DOUBLE H v. Washington Dept. of Ecology

271 P.3d 322, 166 Wash. App. 707
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 23, 2012
Docket29918-0-III
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 271 P.3d 322 (DOUBLE H v. Washington Dept. of Ecology) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DOUBLE H v. Washington Dept. of Ecology, 271 P.3d 322, 166 Wash. App. 707 (Wash. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Brown, J.

¶1 Double H LP appeals the trial court’s penalty calculation against the Washington Department of Ecology under the Public Records Act (PRA), chapter 42.56 RCW. Double H mainly contends the trial court erred in characterizing the withheld records in one group instead of multiple groupings during its calculations and thereby reducing the penalty. We disagree, deny Double H’s attorney fee request for this appeal, and affirm.

FACTS

¶2 On August 6, 2009, Double H initially requested public records from Ecology regarding its investigation of *710 illegal hazardous waste disposal on Double H’s farm. Ecology acknowledged the records request on August 7 (the August 7, 2009 request) and estimated responsive records would be produced the week of September 10, 2009. Ecology provided sets of records on September 24, 2009, September 30, 2009, and January 27, 2010. Ecology posted an exemption log on its web site, disclosing 17 records it withheld from production, in whole or in part, under PRA exemptions.

¶3 In January 2010, Double H asserted its initial request was continuing and asked Ecology for documents created after August 7. Ecology pointed out a public records request was not an open-ended obligation to produce records. Acceding, Double H then made a complying “refresher” request (the January 14, 2010 request) for all public records responsive to the August 7, 2009 request. Ecology acknowledged the refresher request and estimated the requested information would be produced the week of February 18, 2010. Ecology began providing records responsive to the refresher request on March 19. In all, Ecology produced records on nine occasions that were responsive to both the initial request and the refresher request, over 3,000 pages. At argument, Double H argued for penalty purposes that records were produced in 16 groups. Ecology posted another exemption log on its web site, disclosing 37 records withheld from production, in whole or in part, under exemption claims.

¶4 On March 17, 2010, Double H sued Ecology, claiming it had been improperly denied access to records and had not been provided a reasonable estimate of the response time for the refresher request. The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment, with Ecology conceding some PRA violations. Ecology sought to resolve all claims with the imposition of a per-day penalty at the low end of the then statutory $5-$100 range. Double H sought the imposition of the maximum PRA per-day penalty and argued the improperly withheld records should be divided into multiple *711 groups corresponding to Ecology’s production dates and alleged common legal errors.

¶5 At the January 2011 summary judgment arguments, the parties acknowledged that deciding the number of record groups involved and deciding the appropriate per diem penalty would require the court to weigh inferences. Therefore, the parties agreed summary judgment was inappropriate. The parties instead submitted the case to the trial court on the pleadings and affidavits in accordance with Brouillet v. Cowles Publishing Co., 114 Wn.2d 788, 793, 791 P.2d 526 (1990).

¶6 The trial court decided the number of penalty days due was 495 based on the difference between the first reasonable estimated response date given by Ecology for the first request (September 10, 2009) and the date the last responsive records were produced (January 27, 2011). 1 The court fixed, and the parties do not dispute, the daily penalty at $27 using the methodology of Yousoufian v. Office of Ron Sims King County Executive, 168 Wn.2d 444, 459, 229 P.3d 735 (2010) (Yousoufian V). Critical here, the trial court found one group of records existed for penalty calculation purposes, reasoning the same subject matter existed in both PRA requests. The court rejected Double H’s argument that multiple production installments required multiple groups, reasoning:

Dividing the records into groups by response dates is artificial and would actually discourage governmental agencies from producing records over time as they are discovered and reviewed. Therefore, the records which Ecology improperly withheld or failed to disclose constitute one group for purposes of calculating the penalty period.

Clerk’s Papers at 1296.

*712 ¶7 The trial court entered judgment for Double H against Ecology, awarding a $13,365.00 penalty and $88,659.82 in attorney fees and costs. Double H appealed.

ANALYSIS

A. Standard of Review

f 8 The parties dispute the standard of review. Double H argues for de novo review, while Ecology urges review for abuse of discretion. This disparity is unsurprising because, as Ecology correctly notes, Double H conflates counting days with determining whether multiple groups should have been created.

¶9 Double H relies on Yousoufian v. Office of King County Executive, 152 Wn.2d 421, 98 P.3d 463 (2004) (Yousoufian II). The Yousoufian II court grappled with whether the trial court’s improperly subtracted 527 days from the total days that records were improperly withheld from Mr. Yousoufian, a matter of law. Id. at 436-38. Here, the trial court declined to create multiple, likely overlapping record groups that would effectively increase the penalty and act as a disincentive to early document production in part as discovered. Double H acknowledges that “[t]he trial court’s decision to count the penalty days ... is not challenged here.” Reply Br. of Appellant at 3. Notably, the parties agreed summary judgment was inapposite because the court needed to weigh inferences when deciding groupings.

¶10 Separating the conflation, we first note deciding the number of penalty days involves statutory interpretation, a matter of law we review de novo that is not contested here. Second, deciding record groupings and deciding the per diem penalty rate when calculating the penalty amount both involve the exercise of trial court discretion, matters we review for abuse of discretion. A trial court abuses its discretion when it makes a manifestly unreasonable decision or a decision based on untenable *713 grounds. Yousoufian V, 168 Wn.2d at 458 (citing Mayer v. Sto Indus., Inc., 156 Wn.2d 677, 684, 132 P.3d 115 (2006)). We turn now to the trial court’s grouping decision, the gravamen of this dispute.

B. Penalty Grouping

¶11 The issue is whether the trial court erred by abusing its discretion in deciding one group existed based on subject matter when calculating the PRA penalty awarded to Double H for Ecology’s wrongful withholding of public records.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Eric Hood v. South Whidbey School District
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2016
Gronquist v. Department of Licensing
309 P.3d 538 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2013)
Derek E. Gronquist, V State, Dept. Of Licensing
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2013

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
271 P.3d 322, 166 Wash. App. 707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/double-h-v-washington-dept-of-ecology-washctapp-2012.