Andrea Amodeo-Vickery v. Town of Salem

CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMay 20, 2022
Docket2021-0274
StatusUnpublished

This text of Andrea Amodeo-Vickery v. Town of Salem (Andrea Amodeo-Vickery v. Town of Salem) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrea Amodeo-Vickery v. Town of Salem, (N.H. 2022).

Opinion

THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

SUPREME COURT

In Case No. 2021-0274, Andrea Amodeo-Vickery v. Town of Salem, the court on May 20, 2022, issued the following order:

Having considered the briefs and oral arguments of the parties, the court concludes that a formal written opinion is unnecessary in this case. The respondent, the Town of Salem (Town), appeals orders of the Superior Court (Messer, J.) finding in favor of the petitioner, Andrea Amodeo-Vickery, on her petition for access to certain governmental records pursuant to the Right-to- Know Law, RSA chapter 91-A, and awarding her attorney’s fees and costs, see RSA 91-A:8 (2013). We reverse.

The following facts either were found by the trial court or reflect the content of documents in the appellate record. On September 18, 2020, the petitioner requested that the Town Manager provide the following documents pursuant to the Right-to-Know Law:

all written communications between you and any employee at the New Hampshire Office of the Attorney General, from January 1, 2018 through present, regarding the following matters:

1. A list of names of any former Salem Police Officers who had been approved by the [New Hampshire Retirement System] for Accidental Disability Retirement for duty related injuries suffered while employed by the Salem Police Department and whose name and information was included in the “binder” that you provided to the [Office of the Attorney General] and which you referred to in your September 9, 2020 letter to [that office].

2. A list of names of any current or recently separated Salem Police Department officers whose names were included as well as information and evidence you purport to have included in said “binder” that you provided to [the Office of the Attorney General] as referred to in your September 9, 2020 letter.

3. Any and all written correspondence between you and/or [the Town human resources director] and any employee of the NH Attorney General’s Office wherein you described said past, present or future accidental disability retirees as committing “fraud” in regard to their disability claims.

See RSA 91-A:4, IV (Supp. 2021). The Town responded to the request by providing a single document — a 10-page letter from the Town human resources director to the deputy attorney general dated March 6, 2020, in which the human resources director, among other things, observed that the Town had more retirees receiving a “police accidental disability benefit” than any other municipal or county employer. (Bolding omitted.) The human resources director stated that it was “well known” that the Salem Police Department had “questionable claims” for accidental disability retirement. (Quotation omitted). She further stated that the president of the police union had acknowledged “that some claims have been fraudulent in the past.” Yet, she claimed, Town police union members “take no responsibility [for] assisting the Town [in] trying to stop ‘questionable claims.’” The human resources director also stated that the accidental disability retirement benefit “has been exploited and has become unsustainable” because “[e]mployees facing disciplinary action suddenly have a . . . claim, [and] are enhancing injury information to their doctors and Medical Providers [are] not doing their due diligence [when] completing medical forms.” She opined that “[a]ccidental [d]isability is a very lucrative benefit and has become an entitlement in [the Town]. Employees who have worked for the Town as little as 2 years have gone out on a disability pension with full health benefits for life.” In the remainder of the letter, the human resources director provided information about the workers’ compensation claims of certain police department employees and about certain disability retirees who had applied for law enforcement jobs.

In a subsequent email to the Town, the petitioner stated that the March 2020 letter had “partially answered . . . paragraphs 1 and 2” of her Right-to- Know request, but “did not answer in any way . . . paragraph 3” of the request. The Town responded that “there are no . . . emails or correspondence that exist responsive to” the third paragraph of her Right-to-Know request.

Around the same time, the petitioner submitted a Right-to-Know request to the Office of the New Hampshire Attorney General (OAG), seeking, among other things, “[a]ny and all written correspondence, including emails, between [the OAG] and any employee of [the Town] wherein . . . past, present or future accidental disability retirees were described as engaging in possibly fraudulent activity in regard to their disability claims.” (Emphasis omitted.) The OAG responded by disclosing, among other documents:

 A February 24, 2020 email from the Town Manager to the OAG asking “to sit down with someone from [the OAG] to make [that office] aware of possible fraudulent activity” involving “claims of disabilities.”

 A March 12, 2020 email from the human resources director to the OAG, thanking OAG attorneys for speaking with her and the Town Manager on

2 March 6, 2020 and clarifying the difference between criminal actions and actions that are wrong, but are not criminal. The human resources director stated that “[t]he cost to the taxpayer” from such actions “along with the waste of taxpayer funds and the ramification[s] are a huge concern to [the Town].” She also provided information about “a very public case that turned into another duty related disability retirement for [the Town].”

 An April 24, 2020 email from the Town Manager to the OAG noting that the Town had “25 police disability retirees and the next closest municipality, inclusive of counties and the jails, was Manchester at 11,” asking whether the OAG had reviewed information the Town had provided in a binder to “decide if this warrants an investigation,” and opining that “what is going on is [not] right and [that] . . . the tax payers are being unfairly charged.”

In December 2020, the petitioner filed the instant petition alleging that the Town’s assertion that it had no emails responsive to the third paragraph of her Right-to-Know request “was plainly false” and violated the Right-to-Know Law. See RSA 91-A:4, :7 (Supp. 2021). The trial court held a hearing with documents and offers of proof in early January 2021. See RSA 91-A:7. At the hearing, the Town characterized the third paragraph of the petitioner’s request as seeking only correspondence in which the Town Manager specifically “described a retiree as committing fraud.” The Town Manager testified that he “never stated that [Town employees] committed fraud.” Accordingly, the Town argued, “[t]here were no records responsive to [paragraph] three as it was worded.”

The trial court granted the petition, ruling that the Right-to-Know Law required the Town to construe the petitioner’s September 2020 request liberally and that the Town’s narrow construction was unreasonable and violated the Right-to-Know Law. The court determined that “[u]pholding the Town’s refusal to disclose documents” based upon its unduly narrow interpretation of the petitioner’s request “would require those who submit Right-to-Know requests to use magic words to receive information.” The court opined, “This high burden is inconsistent with [the Right-to-Know Law’s] purpose of open, reasonable access to government records.” Construing the request liberally, the court ruled that it sought not only correspondence in which “Town officials described individuals as definitively committing fraud,” but also correspondence discussing “potential and suspected fraud by disability retirees.” The court, therefore, ordered the Town to disclose any responsive documents in its possession.

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Andrea Amodeo-Vickery v. Town of Salem, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrea-amodeo-vickery-v-town-of-salem-nh-2022.