Griswold v. Homer City Council

428 P.3d 180
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 14, 2018
Docket7297 S-16236
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 428 P.3d 180 (Griswold v. Homer City Council) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griswold v. Homer City Council, 428 P.3d 180 (Ala. 2018).

Opinion

STOWERS, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Frank Griswold submitted public records requests to the City of Homer. He requested all records of communications between members of the Homer Board of Adjustment, City employees, and attorneys for the City leading up to the Board's decision in a separate case involving Griswold. He also requested attorney invoices to the City for a six-month period. Citing various privileges, the City Manager refused to provide any records of communications surrounding the Board's decision; the Manager provided some complete invoices but provided only redacted versions of some invoices and completely withheld some invoices. Griswold appealed the partial denial of his records request to the City Council; the Council affirmed, and Griswold appealed to the superior court. The superior court substantially affirmed, and Griswold now appeals to us. We affirm with respect to the communications relating to the Board's decision, but we vacate and remand the attorney invoices issue for further analysis.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Griswold's Public Records Request

In November 2014 Griswold submitted two public records requests to the City. The first request was for documents related to a separate case involving Griswold before the Board. 1 Griswold asked for "[a]ll emails, invoices, documents[,] and other records that reveal who provided non-procedural legal advice to the Board regarding the appeal [in the prior case] and who assisted the Board in writing its June 6, 2014 Decision on Appeal." His second request was for "[a]ll invoices for legal services provided to the city between May 16, 2014 and November 11, 2014."

These requests resulted in a considerable number of emails back and forth between Griswold, City Manager Walt Wrede, and City Clerk Jo Johnson. Wrede's ultimate response to Griswold's requests can be divided into two categories - communications relating to the Board's June 6, 2014 decision and attorney invoices. With respect to the communications, Wrede informed Griswold that attorney Holly Wells had assisted the Board in drafting the decision; Wrede did not provide any of the documents or communications involved in this process, explaining that these documents and communications were subject to the attorney-client and deliberative process privileges. 2 Wrede stated, "After the Board made its decision, it passed that decision, along with its reasons and findings, to Ms. Wells and requested that she draft the final [d]ecisional document. The communications were related to clarification of the Board's intent and making sure the decisional *184 document accurately reflected the Board's decision."

With respect to the invoices, Wrede provided Griswold copies of some of the requested invoices, but some of the invoices were partially redacted and others were completely withheld. The invoices were from two law firms: Wells's firm, Birch Horton Bittner & Cherot (Birch Horton), and Levesque Law Group, LLC (Levesque). Wrede provided a Birch Horton invoice dated June 18, 2014, with two lines describing services redacted and a Birch Horton invoice dated September 17, 2014, with five lines describing services and the number of hours billed for services redacted. Levesque redacted parts of 48 lines describing services from the invoice dated October 7, 2014, parts of 13 lines describing services from the invoice dated November 7, 2014, and parts of 8 lines describing services from the invoice dated December 8, 2014. Wrede provided these redacted records to Griswold. Wrede also stated, "All time entries for litigation matters are omitted due to Attorney-Client privilege."

Griswold appealed Wrede's decisions to the Homer City Council. Griswold argued that invoices and time entries were not subject to attorney-client privilege and that Wells's communications with the Board were not subject to attorney-client privilege or deliberative process privilege because Wells was acting as a neutral advisor to the Board and not as an advocate for the Board. He also argued that Wrede's reasons for withholding records and his explanations were insufficient under the Homer City Code.

B. City Council Proceedings

The City Council held a hearing on Griswold's appeal. In addition to his arguments about Wrede's decisions, Griswold argued that the Homer Mayor and City Attorney had conflicts of interest and should not participate in the appeal. At the hearing, City Councilmember Bryan Zak disclosed that he received a call about the appeal about a half hour before the hearing but said that he did not discuss the appeal with the caller.

After reviewing the documents in camera, the City Council affirmed Wrede's decisions. It stated that there was no ex parte communications issue because Zak did not participate in deliberations on the appeal. And it ruled that there were no disqualifying conflicts of interest.

Griswold appealed the decision of the City Council to the superior court.

C. Superior Court Proceedings

After reviewing the invoices in camera, the superior court determined that the hours billed and names of clients on the two invoices redacted by Wrede were not protected by attorney-client privilege under Homer City Code 2.84.040 and Alaska Evidence Rule 503(b). The court ruled that the rest of the redacted material on these two invoices was protected under the Homer City Code, the Alaska Evidence Rules, and the work-product doctrine. 3 Regarding the invoices that Levesque redacted, the court incorrectly stated that Levesque had "substantially waived the attorney-client privilege by later apparently providing [Griswold] with unredacted versions." The court further ruled that Wrede's response to Griswold's public records requests complied with the Homer City Code, that Griswold was not prejudiced by any ex parte communications because Councilmember Zak did not participate in deliberations, and that the Mayor and City Attorney had no conflicts of interest. The court did not discuss the withheld invoices or the communications surrounding the Board's decision, except to say that Wrede provided an adequate justification for withholding them. The court affirmed the City Council's decision in part and remanded with instructions to "provide [Griswold] with versions of the public records he requested in November *185 of 2014, with redactions ... consistent with [the court's] Order."

Griswold filed a motion for clarification and reconsideration, arguing, among other things, that the court was mistaken in believing that he had received unredacted versions of the Levesque invoices. He requested that the court order the City 4 to disclose the unredacted versions of those invoices. The City opposed the motion with one exception. It conceded that unredacted versions of the Levesque invoices had not been provided to Griswold. But the City suggested that the redacted portions of these invoices were properly withheld as privileged.

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Bluebook (online)
428 P.3d 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griswold-v-homer-city-council-alaska-2018.