Globe Newspaper Co. v. Driscoll

14 Mass. L. Rptr. 66
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedDecember 3, 2001
DocketNo. 005054
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Mass. L. Rptr. 66 (Globe Newspaper Co. v. Driscoll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Globe Newspaper Co. v. Driscoll, 14 Mass. L. Rptr. 66 (Mass. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Gants, J.

The plaintiff, Globe Newspaper Co. (“the Globe”), brought this action on November 14, 2000 seeking a preliminary injunction ordering the defendants, David Driscoll, in his capacity as Commissioner of the Massachusetts Department of Education (“the Commissioner”), and the Massachusetts Department of Education (collectively, “the Department”), to produce forthwith the district-by-district, school-by-school results of the Spring 2000 Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System Test (“the MCAS Test”). On November 16, 2000, after a hearing on November 15, 2000, this Court denied the Globe’s motion for preliminary injunctive relief in a nine-page Memorandum and Order [12 Mass. L. Rptr. 366).

In a footnote, this Court in that decision declared:

Since, for all practical purposes, the denial of the preliminary injunction will end this case, this Court considered treating the motion for a preliminary injunction as a motion for a permanent injunction. However, since this issue is likely to emerge again whenever new MCAS Test results are tabulated, and since this case raises important issues regarding the interpretation of the Public Records Act that have not been fully briefed, this Court has decided that the more prudent course is to treat this motion as one for preliminary injunction and leave the final decision in this case for another day.

Memorandum and Order at 1. With the filing of the cross-motions for summary judgment, that day has come.

Background

In October 19, 2000, Globe reporter Scott Greenberger contends he made an oral request for the district-by-district and school-by-school results of the Spring 2000 MCAS Test to an employee of the Department of Education. The Department did not respond to this oral request so, on November 8, 2000, Mr. Greenberger sent a letter to the Commissioner referencing the oral request and reiterating the public records request.1

A similar request for MCAS Test results had been made in November 1999 by Roselyn Tantraphol to the Commissioner, who denied the request. Under the [67]*67Public Records Act (“the Act”), G.L.c. 66, § 10(b), Ms. Tantraphol appealed the Commissioner’s denial to the Supervisor of Public Records, in the Office of the Massachusetts Secretary of State, who in a three-page opinion letter on December 2, 1999 ordered the Commissioner to provide the requested public records. The Supervisor of Public Records declared that the requested records were subject to mandatory disclosure and did not fall within any statutory exemption. The attorney for the Commissioner did not even argue to the Supervisor of Public Records that the records were subject to any statutory exemption, but advanced the Commissioner’s position that the MCAS Test scores would not be publicly released until each school district had received the reports and had the opportunity to review their accuracy. The Supervisor of Public Records declared that this was not an appropriate legal basis to postpone disclosure of what was plainly a public record, but observed that the Commissioner could mark the reports “Subject to Correction” or “Draft” prior to release.

In November 2000, when the Commissioner had not acted upon the Globe’s request for public records, the Supervisor of Public Records initiated an advisory opinion pursuant to her authority under 950 C.M.R. §32.07 and came to precisely the same conclusion. The Supervisor of Public Records concluded that “the Department may not schedule the release of public records. Once the MCAS scores have been received, those scores are subject to disclosure upon request.”

The Department did not have within its custody any district-by-district or school-by-school results of the Spring 2000 MCAS Test until Tuesday, November 14, 2000, when it received preliminary summary data of the district and school results from its test contractor, Harcourt Educational Measurement, Inc. (“Harcourt”). The Department declared that it planned to release the district and school MCAS Test results on November 21, 2000, after the Department, school superintendents, and school principals had been given a brief opportunity to review the preliminary results, determine their accuracy, and correct any errors. The Globe, contending that the Act required immediate disclosure of this preliminary data, brought this action on November 14, 2000.

The Motion for Preliminary Injunction

On November 15, 2000, one day after the complaint was filed, this Court held a hearing on the Globe’s motion for preliminary injunction. At that hearing, the Department argued that, since it only received the preliminary summary data on Tuesday, November 14, 2000 and planned to release it publicly on Tuesday, November 21, it was in compliance with the Act by providing this data “without unreasonable delay” and within ten days of receipt. The Globe argued that, since these records are available and could be copied within minutes or hours, any delay beyond that time frame constitutes “unreasonable delay" under the Act.

In the Memorandum and Order issued on November 16, 2000 denying the Globe’s motion for a preliminary injunction, this Court wrote:

This dispute requires this Court to harmonize two separate provisions in the Act. Under G.L.c. 66, § 10(a), “Every person having custody of any public record . . . shall, at reasonable times and without unreasonable delay, permit it ... to be inspected and examined by any person . . .” Under G.L.c. 66, § 10(b), “(a) custodian of a public record shall, within ten days following receipt of a request for inspection or copy of a public record, comply with such request.”
There are at least three alternative harmonizing interpretations of these provisions. One is that a custodian who complies with a public records request within ten days, as a matter of law, is necessarily acting “without unreasonable delay.” It is noteworthy that neither party adopts this interpretation. The Department (through its attorney, the Massachusetts Attorney General) concedes that there may be extraordinary circumstances (not found in this case) in which compliance within ten days could constitute “unreasonable delay.”
The second alternative interpretation is that the ten days is an outside limit, and that a custodian is to comply with a public records request “without unreasonable delay” and in no event later than ten days after receipt. This appears to be the interpretation adopted by the Supervisor of Public Records in her November 14, 2000 advisory opinion, who wrote, “Where records are clearly public, and can be readily retrieved, it would be unreasonable to require a ten-day wait before compliance.” The problem with this interpretation is a pragmatic one. If this were the law, an impatient requestor making a focused request for a small number of public documents could virtually always contend that even a one-day delay in complying with the record request is unreasonable and seek a court order demanding faster service. This Court doubts that the Legislature intended that the judicial remedy it preserved for those seeking public records should be routinely available to those demanding faster than ten day service on their document requests.
The third alternative interpretation is that the ten days is effectively a type of “safe harbor” provision, meaning that a custodian who complies with a records request within ten days is presumptively acting without unreasonable delay.

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Globe Newspaper Co. v. Driscoll
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Bluebook (online)
14 Mass. L. Rptr. 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/globe-newspaper-co-v-driscoll-masssuperct-2001.