requirement could be inapplicable) but only to meetings of public bodies where a quorum requirement traditionally exists. See R.I. Gen. Laws §§
While the Attorney General contends that the General Assembly's 1984 amendment of the definition of "meeting" contained in §
The Attorney General argues that the removal of the word "formally" and the expansion of the term "meeting" to include "workshops" illustrates a legislative intent to reach actions taken by a public body in the absence of formal requirements such as a quorum. This argument is unpersuasive, however, because the word "formally", which was deleted by the amendment, described the nature of the discussions and actions subject to the Act but not the manner in which a public body convenes itself. In addition, while broadening the Act's reach beyond formal discussion and actions, the legislature chose not to alter the requirement that a public body must "convene" in order to have a meeting (be it formal or informal) and further chose to leave the term "quorum" defined in the definitional section of the Act. By amending the Act, therefore, the General Assembly continued to limit its application to meetings where the public body convened itself with a quorum while making it clear that the Act would apply to such a meeting regardless of whether matters were discussed formally and voted upon or discussed informally in a workshop setting. Thus the amendment, while broadening the scope of the Act's applicability, did not alter the Act's quorum requirement.
To read the Act as not imposing a quorum requirement, as the Attorney General suggests, would violate basic tenets of statutory construction. This Court would have to interpret the term "quorum", as defined within the Act, as "meaningless and nugatory." Ward v. City of Pawtucket Police Department,
Moreover, imposing a quorum requirement is consistent with a majority of jurisdictions across the United States that have confined the application of their open meetings laws to a meeting of a majority or quorum of a public body. See, e.g., Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 38-431; Cal. Govt. Code § 9027; Conn. Gen. Stat. § 1-18A; Del. Code Ann. tit. 29 § 10002(e); Ga. Code. Ann. § 50-14-1; Haw. Rev. Stat. § 92-2; 5 Ill. Comp. Stat. 120/1.02; Ind. Code § 5-14-1.5-2; Iowa Code § 5.21.2; Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 61.810; Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 30 A § 11A1/2 and ch. 39 § 23B; Md. Code. Ann., State government § 10-502; Mont. Code Ann. § 2-3-202; Nev. Rev. Stat. § 241.015; N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 91-A:2; N.M. Stat. Ann. § 10-15-1; Ohio Rev. Code § 121.22; Okla. Stat. Tit. 25 § 304; Or. Rev. Stat. § 192.610; Tenn. Code. Ann. § 8-44-102; Tex. Gov't. Code Ann. § 551.001; Utah Code Ann. § 52-4-2; and Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 1 § 310; W. Va. Code § 6-9A-2; See also Claude v.Collins,
This is not to say, however, that this Court condones public officials operating in the shadows. Indeed, if this ruling were to be "misconstrued as a license for abuse," the persons involved should think twice, for "[a] court of equity would not be powerless to devise an appropriate remedy in the face of conduct deliberately intended to defeat the Act's essential aims."Delaware Solid Waste Authority v. News-Journal,
Having found, therefore, that the Act implicitly imposes a quorum requirement — such that the Act is inapplicable to a meeting involving less than a quorum of a public body — the only remaining task is to apply that requirement to the meetings between representatives of the Charlestown Town Council and the Narragansett Indians to determine if those meetings are exempt from the Act's strictures. Under the Act, a quorum is a simple majority of the members of a public body unless defined differently by the law governing the body. R.I. Gen. Laws §
Under the Charlestown Town Code enacted by the Charlestown Town Council, which incorporates Robert's Rules of Order Revised (75th Anniv. ed. 1951), a quorum is required not only for the Council to transact official business and vote but also for it to exist at all.11 As it is undisputed that less than a quorum of the Town Council met with the Narragansett Indians on June 22, 1995 and July 18, 1995 (i.e., Councilmen Beck and Craig — only 2 out of the 5 qualified members of the Council at the time), those meetings did not involve the Charlestown Town Council as a public body and cannot be deemed to be meetings subject to the strictures of the Open Meetings Act. As a result, there is no basis upon which to find that any of the defendants violated the Open Meetings Act with regard to the conduct of the meetings of June 22, 1995 and July 18, 1995 between the two Council members and the Narragansett Indians as asserted in Counts 5 and 7 of the Complaint.
Moreover, even assuming, arguendo, that the Act does not impose a quorum requirement, the same result would obtain. Absent an explicit quorum requirement, some courts have imposed a quantitative, qualitative balancing test to determine whether the meeting should be subject to open meetings requirements. See,e.g. Bigelow v. Howze,
Here, the Council itself did not attend the meetings of June 22, 1995 and July 18, 1995 by virtue of the absence of a quorum of its members. In going to the meetings, Councilmen Beck and Craig were not given the power to act on behalf of or to bind the Council, they did not undertake any negotiations or enter into any binding agreements, and their intent was not to thwart the Open Meetings Act. Instead, the Council's intent in sending them and their intent in going was to facilitate an information-gathering session with the Narragansett Indians who insisted that the meetings be on tribal lands and not public. Unfortunately, the Council was presented with a Hobson's choice: either refuse to meet with the Narragansett Indians and risk alienating the very party with whom the Town was trying to forge a constructive relationship or agree to a meeting with two Councilpersons present which was closed on the insistence of the Narragansett Indians and risk a violation of the Open Meetings Act. While there may have been the absence of sunlight during the actual meetings between the Council representatives and the Narragansett Indians, the Council discussed those planned meetings at open, public Council meetings and Councilmen Beck and Craig reported the product of their meetings with the Narragansett Indians at subsequent Council meetings. As a result, the public had the opportunity to discuss the meetings in advance, learn when and where the meetings were taking place and hear a discussion of the information gathered by the Councilmen upon their return.12 Alternatively, therefore, under both a qualitative and quantitative analysis, no violation of the Act can be found with regard to the meetings of June 22, 1995 and July 18, 1995 between the two Council members and the Narragansett Indians under Counts 5 and 7 of the Complaint.13 Absent a violation of the Act, there is no basis to find that any of the defendants acted willfully as asserted in Counts 6 and 8 of the Complaint. Thus judgment shall enter for the defendants as to Counts 5, 6, 7 and 8 of the Complaint.
After the conversation that the Governor's legal counsel, John Partridge, had with Councilman Beck and Solicitor Sloan, it became apparent that there was no longer a need for the special meeting that the Council scheduled for July 25, 1995. That meeting had been called for the express purpose of addressing the Narragansett Indian's request for Town input on the proposed gaming facility, and the Governor did not want the Town discussing this issue with the Narragansett Indians because he believed that he had exclusive jurisdiction over the issue. After Councilman Beck called the July 25, 1995 meeting to order, the Council by unanimous vote moved into executive session.14 Upon reopening the meeting from this executive session, Councilman Beck read in part the following:
I, as Council President, and with our solicitors, have been in regular contact with the Governor's Counsel. Based on conversations held this afternoon and out of consideration for the Governor's position, I have concluded that this evening's meeting should not be held.
Councilman Craig then moved to adjourn the meeting. This motion failed to pass when Councilpersons Dunn and Safford objected because they believed the Council should entertain comments.
Councilwoman Dunn then made a motion to make a motion. After this motion carried, she made the following substantive motion:
At the suggestion of Governor Almond, the Charlestown Town Council and the Narragansett Tribal Council have agreed to meet to discuss matters of mutual importance. The Narragansett Tribal Council has asked that these talks be held in closed session. In order to avoid a quorum and to meet the requirements of [the Open Meetings Act], the Charlestown Town Council elected to send two Council members at a time to participate in closed meetings with the Narragansett Tribal Council. Although it appears that this procedure may not strictly be a violation of the Open Meetings Law it gives the appearance of attempting to circumvent the law. . . . I therefore propose the following motion that the Charlestown Town Council immediately suspend all actions to dilute the intent of the Open Meetings Law and instead work to arrange public meetings with the Narragansett Tribal Council.
The Council discussed her motion, but it failed to carry by a vote of two-to-two.
Councilman Beck then answered a question for a citizen as to what other issues besides gaming were discussed at the July 18, 1995 meeting with the Narragansett Indians. Other citizens expressed opposition to the meetings and requested that more information about the planned discussion topics be provided in advance. Councilman Safford then moved to adjourn the meeting. This motion passed unanimously, and the meeting was adjourned.
The draft minutes make no mention of Councilman Craig's defeated motion to adjourn, Councilwoman Dunn's motion to make a motion, or her motion to cease the closed meetings with the Narragansett Indians. In addition, the draft minutes do not reflect any of the discussion during these motions. The final minutes reference all of these motions, votes and discussions.
The Open Meetings Act requires that all public bodies keep written minutes of all of their meetings. Id. §
This Court is not satisfied, however, that the omission of the information from the draft minutes was anything other than negligent error. There was no evidence adduced at trial to suggest that Marcia D. Carsten, the Charlestown Town Clerk in charge of preparing the minutes, was asked to or intended to leave the material in question out of the draft minutes or that she otherwise acted recklessly in doing so. As a matter of fact, the requisite information was included in the final version of the minutes ultimately prepared and made available to the public, albeit not in a timely fashion. This Court declines, therefore, to find a willful violation of the Act.
Accordingly, judgment shall enter for the plaintiff against the Council as to Count 9 of the Complaint as a result of the Council's failure to prepare accurate minutes of the July 25, 1995 meeting in a timely manner, in violation of §
Counsel for plaintiff and counsel for the defendants shall confer and submit to the Court forthwith for entry an agreed upon form of order and judgment, consistent with this decision.
Many governmental agencies at both the state and federal level advise on regulatory compliance while also acting in a prosecutorial capacity. The Rhode Island Ethics Commission, for example, issues advisory opinions regarding the ethical obligations of public officials and opines as to whether certain proposed actions are in compliance with its regulations, while also investigating and adjudicating charges of ethical impropriety in the first instance. See R.I. Gen. Laws §§
It does not appear that the Attorney General is restricted as a matter of law from giving advice to public bodies or officials with regard to compliance with the Open Meetings Act. Such advice, if followed, could eliminate the need to prosecute, although it still might leave the public body or official open to a private right of action under §
the convening of a public body to formally discuss and/or act upon a matter over which the public body has supervision, control, jurisdiction or advisory power.
P.L 1984, ch. 372. The 1984 amendment to the Act redefined "meeting" as:
the convening of a public body to discuss and/or act upon a matter over which the public body has supervision, control, jurisdiction, or advisory power. As used herein, the term "meeting" shall expressly include, without limiting the generality of the foregoing, so-called "workshop," "'working," or "work" sessions.
R.I. Gen. Laws §
Robert's Rules of Order establish that "[t]he basic principle of a decision in a deliberative assembly [such as a city or town council] is that, to become the act or choice of the body, a proposition must be adopted by a majority vote; that is, direct approval-implying assumption of responsibility for the act must be registered by more than half of the members present and voting on the particular matter, in a regular or properly called meeting at which the necessary minimum members, known as the quorum . . . is present." Robert's Rules of Order Newly Revised, § 1 at 43 (9th ed. 1990). In Section 3, this quorum requirement is explained as being necessary for the protection against totally unrepresentative action in the name of the body by an unduly small number of persons. Robert's Rules of Order § 3 at 20.
This quorum requirement must be satisfied not only if the Council wishes to vote or take official actions, but also for it to exist at all, for "when the time of the meeting has arrived, the presiding officer [the Town Council President] opens it,after he has determined that a quorum is present, by calling the meeting to order. Robert's Rules of Order § 3 at 24 (emphasis added). Accordingly, if a quorum is not present at the beginning of the meeting or at any point thereafter, the members of the Council can take no official actions, except to adjourn or wait for a quorum to be established. It follows, therefore, that in order for the individual council members to exist as the entity known as the "Charlestown Town Council", and to thereby become a public body, a quorum of its members must be present.
Neil Rogen v. Ilikon Corporation ( 1966 )
Delaware Solid Waste Authority v. News-Journal Co. ( 1984 )
Retzlaff v. Grand Forks Public School District No. 1 ( 1988 )
Moberg v. Independent School District No. 281 ( 1983 )
Hometown Properties, Inc. v. Fleming ( 1996 )
Sorenson v. Colibri Corp. ( 1994 )
Ward v. City of Pawtucket Police Department ( 1994 )
Howard Union of Teachers v. State ( 1984 )