STATE OF LOUISIANA
COURT OF APPEAL
FIRST CIRCUIT
NUMBER 2019 CA 0364
PARISH OF ASCENSION
VERSUS
TALETA WESLEY
Judgment Rendered: DEC 12 2019
Appealed from the Twenty -Third Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of Ascension, Louisiana Docket Number 123,215
Honorable Katherine Stromberg, Judge Presiding
O' Neil J. Parenton, Jr. Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee, Gonzales, LA Parish of Ascension
Vercell Fiffie Counsel for Defendant/ Appellant, Edgard, LA Taleta Wesley
BEFORE: WHIPPLE, C. J., GUIDRY, AND CRAIN', JJ.
Justice William J. Crain is serving as judge ad hoc by special appointment of the Louisiana Supreme Court. WHIPPLE, C. J.
In this appeal, a citizen requesting certain public records challenges
the trial court' s judgment ordering the requestor to pay the custodian of
those public records a fee of $10, 000. 00 for the review and redaction of the
requested records. For the following reasons, we reverse the assessment.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On September 12, 2018, Taleta Wesley submitted a public records
request to the Parish of Ascension (" Parish"), requesting the following for
the two years prior to the request: the emails of Taleta Wesley ( herself),
Wanda Guillera, Mandy Daigle, Kristi Anderson, and Kenny Matassa; the
text messages of Kenny Matassa, Thomas Pearce, Donald Hysell, Kenneth
Dawson, and Kristi Anderson; the phone log of Kenny Matassa; and
PAF' s."' The following day, on September 13, 2018, Wesley submitted
two additional public records requests to the Parish. In the first September
13, 2018 request, she sought the following records for the two-year period
preceding the request: the emails of Thomas Pearce, Donald Hysell, Kenneth
Dawson and Kenny Matassa' s cell phone logs. In the second request that
day, Wesley requested any and all emails or " personal message systems"
that mentioned " Taleta, Talita, Taleda or any other variation of Taleta
Wesley' s name."
In response to the requests, the Parish filed a Petition for Declaratory
Judgment in the trial court below, naming Wesley as defendant and averring
that Wesley' s requests yielded a large number of emails and PAFs, each of
which would have to be reviewed to determine whether it was subject to
Testimony of record indicates that a " PAF" is a form utilized by the Parish whenever there is any adjustment to a personnel file.
P) exemption, exception, or redaction.' Thus, the Parish sought a declaratory
judgment setting a reasonable fee " to cover the expense of taxpayer dollars
expended to comply with [ Wesley' s] request" and further setting a
reasonable time period for the Parish to comply with the requests.
Thereafter, Wesley filed an " Exception of No Cause of Action, No
Right of Action, Motion to Dismiss with Incorporated Memorandum,
Answer to Petition for Declaratory Judgment with Reconventional
Demand." In the reconventional demand, in which she named the Parish
and Andria Dollar, the Parish' s custodian of public records, as defendants,
Wesley contended that the custodian of records for the Parish had
unreasonably and arbitrarily failed to respond to her requests. Thus, she
sought writs of mandamus ordering the Parish to comply with her public
records requests, as well as damages or penalties pursuant to La. R.S. 44: 35. 3
On December 7, 2018, the trial court conducted a hearing on the
Parish' s Petition for Declaratory Judgment and Wesley' s exceptions and
motion to dismiss. Thereafter, by order dated December 17, 2018, the court
denied Wesley' s exceptions of no cause of action and no right of action and
motion to dismiss and further granted the Parish' s Petition for Declaratory
Judgment, ordering Wesley to pay the Parish $ 10, 000. 00 for the costs
associated with redacting private information from the records she seeks."
2The Parish further averred in its petition that it was not the custodian of the text message records requested. However, it did not seek any declaratory judgment relief with regard to whether it was indeed the custodian of the requested text messages.
The issue of whether Wesley' s request for writ of mandamus in her reconventional demand was properly cumulated with the Parish' s declaratory judgment action does not appear to have been raised below and was not raised on appeal. Thus, the issue is not before us. Seeeg_nerally Bank of America, N.A. v. Erazo, 13- 153 ( La. App. stn Cir. 10/ 9/ 13), 128 So. 3d 383, 388.
3 From this judgment, Wesley now appeals, listing six assignments of
error.4
DISCUSSION
Through her second, third, and fifth assignments of error, Wesley
contends that the trial court erred: ( 1) in finding that the Parish had a right
to institute proceedings against her, where the Public Records Law does not
afford a public entity the right to bring a lawsuit to set costs for review of
requested records; ( 2) in finding that the request was burdensome; and ( 3) in
setting a $ 10, 000.00 fee for the review and redaction of the requested
records, thereby infringing upon her right to free and unlimited access to
public records.
The public' s right of access to public records is a fundamental right
guaranteed by the Louisiana Constitution and implemented by the Public
Records Law set forth in LSA-R.S. 44: 1 et secs. See Carolina Biological
Supply Company v. East Baton Rouge Parish School Board, 2015- 1080 ( La.
App. lst Cir. 8/ 31/ 16), 202 So. 3d 1121, 1125. Article XII, section 3 of the
Louisiana Constitution mandates that "[ n] o person shall be denied the right
to ... examine public documents, except in cases established by law." A
claim of annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expense
is not enough to overcome the public' s right of access to public records.
Stevens v. St. Tammany Parish Government, 2017- 0959 ( La. App. 1' Cir.
7/ 18/ 18), 264 So. 3d 456, 462, writ denied, 2018- 2062 ( La. 2/ 18/ 19), 265
So. 3d 773.
The custodian of the record shall present it to any person of the age of
4Where a district court renders a judgment on either the principal demand or incidental demand, when the two have been tried separately, the judgment constitutes a partial final judgment without need for a designation of finality. See LSA-C. C. P. art. 1915( A)(4).
E majority who so requests. LSA-R.S. 44: 32( A). While the record generally
must be made available immediately, the Public Records Law recognizes
that some reasonable delay may be necessary to compile, review, and, when
necessary, redact or withhold certain records that are not subject to
production. See LSA-R.S. 44: 32( B), 44: 33 & 44: 35( A); Stevens, 264 So. 3d
at 462. However, where such additional time is necessary for review of the
requested documents, the custodian, within five business days of the request,
must provide a written " estimate of the time reasonably necessary for
collection, segregation, redaction, examination, or review of a records
request." LSA-R.S. 44: 35( A); Stevens, 264 So. 3d at 462 ( quoting Roper v.
City of Baton Rouge/ Parish of East Baton Rouge, 2016- 1025, 2016- 1026,
2016- 1027, 2016- 1028, 2016- 1029, 2016- 1030 ( La. App. 1St Cir. 3/ 15/ 18),
244 So. 3d 4509 459- 460), writ denied, 2018- 0854 ( La. 9/ 28/ 18), 252 So. 3d
926.
With regard to any fee for such review, generally, no fee may be
charged. See LSA-R.S. 44: 32( C)( 3). Indeed, custodians of public records
are already compensated for performing their duties, including the duty of
responding to public records requests that ensure the public' s constitutional
right of access to such records. LSA -Const. art. XII, § 3; LSA-R.S.
44: 31( A) & 44: 32. However, LSA-R.S. 44: 32( C)( 3) also provides, in
pertinent part, that "[ n] o fee shall be charged for examination or review to
determine if a record is subject to disclosure, except as may be determined
by a court of competent jurisdiction." This court has interpreted LSA-R.S.
44: 32( C)( 3) as vesting the trial court with discretion to award a fee to the
custodian for the time and expense incurred to examine or review the
5 requested records to determine if they are subject to disclosure.' See Roper,
244 So. 3d at 471; see also Sewell v. Benoit, 2002- 1714 ( La. App. 4" Cir.
2/ 19/ 03), 841 So. 2d 24, 27, writ denied, 2003- 0817 ( La. 5/ 9/ 03), 843 So. 2d
Andria Dollar, the custodian of records for the Parish of Ascension,
was the only witness to testify at the hearing on the Parish' s petition.6
According to Dollar, a search of the Parish' s email server by the Parish' s
information technology director yielded over 185, 000 responsive emails, and
approximately 3, 400 PAFs responsive to Wesley' s three September 12 and
13, 2018 public records requests. Dollar explained that because the PAFs
contain personal information of Parish personnel such as social security
numbers, addresses, phone numbers, and possibly financial institution
information, she will have to review and possibly redact each PAF
individually.
She further testified that based on her past experience responding to
public records requests, she can review approximately fifty emails per hour,
depending on how many attachments there are to each email, to determine if
there is protected or privileged information that must be redacted. Dollar
estimated that given the number of responsive documents, and based on her
experience, review of the emails would take her approximately 3, 700 hours,
and review of the PAFS would probably take an additional ninety hours.
Dollar, whose hourly rate of pay is $ 26. 38, further testified that she also has
duties as a paralegal that she must accomplish during the time she would be
Because this court has previously held that a trial court has discretion to award a fee to a custodian for the time and expense incurred to examine or review the requested records, Wesley' s assertion in her first assignment of error that the trial court erred in relying on an Attorney General opinion in deciding to award such a fee is without merit.
6While the transcript of the hearing indicates that Ms. Dollar' s name is spelled Andrea," it is spelled " Andria" in the pleadings of record.
31 reviewing requested documents, and that if she spent over 3, 000 hours
reviewing these documents, someone else would have to perform her job
duties as a paralegal.
On cross- examination, however, Dollar conceded that about seventy-
five to eighty days had passed since Wesley requested these documents in
her September 12 and 13, 2018 public records requests, but that Dollar had
not yet begun to review any of the documents responsive to Wesley' s
requests. Rather, once the Parish' s IT personnel found the number of
responsive emails, the Parish filed this lawsuit. Dollar further acknowledged
that there had been two other suits in which the Parish sought to have a fee
set for the time spent by Dollar to review documents requested pursuant to
public records requests, and that in only one of those two cases did the
requestor ultimately receive the documents requested.
While LSA-R.S. 44: 32( C)( 3) has been interpreted as vesting the trial
court with discretion to award a fee to the custodian for the time and expense
incurred to examine or review the requested records to determine if they are
subject to disclosure, questions nonetheless arise as to when and under what
circumstances a custodian should request and a court, in its discretion,
should impose a fee for the review of requested records. Louisiana Revised
Statute 44: 32( C)( 3) is silent as to the circumstances under which such a fee
should be imposed. Some states allow for the imposition of a " reasonable"
fee for compilation, review, and possible redaction where the request is
voluminous or will require extensive use of personnel time to fulfill. See
Fla. Stat. § 119. 07( 4)( d); N.J. Stat. § 47: 1A -5( c). On the other hand,
7While Dollar claimed that in one of those suits by the Parish, where the public records request involved approximately 62,000 emails, a fee was set at around $ 6, 000. 00 for her review of the requested emails, the record before us reveals that the district court in the matter involving approximately 62, 000 emails actually set a fee of $1, 970. 00 for review and production of the records.
VA other states allow for all costs associated with compliance to be recovered.
See e. g. Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. 15. 234( 1); Or. Stat. § 192. 324( 4); and Tx.
Gov' t Code § 552. 261.
Because the Louisiana Public Records Law establishes, as the general
rule, that no fee shall be charged for review to determine if a requested
record is subject to disclosure, LSA-R.S. 44: 32( C)( 3), clearly a fee should be
imposed only where the public records request is extraordinary in some
manner. In that regard, the Louisiana Attorney General' s Office has
suggested that a custodian may wish to consider the appropriateness of
seeking a judicial determination to request that a fee be charged where
compilation of the records takes an extraordinary amount of time.' See La.
Atty. Gen. Op. No. 17- 0056, p. 6 ( 2018); and La. Atty Gen. Op. No. 14-
0163, p. 6 ( 2015).
Moreover, while, contrary to Wesley' s contention on appeal, the
Louisiana Public Records Law clearly contemplates the right of a public
body to bring a suit against a requestor, it does not expressly provide the
procedure through which a custodian should request that the trial court
assess a fee for such review or the time at which the custodian may
judicially pursue such a request. See LSA-R.S. 44: 32( C)( 3) and
44: 35( D)( 2). While the precise procedure for making a request for such a
judicial imposition of a fee for review is not set forth in the Louisiana Public
Records Law, as discussed above, the courts of Louisiana have
acknowledged the right of a public entity to seek a fee, the imposition of
which is in the court' s discretion. See Roier, 244 So. 3d at 471, and Sewell,
8While an Attorney General opinion is merely advisory and not binding authority, it may have some persuasive authority, particularly where there is no jurisprudence on point. See Dipaola v. Municipal Police Employees' Retirement System, 2014- 0037 ( La. App. 1St Cir. 9/ 25/ 14), 155 So. 3d 49, 53 n.4, writ denied, 2014- 2575 ( La. 2/ 27/ 15), 159 So. 3d 1071. 841 So. 2d at 27. However, in neither Roper nor Sewell did the public body
institute suit against the requestor prior to the public body providing the
requestor with any initial response to the public records requests. Rather, in
both of those cases, the request was made in response to litigation instituted
by the requestor. See Roper, 244 So. 3d at 470 ( where the request for costs
was raised by reconventional demand in a suit by the public records
requestor for writ of mandamus and damages), and Sewell, 841 So. 2d at 26
wherein the trial court, in the judgment ordering the custodian of public
records to provide the plaintiff with a redacted copy of the requested records,
further ordered the custodian to keep time records for the redaction and to
submit a bill to the plaintiff for that time, a ruling ultimately reversed by the
appellate court).
Nonetheless, while the Public Records Law in this state may not be
clear on the procedure for requesting the assessment of a fee for review of
requested records, especially as to the timing of such a request in relation to
the custodian' s duties of providing written notice to the requestor, the law is
clear on the statutory duties of the custodian to timely respond to the
requestor by: ( 1) immediately presenting a public record that is immediately
available, or, if not immediately available, certifying such to the requestor
and fixing a time within three days for the exercise of the right, LSA-R.S.
44: 33( B)( 1); ( 2) notifying the requestor within three days of each request of
any question raised by the custodian as to whether a record is a public
record, LSA-R.S. 44: 32( D); or ( 3) within five days of each request,
providing a written estimate of the time reasonably necessary for collection,
segregation, redaction, examination, or review of the request. LSA-R.S.
44: 35( A).
C In the instant case, it is also clear that the Parish did not provide any
written response to Wesley. Instead, rather than respond to Wesley as set
forth in LSA-R.S. 44: 32- 35, the Parish filed the instant suit, naming Wesley
as a defendant and seeking to have the trial court impose a fee for the review
of the records responsive to Wesley' s requests before any such review, even
minimal, was performed by the Parish' s custodian of records. Moreover,
despite the statutory duty of the custodian to timely communicate to the
requestor an estimate of time necessary to collect, examine, review, and
redact the requested records, the Parish also sought to have the court set a
reasonable time within which the Parish was to comply with Wesley' s
requests.
Thus, Wesley, in exercising her fundamental constitutional right of
requesting public records, was named as a defendant in a lawsuit, and a
judgment was rendered against her, ordering her to pay the Parish
10, 000.00, before the Parish ever communicated to Wesley the length of
time the Parish estimated it would take to respond to the requests given the
breadth of the records revealed as potentially responsive in an IT search
performed by the Parish. Additionally, the Parish never communicated to
Wesley that, given the broad scope of the request, it would seek a judicial
determination of a fee to be assessed, nor did it provide her with an
opportunity to reduce the scope of the requests prior to any suit being filed.
While LSA-R.S. 44: 32( C)( 3) does not specifically require that a custodian
communicate such an intent to the requestor, a simple communication to that
effect could have resulted in the parties reaching an agreement as to a
reduced scope of the requests and thereby averted the need for any
10 litigation.' The chilling effect of the fear of a requestor being named as a
defendant and being forced to defend against a lawsuit with no prior
communication from the custodian of public records as to the breadth of the
records responsive to the request, an estimate of the length of time necessary
to fulfill the request, or the possibility of the governmental entity seeking
reimbursement of costs for review of the records simply cannot be denied.
We are sensitive to the expenditure of time and resources by
governmental entities in responding to very large or voluminous requests
and to the impact this can have on the operations of government. As noted
by the Third Circuit Court of Appeal in Johnson v. City of Pineville, 2008-
1234 ( La. App. 3rd Cir. 4/ 8/ 09), 9 So. 3d 313, 319, we live in an age of
technology in which information technology has allowed governmental
entities " to create astronomical numbers of documents." However, we also
further recognize that providing access to public records is a legal duty of
the office of a custodian and his or her employees, and this duty requires the
custodian to present any public record to any person of the age of majority
who so requests, even if full production may take months. LSA-R.S. 44: 31
44: 32; see Stevens, 264 So. 3d at 477- 478.
We recognize that a trial court' s decision in assessing a fee for the
review of requested documents will not be reversed on appeal absent an
abuse of discretion. Roper, 244 So. 3d at 471 Nonetheless, under the
particular facts of this case, where the custodian admittedly never even
reviewed any of the requested records to determine if any were immediately
available and failed to respond in writing to Wesley as the requestor to
9Notably, the New Jersey Open Public Records Act, while authorizing a public agency to charge a " special service charge" for public records requests that involve " an extraordinary expenditure of time and effort to accommodate the request," specifically provides that "[ t] he requestor shall have the opportunity to review and object to the
charge prior to it being incurred." N.J. St. 47: 1A -5( c).
11 provide her with an estimate of the time needed to review and redact
records, where the Parish failed to respond even despite Wesley' s
reconventional demand seeking a response, and where the trial court had
previously acknowledged Wesley' s indigent status by allowing her to proceed in this litigation without the advance payment of costs, we must
conclude that the trial court abused its discretion in imposing a $ 10, 000. 00
fee against Wesley for review of the requested documents. Accordingly, we
reverse that portion of the trial court' s December 17, 2018 judgment.
Turning to Wesley' s contention in her fourth assignment of error that
the trial court erred in finding that text messages on private cell phones,
created in the commission of business for the Parish, are not public records,
we note at the outset that while in written reasons for judgment, the trial
court stated that the Parish was not the custodian of some of the text
messages and that some of the text messages were not subject to the Public
Records Law, the judgment on appeal is silent as to whether any of the
requested text messages are public records or whether the Parish is the
custodian of such records. Moreover, as noted in footnote two supra, the
Parish did not request in its Petition for Declaratory Judgment a declaration
as to whether it was the custodian of the requested text messages. A trial
court' s reasons for judgment form no part of the judgment, and they do not
alter, affect, or amend the final judgment being appealed. Thus, appellate
courts review judgments, not reasons for judgment. Wooley v. Lucksinger,
2009- 05719 2009- 05849 2009- 0585, 2009- 0586 ( La. 4/ 1/ 11), 61 So. 3d 5079
572. Accordingly, this assignment of error presents nothing for our review.
Finally, in her sixth assignment of error, Wesley contends that the trial
court erred in failing to find that the Parish and its custodian were arbitrary
and capricious in their failure to comply with her public records requests.
12 However, Wesley' s reconventional demand in which she sought writs of
mandamus compelling the Parish to respond to her three public records
requests and damages or penalties was not tried together with the Parish' s
petition for declaratory judgment at the December 7, 2018 hearing.
Accordingly, on the record before us, the trial court has yet to rule upon
Wesley' s reconventional demand, and the issues raised therein are likewise
not before this court in this appeal.
CONCLUSION
For the above and foregoing reasons, the portions of the trial court' s
December 17, 2018 judgment, granting the Parish of Ascension' s Petition
for Declaratory Judgment and ordering Taleta Wesley to pay the Parish
10, 000.00 for costs associated with redacting private information from the
records she seeks, are hereby reversed. In all other respects, the judgment is
affirmed. This matter is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings.
Costs of this appeal in the amount of $3, 181. 96 are assessed against the
Parish of Ascension.
REVERSED IN PART; AFFIRMED IN PART; AND REMANDED.