Robert Teig v. Vanessa Chavez, Alissa Van Sloten, Patricia G. Kropf, Elizabeth Jacobi, Brad Hart, and Teresa Feldmann

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 7, 2024
Docket23-0833
StatusPublished

This text of Robert Teig v. Vanessa Chavez, Alissa Van Sloten, Patricia G. Kropf, Elizabeth Jacobi, Brad Hart, and Teresa Feldmann (Robert Teig v. Vanessa Chavez, Alissa Van Sloten, Patricia G. Kropf, Elizabeth Jacobi, Brad Hart, and Teresa Feldmann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Robert Teig v. Vanessa Chavez, Alissa Van Sloten, Patricia G. Kropf, Elizabeth Jacobi, Brad Hart, and Teresa Feldmann, (iowa 2024).

Opinion

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.

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Robert Teig v. Vanessa Chavez, Alissa Van Sloten, Patricia G. Kropf, Elizabeth Jacobi, Brad Hart, and Teresa Feldmann, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-teig-v-vanessa-chavez-alissa-van-sloten-patricia-g-kropf-iowa-2024.