Oklahoma Publishing Co. v. City of Moore

1984 OK 40, 682 P.2d 754, 10 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2253, 1984 Okla. LEXIS 138
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 19, 1984
DocketNo. 59813
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1984 OK 40 (Oklahoma Publishing Co. v. City of Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oklahoma Publishing Co. v. City of Moore, 1984 OK 40, 682 P.2d 754, 10 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2253, 1984 Okla. LEXIS 138 (Okla. 1984).

Opinion

DOOLIN, Justice:

Appellants, Oklahoma Publishing Company and Maureen Shurr (OPUBCO), seek access to arrest records and jail records of the City of Moore Police Department. OPUBCO filed for writ of mandamus in the district court to compel the City of Moore and its police chief Richard Mills (Moore) to make available the arrest and jailing records of the candidate. The district court issued an alternative writ, directing Moore to open the records or to show cause why the information should not be made available.

After hearing, the Court took the matter under advisement. OPUBCO then took discovery and amended its petition to seek a declaratory judgment that the record of a person’s arrests and incarcerations is a public record, and an injunction requiring Moore to open such records for public inspection.

The Court heard evidence, dissolved the alternative writ, and denied declaratory and injunctive relief. OPUBCO moved for new trial. On denial of the motion OPUB-CO appeals.

The trial court ruled that the arrest and incarceration records were not maintained,1 were not required to be maintained, were not public records if maintained, and could not be disclosed without defeating the lawful purpose of keeping the records. The Court also found that Moore has reason to fear liability for disclosing who had been arrested and jailed in Moore.

OPUBCO contends that it has a right to know who has been arrested and jailed in Moore. OPUBCO relies on the City of Moore Charter, the Statutes of Oklahoma, and the Constitution of the United States.

The City of Moore Charter, § 9-3, provides:

“All records and accounts of every office, department or agency of the city government, except records and documents the disclosure of which would tend to defeat the lawful purpose of which they are intended to accomplish, shall be open to public inspection.”

It is apparent that the Moore Police Department is a department of Moore’s City government. The section applies to “every office, department, or agency of the city government,” so the section applies to the police department. The section, with one exception, prescribes that all records of a city department shall be open to public inspection. The issue, then, is whether the disclosure of records indicating who has been arrested and who has been jailed would tend to defeat the lawful purpose which arrest records and incarceration records are intended to accomplish.

OPUBCO deposed Police Chief Mills, who testified that the index card's on which arrest records were kept (prior to the recent computerization of arrest records) were utilized to give the Moore Police, and other law enforcement agencies, a quick check on a person’s prior arrest history. When asked how disclosure of arrest records would defeat the purpose of keeping the records, Mills said that a person’s privacy might be invaded.

OPUBCO properly argues that Mills’ response is a non sequitur. The purpose of [756]*756keeping arrest records cannot be to preserve the arrestee’s privacy. Disclosure of arrest records cannot defeat the stated purpose of making arrest histories accessible to law enforcement agencies.

Moore’s responses to OPUBCO’s arguments are completely irrelevant. Moore asserts that OPUBCO has asked for every record kept by the Moore police department, then argues that some of these records could be improperly used. OPUB-CO has asked to inspect records of (1) arrest and (2) incarceration. OPUBCO claims the right to know who has been (1) arrested and (2) jailed by the Moore Police Department.

Moore, however, argues that “if plaintiffs are entitled under the law to these records, they must also be entitled to every other record maintained by the police department.”

“Very good reasons for the confidentiality of records of police have been set forth by defendants. Ongoing undercover investigations, so-called ‘sting’ operations, narcotics investigations, the use of confidential informants or ‘snitches,’ are common and effective police practices in wide-spread use at the local, state and federal level.
Such police methods necessarily generate records full of names and whereabouts of police informants, and witnesses, victims, and physical evidence.”2

Moore’s entire argument follows this line. Moore never once responds to OPUBCO’s demand to know who has been arrested and who has been jailed. OPUBCO has never asked for the names of informants, witnesses or victims, or for the location of evidence.

Ruling on the merits, we hold that the public is entitled to inspect Moore’s police départment record of arrests and incarcerations. We have no occasion, of course, to rule on the question of whether the public can inspect records describing investigations or naming witnesses, informants, victims or juvenile offenders.

Having ruled on the question raised by the municipal charter however, the state law question is necessarily raised. If state law prohibits public inspection of these records, the Moore Charter is correspondingly superceded. If state law requires these records to be open to public inspection, the Moore Charter is merely redundant. If state law is silent on this subject, our holding under the Moore Charter is dispositive. See City of Pryor Creek v. Public Service Co., 536 P.2d 343 (Okl.1975) (general laws of statewide concern control over conflicting city charter provisions); Moore Funeral Homes, Inc. v. City of Tulsa, 552 P.2d 702 (Okl.1976) (City charter provisions supercede general laws of the state in matters purely of municipal concern); Lee v. Norick, 447 P.2d 1015 (Okl.1968) (same); Moore v. City of Tulsa, 561 P.2d 961 (Okl.1977) (municipal regulation conflicts with state law only if each contains inconsistent and irreconcilable provision — if either is silent where the other speaks there is no conflict).

Oklahoma’s Open Records Act, 51 O.S. 1981, § 24, expressly includes political sub-divisions within its scope. The public nature of municipal documents is clearly a matter of general, as opposed to purely municipal, concern. The Moore Charter provision cannot supercede state law in this case, although the charter provision will control unless there is an irreconcilable conflict with state law.

We note at the outset that no law has been found by us or cited by the parties or by the numerous amici which would preclude Moore from making its arrest and incarceration registers open to public inspection. Therefore, the state law does not irreconcilably conflict with the Moore Charter so as to preclude Moore from permitting the public to find out who the Moore Police Department has arrested or hailed.

The only question to be decided, therefore, is whether state law requires Moore to reveal who has been arrested and jailed by its police department regardless of its own charter provision.

[757]*757The Open Records Act, 51 O.S. 1981, § 24, provides:

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1984 OK 40, 682 P.2d 754, 10 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2253, 1984 Okla. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oklahoma-publishing-co-v-city-of-moore-okla-1984.