OPINION
By the Court,
This appeal involves the denial of a records request made pursuant to the Nevada Public Records Act (NPRA). The primary issue we are asked to resolve is whether, after the commencement of a public records lawsuit, the state entity withholding the requested records is required to provide the requesting party with a
We also address what the state entity withholding the requested records is required to provide to the requesting party in preliti-gation situations. We conclude that, as mandated by NRS 239.0107(l)(d), if a state entity denies a public records request prior to the commencement of litigation, it must provide the requesting party with notice of its claim of confidentiality and citation to legal authority that justifies nondisclosure. Here, we conclude that the state entity withholding the requested records failed to satisfy these responsibilities.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Appellant Reno Newspapers, Inc., is a Nevada corporation doing business as the Reno Gazette-Journal (RGJ). Respondents are Jim Gibbons, former Governor of the State of Nevada, and the State of Nevada (collectively, the State). In 2008, the RGJ made a records request, pursuant to the NPRA, for e-mail communications sent over a six-month time period between Governor Gibbons and ten individuals. The request specified that the e-mails being sought were transmitted to or from Governor Gibbons’ state-issued e-mail account. In the event that the State rejected the request, the RGJ asked that it be provided a log identifying, for each e-mail, the sender, all recipients, the message date, and the legal basis upon which the State was denying access. The State denied the RGJ’s request for the e-mails or a log. Citing to our decision in DR Partners v. Board of County Commissioners,
DISCUSSION
Although the district court’s denial of a writ petition is ordinarily reviewed for an abuse of discretion, when, as here, the petition entails questions of law, we review the district court’s decision de novo. Reno Newspapers v. Sheriff,
The district court erred in denying the RGJ’s request for a log
The RGJ’s primary contention on appeal is that the district court erred in refusing to order the State to provide it with a detailed log describing the factual nature of each withheld e-mail and the legal basis for nondisclosure so that it could make an informed decision regarding whether to challenge the State’s claim of confidentiality. We begin our analysis of this contention by providing an overview of the NPRA and our jurisprudence regarding claims of confidentiality made in response to public records requests.
Overview of the NPRA
The NPRA provides that all public books and public records of governmental entities must remain open to the public, unless “otherwise declared by law to be confidential.” NRS 239.010(1). The Legislature has declared that the purpose of the NPRA is to further the democratic ideal of an accountable government by ensuring that
In 2007, in order to better effectuate these purposes, the Legislature amended the NPRA to provide that its provisions must be liberally construed to maximize the public’s right of access. NRS 239.001(l)-(2); 2007 Nev. Stat., ch. 435, § 2, at 2061. Conversely, any limitations or restrictions on the public’s right of access must be narrowly construed. NRS 239.001(3); 2007 Nev. Stat., ch. 435, § 2, at 2061. In addition, the Legislature amended the NPRA to provide that if a state entity withholds records, it bears the burden of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the records are confidential. NRS 239.0113; 2007 Nev. Stat., ch. 435, § 5, at 2062.
Overview of our NPRA jurisprudence
In Donrey of Nevada v. Bradshaw,
On appeal, we determined that the confidentiality provisions contained in NRS Chapter 179A did not cover the record at issue. Id. at 634,
We expanded upon Bradshaw7& consideration of claims of confidentiality in DR Partners v. Board of County Commissioners,
On appeal, we first set forth the requirements for showing that the deliberative process privilege applies — namely, that the withheld records be both “predecisional” and “deliberative.” Id. at 623,
We recently considered a claim of confidentiality made in response to an NPRA request in Reno Newspapers v. Sheriff,
Our jurisprudence has therefore established a framework for testing claims of confidentiality under the backdrop of the NPRA’s declaration that its provisions “must be construed liberally” to facilitate access to public records, NRS 239.001(2), and that any restrictions on access “must be construed narrowly.” NRS 239.001(3). First, we begin with the presumption that all government-generated records are open to disclosure. See Reno Newspapers v. Sheriff,
With the foregoing principles in mind, we turn to the RGJ’s assertion that because the district court did not order the State to provide it with a log describing each e-mail withheld, it could not meaningfully assess and challenge the State’s claim that the requested e-mails were confidential. It urges us to adopt a rule whereby each time that a state entity asserts that requested records are confidential, the state entity must provide the requesting party with a log in the form of a “Vaughn index” as described in Vaughn v. Rosen,
A Vaughn index is a submission commonly utilized in cases involving the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), the federal analog of the NPRA. This submission typically contains “detailed public affidavits identifying the documents withheld, the FOIA exemptions claimed, and a particularized explanation of why each document falls within the claimed exemption.” Lion Raisins v. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture,
While we agree that the RGJ should have been provided with a log under the circumstances of this case, we disagree that this log was required to be in the specific form of a Vaughn index or that a log is required each time records are withheld. As federal courts have explained when considering the FOIA, although a Vaughn index is often a vital method for resolving the tension between the government’s interest in keeping certain records confidential and the requesting party’s need for enough information to meaningfully contest a claim of confidentiality, “a Vaughn index ... is [not] necessarily required in all cases.” Fiduccia v. U.S. Dept. of Justice,
Nonetheless, the provisions of the NPRA place an unmistakable emphasis on disclosure. The NPRA expressly provides that its provisions “must be construed liberally” to ensure the presumption of openness and explicitly declares that any restriction on disclosure “must be construed narrowly.” NRS 239.001(2)-(3). In harmony with the overarching purposes of the NPRA, the burden of proof is imposed on the state entity to prove that a withheld record is confidential. NRS 239.0113. Equally unmistakable is the emphasis that our NPRA jurisprudence places on adequate adversarial testing. Indeed, the framework established in Bradshaw, DR Partners, and Reno Newspapers v. Sheriff exemplifies an intensely adversarial method for determining whether requested records are confidential.
In view of the emphasis placed on disclosure and the importance of testing claims of confidentiality in an adversarial setting, we agree with the Vaughn court that “it is anomalous” and inequitable to deny the requesting party basic information about the withheld records, thereby relegating it to advocating from a nebulous position where it is powerless to contest a claim of confidentiality.
We therefore conclude that after the commencement of an NPRA lawsuit, the requesting party generally is entitled to a log unless, for example, the state entity withholding the records demonstrates that the requesting party has sufficient information to
The State asserts that it was not required to provide the RGJ with a log because the district court conducted an in camera review of the requested e-mails. It further asserts that an in camera review is the optimal method for the district court to review claims of confidentiality while protecting confidential information from being disclosed.
In and of itself, an in camera review is not improper. See Griffis v. Pinal County,
Here, the State responded to the RGJ’s petition for a writ of mandamus
The State failed to satisfy its prelitigation duties under the NPRA
The RGJ contends that the State also failed to satisfy its prelit-igation duties under the NPRA. In particular, it asserts that the state entity denying an NPRA request prior to the commencement of litigation is required to provide the requesting party with a Vaughn index.
We decline to adopt the Vaughn index as a prelitigation requirement under the NPRA. First, a Vaughn index is not required outside of the litigation context. See Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. v. N.R.C.,
If the governmental entity must deny the person’s request to inspect or copy the public book or record because the public book or record, or a part thereof, is confidential, [the governmental entity shall] provide to the person, in writing:
(1) Notice of that fact; and
(2) A citation to the specific statute or other legal authority that makes the public book or record, or a part thereof, confidential.
Thus, if a state entity declines a public records request prior to litigation, it must provide the requesting party with notice and citation to legal authority that justifies nondisclosure. No log, in the form of a Vaughn index or otherwise, is required under NRS 239.0107(l)(d). Nevertheless, in the instant case, we conclude that the State failed to meet its prelitigation responsibilities under NRS 239.0107(l)(d).
In response to the RGJ’s prelitigation request for Governor Gibbons’ e-mails, the State informed the RGJ that “all [the requested] emails are either privileged or are not considered public records.’ ’ Following this blanket denial, the State summarily listed DR Partners, California caselaw, a Nevada Attorney General Opinion, and the State of Nevada Policy on Defining Information Transmitted via E-mail as a Public Record. The State provided no explanation whatsoever as to why the cases it cited actually supported its claim of confidentiality or were anything other than superfluous. We cannot conclude that merely pinning a string of citations to a boilerplate declaration of confidentiality satisfies the State’s pre-litigation obligation under NRS 239.0107(l)(d)(2) to cite to “specific” authority “that makes the public book or record, or a part thereof, confidential.” And, suffice it to say, the State’s informal employee e-mail policy does not have the force of law, and therefore, we reject the notion that the State satisfied its prelitigation duties by citing this policy. See generally State v. City of Clearwater,
CONCLUSION
We reverse the district court’s order denying in part the RGJ’s petition for a writ of mandamus and remand this case to the district court with instructions to direct the State to provide the RGJ with
Notes
This policy provides state employees with informal guidelines on how to determine if a given e-mail is a public record and describes procedures for dealing with e-mails classified as public records. For example, it indicates that public records should not be deleted.
The State did not file a cross-appeal challenging the district court’s issuance of the writ of mandamus with respect to 6 of the requested e-mails. As such, our consideration of this appeal is limited to whether the district court erred in denying the RGJ’s writ petition as to the 98 remaining e-mails.
We caution that in this log, the state entity withholding records “need not specify its objections in such detail as to compromise the secrecy of the information.” Church of Scientology, Etc. v. U.S. Dept.,
Furthermore, we are cognizant that requiring an individual description of each requested record may become overly burdensome when the requesting party seeks access to several hundred records. In such a circumstance, a log providing a representative sampling of the larger group of records may be appropriate. See Bonner v. U.S. Dept. of State,
We note that mandamus was the appropriate procedural vehicle for the RGJ to seek access to the withheld e-mails or a log. See generally DR Partners v. Bd. of County Comm’rs,
In light of this conclusion, we need not consider whether the district court correctly determined that of the 98 e-mails at issue here, 24 were personal in nature, 32 were of a transitory nature, and 42 were of a transitory nature and/or covered by the deliberative process privilege. See Davin v. U.S. Dept. of Justice,
