IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
F. ROBERTSTRAHM,
No.79711-5-I
Appellant,
) DIVISION ONE
v.
) UNPUBLISHED OPINION
SNOHOMISH COUNTY,
Respondent.
_________________________________) FILED: March 23, 2020
SMITH, J. — F. Robert Strahm appeals the dismissal of his lawsuit alleging
that Snohomish County (County) violated the Public Records Act (PRA), chapter
42.56 RCW, in relation to two public records requests. We conclude that the
record was not sufficiently developed for the trial court to determine (1) whether
the County conducted an adequate search with regard to either of the two
requests or (2) whether the County silently withheld records with regard to the
request assigned tracking number K024672. Accordingly, we vacate the trial
court’s dismissal of Strahm’s case and its conclusions that the County complied
with the PRA, conducted an adequate search for records and, with regard to
request K024672, did not silently withhold records. We remand to the trial court
for further proceedings consistent with this opinion, including determining
(1) whether the County performed an adequate search with regard to both of
Strahm’s requests, (2) whether the County silently withheld records responsive to
request K024672, (3) whether the County complied with the PRA, and (4) if
appropriate, the amount of any costs and monetary penalties.
No. 79711-5-1/2
BACKGROUND
Facts
In 2017 and 2018, Strahm submitted more than 40 total public records
requests to Snohomish County. This appeal concerns two of those requests,
described below.
Request K019782
On November 6, 2017, Strahm made the following request:
I request the following public record(s), including without limitation
electronic records:
1. Records of the attached fund 300, subfund 004, transactions
contained within the red rectangles, including without
limitation, financial institution statements, bank statements,
cancelled checks, wire transfers, interfund transfers, etc.
According to Strahm’s later declaration, ‘[t]he request was for records regarding
six large transactions within the new courthouse project fund between February
29, 2016, and May 2,2016.” Strahm requested that responsive records be
provided “on CD [(compact disc)] for pickup.”
Tracie O’Neill, a Risk Management Specialist for Snohomish County,
responded to Strahm’s request on November 9, 2017. O’Neill informed Strahm
that his request had been assigned tracking number K019782. She also
informed him that “[w]e reasonably believe that public records (if any) responsive
to this request will be available beginning on or before January 15, 201 8.”
On January 12, 2018, the County made a first installment of responsive
records available to Strahm. According to O’Neill’s later declaration, the first
installment consisted of 95 pages and included “the financial records
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No. 79711-5-1/3
documenting the transactions referenced in request K019782. . . from the
County Treasurer’s Office.” In a cover letter that accompanied the first
installment, O’Neill informed Strahm that “[w]e anticipate we will have another
installment or update on or before March 15, 2018.”
On February 13, 2018, O’Neill wrote Strahm regarding two of Strahm’s
other pending records requests, designated KOl 9549 and KOl 9774. In her letter,
O’Neill indicated that “the County ha[d} potentially thousands of. . . records in the
form of daily banking statements” responsive to those two requests. She
explained that the cost to produce the daily banking statements would be “in
excess of $1,000.00” and that “a $100.00 deposit is required before we will begin
processing this request.”
O’Neill indicated that “[t]he County also has access to monthly banking
statements,” which were “a condensed version from the daily statements” and
would also be responsive to requests K019549 and K019774. She explained
that Bank of America would charge the County an estimated $46,000 to prepare
the monthly statements and, thus, the County would require a $4,600 deposit.
O’Neill requested further direction from Strahm as to “which type of statement
you are requesting,” explaining that “[s]ince we are unable to move forward
without a deposit, if we do not hear from you in the next 30 days, then these
requests will be closed and no further action will be taken.” Finally, O’Neill
indicated that the banking records referenced in her letter would “likely be
responsive to several of your other pending requests,” including request
K019782. She wrote that “[w]e will assume you do not want these bank
3
No. 79711-5-114
statement records reproduced under all of your other pending requests KOl 9549
and K019774, then [sic] we will assume you do not want them produced in any of
your other pending public requests.”
Strahm responded to O’Neill’s letter two days later and asked to inspect
the bank statements. O’Neill responded on February 15, 2018, to schedule an
appointment for Strahm to “review examples of both the daily and monthly bank
statements in order for you to determine which option you would prefer to
receive.” In response, Strahm requested that “both paper and electronic versions
of the complete statements” be made available for inspection. O’Neill then
responded that because requests K019549 and K019774 “are large and require
redactions on every document,” inspection would not be possible without creating
copies of the records. O’Neill wrote that “[a]bsent you providing a [10 percent]
deposit, we will not be able to move forward with your records request.” Strahm
then responded, “I am modifying the subject requests to not include bank
statements — under protest. Please promptly make the remaining records
available for inspection and copying.”
About a month later, on March 15, 2018, O’Neill e-mailed Strahm again
regarding multiple pending requests, including the two referenced above
(K019549 and K019774) and K019782. She stated that “[a]s the County
previously advised in our February 13, 2018 . . . correspondence, the bank
records that are responsive to K019549 and K019774 are also responsive to
K018512, K019782 and K018477.” She advised that the County had produced
all responsive requests for the latter three requests “[w]ith the exception of bank
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No. 79711-5-1/5
records.” Referring to Strahm’s earlier e-mail that he was modifying his requests
to not include bank statements, O’Neill asked Strahm, “Based on your statement
that you did not want to receive [bank] records for K019549 and K019774, is
it also true you do not wish to receive the bank statements for KOl 9549,
K019774, [sic] and K018477?” She asked Strahm to respond by March 26,
2018, and indicated that “[i]f we do not receive a response, we will consider your
request abandoned and will administratively close your request.”
Strahm responded the same day and requested, “Please make the
records available for inspection.” O’Neill responded a week later and wrote, with
regard to K019782:
We have estimated 3,360 pages of daily bank records responsive
to K019782. The cost associated with these records is $336.00
and would require a $33.00 deposit. Should you wish to receive
the monthly bank statements for this request, we have identified
more than 2,400 pages at $10.00 per page for a total of $24,000.00
in costs. The required deposit would be $2,400.00.
O’Neill asked Strahm to “advise if you would like to receive the daily and/or
monthly banking statements and forward the corresponding deposit.” She
indicated that the County would begin processing Strahm’s request once the
deposit was received and that “[i]f we do not receive a response by Friday, March
30, we will administratively close these requests.”
It does not appear that Strahm responded to O’Neill’s March 22, 2018, e
mail. Nevertheless, on March 26, 2018, O’Neill e-mailed Strahm again regarding
request K019782, stating, “After an extensive search, we believe we have
produced all responsive records for this request. However, this request will
remain open for an additional thirty days — until April 26, 2018, in the event you
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No. 79711-5-1/6
have questions or wish to discuss this request and responsive records further.”
On March 30, 2018, O’Neill e-mailed Strahm again, indicating (despite her
earlier e-mails stating that a deposit was required and that the County had
produced all responsive records for request K019782) that the County had begun
preparing daily bank statements for inspection in response to multiple requests,
including K019782:
After continued review of your public records requests, K022549,
K019549, K019774, K019782, K018477, K018512, K017685, and
K01 8089, and in order to provide you with the fullest assistance
possible, the County has begun to prepare the responsive daily
bank statements for your inspection. This is based on your request
to review/inspect those records.
A first installment of the bank statements will be available within
thirty days. We will be in contact with you to arrange a mutually
acceptable date and time. If you no longer want to inspect or
receive the daily statements, then please let us know immediately.
In her later declaration, O’Neill characterized this March 30, 2018, e-mail as a
correction of her earlier erroneous assertion that Strahm would be required to
pay a fee to inspect the bank statements.1
According to O’Neill’s declaration, Strahm inspected a first installment of
daily bank statements on May 4, 2018, and a second installment (along with a
second inspection of the first installment) on May 31, 2018. Also according to
O’Neill’s declaration, “[alt the inspection on May 31, 2018, Mr. Strahm informed
me he no longer wished to receive ‘non-electronic paper records.” O’Neill
confirmed this by e-mail to Strahm on June 6, 2018:
1 ~ RCW 42.56.120(1) (“No fee shall be charged for the inspection of
public records or locating public documents and making them available for
copying, except as provided in RCW 42.56.240(14) and subsection (3) of this
section.”).
6
No. 79711-5-1/7
This email serves as follow up to your records inspection on
Thursday, May 31[,] 2018.
At your May 31st inspection, you amended your requests and
advised you no longer wished to receive[ J non-electronic bank
records. As a result, your requests assigned tracking numbers
K022549, K018512, and K017685 will be administratively closed as
we have determined we have nothing further responsive to these
requests.
As we previously advised, our electronic bank records are available
beginning in May of 2016 and will be responsive in part to your
requests assigned tracking numbers K019782, K018477, K018089
and K019549. We understand that you do wish to receive these
records and you are aware they will be provided in PDF format.
We further understand you no longer want to conduct inspections
for your installments of these records but would prefer to receive
them on CD. If this is incorrect, please advise and we will arrange
an inspection.
(Emphasis added and omitted.)
Strahm responded by e-mail on July 5, 2018. In his July 5th e-mail,
Strahm addressed O’Neill’s assertion that he no longer wished to receive non-
electronic bank records:
Re: Requests with county tracking numbers K022549, K018512,
K017685.
In regards to: “advised you no longer wished to receive[] non-
electronic bank records”
I was referring to the specific paper records that were being
produced, which were daily records of all county banking. The
records contained transactions that were not responsive to the
requests.
Strahm further requested that the County “conduct an adequate search for
existing electronic bank records,” “search the Department of Information
Technology [DolT] for responsive electronic bank statement records,” and “make
all responsive bank records available for inspection and copying.” Strahm’s July
7
No. 79711-5-1/8
5th e-mail did not specifically address request K019782. O’Neill thus
understood, according to her later declaration, that Strahm still did not want
paper bank records in response to that request.
On July 9, 2018, Jennifer Sperline, Snohomish County’s Public Records
Officer, wrote to Strahm regarding his July 5th e-mail to O’Neill. Sperline
attempted to clarify what Strahm meant by “electronic banking records,”
explaining that the County interpreted that to refer to “records held by the County
in electronic format that are produced by Bank of America, and which document
financial transactions to or from the County account in the form of Bank
Statements.” Sperline noted that ‘[r]ecognizing that. . . you likely have very
specific financial information you would like to have produced, any explanation
you can provide to help us understand the information you are seeking would be
needed to continue our search.” Sperline also explained that although Strahm
was correct that the bank records contained transactions that were not
responsive to his requests, this was becausethe records as provided by Bank of
America did not allow for the exclusion of transactions associated with funds not
selected in Strahm’s requests. Strahm responded and requested that the County
produce “each page that contains a record of the responsive transactions would
be adequate. For example, on a particular day a responsive transaction
occurred there would be at least one bank statement page containing a record of
the transaction. Producing only these pages with corresponding transactions
would be adequate.”
Meanwhile, on June 29, 2018, O’Neill had e-mailed Strahm to indicate that
8
No. 79711-5-1/9
an additional installment of responsive records, consisting of 85 electronic files
and 437 scanned pages, was available for his review or purchase for multiple
requests, including K019782. Strahm responded on July 9, 2018, again referring
to the DolT:
The county [DolT] provides the county: “digital scanning and
electronic storage of over 6 million pages annually in order to
preserve and protect documents, improve access and retrieval, and
reduce paper storage volumes.” The electronic storage of records
includes asset, financial and accounting records.
The county needs to complete an adequate search for the
requested records I will be paying for the records under protest.
—
On July 18, 2018, Sperline e-mailed Strahm to inform him that the County would
conduct DolT searches for records responsive to his outstanding requests,
including KOl 9782. She also told Strahm that she would “look further into your
suggestion that we only produce pages of records that have the particular
transaction you are looking for.”
The next day, Sperline e-mailed Strahm again and proposed a global
resolution to Strahm’s several outstanding requests:
Given our recent conversations regarding multiple public records
requests, I was prompted to take a look at all your public records
requests. . What I noted were areas of miscommunication
. .
between you and several public records specialists in the County. I
surely do not want obtaining public records from Snohomish County
to be frustrating for you. To ensure we are capturing what you want
and providing you the fullest assistance, I propose closing the[se]
requests and having you work with myself. in determining what
. .
exactly you are seeking and how we can most effectively get you
those responsive records in the format that you wish.
If this is something you are interested in pursuing, then please let
me know. Otherwise, we will continue to process your public
records requests as we have been.
9
No. 79711-5-1/10
According to Sperline’s later declaration, Strahm responded to her e-mail by
submitting another public records request.
On September 14, 2018, O’Neill e-mailed Strahm and informed him
regarding request K019782 that “[a]fter an extensive search, we believe we have
produced all responsive records and we will be administratively closing this
request.” O’Neill indicated that Sperline would contact Strahm regarding the
pending DolT searches and that “[a]ssuming that nothing further is found, this
request will remain closed.”
Strahm responded to O’Neill’s e-mail, stating, “Please make responsive
bank statements available for inspection.” Strahm and O’Neill then engaged in
back-and-forth e-mails in which O’Neill asked Strahm whether he was
“requesting to inspect records you already possess”; Strahm asked O’Neill to
“identify the responsive bank records, e.g. date and page the transactions were
completed”; O’Neill explained that “[w]e will not be highlighting or marking the
exact transactions that you are interested in”; and Strahm asserted that “[t}he
bank records produced by the County do not contain the subject transactions.”
Strahm then requested “an inspection of [DolT] paper records and computer
systems for responsive records.” When Sperline also requested clarification,
Strahm requested “an inspection of Snohomish County paper records responsive
to request KOl 9782, and an inspection of County computer systems for records
responsive to request K019782.” Sperline responded that K019782 had been
closed “because all responsive records have been provided to you.” Sperline
stated that Strahm had requested that only electronic records be produced and
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No. 79711-5-I/Il
asked whether Strahm was now reamending his request “to include paper
records held within the Finance Department.” Strahm responded and asserted
that “[t]he County has not provided all nonresponsive records.” He requested
that the County “make responsive paper bank records available for inspection.”
When Sperline again asserted that “[y]ou previously limited your public records
requests . . . to electronic bank statements only” and asked again whether
Strahm was changing his request to include responsive paper bank statements,
Strahm responded, “I stated that I no longer wished to receive non-responsive
paper bank records because the paper bank records produced for inspection
appeared to be completely non-responsive.” On October 1, 2018, Sperline
(1) responded that the County believed that the paper bank statements produced
were responsive to request K019782, (2) relayed her continued understanding
that Strahm did not wish to receive paper bank statements, and (3) informed
Strahm that request K019782 would remain closed.
Meanwhile, in a separate e-mail chain, Sperline informed Strahm that the
DolT had nothing responsive for request K019782. Strahm responded, “Please
promptly make responsive paper and electronic records available for inspection.”
Sperline responded the next day, explaining that the County interpreted his
request as seeking information about certain transactions marked by red
rectangles in his original, November 2017 request and that “[t]hose marked
transactions stemmed out of the Treasurer’s Office.” Thus, she explained, “[t]hat
is where the responsive records were located.” Sperline also wrote that “there
are paper bank statements responsive to this request but you previously
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No. 79711-5-1/12
instructed us not to produce paper bank statements.” When Strahm responded
on October 10, 2018, and again asked that the paper bank statements
responsive to request K019782 be made available for inspection, the County
opened a new public records request. That request was assigned tracking
number K027222 and is referred to herein as the “KOl 9782 Follow-up Request.”
Request K024672
Strahm made the second request at issue in this appeal on June 14, 2018:
I request the following public record(s):
1. Payments made such as warrants, checks, wire
transfer[sj, electronic payments, etc. for the $15,686,852
federal funding amount enclosed in the red rectangle on
the attached 2014 county Comprehensive Annual
Financial Report page.
According to Strahm’s later declaration, the request related to “County
expenditures of federal disaster funds related to the 2014 Oso area landslide.”
Strahm requested that “all nonexempt records be disclosed and made available
for inspection and copying.”
Kathryn Fugere, a Records Specialist Senior for Snohomish County,
responded to Strahm’s request on June 21, 2018. In her e-mail, Fugere informed
Strahm that his request had been assigned tracking number K024672. She also
informed him that “[w]e reasonably believe that public records responsive to this
request will be available beginning on or before August 1, 2018.”
On August 1, 2018, Fugere e-mailed Strahm to inform him that records
responsive to request K024672 were available for his “review and/or purchase”
and that “[tjhe cost is $[0].35.” According to Strahm’s later declaration, the
12
No. 79711-5-1/13
records were produced on a CD and “contained County year 2014
payment/transaction records evidencing disaster related payments made, and a
spreadsheet containing disaster expenditure information, but did not contain any
requested County ‘warrants, checks, wire transfer[s], electronic payments, etc.”
In a letter that accompanied the responsive records, Fugere wrote, “You will note
that the total reimbursed does not equal the. . . $15,686,852 federal funding
amount you highlighted from the 2014 County Comprehensive Annual Financial
Report.” She explained this was because “the funds are still being reimbursed.”
She also wrote, “We believe that this completes our response to your request”
and asked Strahm to “let us know if you were expecting records showing
additional level of detail for the reimbursements.” She informed Strahm that “[ijf
we do not hear from you within 30 days of your receipt of the installment, we will
assume that you are satisfied with our response and will close the request.”
More than two months later, on October 9, 2018, Strahm responded to
Fugere’s August 1st e-mail, writing, “Please promptly make all records
responsive to this request available for inspection.” Fugere responded, “Do you
need another copy of the installment which my records show you picked up on
8/2/2018?” After a few more back-and-forth e-mails in which Fugere again asked
for clarification and Strahm again asked that all responsive records be made
available for inspection, Fugere wrote, “The County’s search for and production
of records in this response—K024672—is complete. We informed you on August
2, 2018 (the date you picked up the installment), that this request would be
closed if you did not provide additional clarification within 30 days . . . . This
13
No. 79711-5-1/14
request remains closed.” Strahm responded twice to Fugere’s e-mail, first
requesting that the County “promptly produce all records responsive to the
request,” and then demanding that the County “produce all records responsive to
the request, for inspection, by 10/18/18.” Fugere again responded that the
County’s response was complete and that the request remained closed.
Procedural History
Strahm filed a “Motion for Order to Show Cause and Motion to Show
Cause re: Violations of the Public Records Act” on November 9, 2018, followed
by a complaint on December 4, 2018, and then a second show cause motion on
January 7, 201 9~2 Strahm’s motions were supported by four declarations from
himself and one from Virginia Hedge, who inspected some of the records
produced by the County in response to Strahm’s requests. In his second motion,
Strahm alleged that the County violated the PRA by failing to disclose and
produce responsive records, failing to perform an adequate search for
responsive records, silently withholding responsive records, denying his requests
without providing reasoning, failing to specify exemptions, and failing to provide
fullest assistance. In support of his allegations, Strahm declared that in response
to the K019782 Follow-up Request, the County produced a bank statement,
dated February 29, 2016, that was responsive to his original request K019782.
Strahm also declared that in December 2018, the County produced 13 pages of
warrants in response to another of his requests. Strahm asserted that those
warrants were responsive to, and thus should have been produced in connection
2 The record does not reflect why Strahm filed a second motion.
14
No. 79711-5-1/15
with, request K024672.
On January 7, 2019, the superior court entered an order to show cause.3
The County responded on January 14, 2019, relying on declarations from O’Neill,
Fugere, Sperline, and Kirke Sievers, the Snohomish County Treasurer. In his
declaration, Sievers explained, with regard to request K019782, that Snohomish
County maintains two investment portfolios: (1) the “LPAR” portfolio, which
“reflects investments in the Washington State Local Government Investment Pool
(LGIP)” and (2) the “SPAR” portfolio, “also known as the Snohomish County
Investment Pool.” Sievers explained that both the LPAR portfolio and the SPAR
portfolio are pooled portfolios in that they consist of multiple funds, including
subfund 300-04, which was the fund with regard to which Strahm had requested
transaction information in request K019782. Sievers explained that in its bank
account with Bank of America, “the County has the County’s cash for its funds
and subfunds, as well as the funds of fire districts, schools, and any other
governmental agency that wants to have the County invest their money.” Sievers
explained that transactions occurring in the account are “usually netted, meaning
they are grouped together and they are not always individually identified on the
daily banking statement.” Thus, Sievers explained, Strahm was incorrect in
asserting that there should be six bank statements corresponding to the six
subfund 300-04 transactions that Strahm specified in request K019782. Instead,
“[t]here is no one-to-one relationship,” and “[t]here is no single document that
~ The superior court entered an earlier show cause order on November 30,
2018, presumably in response to Strahm’s November 9, 2018, motion. The
record does not reflect the outcome of the first show cause hearing.
15
No. 79711-5-1116
reflects [each] transaction.”
The trial court held a show cause hearing on January 18, 2019. No
transcript was provided for the hearing, but according to a minute entry, the court
“denie[d] penalties to the County [and found that the] County made more than a
good faith effort to comply, regardless of whether Mr. Strahm is satisfied.
Confusion is evident.” The court later entered an order dismissing Strahm’s case
with prejudice. In its order, the court concluded that the County complied with
the PRA, conducted an adequate search for records, imposed appropriate fees,
produced records responsive to both requests, did not silently withhold records,
and “acted in good faith to an exceptional degree in responding to [Strahm]’s
requests.” Strahm appeals.
DISCUSSION
Strahm argues that the trial court erred in concluding that the County
complied with the PRA and, thus, it erred by dismissing his case. As further
discussed below, we agree in part and remand to the trial court for further fact-
finding as to (1) whether the County performed an adequate search with regard
to both requests and (2) whether the County silently withheld responsive records
with regard to request K024672. We otherwise reject Strahm’s arguments.4
Background PRA Concepts
“The PRA is a strongly worded mandate for broad disclosure of public
~ To the extent that Strahm raises arguments that are not specifically
discussed below, those arguments are not adequately briefed to warrant
consideration. See Norcon Builders, LLC v. GMP Homes VG, LLC, 161 Wn.
App. 474, 486, 254 P.3d 835 (2011) (appellate court “will not consider an
inadequately briefed argument”).
16
No. 79711-5-1/17
records.” Neigh. All, of Spokane County v. Spokane County, 172 Wn.2d 702,
714, 261 P.3d 119 (2011). “Passed by popular initiative, it stands for the
proposition that ‘full access to information concerning the conduct of government
on every level must be assured as a fundamental and necessary precondition to
the sound governance of a free society.” Neigh. All., 172 Wn.2d at 714-15
(quoting Progressive Animal Welfare Soc’yv. Univ. of Wash. (PAWS), 125
Wn.2d 243, 251, 884 P.2d 592 (1994)).
“The PRA requires state and local agencies to ‘make available for public
inspection and copying all public records, unless the record falls within the
specific exemptions of [the PRA] or other statute.” Resident Action Council v.
Seattle Hous. Auth., 177 Wn.2d 417, 431, 327 P.3d 600 (2013) (alteration in
original) (quoting RCW 42.56.070(1)). “A ‘public record’ is defined broadly to
include ‘any writing containing information relating to the conduct of government
or [a governmental function]’ that is ‘prepared, owned, used, or retained’ by any
state or local agency.” Resident Action Council, 177 Wn.2d at 431 (alteration in
original) (quoting RCW42.56.010(3)).
Because the PRA applies only to public records, “disclosure is not
necessary unless and until there has been a specific request for records.” Smith
v. Okanogan County, 100 Wn. App. 7, 12, 994 P.2d 857 (2000). When a request
is received, the agency must respond within five business days either by
(1) “[p]roviding the record[s],” (2) providing a link to the records requested (unless
the requester notifies the agency that he or she cannot access records through
the internet), (3) acknowledging receipt of the request “and providing a
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No. 79711-5-1/18
reasonable estimate of the time the agency. . . will require to respond,”
(4) acknowledging receipt of the request, asking for clarification if the request is
unclear, “and providing, to the greatest extent possible, a reasonable estimate of
the time the agency . . . will require to respond to the request if it is not clarified,”
or (5) “[d]enying the . . . request.” RCW42.56.520(1).
The PRA expressly contemplates two types of requester-initiated causes
of action for alleged PRA violations. RCW 42.56.550(1), (2). The first is an
action under RCW42.56.550(1) based on an agency’s denial of”an opportunity
to inspect or copy a public record.” “[S]uch a claim may be based on a variety of
agency actions or inactions,” including an agency’s claim of exemption, failure to
respond or produce records, “silent withholding,” and failure to conduct an
adequate search. WASH. STATE BAR ASS’N, PUBLIC RECORDS ACT DESKBOOK:
WASHINGTON’S PUBLIC DISCLOSURE AND OPEN PUBLIC MEETING LAWS § 16.2 (2d ed.
2014). A claim for denial of an opportunity to inspect or copy under RCW
42.56.550(1) does not accrue until there is “some agency action, or inaction,
indicating that the agency will not be providing responsive records.” Hobbs v.
State, 183 Wn. App. 925, 936, 335 P.3d 1004 (2014); see also Freedom Found.
v. Wash. State Dep’t of Soc. & Health Servs., 9 Wn. App. 2d 654, 664, 445 P.3d
971 (2019) (“In an action challenging an agency’s denial of a records request, a
requester cannot initiate a lawsuit until the agency has denied and closed the
request at issue.”), review denied, 194 Wn.2d 1017 (2020).
The second cause of action contemplated by the PRA is an action under
RCW 42.56.550(2) for an agency’s alleged failure to make a “reasonable
18
No. 79711-5-1/19
estimate” of the time required to respond or of the charges to produce copies.
The PRA expressly provides that a requester may seek judicial review by
moving for an order directing the responsible agency to “show cause why it has
refused to allow inspection or copying” (in the case of an action under
RCW 42.56.550(1)), or “show that the estimate it provided is reasonable” (in the
case of an action under RCW 42.56.550(2)). In both cases, the agency bears
the burden of establishing its compliance with the PRA. RCW 42.56.550(1), (2).
“[W]hether an agency complies with the PRA is a fact specific inquiry and must
be decided on a case-by-case basis.” Andrews v. Wash. State Patrol, 183 Wn.
App. 644, 653, 334 P.3d 94 (2014).
“Any person who prevails against an agency in any action in the courts
seeking the right to inspect or copy any public record or the right to receive a
response to a public record request within a reasonable amount of time shall be
awarded all costs, including reasonable attorney fees, incurred in connection with
such legal action.” RCW 42.56.550(4). “In addition, it shall be within the
discretion of the court to award such person an amount not to exceed one
hundred dollars for each day that he or she was denied the right to inspect or
copy said public record.” RCW 42.56.550(4).
Analysis
Standard of Review
This court “review[s] agency actions under the PRA de novo, taking into
account the PRA’s policy that ‘free and open examination of public records is in
the public’s interest, even [though] examination may cause inconvenience or
19
No. 79711-5-1120
embarrassment.’” Anderson v. Dept. of Soc. & Health Servs., 196 Wn. App. 674,
680-81, 384 P.3d 651 (2016) (second alteration in original) (quoting Neigh. All.,
172 Wn.2d at 715); see RCW 42.56.550(3) (“Judicial review of all agency
actions taken or challenged under RCW 42.56.030 through 42.56.520 shall be de
novo.”). Where, as here, “the record consists only of affidavits, memoranda of
law, and other documentary evidence,” this court “stands in the same position as
the trial court” and “is not bound by the trial court’s findings on disputed factual
issues.” PAWS, 125 Wn.2d at 252-53.
Here, Strahm does not specify whether his claims are based on an
improper denial under RCW 42.56.550(1) or a failure to provide a reasonable
estimate under RCW 42.56.550(2). But the thrust of his contentions is that the
County improperly denied him access to responsive records for various reasons,
each of which is addressed below.
Adequate Search
Strahm first contends that the trial court erred by concluding that the
County conducted an adequate search for responsive records. Because the
record is not sufficiently developed to determine whether the County’s search
was adequate, we agree and remand to the trial court for further fact-finding.
“An adequate search is a prerequisite to an adequate response.” Neigh.
All., 172 Wn.2d at 724. Thus, an agency’s failure to perform an adequate search
“is comparable to a denial because the result is the same,” and an inadequate
search is an actionable violation of the PRA. Neigh. All., 172 Wn.2d at 721, 724-
25 (holding that an inadequate search is a violation of the PRA and “[a] prevailing
20
No. 79711-5-1/21
party in such an instance is at least entitled to costs and reasonable attorney
fees,” but expressly declining to decide “whether the PRA supports a
freestanding daily penalty when an agency conducts an inadequate search but
no responsive documents are subsequently produced”).
In Neighborhood Alliance, our Supreme Court held that the standard for
an adequate search under the PRA is the same as it is under the federal
Freedom of Information Act and described that standard as follows:
[T]he focus of the inquiry is not whether responsive documents do in
fact exist, but whether the search itself was adequate. The adequacy
of a search is judged by a standard of reasonableness, that is, the
search must be reasonably calculated to uncover all relevant
documents. What will be considered reasonable will depend on the
facts of each case. When examining the circumstances of a case,
then, the issue of whether the search was reasonably calculated and
therefore adequate is separate from whether additional responsive
documents exist but are not found. .
This is not to say, of course, that an agency must
search every possible place a record may conceivably be stored,
but only those places where it is reasonably likely to be found.
Neigh. All., 172 Wn.2d at 71 9-20 (citations omitted). To establish that it
conducted an adequate search, “the agency may rely on reasonably detailed,
nonconclusory affidavits submitted in good faith.” Neigh. All., 172 Wn.2d at 721.
These affidavits “should include the search terms and the type of search
performed, and they should establish that all places likely to contain responsive
materials were searched.” Neigh. All., 172 Wn.2d at 721.
Here, the County submitted several affidavits in response to the trial
court’s order to show cause, but none of them describe the County’s search
process or establish “that all places likely to contain responsive materials were
searched.” Neigh. All., 172 Wn.2d at 721. Thus, the record was not sufficiently
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No. 79711-5-1/22
developed for the trial court to determine whether the County’s search was
adequate, and remand is required for further findings. Cl~ O’Neill v. City of
Shoreline, 145 Wn. App. 913, 936, 187 P.3d 822 (2008) (remanding to trial court
to determine whether search of hard drive would yield additional responsive
records where appellate court could not make that determination on the record
provided), affci hi ~ and rev’d hi ~ on other grounds, 170 Wn.2d 138, 240
P.3d 1149 (2010).
The County asserts that it conducted an adequate search with regard to
request K019782 because ‘[biased on the plain language of Mr. Strahm’s
request, he sought records related to transactions that originated out of the
Snohomish County Treasurer’s Office” and ‘he was provided with records from
that office.” But this assertion is not supported by citation to the record, and
nothing in the “plain language” of request K019782 even mentions the
Treasurer’s Office. Moreover, although the County could have filed an affidavit
explaining that the Treasurer’s Office was the only place reasonably likely to
contain responsive documents for Strahm’s request, it did not. Similarly, with
regard to request K024672, the County’s assertion that its search was adequate
because it “located its records that documented every transaction related to the
federal disaster funding” is entirely conclusory and provides no basis to assess
the adequacy of the County’s search. The County’s conclusory assertions do not
establish that its searches were adequate.
Silent Withholding
Strahm next argues that the trial court erred by concluding that the County
22
No. 79711-5-1/23
did not silenfly withhold responsive records. As further discussed below, we
reject Strahm’s argument with regard to request K01 9782. With regard to
request K024672, however, the record is not sufficiently developed to resolve
Strahm’s silent withholding claim, and remand is required for further fact-finding.
Under the PRA, a responsive record “is never exempt from disclosure; it
can be exempt only from production.” Sanders v. State, 169 Wn.2d 827, 836,
240 P.3d 120 (2010). Thus, an agency violates the PRA when it “silently
withholds” a responsive record either without disclosing its existence or without
specifying the exemption that the agency claims applies. See Zink v. City of
Mesa, 162Wn. App. 688, 711, 256 P.3d 384 (2011) (failure to reveal that records
have been withheld in their entirety); Sanders, 169 Wn.2d at 846 (failure to
specify and give a brief explanation of each exemption).5
Here, Strahm first argues that the County silently withheld nonexempt
records that were responsive to request K019782 and located in the Treasurer’s
Office. In support of this argument, Strahm cites to his e-mail exchange with
Sperline in October 2018, after the County indicated it had closed request
K019782. Specifically, on October 9, 2018, Strahm requested that the County
“[pjlease promptly make responsive paper and electronic records available for
inspection.” Sperline responded:
We interpreted your request to be seeking transactions from the
items marked by the red rectangles. Those marked transactions
stemmed out of the Treasurer’s Office. That is where the
responsive records were located. Accordingly, the Treasurer’s
Office’s search for and production of records in response to this
~ Strahm addresses silent withholding and failure to specify an exemption
as two separate issues in his brief; we treat them here as one.
23
No. 79711-5-1/24
request is complete. I will note that there are paper bank
statements responsive to this request but you previously instructed
us not to produce paper bank statements.
Strahm asserts that Sperline’s e-mail establishes that the County silently withheld
responsive paper bank records that were located in the Treasurer’s Office. But
the only reasonable interpretation of Sperline’s e-mail is that the responsive
records located in the Treasurer’s Office either had been produced already or
consisted of paper bank statements that Strahm previously indicated he no
longer wanted. Therefore, the County did not silently withhold records
responsive to request K019782.
Strahm disagrees. In his reply brief, he contends that the County’s claim
that he amended his request to exclude paper records is false. But Strahm does
not dispute that when he inspected paper bank statements on May 31, 2018, he
informed O’Neill that he “no longer wished to receive ‘non-electronic paper
records.” O’Neill confirmed this by e-mail on June 6, 2018, writing, “At your May
31st inspection, you amended your requests and advised you no longer wished
to receive[] non-electronic bank records.” Strahm neither clarified nor corrected
this statement with regard to request K019782. And although he now contends
that “the County should have scanned the paper records . . . into an electronic
format and provided the records to [him] on CD,” he points to nothing in the
record to show that he communicated this request to the County. Instead, he
sowed additional confusion by not being specific about what he believed was
missing when the County later requested clarification. Therefore, Strahm’s
contention fails. Ct Bonamy v. City of Seattle, 92 Wn. App. 403, 409, 960 P.2d
24
No. 79711-5-1125
447 (1998) (‘The [PRA] does not. . . require public agencies to be mind
readers.”).
Strahm next points out that the reason he no longer wanted paper records
was because the paper records produced by the County “‘contained transactions
that were not responsive to [his] requests.” But as Sievers explained in his
declaration, there is no “one-to-one” relationship between the subfund
transactions selected by Strahm in request KOl 9782 and the bank statements
reflecting those transactions. Additionally, and to the extent that Strahm is
arguing that the County should have explained its bank statements to him, we
reject that argument because the PRA “does not require agencies to . . . explain
public records, but only to make those records accessible to the public.”
Bonamy, 92 Wn. App. at 409.
Finally, Strahm points out that in November 2018, after he filed suit, he
inspected daily bank statements produced by the County in response to the
KOl 9782 Follow-up Request, and that a page of those bank statements was
responsive to request K019782. Strahm seems to suggest that the existence of
this responsive bank statement is evidence of the County’s silent withholding.
But the K019782 Follow-up Request was a request for paper records that Strahm
himself had earlier indicated he no longer wanted. Therefore, that the County
ultimately produced a paper bank statement that would have been responsive to
request KOl 9782 does not support Strahm’s argument that the County silently
withheld responsive records.
Turning to request K024672, Strahm contends that the County silently
25
No. 79711-5-1/26
withheld 13 pages of warrants that were later produced in response to a different
request. In support of his contention, Strahm points out that request K024672
expressly referred to “warrants, checks, wire transfer[s], electronic payments,
etc.” He then asserts that the 13 pages of warrants produced in response to his
later request were also responsive to request K024672.
The County did not respond to this assertion, either below or on appeal.
Therefore, the record is not sufficiently developed to determine whether those 13
warrants were, in fact, responsive to request K024672. Furthermore, and as
already discussed, the record is not sufficiently developed to determine whether
the County’s search was adequate. Thus, the record also is not sufficiently
developed to determine whether, if those warrants were responsive to request
K024672, they should have been disclosed. Accordingly, remand is required for
further fact-finding as to whether the County silently withheld records responsive
to request K024672.
The County contends that it “is not withholding records, silent or
otherwise.” It points out that in the letter accompanying the CD produced in
response to request K024672, the County “explicitly informed Mr. Strahm that it
believed the records provided in response to K024672 fulfilled his request” and
told him that “if he was looking for additional records, he needed to contact the
County within 30 days.” The County asserts that Strahm’s failure to timely clarify
his request vitiates his silent withholding claim. But Strahm’s request clearly
included a request for warrants. Thus, even assuming that the County’s letter
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No. 79711-5-1/27
constituted a valid request for clarification,6 Strahm’s failure to respond has no
bearing on whether the County silently withheld the warrants in the first instance.
The County’s assertion lacks merit.
Fee for Inspection
Strahm contends that the County violated the PRA by requiring him to pay
a fee to inspect records in response to request K019782. We disagree.
Under RCW 42.56.120(1), “[n]o fee shall be charged for the inspection of
public records or locating public documents and making them available for
copying,” except under certain exceptions that do not apply here. Accordingly,
the County rightfully concedes that O’Neill was mistaken when she initially told
Strahm that he would be required to pay a fee to inspect bank records
responsive to request KOl 9782. But because O’Neill voluntarily cured her error a
short time later, we conclude that no PRA violation occurred.
Hobbs is instructive. In Hobbs, Mike Hobbs requested records from the
State Auditor’s Office (Auditor). 183 Wn. App. at 928. Two days after the Auditor
made a first installment of records available to Hobbs, Hobbs filed suit against
the Auditor for alleged PRA violations relating to redactions in the first
installment. Hobbs, 183 Wn. App. at 932. The Auditor subsequently provided a
corrected copy of the documents that included explanatory “code numbers,”
which had been omitted from the first production, to explain the redactions.
Hobbs, 183 Wn. App. at 930, 932 n.4. The superior court concluded that Hobbs
6 Strahm contends that if the County believed Strahm’s request was
unclear, then it should have asked for clarification when it initially responded to
the request instead of waiting until it produced the CD.
27
No. 79711-5-1128
did not have a cause of action as to the initial production. Hobbs, 183 Wn. App.
at 932.
On appeal, Hobbs contended that “any violations in the original installment
were violations at the time they occurred and that he was entitled to penalties
regardless of whether the violations were later corrected.” Hobbs, 183 Wn. App.
at 935. We disagreed and held that “before a requester initiates a PRA lawsuit
against an agency, there must be some agency action, or inaction, indicating that
the agency will not be providing responsive records.” Hobbs, 183 Wn. App. at
936. We concluded that there was no such action or inaction in Hobbs’s case.
Hobbs, 183 Wn. App. at 937. In doing so, we observed that the Auditor was
continuing to provide Hobbs with responsive records for some time after it initially
produced the first installment; that the Auditor voluntarily cured the alleged
violation; and that Hobbs did not dispute that by the time of the trial court’s final
hearing, all issues had been cured. Hobbs, 183 Wn. App. at 936, 940.
Here, like the Auditor in Hobbs, O’Neill voluntarily cured her mistake a
short time after she initially told Strahm that a deposit would be required to
inspect bank records responsive to request K019782. To be sure, O’Neill should
have been more transparent about her initial error, and she likely caused
unnecessary confusion when she first indicated that a fee would be required and
then, without any explanation, wrote Strahm again to inform him that the County
would begin preparing the responsive bank records for inspection. She also
injected confusion when, between these two communications, she sent Strahm
an e-mail indicating that the County planned to close request K019782 because
28
No. 79711-5-1/29
all responsive records had been produced. Nevertheless, it is undisputed that
O’Neill voluntarily cured her error, that the cure was made while the request
remained open, and that by the time Strahm filed suit, the records the County
considered responsive had been made available for his inspection without a fee.
Furthermore, none of the authorities that Strahm cites support his contention that
O’Neill’s voluntarily cured mistake remains an actionable violation.7 For these
reasons, we reject that contention.
Production in Lieu of Inspection
Although the County does not acknowledge or respond to this argument,
Strahm seems to suggest that because he expressly requested that responsive
records for request K024762 be made available for inspection, the County
violated the PRA by instead producing them on a CD. But it is undisputed that
Strahm picked up the CD, that he was charged only 35 cents for it, and that he
reviewed the documents thereon. And Strahm does not cite any authority
~ In Cedar Grove Com posting, Inc. v. City of Marvsville, we concluded that
even though the City ultimately produced unredacted versions of certain e-mails
before litigation, the requester still had a cause of action for the City’s initial
refusal to produce the e-mails based on its improper reliance on the attorney-
client privilege. 188 Wn. App. 695, 715, 354 P.3d 249 (2015). But there, the
cure was not voluntarily. Rather, the City produced unredacted versions only
after the requester twice called into question the City’s reliance on the privilege.
Cedar Grove, 188 Wn. App. at 704-05. We distinguished Hobbs on that basis,
observing that the City initially responded by reiterating its initial claim of
privilege, “thus denying the request.” Cedar Grove, 188 Wn. App. at 715. This
case is similarly distinguishable, and thus, any reliance on Cedar Grove is
misplaced. Strahm’s reliance on Neighborhood Alliance is also misplaced
because there, the agency “refused to produce anything at all,” 172 Wn.2d at
727, whereas here, the County did not refuse production but only asserted,
mistakenly, that a fee would be required. And Yousoufian v. Office of Ron Sims,
where the sole issue was the amount of the penalty, is similarly unpersuasive.
168 Wn.2d 444, 450, 229 P.3d 735 (2010).
29
No. 79711-5-1/30
supporting the proposition that the County violated the PRA merely by producing
records electronically, at minimal cost, instead of making them available for
inspection. Therefore, we reject Strahm’s argument.
Fullest Assistance
As a final matter, Strahm contends that reversal is required because the
County violated the PRA by failing to provide “fullest assistance.” We disagree.
Strahm relies on RCW42.56.100 to support his argument. That statute
provides that “[a]gencies shall adopt and enforce reasonable rules and
regulations . . . consonant with the intent of this chapter to provide full public
access to public records” and that “[s}uch rules and regulations shall provide for
the fullest assistance to inquirers.” RCW42.56.100 (emphasis added). In other
words, the phrase “fullest assistance” technically refers to the agency’s rules and
regulations. Freedom Found., 9 Wn. App. 2d at 673. “Nevertheless, courts have
recognized that agencies are required to comply with the principles embodied in
RCW42.56.100.” Freedom Found., 9 Wn. App. 2d at 673.
Here, Strahm argues that the County failed to provide fullest assistance
and “unreasonably delayed” fulfilling his requests by (1) denying him the
“opportunity to inspect responsive records,” (2) not performing an adequate
search, (3) withholding nonexempt responsive records, and (4) failing to “properly
respond[ 1” to his requests. Strahm’s argument is unpersuasive for three
reasons.
First, the first three of Strahm’s contentions above merely repeat his other
contentions, and Strahm does not cite any authority supporting the proposition
30
No. 79711-5-1/31
that a failure to provide fullest assistance is an independently actionable PRA
violation.
Second, Strahm’s final contention that the County did not “properly
respond[ 1” to his requests does not specify the alleged impropriety that serves as
the basis of his “fullest assistance” claim. Thus, it is too conclusory to warrant
reconsideration. See Westv. Thurston County, 168 Wn. App. 162, 187, 275
P.3d 1200 (2012) (“We do not consider conclusory arguments that do not cite
authority.”); see ~ Holland v. City of Tacoma, 90 Wn. App. 533, 538, 954 P.2d
290 (1998) (“Passing treatment of an issue or lack of reasoned argument is
insufficient to merit judicial consideration.”).
Finally, although Strahm cites, in passing, Kittitas County v. AlliDhin, 195
Wn. App. 355, 381 P.3d 1202 (2016), affd, 190 Wn.2d 691, 416 P.3d 1232
(2018), and Mechlinci v. City of Monroe, 152 Wn. App. 830, 222 P.3d 808 (2009),
his reliance on those cases is misplaced: Kittitas County’s discussion of “fullest
assistance” is in the unpublished part of that opinion and, therefore, is not
persuasive. As for Mechlinq: There, the requester contended that based on the
duty to provide “fullest assistance,” the city of Monroe was obligated to provide
certain e-mails in electronic, rather than paper, format. Mechlinq, 152 Wn. App.
at 838, 847. We concluded that the City had no express obligation to provide the
e-mails electronically. Mechling, 152 Wn. App. at 850. But “consistent with the
statutory duty to provide the fullest assistance,” we directed the trial court to, on
remand, determine whether it would be reasonable and feasible for the City to
produce additional, unredacted e-mails electronically. Mechlinci, 152 Wn. App. at
31
No. 79711-5-1/32
850. We did not, however, address whether a refusal to do so would result in an
actionable PRA violation. Thus, Mechlin~ is inapposite here: That an agency
should consider the reasonableness and feasibility of producing records in a
desired format does not support Strahm’s argument that under the circumstances
of this case, the County violated the PRA by failing to provide fullest assistance.
We vacate the trial court’s dismissal of Strahm’s case and its conclusions
that the County complied with the PRA, conducted an adequate search for
records and, with regard to request K024672, did not silently withhold records.
We remand to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion,
including determining (1) whether the County performed an adequate search with
regard to both of Strahm’s requests, (2) whether the County silently withheld
records responsive to request K024672, (3) whether the County complied with
the PRA, and (4) if appropriate, the amount of any costs and monetary penalties.
WE CONCUR:
/i~ ~ _____________________
32