Sander v. State Bar of California

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 23, 2018
DocketA150061
StatusPublished

This text of Sander v. State Bar of California (Sander v. State Bar of California) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sander v. State Bar of California, (Cal. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed 8/23/18 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

RICHARD SANDER et al., Petitioners and Appellants, A150061, A150625 v. STATE BAR OF CALIFORNIA et al., (City & County of San Francisco Super. Ct. No. CPF08508880) Defendants and Respondents.

Appellants and petitioners Richard Sander and the First Amendment Coalition (Petitioners) challenge the trial court’s denial of their petition for writ of mandate seeking to obtain information from the State Bar of California’s bar admissions database. Specifically, Petitioners seek individually unidentifiable records for all applicants to the California Bar Examination from 1972 to 2008 in the following categories: race or ethnicity, law school, transfer status, year of law school graduation, law school and undergraduate GPA, LSAT scores, and performance on the bar examination. Making these records available to the public in a manner that protects the applicants’ privacy and anonymity, they believe, will allow researchers to study the potential relationship between preferential admissions programs in higher education and a gap in bar passage rates between racial and ethnic groups. Following a bench trial, the superior court upheld the State Bar’s denial of Petitioners’ request on five independent grounds. We need address only the first of them. The court correctly found Petitioners’ request to be beyond the purview of the California

1 Public Records Act (Gov. Code § 6250 et seq. (CPRA)) because it would compel the State Bar to create new records.1 Accordingly, we affirm. BACKGROUND I. Phase I Litigation This case has taken a long and well-documented path between the trial court, this court and the Supreme Court. Sander v. State Bar of California (2013) 58 Cal.4th 300, 307–309 (Sander) relates much of the relevant background (incorporated by reference here) and provides the starting point for this appeal, the second in this court. (See Sander v. State Bar of California (2011) 196 Cal.App.4th 614 [126 Cal.Rptr.3d 330], review granted Aug. 25, 2011 and superseded by Sander) At issue in Sander was the trial court’s determination that the State Bar has no common law or state Constitutional duty to disclose records in its admissions database. The Supreme Court reversed and remanded. It explained: “The question presented is whether any law requires disclosure of the State Bar’s admissions database on bar applicants. We conclude that under the common law right of public access, there is sufficient public interest in the information contained in the admissions database such that the State Bar is required to provide access to it if the information can be provided in a form that protects the privacy of applicants and if no countervailing interest outweighs the public’s interest in disclosure. Because the trial court concluded that there was no legal basis for requiring disclosure of the admissions database, the parties did not litigate, and the trial court did not decide, whether and how the admissions database might be redacted or otherwise modified to protect applicants’ privacy and whether any countervailing interests weigh in favor of nondisclosure. Consequently, the Court of appeal will be directed to remand the case to the trial court.” (Sander, supra, 58 Cal.4th at p. 304; see p. 309 [“there is a public interest in access to the State Bar’s admissions database that will require the State Bar to disclose the requested information if it can be

1 Unless otherwise indicated, further statutory citations are to the Government Code. 2 applied in a form that does not violate the privacy of applicants and if other considerations do not warrant nondisclosure”]; see also Sander v. State Bar of California, supra, 196 Cal.App.4th 614.) The Supreme Court in Sander expressly left open whether changes to the admissions database necessary to protect applicants’ privacy would entail the creation of new records, and thereby exceed the scope of disclosure required under public access laws. (Sander, supra, 58 Cal.4th at p. 327.) It observed that “in the context of electronic records, and in particular electronic databases, to resolve this issue would require consideration of the complexity of the tasks required to produce the data in the form requested; consequently, it would be premature for us to attempt to resolve this issue.” (Ibid.) The case was remanded for the trial court to resolve (1) whether the requested information can be provided in a form that protects the privacy of applicants; and (2) whether countervailing interests outweigh the public’s interest in disclosure. (Ibid.) Following remand, more than a dozen individuals who had applied to take the California Bar Exam since 1972 and two non-profit professional associations of African American lawyers, the Black Women Lawyers Association of Los Angeles, Inc. and the John M. Langston Bar Association of Los Angeles, intervened on the side of the State Bar. They did so “to protect privacy and reputational interests that are at the heart of the litigation between Petitioners and the State Bar” by preventing disclosure of “the sensitive, private information of Individual Intervenors or the members of Organizational Intervenors that stands to be exposed if the Petitioners prevail in this action.” II. The Admissions Database Subject to a stringent stipulated protective order, the State Bar provided Petitioners’ experts with highly confidential data from its admissions databases to facilitate expert analysis concerning the issues to be tried upon remand. The admissions databases consist of five separate text files containing for each applicant who sat for the bar examination between 1972 and 2008: (1) the number of times the applicant took the exam, and whether he or she passed or failed; (2) law school graduation date and a code for any law

3 school attended; (3) LSAT score and law school GPA; (4) race and ethnicity; (5) a file linking the law school codes and law school names. III. Post-Sander Legislation In 2015 the Legislature enacted Business and Professions Code section 6026.11, which for the first time made records of the State Bar subject to production under the CPRA. (Stats. 2015, ch. 537, § 6.) It also enacted a specific confidentiality statute governing State Bar admission records. With exceptions not relevant here, section 6060.25 provides that “Notwithstanding any other law, any identifying information submitted by an applicant to the State Bar for admission and a license to practice law and all State Bar admission records, including, but not limited to, bar examination scores, law school grade point average (GPA), undergraduate GPA, Law School Admission Test scores, race or ethnicity, and any information contained within the State Bar Admissions database or any file or other data created by the State Bar with information submitted by the applicant that may identify an individual applicant . . . shall be confidential and shall not be disclosed pursuant to any state law, including, but not limited to, the California Public Records Act. . . .” (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6060.25, subd. (a), added by Stats 2015, ch. 537, § 8.) IV. The “Phase II” Trial The “Phase II” issues were tried to the court over five days. Much of the trial was devoted to competing expert testimony about whether disclosure of the admission records may reveal bar applicants’ private information or require the State Bar to create new records not already in its possession.2 A primary issue was whether the four different protocols proposed by Petitioners to de-identify or “anonymize” the data were sufficient

2 Four of the Intervenors testified to their concerns about the release of information they provided to the State Bar with the understanding it would remain confidential.

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Sander v. State Bar of California, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sander-v-state-bar-of-california-calctapp-2018.