Rocky Mountain Wild v. United States Forest Service

56 F.4th 913
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedDecember 30, 2022
Docket21-1169
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 56 F.4th 913 (Rocky Mountain Wild v. United States Forest Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rocky Mountain Wild v. United States Forest Service, 56 F.4th 913 (10th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

Appellate Case: 21-1169 Document: 010110791250 Date Filed: 12/30/2022 Page: 1 FILED United States Court of Appeals PUBLISH Tenth Circuit

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS December 30, 2022

Christopher M. Wolpert FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT Clerk of Court _________________________________

ROCKY MOUNTAIN WILD, INC.,

Plaintiff - Appellant,

v. No. 21-1169

UNITED STATES FOREST SERVICE; UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE,

Defendants - Appellees. _________________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Colorado (D.C. No. 1:18-CV-03065-MEH) _________________________________

Travis E. Stills, Energy and Conservation Law, Durango, Colorado, (Matthew Sandler, Rocky Mountain Wild, Denver, Colorado, with him on the briefs) for Plaintiff-Appellant.

Marissa R. Miller, Assistant United States Attorney (Cole Finegan, United States Attorney, with her on the brief), Denver, Colorado, for Defendants-Appellees. _________________________________

Before TYMKOVICH, EID, and CARSON, Circuit Judges. _________________________________

CARSON, Circuit Judge. _________________________________

The Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) makes government records accessible

to the public, including organizations like Plaintiff Rocky Mountain Wild. But this

access is not limitless. The statute instructs government agencies to use reasonable— Appellate Case: 21-1169 Document: 010110791250 Date Filed: 12/30/2022 Page: 2

not the utmost—efforts to produce responsive records upon request. Beyond that,

FOIA also exempts nine categories of records from public disclosure.

Plaintiff requested and received voluminous records under FOIA, but now

asserts Defendants United States Forest Service (“USFS”) and United States

Department of Agriculture (“USDA”) abused these statutory limitations to hide

information about projects that harm the environment. The district court rejected

Plaintiff’s speculative theory and found USFS’s efforts to comply with Plaintiff’s

FOIA request reasonable.1 Our jurisdiction arises under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We

affirm.

I. For years the parties have litigated the propriety of a proposed development in

the Wolf Creek Ski Area—which the USFS manages. The proposed development is a

plan for highway access known as “the Village at Wolf Creek Access Project.”

Plaintiff challenges this plan because of alleged environmental risks to the

surrounding national forest. The highway-access litigation continues, but relevant

here is a 2018 FOIA request Plaintiff submitted asking Defendant for “all agency

records regarding the proposed Village at Wolf Creek Access Project.”

Plaintiff’s request caused an enormous undertaking by Defendant. The request

sought “all agency records” about the project. The breadth of the request first

1 Although Plaintiff sued both the Forest Service and the Department of Agriculture, the Forest Service plays the most prominent role in this dispute. So for efficiency, we use “Defendant” or “USFS” to refer to the Forest Service. 2 Appellate Case: 21-1169 Document: 010110791250 Date Filed: 12/30/2022 Page: 3

required Defendant to determine the relevant period during which its employees

would have created responsive documents so it could direct those employees to

search their files within that timeframe. Then Defendant also narrowed the request’s

scope to include only documents Defendant had not already given Plaintiff,

documents Defendant had not made public, and documents not statutorily exempt

from disclosure.

Defendant next had to find employees who might possess responsive records.

Defendant determined that twenty-seven employees were substantially involved in

the Village at Wolf Creek Access Project during the relevant timeframe and likely

possessed responsive records. All but two of those employees worked in Colorado.

Defendant allowed the employees to search their own files using custom search

terms, reasoning that each employee would know the best search terms to find

responsive documents. The employees reported how they searched their files and

listed their individual search terms. Between the twenty-seven employees, they

searched their files with more than two dozen different search terms, including

variations of similar terms. Some of the twenty-seven employees handed off the

search to their administrative assistants but still specified the search terms their

administrative assistants used. Those who searched looked in different locations,

such as physical hard-copy files, external and internal computer hard drives, and

emails, including attachments, within their archive system. Finally, most employees

searched twice for documents, and all the selected employees searched for responsive

records after March 1, 2019, to make sure none showed up at the last minute.

3 Appellate Case: 21-1169 Document: 010110791250 Date Filed: 12/30/2022 Page: 4

After collecting documents from the twenty-seven employees, a team of five

Forest Service officials worked full-time for months to review the produced

documents.2 The team organized documents into three groups: (1) nonresponsive,

which they removed; (2) responsive but either produced before from a past FOIA

request, outside the window Defendant calculated, or exempt under FOIA, which

they also removed but listed the exempt documents in an index; and (3) responsive

and not previously produced, outside the timeframe, or exempt under FOIA, which

they gave to Plaintiff. As the team compiled disclosable responsive documents, it

sent groups of them to Plaintiff in “rolling productions.”

Over the course of a year, Defendant organized twenty-seven rolling

productions to Plaintiff after identifying 140,637 responsive pages in 14,740 records.

Defendant tried to produce these documents in a way Plaintiff preferred, such as

reproducing documents as individual PDF files and reproducing those documents a

third time as searchable PDFs once Plaintiff objected to the non-searchable format.

At Plaintiff’s insistence, Defendant also created an almost 800-page “Vaughn index”

to inventory the thousands of agency records FOIA exempted from disclosure (7,757

in total). See Vaughn v. Rosen, 484 F.2d 820, 827 (D.C. Cir. 1973) (establishing that

an agency can list exempt documents in an index to allow a court to consider the

agency’s justifications for exempting them more easily). Defendant even hired an

outside contractor to help prepare the Vaughn index because so many privilege issues

2 Other Forest Service employees helped part-time. 4 Appellate Case: 21-1169 Document: 010110791250 Date Filed: 12/30/2022 Page: 5

came into play and Defendant wanted to make sure it had properly withheld or

redacted documents. Defendant submitted declarations detailing its months-long

search effort.

While Defendant gathered responsive documents to include in the rolling

productions, Plaintiff sued Defendant in federal court for allegedly missing statutory

deadlines, conducting an inadequate search, and improperly withholding or redacting

documents. During the litigation, Defendant started producing documents to

Plaintiff. In one production, Defendant mistakenly included two documents not

properly redacted and asked Plaintiff to return or destroy the documents and provided

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Bluebook (online)
56 F.4th 913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rocky-mountain-wild-v-united-states-forest-service-ca10-2022.