January 9 2014
DA 13-0442
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
2014 MT 5
THE BOULDER MONITOR,
Plaintiff and Appellee,
v.
JEFFERSON HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 1,
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Fifth Judicial District,
In and For the County of Jefferson, Cause No. DV-2012-52
Honorable Loren Tucker, Presiding Judge
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellant:
David C. Dalthorp, Gough, Shanahan, Johnson & Waterman, PLLP,
Helena, Montana
For Appellee:
David K. W. Wilson, Jr., Morrison, Sherwood, Wilson & Deola PLLP,
Helena, Montana
Submitted on Briefs: November 20, 2013
Decided: January 9, 2014
Filed:
__________________________________________
Clerk
Chief Justice Mike McGrath delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 The Jefferson High School District No. 1 (the District) appeals from the District
Court’s Order filed March 27, 2013, granting summary judgment to the Boulder Monitor
(Monitor). We reverse.
PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND
¶2 The Jefferson County High School Board established a budget subcommittee,
composed of three members of the full Board. The subcommittee’s task was to consider
budget issues and to report recommendations to the full Board. The Board met in a
regular meeting on July 10, 2012, and discussed a number of issues, including several
personnel positions. The Board reviewed four applicants for a principal position, and
asked the budget subcommittee to meet on July 13, 2012 “to see if there is any significant
savings that could be identified” regarding the salary for the position.
¶3 In addition to the discussion at the July 10 Board meeting as noted in the minutes
of that meeting, the Board gave public notice of the July 13, 2012 meeting of the
subcommittee. The notice indicated that the subcommittee would discuss the 2012-2013
school district budget, and noted that: “No decisions are made by a subcommittee of the
Jefferson High School Board of Trustees unless authorized by action of a majority of the
membership of the board in a regular meeting.”
¶4 The Boulder Monitor is a weekly newspaper covering Jefferson County and its
county seat, Boulder. The Monitor, and more specifically its publisher Jan Anderson,
claims that its policy is to attend each meeting of the full School Board and that it has
2
done so for several years. The Monitor was aware of the context of the budget
subcommittee meeting, having attended the July 10 regular meeting of the full Board.
The Monitor admits that it knew about the notice of the July 13 subcommittee meeting
but decided not to send a reporter to cover it because it was not noticed as a meeting of
the full School Board.
¶5 Pursuant to the discussion and directive at the regular Board meeting July 10, the
three designated members of the subcommittee met on July 13. A fourth member of the
School Board who was not a designated member of the budget subcommittee checked to
insure that three Board members were present to participate. Her affidavit indicated that
she was concerned that one of the subcommittee members had recent surgery and might
not be able to attend. All three subcommittee members attended, so the fourth School
Board member sat in the audience to observe the discussions about the 2012-2013
budget. The subcommittee discussed the salary level to allocate to a principal position
and to a part-time athletic director position. The fourth Board member asked some
questions during the discussion. The budget subcommittee, by consensus of its three
members, decided to recommend to the School Board a salary of $55,000 for the
principal position and a salary of $10,000 for the part-time athletic director position.
After the subcommittee set the salary levels, there was a discussion of whether or not full
benefits would also need to be paid. The school superintendent was present, and he
opined that two of the four applicants for the open principal position would likely not be
interested at the salary level recommended by the subcommittee.
3
¶6 One of the subcommittee members took notes of the discussion and intended to
send her notes to the full School Board as a report of the subcommittee’s
recommendations. She sent a draft of her notes of the meeting to each person who
attended, including the fourth board member. The fourth Board member sent back some
suggested revisions. The full School Board considered and acted upon the
subcommittee’s recommendations at its next regular meeting.
¶7 Jan Anderson attended the next scheduled meeting of the full School Board. She
determined, based upon what she heard there and upon the notes of the budget
subcommittee meeting, that the subcommittee meeting had actually been a meeting of the
full School Board. Anderson concluded that the presence of the fourth board member
meant that a quorum of the School Board had met. Anderson further determined that the
subcommittee had done more than discuss the 2012-2013 budget, and had acted in some
way to eliminate two of the candidates for the principal position. Anderson determined
that the notice of the subcommittee meeting had not disclosed that it would be a meeting
of the full School Board and that the notice had not disclosed that the subcommittee
would take action to reduce the number of candidates from four to two.
¶8 The Monitor sued the District contending that the meeting of the budget
subcommittee violated the open meeting and public participation requirements of
Montana law, Title 2, chapter 3, MCA. The complaint alleged that there was a quorum of
the School Board present at the subcommittee meeting on July 13; that the meeting
discussed “personnel matters” in addition to the 2012-2013 budget; that all four Board
members present participated in the discussion; and that the public notice of the
4
subcommittee meeting was inadequate. The complaint requested a declaration that the
Board had violated the open meeting and public participation requirements of Montana
law; requested that if any decision was made at the July 13 meeting, it be voided; and
requested an injunction against the School Board’s conducting any other official business
until its members completed a course in the open meeting and public participation
requirements of Montana law. The Monitor also requested that the School District be
ordered to pay its attorney fees.
¶9 The parties conducted limited discovery and both sides filed motions for summary
judgment. The District Court entered an Order filed March 27, 2013, granting summary
judgment to the Monitor and awarding it attorney fees as the prevailing party. The
District Court granted summary judgment to the Monitor based upon its determination
that the “critical facts are undisputed.” The critical facts noted in the District Court’s
Order were that a quorum of the School Board convened at the budget subcommittee
meeting on July 13, 2012; that the members present at that meeting heard and discussed
school business; that the members present “discussed at least four applications for an
administrative position”; that the members present acted to reduce the “roster of several
candidates” for the principal position; that the fourth School Board member was “clearly
involved in the conduct of the school business”; and that the School Board failed to give
notice that these actions would be taken.
¶10 The District Court, based upon its conclusion that these were undisputed facts,
granted summary judgment to the Monitor. The only relief the District Court granted
was a declaration that the School Board had violated the open meeting and public
5
participation requirements of Montana law at the July 13, 2012 meeting, and a
determination that the Monitor was entitled to attorney fees. The issue on appeal is
whether the District Court properly granted summary judgment to the Monitor based
upon the conclusion that the School Board violated Montana law in the manner in which
the July 13, 2012 budget subcommittee meeting was conducted.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶11 Summary judgment is governed by M. R. Civ. P. 56. That Rule provides that a
party is entitled to summary judgment “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to
interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that
there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to
judgment as a matter of law.” The moving party must demonstrate the absence of any
genuine issues of material fact and its entitlement to judgment as a matter of law.
Hiebert v. Cascade County, 2002 MT 233, ¶ 20, 311 Mont. 471, 56 P.3d 848. If the
moving party satisfies this burden then the opposing party must present material and
substantial evidence to demonstrate that there are genuine issues of material fact, or that
it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Hiebert, ¶ 21. All reasonable inferences that
might be drawn from offered evidence should be drawn in favor of the party opposing
summary judgment. Montana Metal Bldgs. v. Shapiro, 283 Mont. 471, 474, 942 P.2d
694, 696 (1997).
¶12 On appeal this Court reviews decisions on summary judgment de novo, applying
the same evaluation as the district court under M. R. Civ. P. 56 and determining whether
6
the district court’s conclusions of law are correct. Smart v. Judicial Standards Comm.,
2002 MT 148, ¶¶ 9-10, 310 Mont. 295, 50 P.3d 150.
DISCUSSION
¶13 In Montana the public’s constitutional “right to know” guarantees that “[n]o
person shall be deprived of the right . . . to observe the deliberations of all public bodies
or agencies of state government and its subdivisions. . . . .” Mont. Const. art. II, § 9.
This mandate is implemented through the open meeting laws codified at §§ 2-3-201, et.
seq., MCA. Common Cause of Montana v. Statutory Committee, 263 Mont. 324, 329,
868 P.2d 604, 607 (1994). Public bodies in Montana “exist to aid in the conduct of the
peoples’ business” and it is the intent of the statutes that the “actions and deliberations of
all public agencies shall be conducted openly” and “[a]ll meetings of public or
governmental bodies . . . must be open to the public.” Section 2-3-201, MCA. A
“meeting” is “the convening of a quorum1 of the constituent membership of a public
agency . . . to hear, discuss, or act upon a matter over which the agency has supervision,
control, jurisdiction, or advisory power.” Section 2-3-202, MCA. The public is entitled
to notice of public meetings and the opportunity to participate. Sections 2-3-103 and
-104, MCA. These constitutional and statutory provisions “must be liberally interpreted
in favor of openness.” Associated Press v. Crofts, 2004 MT 120, ¶ 22, 321 Mont. 193, 89
P.3d 971.
1
A quorum of a school board is a majority of the trustees’ membership. Section 20-3-322(4),
MCA.
7
¶14 The parties do not dispute that the School Board could establish a subcommittee to
discuss budget issues and then make recommendations for action to be taken by the full
Board. There is no dispute that the School Board provided public notice of the July 13,
2012 meeting of the budget subcommittee and that the Monitor got actual notice. There
is also no dispute that Monitor made its own decision not to attend the meeting called to
discuss the 2012-2013 budget. The Monitor disputes the adequacy of the notice, based
upon its contention that it was a meeting of a quorum of the School Board and that it took
action to eliminate candidates for a vacant principal position.
¶15 The District Court’s decision to grant summary judgment to the Monitor was
expressly premised upon the conclusion that the “critical facts are undisputed.” The
absence of a genuine dispute as to “critical facts” or “material facts” in the language of
M. R. Civ. P. 56, is the lynchpin of summary judgment. In the present case, however, the
record shows that at the time the District Court entered its Order granting summary
judgment, there were genuine disputes as to the material facts the District Court relied
upon. The School District’s pleadings, along with its briefs, affidavits and other
materials submitted to the District Court disputed the essential facts relied upon by the
District Court.
¶16 The District contended that the fourth Board member attended the subcommittee
meeting in her capacity as an interested citizen. The District disputed that the fourth
Board member was involved in the meeting as a member of the Board and contended that
she did not participate in reaching the subcommittee consensus that was reported to the
full School Board. The District asserted that only the designated members of the
8
subcommittee had the authority to consider the budget issue and report its consensus.
The District disputed that a quorum of the Board met and took action and significantly
disputed that the subcommittee “acted to reduce a field of four candidates to two
candidates.” The District contends that the subcommittee’s only action after budget
review was to reach a consensus on a salary level to recommend to the School Board for
final action. The District maintains that the Monitor’s positions on the facts are based
upon a misunderstanding of what happened and upon a mis-construction of the events.
Materials filed in the record by the Monitor took opposing positions on these factual
points.
¶17 The District Court resolved the factual disputes and contentions between the
parties in favor of the scenario posited by the Monitor. While the Monitor’s factual
contentions may ultimately prove out, the District Court should not have resolved factual
disputes between the parties when granting summary judgment. It is settled law that it is
improper for a district court to resolve factual disputes in a summary judgment
proceeding. Cole v. Flathead County, 236 Mont. 412, 416, 771 P.2d 97, 99 (1989);
Walker v. St. Paul Fire & Marine, 241 Mont. 256, 258-59, 786 P.2d 1157, 1159 (1990);
Mount. West Bank v. Mine & Mill Hydraulics, 2003 MT 35, ¶ 28, 314 Mont. 248, 64 P.3d
1048; Corporate Air v. Edwards Jet Center, 2008 MT 283, ¶ 28, 345 Mont. 336, 190
P.3d 1111.
¶18 The District Court erred by granting summary judgment when there were genuine
issues of material fact.
9
¶19 The District Court also incorrectly applied the law by concluding that the July 13,
2012 subcommittee meeting was a meeting of a quorum of the School Board for purposes
of the open meeting statutes. That ruling was based upon a determination that the
subcommittee meeting transformed into a meeting of a quorum of the full School Board
because a fourth Board member stayed during the proceedings. The open meetings
statutes apply to a “meeting,” which occurs upon the “convening” of a “quorum” of the
“constituent membership of a public agency.” Section 2-3-202, MCA. The only meeting
that was convened on July 13, 2012, was a noticed meeting of the three-member
subcommittee tasked by the School Board to make budget recommendations regarding
the salary level for an open principal position. The only persons who convened to “hear,
discuss or act upon” budget recommendations were the three designated members of the
subcommittee who alone could reach a consensus to report to the full School Board. This
is consistent with § 20-3-322(4), MCA, which provides that the “business” of a school
board may only be conducted at “regular meeting or a properly called special meeting” of
the school board.
¶20 Nothing in the letter or spirit of the open meeting statutes prohibits a person in the
position of the fourth member in this case from attending and observing a meeting of a
subcommittee along with any other members of the public. In fact, it can be argued that
the better public policy would be to encourage members of public bodies to observe such
events so they can be better educated and informed about matters that they will later vote
on in their official capacities. Penalizing those members and the public bodies they serve
by an unwarranted application of the statute creates a difficult labyrinth for public
10
servants and threatens to turn any Saturday night at the county rodeo into a board meeting
that must be noticed. We decline to formulate such strictures when none exist in the
statute. Sonsteile v. Board of Trustees, 202 Mont. 414, 419, 658 P.2d 413, 416 (1983).
¶21 We caution that this Opinion should not be taken as an invitation for subterfuge by
public bodies or their members to avoid public scrutiny and to conduct business in
violation of the requirements of the open meeting statutes. We determine only that the
statutes do not prohibit a member of a public body from observing a meeting of a
sub-quorum subcommittee, or even asking questions during the meeting, and that doing
so does not constitute the convening of a quorum. As § 2-3-202, MCA, provides, a
meeting exists only when a quorum has been convened. In the present case the mere
presence of the fourth Board member in the room to observe the budget subcommittee
did not transform that meeting into a meeting of the full School Board.
¶22 The Monitor does not contend, and the District Court did not determine, that it was
improper for the School Board to appoint a budget subcommittee and to ask it to consider
and recommend a salary level for the principal position. It seems clear that it would be
virtually impossible for the subcommittee to discuss the money to be allocated in a
vacuum without mentioning the position that the money would be used to fill and without
discussing such issues as whether or not the salary allocation would include benefits.
The District contends that it was the Superintendent, at the July 13 meeting, and not the
subcommittee members, who offered his opinion that the salary level selected by the
subcommittee would probably not attract some of the then-current applicants for the
11
principal position. As noted above, there are contested issues of fact that must be
resolved in this case and that may not be resolved on summary judgment.
¶23 The District Court improperly granted summary judgment to the Monitor and
therefore also improperly granted attorney fees to the Monitor. The Order granting
summary judgment is reversed and this case is remanded for further proceedings
consistent with this Opinion.
/S/ MIKE McGRATH
We Concur:
/S/ MICHAEL E WHEAT
/S/ PATRICIA COTTER
/S/ JIM RICE
Justice Laurie McKinnon, dissenting.
¶24 I dissent from the Court’s decision because the undisputed material facts establish
that the fourth School Board member’s attendance and participation in the July 13, 2012
meeting rendered it a meeting of the full School Board, regardless of whether the fourth
School Board member (Patricia Lewis) believed she was attending the meeting as a
“private citizen.”1
¶25 Article II, Section 9 of the Montana Constitution provides:
No person shall be deprived of the right to examine documents or to
observe the deliberations of all public bodies or agencies of state
1
It should be noted preliminarily that neither the District nor the Monitor disputes that
the Budget Subcommittee meeting was itself subject to the open-meeting laws.
12
government and its subdivisions, except in cases in which the demand of
individual privacy clearly exceeds the merits of public disclosure.
This provision, commonly referred to as the “right to know,” has been implemented and
protected by the Legislature through the open-meeting laws, codified at Title 2, chapter 3,
part 2, MCA. We recognized in Great Falls Tribune Co. v. Great Falls Public Schools,
255 Mont. 125, 841 P.2d 502 (1992), that Article II, Section 9 “is unambiguous and
capable of interpretation from the language of the provision alone.” 255 Mont. at 129,
841 P.2d at 504; accord Great Falls Trib. Co. v. Day, 1998 MT 133, ¶ 30, 289 Mont.
155, 959 P.2d 508. In Associated Press v. Board of Public Education, 246 Mont. 386,
804 P.2d 376 (1991), we observed that since Article II, Section 9 “is unique, clear and
unequivocal,” we are “precluded, by general principles of constitutional construction,
from resorting to extrinsic methods of interpretation.” 246 Mont. at 391, 804 P.2d at 379;
accord Great Falls Pub. Schs., 255 Mont. at 129, 841 P.2d at 504; Day, ¶ 30.
¶26 The Legislature’s expressed intent is that public boards and agencies in this State
“exist to aid in the conduct of the peoples’ business,” that the people “do not wish to
abdicate their sovereignty to the agencies which serve them,” and, therefore, that “actions
and deliberations of all public agencies shall be conducted openly.” Section 2-3-201,
MCA. “Toward these ends, the provisions of the [open-meeting laws] shall be liberally
construed.” Section 2-3-201, MCA; accord Common Cause of Mont. v. Statutory Comm.
to Nominate Candidates, 263 Mont. 324, 329, 868 P.2d 604, 607 (1994) (“The
legislature’s expressed intent that the open meeting laws be liberally construed . . . guides
our interpretation of these statutes.”).
13
¶27 “All meetings of public or governmental bodies, boards, bureaus, commissions,
agencies of the state, or any political subdivision of the state or organizations or agencies
supported in whole or in part by public funds or expending public funds, including the
supreme court, must be open to the public.” Section 2-3-203(1), MCA (emphasis added).
The term “meeting” is defined as
the convening of a quorum of the constituent membership of a public
agency or association described in 2-3-203, whether corporal or by means
of electronic equipment, to hear, discuss, or act upon a matter over which
the agency has supervision, control, jurisdiction, or advisory power.
Section 2-3-202, MCA. We have previously established that “[n]othing in the plain
language of § 2-3-202, MCA . . . , requires that a meeting produce some particular result
or action, or that a vote on something be taken. All that is required is that a quorum of
the membership convene[s] to conduct its public business.” Associated Press v. Crofts,
2004 MT 120, ¶ 30, 321 Mont. 193, 89 P.3d 971 (emphasis added). The constitutional
guarantee extends to all “deliberations” of a public body. Mont. Const. art. II, § 9.
¶28 To permit and encourage the public to participate in agency decisions, each
agency is required to develop procedures that “ensure adequate notice and assist public
participation before a final agency action is taken that is of significant interest to the
public.” Section 2-3-103(1)(a), MCA. Montana law thus requires that public notice be
given of meetings that are subject to the requirements of the open-meeting laws. We
have acknowledged that “[i]t is difficult to envision an open meeting held without public
notice that still accomplishes the legislative purpose of the Montana ‘open meeting’
statutes. Without public notice, an open meeting is open in theory only, not in practice.
14
This type of clandestine meeting violates the spirit and the letter of the Montana Open
Meeting Law.” Bd. of Trustees v. Bd. of Co. Commrs., 186 Mont. 148, 155-56, 606 P.2d
1069, 1073 (1980).
¶29 In this case, while the Court identifies several disputed facts as a reason to reverse
the District Court’s order granting summary judgment, Opinion, ¶ 16, it is my view that
the material facts are undisputed and that the District Court correctly focused on those
undisputed material facts in analyzing the alleged open-meeting violation. The
undisputed facts material to Article II, Section 9 and §§ 2-3-201, -202, and -203(1),
MCA, establish that the Budget Subcommittee of the School Board held a meeting on
July 13, 2012, to discuss the 2012-2013 school budget. The meeting was noticed up as a
meeting of the Budget Subcommittee, not the School Board. Present at the meeting,
however, were the three members of the Budget Subcommittee plus a fourth School
Board member who was not on the subcommittee. A “quorum” of the School Board is
defined as four or more members of the School Board. Ms. Lewis, the fourth member of
the School Board and the only board member not on the Budget Subcommittee, asked
questions during the meeting about the budget process. Following the meeting, Lewis,
via email, made certain changes or clarifications to the minutes/notes of the July 13, 2012
meeting. Lewis’s changes were subsequently circulated among the four School Board
members—the quorum—in attendance at the July 13, 2012 meeting.2
2
I note that this act alone of making substantive changes to the minutes/notes arguably
constituted a violation of § 2-3-202, MCA, as it was a discussion, by “electronic” means, of a
matter relating to School Board business.
15
¶30 Based on the foregoing undisputed facts, “a quorum of the constituent membership
of a public agency,” § 2-3-202, MCA—i.e., four members of the School Board—was
present on July 13, 2012. A matter over which the School Board has “supervision,
control, jurisdiction, or advisory power,” § 2-3-202, MCA—i.e., the school budget—was
heard and discussed. There was participation by a quorum of School Board members in
“hear[ing], discuss[ing], or act[ing] upon,” § 2-3-202, MCA, matters within the School
Board’s jurisdiction. The meeting by a quorum of the School Board was not properly
noticed as a School Board meeting.
¶31 These undisputed facts, in light of the “clear and unequivocal” language of our
Constitution, Associated Press, 246 Mont. at 391, 804 P.2d at 379, establish that the
meeting of July 13, 2012, did not comply with Montana’s open-meeting laws. A
straightforward application of the statutory provisions necessarily leads to the conclusion
that a quorum of the School Board heard, discussed, and otherwise conducted school
business without properly noticing the meeting as a School Board meeting. The disputed
facts as to what occurred at the meeting are irrelevant, as long as business of the School
Board was heard, discussed, or acted upon—as it was here.
¶32 The Court’s decision today will lead government agencies down a slippery slope
by raising the question of whether presence at a public meeting of the body upon which a
member serves constitutes a quorum. We have previously recognized that a “quorum” of
a given body consists of members who “assemble” or are “in attendance” at “any
particular meeting” of the body. Crofts, ¶ 31. The Court muddles this rule by holding
16
that board members may assemble or be in attendance at a public meeting without
constituting a quorum.
¶33 Our Constitution mandates that the deliberations of all public bodies or agencies
be open. Our open-meeting laws exist to implement this constitutional guarantee. A
gathering of School Board members at the county rodeo or at the local coffee shop, as the
Court posits, is not necessarily impermissible under the open-meeting laws. However, a
gathering of four School Board members at the rodeo or coffee shop is impermissible—
as it is similarly impermissible when four members assemble at a Budget Subcommittee
meeting—if they “hear, discuss, or act upon,” § 2-3-202, MCA, the school budget during
that gathering. We should not allow the open-meeting laws to be evaded on the ground
that a member of a public body, which has assembled as defined in § 2-3-202, MCA,
claims she was attending the meeting as a private citizen. I submit that Lewis’s inquiries
regarding the budgetary process directly related to her subsequent decision, made when
she wore her “School Board member” hat, on whether to approve recommendations of
the Budget Subcommittee concerning the 2012-2013 budget. Lewis’s presence and
inquiries clearly constituted “deliberations” of a matter which the School Board was
considering and which the public was entitled, therefore, to receive proper notice of and
to observe.
¶34 The Court opines that “the better policy” would be to encourage members of
public bodies to attend and observe subcommittee meetings along with members of the
public “so they can be better educated and informed about matters that they will later
vote on in their official capacities.” Opinion, ¶ 20. While such “policy” considerations
17
might be appropriate if we were articulating the substance of the right to know in the first
instance, we are not in a position to do that here. The Delegates debated the competing
“policy” considerations during the 1972 Constitutional Convention and struck the balance
they deemed appropriate. That balance is now set forth in the Constitution and the
statutes which implement the right to know. It is not this Court’s prerogative to adopt
what it feels is a “better” policy. The constitutional and statutory provisions are clear:
When a quorum of the board convenes “to hear, discuss, or act upon a matter over which
the agency has supervision, control, jurisdiction, or advisory power,” § 2-3-202, MCA,
“[n]o person shall be deprived of the right . . . to observe the [board’s] deliberations,”
Mont. Const. art. II, § 9. The open-meeting laws include public scrutiny of the
deliberative process which, in my view, necessarily includes public scrutiny of the
information utilized by board members to make their decisions.
¶35 The constitutional and statutory framework is reasonable and functions well, when
it is properly applied. Again, the scenario described above—a gathering of board
members at the county rodeo or coffee shop—is not impermissible if “a matter over
which the agency has supervision, control, jurisdiction, or advisory power” is not being
considered. Section 2-3-202, MCA. But it is impermissible if the public’s business (such
as school budgets) is being considered by “a quorum of the constituent membership” of
the public body (such as a quorum of the School Board) without proper notice and
without being open to the public. Sections 2-3-103, -202, -203, MCA. We have held that
our constitution mandates that the deliberations of public bodies be open,
which is more than a simple requirement that only the final voting be done
in public. Devices such as not fixing a specific membership of a body, not
18
adopting formal rules, not keeping minutes in violation of § 2-3-212, MCA,
and not requiring formal votes, must not be allowed to defeat the
constitutional and statutory provisions which require that the public’s
business be openly conducted.
Crofts, ¶ 31. I would add to this list that purporting not to “convene” a quorum of the
public agency, Opinion, ¶¶ 19-21, but otherwise satisfying the definition of “meeting” in
§ 2-3-202, MCA, has the potential to defeat the open-meeting laws and the requirement
that the public’s business be openly conducted. The Court’s approach in this case will
enable public bodies to circumvent the open-meeting laws by announcing that they never
“convened” a meeting, even though a quorum of the constituent membership was present
and discussed matters over which the agency has supervision, control, jurisdiction, or
advisory power. The Court’s restrictive interpretation of “convening” in § 2-3-202,
MCA, is contrary to the legislative mandate that our open-meeting laws be “liberally
construed” in favor of openness. Section 2-3-201, MCA; Crofts, ¶ 22.
¶36 The Court states that “[p]enalizing those members and the public bodies they serve
by an unwarranted application of the statute creates a difficult labyrinth for public
servants and threatens to turn any Saturday night at the county rodeo into a board meeting
that must be noticed.” Opinion, ¶ 20. I question, however, whether a “penalty” is being
imposed when the person is not being prohibited from attending the meeting but, rather,
is simply being held to the obligations and responsibilities of his or her position as a
member of the public body. Significantly, the only exception provided for by the plain
language of Article II, Section 9 applies when “the demand of individual privacy clearly
exceeds the merits of public disclosure.” It thus is difficult for me to accept that our
19
fundamental constitutional principles of open government should yield to a public
official’s desire to attend, as a “private citizen,” a meeting of the public body of which
she is a member.3
¶37 We have previously held, and it is my view, that the Constitutional Convention
Delegates “made a clear and unequivocal decision that government operates most
effectively, most reliably, and is most accountable when it is subject to public scrutiny.”
Day, ¶ 34. Our open-meeting laws exist to implement accountability of government to
the public. This fundamental principle of our State’s constitutional law, and the existence
of a clear statutory framework to protect this principle, serves as the basis for this
Dissent. Although we may be urged and encouraged at times to manipulate an exception
into the “clear and unequivocal” language of our open-meeting laws—such as to find that
a quorum was not “convened”—I fear that such exceptions will dilute the strength of our
commitment to open government. “While on any given occasion there may be legitimate
arguments for handling government operations privately, the delegates to our
Constitutional Convention concluded that in the long-term those fleeting considerations
are outweighed by the dangers of a government beyond public scrutiny.” Day, ¶ 35. In
my view, our decision today blurs these constructs and ignores a “clear and unequivocal”
constitutional and statutory framework for applying our open-meeting laws. “All that is
required is that a quorum of the membership convene[s] to conduct its public business.”
Crofts, ¶ 30. Our fundamental constitutional right to open meetings of our public bodies
3
Article II, Section 9 is contained in the Montana Constitution’s Declaration of Rights
and is, therefore, a fundamental right. State v. Tapson, 2001 MT 292, ¶ 15, 307 Mont. 428, 41
P.3d 305.
20
should not be made to depend on any particular interpretation that a member of a public
body places on his or her role and degree of participation when a quorum of the public
body has assembled and discussed agency matters.
¶38 Based on the undisputed material facts, I would hold that Lewis’s attendance and
participation at the July 13, 2012 Budget Subcommittee meeting rendered it a meeting of
the full School Board, regardless of whether Lewis claims she was attending the meeting
as a private citizen, and that the meeting did not comply with Montana’s open-meeting
laws. To the extent the Court holds otherwise, I strongly disagree.
¶39 I dissent.
/S/ LAURIE McKINNON
21