Opinion
Does a newspaper have the right to the names and addresses of a water district’s customers who exceeded their water allocation after implementation of a water rationing ordinance? We conclude that the mere assertion by the water district of possible harassment or physical endangerment does not “clearly outweigh” the public interest in disclosure of these records. We further conclude that the superior court, in denying *1582 the newspaper access to the water district’s list of excessive water users, exceeded its jurisdiction in failing to place the burden to justify nondisclosure of these records on the water district, and shall annul its order.
Procedural Background
As a result of a severe and protracted water shortage, the Goleta Water District (District) adopted ordinance 89-1, effective May 1, 1989, prohibiting certain uses of water and imposing limitations upon the amount of water which customers may receive from the District. Methods of enforcement include imposition of a surcharge of four times the highest billing rate for excessive use in the first and second billing periods, ten times the highest billing rate for the third and fourth periods of excessive use, imposition of a flow restrictor after the third consecutive billing period of excessive use, and ultimately, the draconian measure of termination (of water service, not the customer). The ordinance also permits a customer’s account to be credited for any amount of surcharge payments if total wаter usage during the 12-month period from May 1, 1989, to May 1, 1990, is equal to or less than the total allowed usage for that 12-month period.
Petitioner, a newspaper, sought, under the California Public Records Act (Gov. Code, § 6250 et seq.), 1 a court order that the District disclose the names and addresses of those customers who exceeded their water allocation during the first period after implementation of the ordinance. Petitioner contended that public disclosure—and resultant embarrassment—would provide undeniable incentive to comply with the ordinance and the public would be better able to monitor the District’s enforcement policies. The District claimed that such information would intrude upon its customers’ constitutional right of privacy аnd that any legitimate purpose for disclosure would be outweighed by the harm that would be visited upon the customers. The District agreed, however, to provide the names of commercial, agricultural, and multifamily users that had exceeded water аllocations, as well as account numbers, amount of excess use, and penalties imposed upon individual residential customers. The District refused to disclose the names and addresses of the individual residential customers.
Petitioner moved to compel disclosure of the names and addresses of all customers as constituting public records as defined in section 6252, subdivision (d). 2 The District argued that petitioner’s request was premature since the ordinance was only recently implemented. Additionally, it pointed out that since water usage is seasonal, a customer might well use more water in *1583 the hot months and be above allocation, but conserve in the cooler months and not use more than the yearly allocation at the end of the 12-month period. The court placed the burden on petitioner to justify the public’s right, or need, to know the particular names of individual persons and their addresses, as opposed to statistical information concerning excess use, until such time that the customer becomes a chronic water abuser and subject to imposition of a flow restrictor. 3
The court stated it could take judicial notice of the amount of litigation concerning water use in Goleta and of the drought condition. It was also aware of the passionate feelings in the community concerning water use, and feared that disclosure of customers’ identities would not only subject them to embarrassment, but verbal and possibly physical assault. The court deniеd the motion to compel disclosure of the names and addresses of individuals and ordered disclosure only of the information already provided to petitioner, including the amount of water used by customers that had exceeded their allotmеnts.
Petitioner now seeks a writ of review. (§ 6259, subd. (c).) It asserts that the information sought is not sensitive, and that there is a public interest in opening to inspection the names of the District’s wayward customers. (See
Braun
v.
City of Taft
(1984)
Discussion
1. Standard of Review
Petitioner asserts that the court, in making its order, exceeded its jurisdiction. An order directing or refusing disclosure is reviewable only by extraordinary writ of review as defined in Code of Civil Procedure section 1067. (§ 6259.) Grant of writ of review or certiorari (Code Civ. Proc., § 1067) is limited only to those cases in which a trial court has exceeded its jurisdiction. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 1068, 1074;
Freedom Newspapers, Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(1986)
However, if the court acts contrary to the statutorily authorized procedure, such as that set forth in section 6255, it acts in excess of its jurisdiction and a writ or review, or certiorari, will lie. (See
Rodman
v.
Superior Court
(1939)
Instead, the trial court here placed the onus on the petitioner to give reasons why the court should not limit the amount of access. Additionally, the “evidence” from which the lower court inferred public harassment and danger was mere speculation. Since the trial court did not follow the governing statute, it exceeded its jurisdiction.
2. Burden of Proof and Balancing Interests
Article I, section 1, of the California Constitution guarantees all persons the inalienable right to privacy.
(Scull
v.
Superior Court
(1988)
Consequently, in enacting the Public Records Act, the Legislature balanced the individual’s privacy interest with the right to know about the conduct of public business.
(City of Santa Rosa
v.
Press Democrat
(1986)
*1585
In addition to these express exceptions, section 6255 permits the governmental agency to withhold records if it can demonstrate that “ ‘on the facts of a particular case the publiс interest served by not making the record public
clearly outweighs
the public interest served by disclosure of the record.’ ”
(CBS, Inc.
v.
Block, supra,
3. To Disclose or Not to Disclose
Petitioner asserts that the information sought is located in public records open to public inspection (§§ 6252, 6253) and that the claim of privaсy of the names of users of excessive water resources is outweighed by the public’s “fundamental and necessary right” to be informed concerning the workings of its government. (§ 6250;
CBS, Inc.
v.
Block, supra,
The District asserts that publication of those names could expose the individuals to verbal or physical harassment due to the strong currents of emotion on the subject of water overuse, and not simply encouragе, through public embarrassment, those individuals to husband their water usage. Additionally, it argues, customers apply for water as a matter of necessity, not choice. Most residents have no alternate sources of water. (Compare
CBS, Inc.
v.
Block, supra,
Nonetheless, “[a] mere assertion of possible endangerment does not ‘clearly outweigh’ the public interest in aсcess to these records.”
(CBS, Inc.
v.
Block, supra,
The records sought are public records and, in the absence of a privilege or a compelling countervailing interest, “are open to inspection at all times . . . .” (§ 6253, subd. (a);
CBS, Inc.
v.
Block, supra,
42 Cal.3d at pp. 651-652;
Black Panther Party
v.
Kehoe
(1974)
The preservation of water resources has long been a matter of great concern in California.
(National Audubon Society
v.
Superior Court
(1983)
The District asserts that the overdrafting of one’s water allocation for a month’s period does not necessarily demonstrate noncompliance on the part of the customers. Nonetheless, publication of overdrafting by customers during a given period will discourage рrofligate use of water during the ensuing months and encourage customers to bring their consumption within the guidelines of the ordinance.
Conclusion
The District’s fear that outraged citizens will misunderstand the information sought is speculative and does not outweigh the public’s right to be informed of the District’s implementation of the ordinance. We find that *1587 respondent superior court exceeded its jurisdiction in failing to follow the statutory directive to place the burden on the agency to justify withholding the information sought, a burden that, оn the record, the District could not meet.
Respondent superior court’s order of October 6, 1989, denying the motion to disclose public records is annulled and the matter is remanded to the superior court to issue a new order granting petitioner’s mоtion.
Gilbert, J., and Abbe, J., concurred.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Government Code unless otherwise indicated.
Section 6258 provides that anyone may institute proceedings for injunctive or declaratory relief to enforce the right to inspect or to recеive a copy of any public record.
Under the ordinance, a customer facing imposition of a flow restrictor has a right to a public hearing.
We note the recent, well-reasoned opinion of
Times Mirror Co.
v.
Superior Court
(1990)
