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Susan L. Carlson
Supreme Court Clerk
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CHIEF jusrice
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
RON GIPSON,
No. 96164-6
Petitioner,
V. En Bane
SNOHOMISH COUNTY,a munieipal
corporation.
Respondent. Filed OCT 1 0
MADSEN,J.-—Ron Gipson challenges Snohomish County's response to a records
request under the Public Records Act(PRA), chapter 42.56 RCW,which allows agencies
to withhold information relating to "active and ongoing" employment investigations for
"unfair practice ... or of a possible violation of other federal, state, or local laws
prohibiting discrimination." Former RCW 42.56.250(5)(2014). Gipson requested
records that related to allegations of workplace sexual harassment against him. At the
time of his request, Gipson was under investigation for those allegations. Due to the
voluminous request, Snohomish County responded by producing the documents in five
installments over the course of several months and asserted the active and ongoing
No. 96164-6
investigation exemption under the act for each of those installments. Gipson argues
treating each installment with the exemption was improper under the PRA. We disagree.
For the following reasons, we hold that Snohomish County properly applied the
active and ongoing investigation exemption and affirm.
FACTS
In 2014, Gipson was under investigation for several allegations of sexual
harassment and sexual discrimination reported by a few female corrections officers from
the Snohomish County Denney Juvenile Justice Center, where he was employed. This
investigation was conducted by an outside investigator, Marcella Fleming Reed (referred
throughout by the parties as MFR). The investigation continued until February 2, 2015.
Gipson was the longest serving council member at the time on the Everett City
Council and was up for reelection in 2015. To address the allegations and a report on the
matter from a local news outlet, Gipson submitted a public records request on
November 28, 2014, for "all records which in any way mentions the name Ron Gipson as
it relates to this [public records request]." Clerk's Papers(CP)at 52-56. The county
received the request on December 1, 2014, and assigned the request tracking number
14-06701. See CP at 47-48. In response to Gipson's voluminous request, the county
issued its response in five installments over the course of several months.
On February 19, 2015, Gipson received the second installment to his records
request. This installment contained a series of heavily redacted invoices, along with a
"Withholding Log," which explained that an additional 69 pages were being withheld due
No. 96164-6
to an active, ongoing investigation under RCW 42.56.250(5). A third installment was
provided to Gipson on March 5, 2015, also notifying that an additional 298 pages were
being withheld under the active and ongoing investigation exemption.
On April 22, 2015, Gipson was notified of a fourth installment for his records
request. Believing it had provided all records requested by Gipson, the county closed the
request stating:
With regard to PRR 14-06701, the County claimed the attorney-client
exemption and the exemption identified in RCW 42.56.250(5) for active
and on-going investigations into allegations of employment discrimination.
At the time your request was received, November 28, 2014, the
employment discrimination investigation which was the subject ofthe
request was still active and on-going. These records and the exemptions
cited are not governed by the Court's decision in Predisik [v. Spokane
School District No. 81, 182 Wn.2d 896, 346 P.3d 737(2015)] because the
County did not redact or withhold based on either RCW 42.56.230(3) or
RCW 42.56.240(1). The County declines to change or remove the
exemptions cited and the records withheld or redacted in response to PRR
14-06701.
CP at 140. Gipson responded that he had not received all documents requested,
prompting the county to produce a fifth installment of records on May 4, 2015, that it had
overlooked, and subsequently closed the request.^
In April 2016, Gipson filed a complaint in King County Superior Court seeking
disclosure of the redacted records and statutory penalties under the PRA. The county
filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing the county had a right to rely on the active
and ongoing investigation exemption to each installment because it applied on the date
the request was received. The trial court granted summary judgment, and Gipson
It appears the first and fourth records request installments are not in dispute.
No. 96164-6
appealed. The Court of Appeals affirmed, holding that the exemption applied at the time
the request was made and the county was not required to update its responses once the
investigation ended. See Gipson v. Snohomish County, No. 76826-3-1(Wash. Ct. App.
July 9, 2018)(unpublished), http://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/768263.pdf. Gipson
petitioned this court for review, arguing the Court of Appeals' decision improperly
applied the "no standing request" rule in Sargent v. Seattle Police Department, 167 Wn.
App. 1, 260 P.3d 1006 (2011), aff'd in part and rev'd in part on other grounds, 179
Wn.2d 376, 314 P.3d 1093 (2013).^ We granted review.
ANALYSIS
The PRA was enacted to facilitate government transparency through the disclosure
of public records. In furtherance of that goal, the PRA requires agencies to publish rules
and regulations to promote ease of access for public records requests. See former RCW
42.56.040 (2014). Because the people have a right to remain informed of government
instruments, this chapter's provisions are to be "liberally construed and its exemptions
narrowly construed." Former RCW 42.56.030 (2014). The PRA requires agencies to
"provide for the fullest assistance to inquirers and the most timely . . . action on requests
for information." Former RCW 42.56.100 (2014). However, in certain circumstances,
information is exempted from public inspection. See former RCW 42.56.250 (2014).
Some of these exemptions may be time limited.
^ Gipson also raised an equitable estoppel argument in this court due to the county's response to
his records request. Pet. for Review at 4; Suppl. Br. of Pet'r at 15-20. This court"may refuse to
review any claim of error which was not raised in the trial court." RAP 2.5(a). As such, we
decline to consider Gipson's equitable estoppel claim.
No. 96164-6
Gipson argues the appellate court here erred by extending the application of
Sargent to this case. A discussion of the facts in that case is helpful to understand the
applicability ofSargent to this case. In July 2009, the respondent in Sargent was under
investigation for an altercation with an off-duty police officer. 167 Wn. App. at 7. He
submitted a records request in August and September, which was denied due to an active
and ongoing investigation. Id. The respondent was then asked to resubmit a records
request in six to eight weeks. The investigation continued through the interim, and the
investigator conducted his last witness interview in October 2009. Around this time, an
internal investigation of the off-duty officer commenced. Later that month, the
investigation was referred to the city attorney for prosecution. Id. The city declined to
file charges in late 2009 or early 2010, and the respondent was notified of that decision.
Id.
In February 2010, the respondent submitted a refresher request. Id. at 7-8. The
police department provided redacted records, relying on the active and ongoing
investigation exemption in March. Id. at 8. The internal investigation of the off-duty
officer concluded in April 2010, and the respondent did not submit a new request for
records at that time.
The respondent filed a complaint in King County Superior Court, alleging
violations under the PRA. The trial court in that case agreed with the respondent and
held that the records were no longer exempt after the investigation ended and that the city
No. 96164-6
was required to produce the records for the respondent that were previously exempted.
Id. at 8-9. That decision was appealed.
In Sargent I, the Court of Appeals reversed and created a bright-line rule holding
that "[t]he PRA does not provide for standing records requests. An agency is not
required to monitor whether newly created or newly nonexempt documents fall within
[such] a request to which it has already responded." Id. at 12. Pointing to the
Washington State Bar Association's Public Records Act Deskbook, the court noted,"The
[PRA] does not provide for 'continuing' or 'standing' requests. Instead, the comment
suggests 'refresher' requests." Id. at 11 (footnote omitted)(quoting WASH. State Bar
Ass'n,Public Records Act Deskbook: Washington's Public Disclosure and
Open Public Meetings Laws § 5.3(3)(d) cmt. at 5-31 (2006)). Because the
investigation was not referred to the city for prosecution until after the initial records
requests were made, the city could claim the exemption, and the respondent was required
to submit a refresher request after he was notified the investigation concluded.
Gipson argues that Sargent is inapt because, here, the active and ongoing
investigation exemption was no longer applicable after February 2, 2015, and any
installment produced after that date cannot be limited by that exemption. In essence,
Gipson asks us to treat each installment as a new, independent request, and the county
must determine whether there are any applicable exemptions at the time the installment is
produced to the requester.
No. 96164-6
But installments are not new stand-alone requests. Rather, installments fulfill a
single request and should be treated as such. With any request, the receiving agency
determines any applicable exemptions at the time the request is received. Treating each
installment as a new, single request would effectively permit standing requests because a
requester is not required to submit a records request each time an installment is prepared.
The agency prepares each installment based on the initial records request it receives. An
agency is required to provide only records in existence at the time the request is made.
An exempt record, like a nonexistent record, is not available for inspection, and an
agency is not obligated to produce it. Should the exemption expire and the record come
into "existence" after the initial request and determination, the onus is on the requester to
make a "refresher request."
Holding otherwise runs counter to the Court of Appeals' rationale in creating the
bright-line rule in Sargent. It would allow standing requests in cases where records
requests require multiple installments because, with each installment, Gipson failed to
submit a refresher request, relying instead on his initial request made in November 2014.
Such a reading ofthe PRA is unworkable. As Snohomish County correctly
argued, this would effectively provide for a "standing request," which would treat
requesters who are seeking limited information differently from those who request high
volumes of records.^ Under Sargent, if it were a single installment request that was
^ See Wash. Supreme Court oral argument, Gipson v. Snohomish County, No. 96164-6 (Feb. 26,
2019), at 20 min., 20 sec. through 21 min., 34 sec., video recording by TVW, Washington State's
Public Affairs Network,
https://www.tvw.org/watch/?clientlD=9375922947&eventID=2019021552&autoStartStream
7
No. 96164-6
fulfilled while a limited exemption was in effect, the requester would be required to
submit a new request when the exemption expired. In contrast, under Gipson's proposed
rule, the requester whose voluminous request requires installments would not.
Essentially, this would allow a "standing request" so long as the request is broad enough
to require an agency several months and multiple installments to fulfill. See Wash.
Supreme Court oral argument, Gipson v. Snohomish County, No. 96164-6 (Feb. 26,
2019), at 23 min., 0 sec. through 23 min., 20 sec., video recording by TVW, Washington
State's Public Affairs Network,
https://www.tvw.org/watch/?clientID=9375922947&eventID=2019021552&autoStartStr
eam=true. Only those who request large volumes of records stand to benefit from such a
rule.
Contrary to Gipson's argument, applying Sargent to installment requests is not an
improper extension of the "no standing requests" rule. The policy underlying the "no
standing requests" rule is equally applicable to a voluminous request requiring multiple
installments to fulfill. The Court of Appeals, in Sargent, rejected standing requests
because "[njothing in the language or history of the [PRA]indicates the legislature
intended to impose on agencies an endless monitoring of old requests, or to require
updated responses indefinitely to people who may have long since lost interest." 167
Wn. App. at 11. Further, agency regulations provide that "[a]n agency must only provide
=true.
No. 96164-6
access to public records in existence at the time of the request. An agency is not
obligated to supplement responses." WAC 44-14-04004(4)(a).
We note that the Public Records Act Deskbook already has some guidance on this
issue. It states that "[a]n agency has no duty to create a record in response to a request;
only records existing at the time of the request must be provided." Wash. State Bar
Ass'n,Public Records Act Deskbook: Washington's Public Disclosure and
Open Public Meetings Laws § 5.1(4), at 5-8 (2d ed. 2014). Thus, it notes that
"standing requests" act as a request for documents that may become available in the
future. See id. Similarly, the determination of an exemption at the time the request was
made is treated like a record that does not exist. Therefore, once "a temporal exemption
expires after the request is made, the agency is not required to produce the record." Id.
Rather than requiring our state agencies to continuously monitor for any changes
to the status of a claimed exemption, Sargent's bright-line rule is reasonable, and we
adopt it. Thus, we hold that a records request is satisfied when an agency receives a
public records request, identifies a legitimate exemption under the PRA at that time, and
elearly notifies the requester that the request will be treated in aeeordanee with that
exemption. This puts the requester on notice as to the nature of the exemption, and they
can submit a "refresher request" after receiving an installment controlled by the claimed
exemption, or when the exemption has expired, if the requester still wants those records.
Adopting this bright-line rule also furthers public policy. As Snohomish County
correctly notes, assessing a request on the date it is received "insures the people's prompt.
No. 96164-6
efficient access to public records." Suppl. Br. of Resp't at 10. Many agencies have large
volumes of public records requests. When receiving a request, the agency must identify
responsive documents and any applicable exemptions, and estimate the time for response.
Requiring the agency to continuously reevaluate a request to determine whether their
original assessment regarding exemptions is still correct will only delay the production of
the records request. By treating a request that must be fulfilled in installments as
tantamount to a new request, if an agency realizes that a claimed exemption it relied on
has expired, it will have to reproduce all of the information it previously released to
comply with the public records request. Such an outcome will prove unwieldy and
overburden many agencies that already deal with an enormous volume of records
requests.
Snohomish County argues that requiring a requester to submit refresher requests
would provide greater transparency between the agency and the requester, and while the
county acknowledges doing so puts a greater burden on the agency to process more
requests, "this is the preference" as "transparency is the goal [under the PRA]." Wash.
Supreme Court oral argument,supra, at 23 min., 41 sec. through 24 min., 11 sec., and 24
min., 17 sec. through 25 min., 02 sec. We agree with the county's reasoning. Applying
Sargent to voluminous requests will prevent agencies from allocating personnel to the
task of continuously monitoring the status of a single expansive request while
installments are pending. See id. at 30 min., 16 sec. through 30 min., 39 sec. This is the
very thing that Sargent was trying to prevent.
10
No. 96164-6
When a requester is made aware of a temporal exemption applied to their records
request, the deskbook recommends that the requester submit a separate "refresher
request." PUBLIC RECORDS ACT DESKBOOK § 5.3(24), at 5-19 (2014). It also
recommends that the "refresher request" should seek all records indicated in the initial
request "from the date ofthe first request to the date ofthe refresher request." Id.
Gipson's invitation to create a new rule antithetical to underlying policies of records
requests is not well taken.
Snohomish County determined that an exemption existed at the time Gipson made
his request. The county relayed this to Gipson via e-mail correspondence. See CP at 139-
40. While Gipson argues he was dissuaded from submitting "refresher" requests, in part
because he was provided "factually misleading infonuation ... that the investigation
remained open and as a result the status of the requested records unchanged," that is
immaterial. Suppl. Br. of Pet'r at 11-12. Admittedly, Snohomish County's e-mail may
not have been a model of clarity. It "claimed the attorney-client exemption ... for active
and on-going investigations into allegations of employment discrimination." CP at 140.
It did not state that it would continue to apply that exemption even after the
investigations, then in progress, ended. Thus, it could have been more clear.
But, the PRA does not require agencies to inform the requester when an exemption
expires. The act only requires agencies to inform the requester of any exemptions they
claim. This provides notice to the requester so that the requester may submit a refresher
request when they are aware that the claimed exemption has expired or after an
11
No. 96164-6
installment claiming that exemption is received. Regardless of Gipson's complaint
regarding the e-mail correspondence, the PRA does not require an agency to do more
than communicate any claimed exemptions to the requester. We hold that Snohomish
County complied with the requirements ofthe PRA and that no violation occurred.
Attorneys Fees and Costs
Snohomish County has also moved for recovery of costs under RAP 14.3 and
RCW 4.84.080. In ordinary civil actions, a "successful litigant may recover only such
attorney fees as the statute or agreement of the parties provides." State ex rel. Maori v.
City ofBremerton, 8 Wn.2d 93, 102, 111 P.2d 612(1941)(citing Easterbrooks v.
Abrahams, 200 Wash. 636, 94 P.2d 486 (1939)). RCW 4.84.080(2) provides that where
"judgment is rendered" by an appellate court in a civil proceeding, the prevailing party is
awarded $200. We note that the appellate court determines costs "in all cases after the
filing of a decision terminating review." RAP 14.1(a). The appellate court making the
final determination decides whether to awards costs and fees on review. RAP 14.1(c). If
we determine costs and fees are warranted, the court "commissioner or clerk" will
determine the award by ruling. Id. Because Snohomish County moved for fees in the
lower court and prevails on appeal, we award costs to be determined by the court clerk.
CONCLUSION
Although the goal ofthe PRA is to facilitate government transparency in a timely
and efficient manner, the PRA "does not require that agencies provide updates to
previous responses, or monitor whether documents properly withheld as exempt may
12
No. 96164-6
later become subject to disclosure." Sargent, 167 Wn. App. at 10-11. An agency is not
required to maintain constant vigilance of any exemptions it asserts when the request is
first received, regardless of whether the records request requires a single installment or
multiple installments to satisfactorily fulfill. We affirm.
13
No. 96164-6
WE CONCUR:
3^X4 0
M(Mv^
14
Gipson V. Snohomish County
(Stephens, J., dissenting)
No. 96164-6
STEPHENS, J. (dissenting)—^This case arises under the Public Records Act
(PRA), chapter 42.56 RCW. Ron Gipson requested records relating to workplace
sexual harassment allegations against him, which were under investigation at the
time of his request. Snohomish County(County)responded to Gipson's request in
installments over the course of several months, invoking the exemption in RCW
42.56.250(5)^ for "active and ongoing" employment investigations to withhold the
investigative records. The County continued to rely on this exemption after the
investigation had concluded, reasoning that its obligations were fixed on the date it
received Gipson's request rather than on the dates it released records. We are asked
'When Gipson filed his eomplaint in 2016 the exemption at issue was eodified as
RCW 42.56.250(5). Today, the same exemption, with no change in wording, is eodified
as RCW 42.56.250(6)and will remain effective until July 1,2019. To maintain consistency
with the parties' briefing and lower court opinions, this opinion cites the applicable
exemption as RCW 42.56.250(5).
Gipson V. Snohomish County, 96164-6 (Stephens, J., dissenting)
to decide whether the County violated the PRA in taking this approach. To answer
this question, we must consider the reach of the "no standing requests" rule first
articulated by the Court of Appeals in Sargent v. Seattle Police Department, 167
Wn. App. 1, 260 P.3d 1006 (2011){Sargent I), aff'd in part and rev'd in part on
other grounds, 179 Wn.2d 376, 314 P.3d 1093 (2013) {Sargent II), specifically
whether the PRA allows an agency to, in effect, "freeze" its disclosure obligations
on the date it receives a PRA request.
I would hold that the PRA does not authorize withholding public records
based on an expired temporary exemption. Because the PRA is "a strongly worded
mandate for broad disclosure of public records," Hearst Corp. v. Hoppe,90 Wn.2d
123, 127, 580 P.2d 246 (1978), its provisions "must be 'liberally construed and its
exemptions narrowly construed' to ensure that the public's interest is protected,"
Yakima County v. Yakima Herald-Republic, 170 Wn.2d 775, 791, 246 P.3d 768
(2011)(quoting RCW 42.56.030). The legislature expressly limited the exemption
in RCW 42.56.250(5) to "active and ongoing" employment investigations.
Allowing an agency to continue asserting this exemption after an investigation has
concluded runs counter to the statutory mandate to provide "thefullest assistance to
inquirers and the most timely possible action on requests for information." RCW
42.56.100(emphasis added).
-2-
Gipson V. Snohomish County, 96164-6 (Stephens, J., dissenting)
Rather than construing this purpose liberally and the PRA's exemptions
narrowly, today's majority turns this statutory command on its head. The majority
takes Sargent Fs rule against "standing requests" and applies it to still-pending
requests,reasoning that requiring agencies to adjust the scope ofongoing disclosures
when an exemption expires would be "unwieldy and . . . overburden[some]."
Majority at 10. But logistical challenges do not, in my view,justify responding to
a pending request by inaccurately asserting a no-longer-applicable exemption.
Agencies must comply with the law, even when compliance is inconvenient and
burdensome. Because the majority's reasoning runs contrary to the PRA's mandate
for full and timely disclosure of public records, I respectfully dissent.
BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL fflSTORY
In 2014, Gipson became the subject of several sexual harassment allegations
relating to his employment as a corrections officer at the Snohomish County Denney
Juvenile Justice Center. Gipson was also the longest-serving member ofthe Everett
City Council and was up for reelection in the fall of2015. The investigation ofthese
allegations was overseen by the County's human resources department and was
conducted by an outside investigator, Marcella Fleming Reed (referred to by the
parties as the MFR investigation).
-3-
Gipson V. Snohomish County, 96164-6 (Stephens, J., dissenting)
On December 1, 2014,^ the County received a public records request from
Gipson for "all records which in any way mentions the name Ron Gipson as it relates
to this [public records request]." Clerk's Papers(CP)at 47-48, 52-56. The County
assigned this request tracking number 14-06701. Because the request contained a
large number of documents,the County issued its response in five installments over
the course of several months.
The MFR investigation into the sexual harassment allegations against Gipson
concluded on February 2, 2015. In his complaint, Gipson states that (presumably,
as a subject of the investigation) he was notified of the investigation's closure
through several letters, "which state that the subject EEO [equal employment
opportunity] complaints were in fact closed and that there were no active nor
ongoing investigations." CP at 5. These letters are referenced but not included in
the record on appeal.
On February 19, 2015, after the MFR investigation closed, Gipson received
the second installment in response to his records request.^ This installment contained
a series of heavily redacted invoices from the MFR investigation and an exemption
^ There is some discrepancy in the record regarding the date of Gipson's initial
records request, with some documents listing the date as November 28, 2014. See, e.g.,
CP at 52. The variance is not material to the analysis in this opinion, and we use the most
commonly referenced date, December 1, 2014.
^ The production of records provided in the first and fourth installments are not at
issue in this case.
-4-
Gipson V. Snohomish County, 96164-6 (Stephens, J., dissenting)
log that explained an additional 69 pages were being withheld as part of an active,
ongoing investigation pursuant to RCW 42.56.250(5). A third installment, received
March 5, 2015, also contained an exemption log listing 298 pages of records
withheld under the same exemption.
On April 22,2015,the County attempted to close request 14-06701 by sending
Gipson an e-mail stating:
All records will have been provided with this fourth installment and this
request will be closed.
With regard to PRR 14-06701, the County claimed the attorney-client
exemption and the exemption identified in RCW 42.56.250(5)for active and
on-going investigations into allegations of employment discrimination. At
the time your request was received, November 28, 2014, the employment
discrimination investigation which was the subject of the request was still
active and on-going. These records and the exemptions cited are not
govemed by the Court's decision in Predisik [v. Spokane School District No.
81, 182 Wn.2d 896, 346 P.Sd 737(2015)] because the County did not redact
or withhold based on either RCW 42.56.230(3) or RCW 42.56.240(1). The
County declines to change or remove the exemptions cited and the records
withheld or redacted in response to PRR 14-06701.
CP at 139-40. Gipson responded to this e-mail by stating that he had not received a
complete set ofthe documents requested and, as a result, he still considered request
14-06701 to be open. This prompted the County to issue the fifth installment on
May 4, 2015, which contained additional invoices, and to then close the request.
With the release of each installment after the second, the County reasserted
the active and ongoing investigation exemption in RCW 42.56.250(5) and failed to
reevaluate or make any determination as to whether the exemption applied after the
-5-
Gipson V. Snohomish County, 96164-6 (Stephens, J., dissenting)
investigation was closed. Answer to Pet. for Review at 7. Gipson alleged that he
lost the election in 2015 because he was unable to obtain the requested records in a
timely manner and repudiate a negative article in the Everett Herald regarding the
sexual harassment allegations. Pet. for Review at 18.
In February 2016, Gipson submitted a new request (tracking number
K006705), seeking invoices and other documents from the MFR investigation. At
the initiation of litigation, the County's response to this request was still pending.
Gipson filed the complaint in this case in Kling County Superior Court in April
2016, seeking disclosure ofthe requested records and statutory penalties authorized
by the PRA. In response,the County filed a motion for summary judgment, alleging
that it had the right to rely on RCW 42.56.250(5) in responding to Gipson's initial
records request because the exemption applied on the date the request was received.
The superior court granted summary judgment, concluding that the Court of Appeals
opinion in Sargent I "created a bright line rule that there are no standing requests
and that exemptions are applied as of the date of a request." CP at 397. Gipson
appealed and the Court of Appeals, Division One, affirmed. Gipson v. Snohomish
County, No. 76826-3-1, slip op. at 6-7(Wash. Ct. App. July 9, 2018)(unpublished),
http://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/768263.pdf.
-6-
Gipson V. Snohomish County,96164-6 (Stephens, J., dissenting)
Gipson petitioned this court for review, asserting that the Court of Appeals
decision reflects an improper extension of the "no standing requests" rule in
Sargent
ANALYSIS
Washington's PRA is a strongly worded mandate for disclosure of public
records, aimed to ensure the people ofthe state remain informed,"so that they may
maintain control over the instruments that they have created." RCW 42.56.030.
Exemptions under the act must be narrowly construed "to assure that the public
interest will be fully protected." Id. Judicial review of agency actions taken or
challenged under the PRA is de novo. RCW 42.56.550(3). "While agencies have
some discretion in establishing procedures for making public information available,
the provision for de novo review confirms that courts owe no deference to agency
interpretations of the [PRA] but are charged with determining when a duty to
disclose exists and whether a statutory exemption applies." Zink v. City ofMesa,
140 Wn. App. 328, 335, 166 P.3d 738 (2007).
Gipson also raised an equitable estoppel argument in this court based on the
County's actions in responding to his records requests. Pet. for Review at 4; Suppl. Br. of
Pet'r at 15-20. Because this court has discretion to refuse to review "any claim of error
which was not raised in the trial court," RAP 2.5(a), we decline to consider Gipson's
equitable estoppel claim.
-7-
Gipson V. Snohomish County, 96164-6 (Stephens, J., dissenting)
At issue in this case is the County's application of the employment
investigation exemption found in RCW 42.56.250(5). That provision temporarily
exempts "[i]nvestigative records compiled by an employing agency conducting an
active and ongoing investigation of a possible unfair practice under chapter 49.60
RCW or of a possible violation of other federal, state, or local laws prohibiting
discrimination in employment." The plain language of this exemption restricts its
application to active and ongoing investigations; it does not exempt materials
relating to completed investigations. In determining whether an exemption applies,
"[t]he burden ofproofshall be on the agency to establish that refusal to permit public
inspection and copying is in accordance with a statute that exempts or prohibits
disclosure in whole or in part of specific information or records." RCW
42.56.550(1). In my view,the County failed to meet its burden, particularly in light
ofthe PRA's mandate for broad public disclosure.
A. The "No Standing Requests" Rule of Sargent I Does Not Authorize an
Agency To Assert an Expired Temporary Exemption To Withhold or
Redact Records in Response to a Pending Public Records Request
The PRA does not directly address the question whether an agency may
continue to withhold or redact public records based on an expired temporary
exemption that was effective at the initiation of a records request. No statute
expressly dictates how an agency should implement a temporary exemption if it
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Gipson V. Snohomish County, 96164-6 (Stephens, J., dissenting)
ceases to apply when the agency is still processing a PRA request. While the PRA
provides agencies with latitude to fill in statutory gaps and "adopt and enforce
reasonable rules and regulations," it mandates that"[s]uch rules and regulations shall
provide for ihQfullest assistance to inquirers and the most timely possible action on
requests for information." RCW 42.56.100 (emphasis added). This statutory
mandate provides the guiding principle for my analysis and conclusion that an
agency may not continue to rely on a temporary exemption beyond the time frame
the legislature has specified.
Today's majority takes a contrary view, expanding the rule against "standing
requests" articulated in Sargent I to cover "voluminous request[s] requiring multiple
installments to fulfill." Majority at 8. It argues that because "many agencies . . .
already deal with an enormous volume of records requests," a rule "[rjequiring [an]
agency to continuously reevaluate a request to determine whether their original
assessment regarding exemptions is still correct... will prove unwieldy." Id. at 10.
So the majority holds that because there was an ongoing employment investigation
when Gipson submitted his records request on December 1, 2014,the County could
continue to assert RCW 42.56.250(5) throughout its disclosure of records in
installments, even with respect to installments not released until several months after
the investigation concluded. Id. at 8.
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Gipson V. Snohomish County, 96164-6 (Stephens, J., dissenting)
A brief examination ofthe facts in Sargent I is helpful to understand why the
majority's reliance on its "no standing requests" rule is incorrect. In Sargent I, the
primary issue was "whether a request for public records has indefinite effect, such
that after an agency has responded to a request, it must monitor the status of all
records within the request and disclose any that later become subject to disclosure."^
Sargent I, 167 Wn. App. at 6. The case involved two PRA requests (submitted
August 31 and September 1, 2009) for records regarding an altercation between
Evan Sargent and an off-duty Seattle police officer. Id. at 7. Approximately one
week after Sargent submitted his requests, the city responded that his request was
denied because the requested documents were exempt under RCW 42.56.240(1)
(effective law enforcement investigation exemption), and the city suggested that
Sargent resubmit his request in six to eight weeks. Id.
In February, Sargent resubmitted and clarified his request. Id. at 7-8. The
city responded by disclosing some records but again suggested that Sargent resubmit
his request in four to six weeks because it was withholding the officer's disciplinary
file due to an open and active investigation. Id. at 8. The investigation closed in
^ When Sargent I was subsequently considered in this court, the issue was the
"proper scope of the effective law enforcement exemption of the [PRA]," specifically
whether the exemption applies categorically. Sargent II, 179 Wn.2d at 381. Our opinion
contains no discussion of the duration ofthe exemption. See id.
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Gipson V. Snohomish County,96164-6 (Stephens, J., dissenting)
April 2010, and at that time, Sargent elected not to submit a new request for the
records. Id.
Sargent contended that his August and September PRA requests remained
pending throughout, so that the city had the burden to "search out and disclose
additional records if the basis for a claimed exemption ceases to apply." Id. at 10.
Relying on a Washington State Bar Association Public Records Act Deskhook
comment indicating the PRA does not provide for '"continuing"' or '"standing"'
requests, the appeals court rejected this argument. Id. at 11; see also WASH. State
Bar Ass'n,Public Records Act Deskbook: WASHmcTON's Public Disclosure
AND Open Public Meetings Laws § 5.1(4), at 5-8 (2d ed. 2014).^ The court
articulated the following rule:"An agency is not required to monitor whether newly
created or newly nonexempt documents fall within a request to which it has already
responded." Sargent 1, 167 Wn. App. at 12(emphasis added).
The main distinction between Sargent I and this case is immediately apparent.
In Sargent I, the city had responded in full and closed the request while the
® Because Sargent I was decided in 2011, the court used the 2006 version of the
Washington State Bar Association's Public Records Act Deskbook: Washington's Public
Disclosure and Open Public Meeting Laws. Sargent I, 167 Wn. App. at 9 n3. In 2014,the
Washington State Bar Association released the second edition of the Public Records Act
Deskbook, which replaced the 2006 first edition and the 2010 supplement. To avoid
confusion and ensure the most current guidance is considered, unless otherwise noted, all
original citations to the Deskbook in this opinion are to the 2014 second edition.
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Gipson V. Snohomish County, 96164-6 (Stephens, J., dissenting)
investigation was ongoing, and thus its invocation of the exemption was
contemporaneous with its response to the records request. Sargent I, 167 Wn. App.
at 8. In contrast, here,the County elected to provide records in response to Gipson's
PRA request in several installments, and the investigation concluded well before its
response was complete. CP at 47-49, 139-40. Stated differently, Gipson's PRA
request remained "open" from the County's point of view, and it could not say here,
as in Sargent I, that it had "already responded." 167 Wn. App. at 12.
Another distinction between Sargent I and the case at hand highlights the
likely consequences of the majority's decision. In Sargent I, the city responded to
the PRA request by asserting the exemption and recommending a timeline for the
requester to resubmit his request. Upon resubmittal, the city provided some records
and asserted different applicable exemptions for certain records that remained
undisclosed. Sargent I, 167 Wn. App. at 7-9. Here, in contrast, the County
acknowledges that, even though it compiled and produced some installments of
records after the conclusion of the investigation, it never reevaluated Gipson's
request or made any new determination as to which exemptions applied. Answer to
Pet. for Review at 7. The County simply relied on SargentI to assert any exemptions
that applied on December 1, 2014. Going forward, other government agencies may
well rely on today's decision to avoid disclosing records that were temporarily
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Gipson V. Snohomish County, 96164-6 (Stephens, J., dissenting)
exempted at the time a request was received, even though they know the exemption
does not apply at the time of disclosure. This result runs counter to the PRA's direct
command to construe its provisions liberally and its exemptions narrowly. RCW
42.56.030.
Today's majority disregards this command and instead adopts the broad
reading ofSargent I suggested in some secondary authorities. Id. For example, the
Public Records Act Deskbook, relied on by the appeals court in Sargent I, reads the
PRA as allowing agencies to determine their obligations based on the date a request
is first received. See Public Records ActDeskbook § 5.1(4), at 5-8. Even so,the
Deskbook advises agencies to disclose records once a temporary exemption expires:
[§ 5.1](4) Only existing records may be requested
... A requestor cannot make a "standing request" for records that may
become available in the future. Sargent v. Seattle Police Dep't, 167 Wn.
App. 1, 260 P.2d 1006 (2011), ajfd in part, rev'd in part on other grounds,
179 Wn.2d 376, 314 P.3d 1093 (2013). Likewise, the determination of
whether a record is exempt is made at the time the request is received. If, for
example, a temporal exemption expires after the request is made,the agency
is not required to produce the record; but the record must be identified on an
exemption log, and as a practical matter it may be advisablefor the agency
to produce the record ifit has not yet closed the request.
Id.(emphasis added).
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Gipson V. Snohomish County, 96164-6 (Stephens, J., dissenting)
Similarly, the attorney general's model rules^ suggest a broad reading of
Sargent I, at least insofar as responding to requests in the context of existing versus
future-acquired records:
WAC 44-14-04004(4)(a) When the agency does not have the
record. An agency is only required to provide access to public records
it has or has used. An agency is not required to create a public record
in response to a request.
An agency must only provide access to public records in
existence at the time of the request. An agency is not obligated to
supplement responses. Therefore,ifa public record is created or comes
into the possession of the agency after the request is received by the
agency, it is not responsive to the request and need not be provided. A
requestor must make a new request to obtain subsequently created
public records.
(Footnote omitted.)
While it stands to reason that agencies might rely on such guidance to
essentially "freeze" their obligations on the date a request is received, I believe this
reflects an inappropriately broad reading ofSargent Fs "no standing requests" rule.
Though deskbooks, WACs,and decisions ofthe Court of Appeals may be persuasive
^ The PRA states that
[t]he attomey general, by February 1, 2006, shall adopt by rule advisory
model rules for state and local agencies, as defined in RCW 42.56.010,
addressing the following subjects:
(a) Providing fullest assistance to requestors;
(b) Fulfilling large requests in the most efficient manner;
(c) Fulfilling requests for electronic records; and
(d) Any other issues pertaining to public disclosure as determined by
the attomey general.
RCW 42.56.570(2).
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Gipson V. Snohomish County, 96164-6 (Stephens, J., dissenting)
to this court, none can overcome the PRA's express mandate to provide "thefullest
assistance to inquirers and the most timely possible action on requests for
information." RCW 42.56.100 (emphasis added). By relying on these nonbinding
sources of authority, today's majority undemiines the PRA's "strongly worded
mandate for broad disclosure of public records." Hearst Corp.,90 Wn.2d at 127.
Instead, I would take this opportunity to clarify the limited reach of Sargent
I's rule: it does not reduce an agency's disclosure obligations while an open public
records request is being fulfilled. The basic principle that "[a]n agency is not
required to monitor whether newly created or newly nonexempt documents fall
within a request to which it has already responded^ should remain good law.
Sargent I, 167 Wn. App. at 12(emphasis added). However, this rule's application
ought to be limited to the time period following an agency's completed response,
when the agency and the requester consider the request to be closed.
Because this case involves an open PRA request where the County was in the
process of responding, its practices must adhere to the overarching mandate of the
PRA:to "provide for thefullest assistance to inquirers and the most timely possible
action on requests for information." RCW 42.56.100 (emphasis added). As I
explain below, this mandate precluded the County from continuing to assert the
temporary employment investigation exemption beyond the time frame authorized
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Gipson V. Snohomish County, 96164-6(Stephens, J., dissenting)
in the exemption itself. The exemption applies only when an agency is "conducting
an active and ongoing investigation." RCW 42.56.250(5). Once the MFR
investigation concluded, the PRA obligated the County to reevaluate Gipson's
unfulfilled request rather than to reassert the expired exemption as if it were still
applicable.
B. Because the County Was Required by the PRA To Provide the "Fullest
Assistance" and Take the "Most Timely Action" on Gipson's Public
Records Request, It Could Not Assert RCW 42.56.250(5) as a Basis To
Withhold Records after the MFR Investigation Concluded
The employment investigation exemption in RCW 42.56.250(5) is self-
limiting. It authorizes withholding "[i]nvestigative records compiled by an
employing agency conducting an active and ongoing investigation of a possible
unfair practice under chapter 49.60 RCW or of a possible violation of other federal,
state, or local laws prohibiting discrimination in employment." RCW 42.56.250(5).
Because the legislature has carefully delineated the temporal scope of this
exemption, neither courts through their decisions nor agencies through their
implementation ofthe PRA may expand it. Instead, our responsibility is to interpret
the exemption narrowly to align with the PRA's mandate that agencies provide the
"fullest assistance" and take "the most timely possible action" in response to public
records requests. RCW 42.56.100. While I am not insensitive to the administrative
efficiencies that may be served by allowing agencies to identify a "date certain" for
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Gipson V. Snohomish County, 96164-6 (Stephens, J., dissenting)
purposes of planning large-scale public record responses, the PRA places a high
value on providing the fullest and most timely disclosure to requesters.
Agencies are certainly free to map out their plan for responding to a records
request based on the date a request is received, and they may, of course, elect to
disclose responsive records in multiple installments over time. As part of providing
full assistance and a timely response to public records requests, agencies are
expected to communicate with requesters and articulate the basis for any asserted
exemptions. Communications between the requester and the agency are essential so
that the agency can fulfill a PRA request in the most complete and efficient manner
possible. When circumstances change during the time a public records request is
being processed, the PRA contemplates that agencies will take a service-oriented
approach in communicating with the requester. In some instances,the requester may
elect to proceed with the original request, even though this may result in receiving
partial or redacted information. In other cases, the requester may prefer to make a
new request. Either way, the PRA requires agencies to follow a process that best
serves the public policy of open government.
The problem in this case is that the County continued to assert the exemption
in RCW 42.56.250(5) as if the employment investigation were active and ongoing,
rather than communicating with Gipson and reevaluating its response to his public
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Gipson V. Snohomish County, 96164-6 (Stephens, J., dissenting)
records request. This was not a "standing request," as in Sargent I, but an active,
open request to which the County was still responding. By its plain terms, the
temporary employment investigation exemption expired once the MFR investigation
concluded and no longer provided a basis for the County to withhold records in
response to Gipson's pending request.
CONCLUSION
Clear communication between agencies and public records requesters is
essential to fulfilling the objectives of the PRA and ensuring that the citizens of
Washington "maintain control over the instruments that they have created." RCW
42.56.030. Today's majority errs by extending the "no standing requests" rule of
Sargent I to justify the County's assertion of an expired temporary exemption under
RCW 42.56.250(5)as a basis for withholding public records. While I appreciate the
logistical challenges agencies face in responding to public records requests, the law
prioritizes public disclosure over government convenience and compels "the fullest
assistance to inquirers and the most timely possible action on requests for
information," RCW 42.56.100. Out of respect for PRA's broad mandate of public
disclosure, I respectfully dissent.
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Gipson V. Snohomish County,96164-6 (Stephens, J., dissenting)
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