IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
No. 23–0833
Submitted February 20, 2024—Filed June 7, 2024
ROBERT TEIG,
Appellant,
vs.
VANESSA CHAVEZ, ALISSA VAN SLOTEN, PATRICIA G. KROPF, ELIZABETH JACOBI, BRAD HART, and TERESA FELDMANN,
Appellees.
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Linn County, Lars G. Anderson,
Judge.
Private citizen appeals summary judgment granted to city officials on his
claims for violations of the Iowa Open Records Act. AFFIRMED IN PART,
REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED. Oxley, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all justices joined.
Robert Teig (argued), Cedar Rapids, pro se.
Andrew T. Tice (argued) and Kristine R. Stone of Ahlers & Cooney, P.C., Des Moines, for appellees.
Cathy S. Trent-Vilim of Lamson Dugan & Murray LLP, Omaha, Nebraska,
and Jason Palmer and Ryan Tunink of Lamson Dugan & Murray LLP, West Des
Moines, for amicus curiae Iowa League of Cities.
Thomas Story and Rita Bettis Austen of ACLU of Iowa, Des Moines, for
amici curiae Iowa Freedom of Information Council and American Civil Liberties
Union Foundation of Iowa, Inc. 2
OXLEY, Justice. Iowa’s Open Records Act (the Act) prioritizes “free and open examination
of public records.” Iowa Code § 22.8(3) (2021). It creates a presumption that the
public has a right to access public records, guaranteeing some level of transpar-
ency and accountability in the work of state and local governments. However,
transparency is not absolute. In this case, we consider the extent of certain lim-
itations the general assembly has placed on open records requests in the context
of hiring government employees.
In 2021, the City of Cedar Rapids (the City) hired a new city clerk and city
attorney. Plaintiff Robert Teig took an interest in the City’s hiring processes and
submitted open records requests for job applications and several other
documents. The City refused to fulfill many of Teig’s requests, claiming the
attorney–client privilege and the Act’s confidentiality provisions exempted several
documents from disclosure. Teig filed suit, seeking production of the requested
documents, statutory damages, and declaratory and injunctive relief. The district
court granted the City’s motion for summary judgment.
On appeal, Teig raises five arguments: (1) job applications submitted to
governmental bodies are not confidential under chapter 22, (2) municipalities cannot claim attorney–client privilege in the context of an open records request,
(3) search and retrieval fees are not authorized by chapter 22, (4) defendants
unreasonably delayed fulfilling certain requests, and (5) the district court should
have granted him leave to submit additional interrogatories in the ensuing liti-
gation.
We conclude that the district court correctly found that documents subject
to the attorney–client privilege are protected from disclosure under chapter 22
and that chapter 22 authorizes municipalities or governmental bodies to charge search and retrieval fees. While job applications are generally protected from 3
disclosure, that protection extends only to persons “outside of government.” Id.
§ 22.7(18). Thus, the City was obligated to disclose those applications submitted
by current employees of the City, although it properly withheld external applica-
tions. The district court failed to address Teig’s claims of undue delay related to
billing records on the basis that the request was mooted when Teig later received
them. That a document is eventually received from another source does not nec-
essarily moot a claim of unreasonable delay. For the reasons explained below,
we affirm in part and reverse in part the district court’s grant of summary judg-
ment and remand for further proceedings. We also affirm the district court’s de-
nial of Teig’s motion to submit additional discovery.
I. Factual Background.
The City hired longtime employee Alissa Van Sloten as its new city clerk
in May 2021. After Van Sloten was hired, City Attorney Jim Flitz wrote a letter
expressing his legal opinion that job applications were confidential under Iowa’s
Open Records Act. That summer, Flitz retired, and the City advertised the city
attorney vacancy through a third-party consultant, Novak Consulting Group.
Elizabeth Jacobi and Vanessa Chavez submitted applications. At the time they
applied, Jacobi was employed by the City as an assistant city attorney, and Chavez was serving as city attorney for Green Bay, Wisconsin.
Some city attorney candidates requested that their applications not be
made public. The city council solicited a legal opinion from outside counsel as to
whether it could review applications in a closed session. After receiving
assurance that the process was allowed, the city council entered a closed session
on October 12, 2021, to review applications. Chavez was ultimately hired, and
Jacobi stayed on as assistant city attorney. 4
After learning about this closed session, Robert Teig requested several doc-
uments related to the City’s hiring process for both the city clerk and city attor-
ney positions. Over several months, he submitted requests to Van Sloten,
Chavez, Jacobi, and the other defendants in this case: Cedar Rapids Mayor Brad
Hart, Human Resources Director Teresa Feldmann, and Assistant City Attorney
Patricia Kropf.
First, Teig requested Van Sloten’s job application for the city clerk position.
Kropf informed him that the record was confidential. He then requested city at-
torney applications, Novak’s job posting for the city attorney position, applicant
“requests to close the interviews,” and the legal opinion that precipitated the
October 12 closed session. Feldmann asserted attorney–client privilege over the
legal opinion, but indicated she would work on producing the other records. She
also told Teig that, under City policy, he would be charged $20 per hour for
searches exceeding thirty minutes. On November 23, the city council held an-
other closed session to discuss Teig’s request for job applications and the possi-
bility that Teig might file a lawsuit under the Act to seek access to withheld doc-
uments.
Having not yet received these documents, Teig filed this suit the following day on November 24 in Linn County District Court.
On December 14, Mayor Hart sent Teig the job posting. Hart also reas-
serted the City’s claims of confidentiality over the job applications and privilege
over the legal opinion, and he informed Teig there were no responsive documents
related to requests for closed interviews. However, Chavez later provided Teig
with redacted copies of requests by applicants for the city attorney position that
the City review their applications in a closed session.
Teig made additional requests after filing this suit. On December 6, Teig sought information about the November 23 closed session, requesting “the name 5
of the litigation, name of any attorney involved, and bills and expenditures re-
lated to the matter.” Jacobi, then serving as acting city attorney, sent Teig
minutes from the open portion of the November 23 session. However, she claimed
there were no documents related to litigation or billing, and the City would review
relevant documents it received for privileged information. Teig received redacted
billing documents directly from the City’s outside counsel as part of discovery
related to this litigation on March 10, 2022, in a file labeled: “FINAL APPROVED
BILLINGS TO SEND TO TEIG APPROVED BY CITY.”
Shortly after the December 6 request, Chavez took over as city attorney
and asked Teig to direct all future document requests through her office in light
of his litigation against City officials. She sent instructions on this procedure to
City employees as well. Teig resisted this arrangement and, on March 11, re-
quested a copy of the instructions. Chavez forwarded them to Teig on March 18.
Teig filed an amended petition on March 19, 2022, which included claims related
to the November 23 closed session and Chavez’s instructions that all requests
go through her.
On October 14, 2022, the defendants filed a motion for summary judg-
ment. They argued that the employment applications were confidential and that the legal opinion regarding the closed-session review of applications was pro-
tected by attorney–client privilege. They also defended the City’s search and re-
trieval fees and rejected Teig’s claims that any disclosures were untimely.
Rather than formally resisting summary judgment, Teig filed a motion to
compel and for sanctions against Chavez, seeking to force additional discovery.
He also sought to serve additional discovery requests on Van Sloten, Feldmann,
Jacobi, and Kropf, and to correct a previous interrogatory sent to Hart. Teig
claimed he mistakenly sent requests to the wrong defendants, and this war- 6
ranted exceeding the thirty interrogatories allowed under Iowa Rule of Civil Pro-
cedure 1.509(1)(e). The district court denied Teig’s request for additional discov-
ery on March 7, finding he had not shown good cause.
The district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment
on May 18, 2023. The court found that all employment applications were confi-
dential and that the legal opinion was privileged. It also upheld the City’s search
and retrieval fee policy and rejected all claims of refusal and unreasonable delay.
Teig appealed, and we retained the appeal.
II. Analysis.
A. Interrogatories. We start by disposing of Teig’s claim that the district
court erred in its discovery ruling by counting subparts of his interrogatories
toward the total number allowed. A district court’s evidentiary rulings are re-
viewed for abuse of discretion. State v. Helmers, 753 N.W.2d 565, 567 (Iowa
2008). Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.509(1)(e) limits interrogatories in civil liti-
gation to thirty. The district court concluded that the defendants “arguably re-
sponded to more than 30 interrogatories.” This court has “consistently accorded
the trial court[] broad discretion in superintending discovery.” Munzenmaier v.
City of Cedar Rapids, 449 N.W.2d 369, 371 (Iowa 1989). We see no reason to depart from this principle here, and we affirm the district court’s denial of Teig’s
motion to submit additional discovery and request for immediate consideration
of discovery issues.
B. Iowa’s Open Records Act. We turn now to Teig’s chapter 22 claims, on
which the district court granted summary judgment. We review a district court’s
grant of summary judgment for corrections of errors at law. Story Cnty. Wind,
LLC v. Story Cnty. Bd. of Rev., 990 N.W.2d 282, 285 (Iowa 2023). “The district
court should grant summary judgment if ‘there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and . . . the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of 7
law.’ ” Id. (omission in original) (quoting Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.981(3)). We review the
record in the light most favorable to Teig as the party opposing the motion. See
Koster v. Harvest Bible Chapel–Quad Cities, 959 N.W.2d 680, 687 (Iowa 2021).
Under section 22.10 of the Act, “[a]ny aggrieved person . . . may seek
judicial enforcement of the requirements of [chapter 22] in an action brought
against the lawful custodian and any other persons who would be appropriate
defendants under the circumstances.” Iowa Code § 22.10(1).1 Claimants must
meet three requirements to sustain a cause of action under the Act: (1) “the
defendant is subject to the requirements” of chapter 22, (2) “the records in
question are government records,” and (3) “the defendant refused to make those
government records available for examination and copying by the plaintiff.”
Id. § 22.10(2); see also Horsfield Materials, Inc. v. City of Dyersville, 834 N.W.2d
444, 460 (Iowa 2013). If these requirements are met, the burden shifts to the
defendant to show, by a preponderance of the evidence, that they have complied
with the statute. Iowa Code § 22.10(2)–(3); Horsfield, 834 N.W.2d at 460.
Here, there is no dispute that the first two requirements are met. As for
the third requirement, the defendants refused to disclose job applications and
the legal opinion related to the city council’s October 12 closed session, but they claim their refusals complied with chapter 22. They dispute that their actions in
response to Teig’s other requests amounted to a refusal under the Act. We
address each contention in turn.
1. The confidentiality of job applications under chapter 22. While Iowa Code
section 22.2 requires that public records be made available to “[e]very person,”
1None of the defendants have challenged, on appeal or in the district court, whether they
are proper parties to this enforcement action. We assume, without deciding, that they fit within the catchall “any other persons who would be appropriate defendants under the circumstances.” Iowa Code § 22.10(1). 8
section 22.7 provides a long list of exceptions, identifying those public records
required to “be kept confidential,” id. § 22.7; see also Kirkwood Inst. Inc. v. Sand,
___ N.W.3d ___, ___, 2024 WL 1813027, at *4 (Iowa Apr. 26, 2024) (“The statute
contains a long list of exceptions protecting specific categories of records from
disclosure.”). The district court concluded there was “no circumstance under
which [Teig] would be entitled to the employment applications under Iowa’s open
records law,” relying on both Iowa Code sections 22.7(11) and 22.7(18). Section
22.7(11) protects “confidential personnel records” from disclosure. Iowa Code
§ 22.7(11). Section 22.7(18) protects communications “made to a government
body or to any of its employees by identified persons outside of government,”
where the government body receiving the communication “could reasonably be-
lieve that those persons would be discouraged from making them to that govern-
ment body if they were available for general public examination.” Id. § 22.7(18).
Access to job applications for government jobs has been a source of open records
disputes for some time, so we start with a brief review of prior caselaw and leg-
islative reaction to it.
We first addressed whether applications for government jobs were subject
to the Act in City of Dubuque v. Telegraph Herald, Inc. 297 N.W.2d 523, 526 (Iowa 1980), superseded by statute, 1984 Iowa Acts ch. 1185 § 6, as recognized
in City of Sioux City v. Greater Sioux City Press Club, 421 N.W.2d 895 (Iowa 1988).
At the time we decided Telegraph Herald, Iowa Code section 68A.7(11) (1979),
the predecessor to section 22.7(11), exempted “[p]ersonal information in confi-
dential personnel records of public bodies including but not limited to cities,
boards of supervisors and school districts.” See Tele. Herald, 297 N.W.2d at 526.
There was no equivalent to section 22.7(18) at the time. We construed the lan-
guage in subsection (11) narrowly and determined that it did not shield employ- ment applications from disclosure. Id. at 527. 9
In 1984, the general assembly added a new subsection (18) to section
68A.7. 1984 Iowa Acts ch. 1185, § 6 (originally codified at Iowa Code § 68A.7(11)
(1985), now codified as amended at Iowa Code § 22.7(18) (2021)). Four years
later, we again considered how the Act (moved from chapter 68A to chapter 22)
applied to employment applications in City of Sioux City v. Greater Sioux City
Press Club. 421 N.W.2d at 897. Relying on section 22.7(18), we concluded the
general assembly had “chosen to use broadly inclusive language,” and the nar-
row construction we applied in Telegraph Herald was no longer appropriate. Id.
(holding that “Telegraph Herald . . . no longer provide[d] a useful guidepost for
resolving” questions related to employment applications). Rather, subsection (18)
represented a “legislative goal to permit public agencies to keep confidential a
broad category of useful incoming communications which might not be forth-
coming if subject to public disclosure,” and we concluded that “employment ap-
plications fall within this area of legislative concern.” Id. at 898. More than a
decade later, in Clymer v. City of Cedar Rapids, we observed that “the legislature
. . . amended the statute [after Telegraph Herald] to cloak employment applica-
tions with privacy.” 601 N.W.2d 42, 46 (Iowa 1999).
With this background, we consider the parties’ arguments as applied to the job applications Teig requested.
a. Section 22.7(11). Section 22.7(11) exempts from disclosure “[p]ersonal
information in confidential personnel records of government bodies relating to
identified or identifiable individuals who are officials, officers, or employees of
the government bodies.” Iowa Code § 22.7(11)(a) (2021).
The defendants argue that under Press Club and Clymer, job applications
are categorically exempted from disclosure. Their reliance on these cases is
misplaced. While Press Club directly addressed employment applications, the decision did not rely on section 22.7(11) like Telegraph Herald had. See Press 10
Club, 421 N.W.2d at 898. Rather, Press Club exempted employment applications
from disclosure as “useful incoming communications” under section 22.7(18).
Id. Clymer fairs no better. While that case did apply section 22.7(11), the
plaintiffs were requesting records related to sick leave compensation rather than
employment applications. Clymer, 601 N.W.2d at 43. The observation about
employment applications was not related to a section 22.7(11) analysis, but to
section 22.7(18). See id. at 45–46 (discussing caselaw under various provisions
of chapter 22 in an effort to delineate the scope of the “privacy exemption” in
§ 22.7(11)). Telegraph Herald remains good law to the extent it held that job
applications are not protected as personnel records for purposes of section
22.7(11). See 297 N.W.2d at 526. Thus, section 22.7(11) does not protect any of
the employment applications Tieg requested from disclosure.
b. Section 22.7(18). Iowa Code section 22.7(18) exempts certain voluntary
communications made to government bodies by persons outside of government
from disclosure. The exemption applies to a communication if it fits four criteria:
it “is (1) not required by law and (2) made to a government body (3) by someone
outside government, and (4) the [government body] could reasonably believe that
the sender would be discouraged from making such communications if [the gov- ernment body] publicly disclosed it.”2 Kirkwood Inst., ___ N.W.3d at ___, 2024
WL 1813027, at *10 (applying § 22.7(18) to emails unconnected to the docu-
ments requested and sent to the auditor’s office by a member of the public).3 In
2Teig argues the first requirement is not met for any job application, claiming no person
could apply for any government position without submitting an application. We rejected this argument in Press Club, where we held that “[t]he candidates were not required to submit these applications because they were not required to apply for the job.” 421 N.W.2d at 898. Teig’s reprise of his Press Club predecessors’ argument must meet the same fate. 3Section 22.7(18) includes three express exceptions to its confidentiality protection: (1) the communication’s sender consents; (2) the information can be disclosed without identifying 11
Press Club, we held that employment applications fit within the “broad category
of useful incoming communications” protected by subsection (18), limiting our
holding to “[t]he employment applications which are involved in the present liti-
gation.” 421 N.W.2d at 898–99.
However, Press Club did not address Iowa Code section 22.7(18)’s limita-
tion to “persons outside of government,” the third criterion identified above. See
Kirkwood Inst., ___ N.W.3d at ___, 2024 WL 1813027, at *10. And that case was
decided before the general assembly amended section 22.7(18) in 2001. See 2001
Iowa Acts ch. 108, § 1. That amendment expressly excludes two categories of
individuals from being considered “persons outside of government”:
As used in this subsection, “persons outside of government” does not include persons or employees of persons who are communi- cating with respect to a consulting or contractual relationship with a government body or who are communicating with a government body with whom an arrangement for compensation exists.
Id. (codified at Iowa Code § 22.7(18) (Supp. 2001)). The protection provided for
voluntary communications under subsection (18) applies only to persons outside
of government; people who fit either of these categories do not qualify for that
protection. Teig argues that this amendment exempts all employment applica-
tions submitted to government entities from section 22.7(18)’s protection. The scope of this limitation came before us recently in Ripperger v. Iowa
Public Information Board, 967 N.W.2d 540 (Iowa 2021). That case involved a re-
quest for a list of property owners who asked the Polk County Assessor to remove
them from the name search function of the assessor’s website. Id. at 552. Nota-
bly, in defining this type of communication as fitting within the “broad category
of useful incoming communications [under section 22.7(18)] which might not be
the provider; and (3) information must be provided to the extent it identifies specifics surround- ing the commission of a crime. Iowa Code § 22.7(18)(a)–(c). Teig does not suggest any of these exceptions apply to the job applications. 12
forthcoming if subject to public disclosure,” id. at 553 (alteration in original) (em-
phasis omitted) (quoting Iowa Code § 22.7(18)), we cited with approval to Press
Club, explaining that “[p]resumably some of those job applicants would have
thought twice about applying if doing so put them on a public list that could be
seen by their current employer,” id. at 551. Ripperger also argued that even if
some requests from property owners were protected from disclosure, that pro-
tection should not apply to government employees because they were not “per-
sons outside of government.” Id. at 552. We declined to address that argument
because it had not been adequately briefed or decided in earlier proceedings. Id.
(noting that “[t]he ‘outside of government’ issue was thinly briefed below” but
was not reached by the district court).
The broad categories of useful incoming information covered by Iowa Code
section 22.7(18) are protected from disclosure only if the communication is re-
ceived from “persons outside of government.” The 2001 revision sought to clarify
two specific groups of individuals who are deemed not “outside of government”
and whose communications are therefore not protected from disclosure under
section 22.7(18). The provision identifies two specific categories of people:
(1) those “communicating with respect to a consulting or contractual relation- ship with a government body,” or (2) those communicating with a government
body with whom they have an “arrangement for compensation.” Iowa Code
§ 22.7(18). The first focuses on communications about a particular relationship,
while the second focuses on communications between parties to a particular re-
lationship.
The district court addressed the first part of the provision, agreeing with
the defendants that “the persons ‘outside of government’ language . . . appears
to apply to consultants and contractors,” concluding that nothing in the lan- 13
guage negated the holding in Press Club that employment applications are con-
fidential. Teig argues the general assembly chose the word “contractual,” not
“contractor,” and applications for employment are submitted “with respect to a
. . . contractual relationship.”
A familiar principle of statutory construction is that “when identical
language is used in several places in an enactment, we ordinarily give it the same
meaning.” B.A.A. v. Chief Med. Officer, Univ. of Iowa Hosp., 421 N.W.2d 118, 125
(Iowa 1988). The converse also holds true—use of materially different language
indicates different meanings are intended. See Chiodo v. Section 43.24 Panel, 846
N.W.2d 845, 853 (Iowa 2014) (“If the drafters intended the two concepts to be
coextensive, different words would not have been used.”); see also Sw. Airlines
Co. v. Saxon, 596 U.S. 450, 457–58 (2022) (applying the “meaningful-variation
canon” and citing Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The
Interpretation of Legal Texts 170 (2012), for the proposition that “[w]here [a]
document has used one term in one place, and a materially different term in
another, the presumption is that the different term denotes a different idea.”
(second alteration in original)). We also consider the noscitur a sociis canon,
under which we interpret groups of words in light of their association with each other so long as they “ordinarily have a similar meaning.” Fleur de Lis Motor Inns,
Inc. v. Bair, 301 N.W.2d 685, 690 (Iowa 1981) (quoting 2A J.G. Sutherland &
C. Dallas Sands, Statutes and Statutory Construction §§ 47.16–.17 (4th ed.
1973)).
In section 22.7(18), the general assembly refers separately to “consulting
or contractual relationship” and “arrangement for compensation.” Iowa Code
§ 22.7(18). “[A]rrangement for compensation” used in the second definition
would clearly cover an employment relationship. Id. Employment is often at-will 14
(so not covered by a contract), but by definition it always includes an “arrange-
ment for compensation.” Teig argues that “contractual relationship” also encom-
passes employment contracts. But we cannot ignore this difference in terminol-
ogy. See Chiodo, 846 N.W.2d at 853. Nor can we ignore the pairing of “contrac-
tual” with “consulting” in the phrase “consulting or contractual relationship,”
neither of which suggest an employment relationship—especially when paired
together. See Wright v. State Bd. of Eng’g Exam’rs, 250 N.W.2d 412, 413 (Iowa
1977) (“[T]he meaning of a word is ascertained in the light of the meaning of
words with which it is associated.”). Given this shift in language, we agree with
the district court that “consulting or contractual relationship” refers to consult-
ants and contractors, whose relationship with governmental bodies is different
than the compensation arrangements extended to government employees.
However, that does mean that Press Club protects all employment appli-
cations from disclosure, as the district court concluded. The second category of
persons excluded from protection under the 2001 revision are persons “who are
communicating with a government body with whom an arrangement for com-
pensation exists.” Iowa Code § 22.7(18) (emphasis added). As discussed, an “ar-
rangement for compensation” clearly covers employees. And use of the present tense “exists” limits the reach to only current employees of the particular gov-
ernmental body—the one “with whom [the] arrangement for compensation ex-
ists.” Id. Thus, communications between current (but not prospective) employees
and the governmental body that employs them—including applications for a new
position with the employing body—are not made by persons “outside of govern-
ment” and therefore are not protected from disclosure under section 22.7(18).
While subsection (18) is intended to protect a “broad category of useful
incoming communications,” Press Club, 421 N.W.2d at 898, we cannot ignore the general assembly’s additional limitation that the protection covers only those 15
communications received from “persons outside of government,” Iowa Code
§ 22.7(18). It may be that the threat of possible disclosure of an application may
deter both internal and external candidates for a government job, but that is a
policy consideration best left to the legislative branch. See Press Club, 421
N.W.2d at 897 (“[I]t is not the responsibility of this court to balance the compet-
ing policy interests. The balancing of those interests is the province of the legis-
lature . . . .”). It is not unreasonable for the general assembly to conclude that
any deterrent effect chapter 22 may have on potential applicants will be felt most
acutely by external applicants.
Section 22.7(18) protects applications received from external candidates,
meaning anyone not employed by the City when the application was submitted.
But it does not exempt from disclosure applications submitted by then-current
employees of the City, such as Van Sloten and Jacobi.
2. Attorney–client privilege. Next, we address Teig’s claim that the legal
opinion solicited by the City about closing city council sessions was not protected
from disclosure under chapter 22 by the attorney–client privilege. Teig argues
the privilege does not apply to open records requests because chapter 22 protects
work product, see Iowa Code § 22.7(4) (exempting “[r]ecords which represent and constitute the work product of an attorney, which are related to litigation or claim
made by or against a public body”), but not attorney–client communications. We
reject Teig’s argument as contrary to our holding in Horsfield Materials, Inc. v.
City of Dyersville, 834 N.W.2d 444.
Our cases make clear “that a governmental body may be a client for pur-
poses of invoking the [attorney–client] privilege.” Tausz v. Clarion–Goldfield Cmty.
Sch. Dist., 569 N.W.2d 125, 127 (Iowa 1997) (en banc); see also Horsfield, 834
N.W.2d at 463 (recognizing the City of Dyersville “properly asserted the attorney- client privilege”). Iowa has enshrined its attorney–client privilege in Iowa Code 16
section 622.10, and our caselaw recognizes that this provision effectuates a priv-
ilege “of ancient origin.” Bailey v. Chi., Burlington & Quincy R.R., 179 N.W.2d 560,
563 (Iowa 1970). The privilege “bars attorneys from disclosing confidential com-
munications.” Keefe v. Bernard, 774 N.W.2d 663, 669 (Iowa 2009).
As a general rule of disclosure, chapter 22 does not trump other specific
statutory privileges protecting the confidentiality of documents. See Burton v.
Univ. of Iowa Hosps. & Clinics, 566 N.W.2d 182, 188–89 (Iowa 1997) (holding
that physician–patient privilege protected documents held by public hospital de-
spite not being identified in section 22.7). We extended this holding to documents
broadly protected by the attorney–client privilege in Horsfield, where we held that
Iowa Code section 622.10 protected emails exchanged with counsel for the City
of Dyersville notwithstanding section 22.2’s disclosure requirement. 834 N.W.2d
at 450–51, 463 (“[T]he [Open Records] Act does not affect other specific statutory
privileges recognized by the legislature, such as the attorney-client privilege.”).
This holding was not dicta, as urged by Teig. Although the City of Dyersville
ultimately made the tactical decision to waive the attorney–client privilege and
produce the records during litigation, we still had to address whether the city’s
initial decision to withhold the documents violated chapter 22. Id. at 462–63. It was in this context that we held the attorney–client privilege protected the doc-
uments from disclosure through an open records request. Id. at 463. Horsfield
controls here. The legal opinion regarding closing city council sessions was priv-
ileged and not subject to disclosure.
3. Charges for search and retrieval. The City has adopted an open records
policy that provides records to the public at no charge if the request takes less
than thirty minutes to fulfill. After the first thirty minutes, the City’s policy pro-
vides that it may charge $20 per hour, prorated to the nearest fifteen minutes. Teig argues that chapter 22 does not authorize such a policy, claiming it only 17
allows fees related to “examination and copying.” This interpretation cannot be
reconciled with the plain language of the statute.
We held that chapter 22 authorized retrieval fees under an earlier iteration
of the Act in Rathmann v. Board of Directors. 580 N.W.2d 773, 778–79 (Iowa
1998). In Rathmann, a schoolboard charged an hourly rate to retrieve documents
related to administrative restructuring in the school district. Id. at 775–77. At
the time, section 22.3 required that “[a]ll expenses of such work shall be paid by
the person desiring to examine or copy.” Id. at 777 (emphasis omitted) (quoting
Iowa Code § 22.3 (1995)). We found the phrase “all expenses of such work” to be
“especially significant and indicative of the legislature’s intent” to authorize
retrieval fees. Id. at 778–79. The general assembly has since removed this
language. 2001 Iowa Acts ch. 44, § 2 (codified at Iowa Code § 20.3 (Supp. 2001)).
Teig argues that its removal took with it the authority to charge retrieval fees.
However, we find that the statute now provides even clearer guidance.
After the general assembly removed the language identified by Tieg, it
again amended section 22.3 in 2005. See 2005 Iowa Acts ch. 103, § 1 (codified
at Iowa Code § 22.3 (Supp. 2005)). In addition to examining public records in
person, without charge, Iowa Code § 22.2(1), the 2005 amendment enable indi- viduals to request copies of public records “in writing, by telephone, or by elec-
tronic means.” 2005 Iowa Acts ch. 103, § 1 (codified at § 22.3(1) (Supp. 2005)).
When such a request is made, the lawful custodian cannot “require the physical
presence” of the requester but must “fulfill [such] requests.” Id. In addition, “[f]ul-
fillment of a request for a copy of a public record may be contingent upon receipt
of payment of expenses to be incurred in fulfilling the request” as long as the
estimated expenses are communicated at the time of the request. Id. (emphasis
added). As relevant to the issue of recovering expenses, this is the version of the statute in effect when Teig made his requests. See Iowa Code § 22.3(1) (2021). 18
Thus, while the general assembly expressly refers to “copying,” “examination,”
and “supervision” in section 22.3(1), as Teig points out, id., it expanded access
to public records by requiring custodians to fulfill requests made by phone or
email. In doing so, it also provided for the recovery of “expenses . . . incurred in
fulfilling the request.” Id. Because fulfillment of a request necessarily includes
the retrieval of the requested documents, we conclude the provision in effect
when Teig made his requests allowed the City to recover its expenses in fulfilling
them.
The parties and the district court considered the statute as it existed in
2023, after amendments that became effective on July 1, 2022 (after Teig’s re-
quests). See 2022 Iowa Acts ch. 1039, § 1 (codified at Iowa Code § 22.3 (2023)).
To the extent those amendments have any relevance, they confirm our interpre-
tation of the plain language of section 22.3 as it existed in 2021. See, e.g., Iowa
Individual Health Benefit Reins. Ass’n v. State Univ. of Iowa, 876 N.W.2d 800,
805 (Iowa 2016) (“When an amendment to a statute adds or deletes words, a
change in the law will be presumed unless the remaining language amounts to
the same thing.” (emphasis added) (quoting Davis v. State, 682 N.W.2d 58, 61
(Iowa 2004))). The 2022 amendments limited expenses charged for fulfilling a request to “reasonable expenses,” 2022 Iowa Acts ch. 1039, § 1 (codified at Iowa
Code § 22.3(1) (2023)), and also directed custodians to “make every reasonable
effort to provide the public record requested at no cost other than copying costs
for a record which takes less than thirty minutes to produce,” id. (emphasis
added). Thus, for requests taking more time to fulfill, the amendments to section
22.3(1) clarify that in addition to copying costs, custodians can charge for other
expenses incurred in producing the records, as long as they are “reasonable and
communicated to the requester upon receipt of the request.” Id. The general as- sembly’s continued use of the same word “expenses” in relation to recovery of 19
costs incurred in fulfilling a request for public records reveals that it considered
such expenses to not be limited to copying costs, as Teig argues.
Teig also argues that the general assembly’s use of the word “retrieval” in
Iowa Code section 22.2(4)(a) precludes retrieval fees generally because it indi-
cates that the general assembly “knew how to authorize retrieval fees” but chose
not to do so. Again, we disagree. Section 22.2(4)(a) allows governmental bodies
to restrict public access to “geographic computer database[s],” so long as they
“establish reasonable rates and procedures for the retrieval” of requested docu-
ments. Id. This provision is not an authorization to charge retrieval fees gener-
ally, but it is part of a directive to governmental bodies to accommodate requests
when public access to certain databases is restricted. That it authorizes retrieval
fees in a specific context does not preclude recovery of what might be deemed
“retrieval expenses” in a more general sense in a separate section expressly al-
lowing recovery of expenses to fulfill a request for public records.
As Teig and the amici note, retrieval fees may in fact hamper access to
public documents. However, such fees may also ensure continuing access to
public records through increased funding and deterring excessive or overly broad
requests. In any event, weighing these policy interests is for the general assem- bly. See Press Club, 421 N.W.2d at 897. We hold that in allowing for the recovery
of expenses incurred in fulfilling requests for public records, Iowa Code section
22.3(1) authorizes reasonable fees for the time spent by the custodian or its em-
ployees in fulfilling the request.
4. Refusal and unreasonable delay. We turn now to Teig’s claim that the
defendants either refused or unreasonably delayed producing several requested
documents. To sustain a cause of action under chapter 22, claimants must show
“that the defendant[s] refused to make [requested] records available for exami- nation and copying.” Iowa Code § 22.10(2). While this language “speaks in terms 20
of a refusal rather than a delay in production,” Horsfield, 834 N.W.2d at 463 n.6,
we have also recognized that a defendant can “refuse” a request “by (1) stating
that it won’t produce records, or (2) showing that it won’t produce records,” Belin
v. Reynolds, 989 N.W.2d 166, 174 (Iowa 2023). The second category of refusal
“can be shown through an unreasonable delay in producing records.” Id.
Chapter 22 requires custodians to provide access to requested documents
promptly, but “[i]f the size or nature of the request . . . requires time for
compliance, the custodian shall comply with the request as soon as feasible.”
Horsfield, 834 N.W.2d at 461 (quoting Iowa Unif. Rules on Agency Proc., No.
X.3(4) (17A, 22) (1999)). Because the statute provides no explicit time constraint,
“a reasonable time is implied.” Belin, 989 N.W.2d at 175 (quoting 2B Norman J.
Singer & Shambie Singer, Statutes and Statutory Construction § 55:3, at 457 (7th
ed. 2012)). In Belin, we delineated six factors for determining whether there had
been an unreasonable delay:
(1) how promptly the defendant acknowledged the plaintiff’s re- quests and follow-up inquiries, (2) whether the defendant assured the plaintiff of the defendant’s intent to provide the requested rec- ords, (3) whether the defendant explained why requested records weren’t immediately available . . . , (4) whether the defendant pro- duced records as they became available . . . , (5) whether the defend- ant updated the plaintiff on efforts to obtain and produce records, and (6) whether the defendant provided information about when rec- ords could be expected.
Id.
Teig has three claims of undue delay concerning records we have not yet
considered: (1) records related to the city attorney position, (2) instructions to
direct Teig’s open records request through the city attorney’s office, and (3) in-
formation about the November 23 closed session by the city council. We discuss
each in turn. 21
a. Records related to the city attorney position. Teig originally requested
documents related to the city attorney position on October 21. After exchanging
multiple emails with Feldmann, he narrowed his request on November 3. This
narrowed list included: the legal opinion related to closing the October 12 city
council session, applications for the city attorney position, requests by candi-
dates “to close the interviews,” and the job posting for the position. Having al-
ready discussed the legal opinion and applications above, we now consider the
requests to close the interviews and the job posting.
On December 14, Hart informed Teig there were no responsive documents
relating to candidate requests “to close the interviews.” Despite this denial, Teig
later received redacted copies of two requests by candidates. Hart’s update was
not erroneous though. The City did not close interviews for the city attorney po-
sition, nor was it asked to. Rather, applicants submitted requests for their ap-
plications to be reviewed in a closed session. Noticing Teig’s inaccuracy, Chavez
sent redacted copies of two requests that the applications be considered in a
closed session a few weeks after taking office. Because Teig never requested these
documents, there can be no finding of undue delay.
Teig also received his request for the city attorney job posting. Feldmann acknowledged the request on November 4, the day after Teig submitted it. She
followed up again on November 10 and 24. Hart sent Teig the job posting on
December 14. While this delay may not be the most expeditious, several of the
relevant factors we identified in Belin weigh in favor of the defendants. See id.
Feldmann responded to Teig’s request the day after receiving it, provided multi-
ple updates, and estimated when the documents may be ready. This conduct
does not rise to the level of undue delay.
b. Instructions on Teig’s open records requests. After taking over as city at- torney in December of 2021, Chavez sent a message to City employees, asking 22
that all of Teig’s future open records requests go through her office. Teig asked
for these instructions on March 11, and Chavez provided them on March 18.
Teig claims it should “have taken Defendant Chavez only seconds” to locate these
documents. This demand for instantaneous compliance ignores the express lan-
guage of chapter 22.
Section 22.8 allows custodians up to “twenty calendar days” to fulfill re-
quests when it is necessary “[t]o determine whether a confidential record should
be available for inspection and copying to the person requesting the right to do
so.” Iowa Code § 22.8(4)(d) (emphasis added). Chapter 22 further defines “confi-
dential records” to include “the work product of an attorney, which are related
to litigation.” Id. § 22.7(4). Teig submitted this request several months after filing
the present suit against the City. The document he sought was a communication
between the city attorney and employees of the City relating to that litigation.
When Chavez disclosed the document, she told Teig that “[a]lthough the record
in question was drafted by an attorney, [she had] determined that this record
contains no privileged or confidential communication.” Chavez’s delay was au-
thorized under section 22.7(4).
c. Records related to the November 23 closed session. Finally, we consider Teig’s request for documents related to the city council’s November 23 closed
session. The city council closed the session “to discuss strategy with legal coun-
sel with regard to pending litigation.” On December 6, Teig requested “records
showing the name of the litigation, name of any attorney involved, and bills and
expenditures related to the matter.” Jacobi replied on December 8, claiming “the
city ha[d] not yet received any invoices regarding this representation,” but agreed
to “examine them upon receipt to determine whether any redactions are neces-
sary to preserve the attorney client privilege.” 23
However, the record shows the City approved a payment of $3,167.50 to
the law firm Lynch Dallas P.C. on December 7, with $2,167 of that total being
paid the same day. On March 11, Teig acquired a redacted billing document
related to the November 23 session directly from Lynch Dallas through discovery
in this litigation in a file named: “FINAL APPROVED BILLINGS TO SEND TO
TEIG APPROVED BY CITY.” There is no indication the City kept Teig apprised of
any updates between December 6 and March 11. On a review of a grant of sum-
mary judgment, we view evidence of these facts in the light most favorable to
Teig. See Hedlund v. State, 930 N.W.2d 707, 715 (Iowa 2019).
In their brief, the defendants argue Teig did not file his lawsuit until the
day after the closed session, and his request related only to “pending litigation.”
Thus, the defendants claim they were under no duty to disclose the requested
documents that related instead to “imminent litigation.” However, Teig’s Decem-
ber 6 request does not mention “pending litigation.” While there may not have
been any “name of the litigation” to disclose, this does not affect Teig’s request
for the name of the attorney or billing records.
The defendants also argue that Teig has already received these documents,
implying his claim has been mooted. We rejected a similar argument in Belin. See 989 N.W.2d at 171. There, we held that production of documents only
mooted claims “to produce the already-produced records.” Id. It does not prevent
plaintiffs from pursuing “any other relief that may be available under the Act.”
Id.; see also Kirkwood Inst., ___ N.W.3d at ___, 2024 WL 1813027, at * 6 (holding
that plaintiff’s “pursuit of a civil penalty, attorney fees, and court costs under
chapter 22 based on a refusal to timely produce” requested documents was not
mooted by eventual production of documents). Teig has brought claims for dam-
ages and injunctive relief, and section 22.10(3) authorizes both remedies. 24
We have previously declined to set an exact deadline for “undue delay,”
but our prior cases are instructive nonetheless. In Belin, delays ranging from five
to eighteen months amounted to an undue delay. 989 N.W.2d at 169. In
Horsfield, we found a violation of chapter 22 based on a seventy-day delay. 834
N.W.2d at 460, 462. Here, Teig waited more than ninety days to receive the
redacted billing records. Reasonableness is often a fact question, and we
conclude the district court—as the fact-finder—should address whether the
delayed receipt of the billing records was an unreasonable delay in violation of
chapter 22. See Kirkwood Inst., ___ N.W.3d at ___, 2024 WL 1813027, at *7
(concluding fact issue precluded summary judgment with respect to whether
delay in producing one email, eventually produced as part of litigation discovery
216 days after initial request and 106 days after petition was filed, was
reasonable).
5. Remedies. Having determined that the defendants withheld some rec-
ords required to be disclosed, we now consider what remedies are available to
Teig. If a custodian refuses or unreasonably delays production, courts must en-
join the custodian to comply with the statute. Iowa Code § 22.10(3)(a). Courts
are also required to assess damages under certain conditions and have discre- tion to “order the lawful custodian . . . to refrain for one year from any future
violations” of the Open Records Act. Id. Successful plaintiffs are also entitled to
“costs and reasonable attorney fees.” Id. § 22.10(3)(c).
Because the defendants failed to disclose job applications from internal
applicants, we conclude those applications must be disclosed pursuant to sec-
tion 22.7(11), and Teig is entitled to costs and attorney fees related to those spe-
cific requests. While section 22.10(3)(b) requires courts to assess damages for
violations generally, it prohibits such damages when custodians “[r]easonably relied upon a decision of . . . the attorney for the government body, given in 25
writing.” Id. § 22.10(3)(b)(3). The record indicates that Flitz, Chavez’s predecessor
as city attorney, provided a letter to the city council explaining that job applica-
tions were confidential. Feldmann and Hart stated they received a copy of this
letter in their affidavits. They accordingly are exempt from paying damages. See
id. As for the one-year injunction against future violations of chapter 22, such a
remedy is discretionary and to be applied only “if appropriate.” Id. § 22.10(3)(a).
Given the applicability of an exception to section 22.10’s damages requirement
and our previous guidance in Press Club concerning protection for job applica-
tions, we find this injunctive remedy is not appropriate.
As for Teig’s claim of unreasonable delay, on remand he may pursue all
relief authorized under the Act for any proved unreasonable delay in the fulfill-
ment of his December 6, 2021 open records request.
Section 22.10(3)(c) requires courts to order a plaintiff’s “costs and reason-
able attorney fees, including appellate attorney fees,” to be paid by defendants
who are assessed damages. Id. § 22.10(3)(c). However, “[i]f no such persons exist
. . . the costs and fees shall be paid . . . from the budget of the offending govern-
ment body.” Id. Here, no defendants are liable for damages for refusal to disclose
job applications, and the City is therefore responsible for these costs and fees. III. Conclusion.
For these reasons, we affirm in part and reverse in part the district court’s
grant of summary judgment. We also affirm the district court’s denial of Teig’s
evidentiary motions. We remand for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.