Germeau v. Mason County

271 P.3d 932, 166 Wash. App. 789
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 28, 2012
DocketNo. 41293-4-II
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 271 P.3d 932 (Germeau v. Mason County) 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
Germeau v. Mason County, 271 P.3d 932, 166 Wash. App. 789 (Wash. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Hunt, J.

¶1 Richard Germeau appeals the superior court’s summary judgment rulings (1) that he lacked standing to bring a Public Records Act (PRA)1 action against Mason County and the Mason County’s Sheriff’s Office (Sheriff’s Office); and (2) that even if he did have standing, his letter to the Sheriff’s Office did not provide fair notice that the letter was a PRA request. Germeau argues that (1) although he requested documents in his capacity as the Mason County Sheriff’s Office Employees Guild (Guild) representative, he nevertheless had standing to bring the PRA action;2 and (2) his letter provided fair notice to the County that it was a PRA request. Holding that Germeau had standing to bring this PRA action, we nevertheless affirm the superior court’s summary judgment dismissal of his action on alternative grounds — that Germeau’s letter [792]*792did not provide fair notice to Mason County that his letter was a request for documents under the PRA.

FACTS

I. Records Request Background

¶2 At the time of the events in this case, Mason County Deputy Sheriff Richard Germeau was the representative of the Guild, which has a collective-bargaining agreement with Mason County.3 In 2008, Germeau signed and dated a “Verification of Receipt” acknowledging his receipt of a Mason County Sheriff’s Office general order that adopted Mason County’s public records requests policy, which states, in part:

(a) Public records may be inspected and/or copies may be obtained under the following procedures:
1. Requests for public records should be in writing and directed to the designated public records officer and should include the following information:
(C) A clear indication that the document is a “Public Records Request.”

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 187 (emphasis added). In addition, the Sheriff’s Office has its own “Public Disclosure” web page,4 which contains a link to the Sheriff’s Office’s “Public Records Request Form.”5

[793]*793A. Germeau’s Previous Public Records Requests

¶3 Before the events that gave rise to the instant action, Germeau made a public records request to Mason County (not the Sheriff’s Office) dated February 13,2009, using the “Mason County Public Records Request Form,”6 seeking “all records/documents, all tests, all score sheets/tally sheets related to the Mason County Sherriff [’]s Office sergeant [’]s exam intact in its original form.” CP at 246. Germeau had also made other public records requests to “other County departments (other than the Sheriff’s Office) such as the Civil Service Commission and another County department regarding the purchase of a building.” CP at 30-31. Germeau also used the Mason County Public Records Request Form for these requests. CP at 30, 246.

B. Germeau’s August 13 Letter to Sheriff Concerning Borcherding Investigation

¶4 On August 9, 2009, guild member Mason County Sheriff’s Detective Sergeant Martin Borcherding, who was off-duty at the time, was allegedly involved in a physical altercation at a bar and a domestic dispute with his girl friend, neither of which resulted in criminal charges. Nevertheless, according to Borcherding, Chief Deputy Russell Osterhout advised Borcherding that the Sheriff’s Office had opened an internal affairs investigation of his role in these incidents. In his capacity as Borcherding’s guild representative, Germeau wrote a letter dated August 13, addressed to “Chief Byrd” and “[a]ny individuals associated in an [i]nvestigator[y] capacity” on letterhead that read, “Mason County Deputy Sheriffs Guild.” CP at 10.

¶5 The letter, which did not expressly represent that it was a public records request, stated:

[794]*794I will be representing Martin Borcherding as his guild representative regarding any internal affairs investigation or line investigation. From this point forward if contact is needed with Martin for investigative purposes either formal or non-formal arrangements will need to be made through me.
At the time any active investigation begins either official or unofficial the guild will assume that an internal affairs investigation has begun. Also we are aware that there may be a related criminal investigation with Martin being a victim. We will assume at this time that there is an arterial [sic] motive to use any findings or evidence in this investigation in any current active internal affairs/line investigation or any additional personnel investigations which may occur as [a] result of any findings. The guild will assume at this time that any investigation regarding Martin, being administrative or criminal in nature, is with the intention to be used ultimately in a personnel matter.
Upon receipt of this memo understand that the guild is requesting and has the right to be privileged to any work product, or investigative findings regarding any investigation involving Martin. This includes any notes, interoffice memo’s [sic] or emails that may be related.
Also I am requesting that I be afforded the opportunity to sit in as an observer during any witness interviews which are conducted as [a] result of any investigation regarding Martin.
Please respond to this memo in writing.
Regards
Rich Germeau

CP at 10. Germeau “personally submitted” a copy of this letter to Chief Deputy Osterhout and “placed a second copy of it on the desk” of Chief Deputy Dean Byrd. CP at 31.

¶6 A few hours later Germeau went to a Sheriff’s Office building where he spoke with Undersheriff Jim Barrett, to whom Byrd had earlier given a copy of Germeau’s letter. During their conversation, Barrett handed Germeau a copy of the letter and told Germeau that (1) there was no “internal affairs (LA) investigation being conducted regard[795]*795ing . . . Borcherding at the time and thus no records to provide to [Germeau],” but (2) he (Germeau) could resubmit the letter “if an IA was ever conducted.”7 CP at 205. According to Germeau, Barrett also said that “the Borcherding case was being identified as a criminal matter” and that Barrett “ d[id]n’t have to give [Germeau] sh[*]t related to a criminal investigation.’ ” CP at 31.

¶7 When Germeau tried to hand the letter back to Barrett, Barrett refused it and told Germeau to resubmit the letter only after Germeau removed any request for criminal investigation records from the letter. Germeau told Barrett that he (Germeau) “would let the request stand as it was and handed [the letter] back to Barrett,” who took it back. CP at 32. Germeau left the Sheriff’s Office building.

¶8 Barrett wrote a note and placed it on top of Germeau’s letter, which read:

08/13/09 Meet [sic] with Germeau in Det. Sgts office. Det Gardner present. Told NO IA/LR. Due to injuries and new info MB [Martin Borcherding] is victim of assault and we are treating it that way. Initial memos from responding officers did not not[e] these injuries/victim. Offered Germeau to take this back — he refused.

CP at 206.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
271 P.3d 932, 166 Wash. App. 789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/germeau-v-mason-county-washctapp-2012.