Health Pros Northwest, Inc. V State Of Washington

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 17, 2019
Docket52135-1
StatusPublished

This text of Health Pros Northwest, Inc. V State Of Washington (Health Pros Northwest, Inc. V State Of Washington) 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
Health Pros Northwest, Inc. V State Of Washington, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

September 17, 2019

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II HEALTH PROS NORTHWEST, INC., a No. 52135-1-II Washington corporation,

Appellant/Cross-Respondent,

v.

THE STATE OF WASHINGTON and its PUBLISHED OPINION DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS,

Respondent/Cross-Appellant.

CRUSER, J. — Health Pros Northwest Inc. (HPNW) brought action against the Department

of Corrections (DOC) for violations of the Public Records Act (PRA), ch. 42.56 RCW. In its

timely initial response to HPNW’s PRA request, the DOC stated that it would provide at a later

date an estimate for when the first installment of records would be produced. HPNW asserted that

the DOC’s response violated former RCW 42.56.520(3) (2010). The superior court ruled that

former RCW 42.56.520(3) did not require an agency to provide an estimate of when it will finish

producing records responsive to a request. However, the court further ruled that the DOC’s initial

response did not comply with former RCW 42.56.520(3) because the agency did not provide

HPNW with an estimated date on which the agency would begin producing records. HPNW

appealed and the DOC cross appealed.

We hold that (1) former RCW 42.56.520(3) required an agency to provide an estimate of

when it would provide the first installment of records, not when it would fully respond to the No. 52135-1-II

request and (2) an agency’s response that states only a date by which the agency will give an

estimate for when the first installment of records will be produced does not comply with former

RCW 42.56.520(3). Accordingly, we affirm.

FACTS

I. REQUEST FOR RECORDS

On February 10, 2017, HPNW submitted a public records request to the DOC. HPNW

requested categories of records related to a contract HPNW entered into with the DOC. The

request was three pages long and contained 18 parts, including multiple subparts.

On February 15, the DOC sent HPNW an e-mail with its initial response to the request.

This e-mail acknowledged receipt of the request and provided the DOC’s interpretation of the

request. The DOC did not provide a date on which it would produce the requested records.

Instead, the DOC stated it “will respond further as to the status of your request within 45 business

days, on or before April 20, 2017.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 25.

II. FIRST INSTALLMENT

On April 11, the DOC sent HPNW an e-mail with the cost for the first installment of

records. That same day, HPNW mailed the payment to the DOC. HPNW’s attorney also

responded to the DOC’s e-mail and asked how many installments the DOC expected to produce

and when the DOC expected to produce each installment. The DOC responded,

(1) It is unknown how many installments there will be. Due to the large and complex nature of this request, [we] anticipate there will be easily over 10 installments, but that is simply a “guess-timate.” (2) How our process works is, we offer one installment at a time. The Specialist does not continue to work on the request until payment for that installment is received.

CP at 31.

2 No. 52135-1-II

HPNW responded to this e-mail by stating that the agency’s answer was “not within the

letter of [sic] spirit of the Open Public Records Act.” CP at 29. HPNW asserted that the agency

is required to provide the requestor a reasonable estimate of when the agency would completely

respond to the request. HPNW also requested that to the extent the DOC would require more than

an additional 45 days to fully respond, the agency should “provide a full and complete explanation

based in specific evidentiary facts why such an extraordinary response time is required.” CP at

30. In response, the DOC informed HPNW that it may appeal the agency’s response to its request.

On April 17, the DOC provided HPNW with the first installment of the requested records,

which contained 673 pages of responsive documents. The DOC informed HPNW that “[s]taff

[will] continue to gather and review records responsive to your request” and that the DOC will

“follow up with you within 40 business days, on or before, June 12, 2017.” CP at 36. After

receiving the DOC’s letter, HPNW sent an e-mail asking how the DOC’s response time complied

with the statutory obligation to provide a prompt response. In an e-mail, the DOC Public Records

Specialist explained that her current caseload has over 100 requests and that she could not stop

working on other requests to get to HPNW’s request.

III. COMPLAINT

On May 2, HPNW filed a complaint in superior court, asking the court to find that the DOC

violated former RCW 42.56.520 (2010) in its initial response to HPNW. HPNW also asked the

court to determine whether the DOC’s time estimate was “reasonable” and if the court found the

estimate was unreasonable, to enter an order declaring what time estimate was reasonable.

3 No. 52135-1-II

After being served with the complaint, the DOC continued to produce installments of

records. On May 30,1 the DOC produced the second installment of 1,633 pages of documents. On

July 3, the DOC produced the third installment of 9,119 pages of documents. On August 22, after

HPNW had filed its opening brief below, the agency produced a fourth installment of 4,306 pages

of documents. The DOC asserted in its response brief below that it had provided HPNW 15,531

pages and that the DOC had approximately 350,000 additional pages to review.

IV. HEARING

On September 8, the superior court held a hearing on two issues: (1) whether the DOC

initially responded to HPNW’s request as required by former RCW 42.56.520, and (2) whether

the DOC was required to provide a reasonable estimate of the time it would need to fully respond

to the request in order to have complied with its obligation to provide a reasonable estimate of the

time required to respond within the meaning of former RCW 42.56.550 (2011).

The superior court ruled that the DOC’s initial response did not comply with former RCW

42.56.520(3) because it did not provide HPNW with an estimated date on which the agency would

begin producing records. The court entered the following declaratory judgment:

The Court DECLARES that [former] RCW 42.56.520(3), as construed by the Court of Appeals in Hobbs v. State, 183 Wn. App. 925, 335 P.3d 1004

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