Clackamas River Water v. Holloway

322 P.3d 614, 261 Or. App. 852, 2014 WL 1245058, 2014 Ore. App. LEXIS 370
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 26, 2014
DocketLV11040413; A149667
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 322 P.3d 614 (Clackamas River Water v. Holloway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clackamas River Water v. Holloway, 322 P.3d 614, 261 Or. App. 852, 2014 WL 1245058, 2014 Ore. App. LEXIS 370 (Or. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

SCHUMAN, S. J.

Clackamas River Water (CRW), a domestic water supply district, brought this action seeking a declaration that defendants had to return to CRW documents that defendants had obtained through a public records request, so that CRW could determine which parts of the documents, if any, should have been withheld because they were exempt from public disclosure. CRW also sought a “temporary and preliminary” injunction requiring defendants immediately to return the documents. In response, defendants invoked Oregon’s Anti-SLAPP statute, under which a defendant in an action arising out of some forms of the defendant’s public participation can file a “special motion to strike” a plaintiffs claim unless the plaintiff can establish, at a preliminary hearing, “a probability that the plaintiff will prevail on the claim.” ORS 31.150(1), (3).1 The trial court granted [855]*855defendants’ special motions and dismissed CRW’s complaint. However, the trial court also included in the judgment an order that granted CRW injunctive relief. The judgment states:

“IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that defendants’ respective Special Motions to Strike are GRANTED. It is also ordered that defendants are hereinafter prohibited from using, disclosing, or otherwise disseminating any records created, maintained, or kept in the ordinary course of plaintiffs business that are now or have been in defendants’ possession at any time, if such records are or would be exempt from disclosure under Oregon’s public records law, ORS 192.410 to 192.505.”

Defendants appeal the judgment, characterizing the second sentence as a grant of the injunction that CRW sought and to which the court determined, in the first sentence, that CRW was not entitled. CRW, for its part, does not cross-appeal; it concedes, in other words, that its action against defendants “arises out of’ defendants’ statements in a proceeding authorized by law — presumably, defendants’ written request for CRW to comply with the public records law — and that CRW could not establish a probability that it would prevail on its claim. Rather, CRW characterizes the judgment as “effectively dismissing [CRW’s] claims, and fashion [ing] appropriate equitable relief.” We agree with defendants. We therefore reverse and remand.

Because this action ended at an early stage, before either party had the opportunity to develop a factual record, and because the court made no findings, the facts are murky. As best we can discern, they are as follows. CRW, as noted above, is a domestic water supply district organized under ORS chapter 264 and subject to the public records disclosure laws in ORS chapter 192. Defendant Holloway was at all relevant times a CRW board member, and defendant Mitchell is a former board member. Between September 2007 and January 2008, Mitchell repeatedly sent public records requests to CRW’s management seeking several months’ e-mails sent or received through the CRW e-mail system. When his repeated requests went unfulfilled, [856]*856Mitchell, pursuant to ORS 192.450 and ORS 192.460,2 petitioned the Clackamas County District Attorney for an order requiring CRW to disclose the requested records.

The district attorney’s office contacted CRW and informed it of the request. CRW provided a letter in response, attached to which were six compact computer discs. CRW claimed that “each individual disc” contained all of the requested e-mails. CRW also explained that it had not verified the contents of the discs and that it was possible that the discs contained material that could be exempt from public records requests. Specifically, CRW seems to have been concerned that the discs might have contained private personal information about CRW employees, as well as documents subject to attorney-client privilege. The district attorney’s office did not open the contents of the discs due to “software problems.” Nevertheless, the district attorney issued an order explaining that e-mails are generally subject to disclosure as public records and that it was CRW’s “responsibility to review [its] own records to determine whether any specific personal privacy exemptions or attorney-client privileges exist and to adequately articulate the same.” Finally, the order allowed petitioner’s request “for disclosure of all emails received or sent through the Clackamas River Water e-mail system for the period July 2,2007 through January 3, 2008 * * * as to all non-exempt e-mail detailing the public’s business.” Presumably, “non-exempt” meant e-mail that CRW determined was not exempt from disclosure under the public records law. The district attorney, in other words, ordered CRW to determine which e-mails were exempt from disclosure, and to release the others to Mitchell.

Subsequently, in February and March of 2008, CRW’s acting general manager, Lidston, provided Mitchell [857]*857with approximately 24 computer disks — 18 more than the district attorney had seen — supposedly containing all of the requested records, without claiming that any were exempt from disclosure. The parties disagree about some of the facts underlying that event. Defendants appear to assert that CRW turned over the records in response to the district attorney’s order. CRW, however, while acknowledging that its acting general manager at the time (Lidston) arranged for defendants to receive “24 or possibly more computer discs,” nonetheless alleged in its complaint that “[defendants did not obtain the documents pursuant to the public records request process.” Regardless of whose account is more accurate, it is undisputed that (1) Mitchell repeatedly requested certain e-mails, (2) CRW originally did not provide them, (3) Mitchell requested intervention from the district attorney, (4) the district attorney ordered CRW to provide nonexempt e-mails, and (5) CRW’s general manager subsequently provided Mitchell with the computer discs that CRW, in this action, wants returned. Holloway apparently received the discs from Mitchell.

In February 2009, CRW, having hired a new general manager, began its attempt to secure the return of the computer discs. It intensified its efforts after a representative of CRW’s employees’ union protested that the employees had “concerns * * * about the possible mishandlings of employees’ personal information.” A series of communications between CRW and defendants followed. CRW offered to have the information in the discs reviewed by a neutral third-party who would identify information that was exempt from public disclosure, allowing defendants to retain the other information. Defendants did not accept the offer and did not return the discs.

CRW subsequently brought this action against defendants, asking for a judgment declaring that “defendants are required, in their capacities as both current or former CRW Commissioners and members of the public, to return the documents to CRW, so that CRW may determine what information the documents contain that is exempt from public disclosure.” CRW also requested an order “for temporary and preliminary injunctive relief, specifically requiring that [858]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
322 P.3d 614, 261 Or. App. 852, 2014 WL 1245058, 2014 Ore. App. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clackamas-river-water-v-holloway-orctapp-2014.