Glenda Nissen v. Pierce County

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 9, 2014
Docket44852-1
StatusPublished

This text of Glenda Nissen v. Pierce County (Glenda Nissen v. Pierce 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
Glenda Nissen v. Pierce County, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

TEED COURT OF APPEALS 0l ISIOH I1

a I IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGT t fii crir rV k ON DIVISION II

GLENDA NISSEN, an individual, No. 44852 -1 - II

Appellant,

v.

PIERCE COUNTY, a public agency; PIERCE PUBLISHED OPINION COUNTY PROSECUTOR' S OFFICE, a public agency,

Respondent.

PROSECUTOR MARK LINDQUIST,

Intervenor.

HUNT, J. — Glenda Nissen appeals the superior court' s CR 12( b)( 6) dismissal of her

1 Public Records Act ( PRA) action against Pierce County and the Pierce County Prosecutor' s

Office ( County); she also appeals several other related superior court orders. At issue is whether

a government employee' s private cellular telephone call log records and text messages are

public records" subject to disclosure under the PRA. We hold that ( 1) call logs for a

government .official' s private cellular phone constitute " public records" only with regard to the

calls that relate to government business and only, if these call logs are used or retained by a

government agency; ( 2) text messages sent or received by a government official constitute

public records" only if the text messages relate to government business; and ( 3) because some

of the private cellular phone call logs and text messages Nissen requested may qualify as " public

1 Chapter 42. 56 RCW. No. 44852 -1 - II

records," the superior court erred in granting the County' s CR 12( b)( 6) motion to dismiss her

PRA complaint. We also hold that the superior court did,not err in staying discovery until after

the CR 12( b)( 6) hearing. We reverse the superior court order granting the County' s motion to

dismiss and remand to the superior court to reinstate Nissen' s action and to develop the record.2 FACTS

I. PUBLIC RECORDS REQUESTS

Glenda Nissen is a detective with the Pierce County Sheriff' s Department ( Department)

and a member of the Pierce County Deputy Sheriff' s Guild ( Guild). The Department hired her in

1997; she has worked there as a detective since 2000. Mark Lindquist is the elected Pierce

County Prosecutor. Lindquist has a County- provided cellular phone, which he rarely uses,

apparently preferring instead to use his personal cellular phone to conduct government business. 3 In connection with a separate whistleblower action that Nissen filed, the County

produced ( 1) records showing that Lindquist generally used his County- provided cellular phone

less than 10 minutes per month, and ( 2) heavily redacted records of Lindquist' s personal cellular

phone use. These redacted personal cellular phone call logs showed: 9 work - related calls

totaling 41 minutes on August 3, 2011; 13 work - related calls totaling 72 minutes on August 2,

2011; 10 work - related calls totaling 46 minutes on June 7, 2010; and 16 work - related text

messages on August 2 and 3, 2011.

On June 3, 2011, Nissen submitted a PRA request asking the, County to preserve " any

and all . . . cellular telephone records" for Lindquist' s personal cellular telephone number.

2 Therefore, we do not address Nissen' s challenge to the superior court' s other orders.

3 Nissen' s whistleblower claim is not at issue in this appeal.

2 No. 44852 -1 - II

Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 29. On August 3, Nissen sent another PRA request to the County, which

stated:

Please produce any and all of Mark Lindquist' s cellular telephone records for number 253- 861 - [redacted here but provided in Nissen' s records request4] or any other cellular telephone he uses to conduct his business including text messages from August 2, 2011.

CP at 15.

On September 16, the County produced the first installment of requested records; on

September 28 the County was " prepared" to release the remaining records that it considered

responsive to Nissen' s request. CP at 16. The County also provided a log of exemptions that it

had used to support redacting the produced records. These claimed exemptions variably cited

RCW 42. 56. 050"; " Invasion of Privacy "; " Non-Public Information, Personal Phone Calls ";

Non- Public Information, Last 4 digits of employee' s personal phone number redacted ";

Residential or personal wireless phone numbers, last 4 digits redacted"; " Non- Public Personal

Phone Calls "; or " Non- Public Personal Text Messages." CP at 88.

On September 13, Nissen submitted another PRA request, which stated, " The new public

records request is for Mark Lindquist' s cellular telephone records for number 253- 861 - [redacted

4 To protect Lindquist' s privacy, the superior court redacted from its records the last four digits of his personal cellular phone number. We issued a similar order redacting from the appellate record the last four digits of Lindquist' s personal cellular phone number.

3 No. 44852 -1 - II

5 here but stated in the records request] for June 7, [ 2010]. " CP at 17. This request, however,

omitted Nissen' s previous request' s qualifier that the records be work related. The County

responded on September 19 with heavily redacted records of Lindquist' s personal cellular phone

use and an exemption log citing the same exemptions it had previously cited when it produced

records in response to Nissen' s earlier request.

II. PROCEDURE

On October 26, 2011, Nissen sued the County, asserting that it had claimed improper

exemptions and had wrongfully redacted records in responding to her PRA requests. 6 Lindquist

intervened. The superior court entered orders ( 1) striking and sealing all court filing references

disclosing the last four digits of Lindquist' s personal cellular phone number, and ( 2) staying all 8 discovery pending a hearing on the County' s CR 12( b)( 6) motion to dismiss. Later ruling that

private cellular phone records of elected government officials are not public records subject to

5 Although Nissen' s September 13, 2011 public records request initially requested records from June 7, 2011," this was a typographical error that the parties clarified in subsequent communications. Neither Nissen nor the County disputes that they understood the request to be for records from June 7, 2010. CP at 17. 6 Despite Nissen' s complaint' s lack of specificity, her counsel told the superior court that she was seeking records responsive to both her August 3 and September 13, 2011 requests. 7 As an intervenor in the superior court proceedings below, Lindquist is also involved in this appeal, even though the superior court did not rule on his motion for temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction. 8 This latter order is also called the " November 23, 2011 status conference order."

4 No. 44852 -1 - II

the PRA, the superior court granted the County' s motion to dismiss Nissen' s complaint.9 The superior court later denied Nissen' s motion for reconsideration.

Nissen sought direct review by the Washington State Supreme Court of the superior

court' s orders ( 1) striking and sealing Lindquist' s personal cellular phone number, ( 2)

postponing discovery until after the hearing on the County' s motion to dismiss, ( 3) dismissing

her complaint, and ( 4) denying her motion for reconsideration. On May 1, 2013, the Supreme

Court transferred Nissen' s appeal to our court.

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Glenda Nissen v. Pierce County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenda-nissen-v-pierce-county-washctapp-2014.