Plaintiffs appeal as of right orders finding certain documents exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), MCL 15.231 et seq.; granting defendant’s motion for summary disposition; and denying plaintiffs’ motions for reconsideration and determination of the appropriateness of costs charged under the FOIA. We affirm.
This case centers on plaintiffs’ FOIA requests for information regarding a settlement agreement in which defendant transferred a seventy-five acre parcel of property to Sandstone Associates Limited Partnership-A (Sandstone). Plaintiffs requested all exhibits to this agreement, including those listed as having been intentionally deleted; all side letters (also called “side agreements”) between the parties; and any global positioning satellite readings (global readings) and site plans dealing with the property transferred. Although defendant turned over the exhibits and several side letters, it refused to disclose two others and asserted that the deleted exhibits and the site plans and global readings requested by plaintiffs did not exist.
i
Plaintiffs first argue that the trial court erred in granting summary disposition in favor of defendant on plaintiffs’ FOIA request for the deleted exhibits, global readings, and site plans. We disagree.
We review de novo a trial court’s ruling on a motion for summary disposition.
Glancy v City of Roseville,
“The FOIA protects a citizen’s right to examine and to participate in the political process by requiring public disclosure of information regarding the formal acts of public officials and employees.”
Stone Street Capital, Inc v Bureau of State Lottery,
A. THE MISSING/INTENTIONALLY DELETED EXHIBITS
In their September 4, 2002, FOIA request, plaintiffs sought to obtain, among other things, “[a]ll exhibits, including but not limited to exhibits G, T, U, Y, W, AA, *454 BB, GG, MM, NN, PP, for the Agreement for Entry of Consent Judgment dated June 25, 2002, between Sandstone and the City of Novi.” The “Exhibit List” for the June 25, 2002, “Agreement for Entry of Consent Judgment” letters the exhibits and gives a brief description of each exhibit. With respect to the exhibits specifically identified in plaintiffs’ FOIA request, the description on the exhibit list states: “INTENTIONAL DELETION.” At the October 22, 2003, motion hearing, the trial court stated that defendant did not have to turn over these exhibits because they were “no longer relevant.” Because lack of relevance is not included among the exemptions from disclosure listed in MCL 15.243, this constituted error.
Nevertheless, the trial court reached the correct result. We affirm a lower court’s ruling when it reaches the right result, albeit for the wrong reason.
Morosini v Citizens Ins Co of America,
B. THE GLOBAL READINGS
On the basis of a hand-written reference to “global” on a draft of the consent judgment agreement, plaintiffs
*455
requested global readings on “extra land.” Defendant asserted that no such documents existed. In light of the affidavit of defendant’s mayor, Richard J. Clark, the trial court agreed with defendant and found that no such documents existed. Under a MCR 2.116(0(10) motion, the party moving for summary disposition has the initial burden of supporting its position with documentation such as affidavits or depositions.
Smith v Globe Life Ins Co,
Here, plaintiffs failed to provide any factual support for their allegations that some sort of global readings existed. Although plaintiffs relied on the fact that a draft of the final consent judgment agreement had a note written in the margin stating “global,” plaintiffs’ interpretation of this word is mere speculation. Plaintiffs offer no factual support for their interpretation of the word and no factual support for the belief that such global readings existed. Therefore, the trial court was required to grant summary disposition in favor of defendant on this issue. Id.
Additionally, plaintiffs argue, in essence, that summary disposition was premature because discovery was not concluded and they did not have an opportunity to depose Clark. Ordinarily, summary disposition is premature if granted before completion of discovery on an issue, but it is not premature if discovery does not stand a fair chance of uncovering factual support for opposing the motion for summary disposition.
State Treasurer v Sheko,
C. THE SITE PLANS
Plaintiffs’ FOIA request included a request for all site plans for the dedicated seventy-five acres. Defendant stated that no site plan existed at the time of the request and supplied Clark’s affidavit, which clearly states that Sandstone had not provided site plans at the time of plaintiffs’ request. Again, on the basis of Clark’s affidavit, the trial court agreed with defendant and found that no site plan existed. While plaintiffs attempted to support their position by supplying pictures showing that the seventy-five acres had been cleared of trees and grading had begun, these do not support a conclusion that Sandstone filed a site plan with defendant. Plaintiffs cite no authority that a site plan must be filed before beginning deconstruction or grading on a property. Nor do plaintiffs offer an affidavit from a person in the construction field or working for defendant stating that filing a site plan is customary before such activity is done. Simply put, the photographs are insufficient documentation that Sandstone had filed site plans at the time of the FOIA request. Without factual support to contradict Clark’s affidavit clearly stating that site plans were not filed with defendant, *457 the trial court properly granted summary disposition to defendant on this issue. Smith, supra.
II
Plaintiffs next argue that the trial court erred in finding the side letters exempt from disclosure and in failing to make particularized findings in denying disclosure. We disagree.
Our Supreme Court has held that “the application of exemptions requiring legal determinations are reviewed under a de novo standard, while application of exemptions requiring determinations of a discretionary nature .. . are reviewed under a clearly erroneous standard.”
Federated Publications, Inc v City of Lansing,
In the instant case, defendant claimed exemption pursuant to MCL 15.243(l)(f), which provides:
(1) A public body may exempt from disclosure as a public record under this act:
(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.
*458 (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.
In addition to submitting the side letters in question to the trial court for in camera review, defendant submitted affidavits of Ronald Hughes, one of Sandstone’s general partners, and Gerald Fisher, defendant’s city attorney. The Hughes affidavit states that the side letters in question were submitted by Sandstone upon a promise of confidentiality from defendant’s mayor and city manager. The Fisher affidavit states that he prepared a document describing the letters and that this document has been on file in the city clerk’s office since November 26, 2002.
Following the in camera review, the trial court held that the side letters in question were exempt from disclosure. It specifically found that they contained financial or commercial information voluntarily submitted to defendant by Sandstone and that this information implicated governmental policies regarding the potential expenditure of substantial sums of money by defendant and the retention of land for public use. The court further stated that the documents were submitted in confidence, and held that defendant complied with each of the three requirements in MCL 15.243(l)(f).
After a review de novo of the record, we find the side letters in question exempt from disclosure under the FOIA. The information in the side letters clearly concerned public policy. It related to how defendant intended to settle the Sandstone litigation, a situation with the potential to bankrupt defendant and seriously affect its residents. Furthermore, plaintiffs did not offer *459 any evidence to controvert the proofs presented by defendant tending to establish that the side letters were submitted by Sandstone upon a promise of confidentiality authorized by defendant’s mayor. Defendant did fail to place a description of the letters on file in a central location, as required by MCL 15.243(l)(f)(iii), until after plaintiffs’ request under the FOIA. But although defendant and Sandstone entered their settlement agreement on June 25, 2002, they continued to negotiate after that time because of questions regarding deed restrictions on the property transferred. Under these circumstances, filing descriptions of the documents on November 26, 2002, was within the reasonable time required by the statute. Defendant met all the requirements set forth in MCL 15.243(l)(f), and we affirm the trial court’s order exempting the side letters from disclosure.
hi
Plaintiffs next argue that the trial court improperly allowed the attorney fees charged by defendant for production of some of the documents they requested. Specifically, plaintiffs maintain that attorney Gerald Fisher, whom defendant engaged to negotiate the Sandstone agreement, was neither defendant’s employee nor the lowest paid employee capable of complying with defendant’s request as required by MCL 15.234(3). We disagree.
MCL 15.234(1) allows a public body to charge a fee for the costs, including labor, for the examination, review, and “deletion and separation of exempt from nonexempt information ....” It 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 [the FOIA].” MCL *460 15.234(3). In the instant case, the trial court awarded defendant $150 for the time it took Fisher to review the side letters between defendant and Sandstone and determine which were exempt from disclosure. Plaintiffs contend that, although defendant refers to Fisher as the city attorney, he is an independent contractor rather than an employee and, thus, defendant could not charge for the cost of his services. The trial court found that an attorney retained to do legal work on behalf of defendant constitutes an employee for purposes of MCL 15.234.
The trial court’s decision required it to interpret the term “employee” as used in MCL 15.234(3). Statutory interpretation constitutes a question of law that we review de novo.
MacKenzie v Wales Twp,
*461 Plaintiffs also assert that, even if Fisher is defendant’s employee, he was not the lowest paid employee capable of retrieving the information necessary to comply with their request. This argument is based on plaintiffs’ contention that none of the side letters in question was exempt from disclosure and defendant need not have had them reviewed by an attorney. Because two of the side letters were exempt from disclosure under MCL 15.243(l)(f), we find plaintiffs’ argument to he without merit.
Affirmed.
Notes
The trial court did not state the subsection under which it granted summary disposition. However, when the parties submit documentary evidence and the court relies on it, this Court treats the case as if the court granted summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(0(10).
Kefgen v Davidson,
In arguing that Fisher is not an employee, plaintiffs urge this Court to apply the “economic realities” test formerly used to determine whether a person is an employee or an independent contractor under the Worker’s Disability Compensation Act, MCL 418.101
et seq.
See
Hoste v Shanty Creek Mgt, Inc,
