Jаmes Gray v. Philadelphia District Attorney‘s Office, Appellant
No. 800 C.D. 2021
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
February 22, 2024
HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, President Judge; HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge; HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
Submitted: December 4, 2023
OPINION
BY JUDGE CEISLER FILED: February 22,
The Philadelphia District Attorney‘s Office (DAO) appeals from a June 2, 2021 Order of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County (Trial Court) affirming a Final Determination by the Pennsylvania Office of Open Records (OOR) ordering the DAO to release records requested by James Gray (Requester) pursuant to
I. Background
Requester, an inmate at the State Correctional Institution-Mahanoy, submitted his original request to the DAO on July 10, 2020, seeking the following:
- [A] complete record of the [DAO‘s] publicly announcing [of] the existence and release date of the racially discriminatory jury selection training tape by [former] Assistant District Attorney Jack McMahon [McMahon Tape].2
- [A] comрlete record of all news/press release letters, e-mails, or other records of communication notifying news media about the existence and release of the “McMahon Tape.”
- [A] complete record listing all individuals [who] and/or agencies [that] received a copy of the “McMahon Tape” or transcript of the same from the [DAO] (i.e., attorneys, defendants, prisons, jails, etc.).
- [A] complete record or official letter of notification sent to attorneys, criminal defenders, and/or other individuals regarding the existence and release of the McMahon [T]ape by the [DAO].
- [A] complete record listing the names and titles of all persons responsible for distributing the McMahon [T]ape and/or notifying individuals about the existence and release of the [T]ape.
- [A] complete record of all internal memos, general release information regarding the existence, release, distribution and contents of the McMahon [T]ape and transcript of the same generated by the [DAO].
Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 5a. After invoking a 30-day extension to respond pursuant to
In its defense, the DAO submitted a September 14, 2020 statement by acting RTKL compliance officer, ADA Robbins, attesting that six department supervisors “in the best position to know if their units possess any responsive records” were asked whether any of the requested records were kept;4 none of the supervisors were aware of any responsive records. Id. at 47a. ADA Robbins further asserted that the
DAO had no practical means of searching for responsive records, as its case mаnagement system only permitted searches by a defendant name or identifying number, a docket number, a district control number, or the name of some victims or witnesses. Id. at 47a. Thus, an adequate search would entail looking manually through “thousands of boxes of materials” in an off-site storage facility, “in the hopes of finding a few responsive documents.” Id. In an accompanying letter brief, the DAO asserted that any potentially responsive documents that may exist would be exempt from disclosure pursuant to the RTKL‘s exception for criminal investigative information.5
In correspondence dated September 28, 2020, OOR asked the DAO to clarify whether it ever initiated a search of documents in its off-site storage facility, and whether potentially responsive records have been destroyed pursuant to the DAO‘s record retention policies. Id. at 58a. In a second attestation, dated September 29, 2020, ADA Robbins explained that the only documents stored off-site are trial files, which have not been digitized; thus, searching those files would require retrieving “every file from off-site storage.” Id. at 62a. Regarding other categories of relevant documents, such as internal memos or press releases, ADA Robbins stated that the DAO had no policy requiring their retention. Id.
On October 1, 2020, OOR issued a final determination granting Requester‘s appeal. Id. at 73a. Therein, OOR explained that, because no search of the files stored off-site was conducted, “the [DAO] has not met its burden to establish that it has completed a good faith search for the requested records.” Id. at 72a. OOR
further determined that the original request was sufficiently specific to allow a good-faith
The DAO filed a notice of appeal in the Trial Court on October 30, 2020, which essentially reasserted the arguments made before OOR. Id. at 77a-105a. In a supporting brief, the DAO stated that it searched the trial files from the cases cited by Requester. Id. at 96a. That search yielded a copy of a letter sent to counsel representing William Basemore, who was prosecuted by the DAO and convicted in 1988 of first-degree murder and other crimes, notifying him of the release of the McMahon Tape.6 See id. at 106a. The DAO argued that thе Trial Court should therefore vacate OOR‘s order with regard to Item 4. Id. at 96a. Attached as exhibits were a copy of the notification letter, along with a transcript of the McMahon Tape. See id. at 106a, 110a. Requester filed a brief in response, in which he stated the following:
For the purposes of this appeal, [Requester] will only address and confine his argument to Item 3 of his original RTKL request. [Requester] respectfully withdraws his request for records at Items 1-2, & 5-6. Further, in light of the “good-faith effort to provide records” by the DAO, the [request] at Item 4 has been satisfied.
Id. at 185a. Accordingly, Requester only asked the Trial Court to order the release the record requested at Item 3: a “complete record listing all individuals and/or agencies who received a copy” of the McMahon Tape. Id. at 187a.
The Trial Court held oral arguments via teleconference on May 5, 2021, during which the parties largely reiterated the arguments advanced in their briefs. See Suppl. Record, Hr‘g Tr., 5/5/2021. On June 2, 2021, the Trial Court issued an order affirming OOR‘s Final Determination without an accompanying opinion. Id. at 208a. The DAO timely filed an appeal to this Court on July 2, 2021. Id. at 209a.
In an opinion submitted to this Court pursuant to
referring to its written attestations as “conclusory” and lacking in supporting evidence. Id. at 13 (citing Bagwell, 155 A.3d at 1129).
II. Issues
On appeal,8 the DAO argues that Requester‘s appeal to OOR was rendered “largely moot” by his withdrawal of five of the six items in his request. The DAO further argues that the Trial Court lacked the authority to order the release of Items 3 and 5, which, in the DAO‘s view, “do not exist.” DAO‘s Br. at 20.
III. Discussion
A. Partial Withdrawal of Requests on Appeal
It is well settled that an actual case or controversy must be extant at all stages of litigation, not merely at the time that a complaint is filed; otherwise, this Court will dismiss an appeal as moоt. Harris v. Rendell, 982 A.2d 1030, 1035 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2009). An “actual case or controversy” is one that is real rather than hypothetical and affects someone in a concrete manner so as to provide a factual predicate for reasoned adjudication. Finn v. Rendell, 990 A.2d 100, 105 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2010). Exceptions to the mootness doctrine may be made where the conduct complained of is capable of repetition yet likely to evade judicial review, where the case involves issues of great public importance, or where one party will suffer a detriment without the court‘s decision. Horsehead Res. Dev. Co., Inc. v. Dep‘t of Env‘t Prot., 780 A.2d 856, 858 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2001). As a pure question of
law, the issue of mootness is subject to a de novo standard of review. Commonwealth v. Dixon, 907 A.2d 468, 472 (Pa. 2006).
Our Supreme Court examined the mootness doctrine within the specific context of the RTKL in Chester Water Authority v. Department of Community and Economic Development, 249 A.3d 1106 (Pa. 2021). In that case, a state agency denied a request for records of communication between the agency, a private consulting firm hired to manage the finances of the City of Chester, and two firms serving the agency as subcontractors. Id. at 1108. The state agency asserted various reasons for the denial, including attorney-client privilege and the attorney work-product doctrine. Id. at 1109. On the eve of oral argument before this Court, the state agency released records that it had initially withheld on those two grounds. Id. The requester nonetheless asked this Court to rule оn whether the records had been properly withheld before their release. Id. We dismissed as moot that portion of the petition for review in light of the state agency‘s disclosure of the records, holding that the dispute between the parties was thereby rendered moot. See Finnerty v. Pa. Dep‘t of Cmty. and Econ. Dev., 208 A.3d 178, 180 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2019).
While reversing this Court on issues that are not instantly relevant, the Supreme Court “affirmed as to the mootness
observing that “not every claim arising under the [RTKL] crosses the high threshold for exception.” Id. In the absence of a controversy meeting the requisite threshold, the Court opted to follow “the general, prudential approach” that “courts do not review moot questions.” Id.
Instantly, Requester has stated that the release of a transcript of the McMahon Tape and a copy of the Basemore notification letter satisfied Item 4 of his request. See R.R. at 185a. The DAO argued before the Trial Court that “OOR‘s determination compelling the DAO to disclose these records [was] therefore moot.” Id. at 104a. The Trial Court disagrеed, reasoning that “Request[e]r had already initiated his OOR appeal before he attempted to withdraw portions of his initial request,” and thus “lost the ability to modify, change[,] or add to his request in any form.” Trial Ct. Op., 9/7/2021, at 4.
On appeal to this Court, the DAO cites Chester Water Authority for its assertion that, in the context of RTKL cases, “an appeal becomes moot when an agency provides responsive documents during the pendency of the appeal.” DAO‘s Br. at 16. The DAO further argues that Requester‘s withdrawal of Items 1, 2, 5, and 6 also rendered moot those parts of his appeal to the Trial Court, as “a RTKL requester has the sole discretion to determine whether to appeal an agency‘s denial of a request in the first instance, whether to continue to seek the records during the pendency of an appeal, or whether to withdraw the request altogether.”10 Id. at 17. Upon the withdrawal of a request, the DAO concludes, “a court has no authority to
disclose the records.” Id. (citing Motley Crew, LLC v. Bonner Chevrolet Co., 93 A.3d 474, 476 (Pa. Super. 2014)).
We first note our agreement with the DAO that Requester‘s withdrawal of his appeal as to Item 4 of his request rendered moot that part of this case. When an agency‘s denial is subject to appeal,
We further determine that the same principle may be applied to Items 1, 2, 5, and 6 of the request, where Requester‘s withdrawal of his сlaims on appeal eliminated any case or controversy as to those items.11 When the records identified in those parts of the request were no longer subject to the request, the question of whether the DAO fulfilled its duties became, at most, hypothetical. While Requester
was free to continue his appeal from the DAO‘s denial of Item 3 of the request, the Trial Court had no reasonable basis for pursuing the rest of his appeal sua sponte. Since no actual case or controversy exists where an agency has not released records that are no longer requested, the Trial Court should have dismissed as moot those components of the appeal.
Since the instant case is technically moot as to five of the six items in the request, our inquiry turns to whether the case falls within any of the exceptions to the mootness doctrine. The first exception to mootness—that the conduct complained of is capable of repetition yet likely to evade judicial review—involves two elements: (1) that the duration of the challenged action is too short to be fully litigated prior to its cessation or expiration; and (2) that there is a reasonable expectation that the same complaining party will be subjected to the same action again. Commonwealth v. Buehl, 462 A.2d 1316, 1319 (Pa. Super. 1983). In this casе, the duration of the DAO‘s denial of the relevant parts of the request is not of limited duration; meanwhile, we see no clear reason to suppose that Requester is likely to be subject to repeated, similar actions.12
Next, we determine if the matter falls under the mootness exceptions for matters of great importance to the public interest, or for those where a party will suffer a detriment without our decision. In Chester Water Authority, the Supreme
Court rejected the argument that the dispute over the records in that case met “the high threshold” for the public importance exception. 249 A.3d at 1115. If communications between a state government agency and a рrivate firm tasked with managing the finances of an entire city were insufficient,
As noted above, the Trial Court did not directly address the DAO‘s mootness arguments. Rather, it reasoned that Requester‘s withdrаwal of his appeal as to Items 1, 2, 5, and 6 constituted an improper modification of his request, as requesters “may not, on appeal, argue that an agency must instead disclose different records in response to [a] request.” Trial Ct. Op., 9/7/2021, at 4 (citing Michak v. Dep‘t of Pub. Welfare, 56 A.3d 925, 930 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2012)). Although we conclude that the threshold question of mootness is dispositive of this part of the case, we note that the general rule against modifying requests is inapposite here. As we explained in Michak, the belated modification of requests to include new records is forbidden because it would interfere with the agency‘s duty under the RTKL to respond promptly and specifically to the initial request. See also Dep‘t of Corr. v. Disability Rts. Network of Pa., 35 A.3d 830, 833 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2012) (explaining that the modification of requests under appeal is not permitted because it “preclude[s] the [agency] from raising appropriate exemptions to disclosure“). That concern does not arise when a requester states his intent to appeal from the denial of some distinct
parts of his request but not others. To the contrary, we do not believe that the RTKL‘s purposes are meaningfully furthered by a court‘s ordering of a government agency to find, copy, and release records—a sometimes onerous and costly process—that no one is seeking. Based on the foregoing, we conclude that Requester was permitted to withdraw Items 1, 2, 4, 5, and 6 of his request,13 аnd that the withdrawal rendered this case moot as to those items.
B. Item 3 of the Request
Next, we examine the DAO‘s argument that the record requested at Item 3, a “complete record listing all individuals and/or agencies who received a copy of the ‘McMahon Tape’ or transcript of the same from the [DAO] (i.e., attorneys, defendants, prisons, jails, etc.),” R.R. at 5a., cannot be released because it does not exist.
Pursuant to
searched for the record or a sworn affidavit of nonexistence of the record. Id. at 1190.
In Hodges, a requester sought from the Department of Health the license verification and certificate of need for the private health care provider of the state correctional facility in which the requester was incarcerated. Id. at 1191. The Department of Health argued that it did not have authority over prison medical facilities, and that certificates of need were no longer issued. Id. Additionally, the Department of Health submitted an affidavit by its open records officer, attesting that “she made a good faith and thorough inquiry to determine if the Department was in possession of” the requested records. Id. While conceding that responsive records may exist somewhere “under another spelling, another name[,] or another classification,” the open records officer concluded that, “[b]ased on her search,” no responsive records were within the Department of Health‘s possession, custody, or control. Id. at 1191, 1193. OOR determined that the Department of Health met its burden of proof that it did not possess the requested records; this Court agreed. Id. at 1193. We explained that the open records officer‘s admission of the possible existence of responsive records did not contradict her ultimate conclusion, since the Department of Health “was not required to sift through all of its records in order to determine if something under a different spelling or classification might possibly relate to” the request. Id.
Instantly, ADA Robbins’ unsworn declaration stated that she made inquiries to six department supervisors about whether any responsive documents existed; all responded that they were “unaware of any.” Id. With specific regard to Item 3, ADA Robbins explained that the DAO did not possess a list of all recipients of the McMahon Tape, and that it did not have “a searchable database that would allow the
DAO to identify all cases” in which defendants were notified of the Tape. Id. Furthermore, ADA Robbins attested, any relevant files would be in an off-site storage facility, where they have not been digitized; thus, to compile the data sought by Requester would involve searching “thousands of boxes of materials.” Id.
Rejecting the DAO‘s assertions, the Trial Court reasoned that ADA Robbins’ statements “do not demonstrate clearly to what extent if any that actual searches were undertaken to attеmpt to locate potential responsive records.”14 Trial Ct. Op., 9/7/2021, at 7. The Trial Court acknowledged that the department supervisors who spoke with ADA Robbins were unaware of where responsive records could be found but countered that lack of awareness of responsive records and the actual nonexistence of responsive records “are two distinct scenarios.” Id. Thus, the Trial Court concluded that ADA Robbins’ statements were “conclusory,” and failed to describe “specific good faith efforts undertaken to locate the requested records.” Id. at 8.
We disagree with the Trial Court that the DAO failed to show that it fulfilled its duties under thе RTKL as to Item 3. Our primary point of disagreement concerns
its duty under the RTKL with “a good faith and thorough inquiry to determine if [it is] in possession of the reсords requested.” 29 A.3d at 1191.
The Trial Court is correct that a records custodian‘s unawareness of a certain record is not the same thing as the actual nonexistence of that record. It should be clear that, if an open records officer denied access to a record merely by asserting her lack of personal knowledge of the record, that assertion alone would be insufficient to constitute a good-faith response. However, we believe that the Trial Court‘s concern is unwarranted in this instance, for two reasons. First, ADA Robbins explained in her affidavits that she was not only relying on the department supervisors’ unawareness of the rеcords in question; rather, she and other DAO employees carefully assessed what records from the relevant period are in the DAO‘s possession, and the means by which any relevant records in its case management system may be accessed.
The second reason is that we see no reasonable basis to suppose that a complete record of all individuals and agencies to have received a copy of the McMahon Tape from the DAO is currently in the DAO‘s possession, or that one was ever created in the first place.15 The sole explanation offered by Requester for his belief that such a list exists is the assertion that the release of the McMahon Tape “would not have been possible unless the DAO had compiled a ‘list of individuals’
that it determined should receive the [T]ape.”16 Requester‘s Br. at 11. In the absence of a reasonably precise identification of an existing record, or anything beyond speculation, ADA Robbins could draw a valid conclusion that the requested list was not in the DAO‘s possession following her inquiries.
IV. Conclusion
Requester‘s withdrawal of Items 1, 2, 5, and 6 of the request, and his statement
ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
ORDER
AND NOW, this 22nd day of February, 2024, the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County in the above-captioned matter, dated June 2, 2021, is hereby REVERSED.
ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
