Joel Zellmer v. King County

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 16, 2018
Docket76825-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of Joel Zellmer v. King County (Joel Zellmer v. King 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
Joel Zellmer v. King County, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

FILED COURT OF APPEALS DIV I 1. .f% STATE OF WASHINGTON t1Tr:

1018 JUL 16 AK 9:20

THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION ONE JOEL ZELLMER, ) ) No. 76825-5-1 Appellant ) ) DIVISION ONE v. ) ) KING COUNTY, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Respondent. ) ) FILED: July 16, 2018

SPEARMAN, J. —Washington's Public Records Act(PRA)chapter 42.56 RCW requires agencies to respond to a public records request by conducting a reasonable

search and providing all identifiable records. Prison inmate Joel Zellmer submitted two

public records requests to the King County Prosecuting Attorney's Office(KCPAO)

asking for photographs of the inside of his home that were taken on two specific dates.

Zellmer argued that King County violated the PRA and acted in bad faith by failing to

produce 235 digital photographs of the inside of his home until after his lawsuit was

filed. The trial court dismissed the lawsuit. Because the KCPAO used an unreliable

method for determining the date on which the photographs were taken, we conclude

that the search was inadequate. However, because the undisputed record establishes

that the agency did not act in bad faith, we conclude that Zellmer is not entitled to an

award of penalties and affirm the dismissal. No. 76825-5-1/2

FACTS

Zellmer has been an inmate at the Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla

since 2010. The KCPAO's public records unit is comprised of a public records officer,

Kristie Johnson, a public records paralegal, Myralynn Nitura, and a public records

specialist, Meghan Moore. The KCPAO stores 59 banker's boxes of records relating to

Zellmer's criminal case. Of these, 54 boxes are kept in the King County Courthouse and

another five boxes are kept in the Appellate Unit in the King County Administration

Building. Since his conviction, Zellmer has made 24 separate public records requests to

the KCPAO.

On September 29, 2015, Zellmer submitted a public records request to the

KCPAO (2015 Request) specifically asking for lap photographs taken of the inside of

the home that was done on December 6, 2005. This group of photo's [sic] were taken

just prior to a full search of this home (Pre-search photographs). The photographs

would be of all rooms in the home as well all of the other living areas within the inside of

this home." Clerk's Papers(CP)at 59. On October 6, 2015, the KCPAO sent a letter to

Zellmer acknowledging the request and stating that it would provide an update by

November 12, 2015. On November 12, 2015, the KCPAO sent a letter to Zellmer

informing him that more time was needed to complete his request due to the number of

boxes to be searched, and providing a new response deadline of December 10, 2015.

Nitura began by searching 53 of the 54 banker's boxes kept in the King County

Courthouse for photographs taken on December 6, 2005.1 Nitura did not search the

Nitura did not search the remaining box because it was labeled "DO NOT USE! ARRANGE FOR PICK UP BY NATIONAL MERIT AGENT" and "Contains a Disputed File Re: Zellmer v. Zellmer Wrongful Death Inv. National Merit Ins. DO NOT REVIEW w/o checking with Brenneman." CP at 65-66. On December 6, 2016, Moore reviewed the contents of the box and determined that it contained no photographs responsive to Zellmer's requests.

2 No. 76825-5-1/3

boxes stored in the KCPAO Appellate Unit because, based on her previous experience

with Zellmer's numerous public records requests, she knew that they did not contain

photographs of the inside of the home. Her search produced a number of labeled disks

containing digital photographs.2 She checked the face of each disk for a content

notation indicating that the disks contained photographs of the inside of the home, or a

date notation of December 6, 2015. If the label met either of these criteria, or the label

was not clear, then Nitura reviewed the contents of the disk on her computer.3

The digital photographs were stored on the disks in .JPG (image file) format. The

data fields that appeared on the computer screen included a list of the digital

photographs by file name,file type, file size, and "Date modified." CP at 42-44. If a

photograph appeared to be of the inside of the home, and the "Date modified" data field

showed December 6, 2005, she identified it as responsive to the request. This yielded a

total of 31 digital photographs, which Nitura placed in a shared electronic folder. She

inadvertently placed four additional photographs dated December 7, 2005 in the same

folder, for a total of 35 photographs. On December 10, 2015, the KCPAO sent a letter to

Zellmer indicating that it had identified 34 public records responsive to his request.4

Zellmer paid the fee, and on January 19, 2015, the KCPAO sent him 35 digital

photographs along with a close-out letter stating that the search was complete.

2 Nitura also found printed photographs that appeared to be of the inside of the home, but none of them bore a date label, and KCPAO did not provide them.

3 Nitura was unable to open three disks of the disks labeled December 6, 2005. She gave these disks to Johnson, who opened them and found a video but no photographs.

4According to KCPAO, this was a scrivener's error. The installment actually consisted of 35 photographs.

3 No. 76825-5-1/4

On February 5, 2016, the KCPAO received another public records request from

Zellmer(2016 Request) asking for "1. All photographs taken on December 7, 2005 of

the inside of the home that was searched. 2. Please include anything that was not

produced in the photograph request previously for December 6, 2005. The photographs

would be of all rooms in the house and any property within the home." CP at 38. On

February 12, 2016, the KCPAO sent Zellmer a letter acknowledging receipt of the

request and stating that it would provide an update by approximately March 21, 2016.

Given that the 2016 request asked for anything not produced in response to the

2015 request, the KCPAO realized that there was a possibility that responsive records

had been missed. Accordingly, Nitura again searched the disks for photographs taken

on December 6, 2005, but she did not find anything that had not already been provided

to Zellmer. Nitura then reviewed the faces of the discs for a notation that the contents of

the discs were from December 7, 2005, or that the photographs were of the inside of the

home, or were unclear about the contents. Nitura provided Johnson a box of disks to

review. Johnson also reviewed the face of the disks for a notation indicating that the

disks related to December 6 or 7, 2005, or that they contained photographs of the inside

of the home. She found one disk containing 24 photographs with a "Date modified" of

December 7, 2005 and that were of the inside of the home. She did not find any

photographs with a "Date modified" of December 6, 2005 that had not already been

provided to Zellmer.

On March 21, 2005, the KCPAO sent Zellmer a letter indicating that it had

identified 24 records responsive to his request for photographs of the inside of the home

taken on December 7, 2005, and that it found nothing responsive to his request for

additional photographs taken on December 6, 2005. Zellmer paid the fee, and the

4 No. 76825-5-1/5

KCPAO provided the 24 photographs, along with a close out letter stating that the

search was complete.

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