Balt. Police Dept. v. Open Justice Balt.

301 A.3d 201, 485 Md. 605
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 31, 2023
Docket20/22
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 301 A.3d 201 (Balt. Police Dept. v. Open Justice Balt.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Balt. Police Dept. v. Open Justice Balt., 301 A.3d 201, 485 Md. 605 (Md. 2023).

Opinion

Baltimore Police Department, et al. v. Open Justice Baltimore, No. 20, September Term, 2022. Opinion by Biran, J.

STATUTORY INTERPRETATION – MARYLAND PUBLIC INFORMATION ACT – WAIVER OF FEES – The Maryland Public Information Act (the “MPIA”) permits an agency records custodian to charge a reasonable fee for compliance with a request to disclose public records. The MPIA also permits the custodian to waive fees, in whole or in part, if the custodian determines that a waiver would be in the public interest. Md. Code Ann., General Provisions (“GP”) § 4-206(e)(2)(ii). The Supreme Court of Maryland held that the MPIA vests custodians with discretion to determine which factors (in addition to an applicant’s ability to pay the fee and whether the public would benefit from disclosure of the requested records) are relevant to the determination of whether a fee waiver would be in the public interest. Custodians also have discretion to determine whether the waiver would be in the public interest after considering all relevant factors, which may include the monetary cost of compliance to the agency as well as the burden on agency personnel. If a custodian concludes that a waiver in whole or in part of a fee would be in the public interest, the custodian does not have discretion to deny such a waiver.

APPELLATE REVIEW – DENIAL OF FEE WAIVER UNDER THE MPIA – The Supreme Court held that an agency custodian’s denial of a request for a fee waiver is reviewed under the arbitrary and capricious standard.

MPIA – DENIAL OF FEE WAIVER – ARBITRARY AND CAPRICIOUS REVIEW – The Supreme Court held that Petitioner, Baltimore Police Department (“BPD”), arbitrarily and capriciously denied the request for a fee waiver made by Respondent, Open Justice Baltimore (“OJB”). BPD’s custodian misapplied certain factors in its analysis and failed to consider other factors: whether disclosure of the records in question would shed light on a public controversy; and whether a complete denial of a fee waiver would exacerbate the controversy.

APPELLATE REVIEW – ARBITRARY AND CAPRICIOUS AGENCY ACTION – REMEDY – The Supreme Court held that the proper remedy in light of the custodian’s errors in making the public interest determination under GP § 4-206(e)(2)(ii) was a remand to BPD for reconsideration of that determination, properly applying all relevant factors. Circuit Court for Baltimore City Case No. 24-C-20-001269 Argued: January 6, 2023 IN THE SUPREME COURT

OF MARYLAND*

No. 20

September Term, 2022

BALTIMORE POLICE DEPARTMENT, ET AL.

v.

OPEN JUSTICE BALTIMORE

Fader, C.J. Watts Hotten Booth Biran Gould Eaves,

JJ.

Opinion by Biran, J.

Filed: August 31, 2023

* At the November 8, 2022 general election, the voters of Maryland ratified a constitutional Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials amendment changing the name of the Court of Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this Appeals of Maryland to the Supreme Court of document is authentic. Maryland. The name change took effect on 2023-08-31 12:53-04:00 December 14, 2022.

Gregory Hilton, Clerk For more than 40 years, the Maryland Public Information Act (the “MPIA” or the

“Act”) has allowed records custodians, in certain circumstances, to grant requests for

waivers of fees to search for, prepare, and produce records sought under the Act. The

current version of the MPIA’s fee waiver provision states, in part, that an official custodian

may grant a requested fee waiver if, “after consideration of the ability of the applicant to

pay the fee and other relevant factors, the official custodian determines that the waiver

would be in the public interest.” Md. Code Ann., General Provisions (“GP”) § 4-206(e)

(2019 Repl. Vol.). This is the first case in which this Court has considered a challenge to a

custodian’s denial of a request for such a fee waiver.

Respondent, Open Justice Baltimore (“OJB”), is an organization interested in

investigating and publicizing reports of police misconduct. In late 2019 and early 2020,

OJB filed several requests under the MPIA with the Baltimore Police Department (“BPD”),

seeking records relating to citizen and administrative complaints of police misconduct, as

well as department-initiated investigations of police misconduct by BPD’s Special

Investigation Response Team (“SIRT”) and of other incidents involving uses of force. This

appeal concerns OJB’s requests for production of certain closed files relating to SIRT

investigations and other use of force investigations. BPD provided an estimate to OJB that

quoted a cost of more than $245,000 to produce 2,337 such files. OJB asked BPD to waive

the fees to produce them. OJB asserted that a fee waiver would be in the public interest

because the disclosure of the records would promote transparency and increase trust

between Baltimore citizens and BPD. OJB also told BPD that it was “a program of a non- profit organization” and had been “deemed a public interest organization, classified tax-

exempt, not generating any beneficiary income.”

OJB refused to narrow its request to lessen the costs of compliance and insisted that

BPD waive the entire fee. BPD had questions about how OJB intended to disseminate the

requested records to the public and whether the public would be able to understand the

records with the redactions that would be necessary. These and other concerns led BPD to

conclude that a fee waiver would not be in the public interest. BPD denied the fee waiver

request in its entirety. However, before doing so, BPD did not share its specific concerns

with OJB and give OJB the opportunity to attempt to address them.

OJB sought judicial review of BPD’s denial of the requested fee waiver in the

Circuit Court for Baltimore City. Seeking summary judgment, BPD and then-BPD Police

Commissioner Michael Harrison (collectively, “BPD”)1 submitted an affidavit from the

official who decided to deny the fee waiver. That official attested that, after careful

consideration of OJB’s request, he had determined that disclosure of the investigation

records would not aid the public in understanding what BPD was doing to address its

problems concerning police misconduct. Among other things, he concluded that, given the

resources already publicly available that explain BPD’s efforts to improve its practices

under a federally monitored consent decree, requiring Baltimore City taxpayers to pay the

1 OJB initially named BPD, the City of Baltimore, and Commissioner Harrison (in his official capacity) as defendants in the Complaint. The parties subsequently filed a stipulation dismissing the City of Baltimore as a party in the case. BPD and Commissioner Harrison jointly filed the petition for certiorari that we granted in this case. Commissioner Harrison resigned his position as Commissioner of BPD in June 2023.

2 costs associated with providing the closed investigation files to OJB would not be in the

public interest.

The circuit court upheld the denial of the fee waiver, determining that BPD’s

decision was not arbitrary or capricious. OJB appealed to the Appellate Court of Maryland

(at the time, called the Court of Special Appeals of Maryland),2 which reversed the circuit

court’s ruling. The Appellate Court concluded that BPD failed to meaningfully consider

whether disclosure of the closed investigation files would aid the public’s understanding

of how BPD was addressing allegations of police misconduct. Thus, the Appellate Court

determined, BPD’s denial of the requested fee waiver was arbitrary and capricious. BPD

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