742 N.E.2d 232 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2000
Lead Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *755
The underlying action in this case was brought by the plaintiff municipalities as a constitutional challenge to certain provisions of H.B. 283, the biennial budget bill enacted by the Ohio Legislature in 1999. The provisions at issue reduce or eliminate the authority of municipalities to regulate use of public rights-of-way by public utilities and telecommunications operators, and limit the municipalities' authority to recover costs imposed upon them by such uses of public rights-of-way.
The appellees, through interrogatories and requests for production of documents, sought information related to meetings or other communication between representatives of the state, including members of the General Assembly and their staffs, and other parties, including representatives of utility service providers or cable operators. Appellees specifically sought through interrogatories to discover the source or basis of the language of the disputed enactments, the names of individual members of the General Assembly and third-parties who discussed the proposed legislation, the names of all individuals with knowledge of the public need for the disputed legislation, and the names of any persons with knowledge of the purpose of the enactment of the disputed legislation as part of the biennial budget bill. The interrogatories further sought to identify all persons who researched and reviewed legal issues pertaining to the legislation, including its constitutionality. Appellees' request for production of documents included "all documents relating to communications between representatives of the state of Ohio (including without limitation members of the General Assembly) with third parties (including without limitation representatives of utility service providers or cable operators) relating to the impact of municipal right-of-way regulation upon utility service providers and cable operators." (Appellees' request for production of documents, # 2.) Appellees also sought to compel the deposition of State Senator Louis Blessing, legislative sponsor of the disputed right-of-way provisions.
The state objected to various parts of the above discovery requests, relying on *757
Section
The court's discovery order, however, granted appellees' motion to compel in that it compelled certain narrowly circumscribed responses by the state to appellees' requests for information about meetings held off the public record by legislators or their staff with corporate representatives. The court initially found that the information sought by appellees was at least arguably relevant and therefore discoverable. The court then determined that private meetings with corporate representatives, held off the public record, were not "integral to the legislative process" and thus fell outside the scope of legislative privilege. The court therefore permitted limited discovery by appellees to the extent of requiring legislators and their staff to answer questions regarding the identities of any corporate representatives with whom they had met off the record to discuss the right-of-way statutes at issue. The court limited the proposed discovery to written interrogatories and barred any depositions of legislators or their staff until it could be shown that all other sources for discovering the information sought had been exhausted and that less burdensome forms of discovery were unlikely to provide the information. The court found that once the identities of corporate representatives were known, further discovery by appellees would be had from those representatives.
The state has timely appealed from the trial court's discovery order. Appellees have filed a motion to dismiss the appeal for lack of a final appealable order. Also before the court is appellees' motion to place the matter on the accelerated calendar for argument on the merits.
Appellees assert that the appeal must be dismissed because the discovery order at issue is interlocutory, and not a final appealable order as defined in R.C.
In arguing the motion to dismiss, the parties agree that the narrow issue before us may be defined as whether the limited information actually compelled to be disclosed by the trial court's discovery order (disclosure of the identities of corporate representatives who met with legislators concerning the legislation in question) is covered by legislative privilege. If this information is privileged, then the trial court's order falls within the scope of R.C.
Ohio cases applying legislative privilege are primarily concerned with immunity from criminal prosecution or civil actions for defamation, rather than protection from compelled testimony or discovery. See, e.g., Costanzo v. Gaul (1980),
Both state and federal courts have struggled to define the scope of the privilege, but it is clearly not limited to speeches on the floor of the legislature. In re Grand JuryInvestigation,
The above observations on the scope of legislative immunity from discovery, unfortunately, are more suggestive than definitive. No cases have been found which are precisely on all fours with the facts before us in that they would compel, without more, bare disclosure of the identity of lobbyists with *760 whom legislators had met. Nonetheless, we find the following language most instructive: "[T]o the extent that the Speech or Debate Clause creates a Testimonial privilege as well as a Use immunity, it does so only for the purpose of protecting the legislator and those intimately associated with him in the legislative process from the harassment of hostile questioning. It is not designed to encourage confidences by maintaining secrecy, for the legislative process in a democracy has only a limited toleration for secrecy. * * * The policy against permitting hostile questioning, which justifies the testimonial privilege aspect of Speech or Debate Clause protection, is not implicated in this case." In re GrandJury Investigation, at 597. Accordingly, when asked to balance the integrity of the legislative process as weighed against the rights of litigants in the judicial process, we find that the trial court's discovery order is appropriately tailored to serve both. We therefore hold that requiring legislators to divulge the identity of corporate representatives with whom they have had private, off-the-public-record meetings does not represent an infringement upon an "integral part of the deliberative and communicative processes" of the legislative branch, and is not, therefore, violative of legislative privilege.
Since the information compelled to be disclosed by the trial court's order is not within the scope of legislative privilege, the court's discovery order is not a final appealable order under R.C.
_____________________ DESHLER, J.
BRYANT, J., concurs.
LAZARUS, J., concurs separately.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the majority opinion and its conclusion that the limited information actually compelled to be disclosed by the trial court's discovery order (i.e., the identities of persons who met with legislators concerning the legislation in question) does not fall within the scope of the legislative privilege. I write separately, however, to emphasize that whether such information is at all relevant to the constitutional issues raised by plaintiffs in this case was not before this court and that this court's decision should not be construed as approval of the trial court's unprecedented determination in this regard.
Plaintiffs brought this action challenging the constitutionality of the legislation under the single-subject rule, the uniformity rule, and municipal home rule provision of the Ohio Constitution and the takings clauses of the United States *761 and Ohio Constitutions. In its decision below, the trial court held that compelling legislators to identify who met with them about the legislation could lead to information that was relevant to the validity of the legislation under the single-subject rule, municipal home rule, and the takings clause. According to the court, obtaining information regarding what arguments were made to state legislators or their staff might be relevant in determining the purposes of the legislation, the statewide interest that might be advanced by the legislation, and the possible reasons for including the legislation in the biennial budget act.
I find the trial court's reasoning in this regard unpersuasive. First, nothing in the case law suggests that inquiry into the legislative intent and purposes of an enactment (beyond the language thereof) is appropriate in determining the validity of the legislation under any of the constitutional provisions raised in this case. See, e.g., State ex rel. OhioAcademy of Trial Lawyers v. Sheward (1999),