Jeffrey Mckee, V Wa Dept Of Corr

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 30, 2013
Docket41682-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jeffrey Mckee, V Wa Dept Of Corr (Jeffrey Mckee, V Wa Dept Of Corr) 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
Jeffrey Mckee, V Wa Dept Of Corr, (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

C Cli. ;0 Q la LE ALS DIVISILM IT 2013 APP 30 AFI p: jr.

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF W

DIVISION II

JEFFREY R.MCKEE, ffO

Appellant,

V.

WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT OF UNPUBLISHED OPINION CORRECTIONS,

PENOYAR J. — In November 2006, Jeffrey McKee requested public records from the

Washington State Department of Corrections (Department) regarding a pod restriction placed on

him that month at a private correctional center in Arizona under contract with the Department.

In December, the Department informed McKee that it did not find any records responsive to his

request at the Department and that he should contact appropriate staff at the correctional center in Arizona about any such records it might have. In August 2009, McKee, through a separate

request, obtained an e mail that Department staff had generated in December 2006 about his -

request; the e mail mentioned two records that apparently were at the correctional center: a - kite " McKee had written to the center about his pod restriction and a log book.

In June 2010, McKee sued the Department for violations of the Public Records Act

PRA) . The trial court found that the PRA's one year statute of limitations applied and -

dismissed the case as untimely.

1 A" kite"is a written correspondence, usually from an inmate to prison personnel requesting some kind of service.

2 Ch.42. 6 RCW. 5 41682 4 II - -

McKee appeals, arguing that the trial court erred by (1)dismissing his case as time-

barred, ( )finding that the PRA's statute of limitations applied and began running when the 2

Department sent him its last response, and (3)finding sub silentio that McKee knew or should

have known that the Department had not disclosed or produced all requested records.

The only records that McKee alleges he should have received but did not are the kite and

log book. But McKee, having written the kite himself in 2006, knew back then that he had not

received all records that might have been responsive to his request; he cannot wait for over three

years to make this claim. His action is therefore time -barred under any of the statutes of

limitations proposed in this case. Without determining the applicable statute of limitations, we affirm.

FACTS

1. BACKGROUND

Jeffrey McKee, a Department prisoner, was housed at the Corrections Corporation of

America Florence Corrections Center ( CCA/ CC) in Arizona during November 2006. F

CCA/ CC is a private facility under contract to house Department prisoners. On November 21, F

McKee was put on a pod restriction.

On November 24, 2006, McKee wrote to' Lyn Francis, the Department's Public

Disclosure Coordinator, requesting " ny and all documents related to the pod restriction that was a

placed on me here at FCC CCA on November 21, 2006." Clerk's Papers (CP)at 85. McKee /

repeated and expanded on this request on November 29 when he handed a letter to James C.

Miller,the Department's On Site Contract Monitor at CCA/ CC. In the letter, McKee asked for - F

a]y and all documents to include e mail, notes, phone records, infraction reports wright ups n - / -

2 41682 4 II - -

sic], books that relate to the pod restriction that was placed on myself on November 21; log

2006."CP at 91.

On December 18, 2006, Francis received an e mail from Miller that discussed McKee's -

records request. In his email, Miller wrote: Good afternoon Lyn [Francis], our previous conversation relating to offender per McKee's request[,] State of Washington did not generate any documents the related to Offender McKee being on pod restriction. Also, there is no know[n] infraction related to this incident. Corrections Corporation of America/ lorence F Correction Center ( CCA FCC) has answered a kite from Offender McKee / addressing this issue as well as a log book that talks about pod restriction but once again these are all documents generated by CCA/ CC.F

CP at 100.

On December 26, 2006, following some other correspondence, Francis wrote McKee

final response to his records request regarding his pod restriction. Francis with a public

informed McKee that there was no known infraction related to McKee's placement in pod

restriction, that the Department did not possess any documents responsive to his request, and that

McKee needed to contact CCA/ CC for any documents related to his request. F As of December 26, 2006, the Department did not have the records McKee sought. The

kite, the log book, and any other records regarding his pod restriction were all in Arizona at

CCA FCC.' /

3 McKee obtained this e mail in August 2009 through a separate records request. - 4 Notwithstanding Francis's final response, McKee alleged in his complaint that he "made several more requests to the Department over the next year [2007] requesting where the log book, infraction and other records related to the pod restriction were, or why they were not retained."CP at 73.

We do not address whether the Department had an obligation to obtain these records from CCA/ CC in responding to McKee's request. F 3 41682 4 II - -

II. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

McKee filed a complaint against the Department in Thurston County Superior Court on

June 28, 2010. McKee claimed that the Department had withheld at least his kite and a log book

and, thus, had violated the PRA with respect to his request for records on his pod restriction. As

a result, McKee claimed he was entitled to the PRA's statutory penalties.

On August 23, 2010, the Department filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that the PRA's

one year statute of limitations barred McKee's claims. On November 3, 2010, McKee filed his -

response to the Department's motion along with a supporting declaration and several exhibits.

The next day the Department filed its reply. The trial court heard oral argument the following

day.

At the hearing, the Department argued for application of the PRA's one year statute of -

limitations, or, in the alternative, the two year catch all statute of limitations at RCW 4.6. - - 130. 1

McKee countered that his case did not fit within the language of the one year statute Of -

limitations. The trial court found that the PRA's one year statute of limitations applies "when -

there is a denial of any records" and that the statute started running when the Department told

McKee it didn't have any records.?Report of Proceedings at 15. The court then signed an order

dismissing the case.

McKee timely appeals.

6 RCW 42. 6. out this statute of limitations: " ctions under this section must be filed 550( 6 sets 5 ) A within one year of the agency's claim of exemption or the last production of a record on a partial or installment basis."

7 The trial court appears to have confused the day of Miller's e mail to Francis (December 18, - 2006) with the day Francis wrote McKee that the Department did not have any responsive records (December 26, 2006) when it identified December 18, 2006, as the day the statute starting running. 4 41682 4 II - -

ANALYSIS

Though the Department moved for judgment on the pleadings under CR 12( ), trial c the

court considered matters outside the pleadings, treating the matter more like a summary

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Related

McKee v. Department of Corrections
160 Wash. App. 437 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2011)
Pasado's Safe Haven v. State
162 Wash. App. 746 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2011)

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