Michigan Supreme Court
Lansing, Michigan
Chief Justice: Justices:
Opinion Clifford W. Taylor Michael F. Cavanagh
Elizabeth A. Weaver
Marilyn Kelly
Maura D. Corrigan
Robert P. Young, Jr.
Stephen J. Markman
FILED JULY 19, 2006
ANN COBLENTZ, LEE COBLENTZ,
JOHN LEWANDOWSKI, and
DEBORAH LEWANDOWSKI,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v No. 127715
CITY OF NOVI,
Defendant-Appellee.
BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH
KELLY, J.
This case asks us to determine if the trial court appropriately found
requested documents exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA), MCL 15.231 et seq. We address also whether it was appropriate for
defendant to charge fees to plaintiffs for the work of defendant’s attorney in
retrieving and separating documents plaintiffs sought under the act.
This case revolves around an underlying settlement agreement between
defendant and a third party. Plaintiffs filed a FOIA request for documents
associated with the agreement. Requested were “site plans” and “global readings”
on real property, all exhibits to the agreement, including certain exhibits listed as
intentionally deleted, and side agreements or letters related to the agreement.
The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s decision that the requested
documents were exempt from disclosure. Coblentz v Novi, 264 Mich App 450; 691
NW2d 22 (2004). We affirm in part and reverse in part that decision. We conclude
that the Court of Appeals appropriately affirmed the grant of summary disposition
to defendant on plaintiffs’ request for “site plans” and “global readings.” But the
Court of Appeals erred in affirming summary disposition regarding the request for
all exhibits to the underlying settlement agreement, including the intentionally
deleted exhibits. These exhibits were not exempt from disclosure and were
sufficiently identified in the FOIA request.
The Court of Appeals also erred in affirming summary disposition for
defendant on the requested “side agreements” to the settlement agreement. These
items were not exempt because defendant failed to comply with MCL
15.243(1)(f)(iii). Finally, the Court of Appeals erred in finding appropriate the
fees that defendant charged for its attorney’s work in separating documents. The
attorney in question was not an employee of defendant. Therefore, we remand this
case to the trial court for entry of a judgment compelling disclosure consistent
with this opinion.
I. RELEVANT FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In a separate civil action against defendant, Sandstone Associates Limited
Partnership-A (Sandstone) obtained a judgment that totaled tens of millions of
2
dollars, including costs, interest, and attorney fees. Sandstone and defendant then
entered into an agreement in which defendant waived its appellate rights and
Sandstone received real property rather than the money judgment. The major
component of the agreement called for defendant to turn over 75 “net usable”
acres to Sandstone for development.
The property had previously been set aside as parkland. It is adjacent to
property owned by plaintiffs. Some of the property carried deed restrictions,
including possible reciprocal negative easements.1 Plaintiffs’ properties contained
the same deed restrictions. The settlement agreement required defendant to
arrange for the removal of the deed restrictions on its property and on plaintiffs’
property. It was agreed that, if defendant failed, it would convey additional
property to Sandstone. In an effort to remove the restrictions, defendant contacted
plaintiffs.
1
This Court has provided the following definition and example of a
reciprocal negative easement:
There must have been a common owner of the related parcels
of land, and in his various grants of the lots he must have included
some restriction, either affirmative or negative, for the benefit of the
land retained, evidencing a scheme or intent that the entire tract
should be similarly treated. Once the plan is effectively put into
operation, the burden he has placed upon the land conveyed is by
operation of law reciprocally placed upon the land retained. In this
way those who have purchased in reliance upon this particular
restriction will be assured that the plan will be completely achieved.
[Lanski v Montealegre, 361 Mich 44, 47; 104 NW2d 772 (1960)
(emphasis in original).]
3
Plaintiffs retained counsel who filed a FOIA request with defendant,
seeking:
1. All exhibits, including but not limited to exhibits G, T, U,
V, W, AA, BB, GG, MM, NN, PP, for the Agreement for Entry of
Consent Judgment dated June 25, 2002 between Sandstone and the
City of Novi;
2. Any and all site plans for Sandstone regarding the 75
dedicated acres; and . . . .
Defendant’s attorney responded to these requests by writing:
1. Exhibits G, T, U, V, W, AA, BB, GG, MM, NN, PP: I
have advised you by phone and letter that there are no such exhibits.
The reference in the index, indicating that they were intentionally
deleted, is merely to clarify for the reader that such exhibits have not
been lost or detached from the Agreement. These exhibits do not
exist, and never existed.
2. Site Plan: I have also advised you by phone and letter that
a site plan or concept plan for the 75 acres does not exist. It has
never existed. I do not know how [to] provide any further
explanation.
Plaintiffs then informally requested all side agreements to the Sandstone
settlement agreement and the “global readings.” Defendant’s attorney responded
that he did not know what “global” meant. With regard to the side agreements, he
stated that he assumed that this meant the “side letters” to the Sandstone
agreement. He indicated that he was attempting to learn from Sandstone’s counsel
which of the side letters were submitted with an understanding of confidentiality.
Plaintiffs next filed a second FOIA request. Among the items sought were:
1. Any and all side agreements entered into between the City
of Novi and Sandstone and/or its attorneys or representatives;
4
2. Global readings on “extra land”; global positioning
satellite (GPS) readings on “extra land”;
3. Settlement agreements, releases, copies of drafts in
settlement of the insurance cases relating to this property[.]
After plaintiffs’ second FOIA request, defendant began to negotiate with
Sandstone for release of the side agreements. Sandstone initially stated that none
could be released, but later agreed to release five of the seven side letters.
In response to this FOIA request, defendant told plaintiffs that global or
GPS readings did not exist. It also refused to release the two remaining side
agreements, stating:
The request is denied with regard to two documents
representing commercial and/or financial information voluntarily
submitted to the City of Novi for use in developing governmental
policy . . . as contemplated and required under MCL 15.243(g) [sic,
(1)(f)].
Plaintiffs filed a complaint in the circuit court seeking production of all
intentionally deleted exhibits. Plaintiffs claimed that they had located one of the
exhibits, exhibit AA, despite the fact that defendant contended that it never
existed. They also asked the court to order production of global readings, site
plans, and all side agreements.
Defendant filed a motion for summary disposition before the close of
discovery. Attached was an affidavit from its mayor, Richard Clark. Clark stated
that, as of the date of the affidavit, Sandstone had submitted no site plans for the
75 acres. He also affirmed that no “global readings” or GPS readings existed in
5
connection with the Sandstone settlement agreement. Plaintiffs responded, but did
not attach any documentary evidence rebutting Clark’s affidavit.
The court granted defendant’s motion in part. Regarding the site plans and
global readings, it found, on the basis of Clark’s affidavit, that none existed. It
concluded that further depositions of other city officials on the topic would be
duplicative. The circuit court denied defendant’s request for summary disposition
on the fee issue pending further hearings. It also deferred ruling on the side
agreements until it could make an in camera review. With respect to the
intentionally deleted exhibits, it found them irrelevant and granted summary
disposition for defendant.
Following its review of the side agreements that defendant claimed were
exempt, the court found that defendant properly complied with the requirements of
MCL 15.243(1)(f). The side letters, it found, fell within the governmental policy
exemption of FOIA because they helped to facilitate the Sandstone agreement.
Thus, it granted summary disposition to defendant.
The trial court then turned to the appropriateness of the fees for its attorney
that defendant charged to plaintiffs. Defendant contended that the fees were
appropriate because defendant’s attorney was the lowest paid employee who could
separate the exempt side letters from the nonexempt letters. The court granted
summary disposition to defendant on this issue. It found that the attorney was
defendant’s employee and concluded that the fees were appropriate under MCL
15.234. In the same order, the court denied plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration.
6
On plaintiffs’ appeal, the Court of Appeals concluded that it was not
appropriate for the lower court to grant summary disposition concerning the
intentionally deleted exhibits on the basis of relevance. But it affirmed the
decision on alternative grounds, concluding that the intentionally deleted exhibits
were not part of the final settlement agreement. It based its conclusion on the fact
that these exhibits were listed in the agreement with the words “INTENTIONAL
DELETION” written next to them. Coblentz, 264 Mich App 453-454.
Regarding the global readings and site plans, the Court of Appeals found
that summary disposition was appropriate because of Clark’s affidavit and
plaintiffs’ failure to offer factual support for their existence. It also concluded that
summary disposition was appropriate despite the fact that discovery had not been
concluded. The Court opined that it was unlikely that further discovery would
provide the factual support necessary. Id. at 454-457.
It found that the two side agreements were exempt from disclosure.
Specifically, it concluded that defendant adequately complied with FOIA’s
requirement that it place a description of the exempt material in a central location
within a reasonable time. This is despite the fact that defendant did not file the
description until after plaintiffs had made their FOIA requests and until five
months after Sandstone had submitted the documents. The Court of Appeals
found this reasonable because negotiations had continued between defendant and
Sandstone over the deed restrictions. Id. at 458-459.
7
Finally, the Court of Appeals found the fees charged for the work of
defendant’s attorney appropriate. It concluded that defendant’s attorney met the
dictionary definition of an employee. And it found that he was the lowest paid
employee who could handle the FOIA request. Id. at 460-461.
Plaintiffs sought, and we subsequently granted, leave to appeal. 474 Mich
886 (2005).
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review questions of statutory interpretation and the proper application
of statutes using a de novo standard. Adams Outdoor Advertising, Inc v City of
Holland, 463 Mich 675, 681; 625 NW2d 377 (2001). We review rulings on
motions for summary disposition using the de novo standard as well. Spiek v
Dep’t of Transportation, 456 Mich 331, 337; 572 NW2d 201 (1998). Summary
disposition was granted here under MCR 2.116(C)(10).2 In reviewing a ruling
made under this court rule, a court tests the factual support by reviewing the
documentary evidence submitted by the parties. Spiek, 456 Mich 337. We review
the evidence and all legitimate inferences in the light most favorable to the
2
MCR 2.116(C)(10) provides:
Grounds. The motion may be based on one or more of these
grounds, and must specify the grounds on which it is based:
* * *
(10) Except as to the amount of damages, there is no genuine
issue as to any material fact, and the moving party is entitled to
judgment or partial judgment as a matter of law.
8
nonmoving party. Wilkinson v Lee, 463 Mich 388, 391; 617 NW2d 305 (2000).
“Where the proffered evidence fails to establish a genuine issue regarding any
material fact, the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Maiden
v Rozwood, 461 Mich 109, 120; 597 NW2d 817 (1999).
The standard of review for FOIA cases was clarified this term in Herald
Co, Inc v Eastern Michigan Univ Bd of Regents, ___ Mich ___; ___ NW2d ___
(Docket No. 128263, decided July 19, 2006). The Court stated:
We continue to hold that the clear error standard of review is
appropriate where the parties challenge the factual findings of the
trial court. However, where the parties do not dispute the underlying
facts but rather challenge the trial court’s exercise of discretion, we
hold that an appellate court must review that determination for an
abuse of discretion, which this Court now defines as a determination
that is outside the principled range of outcomes. [Id., slip op at 2-3
(emphasis in original).]
The determination whether a description of material claimed to be exempt under
MCL 15.243(1)(f) was recorded in a central location within a reasonable time after
submission is a discretionary one. Therefore, the trial court’s decision on the
defendant’s compliance with the requirements of MCL 15.243(1)(f)(iii) is
reviewed for an abuse of discretion.
III. SITE PLANS AND GLOBAL READINGS
In response to plaintiffs’ request for site plans and global readings,
defendant provided Clark’s affidavit claiming that the documents did not exist. If
a record does not exist, it cannot be produced. Given that defendant denied the
existence of the records and that it provided supporting documentation for its
9
position, the burden shifted to plaintiffs to produce documentation to counter
defendant’s affidavit.
MCR 2.116(G)(4) provides:
A motion under subrule (C)(10) must specifically identify the
issues as to which the moving party believes there is no genuine
issue as to any material fact. When a motion under subrule (C)(10)
is made and supported as provided in this rule, an adverse party may
not rest upon the mere allegations or denials of his or her pleading,
but must, by affidavits or as otherwise provided in this rule, set forth
specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial. If the
adverse party does not so respond, judgment, if appropriate, shall be
entered against him or her.
Under this court rule, a plaintiff cannot rest solely on its complaint. Affidavits,
pleadings, depositions, admissions, or other documentary evidence must be
offered to survive summary disposition. See Smith v Globe Life Ins Co, 460 Mich
446, 454; 597 NW2d 28 (1999). In this case, plaintiffs failed to provide such
documentary evidence.
Regarding the global readings, plaintiffs admit that they are unsure what
they were seeking. They base their request on a handwritten note contained in one
of the drafts of the Sandstone agreement. The note is in the margin and merely
states “global.” Plaintiffs concede that they were guessing at the meaning of the
word. Plaintiffs offer no documentary evidence showing that their guess was
well-founded. Therefore, the trial court properly granted summary disposition.
MCR 2.116(G)(4).
The site plans present a similar situation. While everyone agrees that,
eventually, site plans for the development must be filed with defendant, the
10
question is whether they had been filed at the time of plaintiffs’ FOIA request.
Again, defendant provided Clark’s affidavit to support its contention that site plans
had not been filed with the city, and plaintiffs offered nothing to contradict this
point. They did not even demonstrate that a local ordinance required Sandstone to
file a site plan by the date of the FOIA request.3 Without factual support to
contradict Clark’s affidavit, the trial court properly granted summary disposition
pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10).
Plaintiffs complain that summary disposition was premature because
discovery had not been completed. They assert that they were unable to depose
defendant’s employees, including Clark, to obtain the information necessary to
counter defendant’s summary disposition motion. Such situations are controlled
by MCR 2.116(H), which provides:
Affidavits Unavailable.
(1) A party may show by affidavit that the facts necessary to
support the party’s position cannot be presented because the facts are
known only to persons whose affidavits the party cannot procure.
The affidavit must
(a) name these persons and state why their testimony cannot
be procured, and
(b) state the nature of the probable testimony of these persons
and the reason for the party’s belief that these persons would testify
to those facts.
3
Photographs suggested that Sandstone removed trees and graded the 75
acres at some point. But this is not evidence that defendant had site plans in its
possession at the time of the FOIA request. Plaintiffs point to nothing to show that
site plans were legally required to be filed before this activity could occur.
11
(2) When this kind of affidavit is filed, the court may enter an
appropriate order, including an order
(a) denying the motion, or
(b) allowing additional time to permit the affidavit to be
supported by further affidavits, or by depositions, answers to
interrogatories, or other discovery.
In this case, plaintiffs did not comply with MCR 2.116(H). They did not
offer the required affidavits of probable testimony to support their contentions.
Therefore, they cannot complain that discovery was prematurely ended.
Given that plaintiffs did not counter defendant’s documentary evidence as
required by MCR 2.116(G)(4) or MCR 2.116(H), the trial court appropriately
granted summary disposition to defendant under MCR 2.116(C)(10).
Accordingly, we affirm the Court of Appeals decision with regard to plaintiffs’
request for global readings and site plans.
IV. THE INTENTIONALLY DELETED EXHIBITS
In the final draft of the Sandstone agreement, the table of contents listed
and lettered the exhibits. Next to some of the letters, the words “INTENTIONAL
DELETION” were inserted. In their FOIA request, plaintiffs asked for all exhibits
to the Sandstone agreement, including the intentionally deleted exhibits.
Defendant argues that the FOIA request was not sufficiently clear. Much of this
argument is based on defendant’s contention that there was only one final
agreement and that plaintiffs requested the exhibits to that final agreement.
MCL 15.233(1) states, in relevant part:
12
Except as expressly provided in section 13 [exemptions from
disclosure], upon providing a public body’s FOIA coordinator with a
written request that describes a public record sufficiently to enable
the public body to find the public record, a person has a right to
inspect, copy, or receive copies of the requested public record of the
public body. [Emphasis added.]
Defendant never claimed, and still does not claim, that it does not know
what plaintiffs seek. But, focusing on its view of what constituted the final
agreement, it concludes that the requested exhibits either do not exist or that
defendant is not required to produce them. It claims that only the final agreement
is discoverable and that the requested exhibits were not part of it.
Even if the exhibits were not part of the final settlement agreement,
defendant had to disclose them. The FOIA request sufficiently identified them.
MCL 15.233(1). Defendant does not contend that it did not know what documents
plaintiffs were requesting. Because plaintiffs’ description was sufficient to enable
defendant to identify the documents, MCL 15.233(1) required defendant to
produce them regardless of whether they were part of the final agreement.
Defendant’s restrictive reading of the FOIA request is not consistent with
the language of the act. MCL 15.233(1). All that a request must accomplish is to
describe the record “sufficiently” to enable the public body to identify it. Because
defendant acknowledges that the FOIA request did that much, the request was
adequate.
The Legislature chose not to require an exacting standard in MCL
15.233(1). It could have required a “written request that describes a public record
13
precisely or fully.” But, instead, the Legislature chose to use the lesser standard of
“sufficiently.” The words chosen by the Legislature are presumed intentional. We
will not speculate that it used one word when it meant another. Detroit v Redford
Twp, 253 Mich 453, 456; 235 NW 217 (1931).
Moreover, requiring only a description sufficient to permit identification of
the requested items is consistent with the goals and intent of the Legislature in
enacting FOIA. It is a prodisclosure act. Swickard v Wayne Co Medical
Examiner, 438 Mich 536, 544; 475 NW2d 304 (1991). All public records are
subject to full disclosure unless they are clearly exempt. Id. If a request is
“sufficient” to allow the public body to find a nonexempt record, the record must
be disclosed. MCL 15.233(1).
Plaintiffs’ request satisfies this requirement. It specifically listed the
intentionally deleted exhibits by letter, G, T, U, V, W, AA, BB, GG, MM, NN,
and PP. Defendant’s response demonstrates that plaintiffs’ description was
adequate because it also listed these exhibits by letter. It is irrelevant that
defendant believed these exhibits not to be part of the final agreement. Plaintiffs’
request provided defendant enough information for it to understand what
documents plaintiffs wished to review.
A FOIA request must be fulfilled unless MCL 15.243 lists an applicable
specific exemption. MCL 15.233(1). Defendant points to no exemption
applicable to the intentionally deleted exhibits. Therefore, the trial court erred in
granting summary disposition to defendant, and the Court of Appeals erred in
14
affirming that decision. MCL 15.233(1) required the trial court to order defendant
to turn over the intentionally deleted exhibits.
V. THE SIDE AGREEMENTS OR SIDE LETTERS
A. THE SIDE LETTERS ARE NOT EXEMPT FROM DISCLOSURE
The trial court and the Court of Appeals found two of the side letters
exempt from disclosure pursuant to MCL 15.243(1)(f). That provision reads:
A public body may exempt from disclosure as a public record
under this act any of the following:
* * *
(f) Trade secrets or commercial or financial information
voluntarily provided to an agency for use in developing
governmental policy if:
(i) The information is submitted upon a promise of
confidentiality by the public body.
(ii) The promise of confidentiality is authorized by the chief
administrative officer of the public body or by an elected official at
the time the promise is made.
(iii) A description of the information is recorded by the public
body within a reasonable time after it has been submitted,
maintained in a central place within the public body, and made
available to a person upon request. This subdivision does not apply
to information submitted as required by law or as a condition of
receiving a governmental contract, license, or other benefit.
Because FOIA is a prodisclosure act,4 the public agency bears the burden of
proving that an exemption applies. MCL 15.240(4). In this case, defendant did
4
Swickard, 438 Mich 544.
15
not carry that burden. Because it failed to meet the requirements of MCL
15.243(1)(f)(iii), the side letters were not exempt.
B. DEFENDANT OFFERED NO LEGAL JUSTIFICATION
FOR THE DELAY IN THIS CASE
We hold that the trial court abused its discretion in finding that defendant
recorded a description of the side letters within a reasonable time after they were
submitted to defendant. The proffered reason for the delay, ongoing negotiations
between defendant and Sandstone to secure the public release of the letters, is a
consideration irrelevant to the recording requirements of MCL 15.243(1)(f)(iii).
MCL 15.243(1)(f)(iii) requires a public body to record a description of
material claimed to be exempt within a reasonable time after its submission to the
body. If it fails to comply with this requirement, the material is not exempt. MCL
15.243(1)(f). Whether the time the public body takes to record a description of the
material is reasonable is measured from the date the material is submitted. It is not
measured from the date the parties designate it as confidential. Because
reasonableness is a discretionary determination, we review the trial court’s finding
for an abuse of discretion. A court abuses its discretion if its determination falls
beyond the principled range of outcomes. Herald, ___ Mich ___, slip op at 3.
In this case, the side letters were sent to defendant between June and July
2002. Defendant did not record a description of them until November 26, 2002,
several weeks after plaintiffs’ November 1, 2002, FOIA request. The question,
then, is whether the trial court abused its discretion when it found that this four- to
16
five-month interval was reasonable. Defendant argues that the delay was
reasonable because, in the intervening months, defendant negotiated with
Sandstone to determine which of the seven side letters it could publicly release.
Defendant contends that, had it immediately recorded a description of the letters
and asserted a FOIA exemption, Sandstone would have been discouraged from
authorizing the letters’ public disclosure later. It argues that negotiations with
Sandstone to disclose the letters would have been rendered futile.
We reject the argument that defendant’s negotiations with Sandstone made
the delay reasonable and hold that the trial court abused its discretion when it
found that defendant complied with MCL 15.243(1)(f)(iii). Defendant’s proffered
reason cannot justify any delay in meeting the filing requirement. However
inconvenient the recording requirement may have been to defendant and
Sandstone, defendant was still required to comply with the provisions of MCL
15.243(1)(f). This exemption is intended to provide notice to the public that a
public body possesses trade secrets, commercial information, or financial
information submitted to it for use in developing governmental policy.
MCL 15.243(1)(f)(iii) describes how those documents must be made
available for public inspection. Only by the fortuity of plaintiffs’ ongoing
negotiations with defendant regarding the removal of deed restrictions from
plaintiffs’ property did plaintiffs become aware of the side letters. Otherwise,
plaintiffs would never have known or suspected that they existed. Defendant’s
17
rationale fails to explain how a requesting party could seek disclosure of a
document of which it was unaware.
Were we to accept defendant’s rationale, a public body could knowingly
possess such confidential information for extended periods without providing any
notice to the public that the information exists. This would defeat the purpose of
the recording requirements expressed clearly in MCL 15.243(1)(f). Therefore,
whether defendant could later secure Sandstone’s permission to release the side
letters is a consideration not legally relevant to its statutory obligation to record a
description of the letters. It cannot be interpreted as a basis for finding that
defendant filed a description within a “reasonable time.”
Justice Corrigan’s dissent argues that the unique facts of this case
warranted the lengthy delay and that the trial court’s discretionary determination
fell within the principled range of outcomes. It misses the point that defendant’s
justification for the delay is legally irrelevant. Defendant bears the burden of
qualifying the side letters as exempt under MCL 15.243(1)(f). Therefore,
defendant must prove that the four- to five-month delay in recording was a
“reasonable time.” It is true, as Justice Corrigan contends, that the permissible
time period for filing can vary. However, we do not need to pinpoint a general
rule concerning what length of time would have been reasonable in this appeal
because no valid reason was offered for the delay. We conclude simply that
defendant’s justification for the four- to five-month delay is legally irrelevant in
view of the notice requirements set forth in MCL 15.243(1)(f)(iii). Therefore, the
18
trial court’s finding that this interval was reasonable falls beyond the principled
range of outcomes.
Accordingly, we hold that the trial court abused its discretion in finding that
the delay was reasonable. Because defendant failed to comply with MCL
15.243(1)(f)(iii), the side letters are not exempt.5
VI. THE AVAILABILITY OF FEES FOR THE WORK OF DEFENDANT’S ATTORNEY
The lower courts erred in allowing defendant to charge plaintiffs for the
work of defendant’s attorney in locating the two allegedly exempt letters and
separating them from the nonexempt material. MCL 15.234(1) provides, in part:
A public body may charge a fee for a public record search,
the necessary copying of a public record for inspection, or for
providing a copy of a public record. Subject to subsections (3) and
(4), the fee shall be limited to actual mailing costs, and to the actual
incremental cost of duplication or publication including labor, the
cost of search, examination, review, and the deletion and separation
of exempt from nonexempt information as provided in section 14.
MCL 15.234(3) describes how the public body may calculate the cost of
producing FOIA documents. It provides, in part:
In calculating the cost of labor incurred in duplication and
mailing and the cost of examination, review, separation, and deletion
under subsection (1), a public body may not charge more than the
hourly wage of the lowest paid public body employee capable of
retrieving the information necessary to comply with a request under
this act.
5
We note that plaintiffs raised challenges in this case under the other two
sections of this exemption, MCL 15.243(1)(f)(i) and (ii). Because defendant failed
to comply with MCL 15.243(1)(f)(iii), we need not reach those claims. Therefore,
we take no position on Justice Corrigan’s discussion of “governmental policy.”
19
Pursuant to this statute, the public body may charge the rate of the lowest
paid public body employee capable of retrieving the information. While the lower
courts attempted to apply the language of the statute, they failed to distinguish
between an employee and an independent contractor. MCL 15.234(3) allows the
public body to charge for an employee’s actions; it does not mention independent
contractors. Therefore, to properly determine whether charges are appropriate, a
court must resolve whether the person who examined the records is an employee
or an independent contractor.
Although we have applied the economic realities test most often in the
workers’ compensation field, we conclude that it is instructive here. The test is a
useful tool for discerning whether an employee-employer relationship exists. See
Clark v United Technologies Automotive Inc, 459 Mich 681, 687; 594 NW2d 447
(1999). The test includes but is not limited to the following factors:
“First, what liability, if any, does the employer incur in the
event of the termination of the relationship at will?
“Second, is the work being performed an integral part of the
employer's business which contributes to the accomplishment of a
common objective?
“Third, is the position or job of such a nature that the
employee primarily depends upon the emolument for payment of his
living expenses?
“Fourth, does the employee furnish his own equipment and
materials?
“Fifth, does the individual seeking employment hold himself
out to the public as one ready and able to perform tasks of a given
nature?
20
“Sixth, is the work or the undertaking in question
customarily performed by an individual as an independent
contractor?
“Seventh, control, although abandoned as an exclusive
criterion upon which the relationship can be determined, is a factor
to be considered along with payment of wages, maintenance of
discipline and the right to engage or discharge employees.
“Eighth, weight should be given to those factors which will
most favorably effectuate the objectives of the statute.” [Hoste v
Shanty Creek Mgt, Inc, 459 Mich 561, 568 n 6; 592 NW2d 360
(1999), quoting McKissic v Bodine, 42 Mich App 203, 208-209; 201
NW2d 333 (1972); see also Askew v Macomber, 398 Mich 212, 217-
218; 247 NW2d 288 (1976), and Schulte v American Box Board Co,
358 Mich 21, 32-32; 99 NW2d 367 (1959) (Smith, J., concurring).]
No single factor is controlling when applying the test. Clark, 459 Mich 689.
In this case, defendant’s attorney did not receive a paycheck or other
employee benefits from defendant. The record reflects that the attorney was
employed by a law firm that defendant retained as city attorney. The attorney
acted as the lead attorney for the firm in that capacity. His social security and
other employment benefits were paid by his law firm. Defendant did not directly
pay the attorney for his services. Rather, defendant paid the law firm, which, in
turn, paid the attorney.
The law firm provided the material and equipment necessary for the
attorney to perform services for defendant. The attorney did not work exclusively
for defendant, but acted as the attorney for other municipalities as well. There was
no indication that the attorney was at all dependent on defendant for his living
expenses. It appears that the attorney’s law firm maintained control over the
21
attorney. Finally, defendant had no liability for the attorney in the event that his
association with defendant was terminated
This is the classic example of an independent contractor. The attorney was
the employee of the law firm. He and the law firm acted as independent
contractors for defendant. Because MCL 15.234(3) does not mention independent
contractors, defendant was not entitled to charge for the attorney’s work.
FOIA allows public bodies to charge a requesting party only for
employees’ labor. MCL 15.234(3). Because the attorney who examined and
separated the side letters was not defendant’s employee, the lower courts erred in
allowing defendant to charge plaintiffs under MCL 15.234(3) for the attorney’s
work.
VII. CONCLUSION
We affirm the part of the Court of Appeals decision that held that defendant
was not required by FOIA to produce documents regarding global readings and
site plans. Plaintiffs did not, as required by MCR 2.116(G)(4), counter
defendant’s affidavit, and they did not demonstrate, pursuant to MCR 2.116(H),
that further discovery would disclose such documents. Therefore, the trial court
properly granted summary disposition to defendant on this issue.
We reverse the part of the Court of Appeals decision regarding the
intentionally deleted exhibits. Plaintiffs’ request provided defendant sufficient
information for defendant to know which documents plaintiffs wished to review.
22
Because no exemption from disclosure applied, MCL 15.233(1) required the trial
court to order defendant to turn over the intentionally deleted exhibits.
We also reverse the part of the Court of Appeals decision regarding the two
side letters that defendant claimed were exempt. Defendant failed to comply with
MCL 15.243(1)(f)(iii). It did not place a description of the material in a central
location within a reasonable time of submission. This failure eliminates the side
letters from being exempt.
Finally, we reverse the part of the decision affirming the allowance of fees
for the work of defendant’s attorney. The attorney was an independent contractor.
The lower courts erred in failing to note the legal distinction between employees
and independent contractors. MCL 15.234(3) allows recovery for the costs
associated only with employees.
We remand this case to the trial court for entry of a judgment compelling
disclosure consistent with this opinion.
Marilyn Kelly
Clifford W. Taylor
Elizabeth A. Weaver
Robert P. Young, Jr.
Stephen J. Markman
23
STATE OF MICHIGAN
SUPREME COURT
ANN COBLENTZ, LEE COBLENTZ,
JOHN LEWANDOWSKI, and
DEBORAH LEWANDOWKSI,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v No. 127715
CITY OF NOVI,
Defendant-Appellee.
CAVANAGH, J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part).
I concur with all parts of the majority opinion except for parts II and VI.
While I agree with the result reached by the majority in part VI—that plaintiffs
should not have to pay defendant the requested fee—I believe the reason is simply
that the failure to charge a fee for searching, examining, and reviewing the side
agreements would not result in an unreasonably high cost to defendant. MCL
15.234(3) states, in relevant part:
A fee shall not be charged for the cost of search, examination,
review, and the deletion and separation of exempt from nonexempt
information as provided in section 14 unless failure to charge a fee
would result in unreasonably high costs to the public body because
of the nature of the request in the particular instance, and the public
body specifically identifies the nature of these unreasonably high
costs.
Defendant charged $150 for the city attorney to search, examine, and
review materials for the requested side agreements. But the nature of the request
for the side agreements was a routine request under the Freedom of Information
Act, MCL 15.231 et seq., and complying with the request would not result in an
unreasonably high cost to defendant. Therefore, there was nothing about the
nature of the request in this particular instance to warrant charging a fee to cover
defendant’s costs. Accordingly, I concur with all parts of the majority opinion,
except for part II and part VI; with regard to part VI, I concur only with the result.
Michael F. Cavanagh
2
STATE OF MICHIGAN
SUPREME COURT
ANN COBLENTZ, LEE COBLENTZ,
JOHN LEWANDOWSKI, and DEBORAH
LEWANDOWSKI,
Plaintiff-Appellants,
v No. 127715
CITY OF NOVI,
Defendant-Appellee.
CORRIGAN, J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part).
I concur with the majority in all respects but one. I dissent from its holding
that the Court of Appeals erred in affirming summary disposition for defendant on
plaintiffs’ request for the “side letters” to the settlement agreement. I believe that
the letters were properly ruled exempt from disclosure under the “trade secrets or
commercial or financial information” exemption of the Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA), MCL 15.243(1)(f). The trial court did not abuse its discretion in
holding that defendant recorded a description of the side letters within a
reasonable time after they were submitted. Nor did the trial court err in holding
that defendant satisfied the remaining requirements of the exemption.
I. Facts and Procedural History
Sandstone Associates Limited Partnership-A (Sandstone) sent the two “side
letters” at issue to defendant on June 25, 2002, and July 23, 2002.1 When
plaintiffs first informally requested the side letters on October 16, 2002,
defendant’s attorney responded on October 21, 2002, by saying that he was
waiting for advice from Sandstone’s lawyers regarding whether to disclose the
side letters because some of them “were submitted with an understanding of
confidentiality.” Plaintiffs filed a formal FOIA request for the side letters on
November 1, 2002, asking defendant to disclose “[a]ny and all side agreements
entered into between the City of Novi and Sandstone and/or its attorneys or
representatives[.]” On November 26, 2002, after negotiating with Sandstone,
defendant produced five side letters, but denied plaintiffs’ request in regard to
two documents representing commercial and/or financial
information voluntarily submitted to the City of Novi for use in
developing governmental policy in connection with the settlement of
Oakland County Circuit Court litigation entitled [Sandstone
Associates Limited Partnership-A v City of Novi, Oakland Circuit
Court Docket No. 95-501532-CK], as contemplated and required
under MCL 15.243[(1)(f)].
On the same day, defendant recorded and filed with the city clerk
descriptions of the two side letters that it had refused to disclose. Both of these
1
Defendant and Sandstone entered their agreement settling Sandstone’s
multimillion dollar judgment against defendant on June 25, 2002. Sandstone
dated and sent the first draft of the first side letter to defendant’s attorney on the
same day. Sandstone sent a revised version of this letter, along with the other side
letter at issue, to defendant on July 23, 2002.
4
side letters had been written by Sandstone and sent to defendant’s attorney and
marked as confidential. In one letter, Sandstone named the prices it would pay to
purchase plaintiffs’ (and others’) properties, assuming that the properties were free
from deed restrictions (Letter 1). In the other letter, Sandstone identified which
parcels of property (including plaintiffs’) have deed restrictions that give their
owners the enforceable right to prohibit commercial use (Letter 2).
Following an in camera review of the two side letters and two affidavits
submitted by defendant, the trial court determined that the letters were exempt
from disclosure under the “trade secrets or commercial or financial information”
exemption of the FOIA:
The court is satisfied that Defendant complied with each of
the three listed requirements of MCL 15.243(1)(f) and thus
disclosure of the two side letters would be inappropriate. The court
finds that the two letters contain financial or commercial information
of Sandstone’s voluntarily provided to Defendant by Sandstone in
confidence. Further, the letters fall within the policy-making
potential contemplated by the Legislature in drafting this exemption
to the FOIA. They were intended to facilitate the Settlement
Agreement and Consent Judgment and assist Defendant in making
the policy decisions with regard to that settlement. The court finds
that the content of the letters relates to Defendant’s deliberations on
the selection of the best government policy for the potential
expenditure of substantial sums of money and the retention of land
for public use.
The Court of Appeals affirmed, holding that defendant had satisfied all the
requirements of the exemption.
5
II. Analysis
I cannot conclude that the lower courts erred in holding that the two side
letters are exempt from disclosure under the “trade secrets or commercial or
financial information” exemption. When reviewing the application of an FOIA
exemption, an appellate court reviews legal determinations de novo, factual
findings for clear error, and discretionary determinations for an abuse of
discretion. Herald Co, Inc v Eastern Michigan Univ Bd of Regents, ___ Mich ___,
___; ___ NW2d ___ (Docket No. 128263, decided July 19, 2006), slip op at 6-8.
The “trade secrets or commercial or financial information” exemption provides:
(1) A public body may exempt from disclosure as a public
record under this act any of the following:
* * *
(f) Trade secrets or commercial or financial information
voluntarily provided to an agency for use in developing
governmental policy if:
(i) The information is submitted upon a promise of
confidentiality by the public body.
(ii) The promise of confidentiality is authorized by the chief
administrative officer of the public body or by an elected official at
the time the promise is made.
(iii) A description of the information is recorded by the public
body within a reasonable time after it has been submitted,
maintained in a central place within the public body, and made
available to a person upon request. This subdivision does not apply
to information submitted as required by law or as a condition of
receiving a governmental contract, license, or other benefit. [MCL
15.243(1)(f) (emphasis added).]
6
The burden is on the public body to demonstrate that the record is exempt from
disclosure. MCL 15.240(4); Federated Publications, Inc v City of Lansing, 467
Mich 98, 108; 649 NW2d 383 (2002).
A. “A description of the information is recorded by the public body
within a reasonable time”
What constitutes a “reasonable time” is a discretionary determination, as
this Court described in Federated Publications, Inc, supra at 106-107. Thus, the
trial court’s determination is subject to review for an abuse of discretion. Herald
Co, supra, slip op at 6-8. This Court “cannot disturb the trial court’s decision
unless it falls outside the principled range of outcomes.” Id. at 8. The trial court’s
decision that defendant recorded a description of the side letters within a
reasonable time after their submission to defendant, MCL 15.243(1)(f)(iii), did fall
within the principled range of outcomes.
Even after defendant and Sandstone agreed to settle Sandstone’s
multimillion dollar judgment against defendant, they continued to negotiate
questions regarding deed restrictions on the subject property. Sandstone believed
that certain of the seven side letters (including the two letters at issue) had been
submitted upon defendant’s promise of confidentiality and hence were exempt
from disclosure under the FOIA. While defendant agreed that some of the letters
had been submitted upon a promise of confidentiality, it kept open the possibility
that the letters might not be exempt under the FOIA. Defendant thus negotiated
with Sandstone to determine which of the letters might be voluntarily disclosed
7
under the FOIA. These negotiations continued until Sandstone eventually agreed
to disclose five of the seven letters on November 26, 2002, the same day that
defendant recorded the descriptions and filed them with the city clerk. Defendant
did not know whether it was going to assert an FOIA exemption regarding these
side letters until its negotiations with Sandstone ended. If defendant had recorded
the information contained in all of these letters and asserted the “trade secrets or
commercial or financial information” exemption earlier than it did, Sandstone
might not have agreed to disclose five of the letters.
The majority’s holding that defendant’s delay in recording descriptions of
the side letters was unreasonable is inconsistent the statutory language. By using
the phrase “reasonable time,” the Legislature made clear that the permissible time
period can vary. MCL 15.243(1)(f)(iii) does not define what constitutes a
“reasonable time.” But this Court has defined “reasonable time” as follows: “By
reasonable time is to be understood such promptitude as the situation of the parties
and the circumstances of the case will allow. It never means an indulgence in
unnecessary delay . . . .” Maley-Thompson & Moffett Co v Thomas Forman Co,
179 Mich 548, 555; 146 NW 95 (1914). Yet the majority disregards the word
“reasonable” in the statute by holding that the circumstances surrounding
defendant’s recording of the descriptions, including the negotiations between
defendant and Sandstone, are “irrelevant,” ante at 16, and by concluding that the
delay was unreasonable because, despite the circumstances, “defendant was still
required to comply with the provisions of MCL 15.243(1)(f),” ante at 17. The
8
majority holds that defendant was required to record descriptions earlier than it did
“[h]owever inconvenient the recording requirement may have been to defendant
and Sandstone,” ante at 17, and despite “whether defendant could later secure
Sandstone’s permission to release the side letters,” ante at 18. In so holding, the
majority consciously shifts the focus away from whether defendant’s actions were
reasonable in this case. To say, as the majority does, that the negotiations
between defendant and Sandstone are irrelevant is to say that defendant was
required to record the descriptions of the side letters within a certain unspecified
time regardless of what time was reasonable under the circumstances. This is
contrary to the text of the statute.
The majority holds that the negotiations between defendant and Sandstone
were irrelevant to the statutory obligation to record descriptions of the side letters
within a reasonable time because the statutory exemption’s recording requirement
is intended to provide notice to the public. In support of this holding, the majority
states that plaintiffs would never have discovered the existence of the side letters if
they had not accidentally happened on a reference to the side letters.2 The
majority’s reasoning appears to be based on the faulty assumption that defendant
never recorded the descriptions of the side letters. Defendant did give plaintiffs
notice of the side letters when it recorded the descriptions on November 26, 2002.
2
Plaintiffs learned of the side letters upon examining a nonfinal draft of the
agreement that was voluntarily disclosed by defendant.
9
Thus, plaintiffs would have received notice within a reasonable time that
defendant possessed the side letters even if plaintiffs had not discovered the letters
before defendant recorded the descriptions. Further, the statute does not create a
race between the requesting party and the public body. That plaintiffs discovered
the existence of the side letters before defendant recorded the descriptions does not
necessarily mean that defendant did not record the descriptions within a
reasonable time. I do not question that the public body must record the
descriptions and give notice to the public in order to comply with MCL
15.243(1)(f)(iii). But the issue is not whether defendant gave notice that it
possessed the side letters before plaintiffs discovered the side letters, but whether
defendant gave notice within a reasonable time that it possessed the side letters.
This case does not involve the situation cited by the majority in which the
“requesting party [is required to] seek disclosure of a document of which it was
unaware.” Ante at 18.
The majority believes that the four-month delay was unreasonable simply
because it was too long. The majority effectively holds that whether the public
body met the requirements of MCL 15.243(1)(f)(iii) depends only on the length of
time the public body takes to record a description of the information, rather than
whether that amount of time was reasonable under the circumstances. If the
Legislature had not intended for the time to vary with the circumstances, it would
have imposed a definite time limitation on the public body recording the
10
description, rather than stating that the description must be recorded within a
reasonable time.
Additionally, after having recited the appropriate standard of review, the
majority nonetheless engages in a review de novo. Given the unusual situation
presented by these facts, in which defendant waited to record the descriptions until
negotiations regarding disclosure had concluded, the trial court accorded leeway in
the recording process to defendant. There is good reason behind the abuse of
discretion standard we articulated in Herald Co, supra, slip op at 6-8. The trial
court is given the discretion to determine what amount of time is reasonable
precisely so that it may take into account the public body’s recording of the
description in each case and examine why the recording took the amount of time it
did under the circumstances. Allowing the trial court the discretion to determine
what amount of time is reasonable under the circumstances does not defeat the
purpose of the recording requirements of the statute. Both the trial court and the
Court of Appeals held that defendant recorded the description of the side letters
within a reasonable time. This reasoned outcome accounts for defendant’s
decision to record the descriptions after the conclusion of successful negotiations
between defendant and Sandstone. The trial court’s determination fell within the
principled range of outcomes. Id. at 8. The trial did not abuse its discretion in
determining that defendant recorded descriptions of the information within a
reasonable time after they were submitted.
11
B. “Submitted upon a promise of confidentiality”
In one of the side letters (Letter 1), Sandstone stated that “[t]he terms of
this letter are confidential under all respects, not subject to disclosure and would
not be covered by any FOIA request.” The other side letter (Letter 2) was
submitted with and related to Letter 1. Thus, Sandstone expressly stated that the
letters were confidential. But to satisfy the exemption, the information must be
submitted upon a promise of confidentiality by the public body. Defendant
satisfied this requirement by offering the unrebutted affidavit of Ronald Hughes,
the Sandstone partner who had signed the side letters. Hughes stated that
defendant promised to keep the letters confidential before Sandstone sent them to
defendant. He averred that the letters “were expressly submitted and conditioned
on their confidentiality contemporaneous with their execution . . . .” Plaintiffs
failed to offer any evidence in rebuttal. In light of Hughes’s uncontested affidavit,
the trial court did not err in finding no genuine issue of material fact that the letters
were submitted upon defendant’s promise of confidentiality.
C. “Authorized by the chief administrative officer of the public
body or by an elected official”
Hughes also stated in his affidavit that “Sandstone understood that the
promise of confidentiality was both known and authorized by the Mayor and City
Manager, at the time of the letters[’] execution, and Sandstone would not have
submitted the letters absent such a promise of confidentiality from the City of
Novi.” As noted, plaintiffs failed to rebut this affidavit. Thus, the trial court did
12
not err in finding no genuine issue of material fact that the chief administrative
officer or an elected official had promised confidentiality.
D. “For use in developing governmental policy”
Finally, I agree with the lower courts that the two side letters at issue
contain financial or commercial information that was “for use in developing
governmental policy.” MCL 15.143(1)(f). The FOIA does not define
“governmental policy.” This Court has never interpreted this phrase in the
context of the FOIA. Further, courts in other jurisdictions interpreting their own
FOIAs have never defined this phrase.3 It is thus difficult to form a precise
definition of “governmental policy.” Governments claim authority and
responsibility over large groups of individuals, and the methods they employ to
decide how to carry out their numerous functions vary widely. Nonetheless, this
Court has defined “policy” in the employment contract context as “‘a definite
course or method of action selected (as by a government, institution, group, or
individual) from among alternatives and in the light of given conditions to guide
and usu[ally] determine present and future decisions; . . . a projected program
3
Other jurisdictions have interpreted their own versions of the “trade
secrets or commercial or financial information” exemption. None of these
jurisdictions has statutes that include the “governmental policy” language found in
Michigan’s exemption. For example, numerous federal courts have interpreted the
federal FOIA provision that exempts from disclosure “trade secrets and
commercial or financial information obtained from a person and privileged or
confidential[.]” 5 USC 552(b)(4). But the federal exemption does not require that
the information be provided “for use in developing governmental policy.”
13
consisting of desired objectives and the means to achieve them . . . .’” In re
Certified Question (Bankey v Storer Broadcasing Co), 432 Mich 438, 455-456;
443 NW2d 112 (1989), quoting Webster’s Third New International Dictionary,
Unabridged Edition (1964); see also Silberman, Chevron—The intersection of
law & policy, 58 Geo Wash L R 821, 822 (1990) (offering a similar definition).4
This definition applies equally to the term “policy” in the FOIA exemption at
issue, and I would adopt it here. I emphasize that this definition does not
encompass every decision regarding a course of action made by a governmental
entity. Obviously, governmental bodies adopt many courses of action that do not
guide present or future decisions. Such decisions may be categorized as
4
I distinguish the phrase “governmental policy” from the phrase “public
policy” because these phrases are generally used to convey different meanings. In
Terrien v Zwit, 467 Mich 56, 68 n 13; 648 NW2d 602 (2002), this Court declined
to define “public policy,” but held that “public policy is defined by reference to
the laws actually enacted into policy by the public and its representatives.” As the
Court observed in Skutt v Grand Rapids, 275 Mich 258, 264; 266 NW 344 (1936),
quoting Pittsburgh, C, C & St L R Co v Kinney, 95 Ohio St 64; 115 NE 505
(1918):
“What is the meaning of ‘public policy?’ A correct
definition, at once concise and comprehensive, of the words ‘public
policy’, has not yet been formulated by our courts. . . . In substance,
it may be said to be the community common sense and common
conscience, extended and applied throughout the State to matters of
public morals, public health, public safety, public welfare and the
like. It is that general and well-settled public opinion relating to
man’s plain, palpable duty to his fellow men, having due regard to
all the circumstances of each particular relation and situation.”
Thus, “public policy” is used as a basis for governmental decisions, rather
than being a “course or method of action” for making present or future decisions.
14
“operational” decisions rather than “policy” decisions. Operational decisions
concern routine, everyday matters and do not require evaluation of broad policy
factors. See Rogers v State, 51 Hawaii 293, 296-298; 459 P2d 378 (1969)
(interpreting a “discretionary function” exception to governmental immunity).
Operational decisions may also be characterized as “the execution or
implementation of previously formulated policy.” Hanson v Vigo Co Bd of
Comm’rs, 659 NE2d 1123, 1126 (Ind App, 1996) (also interpreting a
“discretionary function” exception to governmental immunity).5
5
In interpreting the “discretionary function” exception to its governmental
immunity statute, the Arizona Court of Appeals offered contrasting examples of
operational, as opposed to policy, decisions:
By way of illustration, a decision by the district board to
construct a playground at a school and allocate funds for that
purpose would be a policy decision protected by immunity.
Deciding what specific pieces of equipment to have on the
playground would not be a policy decision, but rather would be an
operational level decision. See, e.g., Warrington v. Tempe
Elementary Sch. Dist., [187 Ariz 249, 252; 928 P2d 673 (Ariz App,
1996)] (school district’s decision regarding placement of bus stop is
an operational level decision); Evenstad [v State], 178 Ariz. [578] at
582-84, 875 P.2d [811] at 815-17 (App. 1993) (issuance of driver’s
license by MVD is an operational level decision; prescribing rules
for issuance is making of policy); Rogers v. State, 51 Haw. 293, 296-
98, 459 P.2d 378, 381 (Haw. 1969) (operational level acts concern
routine, everyday matters, not requiring evaluation of broad policy
factors; operational acts include kinds of road signs to place and
which center line stripes to repaint); Stevenson v. State Dept. of
Transp., 290 Or. 3, 9-12, 619 P.2d 247, 251-52 (Or. 1980) (decision
to build a highway rather than a railroad track is exercise of
governmental discretion or policy judgment entitled to immunity;
planning and design of the road does not involve use of discretion in
the sense that a policy decision is required). [Schabel v Deer Valley
(continued…)
15
Although the Court of Appeals correctly ruled that the side letters were
provided to defendant for use in developing governmental policy, the panel’s
reasoning in reaching this conclusion was faulty. The panel stated that “[t]he
information in the side letters clearly concerned public policy” because “[i]t
related to how defendant intended to settle the Sandstone litigation, a situation
with the potential to bankrupt defendant and seriously affect its residents.”
Coblentz v Novi, 264 Mich App 450, 458; 691 NW2d 22 (2004). The agreement
was of overarching importance to defendant and the development of defendant’s
policy because it settled the Sandstone judgment against defendant, which could
have bankrupted defendant and affected its residents by causing budget cuts and
tax increases or assessments against each resident. Nonetheless, because the side
letters were sent after defendant entered into the agreement with Sandstone, they
did not affect whether defendant entered into the agreement, and accordingly did
(…continued)
Unified School Dist No 97, 186 Ariz 161, 166; 920 P2d 41 (Ariz
App, 1996).]
See also Gutbrod v Hennepin Co, 529 NW2d 720, 723 (Minn App, 1995)
(citations omitted) (“Planning level decisions . . . involve questions of public
policy and the balancing of competing policy objectives. . . . [O]perational level
decisions relate ‘to the ordinary day-to-day operations of the government’ and
involve the exercise of scientific or professional judgment.”).
I recognize that the FOIA exemption at issue is worded differently than,
and applied differently from, the governmental immunity statutes in these cases.
Nonetheless, I find persuasive the analyses of “policy” versus “operational” in
these cases in interpreting what constitutes “policy” within the meaning of
Michigan’s “trade secrets or commercial or financial information” exemption.
16
not affect whether defendant went bankrupt. The letters did not alter or void the
agreement if defendant was unable to clear the deed restrictions or convince
plaintiffs to sell their properties. Because the agreement had already settled the
Sandstone judgment when the side letters were sent, the danger of this judgment
causing defendant to go bankrupt had abated. Thus, the side letters were not
provided to defendant for use in developing its policy to discharge the Sandstone
judgment and avoid bankruptcy.
Nonetheless, defendant did use the side letters in developing governmental
policy. The agreement expressly provided that defendant would forfeit additional
public land (either 4.8 or 9.6 acres at Sandstone’s option) if it failed to purchase
plaintiffs’ properties or otherwise clear the deed restrictions on the properties.
Thus, the agreement demonstrates that before the side letters were sent, defendant
had already made the policy decision that it would agree either to find a way to
remove the deed restrictions on plaintiffs’ property or to relinquish additional
parkland. But at the time defendant entered the agreement, it had not yet decided
which of these two alternatives it would choose. The agreement itself contained
no policy to assist in this decision. Because the decision whether to remove the
deed restrictions or forfeit additional parkland was not a routine decision that
merely required application of policy developed in the agreement, defendant had a
remaining policy decision to make after it entered into the agreement. That
defendant had already agreed on the two alternatives before the side letters were
17
sent did not alter defendant’s need to develop policy in order to choose between
these two alternatives.
The side letters confirm the deed restrictions on the properties and the
amount Sandstone would pay defendant for plaintiffs’ properties once they were
free from restrictions. By offering in the letters to advance all or part of the
money to defendant to purchase plaintiffs’ properties, Sandstone sought to
influence defendant’s decision whether to purchase plaintiffs’ properties, pay
plaintiffs to waive the right to enforce their deed restrictions, or forfeit additional
public land to Sandstone. Because disclosure of the letters would reveal to
plaintiffs the amount Sandstone was willing to pay for their properties, it would
also affect defendant’s ability to purchase plaintiffs’ properties. Defendant’s
decision regarding whether to attempt to purchase plaintiffs’ properties or try to
lift the deed restrictions on the properties not only directly affected plaintiffs
individually, but it also affected the residents of the city because it determined
whether defendant would be forced to forfeit several acres of property set aside
for public use. If defendant decided to purchase plaintiffs’ properties, it would
result in large expenditures of public funds, which would affect defendant’s
budget and its residents. On the other hand, if defendant was unable to lift the
deed restrictions or decided not to purchase plaintiffs’ properties, defendant
18
would forfeit additional public property to Sandstone. The loss of this additional
land would affect all of defendant’s residents.6
Regardless of defendant’s ultimate decision, the information in the side
letters was provided for use in guiding defendant’s management of public affairs.
The letters affected a budgetary decision concerning allocation and substantial
expenditure of public funds to retain public land. Thus, the letters were provided
to defendant to develop a course of action that would materially affect the future
of its citizens. The letters did not involve a mere operational decision regarding a
routine matter for which a policy was already in place. Defendant’s decision on
how to deliver its governmental functions within its budget obviously constituted
a policy decision. Thus, the Court of Appeals did not err in holding that that the
side letters contained financial or commercial information provided to defendant
for use in developing governmental policy.
III. Conclusion
I dissent from the majority’s conclusion that plaintiffs were entitled to
disclosure of the side letters. In my opinion, the trial court did not abuse its
discretion in determining that defendant recorded descriptions of the side letters
within a reasonable time after they were submitted. Because defendants met all of
6
Thus, this case is distinguishable from Herald Co, Inc v Tax Tribunal, 258
Mich App 78, 85; 669 NW2d 862 (2003), in which the Court of Appeals held that
the “trade secrets or commercial or financial information” exemption did not apply
because the single individual tax determination “lack[ed] the policy-making
potential contemplated by the Legislature in drafting this exemption to the FOIA.”
19
the other requirements of the “trade secrets or commercial or financial
information” exemption of the FOIA, the side letters were exempt from disclosure.
Maura D. Corrigan
20