Marcel Dubois v. Office of the Attorney General

2018 ME 67
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 8, 2018
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2018 ME 67 (Marcel Dubois v. Office of the Attorney General) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marcel Dubois v. Office of the Attorney General, 2018 ME 67 (Me. 2018).

Opinion

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT Reporter of Decisions Decision: 2018 ME 67 Docket: Yor-17-191 Submitted On Briefs: October 24, 2017 Decided: May 8, 2018

Panel: SAUFLEY, C.J., and MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, HJELM, and HUMPHREY, JJ.

MARCEL DUBOIS et al.

v.

OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL et al.

HJELM, J.

[¶1] In an order entered in April of 2017, the Superior Court (York

County, O’Neil, J.) affirmed a decision of the Maine Office of the Attorney

General denying a request made by Dubois Livestock, Inc., pursuant to the

Freedom of Access Act, 1 M.R.S. §§ 400-414 (2017), for drafts of a letter sent in

January of 2016 by the Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation and

Forestry (DACF) to Dubois Livestock. In the same order, the court determined

that the Office of the Attorney General did not have just and proper cause to

deny Dubois Livestock’s FOAA request for a series of emails preparatory to a

meeting held among agents of several state agencies in connection with

enforcement efforts against Dubois Livestock. 2

[¶2] Two individuals associated with Dubois Livestock—Marcel Dubois,

and Sol Fedder, who submitted the FOAA request on behalf of Dubois

Livestock—appeal the first aspect of the court’s order, which we affirm because

the drafts of the January 2016 letter constitute privileged work product

material not subject to FOAA disclosure. The Office of the Attorney General and

Assistant Attorneys General Emily K. Green and Scott Boak (collectively, OAG)

cross-appeal from the latter part of the order, which we vacate because the

emails regarding the meeting are also protected as work product.

I. BACKGROUND

[¶3] The following facts are drawn from the court’s findings, which are

supported by the record, and from assertions contained in OAG’s filings that

Dubois and Fedder have not disputed.1 See Dubois v. Dep’t of Envtl. Prot.,

2017 ME 224, ¶ 3, 174 A.3d 314.

1 As is discussed in the text, OAG filed affidavits pursuant to the court’s order to support its

position. Dubois and Fedder assert that the affidavits submitted by OAG are “incompetent” because the information contained in them is not based on personal knowledge. Dubois and Fedder have not developed that argument on appeal, however, and so it is waived. See Laqualia v. Laqualia, 2011 ME 114, ¶ 34, 30 A.3d 838. Further, Dubois and Fedder challenged only the process by which the information contained in the affidavits was presented to the court, so the information itself is undisputed. Finally, even if Dubois and Fedder are correct that the affidavits must be based on personal knowledge, the affidavits would be proper because their contents make clear that they are based on personal knowledge. 3

[¶4] In May of 2015, DACF and the Maine Department of Environmental

Protection began to receive and investigate numerous odor complaints relating

to Dubois Livestock’s business operations, which include producing compost.

Because the complaints generated both agricultural and environmental

concerns, DACF and DEP conducted a coordinated investigation into these

complaints. During that effort, DEP and DACF were represented by assistant

attorneys general. On May 8, 2015, Michael Clark, a DEP project manager

whose responsibilities encompass regulation of Dubois Livestock’s compost

operations, requested information from Dubois Livestock about the material

spread on its fields. Three days later, Dubois Livestock notified Clark that it

intended to file a complaint against DEP for criminal trespass based on an entry

by state officials onto the farm’s premises. After receiving this letter, Clark met

with the assistant attorney general who represented DEP to discuss obtaining

an administrative inspection warrant to enter Dubois Livestock’s fields and

facilities. DEP began drafting an application for the warrant shortly after this

meeting. On November 20, 2015, DEP filed an enforcement action against

Dubois Livestock.

[¶5] As for DACF, on October 16, 2015, DACF Agricultural Compliance

Officer Matt Randall sent an email to Dubois Livestock also requesting 4

information about the materials spread on its fields. In response, Dubois

Livestock notified DACF that it would not be “coerced or bullied into

answering” the agency’s questions about the farming operations. At that point,

DACF began to consider bringing its own action against Dubois Livestock to

enforce agriculture laws based both on the underlying complaints and on

Dubois Livestock’s refusal to cooperate with the State’s investigation. During

his investigation, Randall became aware that Dubois had threatened to bring a

criminal trespass action against DEP. In January of 2016, Randall, on behalf of

DACF, sent a letter to the directors and managers of the various Dubois

Livestock entities explaining that legal protections against nuisance complaints

were not available to the farms unless they cooperated with DACF’s

investigation. It appears from OAG’s briefs filed with the trial court and on this

appeal that the January 2016 letter was the final product of the drafts that

Dubois and Fedder seek to obtain in this action.

[¶6] On April 27, 2016, OAG received a FOAA request from Sol Fedder as

representative of Dubois Livestock. See 1 M.R.S. § 408-A. The request sought

drafts of the January 2016 letter that Randall sent to Dubois Livestock and

documents pertaining to a meeting of DEP, DACF, and OAG employees held on 5

December 4, 2015.2 OAG denied the FOAA request in its entirety, see id.

§ 408-A(4), asserting that the records were prepared in anticipation of

litigation and were therefore protected as work product not subject to FOAA

disclosure, see id. § 402(3)(b).

[¶7] Dubois and Fedder challenged OAG’s denial of the FOAA request in

an action filed in the Superior Court.3 See 1 M.R.S. § 409. On motion filed by

OAG, the court issued a scheduling order directing OAG to submit the contested

documents under seal for the court’s in camera review and to file with the court,

with a copy to Dubois and Fedder, an exceptions log identifying the documents

and the reasons they were withheld. The scheduling order also permitted OAG

2 Apparently, Dubois learned of the December 4, 2015, meeting from documents inadvertently

disclosed by DACF to Dubois Livestock pursuant to a separate FOAA request. In its April 29 letter, OAG notified Dubois Livestock that the inadvertently disclosed documents were privileged work product and requested that it “return or discard all copies.” 3 Although Dubois and Fedder styled their complaint in part as an appeal from agency action filed

pursuant to Maine Rule of Civil Procedure 80B (which, because the challenge is to a decision of a state agency, would be governed by Rule 80C), that Rule does not govern this action. See M.R. Civ. P. 80B, 80C; 1 M.R.S. § 409 (2017). As presently constituted, 1 M.R.S. § 409(1) creates a procedure for a party aggrieved by the denial of a FOAA request to file an “appeal” in the Superior Court. See id. That statute, however, authorizes the court to take testimony and other evidence as the court deems necessary in order to resolve any disputed facts and adjudicate whether the denial was proper. See id.; Dubois v. Dep’t of Envtl. Prot., 2017 ME 224, ¶ 10, 174 A.3d 314.

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