IN THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
‐‐‐‐ooOoo‐‐‐‐
S. Steven Maese, ) MEMORANDUM DECISION
)
Plaintiff and Appellant, ) Case No. 20100663‐CA
)
v. ) FILED
) (February 24, 2012)
Davis County, )
) 2012 UT App 48
Defendant and Appellee. )
‐‐‐‐‐
Second District, Farmington Department, 090700674
The Honorable Rodney S. Page
Attorneys: Kelly Ann Booth, Salt Lake City, for Appellant
William K. McGuire and Neal C. Geddes, Farmington, for Appellee
‐‐‐‐‐
Before Judges Davis, Roth, and Christiansen.
DAVIS, Judge:
¶1 S. Steven Maese appeals the trial court’s grant of Davis County’s motion to
dismiss Maese’s complaint for failing to state a claim for which relief can be granted, see
Utah R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). We affirm.
¶2 On appeal, Maese argues that the facts contained in his complaint necessarily
preclude dismissal, noting that “a trial court must accept all facts as alleged by the
plaintiff as true” when ruling on a rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss. Specifically, Maese’s
complaint alleges that “the Davis County property transaction database is [itself] a
public record . . . that Davis County failed to give him a copy of” after he submitted a
Government Records Access Management Act (GRAMA) request. Specifically, his
request sought “a copy of: [t]he property transaction database, in the electronic format
that Davis County keeps it, in its entirety,” or alternatively, “a compiled transaction
report, for the past 20 years, in electronic format.” See Maese v. Tooele Cnty., 2012 UT
App 49, ¶ 2 (companion to this case in which Maese submitted the same GRAMA
request to Tooele County).
¶3 “Whether a trial court properly granted a rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss is a
question of law that we review for correctness, affording the trial court’s decision no
deference.” Miller v. State, 2010 UT App 25, ¶ 6, 226 P.3d 743 (internal quotation marks
omitted). “Rule 12(b)(6) allows a respondent to move for dismissal of any petition
which the respondent believes ‘fail[s] to state a claim upon which relief can be
granted.’” Id. ¶ 16 (alteration in original) (quoting Utah R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6)).
“Accordingly, [a] rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss admits the facts alleged in the
[petition] but challenges the [petitioner]’s right to relief based on those facts.” Id.
(alterations in original) (internal quotation marks omitted). To the extent our analysis
requires us to interpret GRAMA, we “look first to its plain language,” Valcarce v.
Fitzgerald, 961 P.2d 305, 318 (Utah 1998), and interpret its terms “in accord with their
usual and accepted meanings,” Clover v. Snowbird Ski Resort, 808 P.2d 1037, 1045 (Utah
1991).
¶4 GRAMA ensures “the public’s right of access to information concerning the
conduct of the public’s business.” Utah Code Ann. § 63G‐2‐102(1)(a) (2011).1 It
accomplishes this by protecting “[e]very person[’s] . . . right to inspect a public record
free of charge,[2] and the right to take a copy of a public record during normal working
hours.” Id. § 63G‐2‐201(1). However, GRAMA does not require “a governmental
entity” to
fill a person’s records request if: (A) the record requested is
accessible in the identical physical form and content in a
public publication or product produced by the governmental
entity receiving the request; (B) the governmental entity
1
Portions of GRAMA have been amended since Maese filed his GRAMA request
in 2009. Where substantive changes do not affect our analysis, we cite the most current
version of the Utah Code for the reader’s convenience.
2
This is subject to Utah Code section 63G‐2‐203, which permits “[a] governmental
entity” to “charge a reasonable fee to cover the . . . actual cost of providing a record,”
Utah Code Ann. § 63G‐2‐203(1) (2011), and to Utah Code section 63G‐3‐204, which
pertains to the amount of time the governmental entity has to respond to a request, see
id. § 63G‐2‐204.
20100663‐CA 2
provides the person requesting the record with the public
publication or product; and (C) the governmental entity
specifies where the record can be found in the public
publication or product.
Id. § 63G‐2‐201(8)(a)(v).
¶5 Here, Davis County responded to Maese’s request by declining to provide him
with a full electronic copy of the property records database because the requested
records could be accessed for free at the Recorder’s Office and electronically through
Davis County’s online Redi‐Web system. On appeal, Maese contends that the database
he requested is not “identical [in] physical form or content,” see id., to hard copies of the
requested records or to the Redi‐Web system, arguing that the “[d]atabase [itself] is a
new and independent public record greater than the sum of its parts[ because] it
contains metadata and other variables [that are] not available online or through paper
copies.”3 Maese argues that these assertions in his complaint, describing the database as
3
Other courts have defined metadata “as data about data,” or “information
describing the history, tracking, or management of an electronic document,” Williams v.
Sprint/United Mgmt. Co., 230 F.R.D. 640, 646 (D. Kan. 2005) (internal quotation marks
omitted); see also id. at 652‐53 (determining that metadata contained in the defendant’s
electronic spreadsheet documents was discoverable to the extent it was relevant). An
electronic document’s metadata could include “a file’s name, a file’s location . . . , file
format or file type, file size, [and] file dates (e.g., creation date, date of last data
modification, date of last data access, and date of last metadata modification), and file
permissions.” Id. at 646. Metadata also consists of “the hidden text, formatting codes,
formulae, and other information associated with an electronic document.” Aguilar v.
Immigration & Customs Enforcement Div. of the U.S. Dept. of Homeland Sec., 255 F.R.D. 350,
354 (S.D.N.Y. 2008) (internal quotation marks omitted). Metadata is not always readily
visible to users “who are not technically adept,” and “[m]ost metadata is generally not
visible when a document is printed.” Williams, 230 F.R.D. at 646. Maese does not
describe the metadata that he asserts is a component of the Redi‐Web database, but in
the companion case his counsel at oral argument described the metadata as “the
information that all gets linked to a title,” including “information about . . . all the
documents that were recorded on that parcel, in sequence, . . . when they were
recorded, . . . [and] the order of recording [of those documents],” as well as “the
information entered by the clerk at the time [a document] is presented to the county
(continued...)
20100663‐CA 3
a distinct public record, are factual and that the trial court therefore had to consider
them at face value. We disagree and determine that Maese’s assertions regarding the
classification of the database under GRAMA are legal conclusions, not factual
statements. See Maese, 2012 UT App 49, ¶ 6. The trial court, therefore, was not bound
by these assertions in ruling on Davis County’s motion to dismiss. See generally
Chapman ex rel. Chapman v. Primary Childrenʹs Hosp., 784 P.2d 1181, 1186 (Utah 1989)
(“[M]ere conclusory allegations in a pleading, unsupported by a recitation of relevant
surrounding facts, are insufficient to preclude dismissal . . . .”).
¶6 Further, GRAMA states, “A person making a request for a record shall furnish
the governmental entity with a written request containing . . . a description of the record
requested that identifies the record with reasonable specificity.” Utah Code Ann.
§ 63G‐2‐204(1) (2011). Here, the face of the GRAMA request Maese submitted to Davis
County does not describe the same records Maese now alleges he sought. Maese’s
original request sought a copy of “[t]he property transaction database, in the electronic
format that Davis County keeps it in, in its entirety,” or “a compiled transaction report,
for the past 20 years, in electronic format.” However, Maese now asserts that his
original GRAMA request was for a copy of the “[d]atabase itself,” which contains
information inaccessible in paper or online format, namely, “metadata and other
variables.” Impliedly then, Maese is now framing his GRAMA request as seeking a
copy of the database because of its “metadata and other variables,” which he asserts
differentiate the database itself as a separate public record that is distinct from the
property records organized within the database. This demonstrates that Maese’s
assertion on appeal—that he was wrongly denied a copy of the database itself—is
unsupported by the record because Maese did not ask Davis County for a copy of the
database itself, as a distinct public record, and Davis County did not interpret his
request as such. Cf. Maese, 2012 UT App 49, ¶ 2 (determining that both parties
understood Maese’s request for a copy of the database as distinct from a request for a
copy of the records contained therein). Rather, Maese asked Davis County for a copy of
the database or a twenty‐year transaction report. Further, a compiled transaction report
would have provided Maese with different metadata than a copy of the database. Thus,
his argument on appeal, framing his request as one for a copy of the database itself and
its accompanying metadata, is unavailing in light of the fact that Maese, presumably,
would have been satisfied if Davis County fulfilled his alternative request by providing
3
(...continued)
recorder’s office,” which does not seem to accord with the definition of metadata
employed in the above case law. See Maese v. Tooele Cnty., 2012 UT App 49, ¶18 n.7.
20100663‐CA 4
a compiled transaction report, which, applying the definition of metadata used in
Williams v. Sprint/United Management Co., 230 F.R.D. 640 (D. Kan. 2005), see id. at 646,
would have inevitably contained different metadata than the database itself because
metadata attached to an electronic file is unique to that file. See supra ¶ 5 note 3; see
generally Aguilar v. Immigration & Customs Enforcement Div. of the U.S. Dept. of Homeland
Sec., 255 F.R.D. 350, 354‐55 (S.D.N.Y. 2008). Consequently, the trial court was correct
not to directly rule on the validity of the legal assertion in Maese’s complaint—that the
database itself is a distinct public record. And because Maese’s original GRAMA
request did not clearly seek a copy of the database itself in order to access its metadata
and other hidden variables, we too decline to determine whether the database file, its
metadata, or other hidden variables constitute public records under GRAMA.
¶7 We now determine whether Davis County sufficiently complied with the
GRAMA request Maese actually submitted. We agree with the trial court that GRAMA
was satisfied when Davis County made the records Maese requested “accessible in the
identical physical form and content” via its Redi‐Web system and informed Maese of
such. See Utah Code Ann. § 63G‐2‐201(8)(a)(v)(A). Davis County also informed Maese
that he could access the requested “public record[s] free of charge” by visiting the
Recorder’s Office and explained to him that he could “copy. . . [the requested] public
record[s] during normal working hours.” See id. § 63G‐2‐201(1). As Davis County
stated in its response letter to Maese, his records request was granted.
¶8 Further, GRAMA does not require Davis County to fulfill Maese’s alternative
request for “a compiled transaction report, for the past 20 years, in electronic format.”
On the contrary, GRAMA expressly states, “In response to a request, a governmental
entity is not required to: (i) create a record; (ii) compile, format, manipulate, package,
summarize, or tailor information; [or] (iii) provide a record in a particular format,
medium, or program not currently maintained by the governmental entity.” Id. § 63G‐
201‐8(a)(i)‐(iii) (emphasis added). Maese does not argue that his request for a
“compiled transaction report” would not require Davis County to actually “compile” a
transaction report. Thus, assuming that this request would, in fact, require Davis
County to compile a report, we determine that Davis County was under no obligation
to do so. See Maese v. Tooele Cnty., 2012 UT App 49, ¶ 18 (concluding that having access
to the Tooele County property records and the ability to take copies of those records
satisfied Maese’s GRAMA request because it provided Maese with the means to
assemble a twenty‐year compiled transaction report on his own).
¶9 Last, Maese argues that GRAMA was not satisfied when Davis County provided
him access to the database, rather than a copy of it, when his request was specifically for
20100663‐CA 5
a copy. See id. ¶¶ 16‐18 (addressing the same argument). We disagree. GRAMA was
enacted to protect “two constitutional rights: (a) the public’s right of access to
information concerning the conduct of the public’s business; and (b) the right of privacy
in relation to personal data gathered by governmental entities.” Utah Code Ann. § 63G‐
2‐102(1) (2011) (emphasis added). In terms of copies, GRAMA ensures that “[e]very
person has . . . the right to take a copy of a public record during normal working
hours.” Id. § 63G‐2‐201(1).4 In other words, GRAMA does not necessarily require the
governmental entity to provide a person with a copy of a public record merely because
it was requested, but only that the record be accessible for the public to make a copy
“during normal working hours,” id. Davis County provided that access at the
Recorder’s Office and informed Maese of such. Additionally, at the time of Maese’s
request, GRAMA stated, “A governmental entity may provide access to an electronic
copy of a record in lieu of providing access to its paper equivalent.” Id. § 63G‐2‐201(12)
(2008) (emphasis added) (current version at id. § 63G‐2‐201(12) (2011)).5 In other words,
4
GRAMA also establishes a means for individuals to obtain certified copies of
records, which Maese did not specifically request. See Utah Code Ann. § 63G‐2‐201(7)
(2011). Additionally, GRAMA permits the governmental entity discretion to fulfill
requests for copies of “more than 50 pages of records” only if certain conditions are met.
See id. § 63G‐2‐201(9).
5
Subsection 12 was amended in 2010, see Utah Code Ann. § 63G‐2‐201 amend.
notes (2011), and now states,
(12) Subject to the requirements of Subsection (8), a
governmental entity shall provide access to an electronic
copy of a record in lieu of providing access to its paper
equivalent if:
(a) the person making the request requests or states a
preference for an electronic copy;
(b) the governmental entity currently maintains the
record in an electronic format that is reproducible and
may be provided without reformatting or conversion; and
(c) the electronic copy of the record:
(i) does not disclose other records that are
exempt from disclosure; or
(ii) may be segregated to protect private,
protected, or controlled information from disclosure without
the undue expenditure of public resources or funds.
(continued...)
20100663‐CA 6
GRAMA did not require Davis County to provide Maese with the electronic copy of the
database requested. We do not see how GRAMA, by its “plain language,” see Valcarce v.
Fitzgerald, 961 P.2d 305, 318 (Utah 1998), would otherwise require Davis County to
provide Maese with a copy of the database simply because that is the format he
preferred.
¶10 In conclusion, GRAMA did not require Davis County to compile a twenty‐year
transaction report, nor did it require Davis County to provide Maese with an electronic
copy of the entire property records database. Rather, Davis County satisfied its
obligations under GRAMA when it informed Maese that he could access and copy the
requested records through its Redi‐Web system and at the Recorder’s Office, and
explained to Maese how to do so. Accordingly, we affirm.
____________________________________
James Z. Davis, Judge
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¶11 WE CONCUR:
____________________________________
Stephen L. Roth, Judge
____________________________________
Michele M. Christiansen, Judge
5
(...continued)
Id. § 63G‐2‐201(12). We do not address whether and to what extent this amendment to
the statute would affect Maese’s request had it been effective at the time he made his
original GRAMA request.
20100663‐CA 7