Spokane Research & Defense Fund v. City of Spokane
This text of 89 P.3d 319 (Spokane Research & Defense Fund v. City of Spokane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
SPOKANE RESEARCH & DEFENSE FUND, a Washington non-profit corporation, Plaintiff,
Tim Connor; Rhubarb Sky LLC, Appellants,
v.
CITY OF SPOKANE, a Washington first class charter city, Respondent.
Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 3, Panel Eight.
*320 John D. Blair-Loy, Attorney at Law, Spokane, WA, Steve W. Berman, Nancy A. Pacharzina, Hagens Berman LLP, Seattle, WA, for Appellants.
Laurel Hobbs Siddoway, David Groesbeck, Randall & Danskin PS, Spokane, WA, for Respondent.
SWEENEY, A.C.J.
This is a public disclosure act (PDA) case. Tim Connor, an investigative reporter, seeks attorney fees and penalties as a prevailing party under the PDA. We agree with the trial judge that Mr. Connor is not a prevailing party for two reasons. First, he failed to obtain a show cause order as required by the PDA. And, second, most of the documents Mr. Connor demanded were made public as the result of related but separate litigation by others. To the extent Spokane Research & Defense Fund did prevail, it did so on claims to which Mr. Connor was not a party and by following the correct statutory procedures. Accordingly, we affirm the summary judgment orders dismissing Mr. Connor's claims.
FACTS
In 2000, Tim Connor was a journalist for CAMAS Magazine. Mr. Connor requested numerous records from the City of Spokane (City) related to the River Park Square downtown development project pursuant to the PDA provisions of chapter 42.17 RCW. The City began assembling documents and making them available.
In April 2001, the City gave Mr. Connor an index of 238 documents it claimed were exempt from PDA disclosure as attorney-client communications or litigation work product. Meanwhile, the bondholders on the project filed suit in federal court. In response, the City began a review of its privilege claims. Mr. Connor requested items from the April 2001 index on June 13, 2001. The City replied that a new index was being prepared and that documents previously withheld would soon be released.
A week later Mr. Connor sued for a declaratory judgment that the City had violated the PDA (Spokane County Superior Court No. 01203665-8, Connor I). Mr. Connor's complaint also demanded an order that the City make available all records relevant to his requests, and for attorney fees and penalties. Mr. Connor filed a motion for an order to show cause in Connor I on July 12, 2001. A hearing was held the same day. But no show cause order was ever issued. Mr. Connor proceeded instead with discovery under CR 26. On September 27, 2001, the City produced a definitive index of 111 River Park Square documents it still claimed were exempt from disclosure. All other documents had been released. Mr. Connor requested written depositions on December 14, 2001. The City moved for a protection order and asked the court to rule on the status of the documents already before the court.
*321 The Spokane Research & Defense Fund Action
On December 14, 2001, Spokane Research & Defense Fund filed a PDA request against the City for the same documents requested by Mr. Connor on June 13, relying on the obsolete (April 2001) index. The City again asserted its claims of exemption. Spokane Research proceeded under RCW 42.17.340(1).[1] And on January 7, 2002, it filed an ex parte motion in superior court for an order requiring the City to show cause why the documents should not be released. The court held a hearing on January 22, 2002. Everyone agreed that the only disputed documents were those 111 from the September 27, 2001 index.
The court granted Mr. Connor's motion to intervene in Spokane Research's action. Mr. Connor then filed a complaint as intervenor (Connor II) requesting various documents listed in the September 27, 2001 index and incorporating his Connor I claims. Both Connor I and Connor II were simultaneously before the same judge.
Meanwhile, discovery was proceeding in yet another River Park Square action, Eugster v. City of Spokane, Spokane County Superior Court No. 00204265-0. On December 21, 2001, the court issued a CR 26(b) discovery order in that case (the Lewis order). The court ruled that, by suing its outside counsel, Yale Lewis, the City waived the attorney-client privilege as to any document referenced or relied upon by Mr. Lewis in an October 30, 2000 confidential report to the city manager. Among the documents included in the Lewis order were the same 111 documents at issue in Connor II. The City began making documents publicly available pursuant to the Lewis order.
On January 18, 2002, the City turned over 238 documents to the Connor II court for in-camera review, including the 111 documents from the September 27, 2001 index. The court reviewed only the 18 documents the City had not made public in the wake of the Lewis order. The Connor II court issued its decision in a memorandum opinion filed on April 19, 2002 under the case number of Connor I. As to those documents already released, the court ruled that the City had acted properly in retaining them until they were judicially identified as discoverable. The court ruled that the remaining 18 documents were exempt from disclosure under RCW 42.17.310. In the same order, the court granted Mr. Connor's CR 26 discovery motions in Connor I to find out whether the City had "silently" withheld additional documents by failing to acknowledge their existence.
Orders Appealed From
On May 20, 2002, Mr. Connor moved for summary judgment as intervenor in Connor II. He again asked for a judgment declaring that the City was unlawfully withholding records, for an order to disclose them, for an award of attorney fees and costs, and for the imposition of statutory penalties.
Mr. Connor asked the court to inspect the documents already released and enter findings on disputed facts, such as the propriety of the City's having withheld the records; whether the claims of privilege were overbroad; whether the City should have released redacted versions; whether the records were transactional rather than litigation work product; and whether the City "persistently favor[ed] secrecy over disclosure of these records." Clerk's Papers (CP) at 560, 563, 565-71, 573, 575-77, 580. He also asked the court to reconsider its April 19, 2002 memorandum decision. He asked for attorney fees and $740,000 in penalties.
The court denied summary judgment, incorporating its April 19 Connor I memorandum decision. The court found that the City appropriately retained the documents ordered discoverable in the Lewis order until *322 the scope of the implied waiver was established. Thereafter, it reasonably took until May 2002 for the City, working with Mr. Lewis, to determine the scope of the waiver. The court concluded that neither the Spokane Research action nor Mr. Connor's intervention was instrumental in obtaining release of the Lewis documents. Referring to the Lewis order and Eugster v. City of Spokane, the court found that "someone else had already won the disclosure battle" for these documents before Mr. Connor intervened. CP at 1075. The court concluded that Mr.
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89 P.3d 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spokane-research-defense-fund-v-city-of-spokane-washctapp-2004.