WAGNER v. OFFICE OF THE SHERIFF OF CUSTER COUNTY
This text of 2021 OK CIV APP 20 (WAGNER v. OFFICE OF THE SHERIFF OF CUSTER COUNTY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
WAGNER v. OFFICE OF THE SHERIFF OF CUSTER COUNTY
2021 OK CIV APP 20
492 P.3d 1240
Case Number: 119009
Decided: 04/30/2021
Mandate Issued: 05/26/2021
DIVISION I
THE COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA, DIVISION I
Cite as: 2021 OK CIV APP 20, 492 P.3d 1240
A. JAY WAGNER Plaintiff/Appellant,
v.
THE OFFICE OF THE SHERIFF OF CUSTER COUNTY, OKLAHOMA, Defendant/Appellee.
APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF
CUSTER COUNTY, OKLAHOMA
HONORABLE JILL C. WEEDON, JUDGE
AFFIRMED
Kevin K. Kemper, Guthrie, Oklahoma, for Plaintiff/Appellant,
Mart Tisdal, Luke Adams, TISDAL & O'HARA, Clinton, Oklahoma,
Pat O'Hara, Patrick O'Hara, Jr., W. Jason Hartwig, TISDAL & O'HARA, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma,
Angela Marsee, District Attorney, Arapaho, Oklahoma,
Ricky McPhearson, Assistant District Attorney, Arapaho, Oklahoma, for Defendant/Appellee.
¶1 This appeal presents the following question: When a public body receives a request via email for records covered by Oklahoma Open Records Act, 51 O.S. §24A.1, et. seq ("the Act"), is that body required to respond and provide the records via email? Because we determine that the text of the statute requires a public body to do nothing more than make such records available, we answer in the negative.
BACKGROUND
¶2 The relevant facts are not in dispute. A. Jay Wagner is a professor of journalism in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In June 2019, Professor Wagner sent a request for records to the defendant and appellant, the sheriff of Custer County, Oklahoma, pursuant to the Open Records Act. The records sought were not expansive, being the incident or initial offense reports generated by the sheriff's office covering just two days. It is undisputed that the relevant records were covered by the Act. The professor sent his request via email and asked that the pertinent records be returned "as a digital file ... and delivered via email."
¶3 According to the undisputed record, the sheriff looked for and found the relevant records but refused to deliver them to the professor via email or any other method, stating he was not required to do so under the Act. When the professor sought clarification as to the reason for the refusal, the sheriff responded as follows:
Under advisement of legal counsel, nothing in the Oklahoma Records Act requires me to mail or email records or documents to a requestor.
The law states that I am required to maintain business hours for the purpose of inspection, copying or the mechanical reproduction of records.
I am not refusing to search for your requested records, as I have done so, and they are ready for you or a representative to pick up at our office Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., excluding weekends and holidays.
¶4 Thereafter, the professor hired counsel and sued the sheriff, claiming a right to electronic delivery of records under the Act.1 The sheriff moved for summary judgment, which the trial court granted, finding that no such right exists.2
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Whether summary judgment was properly entered is a question of law which we review de novo. In a de novo review, we have plenary, independent and non-deferential authority to determine whether the trial court erred in its application of the law and whether there is any genuine issue of material fact. Like the trial court, we examine the pleadings and summary judgment evidentiary materials submitted by the parties to determine if there is a genuine issue of material fact. We view the facts and all reasonable inferences arising therefrom in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.
Citizens Against Taxpayer Abuse, Inc. v. City of Oklahoma City, 2003 OK 65, ¶6, 73 P.3d 871, 874 (citations omitted).3
ANALYSIS
¶5 The Oklahoma Open Records Act was enacted in 1985. 1985 Okla. Sess. Laws, ch. 355, §1. It is codified at 51 O.S. §24A.1 et seq. Although several portions of the Act have been updated at various times, its operative provisions, which we view as dispositive here, have not been meaningfully changed. Section 24A.5 provides: "All records of public bodies and public officials shall be open to any person for inspection, copying, or mechanical reproduction during regular business hours ...." 51 O.S. §24A.5. Similarly, §24A.8, which the parties agree applies specifically to the sheriff and the records requested here, requires that "[l]aw enforcement agencies shall make available for public inspection and copying, if kept, ... [a] chronological list of all incidents, including initial offense report information ...." Id. at §24A.8.
¶6 The professor invites us to convert these passive commands -- commands simply to make records available to the public -- into affirmative prescriptive requirements. However, neither the plain language of the directives nor the contextual clues left by the legislature throughout the Act support the professor's reading.
¶7 We look first to the words of the statute. Although the fundamental goal of statutory construction is to divine the intent of the legislature, we must search for that intent in the language of the statute. YDF, Inc. v. Schlumar, Inc., 2006 OK 32, ¶6, 136 P.3d 656, 658. Here the legislature invoked the passive voice to describe what a government body must do with regards to its records but did not indicate how the required result must be accomplished.
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