When reviewing judgments of dismissal under V.R.C.P. 12(b)(6) we accept all allegations pleaded in the complaint, as well as reasonable inferences from the complaint, to be true, and treat all contrary allegations of the moving party as false.
Amiot v. Ames,
Plaintiff also requested property tax documents in electronic format under Vermont’s
As to the meetings, plaintiff alleged that defendants violated thе open meeting law and, also, violated his First Amendment right of access to the meetings and sought a declaratory judgment and an injunction against conducting future meetings in executive session. As to the documents, plaintiff alleged that defendants violated the access to public records law and breached the contract to provide him the records. On these counts, he sought an order requiring defendants to give him the records.
In response to defendants’ motion to dismiss, the court dismissed plaintiffs complaint ruling: (1) preliminary contract negоtiations of the kind involved here are exempted from public access by 1 V.S.A. § 313(a)(1); (2) plaintiff has failed to demonstrate that he suffered harm from the denial of access to the negotiation because he can be present when the seleetboard formally signs the resulting agreements in open session; (3) because plaintiff had no right to be present at the negotiating sessions, his First Amendment claim fails; (4) plaintiffs complaint demands a “usable” copy of the tax records, and the law does not require the town to produce records in that format; (5) if plaintiff has no right to the records under the statute, his contractual claim must also fail.
The standard to be applied to a Rule 12(b)(6) motion is set out in
Amiot:
to grant the motion, it must appear “ ‘beyond doubt’ that there exist no facts or circumstances that would entitle the plaintiff to relief.”
Plaintiff first argues that the court erred in applying the open meeting law exception; in 1 V.S.A. § 313(a). Vermont’s open meeting law requires meetings of a public body “to be open to the public at all times, except as provided in section 313.” 1 V.S.A. § 312(a). In
Trombley v. Bellows Falls Union High School,
In essence, the superior court held that all contract negotiations necessarily meet the statutory standard. That approach is prohibited by
Trombley,
which requires a case by ease analysis of the application of the “substаntial disadvantage” proviso in the exception.
Trombley,
Defendants argue, however, that we should not consider this objection to the superior сourt decision because plaintiff never raised the application of the statutory exception in his complaint. We reject this argument as inconsistent with the limited role of the court in addressing a Rule 12(b)(6) motion. Plaintiff pled that the negotiating meetings should be open under the open meeting law, and the decision to hold them in executive sеssion was unlawful. It is up to defendants to show that they are entitled to an exception from public access and that “no facts or circumstances” would entitle plaintiff tо relief.
Second, plaintiff alleges that the court erred in concluding that he does not have standing. The private remedy provision of the open meeting law requires thаt plaintiff be “aggrieved” by the action of the town. 1 V.S.A § 314(b);
Trombley,
We cannot accept that plaintiff does nоt have standing because he can object to any contract before the seleetboard formally agrees to it, an act they have to take in open session. See 1 V.S.A. § 313(a). Under that theory no member of the public can ever object to an executive session because the law requires that the formal acts be takеn in open session.
Next, plaintiff argues that the court erred in dismissing his access to public documents law claim. Again, we stress that the standard is whether the complaint shows beyond dоubt that there are no facts or circumstances that would entitle plaintiff to relief. The court focused on the allegations that defendants offered some recоrds to plaintiff, but plaintiff found the records offered not usable and complete. The court held that the statute does not require that copies of requested materiаl be in “usable” form; rather it requires only that the material be presented in “standard format” in “which the record is maintained.” 1 V.S.A. § 316(h). On this theory, it dismissed the complaint as inadequate. While we аgree with the superior court that the statute does not require the agency to provide the information in usable form, plaintiff also alleged that the information was not complete. Again, we conclude that the court struck too soon in dismissing the complaint.
We have a similar reaction to the last issue — the rejection on the face of the complaint of plaintiffs theory that defendants contractually obligated themselves to provide the information in the format plaintiff requested. We see nothing in the law which prevents a public agency from contractually binding itself to provide electronic versions of documents in a specified format in return for sufficient considеration.
Plaintiff also filed a motion to take judicial notice of the judgment of the Bennington Superior Court decision in the
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
We do not reach this claim independent of the substantive claims.
The superior court assumed that the negotiating sessions are meetings for purposes of the act, see 1 V.S.A. § 310(2), and neither party has contested that assumption. Similarly, the parties agree that § 313(a)(1) applies, although the “meetings” are negotiating sessions in which the other party to the contract is present. We rely on both assumptions without examining their accuracy.
