Vermont Journalism Trust v. Vermont Agency of Commerce and Community Development

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedJuly 13, 2021
Docket338-10-20 Wncv
StatusPublished

This text of Vermont Journalism Trust v. Vermont Agency of Commerce and Community Development (Vermont Journalism Trust v. Vermont Agency of Commerce and Community Development) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vermont Journalism Trust v. Vermont Agency of Commerce and Community Development, (Vt. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Washington Unit Case No. 338-10-20 Wncv 65 State Street Montpelier VT 05602 802-828-2091 www.vermontjudiciary.org

Vermont Journalism Trust vs. Vermont Agency of Com

ENTRY REGARDING MOTION Title: Motion for Summary Judgment; Cross Motion for Summary Judgment Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment and Incorporated Memorandum of Law; (Motion: 3; 4) Filer: Lia N. Ernst Filed Date: March 16, 2021; April 27, 2021

The motion is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART.

Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment

This is a public records case in which Plaintiff the Vermont Journalism Trust, which operates the VTDigger.org news website, has sought the production of certain public records from Defendant the Vermont Agency of Commerce and Community Development and its secretary, Lindsay Kurrle, in official capacity only (collectively, ACCD or the State). The disputed records consist of e-mails to or from ACCD’s former secretary Lawrence Miller and several key figures directly involved in or related to the sprawling Jay Peak EB-5 fraud scandal during key years (the Miller e-mails). The ACCD withheld those records under the “litigation exception” to the Public Records Act, 1 V.S.A. § 317(c)(14). 1 The parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment addressing whether the documents have been properly withheld although, as described below, the underlying events have partially overtaken the pace of this case.

The defrauded EB-5 investors currently are suing the State and two State officials based on their alleged roles in the fraud in Sutton v. Vermont Regl. Ctr., No. 100-5-17 Lecv (Vt. Super. Ct.). Mr. Miller originally was a defendant in that case, though he was later determined to have absolute immunity. Sutton v. Vermont Regl. Ctr., 2019 VT 71A, ¶ 48. The Sutton litigation is ongoing. The State originally

1 At issue are over 1,000 records the State deems “relevant” to litigation. The State originally identified approximately 300 other potentially responsive but not-relevant-to-litigation records that it believed were outside the scope of the Trust’s interests. It has since voluntarily produced those records upon clarification that the Trust in fact wanted them. Entry Regarding Motion Page 1 of 5 338-10-20 Wncv Vermont Journalism Trust vs. Vermont Agency of Com denied the Trust’s request claiming that the documents are “relevant to” the Sutton litigation under Exemption 14.

Exemption 14 allows the State, in response to a public records request, to temporarily not produce “[r]ecords which are relevant to litigation to which the public agency is a party of record, provided all such matters shall be available to the public after ruled discoverable by the court before which the litigation is pending, but in any event upon final termination of the litigation.” 1 V.S.A. § 317(c)(14). The Trust argues that Exemption 14 does not apply here because it (the Trust) is not a party to the underlying litigation and, otherwise, the court should import a balancing test from the law of other states or otherwise substantially narrow Exemption 14 due to intense public interest in the EB-5 scandal and its private motivations to reveal and report on the State’s involvement. The Trust also argues that the State essentially has manipulated the underlying litigation to avoid production, that litigation is taking too long in any event, and the records somehow are not relevant to the underlying litigation even though the Trust believes they will document individual State actors’ complicity or negligence regarding the fraud, the very claims the Sutton plaintiffs are asserting.

The Trust’s arguments are at war with the language of Exemption 14 and binding precedent that this court has no authority to disregard or alter in the manner urged. The Vermont Supreme Court interpreted Exemption 14 in Wesco, Inc. v. Sorrell, 2004 VT 102, 177 Vt. 287, and Shlansky v. City of Burlington, 2010 VT 90, 188 Vt. 470. In Wesco, the Court broadly held that the plain language of Exemption 14 extends to documents “that are relevant—related or pertinent—to, and not merely discoverable in, pending or ongoing litigation” until the litigation ends or the litigation-court orders production in discovery. Wesco, 2004 VT 102, ¶ 14. In Shlansky, the City had withheld some documents in response to Mr. Shlansky’s records request that the City itself had determined were “completely irrelevant” to related traffic-ticket litigation. Shlansky, 2010 VT 90, ¶ 4. The Court ultimately remanded for a better “related or pertinent” showing to the trial court. However, it noted that the City’s decision was illogical on its face, and it otherwise saw no evident connection between certain records that may reflect on the general functioning of the police department and whatever specific issues there may be in Mr. Shlansky’s traffic ticket case.

Shlansky does not draw the brightest of lines demarcating relevance for Exemption 14 purposes but its purport is that the proper breadth of relevance is mediated both by Wesco’s broad “related or pertinent” showing as well as by the actual litigation interests of the public agency in the underlying case. In Shlansky, the City essentially claimed that the withheld records were relevant to the underlying litigation in some fashion though they had no bearing on the City’s actual litigation interests in the underlying litigation. If a public records requestor seeks documents that are “relevant” to issues or facts in the public agency’s underlying litigation, but the agency has no underlying litigation interest in not producing those documents, then they should not be withheld under Exemption 14. To do so would be to use relevance as a “magic word” to maximize secrecy, which is not the point of Exemption 14.

Entry Regarding Motion Page 2 of 5 338-10-20 Wncv Vermont Journalism Trust vs. Vermont Agency of Com Shlansky, 2010 VT 90, ¶ 12. Exemption 14 protects the public agency’s legitimate, ongoing litigation interests and nothing more.

The Trust’s principal arguments may be dispensed with summarily. The argument that Exemption 14 does not apply because it (the Trust) is not a party to the underlying litigation makes no sense. Exemption 14 applies when a records requestor seeks documents relevant to litigation to which a public agency is a party. It is not based on the private motivations of the requestor (discovery-related or otherwise), and any third party could get access through a public records request and hand the documents over to the litigant. It plainly applies equally to the State’s adversary and any other third party.

The Trust’s argument that the court should adopt a balancing test or otherwise narrow Exemption 14 substantially is simply incongruous with Wesco and Shlansky, which are binding. If change is to be made, then legislative action is the best probable method for doing so.

The Trust’s argument that its private motivations—to uncover the State’s alleged misconduct and report on it—are irrelevant. The private motivations of a public records requestor are irrelevant to the analysis of records exemptions. Neither the website it operates nor its prior reporting on the EB-5 scandal give the Trust any special status under the Public Records Act. Public agencies have been pointedly advised that the motivations underlying public records requests are not up for consideration. That is a two-way street. See Finberg v. Murnane, 159 Vt. 431, 437 (1992) (noting that identify and motive of requestor are irrelevant to evaluation of exemption).

The Trust’s argument that the State has manipulated EB-5 litigation to thwart its public records requests has no evidentiary basis in the record.

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Related

Shlansky v. City of Burlington
2010 VT 90 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2010)
Finberg v. Murnane
623 A.2d 979 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1992)
Wesco, Inc. v. Sorrell
2004 VT 102 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
Vermont Journalism Trust v. Vermont Agency of Commerce and Community Development, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vermont-journalism-trust-v-vermont-agency-of-commerce-and-community-vtsuperct-2021.