ESPN, INC v MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY
Docket No. 326773
COURT OF APPEALS OF MICHIGAN
Submitted August 5, 2015. Decided August 18, 2015.
311 MICH APP 662
Leave to appeal denied 498 Mich 957.
The Court of Appeals held:
The trial court did not err by ruling that the names of the suspects identified in the incident reports were not exempt from disclosure under FOIA. Under
Affirmed.
Honigman Miller Schwartz and Cohn LLP (by James E. Stewart, Eric J. Eggan, and Mitra Jafary-Hariri) for ESPN, Inc.
Before: SAWYER, P.J., and M. J. KELLY and SHAPIRO, JJ.
Per CURIAM. In this dispute over the application of the privacy exemption to Michigan‘s Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), see
I. BASIC FACTS
In September 2014, ESPN submitted a request under FOIA to the University asking it to provide ESPN with incident reports involving a list of student-athletes over a specific period of time. The University produced two sets of records, but redacted the names and identifying information of the suspects, victims, and witnesses. As authority for its decision to redact the names and identifying information, the University cited the privacy exemptions set forth in
In February 2015, ESPN sued the University to obtain the records with the names of the suspects, victims, and witnesses. After holding a hearing, the trial court ordered the University to disclose the names of the suspects if they were one of the 301 student-athletes identified by ESPN in its request. The Court, however, agreed that the privacy exemption applied to the names and identifying information of the victims
II. THE PRIVACY EXEMPTION
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The University argues that the trial court erred when it determined that the names of the suspects identified in the incident reports were not exempt from disclosure under FOIA. This Court reviews de novo whether the trial court properly interpreted and applied FOIA. Herald Co, Inc v Eastern Mich Univ Bd of Regents, 475 Mich 463, 470; 719 NW2d 19 (2006). This Court reviews the trial court‘s factual findings for clear error, but reviews its discretionary determinations—such as its application of the balancing test under FOIA—for an abuse of discretion. Id. at 472. A trial court abuses its discretion when its decision falls outside the range of principled outcomes. Id.
B. ANALYSIS
The Legislature determined that a public body “may exempt” from FOIA‘s general disclosure requirement information that is “of a personal nature” if the disclosure of the personal information would “constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of an individual‘s privacy.”
The first prong of the privacy exemption will be satisfied if the information contains “‘intimate’ or ‘embarrassing’ details of an individual” because these are of a personal nature. Mich Federation of Teachers, 481 Mich at 675. Further, records containing “private or confidential information relating to a person, in addition to embarrassing or intimate details, is ‘information of a personal nature.‘” Id. at 676.
In Rataj v Romulus, 306 Mich App 735, 753; 858 NW2d 116 (2014), this Court stated that a person‘s name—standing alone—is not information of a personal nature and, on that basis, determined that the privacy exemption did not apply to the names that had been redacted from an incident report. The Court in Rataj cited three decisions for this general proposition, but did not analyze those authorities; instead, it merely concluded that the names were not information of a personal nature. Id. Moreover, to the extent that the decision in Rataj can be understood to stand for the proposition that a name can never constitute information of a personal nature, that conclusion appears to conflict with this Court‘s earlier decision in State News v Mich State Univ, 274 Mich App 558, 578; 735 NW2d 649 (2007) (holding that “people linked with a crime, whether as a perpetrator, witness, or victim, have an interest in not sharing this information with the public“), rev‘d in part on other grounds 481 Mich 692 (2008), and is inconsistent with our Supreme Court‘s
It is accurate to state that a person‘s name does not by itself provide information of a personal nature; but this is true only to the extent that the name is not associated with any personal information about the person named. In order for a name to be useful, the name must normally be associated with some other information. In the context of a police report, a person‘s name is useful because the report will contain information about the person‘s actual or purported involvement in the incident. That is, the report will associate the name with specific facts or allegations that may or may not be information of a personal nature. And, in analyzing the first prong of the test for the privacy exemption, our Supreme Court has recognized that the relevant inquiry is whether the information associated with the name is information of a personal nature.
In Mager v Dep‘t of State Police, 460 Mich 134, 135; 595 NW2d 142 (1999), the plaintiff requested that the Michigan State Police provide him with a list of the names and addresses of the persons who owned registered handguns. In determining whether the request was exempt from disclosure under the first prong of the test, the Court did not examine whether the disclosure of names alone constituted information of a personal nature; instead, it stated that the relevant inquiry was whether associating those names with “the fact of gun ownership is ‘information of a personal nature.‘” Id. at 143. The Court then held that gun ownership constituted information of a personal nature: “A citizen‘s decision to purchase and maintain firearms is a personal decision of considerable importance. We have no doubt that gun ownership is an intimate or, for some persons, potentially embarrassing detail of one‘s per-
In order to protect the privacy of the person named in a report, a public body might redact the information of a personal nature associated with the named person or, as was the case here, might redact the name of the person involved, but leave the information unredacted. Thus, the issue here is not whether the names of the suspects in the reports amount to information of a personal nature, but whether the revelation of the names when coupled with the information in the reports constitutes information of a personal nature and, if so, whether the method for protecting the private information was minimally sufficient to avoid an unwarranted invasion of privacy.
As this Court has explained, just being linked with a criminal incident is information of a personal nature: “[P]eople linked with a crime, whether as a perpetra-
The second prong asks “whether disclosure of the information at issue would constitute a clearly unwar-
The disclosure of the names of the student-athletes who were identified as suspects in the reports serves the public understanding of the operation of the University‘s police department. ESPN seeks the information to learn whether policing standards are consistent and uniform at a public institution of higher learning. The disclosure of the names is necessary to this purpose. In order to determine whether the student-athletes were treated differently from the general student population or from each other on the basis of the student-athlete‘s participation in a particular sport or the renown of the student-athlete, it is necessary to know the student-athlete‘s name and the nature of the allegations involved in the investigation. Only then can ESPN compare and contrast the information
III. CONCLUSION
On this record, we cannot conclude that the trial court abused its discretion when it balanced the public‘s interest in understanding how the University‘s police department handles criminal investigations involving student-athletes against the student-athletes’ privacy interests and determined that the balance favored disclosure. Herald Co, 475 Mich at 472. The trial court did not err when it ordered the University to disclose the names of the student-athletes at issue.
Affirmed.
SAWYER, P.J., and M. J. KELLY and SHAPIRO, JJ., concurred.
