287 Mich. App. 228 | Mich. Ct. App. | 2010
Plaintiffs appeal as of right the trial court’s grant of summary disposition to defendants and dismissal of their “reverse” Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), MCL 15.231 et seq., action.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In March 2007, the intervenor, Chetly Zarko, began submitting a series of FOIA requests to defendant Howell Public Schools (HPS), including requests for all e-mail beginning January 1, 2007, sent to and from three HPS teachers: plaintiffs Doug Norton, Jeff Hughey, and Johnson McDowell. During that time, each of these teachers was also a member and official for plaintiff Howell Education Association, MEA/NEA (HEA); Norton was president, Hughey was vice president for bargaining, and McDowell was vice president for grievances. After the filing of this lawsuit, Zarko also requested all e-mail sent to or from plaintiff Barbara Cameron that was to or from Norton, McDow
The HEA objected to having to release union communications sent between HEA leaders or between HEA leaders and HEA members and took the position that, to the extent the e-mails addressed union matters, they were not “public records” as defined under FOIA. The HEA asked counsel for HPS to confirm whether the internal union communications of Norton, Hughey, and McDowell would be treated as nondisclosable. Counsel for HPS noted that there was no reported caselaw regarding whether personal e-mails or internal union communications maintained on the computer system of a public body were public records subject to disclosure under FOIA and suggested a “friendly lawsuit” to determine the applicability of FOIA to the e-mail requests made by Zarko.
Plaintiffs filed their complaint in May 2007 against HPS and defendant Howell Board of Education requesting a declaratory judgment that: (1) personal e-mails and e-mails pertaining to union business are not “public records” as defined by FOIA; (2) that the collective bargaining e-mails were exempt pursuant to MCL 15.243(l)(m); and (3) that the e-mails containing legal advice were exempt pursuant to MCL 15.243(l)(g). Plaintiffs also requested an injunction to prevent the release of the documents until the issues could be resolved. A temporary restraining order (TRO) was entered on May 7, 2007. Following a show cause hearing, Zarko was permitted to intervene as an intervening defendant and counter-plaintiff, the TRO was extended
The trial court appointed a special master to review approximately 5,500 e-mails.
Defendants moved for summary disposition in July 2008, arguing that plaintiffs lacked standing to prevent disclosure because all the documents were public records and only defendants had the authority to assert the exemption provisions of MCL 15.243. Defendants also argued that the trial court could not grant relief to Hughey given that his e-mail had already been released and could not grant relief as to any e-mail from the other plaintiffs to which Hughey was a party because that e-mail was “no longer secret.” Defendants argued that any exemption under MCL 15.243(l)(m) was inapplicable because the collective bargaining agreement had already been reached. Thus, there could be no harm to the collective bargaining negotiations, as the negotiations had concluded. Finally, defendants argued that plaintiffs were not entitled to injunctive relief because they could not show irreparable harm.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The issue before us is one of statutory interpretation and arises in the context of a summary disposition motion. We review de novo both issues of statutory interpretation and a trial court’s decision to grant summary disposition. Mich Federation of Teachers v Univ of Mich, 481 Mich 657, 664; 753 NW2d 28 (2008).
III. ANALYSIS
The issue before us requires us to consider the application of the FOIA statute, adopted in 1977 and last amended in 1997, in the context of today’s ubiquitous e-mail technology. This is a challenging issue and one that, as we noted at the outset, we believe is best left to the Legislature because it is plainly an issue concerning social policy. Unfortunately, until the Legislature makes its intention clear by adopting statutoiy language that takes this technology into account, we must attempt to discern, as best we can given the tools available to us, what the intent of the Legislature would have been under the circumstances presented by this technology that it could not have foreseen. Cf. Denver Publishing Co v Bd of Co Comm’rs of Arapahoe, Colorado, 121 P3d 190, 191-192
“Consistent with the legislatively stated public policy supporting the act, the Michigan FOIA requires disclosure of the ‘public record[s]’ of a ‘public body’ to persons who request to inspect, copy, or receive copies of those requested public records.” Mich Federation of Teachers, 481 Mich at 664-665. It is undisputed that defendants are public bodies. MCL 15.232(d)(iii). A “public record” is “a writing prepared, owned, used, in the possession of, or retained by a public body in the performance of an official function, from the time it is created.”
Defendants argue that retention of electronic data is an official function where it is required for the operation of an educational institution, citing Kestenbaum v Mich State Univ, 414 Mich 510; 327 NW2d 783 (1982).
In the present case, defendants can function without the personal e-mail. There is nothing about the personal e-mail, given that by their very definition they have nothing to do with the operation of the schools, which indicates that they are required for the operation of an
Defendants offer a simple solution approach to this puzzle, which is to simply say that anything on the school’s computer system is “retained” by the school and therefore subject to FOIA. However, the school district does not assert that its back-up system was purposely designed to retain and store personal e-mail or that personal e-mail has some official function. It appears that the system is intended to retain and store e-mail relating to official functions, but that it is simply easier technologically to capture all the e-mail on the system rather than have some mechanism to distinguish them. We do not think that because the technological net used to capture public record e-mail also automatically captures other e-mails we must conclude that the other e-mails are public records.
This position is consistent with federal cases interpreting whether an item is an “agency record” under the federal FOIA.
The e-mails in the present case are analogous to the electronic calendar and other personal uses of SEC office equipment. Defendants’ storage and retention of personal e-mails is a byproduct of the fact that all e-mail is electronically retained, regardless of whether it was personal or business-related. We are not persuaded that personal e-mails are rendered “public records” under FOIA merely by use of a public body’s computer system to send or receive those e-mails or by the automatic back-up system that causes the public body to “retain” those e-mails.
Contrary to Zarko’s position, our determination that personal e-mails are not public records does not render
For example, personal information that falls within this exclusion includes home addresses and telephone numbers. Mich Federation of Teachers, 481 Mich at 677. Thus, when someone makes a FOIA request for an employee’s personnel file, the personnel file is a public record, Bradley v Saranac Community Sch Bd of Ed, 455 Mich 285, 288-289; 565 NW2d 650 (1997), but the employee’s home address and telephone number may be redacted because they are subject to the privacy exclusion in MCL 15.243(l)(a). The employee’s home address and telephone number are examples of private information contained within a public record. In contrast, an e-mail sent by a teacher to a family member or friend that involves an entirely private matter such as carpooling, childcare, lunch or dinner plans, or other personal matters, is wholly unrelated to the public body’s official function. Such e-mails simply are not public records.
We recognize that the present case is distinguishable from Bloomberg, where limited use of the office equip
This is a Howell Public Schools computer system. Use of this system is governed by the Acceptable Use Policy which may be viewed at http://www.howellschools.com/aup.html.
All data contained on any school computer system is owned by Howell Public Schools, and may be monitored, intercepted, recorded, read, copied, or captured in any manner by authorized school personnel. Evidence of unauthorized use may be used for administrative or criminal action.
By logging into this system, you acknowledge your consent to these terms and conditions of use. [Emphasis added.]
Defendants’ acceptable use policy provides, in relevant part:
Howell Public Schools provides technology in furtherance of the educational goals and mission of the District. As part of the consideration for making technology available to staff and students, users agree to use this technology only for appropriate educational purposes. ...
Email is not considered private communication. It may be re-posted. It may he accessed by others and is subject to subpoena. School officials reserve the right to monitor any or all activity on the district’s computer system and to inspect any user’s email files. Users should not expect that their communications on the system are private. Confidential information should not be transmitted via email.
Appropriate use of district technology is defined as a use to further the instructional goals and mission of the district.*242 Members should consider any use outside these instructional goals and mission constitutes potential misuse....
Members are prohibited from ... [u]sing technology for personal or private business,... or political lobbying ....
Defendants argue that their acceptable use policy notified users that personal e-mail was subject to FOIA. We disagree. Although the use policy certainly gives notice to the users that school officials may look at their e-mail, and that the documents could be released pursuant to a subpoena, it in no way indicates that users’ e-mail may be viewed by any member of the public who simply asks for it. Thus, we conclude that the public employees’ agreement to this acceptable use policy did not render their personal e-mail subject to FOIA.
Furthermore, we are not persuaded that a public employee’s misuse of the technology resources provided by defendants, by sending private e-mails, renders those e-mails public records. The acceptable use policy makes clear that “[appropriate use of district technology is defined as a use to further the instructional goals and mission of the district.” An employee’s use of a public body’s technology resources for private communication is clearly not in the furtherance of the instructional goals of the public body. Although this is an inappropriate use that could subject the employee to sanction for violation of the policy, the violation does not transform personal communications into public records. Indeed, the fact that the communication is sent in violation of the use policy militates in favor of the conclusion that the e-mail is not a public record because it falls expressly outside the performance of an official function, i.e. the furtherance of the instructional goals of the district.
In reaching our decision, we have also considered two unpublished cases in which our Court has addressed issues that may be relevant. These cases are not precedential authority. However, given the limited published caselaw on the issue and the issue’s significance, we have reviewed them for guidance. In WDG Investment Co v Mich Dep’t of Mgt & Budget, unpublished opinion
A similar approach was followed in Hess v City of Saline, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued May 12, 2005 (Docket No. 260394), which involved the use of video cameras to record a city council meeting. At some point, the council adjourned but the video camera was not turned off and it recorded conversations among city staffers who remained in the council chambers talking for some time after the council members had left. A copy of the videotape of the staffers’ postmeeting conversations was sought under FOIA. We held that “the unedited videotape was not a public record.. . . [as] no official city business was
This is not to say that personal e-mails cannot become public records. For example, were a teacher to be subjected to discipline for abusing the acceptable use policy and personal e-mails were used to support that discipline, the use of those e-mails would be related to one of the school’s official functions — the discipline of a teacher — and, thus, the e-mails would become public records subject to FOIA. This is consistent with Detroit Free Press, Inc v Detroit, 480 Mich 1079 (2008). It is common knowledge that underlying that case was a wrongful termination lawsuit that resulted in a multimillion dollar verdict against the city of Detroit. During the course of the lawsuit and subsequent settlement negotiations, certain text messages became public, which had been sent between the Detroit mayor and a staff member through the staff member’s city-issued mobile device. The text messages indicated that the mayor and the staff member had committed perjury. Two newspapers filed FOIA requests for the settlement agreement from the wrongful termination trial, along with various other documents. Our Supreme Court found no error in the trial court’s determination that the settlement agreement was a public record subject to disclosure under FOIA. Id. However, the Supreme Court did not rule that the text messages themselves were public records. The Court’s order denying leave to appeal contains no reference to text messages. Rather,
Having determined that the personal e-mails are not “public records” subject to FOIA, the next question is whether e-mails involving “internal union communications”
IV CONCLUSION
This is a difficult question requiring that we apply a statute, whose purpose is to render government transparent, to a technology that did not exist in reality (or even in many people’s imaginations) at the time the statute was enacted and that has the capacity to make “transparent” far more than the drafters of the statute could have dreamed. When the statute was adopted,
Accelerating communications technology has greatly increased tension between the value of governmental transparency and that of personal privacy. As we stated at the outset, the ultimate decision on this important issue must be made by the Legislature and we invite it to consider the question. However, on the basis of the statute adopted in 1977, the technology that existed at that time, and the caselaw available to us, we conclude that the trial court erred in its conclusion that all e-mails captured in a government e-mail computer storage system, regardless of their purpose, are rendered public records subject to FOIA.
We reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction. No costs, a public question being involved.
A “reverse FOIA” claim is one where a party “seek[s] to prevent disclosure of public records under the FOIA.” Bradley v Saranac Community Sch Bd of Ed, 455 Mich 285, 290; 565 NW2d 650 (1997).
These e-mails did not include any to or from Hughey. On May 2, 2007, before the suit was filed, the review of these e-mails was completed and defendants released the e-mails to Zarko.
Although unnecessary for the resolution of this case, we wish to address the suggestion of amicus curiae Mackinac Center for Public Policy that the “it” in the clause “from the time it is created” refers to the public body. The amicus asserts that interpreting the “it” as a writing would cause the overruling of Detroit News, Inc v Detroit, 204 Mich App 720; 516 NW2d 151 (1994). However, this ignores that Detroit News explicitly interpreted the “it” as meaning a writing:
The city relies on the statutory clause “from the time it is created” found in the definition of public record. We do not construe this clause as requiring that a writing be “owned, used, in the possession of, or retained by a public body in the performance of an official function” from the time the writing is created in order to be a public record. A writing can become a public record after its creation. We understand the phrase “from the time it is created” to mean that the ownership, use, possession, or retention by the public body can he at any point from creation of the record onward, lid. at 725.]
Accordingly, we reject the suggested interpretation.
Thus, we are not ruling on whether any exemptions apply or who has the standing to argue them.
Kestenbaum was a three to three decision and has no majority opinion.
Indeed, we should not presume that the question would even end with personal e-mail sent on government computers. At oral argument, defendants would not concede that employees’ personal e-mail would not be subject to FOIA even if the employees sent it on their personal laptop computers if, because the laptops used a government wireless system, the e-mail was captured and retained.
“Federal court decisions regarding whether an item is an ‘agency record’ under the federal FOIA are persuasive in determining whether a record is a ‘public record’ under the Michigan FOIA.” MacKenzie v Wales Twp, 247 Mich App 124, 129 n 1; 635 NW2d 335 (2001).
We note that the United States Supreme Court has granted certiorari in the case of City of Ontario, California v Quon, 558 US _; 130 S Ct 1011; 175 L Ed 2d 617 (2009). While that case involves an issue of privacy raised by new communications technology, it is unlikely to have any bearing on this case. In Quon, the cily had an informal policy of allowing its employees to use their city-supplied pagers for personal text messaging provided the employee paid the extra cost of service. Quon v Arch Wireless Operating Co, Inc, 529 F3d 892, 897 (CA 9, 2008). Despite assurances that the cily would not review the contents of the personal text messages, the cily did so and an employee brought an action claiming violation of his Fourth Amendment right to be protected against unreasonable searches and seizures. Id. at 897-898. Because Quon involves the Fourth Amendment and not FOIA, it is unlikely to answer the question now before us.
We define “internal union communications” to mean those communications sent only between or among HEA members and leadership, involving union business or activities, including contract negotiation, grievance handling, and voting. Any e-mail involving these topics that is sent to the district is no longer purely between or among HEA members and leadership and, therefore, does not fall under this category.
Although the question is not before us, we note that an e-mail transmitted in performance of an official function would appear to be a public record under FOIA.