Arkansas Children's Hospital v. Dee Blakely

2019 Ark. App. 565
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 4, 2019
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2019 Ark. App. 565 (Arkansas Children's Hospital v. Dee Blakely) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arkansas Children's Hospital v. Dee Blakely, 2019 Ark. App. 565 (Ark. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Cite as 2019 Ark. App. 565 Digitally signed by Elizabeth Perry ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS Date: 2022.08.09 10:47:20 -05'00' DIVISION IV Adobe Acrobat version: No. CV-18-132 2022.001.20169 ARKANSAS CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL Opinion Delivered December 4, 2019

APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, V. SIXTH DIVISION [NO. 60CV-17-2148] DEE BLAKELY HONORABLE TIMOTHY DAVIS APPELLEE FOX, JUDGE

REMANDED FOR CLARIFICATION

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge

This case is factually related to Blakely v. Arkansas Children’s Hospital, 2019 Ark. App.

568 (Blakely I), which involves Arkansas’s Freedom of Information Act and illegal-exaction

claims against the hospital. We have chosen not to decide the merits of this appeal now

because the circuit court’s order is unclear on some points, which in turn prevents us from

ensuring that our review is fair to the court and the parties. We therefore remand and ask

the circuit court to clarify its order.

While Blakely I was pending in circuit court, Dee Blakely sent a written request to

Arkansas Children’s Hospital on 15 February 2017 seeking records under the Arkansas

Freedom of Information Act. Blakely asked for “[r]ecords related to the receipt and

expenditure of County tax funds by Arkansas Children’s Hospital, the County hospital for

Pulaski County, Arkansas, for the ‘purpose of maintaining, operating and supporting such

hospital’ for the calendar years 2011–2016.” The hospital responded that it was not subject to FOIA and had no such records because the funds were paid to the hospital as Medicaid

funds from the Arkansas Department of Human Services.

On 4 April 2017—the date the illegal-exaction claims in Blakely I were tried to the

court—Blakely, through counsel, orally asked Jane Duke (outside counsel for the hospital)

for “all remittance advice letters sent to ACH from Medicaid, as identified by Christine

Coutu in her testimony on April 4, 2017, during the bench trial of [Blakley I].” On that

same day, Blakely, through counsel, also asked Duke and Rhonda McKinnis, chief counsel

for the hospital, for “all notes they had taken while attending the bench trial of [Blakley I].”

The hospital denied the April 2017 requests, stating again that it is not subject to FOIA.

Blakely sued and asked that the requested documents be produced. (Thus this Blakely

II was born.) She also asserted that the hospital was subject to FOIA because it is designated

as a county hospital; there is a tax levied for the maintenance, operation and support of it;

it is affiliated with UAMS; and the hospital receives several million dollars from state

appropriations every year.

The circuit court entered an order on Blakely’s FOIA requests on 13 December

2017. The court wholly denied the FOIA requests for remittance-advice letters and trial

notes. The court denied in part and granted in part the FOIA request relating to county

money.

The hospital filed its notice of appeal on 15 December 2017 and makes one point

for reversal: the circuit court clearly erred by ordering it to produce the documents under

FOIA.

2 Before a private entity like the hospital can be ordered to disclose records under

FOIA, it must be covered by the act. Sebastian Cty. Chapter of Am. Red Cross v. Weatherford,

311 Ark. 656, 846 S.W.2d 641 (1993). Whether a private entity is covered by FOIA is

determined by a three-factor test, which according to an authoritative commentator in this

area of the law, asks whether the entity (1) receives public funds, (2) engages in activities

that are of public concern, and (3) carries on work that is intertwined with that of

governmental bodies. See John J. Watkins et al., The Arkansas Freedom of Information Act, 64

(6th ed. 2017) (footnotes omitted). The test is a conjunctive one according to the

preeminent book on Arkansas’s FOIA, and the parties in this case so argued in their

respective briefs, themselves each citing Arkansas Attorney General opinions to that effect.

As one example, in a bench brief filed with the circuit court in opposition to Blakely’s FOIA

complaint, the hospital argued that “The FOIA only applies to organizations that meet a

three-prong test. The receipt of [direct] public funds is merely one prong of the test.” The

hospital then provided the same quote from Professor Watkins’s book as the one we

provided at the beginning of this paragraph. And in its appeal brief, the hospital asserts that

it “is not an entity subject to FOIA. The record demonstrates that ACH does not engage

in matters of public concern, is not intertwined with the government, and is not supported

by direct public funds.”

A primary reason we have decided to remand the case rather than decide it now on

its merit is that the circuit court expressly made a finding on the first factor related to public

funds, but it remained silent on the other two factors. The court also appears to have

determined whether certain documents were subject to FOIA, not whether the hospital

3 itself was subject to it. (More on this below.) Normally we indulge the presumption that

the circuit court made the findings necessary to support its judgment. See Moreland v. Dodds,

2012 Ark. App. 10, 388 S.W.3d 73. Here, however, we cannot fairly do so.

Blakely asked for a declaration in her complaint that the hospital is a FOIA-covered

entity. But the circuit court’s order is unclear on whether it decided that question fully.

For example, paragraph 2 of the order indicates that the court may have applied the three

factors in a disjunctive, not conjunctive, manner. The opening sentence of the paragraph

states (with our emphasis): “Defendant Arkansas Children’s Hospital (ACH) contests that

it is an entity subject to the Arkansas FOIA because, as a private entity it does not: (1)

directly receive public funds; and/or (2) engage in activities that are of public concern; and/or

(3) carry on work that is intertwined with that of government bodies.” The remainder of

the paragraph reads as focusing on factor one. Having considered the entire order, we

cannot tell with confidence whether all three factors were applied in a conjunctive or

disjunctive manner. The difference is a legally meaningful one.

Another example of an important ambiguity is that in paragraph 3.c. the court

speaks in terms of FOIA attaching to certain documents. Specifically, the order states in

part:

Arkansas Children’s Hospital, for the time period of 2011–2016, received documents from the Arkansas Department of Human Services concerning Pulaski County millage tax monies, such documents are subject to the FOIA and Arkansas Children’s Hospital is ORDERED to disclose such records to Plaintiff within three (3) days from entry of this Order. With respect to any other document encompassed within Plaintiff’s February 15, 2017 written request, the relief sought is DENIED.

4 Here again we cannot tell whether the court did or did not rule that the hospital was a

FOIA-covered entity, and why or why not. The hospital can have no potential liability

under FOIA unless the three-factor test is first met. See Nabholz Constr. Corp. v.

Contractors for Pub. Prot. Ass’n, 371 Ark.

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Related

Dee Blakely v. Arkansas Children's Hospital
2019 Ark. App. 568 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2019)

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