Doe v. Alaska Superior Court, Third Judicial District

721 P.2d 617, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 350
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1986
DocketS-859
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 721 P.2d 617 (Doe v. Alaska Superior Court, Third Judicial District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe v. Alaska Superior Court, Third Judicial District, 721 P.2d 617, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 350 (Ala. 1986).

Opinion

OPINION

MOORE, Justice.

This case raises important constitutional questions regarding the confidentiality of files maintained by the Governor concerning potential appointees to state office. We are asked to decide whether the trial court properly ordered discovery of the *619 Governor’s complete file concerning a candidate for the State Medical Board. The file included internal staff memoranda and numerous letters to the Governor from citizens regarding the potential appointee. We find no error in requiring disclosure of the letters from citizens. However, we conclude that the doctrine of executive privilege may protect from disclosure the internal memoranda in the Governor’s file. We remand this question for the trial court to determine the exact nature of the internal documents.

I.

In 1981, Dr. Carolyn Brown, a licensed obstetrician, was under consideration for appointment to the State Medical Board. Governor Hammond’s staff prepared a letter over the Governor’s signature appointing Brown. Although the letter was not mailed, the Governor’s press secretary announced Brown’s appointment and the lieutenant governor sent Brown a congratulatory letter.

In response, Alaska Right-to-Life, Inc. published an article in its “Alaska Right-to-Life Hot Line” urging readers to contact the Governor to protest Brown’s selection. The article described Brown as “an abortionist whose methods were so horrible as to cause a boycott by every nurse employed at Valley Hospital.” The Governor received 65 letters and telegrams supporting or opposing Brown’s appointment. Approximately fifteen urged her rejection.

The Governor subsequently sent Brown a letter informing her that he had decided to follow his past practice of appointing a person recommended by the State Medical Association. The Association had not recommended Brown. The Governor stated that the erroneous press release went out before he approved Brown’s appointment, and that he learned of the mistake when he “suddenly was onslaughted by some objecting to your ‘appointment’ because of your alleged stand on abortion.” He apologized to Brown for the “erroneous announcement” of her appointment.

Brown and other doctors identified as “abortion profiteers” in the Right-to-Life newsletter sued Alaska Right-to-Life, Inc. and its officers for defamation of character. 1 Brown claimed that the defendants intimidated the Governor and caused him to withdraw Brown’s appointment, resulting in damage to her professional reputation and career.

As part of discovery, Brown sought production of the Governor’s appointment file, which included letters from private citizens regarding her appointment. Both the state and the Right-to-Life defendants objected. On February 4, 1984, Superior Court Judge Mark C. Rowland ordered the state to produce the “complete file from the ... Governor’s Office of the State of Alaska relating to the appointment of Dr. carolyn [sic] Brown to the State Medical Board for the months of April through August, 1981.” This discovery order is challenged in this petition.

The state, in opposing Brown’s discovery request, described the contents of the file as follows:

[T]here are approximately 65 discrete' communications (letters and telegrams) to Governor Hammond supporting or opposing Dr. Brown’s appointment. There are an approximately equal number of responsive letters from Governor Hammond or his staff, internal memoranda, and miscellaneous papers. Of these, only two (2) are from defendants; a third item tersely informed one of the defendants that someone other than plaintiff had been appointed; a fourth item, a brief internal memorandum mentions the last name (misspelled) of one defendant in a single short sentence.

*620 Although the court’s order authorized disclosure of all documents in the appointment file, counsel for Brown reached a voluntary agreement with the state Department of Law to permit deletion of names and identifying references in the documents. Under the agreement, Brown reserved the right to argue later that names should be provided for any documents with wording similar to the statements in the Right-to-Life newsletter. The court was not involved in this agreement. 2 The state forwarded copies of the edited documents to all parties in the case.

Brown subsequently requested that the Department of Law disclose the unedited versions of three letters and postcards sent to the Governor and one letter from the Governor in response. The state submitted the requested documents to the trial judge for an in camera review. The court ordered release of the four communications without deletion of the names.

Brown did not seek the release of additional names. However, in early 1985 defendant Moffatt requested the Department of Law to disclose the names of all the persons who wrote the Governor about Brown’s appointment. The state then forwarded unedited copies of all the communications to the trial court for an in camera review. The state also sent letters notifying the correspondents of the pending release of their identities.

On behalf of himself and sixty-two other people similarly situated, John Doe filed an Original Application for Relief with this court, pursuant to Alaska Appellate Rule 404(a). Doe, who is one of the people who wrote the Governor about Brown’s appointment, 3 requested that his right to privacy be protected and that his letter and the letters of the other people remain confidential. We treated Doe’s application as a Petition for Review pursuant to Appellate Rule 402. Because of the important constitutional questions involved, we granted the petition and stayed further release of the names and correspondence of citizens who wrote Governor Hammond in 1981 about Brown’s appointment. 4

II.

The issue is whether a trial court may order production of the Governor’s appointment file containing, inter alia, internal staff memoranda and letters from concerned citizens. Petitioner Doe, the state, and the Right-to-Life defendants contend that none of the file documents should have been ordered disclosed.

The parties argue that the trial court discovery order (1) requires production of material not relevant to Brown’s libel action, and that it violates (2) the State Personnel Act, (3) the doctrine of executive privilege, and (4) the Alaska Constitution’s protection of privacy, free speech, and the right to petition the government.

A. THE RELEVANCY STANDARD OF CIVIL RULE 26

Alaska Civil Rule 26(b)(1) permits a party to discover all evidence, not privileged, that would be relevant at trial or that “appears reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence.” Alaska’s civil discovery rules are to be construed liberally, Van Alen v. Anchorage Ski Club, Inc., 536 P.2d 784, 787 (Alaska 1975), and the determination of relevancy is within the trial court’s discretion.

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Bluebook (online)
721 P.2d 617, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-alaska-superior-court-third-judicial-district-alaska-1986.