Lead Opinion
Although the issue of privilege between state agencies and their in-house counsel is not before this court, our decision on whether to award Olander attorney fees is necessarily made in the context of that issue. Since we find that the OEPA and its counsel were reasonable in their position that OEPA’s communications with its in-house counsel were privileged, and because the public benefit gained by the success of Olander’s mandamus action was not significant enough to itself merit an award of attorney fees, we find that the court of appeals did not abuse its discretion in declining to award attorney fees in this case.
This court found in State ex rel. Thomas v. Ohio State Univ. (1994),
Thus, respondents’ claim of privilege in this particular case was reasonably grounded in the law. As this court noted it Hutson, attorney fees are regarded as punitive. Id.,
The second factor to consider when deciding whether to award attorney fees in a public records case is the degree to which the public benefits from the release of the records. We find that the court of appeals did not abuse its discretion by finding that benefit to be minimal in this case. In Hutson, this court awarded attorney fees where the relator’s mandamus action increased the period allowed for the inspection of records at the Warren Police Department from three hours per day to eight hours per day.
In State ex rel. Multimedia, Inc. v. Snowden (1995),
The release of records in the present case confers its benefits mostly on Olander in his personal battle against a former employer. The public benefit lies more with the exposure of the OEPA’s seeming repudiation of R.C. 109.02 than it does with expanded access to public records.
Therefore, since the OEPA refused Olander’s disputed public records requests in good faith, and because the public benefit of releasing those records, if any, is not great enough to support an award of attorney fees on its own, we find that the court of appeals did not abuse its discretion in denying attorney fees to Olander in this case.
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. Once again a majority applies the wrong test in determining the issue of entitlement to attorney fees for a plaintiff who succeeds in an R.C. 149.43 public records case. The statute does not say an award is discretionary. The statute does not say that a court “should consider the reasonableness of the government’s failure to comply” with the law. The statute does not say that a court should consider “the degree to which the public will benefit from release of the records in question.” The history of the statute and the confirmation of the policy and rule as so clearly and concisely set forth by Justice Francis E. Sweeney in State ex rel. Pennington v. Gundler (1996),
