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AMERICAN FEDERATION OF STATE, COUNTY AND MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES
(AFSCME), LOCAL1650, Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
THE REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA et al., Defendants
and Appellants.
80 Cal.App.3d 913
Civ. No. 41982.
Court of Appeal, First District, Division 1, California
May 16, 1978.
COUNSEL
Antenore & Pokras and Dennis A. Antenore for Plaintiff
and Appellant. Donald L. Reidhaar, Milton H. Gordon, Glenn R.
Woods, Joseph L. Cowan and Susan Amateau for Defendants and Appellants.
MAJORITY OPINION, ELKINGTON, J.
Recent years have witnessed an accelerated public consciousness
of the people's right to information about the conduct of their
business by public officials, and of the people's right to privacy.
An expression of the people's right to information will be
found in California's Public Records Act (hereafter the Act)
found in Government *915 Code sections 6250-6261. There the Legislature
reaffirmed the principle that "access to information concerning
the conduct of the people's business is a fundamental and necessary
right of every person in this state." ( Gov. Code, §
6250; italics added.)
However, in reasserting the people's "right to information,"
the Legislature took pains to point out that in the effectuation
of that right, courts and legislatures must be mindful of the
"right of individuals to privacy, ..." ( Gov. Code,
§ 6250; italics added.)
The right to privacy has acquired express constitutional recognition.
Among the inalienable rights of the people of this state are
those of "pursuing and obtaining ... privacy." ( Cal.
Const., art. I, § 1; italics added.) It has elsewhere been
given expression in appropriate cases, such as the authorization
of certain tribunals to "make rules ... providing for confidentiality
of proceedings." (See, e.g., Cal. Const., art. VI, §
18, subd. (f).) And see Craemer v. Superior Court, 265 Cal.App.2d
216, 220-222 [71 Cal.Rptr. 193], where we pointed out many statutory
and judicial declarations of this right.
The Act provides: "Public records are open to inspection
at all times during the office hours of the state or local agency
and every citizen has a right to inspect any public record, except
as hereafter provided." ( Gov. Code, § 6253, subd.
(a).) Among the Act's provided exceptions found to be here relevant
are the following:
"Personnel, medical, or similar files, the disclosure
of which would constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal
privacy; ..." ( Gov. Code, § 6254, subd. (c).)
"The agency shall justify withholding any record by demonstrating
... that on the facts of the particular case the public interest
served by not making the record public clearly outweighs the
public interest served by disclosure of the record." ( Gov.
Code, § 6255.)
In a lucid exposition of the Act's subject matter it has been
said: "Government files hold massive collections which are
roughly divisible into public business and private revelations.
Statutory and decisional law *916 on public record disclosure
reveals two fundamental if somewhat competing societal concerns-prevention
of secrecy in government and protection of individual privacy.
'The people's right to know' is a rubric which often accompanies
disclosure claims. The 'right to know' demands public exposure
of recorded official action. A narrower but important interest
is the privacy of individuals whose personal affairs are recorded
in government files. Societal concern for privacy focuses on
minimum exposure of personal information collected for governmental
purposes. The California courts have equated the right of privacy
with the right 'to be let alone,' which must be balanced against
public interest in the dissemination of information demanded
by democratic processes." (Black Panther Party v. Kehoe,
42 Cal.App.3d 645, 651-652 [117 Cal.Rptr. 106].)
To implement the needed "balancing" process, the
Act ( Gov. Code, § 6259) provides access to the courts where
"public records are being improperly withheld from a member
of the public, ... The court shall decide the case after examining
the record in camera, if permitted by subdivision (b) of Section
915 of the Evidence Code, papers filed by the parties and such
oral argument and additional evidence as the court may allow.
[¶] If the court finds that the public official's decision
to refuse disclosure is not justified ... he shall order the
public official to make the record public. If the judge determines
that the public official was justified in refusing to make the
record public, he shall return the item to the public official
without disclosing its content with an order supporting the decision
refusing disclosure." (Italics added.)
We are brought to the factual context, and issues, of the
case before us. Apparently following the imposition of, or attempt
to impose, disciplinary sanctions upon an employee (hereafter
the employee) of the University of California at San Francisco,
she reported many acts of alleged financial irregularities by
two of her superiors. The university's chancellor ordered an
"audit investigation" of the charges, and thereafter
a voluminous "audit report" was furnished him. The
employee, and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees (AFSCME), Local 1650 (hereafter Union), made request
upon the chancellor, under the Act, for a copy of the audit report.
The request was denied by the chancellor for the reasons that
its release "would constitute an unwarranted invasion of
personal privacy" (see Gov. Code, § 6254, subd. (c)),
and that "on the facts of the particular case the public
interest *917 served by not making the record public clearly
outweighs the public interest served by disclosure of the record"
(see Gov. Code, § 6255).
It is notable at this point that no member of the Union was
in any way the subject of the charges of misconduct preferred
by the employee. The employee and the Union thereupon commenced
the instant judicial proceedings under section 6259 of the Act.
The superior court examined the audit report in camera, as required.
[FN*] Thereafter the court ruled, in effect, that the employee
and the Union might have access to voluminous documentary evidence
attached as exhibits to the audit report. But it otherwise denied
inspection or copies of the report itself. An order was then
entered allowing the limited discovery only, and awarding attorney
fees of $350 for the services of counsel for the employee and
the Union.
FN* Neither party contends that the in camera proceedings
were not such as are "permitted by subdivision (b) of Section
915 of the Evidence Code, ..." (See Gov. Code, § 6259,
1st par.)
The Union has appealed from the order insofar as it denied
full disclosure of the audit report. The employee has not appealed,
and through counsel has "specifically requested that this
[court] be informed that she opposed the filing of the within
appeal." The university's regents and chancellor cross-appealed,
but only from that portion of the order allowing attorney fees.
However, in their brief it is stated that they "now decline
to pursue [the] cross-appeal." (1)The Union describes its
grievances as follows: "In the instant matter the University
not only claims that it is entitled to permanently maintain the
secrecy of the audit report, but refuses to publicly disclose
the results of its investigation, the action it has taken with
regard to any wrongdoing revealed thereby, and whether restitution
has been made of any public funds which may have been misappropriated."
The university's audit report which was reviewed in camera
by the superior court has been transmitted to this court. We
perceive the issue before us to be whether the superior court
abused its discretion by its implied determination that "on
the facts of the particular case the public *918 interest served
by not making the [audit report] public clearly outweighs the
public interest served by disclosure of the record."
Neither the Act, nor any judicial authority found by us expository
of it, furnishes guidelines or other express assistance in this
exacting determination. We therefore look generally to expressions
of the state's high court in reasonably comparable areas.
We are aided greatly by the case of Chronicle Pub. Co. v.
Superior Court, 54 Cal.2d 548 [7 Cal.Rptr. 109, 354 P.2d 637],
which concerned the public right to information concerning records
of complaints of wrongdoing against members of the State Bar
of California, a context, we opine, reasonably analogous to that
of the case at hand. The high court concluded (p. 572) that:
"'Only strong public policies weigh against disclosure"'
of such matters. Such a strong public policy was found in the
case of trivial or groundless charges which often, "no matter
how guiltless the attorney might be, if generally known, would
do the attorney irreparable harm ..." (P. 569.) In such
a situation the attorney was to be compared with ""'public
officers and employes ""' generally, against whom such
communications ""'are to be considered as highly confidential,
and as records to which public policy would forbid the confidence
to be violated.""' (Pp. 568-569.) But where the charges
are found true, or discipline is imposed, the strong public policy
against disclosure vanishes; this is true even where the sanction
is a private reproval. In such cases a member of the public is
entitled to information about the complaint, the discipline,
and the "information upon which it was based." (P.
575.)
We are further of the opinion that a proper reconciliation
of the Act and the constitutional right of privacy mandates that,
in situations such as that before us, the recorded complaint
be of a substantial nature before public access is permitted.
And patently, it is in keeping with the rationale of Chronicle
Pub. Co. and the express purpose of the Act that where there
is reasonable cause to believe the complaint to be well founded,
the right of public access to related public records exists.
Courts should not be bound by a contrary determination of the
public agency, for if that were so the Act's decree that-"access
to information concerning the conduct of the people's business
is a fundamental and necessary right of every person in this
state"- would be largely frustrated.
We apply these several criteria to our own in camera review
of the audit report. *919 The audit report concluded that the
greater part of the many accusations against the employee's superiors
were wholly "unsupported by evidence"; others were
found to be "without substance." Yet others were found
to "represent either entirely acceptable practices, or matters
which appeared to be minor violations of established university
procedures having no cost or other unfavorable consequences"
to the university. Generally we find ourselves in agreement.
But we observe exceptions where, in our opinion, disclosure should
have been allowed under the Act's mandate and the criteria we
have alluded to.
The exceptions will be found in the following portions of
the university's audit report: Item 2, pages 4-5; item 4, pages
6-10; last paragraph, page 26; pages 28-29. The failure of the
superior court to order disclosure of those matters is found
to be an abuse of discretion.
The superior court will modify its order in a manner not inconsistent
with what we have said. As so amended, the order is affirmed.
The defendants having abandoned their appeal, it is dismissed.
Plaintiff will recover its costs of appeal, and the superior
court will fix and award reasonable fees for its attorney's services
on the appeal.
Racanelli, P. J., and Sater, J., [FN*] concurred. *920
FN* Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
Cal.App.1.Dist.,1978. American Federation of State, County
and Municipal Emp. (AFSCME), Local 1650 v. Regents of University
of California
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