Tommy Adkisson, Individually, and Officially on Behalf of Bexar County, Texas, as County Commissioner Precinct 4 v. Ken Paxton, Attorney General of Texas And Hearst Newspapers, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 13, 2014
Docket03-12-00535-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Tommy Adkisson, Individually, and Officially on Behalf of Bexar County, Texas, as County Commissioner Precinct 4 v. Ken Paxton, Attorney General of Texas And Hearst Newspapers, LLC (Tommy Adkisson, Individually, and Officially on Behalf of Bexar County, Texas, as County Commissioner Precinct 4 v. Ken Paxton, Attorney General of Texas And Hearst Newspapers, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Tommy Adkisson, Individually, and Officially on Behalf of Bexar County, Texas, as County Commissioner Precinct 4 v. Ken Paxton, Attorney General of Texas And Hearst Newspapers, LLC, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-12-00535-CV

Tommy Adkisson, Individually, and Officially on Behalf of Bexar County, Texas as County Commissioner Precinct 4, Appellant

v.

Greg Abbott, Attorney General of Texas; and Hearst Newspapers, LLC, Appellees

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 200TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. D-1-GN-10-002120, HONORABLE GISELA D. TRIANA, JUDGE PRESIDING

OPINION

Tommy Adkisson appeals, both individually and on Bexar County’s behalf in his

official capacity as Bexar County Commissioner Precinct 4, from the trial court’s summary judgment

declaring that he must disclose certain records requested under the Texas Public Information Act

(PIA). See generally Tex. Gov’t Code §§ 552.001-.353. Commissioner Adkisson contends that the

requested information is not public information. The requestor, appellee Hearst Newspapers, LLC,

sought correspondence from Commissioner Adkisson’s personal e-mail accounts related to his

official capacity as a county commissioner or as chairman of the San Antonio-Bexar County

Metropolitan Planning Organization, or both.

The Commissioner sued the Attorney General for declaratory relief from the Attorney

General’s letter rulings that the information is public and must be released. See id. § 552.324.

Hearst intervened in the lawsuit. See id. §§ 552.321 (permitting requestor to sue for writ of mandamus compelling governmental body to make information available to public), .325 (providing that

requestor is entitled to intervene in suit filed by governmental body seeking declaratory relief

allowing it to withhold information). The Commissioner, the Attorney General, and Hearst each

moved for summary judgment. The trial court denied the Commissioner’s motion and granted the

Attorney General’s and Hearst’s motions and awarded attorneys’ fees to the Attorney General and

to Hearst. We will affirm because we conclude that information in the Commissioner’s official-

capacity e-mails is necessarily connected with the transaction of the County’s official business and

the County owns the information under the Local Government Code; thus, the requested information

satisfies the PIA’s definition of “public information.” In addition, we conclude that the trial court

acted within its discretion by awarding attorneys’ fees to the Attorney General and Hearst.

BACKGROUND

Hearst is the publisher of the San Antonio Express-News. An Express-News reporter

requested information under the PIA from the Commissioner. The reporter requested copies of

certain e-mail correspondence “related to [the Commissioner’s] official capacity as a county

commissioner and/or chairman of the [Metropolitan Planning Organization].” Although the request

sought correspondence from both the Commissioner’s personal e-mail accounts and his County

e-mail account, it explicitly stated that the Express-News sought only “relevant documents from

Commissioner Adkisson’s official capacity, not personal correspondence.”

Soon after Hearst requested documents from Bexar County, the Metropolitan Planning

Organization received a request from a different requestor seeking all correspondence between

the Commissioner, other named County Commissioners, and certain county employees on both

2 work and home communication devices when used in official capacity. The Metropolitan Planning

Organization, in turn, requested the information from Bexar County. The San Antonio-Bexar County

Metropolitan Planning Organization is an organization charged with developing and maintaining a

comprehensive regional transportation planning process.1 Its Transportation Policy Board provides

transportation policy and planning guidance. A number of regional elected and appointed officials

are on the Board. At the time of the PIA requests, the Commissioner served on the Board as one of

the Bexar County representatives and was the Board Chair.

Bexar County sought letter rulings from the Attorney General for both requests.2 See

id. § 552.301 (requiring governmental body that receives written request for information that it

wishes to withhold from public disclosure to ask for attorney general decision). The County

contended that any correspondence in the Commissioner’s personal e-mail accounts, regardless of

its content, is not public information as defined by the PIA because it was not either collected,

assembled, or maintained by the governmental body or prepared on behalf of the governmental body

and the governmental body did not have a right of access to the correspondence. The County

asserted that it was not submitting a representative sample of any requested correspondence

because to do so would require the County to search a computer at the Commissioner’s private

residence to compile the requested correspondence, which would infringe upon the Commissioner’s

legitimate expectation of privacy and his constitutional rights not to be subject to a search warrant

1 This background information about the San Antonio-Bexar County Metropolitan Planning Organization was provided in Adkisson’s summary-judgment motion and appears to be uncontested. 2 The Attorney General issued substantively similar letter rulings for both requests, reaching the same conclusion in both. Likewise, our analysis applies to both requests.

3 without probable cause. The County’s two requests for rulings from the Attorney General were

substantively the same, except that in the second request the County also asserted that the

information might be excepted from disclosure under Sections 552.101 (based on case law related

to common-law privacy), 552.109, 552.111, and 552.137 of the PIA. See id. §§ 552.101 (excepting

from disclosure information considered to be confidential by law, including judicial decision), .109

(excepting from disclosure elected official’s private correspondence or communications related to

matters which would constitute invasion of privacy if disclosed), .111 (excepting from disclosure

interagency or intra-agency correspondence that would not be available by law to party in litigation

with agency), .137 (excepting from disclosure e-mail address of member of public that is provided

for purpose of communicating electronically with governmental body).

The Attorney General determined that the requested information comes “within the

scope of the [PIA] if it relates to the official business of a governmental body and is maintained by

a public official or employee of the governmental body.” Relying on the statutory language and

prior open records decisions, the Attorney General explained that information in a public official’s

personal records may be subject to the PIA if the public official uses the records to conduct public

business: “A governmental body may not circumvent the applicability of the [PIA] by conducting

official public business in a private medium.” Accordingly, the Attorney General ruled that:

[T]o the extent the e-mails maintained by the county Commissioners and county employees relate to the official business of the county, they are subject to the [PIA]. To the extent the county Commissioners’ and county employees’ e-mails do not relate to the official business of the county, they are not subject to the Act and need not be released.

4 The Attorney General also addressed the County’s contention that it could not

search for or produce a representative sample of documents without infringing upon the County

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