REQUESTED BY: Senator Chris Beutler Legislative Performance Audit Committee
The Legislative Performance Audit Committee (the "Committee") is created under the Legislative Performance Audit Act (the "Act"), Neb. Rev. Stat. §§
The Section recently conducted a performance audit of the School-Based Teacher-Led Assessment and Reporting System ("STARS") managed by the Nebraska Department of Education (the "Department"). In the course of that performance audit, the Department declined to provide the Section with access to eight letters which the Department had previously received from this office pursuant to our review of agency rules and regulations. In declining to provide the Section with those letters, the Department relied on the attorney/client privilege, since the letters did not involve published opinions of the Attorney General. The Department's refusal to provide the Section with those letters led to this opinion request and the four separate questions which you have posed to us. After a brief discussion of the background circumstances in this case, we will discuss each of your questions in turn.
BACKGROUND
We have previously considered questions similar to the matters at issue in your current opinion request. In 2004, you asked us, "[w]hether the Legislative Performance Audit Committee has the inherent authority to access any and all of an agency's information and records, confidential or otherwise, in whatever form they may be." Op. Att'y Gen. No. 04022 at 3, 4 (August 14, 2004). We will quote at length from Opinion No. 04022 because our discussion there is germane to the questions currently under consideration:
We have found no Nebraska cases which directly address the scope of the Committee's authority to obtain "confidential" or privileged information as it goes about its responsibilities to conduct performance audits. Nor are there any Nebraska statutes which directly address that issue. Our research also indicates that there is little law from other jurisdictions which is helpful in this area. Therefore, we would first point out that the law concerning your initial inquiry is not clear. However, we can again offer several observations concerning the Committee's authority to obtain "confidential" information.
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There are also evidentiary privileges set out at Neb. Rev. Stat. " 27-501 through 27-513 (1995) and in common law. Those privileges allow certain communications such as those between an attorney and client or a physician and patient to be kept confidential. Authorities which have considered application of those privileges in the context of audits have come to varying conclusions.
The Attorney General of North Dakota has indicated that privileges set out in the North Dakota Rules of Evidence such as the attorney/client privilege apply only to court proceedings, and do not prevent the release of attorney billing information to the North Dakota State Auditor. Op. N.D. Att'y Gen. No. L-1 (January 17, 1995). Similarly, the Attorney General of Delaware opined that a county auditor could review certain county billing records, even if they included potential information subject to the attorney/client privilege. Op. Del. Att'y Gen. No. 04-IB09 (April 15, 2004). On the other hand, in Kyle v. Louisiana Public Service Commission,
As a result, it is not at all clear whether evidentiary or common law privileges may be properly asserted with respect to a performance audit by the Committee. Moreover, we would also point out that a performance audit by the Committee is an audit of executive branch agencies by the Legislature and the legislative branch of government. Floor Debate on LB 607, 98th Neb. Leg., 1st Sess. 41 (February 12, 2003) (Statement of Sen. Schimek). That, in turn, raises questions regarding whether certain privileges which might be raised by an executive agency such as the executive privilege or the deliberative process privilege could raise separation of powers issues under art. II, ` 1 of the Nebraska Constitution. For example, the Attorney General of Maryland has indicated that a statute which purports to give a legislative auditor authority to examine any record pertinent to an executive agency's performance cannot exceed those powers allocated to the legislative branch under the constitution and separation of powers principles. Op. Md. Att'y Gen. No. 91-014 (March 18, 1991).
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To summarize the discussion above, we believe that the [State] Auditor's general authority to review records in the context of an audit is broader than that of the Committee. That result may allow an argument that the Committee has less authority to review confidential records than does the Auditor. We also do not believe that the confidentiality provisions of the Public Records Statutes limit access by the Committee to agency records. However, agencies may well be able to assert evidentiary privileges in response to records requests from the Committee in connection with an audit, particularly when the records at issue implicate separation of powers issues and privileges. Some of the current uncertainties in the statutes could be remedied by clarifying legislation. In that regard, we would point out that it may be easier to overcome an evidentiary privilege in an audit by the Committee if there is a statutory provision similar to Neb. Rev. Stat. ` 84-311 (1999) which places strictures on the Committee and its staff with respect to the unauthorized release of information obtained in an audit.
Op. Att'y Gen. No. 04022 at 4-7 (August 14, 2004) (footnotes omitted).
Subsequent to issuance of our Opinion No. 04022 in 2004, the Legislature passed 2006 Neb. Laws LB 588, and that bill is now codified, in part, at Neb. Rev. Stat. §
The [Legislative Performance Audit] section shall have access to any and all information and records, confidential or otherwise, of any agency, in whatever form they may be, unless the section is denied such access by federal law or explicitly named and denied such access by state law. If such a law exists, the agency shall provide the committee with a written explanation of its inability to produce such information and records and, after reasonable accommodations are made, shall grant the section access to all information and records or portions thereof that can legally be reviewed. Accommodations that may be negotiated between the agency and the committee include, but are not limited to, a requirement that specified information or records be reviewed on agency premises and a requirement that specified working papers be securely stored on agency premises.
Question No. 1: Are there any circumstances in which the attorney-client privilege would bar [Legislative Performance Audit] Section access to an agency's confidential or privileged information and records that relate to a program being audited under the Legislative Performance Audit Act?
We have reviewed the various authorities cited in our Opinion No. 04022, and there has been little change in the status of the law since we wrote that opinion in 2004. There are no Nebraska cases which directly address the precise issue raised in your first question, and authorities from other jurisdictions arrive at differing results when considering an auditor's access to materials subject to the attorney/client privilege. Consequently, we are left with the language of the statutes at issue. The pertinent portion of §
Both sides of this debate have raised legitimate arguments in support of their positions. Among other things, the Section argues that the language of §
In Nebraska, statutes should be construed in pari materia and from their language as a whole to determine the intent of the Legislature. Alegent Health Bergan Mercy Medical Center v. Haworth,
After §
(2) Except as provided in this section, any confidential information or confidential records shared with the section shall remain confidential and shall not be shared by an employee of the section with any person who is not an employee of the section, including any member of the committee. If necessary for the conduct of the performance audit, the section may discuss or share confidential information with the chairperson of the committee. If a dispute arises between the section and the agency as to the accuracy of a performance audit or preaudit inquiry involving confidential information or confidential records, the Speaker of the Legislature, as a member of the committee, will be allowed access to the confidential information or confidential records for the purpose of assessing the accuracy of the performance audit or preaudit inquiry.
(3) Except as provided in subdivision (10)(c) of section
77-27,119 , if the speaker or chairperson knowingly divulges or makes known, in any manner not permitted by law, confidential information or confidential records, he or she shall be guilty of a Class III misdemeanor. Except as provided in subsection (11) of section 77 — 2711 and subdivision (10)(c) of section77-27,119 , if any employee or former employee of the section knowingly divulges or makes known, in any manner not permitted by law, confidential information or confidential records, he or she shall be guilty of a Class III misdemeanor and, in the case of an employee, shall be dismissed.(4) No proceeding of the committee or opinion or expression of any member of the committee or section employee acting at the direction of the committee shall be reviewable in any court. No member of the committee or section employee acting at the direction of the committee shall be required to testify or produce evidence in any judicial or administrative proceeding concerning matters relating to the work of the section except in a proceeding brought to enforce the Legislative Performance Audit Act.
(5) Pursuant to sections
84-712 and84-712.01 and subdivision (5) of section84-712.05 , the working papers obtained or produced by the committee or section shall not be considered public records. The committee may make the working papers available for purposes of an external quality control review as required by generally accepted government auditing standards. However, any reports made from such external quality control review shall not make public any information which would be considered confidential when in the possession of the section.
Neb. Rev. Stat. §
Section
We would also point out that the attorney/client privilege can be waived voluntarily by clients. 98 C.J.S. Witnesses § 378 (2006); 81 Am.Jur. 2d Witnesses § 334 (2006). In addition, such a waiver may be created by self-disclosure of confidential information. 98 C.J.S. Witnesses § 385 (2006). However, it is also true that information subject to the attorney/client privilege retains its privileged character until the client has consented to its disclosure. Mayberry v. State,
Question No. 2: Is the approval of the Attorney General required before an agency may release to the Section unpublished communications from the Attorney General's office that relate to a program being audited under the Legislative Performance Audit Act?
In 1995, a state agency requested written advice from this office concerning the agency's obligation to release copies of a numbered informal opinion of the Attorney General.1 We indicated to that agency in 1995 that release of informal opinions from this office, which might be privileged, is within the discretion of the recipient agency. We believe that a similar rule applies to unpublished communications from this office, including informal opinions, which relate to a program being audited under the Act.
Question No. 3: If attorney-client privilege does not bar access to an agency's confidential or privileged information and records, how long must the Section wait to gain access to them? In other words, at what point can the Section, suspecting an agency of purposely delaying compliance with a request to produce information or records, demand immediate access to such documents?
The Legislative Performance Audit Act contains no provisions which set out time parameters for production of records in connection with a performance audit. Absent any specific time frames in that Act, we assume that an agency undergoing a performance audit may produce records to the Section in a time frame that is reasonable under the circumstances. In addition, it seems to us that agencies undergoing a performance audit also have a reasonable time to review their records or have their records reviewed by counsel to determine if there is a basis to assert the attorney/client or other privileges and to establish confidentiality for particular records under §
Question No. 4. If an agency refuses to grant the Section access to confidential or privileged information and records not specifically excluded under Section
Neb. Rev. Stat. §
Sincerely,
JON BRUNING
Attorney General
Dale A. Comer
Assistant Attorney General
Approved by:
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Attorney General
