STATE DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH, Petitioner, v. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SACRAMENTO COUNTY, Respondent; CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING, Real Party in Interest.
No. S214679
Supreme Court of California
Feb. 19, 2015
940
Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Kathleen Kenealy, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Gregory D. Brown, Deputy State Solicitor General, Julie Weng-Gutierrez, Assistant Attorney General, Niromi W. Pfeiffer and Grant Lien, Deputy Attorneys General, for Petitioner.
No appearance for Respondent.
Davis Wright Tremaine, Rochelle Wilcox; Jassy Vick Carolan, Duffy Carolan and Jeff Glasser for Real Party in Interest.
Arne Werchick for California Advocates for Nursing Reform, Inc., as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Real Party in Interest.
Ram, Olson, Cereghino & Kopczynski, Karl Olson; Jeffrey D. Glasser; James W. Ewert; and Juan F. Cornejo for California Newspaper Publishers Association, Los Angeles Times Communications LLC, McClatchy Newspapers, Inc., First Amendment Coalition and California Broadcasters Association as Amici Curiae on behalf of Real Party in Interest.
O‘Melveny & Myers, Sabrina Heron Strong, Patricia K. Yew, Heather Silver and Alexander Slavin for Inner City Law Center as Amicus Curiae.
OPINION
LIU, J.—The Center for Investigative Reporting (the Center) is a news organization investigating mistreatment of mentally ill and developmentally disabled individuals in state-owned long-term health care facilities. It filed a California Public Records Act (Public Records Act;
The Long-Term Care, Health, Safety, and Security Act of 1973 (the Long-Term Care Act;
The trial court determined that the Long-Term Care Act was the more specific and later-enacted statute and thus trumped
We reverse and remand with instructions for the Court of Appeal to deny the petition. The trial court was correct: The Long-Term Care Act‘s provisions are the later-enacted provisions, and they announce with detail and specificity the information that must be included in DPH citations in the public record. Because it is both the more specific and the later-enacted statute, the Long-Term Care Act is properly construed as a limited exception to
I.
The Center is a nonprofit news organization involved in investigating and reporting on patient abuse in state-owned long-term care facilities operated by
In May of 2011, while investigating these matters, a staff reporter employed by the Center filed a written request, pursuant to the Public Records Act (
DPH‘s response was twofold. First, it informed the Center that DPH was required to maintain citations for only four years. Second, DPH told the Center that any recent responsive records would be “examined and redacted before release in accordance with
A month later, DPH produced 55 citations from the years 2007 through 2011. In DPH‘s own words, the records were “aggressively” redacted. In fact, the redacted citations contained scant information about the violations giving rise to each citation. A representative example is citation No. 15-1040-0003490-S. The citation is classified as an “AA” citation, meaning that the patient died as a direct and proximate result of the facility‘s offense. (
The Center‘s legal counsel wrote a letter to DPH arguing that the redactions were not legally justified. DPH responded with an e-mail maintaining that the redactions were required by
The trial court said it was “called upon in this case to resolve an apparent conflict between the Lanterman Act‘s prohibition against disclosure of records obtained in the course of providing mental health or developmental services, and the Long-Term Care Act‘s requirement that citations issued to long-term health care facilities be open to public inspection.” It concluded that the two statutes could not be reconciled and that the Long-Term Care Act‘s mandate that DPH citations be made public with minimal redaction trumped the Lanterman Act‘s confidentiality provisions because the Long-Term Care Act was the more specific statute. DPH filed a petition for writ of extraordinary mandate.
The Court of Appeal acknowledged a conflict between the Long-Term Care Act and the Lanterman Act, but determined that the statutes could be harmonized. It observed that “the Lanterman Act and the Long-Term Care Act apply to the same population and seek the same purpose—to promote and protect the health and safety of mental health patients. But the two acts effectuate this common purpose from opposite directions. The Lanterman Act effectuates this purpose by ensuring the confidentiality of mental health records—this encourages persons with mental problems to seek, accept and undergo treatment and to be open and candid in treatment. The Long-Term Care Act effectuates this purpose, as relevant here, by making citations for violations of patient care standards publicly accessible, so the public can oversee what is happening in these facilities.” The “congruence of population and purpose, and this effectuation of purpose from opposite directions, creates a complementarity of method to effectuate the common purpose for this common population. In this way, these confidentiality and public accessibility provisions can be harmonized.”
Justice Hoch dissented. She would have concluded that the two statutes were in irreconcilable conflict as to what information in a DPH citation can or must be released to the public. She would have resolved the conflict by concluding that the Long-Term Care Act prevailed because its relevant provisions are more specific and later enacted than
II.
We begin by describing the two statutory schemes at issue.
A.
The Long-Term Care Act was enacted in 1973 with the purpose of “establish[ing] (1) a citation system for the imposition of prompt and effective civil sanctions against long-term health care facilities in violation of the laws and regulations of this state, and the federal laws and regulations as applicable to nursing facilities as defined in subdivision (k) of Section 1250, relating to patient care; (2) an inspection and reporting system to ensure that long-term health care facilities are in compliance with state statutes and regulations pertaining to patient care; and (3) a provisional licensing mechanism to ensure that full-term licenses are issued only to those long-term health care facilities that meet state standards relating to patient care.” (
The term “long-term health care facility” is defined as any of eight types of licensed care facilities. (
Before the Long-Term Care Act was enacted, the only significant sanctions available against a long-term health care facility were misdemeanor criminal charges, injunctions, or suspension or revocation of the facility‘s license. (Sen. Com. on Health & Welfare, Analysis of Assem. Bill No. 1600 (1973–1974 Reg. Sess.) as amended June 21, 1973, p. 1.) This system was “criticized as too rigid, lacking in intermediate sanctions, and ineffective in producing compliance with standards.” (Ibid.; see Joint Com. on Aging, Analysis of Assembly Bill 1600 (1973–1974 Reg. Sess.) p. 4; Rep. of Joint Com. on Aging, Regarding Assembly Bill 1600, 5 Assem. J. (1973–1974 Reg. Sess.) p. 8786 (Joint Committee Report) [describing the available remedies as “either too weak or too severe in nature“].) The Long-Term Care Act also specifically sought to combat the problem that “[t]he Department‘s reports on nursing homes and their relative compliance with patient health and safety standards were all centralized in Sacramento and, therefore, practically inaccessible to nursing home consumers . . . .” (Joint Com. Rep., at p. 8786.)
Although the Long-Term Care Act‘s inspection and citation process serves to punish by naming and shaming facilities that violate the law, “[t]he
The Long-Term Care Act details the information that must be included in every citation, and it specifies that citations are public records. It also specifies that the patient‘s or resident‘s name must be redacted and is not part of the public record.
Class “AA” and “A” citations—i.e., citations issued for violations that are a proximate cause of the death of a patient or resident or that pose a
Finally, the Long-Term Care Act says, “Any writing received, owned, used, or retained by [DPH] in connection with the provisions of this chapter is a public record within the meaning of subdivision (d) of Section 6252 of the Government Code, and, as such, is open to public inspection pursuant to the provision of Section 6253, 6256, 6257, and 6258 of the Government Code.” (
B.
The Lanterman-Petris-Short Act was enacted in 1967. (Stats. 1967, ch. 1667, § 36, p. 4074.) Its stated purposes include “provid[ing] prompt evaluation and treatment of persons with mental health disorders or impaired by chronic alcoholism” (
The relevant provisions here are
As originally enacted,
III.
Before considering the merits of the Court of Appeal‘s effort to harmonize the Long-Term Care Act and the Lanterman Act, we must first address a threshold argument. The Center contends that
We disagree.
The Center relies on Sorenson, supra, 219 Cal.App.4th 409, Tarasoff v. Regents of University of California (1976) 17 Cal.3d 425, 443 (Tarasoff), and Devereaux v. Latham & Watkins (1995) 32 Cal.App.4th 1571, 1585 (Devereaux) in support of its argument that the information in DPH citations is not “obtained in the course of providing services.” But none of these cases stands for the proposition that confidential information obtained during a DPH investigation becomes public when an investigator reviews or reproduces it.
Tarasoff and Devereaux are even further afield. Neither case involved a patient or resident who was alleged to have been receiving treatment under the Lanterman Act at the time the record in question was generated. (See Tarasoff, supra, 17 Cal.3d at p. 443 [“[t]he pleadings . . . state no facts showing that the psychotherapy provided to [the patient] by [the hospital] falls under any of [the] programs” enumerated in
A.
We now turn to the primary question that occupied the Court of Appeal: whether the Long-Term Care Act and the Lanterman Act can be harmonized, or whether one must prevail over the other.
We have recently emphasized the importance of harmonizing potentially inconsistent statutes. ” ‘A court must, where reasonably possible, harmonize statutes, reconcile seeming inconsistencies in them, and construe them to give force and effect to all of their provisions. [Citations.] This rule applies although one of the statutes involved deals generally with a subject and another relates specifically to particular aspects of the subject.’ [Citation.] Thus, when ” ‘two codes are to be construed, they “must be regarded as blending into each other and forming a single statute.” [Citation.] Accordingly, they “must be read together and so construed as to give effect, when possible, to all the provisions thereof.” [Citation.]” ’ [Citation.] Further, ’ “[a]ll presumptions are against a repeal by implication. [Citations.]” ’ [Citation.] Absent an express declaration of legislative intent, we will find an implied repeal ‘only when there is no rational basis for harmonizing the two potentially conflicting statutes [citation], and the statutes are “irreconcilable, clearly repugnant, and so inconsistent that the two cannot have concurrent
But the requirement that courts harmonize potentially inconsistent statutes when possible is not a license to redraft the statutes to strike a compromise that the Legislature did not reach. (See Garcia v. McCutchen (1997) 16 Cal.4th 469, 479 [“the general policy underlying legislation ‘cannot supplant the intent of the Legislature as expressed in a particular statute’ “].) The cases in which we have harmonized potentially conflicting statutes involve choosing one plausible construction of a statute over another in order to avoid a conflict with a second statute. (See, e.g., Pacific Palisades, supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 803 [characterizing the statute being construed as “unclear or ambiguous“]; Brown v. Mortensen (2011) 51 Cal.4th 1052, 1067–1068 [harmonizing two federal statutes where the first statute was “silent” on the question at issue].) This canon of construction, like all such canons, does not authorize courts to rewrite statutes.
The Court of Appeal misapplied the harmonization rule here. It did not interpret either the Lanterman Act or the Long-Term Care Act in a way that rendered the text of the two acts consistent. Instead, its harmonization analysis began by considering the “common purpose” of the two acts, i.e., “to promote and protect the health and safety of mental health patients.” It then harmonized the statutes by considering, in its own independent judgment, whether disclosure of the various types of information listed as public records in the Long-Term Care Act would serve this common purpose. This approach was well intentioned but erroneous.
Instead of starting with the statutes’ purposes, the Court of Appeal should have started with their respective texts. (See Pineda v. Williams-Sonoma Stores, Inc. (2011) 51 Cal.4th 524, 529 [“we look first to the words of a statute, ‘because they generally provide the most reliable indicator of legislative intent’ “].) Beginning with the text of the statutes, we conclude that the statutes are in conflict and thus one must be interpreted as providing an exception to the other.
The Long-Term Care Act states not only that DPH citations are public records, but that “AA” and “A” citations must be publicly posted at the facility in question. (
In two separate statutory provisions, the Long-Term Care Act also mandates the precise redactions that should occur before making a citation public.
Thus, the Long-Term Care Act‘s detailed provisions mandate the contents and public nature of DPH citations, as well as the information that must be redacted before the citations are made public. By specifying that names must be redacted from the public copies of citations but not mentioning any other information that may be redacted,
By contrast, the Lanterman Act‘s express terms would render most of the information included in a DPH citation confidential and therefore not subject
It is thus evident that the two statutory schemes conflict. On one hand, the Long-Term Care Act, which expressly applies to facilities that provide the types of services enumerated in
The Court of Appeal‘s harmonization effort results in a disclosure scheme that is inconsistent with the requirements of either statute. By permitting DPH to disclose “what was the harm [to the patient or resident], what was the abuse, what was the lack of respect or dignity afforded, and what was the action that the facility did or failed to do” (italics omitted), the Court of Appeal did not give full effect to
Even if the Court of Appeal‘s methodology had been sound, it is not clear that the balance it struck was logical. The Court of Appeal‘s decision required the redaction of information, including information on “the risk the violation presents to [the patient‘s or resident‘s] mental and physical condition,” that is highly significant to understanding how and why the DPH selected a particular penalty as the appropriate punishment for a particular violation. At the same time, the Court of Appeal‘s compromise leaves in the public record enough facts for a patient or resident who was the victim of the misconduct to know that he or she is the subject of the citation. It is hard to see how such results would protect patients from the embarrassment of seeing their suffering disclosed in the public record or advance the Long-Term Care Act‘s goal of specifically and publicly identifying the full scope of a facility‘s misconduct.
In addition, the Court of Appeal‘s harmonization requires facilities to walk a tightrope when balancing their obligations to protect confidentiality and to make citations public. The slightest misstep in either direction exposes facilities to significant civil liability. (See
We also reject DPH‘s argument that the statutes can be harmonized by reading
For similar reasons, we reject DPH‘s argument that the Information Practices Act of 1977 (
B.
We now address the dispositive question: whether the Lanterman Act must be treated as an exception to the Long-Term Care Act‘s general rule that DPH citations must be made public with only minimal redactions, or whether the Long-Term Care Act must be treated as an exception to the Lanterman Act‘s general rule that all information obtained in the course of treating mentally ill and developmentally disabled patients and residents is confidential.
The rules we must apply when faced with two irreconcilable statutes are well established. “If conflicting statutes cannot be reconciled, later enactments supersede earlier ones [citation], and more specific provisions take precedence over more general ones [citation].” (Collection Bureau of San Jose v. Rumsey (2000) 24 Cal.4th 301, 310 (Rumsey).) But when these two rules are in conflict, the rule that specific provisions take precedence over more general ones trumps the rule that later-enacted statutes have precedence. (See People v. Gilbert (1969) 1 Cal.3d 475, 479 [” ‘It is the general rule that where the general statute standing alone would include the same matter as the
The parties rely on dueling cases to demonstrate which statute is more specific. The Center cites cases to demonstrate that the relevant provisions of the Long-Term Care Act are more specific because they deal with a more specific subject matter—i.e., DPH citations—than does
“[O]ur goal is to discern the probable intent of the Legislature so as to effectuate the purpose of the laws in question.” (Rumsey, supra, 24 Cal.4th at pp. 309–310; see
The Legislature has amended
Moreover, the Legislature has continued to view the Long-Term Care Act as demanding specific and detailed disclosure of DPH citations.
Contrary to DPH‘s argument, the 2012 enactments do not provide protection and advocacy agencies with merely the same access to DPH citations that the general public has under the Long-Term Care Act. The statutes, by their terms, provide for disclosures of unredacted citations, i.e., citations that include the names that
The legislative history of the 2012 enactments further supports the Center‘s position. The enactments were directed at a specific problem: DPH‘s refusal to provide unredacted reports regarding Lanterman-protected residents to the state‘s protection and advocacy agency absent a case-specific showing of probable cause. (Off. of Sen. Floor Analyses, 3d reading analysis of Sen. Bill No. 1377 (2011–2012 Reg. Sess.) as amended Aug. 20, 2012, p. 4
DPH‘s argument that
In sum, the Long-Term Care Act is both the more specific and the later-enacted statute. As such, it creates a limited exception to
On this record, we do not know whether the 55 citations at issue will be devoid of personally identifying information once redacted to remove patient and resident names. Accordingly, we have no occasion to consider whether unusually detailed citations that clearly identify particular patients or residents without expressly naming them might require redaction under the Long-Term Care Act.
IV.
For the reasons above, we reverse and remand this case to the Court of Appeal with instructions to deny DPH‘s petition for writ of mandate. We also deny DPH‘s motion to take additional evidence.
Cantil-Sakauye, C. J., Werdegar, J., Chin, J., Corrigan, J., Baxter, J.,1 and Gilbert, J.,† concurred.
