"Extra! Extra! Read all about it! " This iconic news entreaty evokes images of a
This case calls for a reflection on the meaning of news, both breaking and not, and the obligations that the United States Constitution imposes on the government in society's ever more demanding quest for news. It asks what burdens the justice system must bear and what risks it must take to provide access to information in the name of "news." The importance of this dispute is reflected in the rather voluminous extra documents that have been filed for the pending summary judgment motion, including one amici curiae brief filed on behalf of the Orange County Bar Association, National Association of Women Lawyers, Family Violence Appellate Project, Legal Aid Society of Orange County, Public Law Center, and Veterans Legal Institute, to support Defendant's position, and another one amici curiae brief filed on behalf of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and 15 other media organizations, to support Plaintiffs' position. (See Dkt. Nos. 82, 105; see also Dkt. No. 41-1.)
Plaintiff Courthouse News Service, or "CNS," sued Defendant David Yamasaki in his official capacity as the Court Executive Officer/Clerk of the Orange County Superior Court, or "OCSC," for injunctive and declaratory relief under
Last year, CNS moved for a preliminary injunction, which the Court denied. Now OCSC moves for summary judgment. Having considered the numerous filings and extensive oral arguments, the Court GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART OCSC's motion for summary judgment. (Dkt. No. 75.)
1. BACKGROUND
This section provides context to the Court's analysis, where the Court will discuss relevant facts in more detail.
1.1 CNS Reporting and Publications
CNS is a news organization that specializes in civil litigation reports. CNS reporters write articles about legal news and create litigation reports. Some CNS original articles are freely available to the public on the organization's website, which also features a selection of non-legal news articles from the Associated Press. COURTHOUSE NEWS SERVICE , https://www.courthousenews.com/ (last visited May 7, 2018). On multiple occasions, other news organizations-including locally the Orange County Register and the Los Angeles Times-have credited CNS articles as their source.
CNS has over 2,000 subscribers nationwide. CNS subscribers include academic institutions, government agencies, and other media organizations, but overwhelmingly, they're law firms. CNS subscribers may receive "trackers," which provide updates about cases a subscriber is following, and "dingers," which alert subscribers about lawsuits filed against a specific party. CNS
To provide this content, CNS employs reporters across the country. These reporters are assigned coverage of specific federal and state courthouses. One of their duties is to review new complaints and choose which ones to include in the daily New Litigation Reports.
Sixteen New Litigation Reports focus on California, covering new civil complaints in the federal district courts, and new unlimited civil complaints (sometimes just called "complaints" in this order) in the superior courts. Under California law, unlimited civil cases are those where the amount in controversy exceeds $25,000 or where the plaintiff requests certain types of injunctive relief. Complaints filed at OCSC are covered in CNS's Orange County Report, which is "emailed each weekday evening to about 275 subscribers." (See Dkt. No. 85 at 6; Dkt. No. 86 at ¶ 7.) But CNS reporters at OCSC cannot always access new complaints on the same day that those complaints are submitted to the court. So CNS sued OCSC.
1.2 OCSC Practices
OCSC is one of the busiest state trial courts in the country. In the 2014-2015 fiscal year, it opened nearly half a million new cases. Judicial Council of California, 2016 Court Statistics Report app. G, tbl.1. Besides numerous criminal cases, it handles all sorts of civil matters. Civil cases are handled at one of four OCSC divisions. Two of those divisions, the Central Justice Center (or "CJC") and the Civil Complex Center, process all filings in unlimited civil cases. Unlimited civil cases cover, among other things, requests for civil restraining orders, name change petitions, and complex civil casеs. It's undisputed that on average, OCSC receives 14,098 new unlimited civil complaints a year. (Dkt. No. 84 at 2 ¶ 3.) Meanwhile, and as widely acknowledged in the press, OCSC has faced increasingly challenging budgetary restrictions. One source explains that while it's "no secret that California's clogged courts are seriously underfunded" in general, "as a 'donor' court under the current, convoluted funding method," OCSC isn't receiving its "fair share of statewide funding." See Josh Newman & Jennifer Muir Beuthin, Better Justice Through Local Funding Control , ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER (updated Feb. 9, 2018, 10:12 AM), https://www.ocregister.com/2018/02/08/better-justice-through-local-funding-control/[http://bit.ly/2oitH1B]. This has created problems unique to OCSC, which is for example "the only Superior Court in all of California to rely solely on part-time court reporters."
Most new complaints are submitted to OCSC electronically. (See Ochoa Decl., Dkt. No. 75-2 at ¶ 14.) Indeed OCSC implemented mandatory electronic filing (or "e-filing") in 2013, subject to very few exceptions. One of those exceptions is for filings submitted by litigants representing themselves, said to be acting pro per (counsel use the expression "pro se ," which is less suitable for state court). Complaints may be submitted electronically 24 hours a day, even on weekends and court holidays. Manually filed complaints may be turned into the clerk's office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. on court business days.
It's this review and processing of new complaints that causes the delays at OCSC that CNS claims are unconstitutional.
1.3 Delays at Issue
The evidence and data submitted about delays in this case concern two periods: the last quarter of 2016 (October to December 2016), and the period from January 1, 2017 to October 18, 2017. The filings for this motion focus mainly on the 2017 period.
The statistics that CNS and OCSC have provided are for the most part representations of the same OCSC data. How they represent that data, though, differs greatly. According to OCSC, 95.97% of new unlimited civil complaints during the relevant 2017 period, and 89.2% of new unlimited civil complaints in the last quarter of 2016, were available within eight business hours. (Mot., Dkt. No. 75 at 7.) By contrast, according to CNS, during the relevant 2017 period, 56.9% of new unlimited civil complaints wеre delayed one to thirteen days, and during the last quarter of 2016, nearly half of the new unlimited civil complaints were delayed between one and nine days. (Opp'n, Dkt. No. 83 at 4.)
The main reason for the disparities in the parties' statistics is that OCSC and CNS disagree about the appropriate time unit to calculate delays. OCSC quantifies delays in business hours, reflecting its functional reality and the speed of LPS complaint review and processing. Meanwhile, CNS quantifies delays in terms of calendar days, reflecting its own business reality tied to newsworthiness. Then, the parties' views on how to count delays that begin or end before 8 a.m. or after 4 p.m. further separates each side's numbers. With OCSC's numbers, whether hours before 8 a.m. or after 4 p.m. count as business hours may depend on whether complaints were submitted or released during those hours. Indeed it's clear that the hour when a complaint is released always counts as a business hour, even if the complaint is released before 8 a.m. or after 4 p.m. But what's unclear is whether the hour when a complaint is submitted counts as the first business hour and starts the clock when the complaint is submitted between 4 and 5 p.m. As for CNS's numbers, they reflect CNS's position that when a complaint is released after 4 p.m. (including before 5
For the purpose of this motion, the Court won't adopt the time unit of one party or the other, instead adapting its description of delay lengths to the arguments presented. So some basic reference points may be useful before moving on.
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1.4 CNS Allegations and Lawsuits
CNS argues that the public has a First Amendment right of access to new civil complaints that attaches as soon as the complaints are submitted to or received by a court. The parties refer to that argument for short as a right of "access upon receipt," "same-day access," or "immediate access." The Court will use those expressions interchangeably. CNS further argues that the delays at OCSC are the product of what CNS calls OCSC's "process-first policy," and that they impermissibly restrict the public's First Amendment right of access.
Conversely, OCSC argues that the public's First Amendment right of access to new complaints doesn't attach as soon as a court receives a complaint and that at any rate, courts may take a reasonable amount of time to review and process complaints before making available to the public those complaints that may be released.
CNS filed this lawsuit on January 24, 2017. Before and since then, CNS has sued multiple state trial court clerks in federal district courts across the country, seemingly based on the same legal arguments it makes here. Each case apparently involves courts where CNS reporters have been unable to access newly submitted complaints on the same day that the courts receive them, and where the clerks refused to change their practices when CNS asked them. In particular, before suing OCSC's Clerk, CNS sued the Clerk of the Ventura County Superior Court. Courthouse News Service v. Planet , CV 11-08083 SJO (FFMx). That lawsuit produced two Ninth Circuit opinions impacting the legal analysis in this case: Courthouse News Service v. Planet ("Planet I "),
Mindful of those decisions, the Court denied CNS's motion for a preliminary injunction last year. (Dkt. No. 56.) Since then, CNS filed an interlocutory appeal of that denial with the Ninth Circuit. That appeal is still pending. And OCSC filed the pending motion for summary judgment with this Court. When the summary judgment motion, oppоsition, and reply were filed, the Court granted applications to file amici curiae briefs supporting each party, and requested supplemental briefing. (Dkt. No. 106.) Supplemental briefs and rebuttals were timely filed. (Dkt. Nos. 111, 112, 115, 116.) A special hearing date was set on the Court's calendar, separate from the
2. PRELIMINARY MATTERS
2.1 Jurisdiction
CNS's opposition to OCSC's motion for summary judgment opens on a claim that the Court lacks jurisdiction to rule on the motion because of CNS's interlocutory appeal. In its tentative order, the Court explained that CNS misinterpreted the relevant case law, and that the Court does have jurisdiction under Plotkin v. Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co. ,
2.2 Evidence and Objections
CNS mentioned in a footnote that it thought OCSC's motion was premature. (Opp'n, Dkt. No. 83 at 5 n.4.) But CNS didn't follow the requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(d), which allows a court to delay ruling on a summary judgment motion "[i]f a nonmovant shows by affidavit or declaration that, for specified reasons, it cannot present facts essential to justify its opposition." And CNS has been collecting evidence on courts' complaint access practices for some time. As CNS itself says, 36 of the declarations it submitted here were first filed two years ago, on March 14, 2016, in one of the other similar lawsuits initiated by CNS. (See Dkt. No. 12 at 1-5.) In any event, none of the Court's dispositive rulings depend on information that CNS would have obtained through discovery.
The parties raised voluminous issues concerning the evidence and filings for this motion. These issues were addressed in over seven pages of the Court's tentative order. At the hearing, the parties did not wish to discuss the Court's rulings on those matters, which remain in place. Now the Court will proceed directly to the merits, only occasionally mentioning evidentiary issues when necessary.
3. LEGAL STANDARD
Summary judgment is appropriate where the record, read in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, shows that "there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and ... the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a) ; see Celotex Corp. v. Catrett ,
The burden is first on the moving party to show an absence of a genuine issue of material fact. Celotex ,
4. ANALYSIS
The Court's analysis will focus on binding law, ignoring any unhelpful and sometimes distasteful comments attempting to demean one party or the other or to pit courts against each other. For clarity, the Court's analysis will start with an overview of the substantive law, then address the parties' arguments under the three frameworks in their briefs, and finally summarize the conclusions of the analysis.
4.1 Free Speech and Qualified Right of Access Under the First Amendment
4.1.1 U.S. Protection of Free Speech
Perhaps one of the most remarkable features of American government is its robust protection of free speech. By its very terms, the First Amendment is formidable. "Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press ...." U.S. Const. amend. I. While it's well settled that this "unconditional phrasing ... was not intended to protect every utterance," see Roth v. United States ,
This is particularly true concerning political speech. "Speech concerning public affairs is more than self-expression; it is the essence of self-government." Connick v. Myers ,
Overall, freedom of speech and of the press under the U.S. Constitution is impressive in both its strength and its breadth. See In re Anonymous Online Speakers ,
4.1.2 Qualified Rights of Access
An important corollary of the right to free speech is the right to receive information. That right may be thought of as a shield, a negative right to be free from governmental interference. Or it may be thought of as a sword, a positive or affirmative right requiring the government to act in some circumstances. The shield here protects the right of the intended recipient of information to get that information. "Customarily, First Amendment guarantees are interposed to protect communication between speaker and listener." Richmond Newspapers v. Virginia ,
Nor does a right of access exist only under the First Amendment. It may exist under one of at least three sources. Depending on the source, the scope and application of the resulting right may differ. Different rights of access may overlap. But no right of access is absolute. And all rights of access stem from some notion of public oversight over governmental affairs.
First, there's a common law right of access, since "the courts of this country recognize a general right to inspect and copy public records and documents, including judicial records and documents." Nixon v. Warner Commc'ns ,
Second, there are statutory rights of access to government records and documents, normally accompanied by exemptions. These rights may be found in both federal statutes such as the Freedom of Information Act, originally enacted in 1966 and commonly called "FOIA," and state statutes like the California Public Records Act, or "CPRA," originally enacted in 1968. These statutory rights of access embody the same sort of concerns as the common law right of access. "FOIA is often explained as a means for citizens to know what their Government is up to," reflecting "a structural necessity in a real democracy." Nat'l Archives & Records Admin. v. Favish ,
Finally, there are constitutionally protected rights of access. For example, since the passage of Proposition 59 in 2004, the California Constitution expressly protects "the right of access to information concerning the conduct of the people's business." Cal. Const. art. I, § 3, subdiv. (b)(1). And the United States Supreme Court also found a qualified right of access implied in the First Amendment to the United States Constitution in Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia ,
4.1.3 Supreme Court Recognition of a First Amendment Right of Access
The Supreme Court has generally been reluctant to find implied affirmative constitutional rights, which may allow citizens to demand action by the government. For example, the Supreme Court stressed the difference between affirmative and negative rights in Houchins v. KQED, Inc. ,
It actually wasn't until 1980 that the Supreme Court recognized the existence of a constitutional right of access under the First Amendment in Richmond Newspapers , which Justice Stevens described as "a watershed case."
Still, the foundation of the First Amendment right to access in the "popular, yet constitutionally novel, theory of self-government" was already apparent in the plurality opinion of Chief Justice Burger, and even more so in the concurring opinion of Justice Brennan, "which was subsequently to become the actual touchstone for the new doctrine of access." See Eugene Cerruti, "Dancing in the Courthouse": The First Amendment Right of Access Opens a New Round , 29 U. RICH. L. REV. 237, 271-72 (1995). Both opinions stressed the historical and practical importance of open criminal trials. In particular, they noted the tradition of open criminal trials going back to English common law, the positive effect of open trials on the administration and fairness of the trials themselves, the
However, because "the stretch of this protection is theoretically endless," it must be invoked with discriminаtion and temperance. For so far as the participating citizen's need for information is concerned, "[there] are few restrictions on action which could not be clothed by ingenious argument in the garb of decreased data flow."
All rights of access thus stem from notions of government legitimacy and informed citizen participation in and oversight of governmental affairs. See Favish ,
So courts have determined whether a specific qualified right of access exists using the two-part test from Press-Enterprise II , commonly referred to as the "experience and logic test." See United States v. Index Newspapers LLC ,
4.1.4 Development of the First Amendment Right of Access
The development of the First Amendment right of access has happened on a right-by-right basis. So far, the Supreme Court and the Ninth Circuit have found a First Amendment right of access in the context of many criminal proceedings. See Planet I ,
The specific issue of a qualified First Amendment right of access to civil complaints was first addressed in the Ninth Circuit by Planet I . Although the court acknowledged that the Ninth Circuit had "not expressly held that the First Amendment right of access encompasses civil cases," it found that CNS had "alleged a cognizable injury" under the First Amendment caused by a "denial of timely access to newly filed complaints." See
4.1.5 Qualified Right to "Timely" Access Complaints
The Planet I panel didn't define "timely," instead remanding the case for the district court to make that determination in the first instance. Planet I ,
To decide whether there's a genuine issue of material fact about the constitutionality of the delays in complaint access at OCSC, the Court's first task is therefore to determine the definition of "timely" access, within the framework laid out in Planet I . The parties urge the Court to determine the meaning of timeliness from one of three tests: (1) the experience and logic test from Press-Enterprise II , (2) the strict scrutiny test from Leigh , or (3) the time, place, and manner regulation from Ward . Yet although courts applying these tests have sometimes mentioned delays they found acceptable or unacceptable, the Court isn't aware of any binding case that applies any of the three tests to define "timely" access. Nor have the parties cited any. At the hearing, OCSC strongly argued that the Press-Enterprise II test was the appropriate framework for the Court's analysis, relying on California First Amendment Coalition v. Woodford ,
Accordingly, the Court discusses the application and limitations of each test in the next sections. The Court's analysis is briefly summarized as follows. When a right of access attaches under Press-Enterprise II , a presumption of openness applies. Doe ,
Before going further, one more observation is in order. When imposing affirmative obligations on the government in the First Amendment context, costs become more relevant in a way not sufficiently reviewed in the extensive history of defensive First Amendment rights. The relatively new right of access case law has yet to fully articulate the balance between costs and access. Still, how much it costs to provide access that didn't previously exist is a relevant consideration. See, e.g. , Barber v. Conradi ,
4.2 The Experience and Logic of Timely Access to New Complaints
4.2.1 The Experience and Logic Test
Chief Justice Burger's majority opinion in Press-Enterprise II , bearing clear marks of both his and Justice Brennan's opinions in Richmond Newspapers , laid out a test to determine whether a qualified right of access attaches under the First Amendment. That test considers two distinct but interrelated elements.
First, because a tradition of accessibility implies the favorable judgment of experiences, we have considered whether the place and process have historically been open to the press and general public .... Second, in this setting the Court has traditionally considered whether public access plays a significant positive role in the functioning of the particular process in question.
There are substantial similarities between the documents at issue in this case and the documents to which a qualified First Amendment right of access attaches pursuant to our holdings in CBS [Inc. v. United States Dist. Court for Cent. Dist. ,(9th Cir. 1985) ] and Copley Press . On the other hand, when we decided CBS and Copley Press , electronic filing had not made court documents so easily accessible, nor had the CCACM [Committee on Court Administration and Case Management of the Judicial Conference of the United States] released its report finding that new inmates are often required by other prisoners to produce copies of their case dockets to prove they did not cooperate with the government .... 765 F.2d 823
The CCACM Report highlights the grave threats faced by defendants who cooperate with the government in the era of remote electronic access to court files ....
Doe ,
4.2.2 Insufficient Experience of Same-Day Access to New Complaints
The "experience" prong of the Press-Enterprise II test requires a strong tradition over time and throughout the country. Following the relevant case law, the Court uses "experience" and "tradition" interchangeably. The Supreme Court has taken a firm position regarding the geographical scope of experience, reminding courts to "not look to the particular practice of any one jurisdiction, but instead to the experience in that type or kind of hearing throughout the United States." El Vocero de P.R. v. Puerto Rico ,
To start, CNS's evidence doesn't concern practices throughout the United States. CNS's argument about the extent of same-day access in the nation relies on its "Additional Material Facts" (or "AMFs") 226 through 230. (Opp'n, Dkt.
What's missing from CNS's evidence is particularly telling here. After all, CNS itself publicly claims that it "provides coverage of more than 2,000 courts around the country, spanning all 50 states." About Us , COURTHOUSE NEWS , https://www.courthousenews.com/about-us/[https://bit.ly/2nYP4EZ] (last visited May 7, 2018). (See also Girdner Decl., Dkt. No. 86 at ¶ 5.) Evidence of a nationwide practice, if it existed, should therefore be readily available to CNS.
In fact, a closer look at CNS reporter declarations reveals a mixed experience of access to new complaints. Two examples illustrate this point well. First, CNS reporter Sergio Lopez, describing his experience at the San Diego Superior Court, stated that, "the great majority of complaints that I see are at least one day old, and a substantial number of complaints are two days old or older. On average, I receive same-day access to only about one-quarter of new civil unlimited jurisdiction complaints." (Ex. 9, Dkt. No. 12 at ¶ 16.) Second, another CNS reporter, David Lee, said that in the six months before his declaration, he had only "been able to see approximately half of the new civil petitions on the same day they are received by the court for filing" at the Dallas State Court. (Ex. 18, Dkt. No. 12-1 at ¶ 16.) AMFs 226 through 230 don't cite to these portions of the declarations. And Texas is actually one of the three states whose federal courts, but not state courts, CNS relies on to support its experience argument. (See AMF 226, Dkt. No. 85 at 64; AMF 230, Dkt. No. 85 at 66.) So aside from highlighting the limits of the experience CNS discusses, these two examples further suggest that the omissions in CNS's court survey were deliberate, and that over half the country doesn't provide the type of access CNS seeks. The Court therefore finds no tradition of same-day access to new complaints.
4.2.3 Unconvincing "Logic" of Same-Day Access to New Complaints
Moving on to the next prong of the Press-Enterprise II test, CNS's claimed logic of access upon receipt is easily dismissed. Indeed CNS seems to disregard, or at least fails to acknowledge, the fact that the term "logic" is a shorthand for the issue of "whether public access plays a significant positive role in the functioning of the particular process in question." See Index Newspapers LLC ,
But, mindful of the interest in openness central to this case, the Court will say a few words about the arguments that CNS does make in its logic section. In CNS's view, three interests justify access to new complaints upon receipt: (1) newsworthiness, (2) accuracy of reporting, and (3)
First , CNS's main argument for a right of access upon receipt concerns the newsworthiness of stories about new complaints. (See Dkt. No. 83 at 13-14; Dkt. No. 112 at 2-3, 7.) But newsworthiness has no effect on whether or when a right of access attaches. CNS cites some opinions that mention both a right of access and the value of timely reporting, but those opinions consider the interests of the public and the press in contemporaneous access only after determining that a right of access attaches. See, e.g. , Co. Doe v. Pub. Citizen ,
Second , CNS mentions accuracy of reporting as an interest to support its position. (Opp'n, Dkt. No. 83 at 13.) This asserted interest is further developed in CNS's amici brief and additional material facts. (See RCFP Amici Br., Dkt. No 41-1 at 9-10; AMFs 33 & 36, Dkt. No. 85 at 16-17.) Like newsworthiness, accuracy of reporting is insufficient to recognize the existence of a right of access. Still, the Court naturally agrees that information directly from the source is more reliable than second-hand information. (See RCFP Amici Br., Dkt. No 41-1 at 9-10.) But when the source is a complaint, the Court isn't convinced that the source itself is necessarily very reliable. The fact that "complaints are at least bound by rules of civil procedure" and the hope that they're "confined to the factual and legal issues involved" does little to improve the trustworthiness of complaints, as the Court knows only too well. (See Drechsel Decl., Dkt. No. 12, Ex. 8 at ¶ 27.) Just as unpersuasive is the argument that, "Immediately [sic] knowledge of a complaint also means a journalist will have the opportunity to seek out a response from the defendant even before any legal answer is filed, adding vital balance and completeness from the outset." (See ibr.US_Case_Law.Schema.Case_Body:v1" id="p865" href="#p865" data-label="865" data-citation-index="1" class="page-label">*865
It also hasn't escaped the Court's attention that there's nothing to support CNS's asserted concerns about accuracy, information manipulation, or bias. (See, e.g. , Girdner Decl., Dkt. No. 86 at ¶¶ 55-56, 59; Drechsel Decl., Dkt. No. 12, Ex. 8 at ¶¶ 27-28.) To the contrary, all that CNS's evidence on this matter shows is discontent with not being the first to report, with missing an exclusive, or with receiving subscriber complaints. (See, e.g. , Girdner Decl., Dkt. No. 86 at ¶¶ 51, 56-58 & Exs. 4-6; Frez Decl., Dkt. No. 12, Ex. 9 at ¶ 17.) For example, CNS relies heavily on the Miller lawsuit against Knott's Berry Farm over the safety of its log water ride. (See Girdner Decl., Dkt. No. 86 at ¶ 57 & Ex. 4.) Let's assume for now that the statements in the Girdner declaration about that lawsuit were entirely admissible. Still, CNS's own evidence shows that CNS's problem with the coverage of the Miller lawsuit is really that the Los Angeles Times "beat its rival of old" (the Orange County Register) and CNS itself to the story. (See
Third , CNS contends that a right of access on receipt promotes informed public discussion about potentially important complaints. The First Amendment right of access unquеstionably serves to protect the "free discussion of governmental affairs," and reporting on complaints may assist in the "informed public discussion of ongoing judicial proceedings." See Planet I ,
To start, a complaint is not in itself a judicial proceeding. CNS asserts that "the filing of new complaints have [sic] long been treated as a 'judicial proceeding,' " relying on Campbell v. N.Y. Evening Post, Inc. ,
Yet when a complaint is first submitted, courts have no immediate role to play unless the complaint is accompanied by some specific request, like a temporary restraining order. Put differently, the courts aren't acting as "umpires," let alone "lawmakers" in "a coordinate branch of government " upon submission of a complaint. See
Still, complaints are critical to the judicial process in many ways. Whether a complaint serves as the impetus for important litigation or is voluntarily dismissed before any real action occurs, there is important information to learn from complaints. But the significance of a complaint develops after its submission. Thus the interest in "informed public discussion of ongoing judicial proceedings" isn't triggered by the mere submission of a complaint to a court. See Planet I ,
Overall, the most effective way to illustrate the weakness of CNS's third argument is likely with CNS's Orange County Reports. After all, those reports, which are "emailed each weekday evening to about 275 subscribers," are where CNS features its daily coverage of new OCSC complaints. (See Dkt. No. 85 at 6; Dkt. No. 86 at ¶ 7.) And CNS has conveniently submitted "[t]rue and correct copies of representative examples of Orange County Reports from 2017." (Mendoza Decl., Dkt. No. 88 at ¶ 4 & Ex. 1) The reports begin with an introductory paragraph mentioning the readers' "firm," confirming that CNS's audience is lawyers rather than the public at large. More importantly, the reports lack much of the information required for informed discussion of ongoing judicial proceedings among any members of public, even lawyers. Each entry includes the parties' name, the date of filing, the case number, and counsel's name if any. But the descriptions of the cases are often very short, sometimеs so short that it's unclear what reading the complaint contributed to the report. The most detailed entries describe a case in a few lines, sometimes even with a link to the complaint. But others look more like this case description: "Collections. Defendants owe $692,000 for goods." (Mendoza Decl., Dkt. No. 88, Ex. 1 at 24.) And often, the case description is just a word or two: "car collision," "unlawful detainer," or "employment." (See, e.g. , id. at 24-25, 30, 42-43, 52.) So it's hard to see CNS's lofty First Amendment arguments in its Orange County Reports. What's apparent is something else.
Lawyers in private firms are likely very familiar with reports like the Orange County Reports, and know that their firms don't subscribe to them to foster an "informed public discussion of ongoing judicial proceedings." See Planet I ,
To sum up, access to new complaints upon receipt doesn't play a significant positive role in civil proceedings. Some members of the public could undoubtedly personally benefit from learning about complaints immediately. And any resulting public discussion about new complaints would likely be entitled to sturdy protection as political speech. But the right of access exists to protect specific interests, and same-day access to new complaints doesn't involve those interests.
4.2.4 Meaningless Experience and Logic of Access to New Complaints After Undefined Time for Review
OCSC argues extensively that there's no experience and logic of same-day access to new complaints-an argument that the Court agrees with-but OCSC doesn't present a coherent argument of its own about experience and logic of timely access to new complaints. Regarding experience, OCSC contends that many states only provide access within several business days in compliance with "a 'reasonable' or 'as promptly as practical' guideline," or within a timeline that court clerks may set in their discretion. (Mot., Dkt. No. 75 at 12, 14.) As for logic, OCSC essentially argues that access should occur after the time required to protect the privacy interests of the litigants. (See id. at 15-17.)
None of OCSC's arguments help determine what timely access to complaints affirmatively means. For one thing, the extent of the experience that OCSC mentions here is no more compelling than the experience CNS discussed. But more importantly, because of all the variations in the standards OCSC mentions, the Court can only conclude from those standards that access to new complaints delayed for more than several business days would likely not be timely. That's at best minimally useful to the Court's analysis. And at any rate, it doesn't answer the question: What does timely access mean?
4.2.5 Significance of the Experience and Logic Analysis
To summarize, the experience and logic analysis confirms the conclusion implied in Planet I -that the public has a right of access to complaints submitted to the courts. See
On the one hand, the experience and logic test shows that the public doesn't have a First Amendment right to access new civil complaints on the same day they are submitted to the courts. Strict scrutiny isn't triggered just because access to complaints is delayed beyond the day the complaints are submitted. Quite
On the other hand, the experience and logic test establishes that courts don't have a discretionary right to keep complaints from the public until such a time as the court clerk is ready or willing to release them. So courts aren't necessarily immune from liability until the time they decide to release complaints to public access either. And the question of how long delays can last while still being constitutional remains.
To continue exploring this question, the Court must turn to the tests used for restrictions on First Amendment rights. Under the applicable case law, strict scrutiny is the applicable test for dеnials of First Amendment rights, while the time, place, and manner framework is appropriate for mere delays. See Planet I ,
4.3 Delays Versus Denials of First Amendment Rights
CNS contends that even if "timely" access doesn't require same-day access under Press-Enterprise II , strict scrutiny still applies to one-day delays because all delays in accessing new complaints act as "blanket access denials," even if those denials are "limited in time." (See Opp'n, Dkt. No. 83 at 17.) Indeed CNS claims that, in the Ninth Circuit, delays of only 48 hours under Associated Press v. U.S. Dist. Court ,
A closer look at the two cases that CNS relies on reveals deep flaws in CNS's reasoning. Associated Press involved criminal proceedings that were already highly publicized when the district court issued a blanket order requiring all documents to be filed under seal.
Reviewing these cases shows that Associated Press didn't really involve a delay of 48 hours and Brooklier didn't involve delayed access to the suppression hearing at all. In both cases, the public was categorically cut off from ongoing judicial proceedings-even though a different right of access could be exercised at a later time in Brooklier , and delayed access to parts of the proceedings may have been a possibility in Associated Press . The 24 hours mentioned in Brooklier didn't represent a delay in access to the suppression hearing, just an ultimately inaccurate estimate of the delay for the release of the hearing transcript. But a hearing is a live event. The public cannot attend a hearing after it's over. And a written transcript isn't а perfect substitute, nor is it meant to be. Even if the hearing transcript had been released within 24 hours as planned, it wouldn't have enabled the public to, among other things, see facial expressions or hear tone. So since the hearing was closed to the public, access to the hearing was necessarily denied, not delayed. Associated Press , on the other hand, did involve the possibility of delayed access to certain documents. But as the Associated Press court stressed, those delays weren't relevant to its analysis.
Besides proposing dubious interpretations of case law, CNS-using its words-argues that all delays in releasing complaints "deny" access because the "filing" of a complaint is a "contemporaneous event" such that there are no adequate alternative channels to access the information in a complaint submitted to a court. (See Dkt. No. 83 at 24; Dkt. No. 112 at 6.) The Court will address those arguments in a later section. Suffice to say for now that the Court finds them unconvincing.
To the contrary, the Court sees nothing here to equate any delays in complaint access with access denials. So the Court concludes that strict scrutiny doesn't apply to all delays between a complaint's submission and its release to the public. The Court's analysis here, following the parties' arguments, has focused on very short delays. But to be completely clear, the Court makes no determination regarding whether longer delays could ever act as an access denial.
4.4 Time, Place, and Manner Restrictions on Access to New Complaints
The First Amendment "does not guarantee the right to communicate one's views at all times and places or in any manner that may be desired." Heffron v. Int'l Soc. for Krishna Consciousness, Inc. ,
First, the delays must not be the product of a content-based practice, and the extent of the delays must not have been set by the court based on the content of complaints. See Ward ,
Second, the existence of the delays must stem from narrowly tailored efforts to serve a significant government interest. See Ward ,
Finally, ample alternative channels must remаin available to obtain the information in new complaints during the delays. See Ward ,
The following sections address the parties' arguments under these rules. Overall, the Court finds that material issues prevent the Court from determining if all of the relevant delays satisfy the time, place, and manner rules.
4.4.2 Content-Neutral Practice
Nothing suggests (and CNS doesn't make the argument) that OCSC sets the length of delays in each case depending on the contents of a complaint. But CNS does say that complaint access at OCSC during the relevant 2017 period "were longer for the most significant cases," meaning for "complex cases." (Opp'n, Dkt. No. 83 at 4.) Putting aside the parties' different methods for calculating delays, greater delays in complex cases doesn't mean that the delays are the product of a content-based policy. "A law is content-based rather than content-neutral if 'the main purpose in enacting it was to suppress or exalt speech of a certain content, or it differentiates based on the content of speech on its face.' " Long Beach Area Peace Network v. City of Long Beach ,
4.4.3 OCSC's Significant Interest in Protecting Litigant Privacy
That protecting privacy is an important government interest is beyond debate. It's even enshrined in the California Constitution. "All people ... have inalienable rights. Among these are ... privacy." Cal. Const. art. I, § 1. It's also well established that there may be sensitive information in court records, which can cause "real" harm if in the wrong hands. See Edenfield ,
Still, CNS has made several comments questioning OCSC's interest in protecting privacy. In general, CNS doesn't seem convinсed that courts should be concerned with protecting private information in complaints, stating that "filers are responsible to protect confidential information," and that the risks that confidential complaints may be inadvertently disclosed "inhere in our open court system." (Opp'n, Dkt. No. 83 at 13 n.17, 20.) Regarding OCSC specifically, CNS remarks that OCSC hasn't produced any evidence to show that inadvertent disclosures have in fact caused harm or violated privacy. But none of these arguments detract from OCSC's strong interest in protecting privacy.
Before explaining why, the Court will summarily address several other statements in CNS's papers that read as thinly veiled attempts to cast doubt on whether privacy concerns are behind the delays at OCSC at all. (See Opp'n, Dkt. No. 83 at 3-5.) Since it's undisputed that OCSC LPSs perform a privacy review of all complaints submitted, any argument that privacy concerns aren't really involved here is absurd, and insinuations to support that argument are unhelpful at best. With that out of the way, the Court turns back to the arguments that CNS properly raised.
First, even if the ultimate responsibility for protecting confidential information lies with the filers, courts have a general responsibility to enforce the law. After all, "filers are human and often simply make mistakes." Tom Clarke, A Contrarian View of Two Key Issues in Court Records Privacy & Access , TRENDS IN STATE COURTS 2016, 56, http://www.ncsc.org/~/media/Microsites/Files/Trends%202016/Contrarian-View-Trends-2016.ashx. Pro per litigants, who generally have no legal training, are even more likely to make mistakes.
Second, the inevitability of a risk is no reason not to try to minimize it. It's certainly not a sensible reason for the government to abandon efforts to prevent the realization of that risk when the risk carries irreversible consequences and the
Finally, CNS's argument about the lack of evidence of harm due to pre-review access is puzzling. As mentioned, the risks associated with access to certain information are well established. In some respects, those risks are particularly acute at OCSC. For example, of 58 California counties, Orange County has the second highest number of participants in the Safe at Home Program. SECRETARY OF STATE CALIFORNIA CONFIDENTIAL ADDRESS PROGRAM (SAFE AT HOME), 2016 ANNUAL REPORT (2017) , http://admin.cdn.sos.ca.gov/reports/2016/sah-annual-report.pdf. And OCSC has shown that its privacy review prevented the disclosure of confidential information in several cases. (See Dkt. No. 75-2 at Exs. A-B.)
To meet its burden, OCSC must show a risk of real harm that it alleviates to a material degree, not that OCSC itself contributed to actual harm. Therefore, the only plausible explanation for CNS's argument is that it believes that OCSC previously allowed access to complaints without any privacy screening. The declaration of CNS editor and publisher William Girder would at least suggest as much. (See Girdner Decl., Dkt. No. 86 at ¶¶ 25, 37-38.) But Girdner has no personal knowledge of the procedures that used to be in place at OCSC. And even if there were competent evidence that, around 23 years ago, the public could access complaints at OCSC before privacy review, it wouldn't necessarily follow that OCSC wouldn't be justified in refusing access until privacy review is done today , when "electronic filing [has] made court documents so easily accessible." See Doe ,
The Court therefore finds that OCSC's interest in protecting private information in complaints is significant, and that there's a reasonable "fit" between that interest and OCSC's privacy review. See Discovery Network ,
4.4.4 Readily Available Alternatives
While OCSC need not adopt the least restrictive means to protect litigant privacy, "it may not select an option that unnecessarily imposes significant burdens" on access to new complaints when "readily available," less restrictive alternatives exist.
Here, OCSC has determined that human review of newly filed complaints effectively achieves its interests in protecting litigant privacy. OCSC has explained that the reason for its current review practice is that plaintiffs don't always follow established procedures, particularly pro per litigants, whose complaints represented 26% of all new civil unlimited complaints in the relevant 2017 period. See also Tom Clarke, A Contrarian View of Two Key Issues in Court Records Privacy & Access , TRENDS IN STATE COURTS 2016, 56, http://www.ncsc.org/~/media/Microsites/Files/Trends%202016/Contrarian-View-Trends-2016.ashx. Further supporting OCSC's point, OCSC has shown that in fact numerous plaintiffs since January 2016 didn't know how to seek confidentiality or sealing. (See Dkt. No. 75-2 at Exs. A-B.) Finally, as already mentioned, "the privacy interests of defendants -like tenants in eviction proceedings-are at risk too and should not be entrusted solely to the care of plaintiffs." (OCBA Amici Br., Dkt. No. 105 at 25) (emphasis in original.)
Considering OCSC's concerns and objectives, CNS hasn't shown that OCSC has chosen to ignore adequatе, readily available alternatives. The alternatives CNS suggests are either that OCSC create and adopt a new filing system, or that it require that confidential complaints be submitted manually. (Dkt. No. 116 at 5.) Yet there's no evidence that either alternative would achieve OCSC's interests as effectively as OCSC's existing practice. In fact, both options still rely on plaintiffs to know the proper procedure for filing a confidential complaint, which is what OCSC seeks to avoid. What's more, as OCSC correctly points out, the "creation and adoption of an entirely new filing system can hardly be characterized as 'readily available.' " (Reply, Dkt. No. 97 at 18.)
CNS's arguments and supposed evidence don't compel a different conclusion. For example, CNS relies on different filing systems adopted by other courts and asserts those systems adequately protect confidential complaints. (Opp'n, Dkt. No. 83 at 21.) But as already mentioned, whether all of those systems effectively protect private information has been questioned. See Doe ,
The same is true of CNS's arguments based on the purported expert declaration by Craig Rosenberg, Ph.D. To start, most of that declaration is inadmissible. OCSC objected on multiple grounds to essentially every part of Rosenberg's declaration that supposedly offered an expert opinion. (Dkt. No. 100, Objections Nos. 46-52.) As explained in the tentative order, the Court sustained all of those objections except one (Dkt. No. 100, Objections Nos. 46-47, 49-52), either because Rosenberg failed to establish a sufficient foundation for his opinion (see Rosenberg Decl., Dkt. No. 89 at ¶¶ 5, 9, 11), or because Rosenberg didn't sufficiently establish his expertise in the relevant area of programming (see
4.4.5 Extent of the Burden on the Right of Access
CNS contends that OCSC may not delay access to over 14,000 complaints a year when so few cases raise privacy concerns. (See Dkt. No. 116 at 5 n.6.) Evaluating that argument and assessing the extent of the burden imposed by OCSC's privacy review practice requires the Court to answer two related questions: (1) How much access does the practice actually restrict? (2) Does the practice restrict substantially more access than necessary?
The answer to the first question turns on the notion of access restriction-or untimely access. Two observations are therefore in order. First, the fact that all new complaints at OCSC are subject to privacy review doesn't mean that access to all new complaints is untimely. And second, only untimely delays in complaint access create access restrictions.
So at the outset, OCSC doesn't restrict access to all 14,000 or so complaints it receives each year. As the Court already explained, the Press-Enterprise II experience and logic analysis showed that the public doesn't have a right of access to complaints on the same day that they are filed. This means that, whether or not delays of more than one day may ultimately be considered access restrictions, the Court must begin by separating delays of no more than one day from longer delays. Yet the Court cannot complete this preliminary step. Looking only at the statistics CNS presented, 43.1% of all new complaints are made available on the same day that they are submitted, and 88.9% of complaints are made available within one day. (See Mendoza Decl., Dkt. No. 88 at ¶ 25.) But there's a significant problem with CNS's statistics, which the Court mentioned early on: they treat access to complaints released after 4 p.m. on one day as delayed until the next calendar day.
The statistical importance of the delays in accessing complaints released between 4 and 5 p.m. is nonnegligible. The parties agree that OCSC made 1,473 unlimited civil complaints available to the public between 4 and 5 p.m. during the relevant period, from January 1, 2017 to October 18, 2017. (See, e.g. , Girdner Decl., Dkt. No. 86 at ¶ 124; OCSC Reply to AMF at 32.) So at least 10% of the delays here turn on the issue of access between 4 and 5 p.m.
With that in mind, the issue with the way that CNS statistics treat complaints released after 4 p.m. as delayed until thе next day is that CNS hasn't made any argument to justify that treatment in its brief. CNS appears to draw an arbitrary line at 4 p.m. because it cannot access the free terminals inside the clerk's office between 4 and 5 p.m., so it would have to use OCSC's paying online services to see those complaints before the next day. But time, place, and manner cases explain that access that's more expensive than what the public wants may be acceptable. See Santa Monica Nativity Scenes Comm. ,
And since this determination affects the foundation of CNS's statistical delay data, that data is flawed and unreliable. Meanwhile, the Court can't find numbers beyond dispute about one day delays in OCSC's statistics. Using OCSC's methods, a one day delay might be counted in the "within 8 business hours" or "within 24 business hours" categories, while complaints released "within 8 business hours" may be released up to several calendar days after submission.
In short, the parties' statistics present material issues of fact regarding how much access to new complaints is restricted by OCSC's privacy review. The first question raised in this section must therefore remain unanswered for now. And the Court's analysis of the extent of the burden imposed by OCSC's practice will end here.
4.4.6 Ample Alternative Channels
Finally, the Court turns to the issue of whether sufficient alternative channels exist to obtain information in new сomplaints during the delays that may occur at OCSC. CNS argues that there cannot be any alternative channels of access while access to the actual complaints is delayed. (Opp'n, Dkt. No. 83 at 24-25.) The Court disagrees with this categorical position.
CNS makes two arguments to support its position. One, access to new complaints enables CNS "to engage in '[i]mmediate speech ... on immediate issues,' " with the immediate issues being "the day's new civil actions." (Opp'n, Dkt. No. 83 at 24.) And two, the submission of a new complaint is a "contemporaneous event." (CNS Suppl. Br., Dkt. No. 112 at 6.)
The first argument is unconvincing for many reasons already mentioned at other points in this order, including the improper conflation of free speech and right of access law. Here in particular, CNS relies on the type of free speech rules that makes little sense in the context of access to documents. For example, CNS quotes strong language from NAACP v. City of Richmond ,
Parades are public events. Participatory enthusiasm is vital to their success. The size of a crowd and its enthusiasm for a cause may generate sufficient passion to sway the undecided. Thus, simple delay may permanently vitiate the expressive content of a demonstration. A spontaneous parade expressing a viewpoint on a topical issue will almost inevitably attract more particiрants and more press attention, and generate more emotion, than the "same" parade 20 days later. The later parade can never be the same. Where spontaneity is part of the message, dissemination delayed is dissemination denied.
City of Richmond ,
id="p877" href="#p877" data-label="877" data-citation-index="1" class="page-label">*877
As for CNS's second argument, the submission of a complaint to a court is no more a "contemporaneous event" than is the submission of any other document to any other branch of government. CNS's attempt to make complaint submissions seem more "eventful" than the submission of other official documents ignores the important role that administrative documents, for example, may play in public affairs. (See Dkt. No. 112 at 6; Dkt. No. 115 at 4-6.) At any rate, unlike the submission of any document, a contemporaneous event is inherently fleeting independently from the fleeting value of the news story covering the event. To use examples from cases already discussed, delays may change the nature or message of an event, like in City of Richmond , see
Still, the Court cannot conclusively say on this motion that adequate alternative channels to receive information in new complaints exist no matter how long delays last. The Court is mindful of sadly famous controversies, like those surrounding the confidential settlements in the Firestone tire cases and clergy sexual misconduct cases, where defendants determined to keep certain lawsuits from the public sought to quickly settle all new cases with a protective order before any word of the lawsuits got out. See Walter W. Heiser, Public Access to Confidential Discovery: The California Perspective , 35 W. ST. U. L. REV. 55, 55-57 (2007) ; Mike France, The Hidden Culprit: The U.S. Legal System , BUSINESSWEEK 42 (Sept. 18, 2000). These notorious examples are one reminder among others that courts should not be too quick to dismiss concerns about parties using privacy protections to cheat or abuse the judicial system. But considering the state of the evidence on this issue, the Court cannot decide now whether those concerns have any bearing on this case.
4.5 Conclusion
Considering all the relevant tests, the Court thus reaches the four conclusions that follow.
1. The public doesn't have a right to access new civil complaints on the same day OCSC receives them.
2. When a complaint is released to the public on OCSC's website, access to that complaint is neither delayed nor denied, even if the public no longer has access to OCSC's free terminals.
3. Issues of material fact prevent the Court from determining if or when delays longer than one day may violate the First Amendment right of access.
4. Issues of material fact prevent the Court from determining that no delay involved in this case violates the First Amendment right of access.
5. DISPOSITION
The Court GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART OCSC's motion for summary judgment as previously explained. (Dkt. No. 75.)
It is so ORDERED.
