State Ex Rel. Veale v. City of Boca Raton

353 So. 2d 1194, 1977 Fla. App. LEXIS 16909
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 20, 1977
Docket75-2257
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 353 So. 2d 1194 (State Ex Rel. Veale v. City of Boca Raton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Veale v. City of Boca Raton, 353 So. 2d 1194, 1977 Fla. App. LEXIS 16909 (Fla. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

353 So.2d 1194 (1977)

STATE of Florida ex rel. Max VEALE, Appellant,
v.
CITY OF BOCA RATON, etc., et al., Appellees.

No. 75-2257.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.

December 20, 1977.
Rehearing Denied February 7, 1978.

Parker D. Thomson and Franklin G. Burt of Paul & Thomson, Miami, for appellant.

William K. Howell, Jr., City Atty., Boca Raton, for appellees.

SCHWARTZ, ALAN R., Associate Judge.

We must decide in this case the important issue which the Supreme Court in News-Press Publishing Co. v. Wisher, 345 So.2d 646 (Fla. 1977), held the Second District need not have decided in Wisher v. News-Press Publishing Co., 310 So.2d 345 (Fla.2d DCA 1975); that is, whether non-statutory public policy considerations may restrict public access to governmental documents otherwise deemed "public records" under the Public Records Act, Fla. Stat. § 119.01 et seq. For the reasons which follow, we conclude that the presently applicable statutory provisions neither recognize nor permit the judicial creation of exceptions to the Act and therefore reverse the contrary conclusion reached below.

The facts which give rise to this controversy are undisputed. In late 1975, the Boca Raton City Council directed Lawrence J. Marchbanks, an Assistant City Attorney, to investigate and prepare a report concerning suspected irregularities in the City's Building Department. Together with his law partner, City Prosecutor Reynolds, Marchbanks carried out this directive and prepared the requested report which he *1195 presented to the Council on December 16, 1975. An accompanying letter by Marchbanks stated that the report demonstrated "probable cause to warrant consideration of sanctions against named individual city employees;" in fact, apparently on the basis of the report, two employees were fired and another was being investigated further. Marchbanks had also turned over his "findings" to the State Attorney's office for further inquiry and such action as that office deemed advisable. At the December 16, 1975 meeting, however, the City Council declined to make the report itself available to the press and public. It did so upon the acceptance of Marchbanks' advice, made on the basis of the Second District's Wisher decision and upon an invocation of the "attorney-client" privilege, that such access could be lawfully refused. Indeed the Council merely ordered the report referred to City Attorney William Howell, who was himself directed to confer with the City Manager as to further appropriate action.

Almost immediately, Max Veale, the Managing Editor of the Boca Raton News, filed a mandamus proceeding against the City, its mayor and manager, and Howell and Marchbanks, to require them to make the report public. Although an alternative writ was issued, the trial court, at which the Attorney-General appeared as an amicus for Veale, dissolved the alternative writ and dismissed the proceeding in a final judgment which recognized the status of the document itself as a "public record" as defined in Fla. Stat. § 119.011(1) (1975) but which stated

"... that the issues herein are governed by the case of Wisher vs. News-Press Publishing Co., 310 So.2d 345 (2 DCA Florida 1975), and that the report in question has been referred to the State Attorney, and that the opening of the investigation report sought by the Petitioner would result in a substantial probability of significant damage to the public. The Court further finds that the subject report is a public record exempted by the doctrine of Wisher vs. News-Press Publishing Co., Supra, and Chapter 119, Florida Statute."

Veale has taken this appeal to review this determination.

The burden of the parties', and particularly the appellees' argument to us in support of their respective positions is concerned with weighty and significant questions of public policy concerning the relative significance of the "public's right to know," on the one hand, and the damage to the proper administration of governmental affairs should allegedly confidential information be publicly revealed, on the other. Perhaps thankfully, we consider that it is neither necessary nor proper for us to resolve this debate and that, to the contrary, the case may be properly decided merely upon an application of well-accepted and prosaic rules of statutory interpretation and stare decisis. We think that the Legislature has told us — and prior decisions have said that it told us — that the document in question may not be shielded from disclosure.

Our analysis begins, of course, with the terms of the statute itself. At all pertinent times, Fla. Stat., § 119.01 (1975) has provided that:

"It is the policy of this state that all state, county, and municipal records shall at all times be open for a personal inspection by any person. [emphasis supplied]."

Fla. Stat. § 119.07(1) (1975) requires the public official with custody of a public record to disclose it to any member of the public, including the media, who wishes to inspect it. Non-disclosure is permitted only if there is an exemption provided by Fla. Stat. § 119.07(2). At the time of the events concerned in the Wisher case, Fla. Stat. § 119.07(2)(a) (1973) provided:

"(a) All public records which presently are deemed by law to be confidential or which are prohibited from being inspected by the public, whether provided by general or special acts of the legislature or which may hereafter be so provided, shall be exempt from the provisions of this section." [emphasis supplied]

In 1975, the Legislature made what we think to be a significant amendment to this *1196 provision by deleting the phrase "deemed by law" and, in effect, substituting the phrase "provided by law". Fla. Stat. § 119.07(2)(a), as it applies to this case, therefore, now reads:

"(a) All public records which presently are provided by law to be confidential or which are prohibited from being inspected by the public, whether by general or special law, shall be exempt from the provisions of subsection (1)." [emphasis supplied]

While the parties disagree about almost everything else, they do agree that the report in question here is a "public record" under the Act, and that there is no specific statutory provision, contained in either a general or a special act, which renders it confidential or precludes its inspection. It is our view that this agreement to all intents decides the case to the contrary of the appellees' position.

The Supreme Court's decision in Wisher seems in itself to compel this conclusion. For the Court took jurisdiction of the case on the basis of its conclusion, expressed at 345 So.2d 646, that the Second District's Wisher "decision conflicts directly with State ex rel. Cummer v. Pace, 118 Fla. 496, 159 So. 679 (1935) ...". The Second District Wisher

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Bluebook (online)
353 So. 2d 1194, 1977 Fla. App. LEXIS 16909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-veale-v-city-of-boca-raton-fladistctapp-1977.