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1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
2 Opinion Number:
3 Filing Date: March 31, 2023
4 No. A-1-CA-37402
5 KEVIN HALL,
6 Petitioner-Appellant,
7 CITY OF CARLSBAD and
8 ANNETTE BARRICK,
9 Respondents-Appellees.
10 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF EDDY COUNTY
11 William G.W. Shoobridge, District Court Judge
12 Grover Law, LLC
13 Thomas R. Grover
14 Albuquerque, NM
15 for Appellant
16 Hinkle Shanor LLP
17 Richard E. Olson
18 Chelsea R. Green
19 Roswell, NM
20 for Appellees
1 OPINION
2 YOHALEM, Judge.
3 {1} This case arises under the Inspection of Public Records Act (IPRA), NMSA
4 1978, § 14-2-1 to -12 (1947, as amended through 2019). 1 Petitioner Kevin Hall
5 appeals the district court’s order denying his petition for mandamus seeking to
6 compel disclosure of documents withheld by the City of Carlsbad, New Mexico (the
7 City). The City withheld 3,271 pages of documents related to internal affairs
8 investigations of police officers employed by the City, claiming the documents are
9 exempt from disclosure under Section 14-2-1(C), “letters or memoranda that are
10 matters of opinion in personnel records.” The district court, following an in camera
11 inspection, agreed with the City that the documents were prepared for the purpose
12 of discipline of City employees and are, therefore, subject to the exemption for
13 “letters or memoranda that are matters of opinion in personnel files” in Section 14-
14 2-1(C). We affirm.
1
Some sections of IPRA were amended in 2019, after Petitioner’s requests
were made. The exemption for “matters of opinion in personnel files,” was amended
from NMSA 1978, Section 14-2-1(A)(3) (2011) to Section 14-2-1(C). Because the
2019 amendments do not impact this appeal, we cite to the current IPRA for ease of
reference.
1 BACKGROUND
2 {2} Hall made an IPRA request to the City, in relevant part, for (1) “all internal
3 affairs reports and/or investigative files concerning as targets, or as witnesses,”
4 fourteen City police officers identified by name; (2) all communication records,
5 including emails, memos, and written records, relating to the processing and
6 completion of the internal affairs investigation report concerning Hall; and (3) City
7 notices to City police officers of certain types of discipline from January 1, 2015,
8 through the date of the request. The City identified 3,777 pages of documents
9 responsive to Hall’s requests. Of those 3,777 pages, 528 pages were produced, and
10 3,271 pages were withheld as exempt under Section 14-2-1(C).2 The City, both in
11 its response to Hall’s request, and by sworn affirmation in the district court,
12 described the documents it withheld as follows: “the files not produced contained
13 statements of opinion and/or discussion of discipline, consisting of: pretermination
14 notices of disciplinary action, notice of investigation, target letters, summaries of
15 findings, internal affairs incident reports, transcribed statements of interviews and
16 the like, all of which clearly fall within the limitations provided in Cox v. Department
17 of Public Safety, [2010-NMCA-096, ¶ 21, 148 N.M. 934, 242 P.3d 501] exempting
2
We do not address the City’s claim of attorney-client privilege because that
claim was not the basis of the district court’s decision and is not raised as an issue
on appeal.
2
1 internal evaluations, disciplinary reports, disciplinary documentation, demotion or
2 termination information, and performance assessments from disclosure.”
3 {3} The district court, after hearing argument, decided that it could not evaluate
4 whether any document or “any portion of any document contains any factual
5 information in addition to opinion or other privileged personnel information”
6 without independently examining the documents in camera. Following the district
7 court’s review of the documents, the court made the following finding of fact:
8 The records reviewed in camera reflect that the documents in question
9 were created for the purpose of conducting internal disciplinary
10 proceedings and investigatory statements taken concerning potential
11 infractions involving sensitive allegations of conduct occurring on and
12 off duty regarding the employer/employee relation and disciplinary
13 action; which were properly withheld and exempt pursuant to Section
14 14-2-1[(C)] and [State ex rel. Newsome v. Alarid, 1977-NMSC-076, ¶
15 12, 90 N.M. 790, 568 P.2d 1236].
16 Concluding that the documents withheld by the City were exempt from disclosure
17 pursuant to Section 14-2-1(C), the district court denied Hall’s request for additional
18 documents. This appeal followed.
19 DISCUSSION
20 {4} Hall contends on appeal that the district court erred in denying the production
21 of additional documents or portions of documents. Hall argues that (1) internal
22 affairs investigations are not subject to the IPRA exemption for disciplinary
23 proceedings; (2) even if they are disciplinary proceedings, internal affairs
24 investigation records are not exempt from disclosure because the public importance
3
1 of disclosure outweighs the privacy interests protected by IPRA; (3) portions of
2 documents are factual, and those portions should be produced; (4) the dates, times,
3 authors, and recipients of communications, even if the communications address
4 disciplinary matters, are not subject to the exemption for disciplinary proceedings;
5 and (5) notices of employee discipline must be disclosed.
6 Standard of Review
7 {5} “We generally review the granting or denial of a writ of mandamus under an
8 abuse of discretion standard.” N.M. Found. for Open Gov’t v. Corizon Health, 2020-
9 NMCA-014, ¶ 15, 460 P.3d 43 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). A
10 district court abuses its discretion if its discretionary act is premised on an erroneous
11 view of the law. See Rangel v. Save Mart, Inc., 2006-NMCA-120, ¶ 12, 140 N.M.
12 395, 142 P.3d 983. We review the interpretation of the language of a statute de novo.
13 See Faber v. King, 2015-NMSC-015, ¶ 8, 348 P.3d 173. We emphasize, however,
14 that it is the appellant’s burden to persuade us that the district court erred. See State
15 v. Oppenheimer & Co., 2019-NMCA-045, ¶ 8, 447 P.3d 1159. “On appeal, there is
16 a presumption of correctness in the rulings and decisions of the district court, and
17 the party claiming error must clearly show error.” Id. (alterations, internal quotation
18 marks, and citation omitted). We address each of Hall’s arguments in turn, applying
19 these principles of review.
4
1 I. Internal Affairs Investigation Documents That Concern Employee
2 Infractions or Disciplinary Action Are Exempt From Disclosure Under
3 IPRA
4 {6} First, Hall contends that police department internal affairs investigations are
5 “administrative” proceedings, that the documents produced are factual in nature, and
6 do not come within IPRA Section 14-2-1(C) exemption for “letters or memoranda
7 that are matters of opinion in personnel files.” Although acknowledging that our
8 Supreme Court has construed the “letters or memoranda that are matters of opinion
9 in personnel files” exemption, Section 14-2-1(C), to include “documents concerning
10 infractions and disciplinary action,” Newsome, 1977-NMSC-076, ¶ 12, Hall argues
11 that because disciplinary proceedings against the employee being investigated do
12 not “always follow completion of an internal affairs investigation,” the investigation
13 does not concern “infractions or disciplinary action.” Id. We are not persuaded.
14 {7} Hall’s argument is inconsistent with the construction of the “letters or
15 memoranda that are matters of opinion in personnel files” exemption to IPRA
16 adopted by our Supreme Court in Newsome, and further defined by this Court in
17 Cox, 2010-NMCA-096. Newsome holds that the Legislature intended the “letters and
18 memoranda that are matters of opinion in personnel files” exemption to apply to
19 “documents concerning infractions and disciplinary action,” and to other opinion
20 information “that might have no foundation in fact but, if released for public view,
21 could be seriously damaging to an employee.” 1977-NMSC-076, ¶ 12.
5
1 {8} Although the Legislature adopted significant amendments to IPRA after our
2 Supreme Court’s opinion in Newsome, apparently in response to that opinion, the
3 exemption for “letters or memoranda that are matters of opinion in personnel files”
4 was not amended. See Aguilera v. Bd. of Educ. of Hatch Valley Schs., 2006-NMSC-
5 015, ¶ 19, 139 N.M. 330, 132 P.3d 587 (“The Legislature may . . . amend a statute
6 to adopt prior interpretations by the courts.”). Newsome, therefore, continues to
7 provide guidance on construction of the exemption at issue here.
8 {9} In Cox, this Court relied on Newsome to conclude that “the Legislature
9 intended to exempt from disclosure ‘matters of opinion’ that constitute personnel
10 information of the type generally found in a personnel file, i.e., information
11 regarding the employer/employee relationship, such as internal evaluations;
12 disciplinary reports or documentation; promotion, demotion, or termination
13 information; or performance assessments.” Cox, 2010-NMCA-096, ¶ 21. This Court
14 further concluded in Cox that the Legislature intended the exemption to protect
15 documents that are “generated by an employer or employee in support of the working
16 relationship between them.” Id. ¶ 22. Included in information, “regarding the
17 employer/employee relationship,” that this Court concluded in Cox is protected from
18 disclosure are “investigatory processes, disciplinary actions, or internal memoranda
19 that might contain [agency] opinions (in [the agency’s] capacity as the officer’s
20 employer).” Id. ¶ 24.
6
1 {10} When a law enforcement officer’s employer performs an internal affairs
2 investigation to investigate violations of the officer’s terms of employment for the
3 purpose of determining whether infractions occurred and whether disciplinary action
4 should be taken, documents and reports prepared in furtherance of the investigation
5 fall squarely within this exemption. The application of the exemption does not turn
6 on the outcome of the investigation, as Hall argues. In any fairly conducted
7 investigation, the allegations may be shown to be unfounded and disciplinary action
8 may, therefore, not be taken. Indeed, it is the uncertainty of allegations not proved
9 in court that, according to our Supreme Court, has led our Legislature to categorize
10 reports on investigations of disciplinary infractions as matters of opinion, rather than
11 of fact. See Newsome, 1977-NMSC-076, ¶ 12 (“The Legislature quite obviously
12 anticipated that there would be critical material and adverse opinions in . . .
13 documents concerning disciplinary action . . . that might have no foundation in fact
14 but, if released for public view, could be seriously damaging to an employee.”).
15 {11} We conclude that IPRA Section 14-2-1(C) exemption applies to documents
16 prepared as part of an internal affairs investigation regarding the employer/employee
17 relationship and undertaken for the purpose of determining whether to take
18 disciplinary action. See Cox, 2010-NMCA-096, ¶ 24. We emphasize that if an
19 investigation of a law enforcement officer is not performed by the officer’s
20 employer, to determine in the context of the employer/employee relationship
7
1 whether an infraction has occurred for the purpose of disciplining that officer,
2 documents concerning the investigation are not exempt under Section 14-2-1(C).
3 Nor does the exemption apply to the entire internal affairs investigation file. As this
4 Court held in Cox, it is not the location of a document in a particular file that is
5 dispositive, it is the nature of each document that determines whether the exemption
6 applies. See 2010-NMCA-096, ¶ 21 (“[T]he location of a record in a personnel file
7 is not dispositive of whether the exception applies; rather, the critical factor is the
8 nature of the document itself.”). We, therefore, agree with the district court’s
9 conclusion that the application of the exemption depends upon the nature and
10 purpose of each document.
11 {12} To the extent Hall contends that the district court misapplied the legal standard
12 stated here to particular documents or portions of documents reviewed by the court
13 in camera, we are not able to consider that claim on appeal. Hall has not ensured that
14 the 3,271 pages reviewed in camera by the district court were made part of the record
15 on appeal. See State ex rel. N.M. Highway Comm’n v. Sherman, 1971-NMSC-009,
16 ¶ 6, 82 N.M. 316, 481 P.2d 104 (“A litigant seeking review of a ruling of the trial
17 court has the duty to see that a record is made of the proceedings he desires reviewed;
18 otherwise, the correctness of such ruling cannot be questioned.”); see also
19 Republican Party of N.M. v. N.M. Tax’n & Revenue Dep’t, 2012-NMSC-026, ¶ 50,
20 283 P.3d 853 (“The record only contains redacted versions of the emails, so it is
8
1 impossible to ascertain their contents.”). We, therefore, apply our presumption of
2 correctness to the district court’s conclusion that all the documents reviewed in
3 camera were subject to the exemption. See Oppenheimer & Co., 2019-NMCA-045,
4 ¶ 8.
5 II. Weighing the Public Interest
6 {13} Anticipating our decision that internal affairs investigations are exempt from
7 disclosure under IPRA Section 14-2-1(C), as documents concerning employee
8 infractions and disciplinary action, Hall argues that the district court should have
9 placed the burden on the City to prove that disclosure of these documents would be
10 prejudicial to the public interest. Hall relies on Board of Commissioners of Doña
11 Ana County v. Las Cruces Sun-News, 2003-NMCA-102, ¶ 11, 134 N.M. 283, 76
12 P.3d 36, a case overruled on this very point by Republican Party of New Mexico,
13 2012-NMSC-026, ¶ 16. In Republican Party of New Mexico, our Supreme Court
14 rejected the continued application of the “rule of reason,” adopted by the Court
15 before IPRA was amended by our Legislature to list specific exemptions. Id. When
16 IPRA failed to comprehensively list exemptions, our Supreme Court weighed the
17 public interest in disclosure against any interest in privacy to determine whether a
18 document, not subject to an exemption identified in the statute, was, nonetheless,
19 exempt. Newsome, 1977-NMSC-076, ¶ 33 (“Until the Legislature gives us direction
20 [as to what records should be kept confidential in the public interest], the courts will
9
1 have to apply the ‘rule of reason’ to each claim for public inspection as they arise.”).
2 The “rule of reason” was applied by our courts only until the Legislature adopted
3 specific exemptions to disclosure. See Republican Party of N.M., 2012-NMSC-026,
4 ¶ 16. Once IPRA was amended to comprehensively list exemptions, our Supreme
5 Court held that balancing privacy interests in documents against the public interest
6 in disclosure should be left to the Legislature. See id. (“The Legislature has since
7 responded to the Court’s request, obviating any need that existed for application of
8 the ‘rule of reason,’ by enumerating specific exceptions to disclosure.”). Analysis
9 by our courts was thus restricted to the construction and application of statutory
10 exemptions. See id.
11 {14} Hall also relies on court decisions in other states concerning the disclosure of
12 police internal affairs investigations. Hall, however, “does not demonstrate that the
13 other states have similar statutes or are otherwise bound by similar law in construing
14 the meaning of ‘public records’ and its narrow exceptions.” Dunn v. N.M. Dep’t of
15 Game & Fish, 2020-NMCA-026, ¶ 13, 464 P.3d 129. We, therefore, do not find
16 these cases persuasive.
17 III. Disclosure of Portions of Exempt Documents
18 {15} Hall claims that some documents determined by the district court to come
19 within the exemption for documents concerning employee infractions and discipline
20 contain factual portions and that these pages or redacted portions of these pages
10
1 should have been disclosed. Hall, however, fails to direct us to a decision of the
2 district court on this issue. Indeed, the City produced 528 pages, which the City
3 represents concern factual matters. The district court’s order for in camera review
4 states that the district court will review the documents claimed by the City to be
5 exempt to determine whether any of the documents should have been disclosed in
6 whole or in part. We therefore assume that this is what the district court did and that
7 its determination that no part of the documents was subject to disclosure was correct.
8 See Oppenheimer & Co., 2019-NMCA-045, ¶ 8 (applying our presumption of
9 correctness to the district court’s conclusion in the absence of a record that allows
10 review).
11 IV. Information Concerning the Dates, Times, Authors, and Recipients of
12 Exempt Communications
13 {16} Hall next claims that the district court erred in not requiring the City to
14 disclose the dates, times, authors, and recipients of emails and other communications
15 concerning the conduct of the disciplinary investigations at issue. Hall presents no
16 argument or authority to support his claim that there is no basis in law to exclude
17 these communications. Hall admits that information about dates, times, authors, and
18 recipients is “valuable information” concerning a disciplinary investigation. Hall
19 makes no argument about why this information is separable from the communication
20 as a whole or why it is not subject to the exemption for documents concerning
21 disciplinary infractions. “We will not review unclear arguments, or guess at what a
11
1 party’s arguments might be.” Elane Photography, LLC v. Willock, 2013-NMSC-
2 040, ¶ 70, 309 P.3d 53 (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted).
3 We, therefore, do not consider this issue further.
4 V. Notices of Discipline
5 {17} Hall next argues that notices of discipline are not exempt as “letters or
6 memoranda that are matters of opinion in personnel files.” Hall contends that the
7 names of employees and the objective fact of discipline are not exempt; therefore,
8 these notices must be disclosed. Hall once again provides no authority or argument
9 in support of his claim that documents revealing the name of an employee, together
10 with the discipline imposed, are not subject to the exemption. We note that our
11 Supreme Court in State ex rel. Barber v. McCotter, 1987-NMSC-046, ¶¶ 9, 11, 106
12 N.M. 1, 783 P.2d 119, held that divulgence of the names of former employees was
13 improper under the exemption for “documents concerning infractions and
14 disciplinary action,” where the disclosure of names “would amount to the divulgence
15 of . . . the disciplin[ary action] against them.” (Internal quotation marks and citation
16 omitted.)
17 {18} Even if Hall is correct that “the fact of discipline,” together with the name of
18 the employee, is not exempt from disclosure, Hall fails to present any evidence that
19 this information is all that is contained in a notice of discipline. Because these
20 documents are not in the appellate record for this Court’s review, we again rely on
12
1 our presumption of correctness of the district court’s decision and affirm. See
2 Oppenheimer & Co., 2019-NMCA-045, ¶ 8.
3 CONCLUSION
4 {19} Finding no merit in Petitioner’s claims of error, we affirm.
5 {20} IT IS SO ORDERED.
6 _________________________
7 JANE B. YOHALEM, Judge
8 WE CONCUR:
9 ________________________________
10 JACQUELINE R. MEDINA, Judge
11 ________________________________
12 GERALD E. BACA, Judge
13