Ethyl Corporation v. Environmental Protection Agency, (Two Cases)

478 F.2d 47, 3 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMay 10, 1973
Docket72-2355, 72-1005
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 478 F.2d 47 (Ethyl Corporation v. Environmental Protection Agency, (Two Cases)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ethyl Corporation v. Environmental Protection Agency, (Two Cases), 478 F.2d 47, 3 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20 (4th Cir. 1973).

Opinion

DONALD RUSSELL, Circuit Judge:

The Administrator of EPA 1 resists an application by Ethyl Corporation filed under the Freedom of Information Act, 2 to require the production of seven documents containing medical and scientific data and considered by him in connection with the issuance of proposed lead regulations under the Clean Air Act. 3 He contended initially that the documents were exempt from production by the terms of Section (b)(5) of the Act. When the District Court, after hearing testimony and considering affidavits submitted, expressed the intention to require production of the- strictly factual parts of the documents, the Administrator requested a continuance in order to permit him to consider whether to claim “executive privilege”. The continuance was granted and the Administrator did file thereafter with the Court an affidavit in which he claimed “executive privilege”. Despite this claim by the Administrator, the District Court examined the documents in camera, determined that parts thereof contained purely factual material not inextricably intertwined with policy-making processes, and ordered the same produced. The Administrator has appealed and, pending appeal, secured a stay of the order.

We affirm.

The Freedom of Information Act was intended to express in statutory form the firm obligation of governmental agencies to make disclosure to “any person” of identifiable information and facts in their possession, limited only by certain specific exemptions. 4 Specifically, it denied the federal agency any *49 right to “refuse disclosure of materials covered by the Act for any reason other than one contained in the exclusionary section of the legislation.” 5 The legislative history of the Act makes it clear that the obligation to produce thereby mandated is to be construed broadly and the exemptions from such obligation narrowly. 6 In short, the Act makes disclosure the rule and secrecy the exception. And, lest the Congressional purpose be thwarted by the inevitable tendency of the agency towards secrecy, Congress, discarding the usual principle of deference to administrative determinations, provided for any “aggrieved citizen” denied disclosure a judicial remedy in the District Court, which was directed to “determine the matter de novo”, with the burden on the agency itself “to sustain” its claim for exemption. 7 By-such provision, Congress imposed on the federal courts “the responsibility of determining the validity and extent of the claim [of exemption], and insuring that the exemption is strictly construed in light of the legislative intent.” 8

The specific exemption on which the Administrator relies authorizes non-disclosure of “inter-agency or intra-agency memorandums or letters which would not be available by law to a party other than an agency in litigation with the agency.” This exemption has been authoritatively construed as differentiating in treatment between “materials reflecting deliberative or policy-making processes on the one hand, and purely factual, investigative matters on the other”, 9 between material that deals “solely with matters of law or policy” and those that are “matters of a factual nature”. 10 The Act never “intended to place ‘factual material’ within the coverage of the fifth exemption.” 11 ******Simply because a document contains both purely factual material and “materials reflecting deliberative or policy-making processes” does not render the document automatically exempt from discovery. Congress never “intended to exempt an entire document merely because it contained some confidential information.” 12 *50 And this construction of the exemption was given authoritative approval in Mink when Justice White said that “in the absence of a claim that disclosure would jeopardize state secrets, see United States v. Reynolds, 345 U.S. 1 [73 S.Ct. 528, 97 L.Ed. 727] (1953), memoranda consisting only of compiled factual material or purely factual matetial contained in deliberative memoranda and severable from its context would generally be available for discovery * * 410 U.S. at 87, 93 S.Ct. at 836. In that case, Justice White stated that Exemption 5 of the Act was not to be applied “woodenly” as authorizing the “withholding of factual material otherwise available on discovery merely because it was placed in a memorandum with matters of law, policy or opinion.” He pointed out that the proper application of the exemption makes discoverable factual material in memoranda, even though the memoranda include protected law, policy, or opinion or recommendations, if the “purely factual material appearing in those documents [is] in a form that is severable without compromising the private remainder of the documents.” 13

Ordinarily, when the issue of severa-bility, as stated in Mink, arises, the Court will review in camera the documents in controversy. 14 But, as Mink declares, such in camera review “need not be automatic”. If the agency is able to establish, whether “by surrounding circumstances” or otherwise, that the documents “are purely advisory and contain no separable, factual information” or if the agency discloses “the factual portions of the contested documents” and shows “that the excised portions constitute the bare bones of protected matter”, in camera inspection may be avoided. 15

In this case, it is freely conceded by the Administrator that the documents in question contain in part scientific, medical, economic and technological data of a purely factual nature. The District Court found from an in camera review of the documents that such factual data were “severable without compromising the private remainder of the documents.” That this conclusion is correct was substantiated by the subsequent concession made by the Administrator himself.

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478 F.2d 47, 3 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ethyl-corporation-v-environmental-protection-agency-two-cases-ca4-1973.