Navajo Nation Department of Child Support Enforcement v. Navajo Nation Labor Commission

6 Am. Tribal Law 801
CourtNavajo Nation Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 24, 2006
DocketNo. SC-CV-22-06
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 Am. Tribal Law 801 (Navajo Nation Department of Child Support Enforcement v. Navajo Nation Labor Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Navajo Nation Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Navajo Nation Department of Child Support Enforcement v. Navajo Nation Labor Commission, 6 Am. Tribal Law 801 (navajo 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

This case concerns whether the Navajo Nation Labor Commission (Commission) is barred by a specific provision in the Navajo Nation Privacy Act (Act) from allowing public access to its records and to its hearings. The Court holds the Commission is not barred by that provision, and therefore denies the petition for a writ of prohibition.

I

The relevant facts are as follows. Real Party in Interest Evangeline Logg (Logg); filed a complaint with the Commission ab leging her employer, Navajo Nation De-: partment of Child Support Enforcement (CSE) violated the Navajo Preference in Employment Act (NPEA). During the Commission proceedings, CSE filed a mo-: tion to bar the press from evidentiary hearings in the case, based on several artfe des published in the Gallup Independent that revealed information from proposed exhibits and other documents filed by the [803]*803parties.1 The Commission denied the motion. CSE filed a motion to vacate the denial due to the lack of a quorum, which the Commission granted. However, in a subsequent hearing (this time apparently with a quorum present), the Commission again refused to bar the press by denying a motion to reconsider filed by CSE. CSE then filed a petition for a writ of prohibition.

Based on the petition, this Court issued an alternative writ of prohibition. The alternative writ prohibited the Commission from disclosing any documents or allowing the public access to any hearings pending review of the case. The Court also invited the Commission and Logg to respond to the petition. Neither filed responses, and the Court therefore considers the petition based solely on CSE’s petition and accompanying exhibits.

II

The issue in this case is whether the Commission is barred by Section 84(B)(11) of the Navajo Nation Privacy Act from disclosing documents and allowing access to hearings.

III

The meaning of the Act is a matter of first impression for this Court.2 The Act attempts to balance two competing values: (1) the importance of a transparent Navajo government that educates the people on its activities through unfettered access to government information, and (2) the proteetion of the privacy of individuals affected by the government. See 2 N.N.C. § 82 (2005). To accommodate these potentially conflicting values, the Act sets up procedures by which “the general public has a means to access records and information relating to the operation of the Navajo Nation while preserving the privacy interests of individuals and entities.” Id,

The Act attempts to regulate access to “records,” defined as certain documents and other physical objects held by government offices. See 2 N.N.C. § 83(E) (2005). It divides records into two main categories. The first category is “records that must be disclosed,” or “public records,” and the second is reeords that cannot be disclosed, or “protected records.” 2 N.N.C. §§ 84; 85 (2005). The clarity of the Act’s language ends at this point. The Act further divides “public records” into two apparently separate categories: records that are public “except to the extent they contain information expressly permitted to be treated as protected as provided for in 2 N.N.C. § 85,” and records that are “normally public, but to the extent that a record is expressly exempt from disclosure, access may be restricted under 2 N.N.C. § 85.” 2 N.N.C. §§ 84(A), (B) (2005).3

CSE relies on one provision in the Act to argue that the Commission must bar public access to documents and hearings in this ease. Section 84(B)(il) identifies certain records that are “normally public”: “[rjecords which would disclose informa[804]*804tion relating to formal charges or .-disciplinary action against a past or present governmental entity employee if: (a) The disciplinary action has been completed and all time periods for administrative appeal have expired; and (b) The formal charges were sustained.” 2 N.N.C. § 84(B)(11) (2005). CSE asserts that the Section establishes a three-part test and that any records that do not fit that test are not “normally public” records, but are automatically “protected records,” even if they are not listed in Section 85. As the Commission proceeding concerns an employment dispute, CSE contends, without explaining why, that the Commission’s records on this case relate to a “disciplinary action.” As the Commission has not issued a final judgment, CSE contends the action has not been completed. Finally, CSE contends that the Commission has not yet “sustained” the charges against Logg. CSE also contends that, because the records in this case are allegedly barred from public access, the hearings also must necessarily be closed to the public. The Court considers the access to Commission hearings and access to Commission records separately.

IV

The Court holds that the Act does not regulate access to Commission proceedings, regardless of whether Commission records are covered by the Section. As noted above, the Act regulates access to records, that is, physical objects held by the government. It nowhere purports to regulate whether hearings are open or closed to the public. Therefore, CSE’s claim that the Act requires closure of Commission proceedings fails. The Commission has discretion to adopt rules to govern its own proceedings, 15 N.N.C. § 616 (2005), and therefore may decide whether to close a particular hearing due to the revelation of potentially sensitive information through witness testimony. The Act does not bar that discretion. If the Navajo Nation Council wishes to control access to Commission hearings, It may do so by amending the Act or the Navajo Preference in Employment Act or by passing separate legislation. Cf. 9 N.N.C. §§ 1115(B), (C) (2005) (barring general public from certain Children’s Code hearings and barring and punishing disclosure of information from such hearings).

V

The Court also holds the Section does not bar access to Commission records. The Court approaches the issue in two ways. First, the Court holds that the list of “public records” in Section 84 of the Act cannot be used to bar access to other records by negative implication. Second, the Court holds that even if Section 84 barred other records by negative implication, Section 84(B)(11) does not apply to Commission records, but only to records concerning Navajo governmental employee grievances. Access to Commission records therefore are not covered by the Section at all, and the Section’s negative implication therefore does not bar access to them.

A

Section 84(B)(11) (Section) is unlike any of the other categories of “public records.” It allows access to government employee records only after disciplinary action is complete and only when the government employer prevails. The result is, despite the Act’s purported balance between government transparency and privacy, that if a government employer correctly disciplined an employee, personal privacy is apparently unimportant, as those records are freely accessible. On the other hand, if the government employer illegally disciplined an employee, an employee’s right to [805]*805privacy and/ or at the protection of government agencies from public scrutiny, disallows access. CSE provides no explanation and Court sees no clear rationale for such disparate treatment of government employees.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Am. Tribal Law 801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/navajo-nation-department-of-child-support-enforcement-v-navajo-nation-navajo-2006.