ACTION COMMITTEE FOR TRANSIT, INC. et al. v. TOWN OF CHEVY CHASE
No. 1204, Sept. Term, 2015
Court of Special Appeals of Maryland.
September 1, 2016
145 A.3d 640
Kehoe, J.
Panel: Woodward, Kehoe, Robert A. Zarnoch, (Retired, Specially Assigned), JJ.
Argued by: Victoria M. Shearer (Kevin Karpinski, Karpinski, Colaresi & Karp, PA on the brief) all of Baltimore, MD, for Appellee.
Kehoe, J.
The Maryland Public Information Act (the “MPIA“)1 permits government agencies to charge a reasonable fee for
The Action Committee for Transit (“ACT“) and Benjamin Ross appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County in favor of the Town of Chevy Chase.2 ACT and Ross assert that the Town violated the MPIA when it denied their requests for waivers of fees that the Town proposed to charge them for responding to requests for copies of certain Town records. The circuit court concluded that the Town did not violate the Act and entered judgment accordingly. ACT and Ross present two issues, which, for purposes of analysis, are best expressed in terms of whether the circuit court erred in granting summary judgment to the Town as to the claims of ACT on the one hand, and Ross on the other.3
BACKGROUND
“In cases interpreting an MPIA request, facts necessary to the determination of a motion for summary judgment may be placed before the court by pleadings, affidavit, deposition, answers to interrogatories, admission of facts, stipulations and concessions.” Prince George‘s County v. The Washington Post Co., 149 Md.App. 289, 304, 815 A.2d 859 (2003) (internal quotation and citation omitted). Our summary of the facts is drawn from those sources.
ACT is a non-stock, non-profit organization that advocates for public transportation in Montgomery County, Maryland. Ross is a published author who has written extensively in print and electronic media about issues regarding the Purple Line. He lives in Bethesda. The Town is a Maryland municipal corporation and, as such, is subject to the MPIA. Todd Hoffman, the Town Manager, is the official custodian of the Town‘s public records. See
The controversy between the parties concerns the Purple Line, a proposed light rail public transit system that, if constructed, will extend from Bethesda to New Carrollton. The Purple Line is a multi-billion dollar project that is proposed to be funded through a combination of federal, State, local, and private sources.5 Current plans call for a portion of the Purple Line to be located within in a former railroad right-of-way which is currently used as a linear park known as the Georgetown Branch Trail or the Capital Crescent Trail. Part of this trail is located within the Town. Town residents and property owners will be directly affected by the construction
ACT and Ross allege that, in 2008, and as part of its effort to oppose construction of the Purple Line, the Town retained the law firm of Sidley Austin and a civil engineer to review the Maryland Transit Administration‘s Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the Purple Line. ACT and Ross allege that the Town spent approximately $434,000 in that effort. ACT and Ross further allege that in 2014, the Town retained the law firm of Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney (the “Buchanan Firm“), which in turn subcontracted with two lobbying firms, Chambers, Conlon & Harwell, LLC (the “Chambers Firm“) and Alexander & Cleaver, P.A. (the “Alexander Firm“). The Town also retained the public relations firm Xenophon Strategies. All four firms were retained to represent the Town‘s interests in lobbying both the federal and state governments to deny funding for the Purple Line. The Town paid the Buchanan Firm $20,000 monthly for its services.
Early in 2014, the Washington Post and other news sources published several articles detailing the Town‘s relationship with the four firms, including some details on the monthly fees the Town paid for the firms’ services. Additionally, an article in the Washington Post reported that one of the partners in the Buchanan Firm was Robert L. Shuster, whose brother, Bill Shuster, is the chair of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee of the United States House of Representatives.7 Spurred by the information contained in these articles, ACT and Ross sought access to the Town‘s records pertaining to the Town‘s relationship with these firms. To that end, both ACT and Ross filed a series of MPIA requests with the Town.
ACT filed two additional requests in April. The first sought documents pertaining to the Town‘s relationship with the Chambers and Alexander Firms, as well as any additional documents pertaining to the Buchanan Firm. The second request sought access to privileged documents relating to the Buchanan Firm and documents concerning the Town‘s relationship with Xenophon Strategies.
In response to the first April request, Hoffman, the Town Manager, stated that the Town staff would begin searching for documents responsive to the request upon ACT‘s deposit of $700, noting that it would not provide the two hours of free research because ACT‘s request was on the same general topic as its February request. As to the second April request, Mr. Hoffman stated that it would provide two hours of free research, but still required a deposit of $250 before it would begin research on the requested documents.
ACT then requested a fee waiver for both April requests. The Town denied the waiver request on April 23, 2014. By way of explanation, Mr. Hoffman stated that “[i]t is anticipated that the Town will expend a significant amount of time researching and processing [t]he requests.”8
On May 21, 2014, ACT submitted another request for documents, asking for substantially the same information sought in the April requests. Meriam Schoenbaum, a part-time
This brings us to the two MPIA requests that are at issue in this appeal: ACT‘s request dated October 15, 2014 (the “ACT Request“), and Ross‘s request, which was one of two filed by him on November 10, 2014.
The ACT Request sought:
copies of public records relating to contracts, agreements, and communications between [the Town] and the four firms the Town retained to provide services in relation to the Purple Line public transit project. ACT also seeks full minutes of closed sessions held by the Town Council .... ACT makes this request in order to promote the public‘s understanding of the Town and the conduct of its public officials in conducting public business relating a major public infrastructure project. ACT intends to contribute significantly to the public‘s understanding by making public the requested records and the information the records contain.
As part of its request, ACT sought a waiver of fees on three grounds:
(1) it was entitled to a fee waiver because “the information requested will serve the public interest and contribute significantly to the public‘s understanding of the business, activities, and public-money expenditures of a government body related to a major public infrastructure project“;
(3) ACT did not have the financial resources to pay any fee associated with its request because it was a grassroots, public interest organization run by volunteers, and because its charter requires that any assets to be donated to a 501(c)(3) charitable organization upon dissolution. However, ACT did not attach any documentary support for these assertions.10
On October 27, 2014, counsel for the Town responded to ACT. First, the Town denied ACT‘s request for a fee waiver. By way of explanation for the denial, counsel stated:
As you know, the [MPIA] authorizes the Town to charge a reasonable fee for making copies and a reasonable fee for researching its records. In your request, you outline your arguments in support of a waiver of all fees associated with the request. Please be advised the request for a waiver has been considered and is denied.
Additionally, counsel explained that the Town would not provide two hours of free research because the request related “to the same general topic” as ACT‘s previous request. Finally, counsel provided ACT with an estimate of $879 for the fee the Town would charge to respond to the request and requested that amount as a deposit before the Town processed ACT‘S request.
On November 10, 2014, Ross submitted two MPIA requests to the Town. The first was titled: “Re: Maryland Public Information Act Request on behalf of Action Committee for Transit[.]” Ross almost immediately withdrew this request and submitted a second request titled “Re: Maryland Public Information Act Request[.]” Titles aside, the two requests were largely identical, although Ross‘s second request contained more detail on his status as a member of the media. In both
I am submitting the following request as a member of the media. I am a published author who writes on issues of public interest, such as chemical pollution and urban development. I have written extensively on issues regarding the Purple Line in both print and electronic media. For the last 14 years, I have regularly contributed articles and (in more recent years) blog posts to Dissent magazine and I have written there on issues regarding the Purple Line. I also write at Greater Greater [sic] Washington blog. The purpose of this blog is to provide information about elected officials, development, traffic, and other matters impacting the Greater Washington area, including Montgomery County, Maryland.
Included in his letter were requests for fee waivers. He listed all of the same grounds included in the ACT Request, but additionally listed several other grounds related to his status as a member of the media, including that: (1) he frequently writes books and articles concerning issues impacting the public, (2) that he has written before on developments concerning the Purple Line, and (3) that providing him more information on the Purple Line would be in the public interest because it, and the Town‘s expenditures, have garnered coverage in mainstream news outlets.
On November 21, Hoffman denied Ross‘s request for a fee waiver. He stated:
In your request, you identify yourself as a member of the media as a basis for a waiver of all fees associated with the request. Please be advised that the request for a waiver has been considered and is denied. We do not believe this request is being made in your capacity as a member of the media. This belief is based on the first request you submitted and then immediately withdrew on November 10, 2014, which clearly indicated it was being submitted on behalf of [ACT], along with your known affiliation with ACT. Accord-
-The Circuit Court Proceedings-
In January, 2015, ACT and Ross filed a joint complaint in the circuit court challenging the Town‘s denial of their fee waiver requests. The complaint alleged that the Town violated the MPIA when it: (1) denied their requests for access to the minutes of the closed meetings between the Town and the lobbying and public relation firms; (2) denied their requests for waivers of the fees associated with the requests; (3) denied providing them with two hours of free research for the requests;11 and (4) denied ACT‘s and Ross‘s requests to review the minutes of closed meetings in which the Town‘s relationship with the Buchanan Firm and the other lobbyists were discussed.
In their prayer for relief, ACT and Ross requested that the Town provide access to all of the requested documents, and that the fees associated with the requests be waived. Additionally, ACT and Ross requested that the Town provide them with copies of minutes of the closed meetings of the Town Council that pertained to the lobbyists. Finally, they asked that the court award them attorneys’ fees pursuant to
In response, the Town filed a motion to dismiss, or, in the alternative, a motion for summary judgment. In its motion, the Town took a two-fold approach:
First, it argued that it denied ACT‘s and Ross‘s fee waiver requests based on the grounds contained in ACT‘s and Ross‘s requests themselves; as the Town explains this logic: “[T]he Town reviewed ACT‘s arguments and all of the ‘relevant
Second, the Town provided an explanation of its reasoning in its memorandum in support of its motion. Among other reasons advanced by the Town was the following:
The Town also did not agree that ACT or Ross‘s fee waiver requests were made in the ‘public interest,’ or even that the documents requested were sought for a public purpose. Rather, the history of attacks on the Town by ACT/its members, and previous requests made by ACT and its Officers demonstrated that Plaintiffs sought the fee waiver for their own personal interests in retaliating against the Town for its opposition to the proposed Purple Line project. ACT had posted false accusations against the Town on ACT‘s website and had repeatedly attacked the Town because of the Town‘s opposition to the proposed Purple Line project, accusing the Town of acting illegally. The Town, like any private citizen, is entitled to take a position on the public issue. ACT and its members engaged in a smear campaign and utilized the Open Meetings Act Compliance Board14 and, now this Court, to retaliate against the Town
for its position on the proposed Purple Line project. Thus, the Town rightfully disbelieved ACT and Ross‘s claims that the request for the fee waiver was in the ‘public interest.’ If anything, ACT and Ross appeared to desire the documents without paying the fee for the ‘commercial’ or proprietary purpose of attacking the Town for its opposition to a project supported by ACT. Thus, the Plaintiffs’ fee waiver requests were carefully considered and all factors militated against a finding by the Town that a fee waiver was in the ‘public interest’ or was warranted.
(Emphasis added; citation deleted.)
To buttress these assertions, the Town attached copies of press releases issued by ACT in March of 2014 as exhibits to the memorandum. One release criticized the Town Council for “misinforming” the public about the nature of the services that the Buchanan Firm would provide to the Town. Another stated that the Town “broke the law when its council met in secret to hire an anti-Purple Line lobbyist.”15 Additionally, in its memorandum, the Town asserted that it was entitled to deny Ross‘s request because: a) it was justified in not credit-
After a hearing, the circuit court issued a bench opinion granting the Town‘s motion for summary judgment. The court denied ACT‘s and Ross‘s requests for access to minutes of the closed sessions of Town Council meetings.16 The court concluded that, since the MPIA does not state that an agency or government must name the factors it relied on in deciding to deny the fee waiver, the Town‘s statement that it considered relevant factors was sufficient:
The letters that the plaintiffs have cited cite reasons to grant the waiver in them, and the town has responded by saying that it‘s considered those requests [sic] in the letters that were sent, and it has denied them....
So, the town considered the information that was presented to it, said in its response have [sic] considered that request, and, based on one of their factors being past negative comments and other relevant factors they were denying the request. There‘s nowhere that it says that they have to report what those factors are. ... Defendant maintains they were considered.
This appeal followed.
ANALYSIS
I. The Statutory Framework
The MPIA was enacted in 1970, four years after Congress enacted the federal Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA“),17 often referred to as the “archetype of public information acts.” Blythe v. State, 161 Md.App. 492, 513, 870 A.2d 1246 (2005).
The Maryland Public Information Act is based on the enduring principle that public knowledge of government activities is critical to the functioning of a democratic society; that a government of the people, by the people and for the people must be open to the people.
Office of the Attorney General, MARYLAND PUBLIC INFORMATION ACT MANUAL (the “MPIA Manual“) Preface (14th ed., October 2015) (emphasis in original); see also ACLU v. Leopold, 223 Md.App. 97, 109, 115 A.3d 649 (2015).
The MPIA provides that the official custodian of requested public records is ordinarily entitled to charge an applicant a reasonable fee18 for: (1) “the search for, preparation of, and reproduction of a public record prepared, on request of the applicant, in a customized format;” and (2) “the actual costs of the search for, preparation of, and reproduction of a public record in standard format, including media and mechanical processing costs.”
(e) The official custodian may waive a fee under this section if:
(1) the applicant asks for a waiver; and
(2) (i) the applicant is indigent and files an affidavit of indigency; or
(ii) after consideration of the ability of the applicant to pay the fee and other relevant factors, the official custodian determines that the waiver would be in the public interest.19
Maryland‘s appellate case law on MPIA fee waiver requests is limited to a single decision, Mayor and City of Baltimore v. Burke, 67 Md.App. 147, 506 A.2d 683 (1986), which we will discuss later. In addition to Burke, the parties cite to the MPIA Manual and a 1996 opinion of the Attorney General, 81 Op. Att‘y Gen. 154 (1996).
The MPIA Manual is a document written and updated by the Office of the Maryland Attorney General. In its preface, it states that it is “designed to be a resource for a range of users, from members of the public and the media who request information, to the government officials who have the responsibility to implement the Act‘s requirements.” Chapter 7 of the Manual pertains to fees under the Act. It states:
To determine whether a waiver is in the public interest, the official custodian must consider not only the ability of the applicant to pay, but also other relevant factors. A waiver may be appropriate, for example, when a requestor seeks information for a public purpose, rather than a narrow personal or commercial interest, because a public purpose
justifies the expenditure of public funds to comply with the request. . . . In deciding whether to waive a fee, an official custodian may find it helpful to look at case law interpreting the comparable FOIA provision[.]
MPIA Manual at 7-3.
The Manual goes on to identify several relevant factors identified in federal FOIA decisions. These factors include “the potential that the requested disclosure would contribute to public understanding and the significance of that understanding.” Id. at 7-4 (citing Project on Military Procurement v. Dept. of Navy, 710 F.Supp. 362 (D.D.C.1989); and Larson v. CIA, 843 F.2d 1481 (D.C.Cir.1988). Another factor identified in the Manual is whether the material sought pertains to “a matter of genuine public concern[.]” Id. (citing Crooker v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, 882 F.Supp. 1158 (D.Mass.1995)).
The Attorney General issued an opinion discussing fee waivers in the context of the MPIA. 81 Op. Att‘y Gen. 154 (1996). In his opinion, the Attorney General stated that “the broad term ‘public interest’ does not permit a precise listing of relevant factors.” Id. at 157, 506 A.2d 683. However, the Opinion lists several examples of factors that may contribute to the public interest determination, such as whether disclosure of records will shed light on “a public controversy about official actions,” or on “an agency‘s performance of its public duties.” Id. at 157-58, 506 A.2d 683.20
II. The Standard of Review
Judicial review of an agency‘s decision on MPIA requests is authorized by
The parties do not dispute that our review of the circuit court‘s decision is de novo. However, they part compa-
ACT and Ross argue for a different standard. They note that under FOIA, courts review an agency‘s decision to deny a fee waiver de novo. See, e.g., Cause of Action v. F.T.C., 799 F.3d 1108, 1113 (D.C.Cir.2015) (“We review de novo both the district court‘s grant of summary judgment and the agency‘s denial of the fee-waiver applications.“). We don‘t find this argument to be persuasive.
The de novo review standard for FOIA fee waiver disputes is statutory. See
In contrast, generally when a Maryland court addresses an MPIA dispute, the court considers not only the agency record, but also facts generated “by pleadings, affidavit, deposition, answers to interrogatories, admission of facts, stipulations and concessions.” Prince George‘s County v. The Washington Post Co., 149 Md.App. at 304, 815 A.2d 859. Were we to limit our review solely to the record before the agency, we would burden government units with the obligation of generating a record against the possibility that a dispute will end up in court.
III. The Parties’ Contentions
ACT and Ross argue that the circuit court erred in granting the Town summary judgment on two bases. First, they contend that the Town‘s letters of denial themselves were legally deficient under the MPIA because neither letter cited any relevant factor that justified denying the requests for fee waivers. Second, they note that the circuit court cited as one of the factors considered by the Town in denying their requests was the “past negative comments” made by ACT and
The Town‘s primary contention is that its responses to ACT‘s and Ross‘s waiver requests were adequate as a matter of law and constitute conclusive evidence that its decisions to deny the requests were based upon valid reasons.
From these premises, the Town further asserts that:
(1) ACT‘s and Ross‘s claims to the contrary notwithstanding, the Town did not base its decision in whole or in part upon past negative comments made by Ross and/or ACT regarding the Town.21
(2)
To determine whether a waiver is in the public interest, the official custodian must consider not only the ability of the
applicant to pay, but also other relevant factors. A waiver may be appropriate, for example, when a requester seeks information for a public purpose, rather than a narrow personal or commercial interest, because a public purpose justifies the expenditure of public funds to comply with the request.
MPIA Manual, Chapter 7-3 (C).
The Town concludes by asserting that “the Town reasonably concluded that waiver of the fee was not in the public interest” because of:
Mr. Ross‘s known affiliation with ACT. Because of the history and Mr. Ross‘s apparent duplicity, the Town obviously questioned the purpose of the fee waiver request, and whether it was for a public purpose and would be in the ‘public interest.’ Upon consideration of ACT/Ross‘s ability to pay and the ‘other relevant factors,’ the Town ultimately determined that the fee waiver would not be in the public interest and denied the request. As discussed, the Town was entitled to consider these circumstances in denying the fee waiver request and the decision was not ‘viewpoint discrimination.’
IV. ACT‘s Waiver Request
Upon consideration of the parties’ contentions, we conclude that the circuit court erred in granting summary judgment to the Town. The circuit court was correct that
Burke was a reporter for the Baltimore News American who sought records from the City of Baltimore pertaining to a malfunctioning sewer treatment plant owned by the City. Id. at 149, 506 A.2d 683. The City responded that approximately 160,000 pages of documents were responsive to Burke‘s request “and that these documents would be released providing the appellee paid approximately $50,000 to cover copying at 25 cents per page and the cost of the ‘City employee‘s time based upon their [sic] salary to retrieve the documents and the portion of an Assistant City Solicitor‘s time to review each document to delete material which is not subject to disclosure.‘” Id. Burke challenged the City‘s refusal to grant a fee waiver. In affirming the circuit court‘s conclusion that the City‘s refusal to grant the fee waiver was arbitrary and capricious, we stated:
It is apparent from the record that [the relevant City officials] considered no more than the expense to the City of locating and duplicating the documents . . . and the perceived ability of the appellee, as an employee of a Baltimore newspaper, to pay the City‘s projected fee. The appellants did not abide by 10-621(d)(2)22 which mandates consideration of ‘other relevant factors’ and making a determination of whether the waiver would be in the public interest. Certainly those relevant considerations would include the health hazard created by the discharge of inadequately treated sewage into the Patapsco River, the importance of public exposure of the delayed and extremely costly improvements to the Patapsco Waste Water Treatment Plant, and the danger that imposing a fee for information upon a newspaper publisher might have a chilling effect on free exercise of freedom of the press.
Returning to the present case, the Town‘s response to ACT‘S waiver request was:
In your request, you outline your arguments in support of a waiver of all fees associated with the request. Please be advised the request for a waiver has been considered and is denied.
This bald and conclusory statement provides no insight whatsoever as to the actual considerations that motivated the Town to deny the request. As Burke makes clear, a court must necessarily consider the actual decision-making process by the custodian in order to decide whether the custodian gave appropriate consideration to “other relevant factors.” This necessarily calls for custodian to identify what relevant factors he or she considered. The Town‘s response to ACT fails comprehensively in this regard.
The Town‘s failure to explain the reasons for its decisions in its letter to ACT isn‘t necessarily fatal because the factual record can be further developed in the circuit court “by pleadings, affidavit, deposition, answers to interrogatories, admission of facts, stipulations and concessions.” Prince George‘s County v. The Washington Post Co., 149 Md.App. at 304, 815 A.2d 859. The Town did this by setting out its reasoning in its memorandum in support of its motion for summary judgment. We have set out a portion of that narrative earlier in this opinion. Our reading of that memorandum leaves us satisfied that a significant factor, if not the primary factor, in the Town‘s decision to deny ACT‘s request for a waiver was that the organization had previously criticized the Town officials for their opposition to the Purple Line.23 Without belaboring the issue, we agree with appellants that the First Amendment‘s guarantee of free expression of speech protects persons from the imposition of financial burdens based upon the content of their speech. See Rosenberger v. Rector and Visitors of the U. Va., 515 U.S. 819, 828, 115 S.Ct.
V. Ross‘s Request
We turn to the Town‘s denial of Ross‘s fee waiver request. The letter from the Town‘s counsel to Ross stated in pertinent part:
In your request, you identify yourself as a member of the media24 as a basis for a waiver of all fees associated with the request. Please be advised that the request for a waiver has been considered and is denied. We do not believe this request is being made in your capacity as a member of the media. This belief is based on the first request you submitted and then immediately withdrew on November 10, 2014, which clearly indicated it was being submitted on behalf of [ACT], along with your known affiliation with ACT. Accordingly, the Town will expect payment in full for all fees associated with the request.
Under different circumstances, we believe that Ross‘s request on his own behalf, coming within hours of Ross‘s request
VI. Conclusion
We hold that the circuit court erred when it granted the Town‘s motion for summary judgment as to the fee waiver issue. What happens on remand is complicated by the fact that the circuit court‘s judgment addressed another issue, namely, the court concluded that the Town was not required to disclose minutes of closed meetings. Neither ACT nor Ross has asserted that the court erred in this regard.
We will vacate the circuit court‘s judgment and remand this case for it to enter a judgment that the Town is not required to disclose minutes of its closed meetings in response to the MPIA requests from ACT and Ross that are the subject of this appeal. The judgment will further provide the Town is obligated to respond to Ross‘s and ACT‘s requests without charge to the appellants. Finally, the court must consider ACT‘s and Ross‘s request for attorneys’ fees pursuant to
Notes
- Whether the Circuit Court erred in holding that the Town of Chevy Chase was permitted to use “past negative comments” by a public-interest group and a journalist as a basis for denying their requests for fee waivers under the MPIA.
- Whether the Circuit Court erred in holding that the Town of Chevy Chase was permitted to deny fee waiver requests based on “other relevant factors” it neither articulated nor explained.
- the official custodian; or
- any other authorized individual who has physical custody and control of a public record.
If the court determines that the complainant has substantially prevailed, the court may assess against a defendant governmental unit reasonable counsel fees and other litigation costs that the complainant reasonably incurred.
Tuzeer v. Yim, LLC, 201 Md.App. 443, 464, 29 A.3d 1019 (2011) (quotation marks and citations omitted).is based on the philosophy that public business should be performed in a public manner, which is accessible to interested citizens, and that this type of open government is essential to the maintenance of a democratic society. Such open government ensures the accountability of government to the citizens of the State[,] . . . increases the faith of the public in government and enhances the effectiveness of the public in fulfilling its role in a democratic society.
The Open Meetings Compliance Board is a State agency established by
The particulars of the parties’ Open Meetings Act dispute are beyond the scope of this opinion but may be found in the Compliance Board‘s ruling on the complaint. See 9 OMCB 99 (2014).
9 OMCB at 101.The Act‘s disclosure measures serve partly to enable a public body to assure [its] constituents that when the public body is meeting behind closed doors, it is doing so legally and for a reason. The Council‘s use of them for the November 26 meeting might have avoided this complaint and its neglect of them violated the Act.
Documents shall be furnished without any charge or at a charge reduced below the fees established under clause [] if disclosure of the information is in the public interest because it is likely to contribute significantly to public understanding of the operations or activities of the government and is not primarily in the commercial interest of the requester.
The constitutionally-prescribed duties of the Attorney General included providing written opinions “on any legal matter or subject” when required by the General Assembly, the Governor, and certain other State officials. See Maryland Constitution Article V, § 3(a)(4). Opinions that address matters of significant public importance are “compiled and published annually as the Opinions of the Attorney General.” Dan A. Friedman THE MARYLAND STATE CONSTITUTION 190 (2006).
Courts carefully consider, but are not bound by, the analyses and conclusions contained in Opinions of the Attorney General. See, e.g., Fuller v. Republican Central Committee of Carroll County, 444 Md. 613, 631, 120 A.3d 751 (2015); ACLU of Maryland v. Leopold, 223 Md.App. 97, 109, 115 A.3d 649 (2015). Attorney General‘s opinions are particularly helpful in discerning legislative intent. Fuller, 444 Md. at 631. This is because “[t]he Legislature is presumed to be aware of the Attorney General‘s statutory interpretation and, in the absence of enacting any change to the statutory language, to acquiesce in the Attorney General‘s construction.” Gomez v. Jackson Hewitt, Inc., 427 Md. 128, 170 n. 36, 46 A.3d 443 (2012).
No reported opinion has yet articulated what weight should be afforded to the MPIA Manual even though the Manual has been referenced in several reported appellate decisions. See Mayor & City Council of Baltimore v. Maryland Comm. Against the Gun Ban, 329 Md. 78, 81, 617 A.2d 1040 (1993); Leopold, 223 Md.App. at 117; Gallagher v. Office of the Atty. Gen., 127 Md.App. 572, 578, 736 A.2d 350 (1999), rev‘d on other grounds, 359 Md. 341, 753 A.2d 1036 (2000).
There is no constitutional or statutory mandate requiring the Attorney General to publish the MPIA Manual. Although the Manual may not rise to the dignity of a formal opinion by the Attorney General, it is nonetheless a useful, although not binding, resource for courts.
the Circuit Court [did not] “hold” that the Town based its decision to deny the fee waiver request on “past negative comments” nor so-called “viewpoint discrimination.”
We can dispose of this contention quickly. The relevant part of the court‘s decision is (emphasis added):
So, the town considered the information that was presented to it, said in its response have considered that request, and, based on one of their factors being past negative comments and other relevant factors they were denying the request. There‘s nowhere [in the MPIA] that it says that they have to report what those factors are. There‘s no statute, and [Mayor and City of Baltimore v.] Burke doesn‘t speak to that. It says they have to consider them.
A “holding” is a “court‘s determination of a matter of law pivotal to its decision[.]” Bryan A. Garner BLACK‘S LAW DICTIONARY (10th Ed. 2014) 849. Thus, the Town is, hyper-technically, correct—the circuit court did not hold as a matter of law that the Town‘s decision to deny the fee waiver requests was based on the Town‘s perception that ACT and Ross had commented negatively about the Town‘s past handling of the Purple Line issue. This is not because the circuit court didn‘t address the issue but because issue was a factual, as opposed to a legal, one. There can be no doubt that the court concluded that the Town‘s decision to deny the waiver requests was based in part on ACT‘s and Ross‘s past statements about the Town Council.
