In this сase arising under the Freedom of Information Act, we are asked to decide whether the Act requires the General Services Administration (GSA) to disclose an appraisal of realty to a state agency that is seeking to buy the property from GSA.
The Facts: GSA and the Land Bank
The plaintiff, Government Land Bank (Land Bank), is an agency of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts whose principal function is to acquire land for eventual redisposition to state agencies and private parties for publicly beneficial use. Defendant GSA is a United States government agency empowered to sell certain surplus federal property.
In May, 1978, GSA determined that five tracts of vacant military family housing at the former Westover Air Force Base in Chicopee, Massachusetts, were surplus real property. In January, 1979, the Land Bank *665 expressed interest in purchasing the land on behalf of the city of Chicopee. That June, GSA received an appraisal report from a professional real estate appraiser, and in December it offered the property to the Land Bаnk for $3,260,000 (a price it raised to $3,565,000 in June, 1980). The Land Bank believed that the property was worth no more than approximately 30 per cent of GSA’s asking price, and it pressed GSA to justify its offer. In March, 1980, it filed a formal request under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), for a coрy of the appraisal and any “internal staff memoranda relating to the determination of the $3,260,-000 price”.
GSA refused to reveal the appraisal report and related memoranda, invoking FOIA’s exemption for intra-agency memoranda. After exhausting administrative remedies, the Land Bank sought injunctive relief in federal district court. The court ordered GSA to disclose the appraisal and supporting memoranda, but ordered the Land Bank not to release any of that material to any person or organization without first obtаining permission from the court. GSA appeals.
Background: FOIA and the Government in the Marketplace
FOIA establishes a “general philosophy of full agency disclosure unless information is exempted under clearly delineated statutory language”. S.Rep. No. 813, 89th Cong., 1st Sess. 3 (1965). Moreover, because the dominant objective of the Act is disclosure, the exemptions are narrowly construed.
Dep’t of the Air Force
v.
Rose,
Under Exemption 5 of the Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(5), an agency need not disclose “inter-agency or intra-agency memorandums or letters which would not be available by law to a party other than an agency in litigation with the agency.” Both parties agree that a property appraisal, performed under contract by an independent professional, is an “intra-agency” document for purposes of the exemption.
See Hoover v. United States Dep’t of the Interior,
In
Federal Open Market Committee v. Merrill,
*666
A realty appraisal generatеd by a government agency to help it sell property is covered by the exemption.
Merrill
held that the exemption prevails where the document contains “sensitive information not otherwise available”, and disclosure would significantly harm the government’s commercial interests.
Id.
at 363,
We conclude that appraisals such as the one at issue in this case are prime candidates for exemption under
Merrill. See also Hoover v. Dep’t of Interior, supra; Martin Marietta Aluminum, Inc. v. Administrator,
Foreground: GSA, The Land Bank, and FOIA
The Land Bank offers several theories for refusing to apply Exemption 5 to its request. First, it argues that the GSA apрraisal lies outside the language of the exemption because it would be discoverable in civil litigation. Although the Land Bank concedes that several cases have refused to order discovery of appraisals as a matter of course,
see, e.g., United States v. 145.31 Acres of Land,
This argument misconceives the purpose of Exemption 5’s language, “which would not be available by law to a party ... in litigation with the agency”. The Land Bank would have us construe the language so that Exemption 5 would only be applied where a litigant seeks to use FOIA to circumvent normal discovery procedures. Such a construction was not the intent of Congress. Rather, the reference to discovery rules was intended to ensure that Exemption 5 not become so big that members of the public (using FOIA) were denied access to documents that were
routinely
discoverable in private litigation.
See EPA v. Mink,
*667 Alternatively, the Land Bank contends that the exemption should not be applied to its requests since GSA owes it special obligations. It cites 41 C.F.R. §§ 101-47.303-2, 101-47.304-9(a)(4), which require GSA to pursue a negotiated sale with state agencies before proceeding to a public auction. It reasons that these regulations remove its relationship with GSA from the ordinary world of commercial bargaining and thereby render the “commercial information” exemption irrelevant. It argues further that the order of the district court, which prohibits circulation of the appraisal among the general public, adequately protects GSA’s commercial interests. We find this analysis flawed, both in its characterization of the relationship between GSA and the Land Bank, and in its unstated premise that Exemption 5 allows a document to be exempt from disclosure to one class of plaintiffs, but subject to disclosure to another.
GSA’s principal obligations in directing the disposal of surplus property are set forth in 40 U.S.C. § 484(e). It provides generally that all disposals of surplus property “shall be made after publicly advertising for bids”, with an award to the bid that “will be most advantageous to the federal Government, price and other factors considered”. (Emphasis added.) The legislation qualifies that general mission by giving the Administration some discretion under certain circumstances. Thus, rather than advertising for bids, the disposal “may be negotiated, under regulations prescribed by the Administrator [if] the disposal will be to Statеs, Territories, possessions, political subdivisions thereof, or tax-supported agencies therein, and the estimated fair market value of the property and other satisfactory terms of disposal are obtained by negotiation”. 40 U.S.C. § 484(e)(3)(H). (Emphasis added.) This option is permissive, not mandatory. The use of the auxiliary verb “may”, rather than “shall”, confirms the Administrator’s authority to reject a negotiated disposal, even if the state offers to pay the estimated fair market value of the property.
Moreover, the legislative history of the provision confirms that negotiated disposal was not intended to be a “preferred method”. Indeed, it reveals the legislators’ distrust for appraisals and its desire that the Administrator do better than the appraised value whenever feasible:
“[Disposal оf Government surplus property should not be made by negotiation except under those very unusual circumstances where such method would be in the public interest and assure the Government of a fair market value return. Of particular alarm has been the great number of unrealistic appraisals on which negotiated sales price was based. Perhaps this stems to some extent from the possibility that local appraisers are inclined to be more sympathetic to the local private interests than to the generаl public interest as represented by the United States Government.
. . . [Negotiating authority should be exercised sparingly, and only in those instances where it would clearly be in the best interest of the Government.” H.Rep. No. 1763, 85th Cong., 2d Sess., reprinted in [1958] U.S.Code Cong. & Ad. News 2861, 2866.
Thus, the statute was clearly intended to keep thе relationship between GSA and the Land Bank a competitive, arm’s-length, commercial affair.
Nor are GSA’s regulations inconsistent with that legislative intent. 41 C.F.R. § 101 — 47.303-2 requires that GSA notify local public agencies of available surplus property before it advertises for bids. It requirеs GSA to give any interested agencies time to develop and submit formal applications for the property. Once an application is received, GSA is required only to “consider and act upon it in accordance with the provisions of the statute аnd applicable regulations”. And 41 C.F.R. § 101-47.304-9(a)(4) is no more than a paraphrase of 40 U.S.C. § 484(e)(3)(H). When read against the statutory background, these regulations appear to give the public agencies no more than a right of first refusal. We see no reason to interpret them as derogating from GSA’s efforts to satisfy its *668 statutory duties by obtaining the price it considers fair. Cf. 40 U.S.C. § 484(e)(2)(C) (where disposal is by auction sale, GSA may choose to reject all bids if none is adequate).
Even if there were validity to the plaintiff’s contention that it is a “preferred buyer”, our conclusion here would not be affectеd. Although such a preference might give the plaintiff additional rights under the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act of 1949, as amended, it has no relevance in a suit under FOIA. The issue of whether disclosure is required by FOIA turns on the nature of
the document,
not the particular party requesting it. Thus, an individuаl applicant’s need for information is not to be taken into account in determining whether materials are exempt.
Federal Open Market Committee v. Merrill, supra,
The judgment of the district court is vacated. The case is remanded with instructions that judgment be entered for the defendant.
Notes
.
Merrill
may even go farther. Therе, the Supreme Court remanded for consideration whether the exemption applied to a policy directive regulating financial markets; the threatened harm was to agency policy rather than the agency budget. See
. Thus, there is an explicit time limitation on Exemption 5 documents: “[T]he rationale for protecting such information expires as soon as the contract is awardеd or the offer withdrawn.”
. Such a discrepancy can, of course, be fully consistent with legitimate agency objectives. See H.Rep.No. 1763, 85th Cong., 2d Sess., quoted in text infra.
. Given our conclusions, we need not consider GSA’s alternative argument that the documents were protected under Exemption 5’s doctrine of “executive privilege".
