OPINION AND ORDER
In this action brought by John Gilmore (“Gilmore”) against the United States Department of Energy (“DOE”) under the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”), 5 U.S.C. § 552, both parties now move for summary judgment. For the reasons set forth below, DOE’s motion for summary judgment is granted in part, and denied in part. Gilmore’s motion for summary judgment is denied in its entirety.
I.
On December 8, 1993, Gilmore filed a FOIA request with DOE, seeking access to all agency records pertaining to the CLER-VER conferencing technology. CLERVER was created by Sandia National Laboratories/New Mexico (“SNL”), is owned by San-dia Corporation (“Sandia”), and has been licensed to several private parties, including SunSolutions, Inc. (“Sun”). CLERVER is
By letter dated May 2, 1994, DOE denied Gilmore’s request in its entirety on the ground that (1) the software was not an agency record; (2) the other information about the software was not in DOE’s possession; and (3) the information was exempt from disclosure because it was commercially valuable. On May 27, 1994, Gilmore appealed DOE’s denial of his request. On June 29, 1994, DOE denied his appeal.
This action was filed on January 24, 1995, and an amended complaint was filed on March 2,1995. Gilmore seeks:
1. disclosure of CLERVER and related documents;
2. to enjoin DOE from denying FOIA requests for computer software on the ground that software is not an agency record;
3. a declaration that DOE’s failure to publicly define the terms “contractor” or “contractor records” renders its “contractor records” regulations null and void as applied to Gilmore and any other person without actual notice of their terms, and requiring DOE to publish definitions of these terms in the Federal Register;
4. a declaration that federal laboratories such as SNL are agencies of DOE subject to the FOIA, and that records of federal laboratories produced under their management and operations contracts with DOE are agency records subject to the FOIA that cannot be withheld under FOIA Exemption 4;
5. a declaration that DOE’s pattern and practice of failing to issue a determination of FOIA requests within the ten-day statutory period is unlawful;
6. a declaration that DOE’s failure to provide adequate information during the administrative process about -the withholding of records is unlawful; and • •
7. an award of costs and fees.
Gilmore brings these claims under the FOIA, the Administrative Procedures Act, and the Fifth Amendment of the. United States Constitution: The parties have now filed cross-motions for summary judgment.
II.
A.
“The basic purpose of the [FOIA] is to ensure an informed citizenry, vital to the functioning of a democratic society, needed to check against corruption and to hold the governors accountable to the governed.”
NLRB v. Robbins Tire & Rubber Co.,
The FOIA vests jurisdiction in federal district courts to enjoin an agency from
Under the FOIA, the term “agency” includes “any executive department, military department, Government corporation, Government controlled corporation, or other establishment in the executive branch of the Government (including the Executive Office-of the President), or any independent regulatory agency.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(f). Private organizations receiving federal financial assistance grants are not within the FOIA definition of “agency,” absent extensive, detailed, and virtually day-to-day supervision.
Forsham v. Harris,
“Records” include “all books, papers, maps, photographs, machine readable materials, or other documentary materials, regardless of physical form or characteristics made or received by an agency of the United States Government under Federal law or in connection with the transaction of public business.”
Id.
at 183,
Two requirements must be satisfied for materials to qualify as “agency records.”
United States Dep’t of Justice v. Tax Analysts,
Records of a nonageney can become agency records by contract.
Forsham,
The burden is on the agency to demonstrate that the materials sought are not agency records or have not been improperly withheld.
Tax Analysts I,
B.
1.
The Court begins by examining who was in control of CLERVER and the related CLERVER records on December 8, 1993, the date of Gilmore’s FOIA request. The contracts between DOE and Sandia for the operation of SNL provide that, subject to exceptions not relevant here, all records acquired or generated by Sandia in its, performance of the contract are the property of the government. (Index to Exs. (“Index”), Vol. II, Ex. C, app. B, art. B-XXXI at B65;
id.
Vol. I, Ex. B, ¶ H-18(a) at 16.) The contracts also provide that the government will control the rights to all intellectual property created pursuant to the contracts, but that Sandia can request that it be permitted to retain title if it intends to take reasonable
Accordingly, on December 8, 1993, the date of Gilmore’s FOIA request, the government owned all records relating to the development of CLERVER, and owned a nonexclusive license to use CLERVER itself. Sandia owned the copyright in CLERVER, which gave it the exclusive right, subject to the license retained by the government, to make copies of CLERVER and to distribute it to" the public. 17 U.S.C. § 106. Sandia also owned exclusive rights in a patented invention that is incorporated into CLER-VER; subject to a license to the government. Id.
The government does not, however, own CLERVER itself, but merely possesses a license to use it for government purposes. At least one recent ease has found that the government does not control a record for FOIA purposes if it does not have unrestricted use of it.
See Tax Analysts v. United States Dep’t of Justice,
In
Tax Analysts II,
the plaintiff had submitted a FOIA request seeking to compel the United States Department of Justice (“DOJ”) to disclose its JURIS electronic legal research database. M at 600. The DOJ refused to- disclose the portion of JURIS that was provided to it by West Publishing Company on the ground that it either was not an agency record or was confidential commercial information excluded from disclosure by FOIA Exemption 4.
Id. West
had granted the DOJ a nonexclusive license for limited use of the JURIS materials,-'which specifically provided that West remained the exclusive owner of the materials.
Id.
at 604. The court focused on the definition of “control” under the FOIA. The court found that although the Supreme Court had stated that “[b]y control, we mean that the materials have come into the agency’s possession in the legitimate conduct of its official duties,” it did not suggest that mere possession was synonymous with control.
Id at
602 (quoting
Tax Analysts I,
2.
It is undisputed that CLERVER and its related documentation were in the physical possession of Sandia on the date of Gilmore’s FOIA request. The Court turns to whether Sandia can be considered a government agency. Under the FOIA, the term “agency” includes “any executive department, military department, Government corporation, Government controlled corporation, or other establishment in the executive branch of the Government (including the Executive Office of the President), or any independent regulatory agency.” 5' U.S.C. § 552(f). At the time CLERVER was developed, Sandia was owned in its entirety by American Telephone and Telegraph Company. It is currently 100 percent owned by Lockheed Martin. Accordingly, the only definition of “agency” that might conceivably apply to Sandia is that of a government controlled corporation.
Whether an entity should be considered a government controlled corporation is determined on a case-by-ease basis.,
Irwin Mem’l Blood Bank of San Francisco Med. Society v. American Nat’l Red Cross,
In
Irwin,
the Ninth Circuit found that the American National Red Cross (“Red Cross”) was not a government controlled corporation because its employees were not considered employees of the United States, the United States does not appropriate funds for the Red. Cross, although the Red Cross receives money from government contracts and specific purpose grants, and government officials do not direct its everyday affairs.
Id.
at 1056: The court found not to be determinative the Red Cross’s use of government buildings, the requirement that it submit financial reports to the Secretary of Defense, and the government’s power to appoint eight of the fifty members of the Red Cross’ Board of Governors.
Id.
at 1056-57. The- court concluded that although the Red Cross is “undoubtedly a close ally” of the United' States, “its operations are not subject to substantial federal control or supervision.”
Id.
at 1057-58.
See also Public Citizen Health Research Group v. Department of HEW,
The Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (“FHLMC”) was found to be a government controlled corporation in
Rocap v. Indiek,
It is undisputed that none of Sandia’s employees receive any federal salaries or federal benefits. The contract between DOE and Sandia that was in effect at the time of Gilmore’s FOIA request specifically provides that “[p]ersons employed by the Contractor
Sandia is incorporated in Delaware, New Mexico, Nevada, Virginia, and Texas under state law, and was not established pursuant to federal law. Although the members of the board of directors and other key personnel must be acceptable to DOE, it does not select people for those positions. No member of the current board of directors of Sandia, which consists of prominent scientists and researchers, was recommended or chosen by DOE, nor does any DOE employee sit on the board. Sandia retains complete autonomy in implementing policies for the company, as long as they are within the terms and conditions of the contract between it and DOE. DOE does not participate at all in the formulation of policies to guide Sandia in conducting its business, other than its participation in establishing the directives set forth in the parties’ negotiated contract.
On the other hand, there have been complaints that DOE micromanages the SNL laboratories. (Index, Vol. I, Ex. B at 78.) In addition, Lockheed Martin cannot transfer control of Sandia to another party without DOE’s permission. At the end of the contract period, DOE retains the right to buy all shares of Sandia, require the resignation of the board of directors, and transfer the shares to a new contractor. (Id. attachment 1 at 13.) This demonstrates only that DOE retains the ultimate authority to change the private contractors who oversee operation of the SNL; it does not show that DOE retains day-to-day supervision over the contractor’s operation of SNL. Similarly, DOE’s regular reviews of Sandia’s performance to ensure that contractual requirements are being complied with does not constitute day-to-day supervision. There is a great deal of difference between DOE’s prudent system of checks and balances, and actual control of Sandia.
The Court finds that there is no dispute of material fact and that the facts demonstrate that Sandia is not a government-controlled corporation, as a matter of law. Unlike the Red Cross and the Smithsonian, both of which are run by a certain percentage of federal appointees or officials but were found not to be government controlled, no employee of Sandia is a federal employee, and DOE has no control over San-dia’s employees. Like the Red Cross and the Smithsonian, Sandia receives federal funding, but is not subject to day-to-day federal supervision. DOE’s detailed contractual objectives for the operation of SNL by San-dia do not translate into the day-to-day supervision and control required for Sandia to be deemed a government-controlled corporation. Accordingly, the Court finds that San-dia is not a government agency for FOIA purposes.
3.
Even if DOE actually owned and controlled CLERVER at the time of Gilmore’s FOIA request, CLERVER still would not be an agency record subject to the FOIA because CLERVER does not illuminate the structure, operation, or decision-making structure of DOE. In Tax Analysts II, the court found, as an alternate basis for its holding that the West database materials were not agency records, that the data was-not the type of information that Congress intended to make available to the public under the FOIA, because it provided no information about the structure, operation or decision-making procedures of the DOJ. Id. 3
Ninth Circuit authority is in accord. In
Baizer v. United States Department of the Air Force,
In
Tax Analysts I,
the Supreme Court held that the Tax Division of the DOJ was required under the FOIA to produce copies of opinions in district court tax cases that it received in the course of litigating tax eases on' behalf of the federal government.
Tax Analysts I,
The Air Force simply does not control the decisions of the Supreme Court in the same manner that the Tax Division controlled the decisions it received as a party litigant, integrated into its case files, and used to prosecute" appeals. As a result, the database of Supreme Court decisions is not an agency record.
Id. at 228-29.
Similarly, here, CLERVER illuminates nothing about DOE’s decision-making process and thus-is not an agency "record subject to disclosure under the FOIA. Cases in which computer software has been found to be an agency record subject to FOIA disclosure are distinguishable on their facts. In
Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton v. Department of Health & Human Services.,
Gilmore cites a number of eases predating
Tax Analysts I
for the proposition that a record does not have to expose the government deeision-making process to be an agency record under the FOIA. All of these cases did, in fact, involve records that were used in government decision making. In
Stephenson v. Internal Revenue Service,
4.
Even if the CLERVER software could be considered an agency record, it would still be exempt from disclosure under FOIA Exemption 4. Exemption 4 provides that “trade secrets and commercial or financial information obtained from a person and privileged or confidential” need not be disclosed pursuant to a FOIA request. 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(4). In evaluating whether a request for information falls within the scope of a FOIA exemption, the Court must balance the public interest in disclosure against the interest Congress intended the exemption to protect.
United States Dep’t of Defense v. Federal Labor Relations Auth.,
A record is confidential for purposes of Exemption 4 “if disclosure is likely to have either of the following effects: (1) to impair the Government’s ability to obtain necessary information in the future; or (2) to cause substantial harm to the competitive position of the person from whom the information was obtained.”
GC Micro Corp. v. Defense Logistics Agency,
Here, both prongs of the test for confidentiality are satisfied. At the time CLERVER was developed, Sandia was owned in its entirety by American Telephone and Telegraph Company. It is now 100 percent owned by Lockheed Martin. The contract between DOE and Sandia for the operation of SNL, which was in effect at the time CLERVER was created, provided that one of the objectives of the contract was to expeditiously and efficiently transfer technology, developed at SNL to domestic industry, in order to contribute to national well-being by aiding United States industrial competitiveness. (Index, Vol. I, Ex. A, app. D, General, ¶¶ 1-2 at D3.) Sandia was required to “undertake a vigorous licensing program whereby Sandia Corporation technology is moved expeditiously into the commercial marketplace.” {Id., app. D, pt. I, ¶ 2 at D4.) Pursuant to this mandate, Sandia has licensed CLERVER to SunSolutions, Inc., the University of New Mexico, the University of Delaware, and Sterling Winthrop, Inc. (Stanley Decl. Ex. G ¶¶ 7-8; Second Stanley Decl. Ex. 4 ¶ 3.) It has received inquiries from other companies, and is engaged in ongoing efforts to market CLERVER to other commercial entities. (Stanley Decl. Ex. G ¶¶ 7-8; Second Stanley Deck Ex. 4 ¶ 3.) Under the license granted to Sun Solutions, Sandia has received approximately $164,000 in royalties, and a portable computer valued at $62,000. (Stanley Decl. Ex. G ¶ 10; Second Stanley Decl. Ex. 4 ¶ 2.) Sandia owns the copyright on CLERVER, but gave the government a limited license to use CLERVER for government purposes only.
There can be no doubt that disclosure of CLERVER to Gilmore so that he can distribute CLERVER on the Internet will cause substantial commercial harm to Sandia
For all of these reasons, Gilmore’s FOIA request for CLERVER was properly denied.
5.
Because the government, by contract, owns the records relating to the development of CLERVER, those records are agency records under the FOIA, whether or not Sandia or SNL are themselves government agencies.
Forsham,
For the same reasons Gilmore’s FOIA request for CLERVER was properly denied, his request for the CLERVER technical documentation owned by DOE was also properly denied under FOIA Exemption 4. The information in those documents reflects confidential information, the disclosure of which would cause commercial damage to Sandia and Lockheed Martin, and would likely impair the government’s access to such information in the future.
Gilmore attempts to rely, on an unpublished DOE internal order to force the government to disclose the CLERVER documentation. DOE Order 1700.1 provides that “[w]here a contract with DOE stipulated that ■ any documents relating to work under the contract shall be the property of the Government, such records shall be considered to be agency records and subject to disclosure under the FOIA.” (Tien Decl. Éx. R.) This order adds nothing to the Supreme Court’s
Forsham
opinion, in which the Court noted that records of a nonageney could become records of the agency by contract,
At that point, DOE no longer had control over the technical documentation of CLERVER because it could not distribute the documents to the public without violating Sandia’s copyright and the terms of DOE’s own license to use CLERVER. Accordingly, on the date of Gilmore’s FOIA request, the CLERVER technical documentation was no longer an agency record under the FOIA because the government no longer controlled its dissemination.
See Tax Analysts II,
Alternately, the documentation contains confidential information of Sandia that could not be disclosed without causing commercial harm to Sandia and Lockheed Martin, or without impairing the government’s access to such information in the future. As a result, even if the technical documentation was an agency record, it would be exempt from disclosure under FOIA Exemption 4. 6
For all of these reasons, Gilmore’s FOIA request for the CLERVER technical documentation was properly denied by DOE.
B.
Gilmore also argues that DOE has a pattern and practice of late responses to FOIA requests. He seeks a declaratory judgment that this practice is unlawful and seeks an order enjoining DOE from failing to process FOIA requests within the statutory period. By statute, an agency shall issue a decision on a FOIA request within ten business days. 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(6)(A)(i). In unusual circumstances, the ten-day period may be extended for an additional ten days. 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(6)(B). Any person whose request was not answered in a timely manner is deemed to have exhausted his administrative remedies, and may seek redress in court. 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(6)(C). “If the Government can show exceptional circumstances exist and that the agency is exercising due diligence in responding to the request, the court may retain jurisdiction and allow the agency additional time to complete its review of the records.” Id. DOE’s own regulations also provide for these deadlines, and further provide that if DOE is unable to respond within the statutory period, it shall inform the requester of the reason for the delay and the date upon which a determination may be expected to be made. 10 C.F.R. § 1004.5(d) (1997). Gilmore’s FOIA request was filed on December 8, 1993. DOE first denied his request by letter dated May 2, 1994, nearly six months later.
The Supreme Court, in
Tax Analysts I,
noted that “[e]ven when an agency does not deny a FOIA request outright, the requesting party may still be able to claim ‘improper’ withholding by alleging that the agency has responded in an inadequate manner.”
Tax Analysts I,
The leading case on enforcement of the FOIA time limits is
Open America v. Watergate Special Prosecution Force,
Whether exceptional circumstances exist and whether an agency is exercising due diligence in processing FOIA requests are inherently factual questions. The parties have not briefed the issue in great detail, having spent most of their briefing arguing why CLERVER is or is not subject to disclosure under the. FOIA. Further briefing on the extent of DOE’s compliance with the FOIA time limitations is required.
DOE ■ spent nearly six: months processing Gilmore’s FOIA request. Gilmore has submitted evidence of ten other lengthy delays by DOE in processing FOIA requests, which he obtained from DOE’s World Wide Web site. (See Tien Deck Ex. Z.) In all ten of these examples, DOE took more than six months to issue an initial determination, and in one instance took nearly seven years. Id. Gilmore states, however, that these, ten examples were selected from a universe of more than 200 decisions available on the web site. (Tien Deck ¶ 1.) Gilmore does not state whether the examples he selected were representative of the entire universe of DOE FOIA determinations, or whether in the other 190 decisions, DOE responded in a timely manner. -
DOE evades addressing the issue head-on, and does not provide declarations suggesting that it generally 'responds to FOIA requests in a timely manner, or in the alternative, explain why exceptional circumstances and due diligence exist for its processing delays. On the factual record before the Court, summary judgment must be denied for both parties. The Court may well be able to rule on the issue in a further summary judgment motion, without the need for a trial, if it is provided with a more substantial factual record.
The Court orders the parties to provide further'briefing, as follows:
1. "Gilmore shall file a proposed form of injunction, so that DOE and the Court know precisely what relief is being sought. The proposed form of injunction must be filed
2. The parties sha 1 file new cross-motions for summary judgment on the issue of whether DOE has a pattern and practice of late responses to FOIA requests. The parties shall meet and confer to set up a briefing schedule for these motions, and must file a briefing schedule with the Court no later than thirty days from the filing of this Memorandum Decision and Order.
3. Gilmore has complained that he has not been permitted to obtain discovery on DOE’s pattern and practice of responding to FOIA requests. If Gilmore needs such discovery to prepare his motion or to respond to DOE’s motion, he must file a Rule 56(f) declaration itemizing the discovery he feels is necessary to adequately address the issues.
C.
Gilmore also claims that DOE’s initial determination of his FOIA request was so inadequate that it deprived him of a meaningful appeal. This claim is meritless. DOE’s initial determination denied Gilmore’s request because CLERVER was not an agency record and because even if it were an agency record it would be exempt under FOIA Exemptions 4 and 5. The Court has found that CLERVER and its related documentation are not agency records and would be exempt from disclosure under FOIA Exemption 4 even if they were agency records. These are precisely the grounds relied upon by DOE in denying Gilmore’s request. Summary judgment on this claim is granted for DOE.
D.
Gilmore challenges DOE’s policy on disclosure of contractor records as inconsistent with the FOIA. The contractor records policies set forth in DOE Order 1700.1 and the Carter Memorandum now have been published, in a somewhat different form, in the Code of Federal Regulations, as of December 12, 1994. 7 10 C.F.R. § 1004.3(e) (1997). The regulation provides:
(e) Contractor Records. (1) When a contract with DOE provides that any records acquired or generated by the contractor in its performance of the contract shall be the property of the Government, DOE will make available to the public such records that are in the possession of the Government or the contractor, unless the records are exempt from disclosure under 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(2).
(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (e)(1) of this section, records owned by the Government under contract that contain information or technical data having commercial value as defined in § 1004.3(e)(4) or information for which the contractor claims a privilege recognized under federal or state law shall be made available only when they are in the possession of the Government and not otherwise exempt under 5 U.S.C. 552(b).
(3) The policies stated in this paragraph:
(i) Do not affect or alter contractors’ obligations to provide to DOE upon request any records that DOE owns under contract, or DOE’s rights under contract to obtain any contractor records and to determine their disposition, including public dissemination; and
(ii) Will be applied by DOE to maximize public disclosure of records that pertain to concerns about the environment, public health or safety, or employee grievances.
(4) For purposes of § 1004.3(e)(2), “technical data and information having commercial value” means technical data and related commercial or financial information which is generated or acquired by a contractor and possessed by that contractor, and whose disclosure the contractor certifies to DOE would cause competitive harm to the commercial value or use of the information or data.
10 C.F.R. § 1004.3(e) (1997).
The Court has already found that DOE Order 1700.1 did not conflict with existing
III.
For the reasons set forth above,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:
1. Summary judgment is GRANTED for DOE, and DENIED for Gilmore, on' Gilmore’s claim that CLERVER and its related documentation was improperly withheld from disclosure under the FOIA;
2. Summary judgment is DENIED for both parties on the issue of whether DOE has a pattern and practice of untimely responses to FOIA requests.
a. Gilmore shall file a proposed form of injunction within ten days of the filing of this Memorandum Decision and Order, so that DOE and the Court know precisely what relief is being sought on this claim.
b. The parties shall file new cross-motions for summary judgment on the issue of whether DOE has a pattern and practice of late responses to FOIA requests, and shall submit declarations providing factual support for their positions. The parties shall meet and confer to set up a briefing schedule for these motions, and shall file with the Court a copy of this proposed briefing schedule within thirty days of the filing of this Memorandum Decision and Order.
c. If Gilmore’s inability to obtain discovery on DOE’s practice in complying with FOIA requests prevents him from filing the necessary factual support for his motion, he shall file a declaration, pursuant to Rule 56(f) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, itemizing the discovery he feels is necessary to adequately address the issue.
3. Summary judgment is GRANTED for DOE, and DENIED for Gilmore, on Gilmore’s claim that DOE’s initial determination of his FOIA request was so inadequate that it denied him a meaningful appeal.
4. Summary judgment is GRANTED for DOE on Gilmore’s claim that DOE’s contractor records regulation, 10 C.F.R. § 1004.3(e), violates the FOUL
Notes
. To distinguish this case from the Supreme Court’s 1989 Tax Analysts decision, the Court will refer to this case as Tax Analysts II, and to the Supreme Court case as Tax Analysts I. Other than the similarity in names, the two cases are not related.
. As
Weisberg
and
Tax Analysts II,
both arise out of the D .C. Circuit, the Court presumes that
Tax Analysis II
provides the current test in that circuit for analyzing wheLher a document is an agency record under the FOIA. The Court also questions the continuing validity of the analysis in
Weisberg
now that the Supreme Court has
. This definition of "agency record" does not appear in the FOIA statute, but is a court-created limitation derived from the legislative history.
. Although Gilmore argues that there is no showing of substantial commercial harm because San-dia has received only relatively meager royalties, there is a presumption of irreparable harm when a copyright is infringed.
Cadence Design Sys., Inc. v. Avant! Corp.,
. The Supreme Court has never held that a record owned by a government agency must also be in its possession in order to be considered an agency record under the FOIA. Although the Supreme Court, in
Forsham,
held that a mere right of access to documents did not convert those documents into agency records until that right had been exercised, that discussion was in the context of records owned by a federal grantee, not records owned by the government itself.
. As a result, the applicability of the Carter Memorandum is irrelevant under the facts of this case. The Carter Memorandum modified DOE Order 1700.1 to provide that "[w]here a contract with DOE stipulates that any records relating to work under the contract shall be the property of the Government, such records shall be considered to be agency records and subject to disclosure under the FOIA, except for records that contain information or technical data having commercial value as defined below." (Tien Decl. Ex. S) (emphasis added). Gilmore argues that the Carter Memorandum had no effect because it was not published in the Federal Register. As explained above, however, regardless of whether the Carter Memorandum was effective, the CLERVER technical documentation was not subject to disclosure under the FOIA.
. Their revision and publication was a result of United States District Court Judge Edward Raf-eedie’s decision that DOE Order 1700.1 and the Carter Memorandum were substantive rules that were required to be published in the Federal Register. Committee To Bridge The Gap v. DOE, No. CV 90-3568-ER, slip op. at 6-7 (C.D.Cal. Oct. 11, 1991) (unpublished). See 59 Fed.Reg. 63,882, 63,883 (1994).
