Britton v. Office of the Att'y Gen.

2019 NMCA 2
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 24, 2018
DocketA-1-CA-35346
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 2019 NMCA 2 (Britton v. Office of the Att'y Gen.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Britton v. Office of the Att'y Gen., 2019 NMCA 2 (N.M. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this document New Mexico Compilation Commission, Santa Fe, NM '00'05- 11:03:36 2019.01.23

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

Opinion Number: 2019-NMCA-002

Filing Date: September 24, 2018

Docket No. A-1-CA-35346

MARCY BRITTON,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF NEW MEXICO,

Defendant-Appellee.

APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY C. Shannon Bacon, District Judge

Freedman Boyd Hollander Goldberg Urias & Ward, PA John W. Boyd Albuquerque, NM

for Appellant

Fuqua Law & Policy, PC Scott Fuqua Santa Fe, NM

for Appellee

Rodey, Dickason, Sloan, Akin & Robb, P.A. Denise M. Chanez Albuquerque, NM

for Amici Curiae New Mexico Foundation for Open Government

OPINION

HANISEE, Judge.

1 {1} At issue in this appeal is the appropriate damages available to Plaintiff under the Inspection of Public Records Act (IPRA), NMSA 1978, §§ 14-2-1 to -12 (1947, as amended through 2018), when she successfully proved that the New Mexico Attorney General’s Office (AGO) failed to produce all nonexempt records in response to her request to inspect public records and further failed to provide her with an explanation of why she was denied the right to inspect those records. In Faber v. King, 2015-NMSC- 015, ¶ 1, 348 P.3d 173, decided two months before the district court ruled in this case, our Supreme Court addressed what damages are available under Section 14-2-12 of IPRA when a public body affirmatively denies an IPRA request and it is later determined that the denial was wrongful. Faber held that in an action brought under Section 14-2-12 to enforce a “wrongful denial,” successful plaintiffs may only recover actual damages, costs, and attorney fees, but not statutory or punitive damages. Faber, 2015-NMSC-015, ¶¶ 15, 31, 41. Relying on Faber, the district court here reasoned that because the AGO timely provided “some responsive records” to Plaintiff’s request, Plaintiff’s case is a “wrongful denial” case “that proceeds under Section 14-2-12, not under Section 14-2- 11.” Thus, the district court ruled that Plaintiff is entitled only to actual damages, attorney fees, and costs under Section 14-2-12, and is foreclosed from recovering Section 14-2- 11’s statutory damages of up to $100 per day. Concluding that the district court misapplied Faber and misinterpreted the damages provisions of IPRA in a manner inconsistent with the legislation’s overarching purpose, we reverse.

BACKGROUND

Historical Facts

{2} Plaintiff is a long-time animal welfare activist in New Mexico who, in 2007, learned about raids being conducted by the AGO’s newly formed Attorney General’s Animal Cruelty Task Force (AGACT). Among other things, Plaintiff became concerned that AGACT was engaging in “killing animals unnecessarily, inhumanely and unlawfully[.]” Plaintiff was also concerned that reports of animal cruelty that were made to the AGACT Hotline were going unanswered, and that Heather Ferguson, a private citizen who was appointed “coordinator” of AGACT, “was mishandling cruelty cases while exercising some sort of law enforcement authority derived from her status as ‘coordinator’ of the AGACT.”

{3} After writing to the AGO to express concerns regarding the hotline, Ferguson, and the failure to prosecute cases of animal cruelty and being told by the AGO that its “jurisdiction and authority [to investigate and prosecute complaints of animal cruelty] is, in fact, limited by state statute[,]” Plaintiff sought the assistance of sheriffs, district attorneys, the FBI, and state legislators among others. Because “[n]ot one agency investigated or took any action[,]” Plaintiff “decided to launch [her] own investigation through letters and IPRA requests directly to the AGO.”

Plaintiff’s IPRA Requests and the AGO’s Responses

2 {4} In March 2009 Plaintiff began submitting requests to inspect public records related to AGACT to the AGO. Specifically, Plaintiff was “trying to find out how ordinary citizens had acquired law enforcement and dispatch authority from the AGO.” On June 30, 2009, Plaintiff served the request at issue in this appeal (June 2009 request)—her fifth request in total to the AGO—in which she sought to inspect:

[a]ny and all electronic communications . . . sent and/or received by or between any persons employed by or associated with the [AGO,] including but not limited to . . . Steve Suttle, . . . and all persons on or associated with the Attorney General’s Animal Cruelty Task Force/Hotline . . . , including but not limited to Heather Ferguson[,] . . . Sherry Mangold, etc. in connection to all activities . . . involving in any way the above-referenced parties for the time period of July 1, 2007 through June 30, 2009[.]

After initially informing Plaintiff on July 1, 2009, that the AGO would respond to Plaintiff’s request no later than July 15, 2009, the AGO’s records custodian later wrote to Plaintiff on July 14, 2009, to inform her that “[t]his request is excessively burdensome and broad and we need additional time to respond.” The AGO told Plaintiff it would “gather the records into year groupings and allow inspection on an on-going basis.”

{5} On August 1, 2009, having not been permitted to inspect any of the public records responsive to her June 2009 request, Plaintiff wrote to Chief Deputy Attorney General Albert Lama and asked the AGO to “immediately comply with IPRA and provide all requested public records to [her] by Friday, August 14, 2009.” In a letter dated August 6, 2009, Lama’s assistant provided Plaintiff with the following updates regarding the AGO’s efforts to respond to her request: (1) the AGO had “completed [its] search for responsive records created in 2007” and had “located no responsive records for that year”; (2) the AGO anticipated “be[ing] able to provide [Plaintiff] with records for 2008 on or before September 8, 2009”; and (3) the AGO “will then continue [its] efforts to identify and make available for inspection the responsive 2009 records.” The letter further stated that the AGO “believe[s] that there are potentially 10,000 records responsive to [Plaintiff’s] request” and asked Plaintiff to provide additional specificity as to the particular records she wished to inspect. Plaintiff responded by letter on August 9, 2009, commenting that the AGO’s August 6 letter had “brought to light the startling and unexpected fact that, by [the AGO’s] estimation, there have been potentially 10,000 e- mails exchanged between members of [AGACT] and staff members of the [AGO] within th[e] last year and a half.” She then informed the AGO that “[b]ecause of this new information, instead of tightening the scope of [her] public records request . . . , [she] must now expand it to include all of the records [the AGO] mentioned.”

{6} On September 4, 2009, the AGO wrote to Plaintiff, informing her that “the first batch [of emails were] available and ready for inspection” and that the standard copying fee of $0.25 per page would apply. Plaintiff sent the AGO a check for $75, and the AGO provided copies of records on September 18, 2009. After Plaintiff sent another check for $19.50, the AGO provided Plaintiff with additional records on October 15, 2009, and

3 advised her that those records constituted “the last batch of emails available for inspection[.]” In total, Plaintiff received 378 records from the AGO in response to her June 2009 request.

{7} On October 17, 2009, Plaintiff wrote to the AGO, asking it to “explain the discrepancy between the 10,000 emails that [the AGO] wrote would be responsive to [her] public records request and the 378 records that were actually provided to [her].” Plaintiff also said that she believed she had “evidence . . .

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2019 NMCA 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/britton-v-office-of-the-atty-gen-nmctapp-2018.