GEORGIA HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION et al. v. LEDBETTER et al.
S90A1022
Supreme Court of Georgia
October 4, 1990
Reconsideration Denied October 24, 1990
(396 SE2d 488)
CLARKE, Chief Justice.
Rubin & Meroney, Anne E. Meroney, for appellee.
CLARKE, Chief Justice.
This case involves the Georgia Open Records Act,
Two newspapers sought JCAHO reports. The Georgia Hospital Association (GHA) resisted disclosure. Reports of DHR inspections are routinely disclosed. DHR filed the present action to obtain a ruling on whether the Georgia Open Records Act requires disclosure. The newspapers intervened in the action. The trial court granted the newspapers’ motion for summary judgment, denied GHA‘s motion for summary judgment, and ordered the reports revealed. This court granted a stay pending appeal, and appellants appealed.
1. Are the Records Exempt from Disclosure as Hospital Records Generated to Provide Peer Review?
Records generated to provide peer review are exempted from the requirement that all public records be open for inspection. These records are exempted from disclosure to further the important goals of improving health care and reducing patient mortality and morbidity through candid assessment of health care providers and facilities by peer review.
Appellants contend that the records are protected from disclosure under the Open Records Act by
Appellees respond that the reports in question are generated as part of the state‘s licensing activities rather than as peer review, argu
2. Are the Records Protected from Disclosure as Records of A Confidential Review Organization?
Appellants insist that the records are protected from disclosure as the records of a confidential review organization under
3. Are the Records Protected from Disclosure as Required by Federal Law?
Next appellants argue that the records are protected from disclosure under
The section of the federal statute relied upon by appellants concerns the use of JCAHO accreditation to certify a hospital to receive medicare funds. The section provides:
The Secretary may not disclose any accreditation survey (other than a survey with respect to a home health agency made and released to him by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals, the American Osteopathic Association, or any other national accreditation body, of an entity accredited by such body, except that the Secretary may disclose such a survey and information related to such a survey to the extent such survey and information relate to an enforcement action taken by the Secretary.
4. Are the Records Protected from Disclosure by DHR Rules?
Appellants argue that the records are protected from disclosure under
5. Was Summary Judgment Inappropriate in This Case?
Finally, appellants’ argument that summary judgment was inappropriate in this case because questions of fact remain concerning the relative importance of the public‘s need to know and the appellants’ interest in confidentiality is without merit. This balancing test first enunciated in Houston v. Rutledge, 237 Ga. 764 (229 SE2d 624) (1976), was considered in the recent case of Bd. of Regents v. Atlanta Journal & Constitution, 259 Ga. 214 (378 SE2d 305) (1989). In that case we limited application of the balancing test to those cases in which the issue was an unwarranted intrusion into an individual‘s privacy. There is no allegation that disclosure of the accreditation reports here would invade individual privacy.
Aside from the fact that the accreditation surveys do not fit into any of the categories of records exempted from disclosure, the policy underlying the Open Records Act mandates their release. Since the accreditation surveys in question were presented by the hospitals to the DHR for licensing in lieu of the hospitals’ submitting to a DHR inspection, and since DHR inspection reports on hospitals not submitting JCAHO reports are routinely disclosed under the Open Records Act, common sense dictates that the JCAHO reports used for licensing be also released. The public has a legitimate interest in the records which make up the DHR‘s hospital licensing decisions.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Smith, P. J., and Fletcher, J., who dissent.
In Houston v. Rutledge, 237 Ga. 764 (229 SE2d 624) (1976), this Court established a balancing test, requiring the judiciary to balance the interest of the public in favor of disclosure of public records against the interest of the public in favor of nondisclosure, in determining whether public records, which are not prohibited “by law” from being made available for public inspection, should be so prohibited by court order.
However,
I respectfully dissent as to Division 5 and the judgment.
I am authorized to state that Presiding Justice Smith joins in this dissent.
DECIDED OCTOBER 4, 1990 —
RECONSIDERATION DENIED OCTOBER 24, 1990.
Alston & Bird, Jack Spalding Schroder, Jr., Walter G. Elliott, for appellants.
Michael J. Bowers, Attorney General, Kathryn L. Allen, William C. Joy, Senior Assistant Attorneys General, Long, Aldridge & Norman, John L. Watkins, F. T. Davis, Jr., Dow, Lohnes & Albertson, James A. Demetry, Terrence B. Adamson, Peter C. Canfield, Jean B. Blumenfeld, for appellees.
Harman, Owen, Saunders & Sweeney, H. Andrew Owen, David C. Will, Richard L. Greene, amici curiae.
