Kilduff v. San Juan County

CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 2019
Docket95937-4
StatusPublished

This text of Kilduff v. San Juan County (Kilduff v. San Juan County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kilduff v. San Juan County, (Wash. 2019).

Opinion

/ yrraEv IN CLERKS OFFICE X This opinion was filed for record 8ISHSMS COURT.STME OF VmSHSieTON

1 DATg ^ ^ 2Q19! Susan L. Carlson CHIEF JUSnCE Supreme Court Clerk

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

EDWARD KILDUFF, No. 95937-4 Appellant,

EN BANC

SAN JUAN COUNTY,a political subdivision of the State of Washington, and JAMIE STEPHENS,in his capacity as San Juan County Council Member and Public Records Officer, Filed: DEC 1 2 2019 Respondents.

YU, J. —The Public Records Act(PRA), ch. 42.56 RCW,declares that the

people "do not yield their sovereignty to the agencies that serve them" or "give

their public servants the right to decide what is good for the people to know and

what is not good for them to know." RCW 42.56.030. Despite the burden this

places on local governments, nothing in the PRA gives local governments the right

to create another layer of administrative review or to require administrative

exhaustion before the public may seek judicial review. KilduffV. San Juan County, No. 95937-4

Edward Kilduff sued San Juan County for alleged violations of the PRA. In

the same complaint, he brought a quo warranto' action against county council

member Jamie Stephens, who also served as the county's public records officer,

believing the offices to be incompatible. The trial court dismissed Kilduffs PRA

claim on the basis that he failed to exhaust an internal administrative review

procedure mandated by San Juan County Code(SJCC)2.108.130. Finding

Kilduffs quo warranto action to be frivolous, the court dismissed the claim and

sanctioned Kilduff and his attorneys pursuant to CR 11 and RCW 4.84.185.

Kilduff appealed directly to this court. He challenges the validity of SJCC

2.108.130, the trial court's dismissal of his PRA claim, and the sanctions award.

We reverse the trial court's dismissal of Kilduff s PRA claim and hold that

public records requesters are not required to exhaust administrative remedies

before filing a PRA lawsuit; therefore, SJCC 2.108.130 is invalid. We further hold

that although Kilduff lacked standing to bring the ouster claim, the trial court

abused its discretion when it imposed fees and sanctions pursuant to CR 11 and

RCW 4.84.185. Finally, we remand the question of attorney fees to the trial court.

We therefore reverse in part, affirm in part, and remand to the trial court.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

' The terms "quo warranto" and "ouster" are used interchangeably throughout this opinion. KilduffV. San Juan County, No. 95937-4

A. PRA claim

On May 20, 2015, Kilduff filed a two-part PRA request stemming from a

wetlands classification dispute and subsequent investigation into improper

government action (IGA). He requested '"all documents, correspondence, memos,

statements, reports, and other contents of the [San Juan County Department of

Community Development] code enforcement file'" and "'all documents, memos,

statements, reports, con^espondence and other records associated with the

investigation of[IGA], related to the above referenced code enforcement file.'"

Clerk's Papers(CP)at 17. Public Records Clerk Sally Rogers acknowledged the

request and indicated a response would follow "within the next 5-10 business

days." Id.

On May 28, 2015, San Juan County Prosecuting Attorney Randall Gaylord

called Kilduff to discuss his records request. Gaylord had previously directed the

code enforcement officer to segregate the IGA file from the code enforcement file,

and he testified that during the May 28 phone call, Kilduff agreed to accept the

final redacted IGA report in lieu of his records request. Kilduff disputes that he

agreed to limit his request, and claims he never received anything in writing

memorializing the alleged modification of his request. The trial court did not make

any finding as to whether Gaylord or Kilduff was more credible on this issue. KilduffV. San Juan County, No. 95937-4

Following the phone call, Rogers produced 45 pages of documents that were

responsive to the code enforcement file request and indicated that "other records

associated with the investigation of[IGA]" would arrive in another two weeks. Id.

at 19. On June 12, Rogers e-mailed Kilduff the redacted IGA report. Her e-mail

stated the following:

In final response to your public records request received on 5/20/15 for the remaining document,("for copies of all documents, memos, statements, reports, correspondence and other records associated with the investigation of improper governmental action...)" per Randy Gaylord he spoke to you by phone it was agreed that the County would proceed with providing a copy of the final report redacted.

This email response and attachment fulfills your public records request.

Id. at 67. Rogers did not include an exemption log or indicate that any additional

responsive records existed but were withheld.

On June 1, 2016, Kilduff sued San Juan County, alleging that it violated the

PRA by failing to conduct a reasonable search for responsive records and silently

withholding records without an exemption. The county denied the allegations and

raised the affirmative defense that Kilduff failed to exhaust administrative

remedies as required by SJCC 2.108.130 and asserted that Kilduff never received a

final decision concerning his records request.

SJCC 2.108.130(C) provides in relevant part that "[ajdministrative remedies

shall not be considered exhausted until the prosecuting attorney has made a written KilduffV. San Juan County, No. 95937-4

decision, or until the close of the second business day following receipt of the

written request for [the prosecuting attorney's] review of the action of the public

records officer, whichever occurs first." It further provides,"No lawsuit to review

the action taken, compel the production of a public record, or impose a penalty or

attorney fees shall be brought before the administrative remedies set out in this

section have been exhausted by the party seeking the record." SJCC 2.108.130(D).

Between February and November 2017, the trial court held an evidentiary

hearing on Kilduffs PRA claims. In its final order, the court found that San Juan

County never issued a final decision on Kilduffs request, and therefore the court

had no final decision to review. Accordingly, the court dismissed Kilduffs PRA

claims with prejudice.

B. Quo warranto claim and sanctions

In the same complaint as his PRA claim, Kilduff brought an ouster action

against Stephens, who served as both a county council member and the county

public records officer. Kilduff asserted that the offices were incompatible because

the public records officer is appointed by the county manager, while the county

manager is subservient to the county council. His prayer for relief requested that

the court order Stephens to vacate his county council seat.

In response, Stephens moved to be dismissed from the suit, asserting that

Kilduff did not have standing to bring a quo warranto claim. He also argued that KilduffV.

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