Data Tree, LLC v. Romaine
In the Matter of Data Tree, LLC, Appellant, v Edward P. Romaine, as Suffolk County Clerk, Respondent
Attorneys
POINTS OF COUNSEL, DLA Piper US LLP, New York City (Andrew L. Deutsch of counsel), for appellant., Christine Malafi, County Attorney, Hauppauge (Christopher A. Jeffreys of counsel), for respondent., Cowan, Liebowitz & Latman, P.C., New York City (Robert W. Clarida of counsel), and Meyer, Klipper & Mohr, PLLC, Washington, D.C. (Michael R. Klipper, Christopher A. Mohr and David Ludwig of counsel), for American Business Media and others, amici curiae., Levine Sullivan Koch & Schulz, L.L.P., New York City (David A. Schulz of counsel), for Advance Publications, Inc. and others, amici curiae., Michael A. Cardozo, Corporation Counsel, New York City (Kristin M. Helmers and Alan G. Krams of counsel), for City of New York, amicus curiae.
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
OPINION OF THE COURT
The issue presented on this appeal is whether the Suffolk County Clerk is required by the Freedom of Information Law (FOIL) to provide certain land records requested by Data Tree, LLC, a commercial provider of on-line public land records, and if so, whether the records must be provided in the electronic format specified by Data Tree. We hold that questions of fact exist as to whether compliance with such request would require the Clerk to disclose information excluded under the privacy exemption of FOIL and whether the Clerk has the ability to *460 comply with the request in the format sought by Data Tree. Therefore, we reverse the Appellate Division order denying disclosure and remit the matter to Supreme Court for those determinations.
I.
Data Tree is a national company that provides on-line public land records such as deeds, mortgages, liens, judgments, releases and maps, and maintains a database of nearly two billion documents, providing its customers with immediate electronic access to the information. Its customers are those entities who purchase, sell, finance and insure property. Data Tree obtains the public land records by requesting them from county clerks, or other public officials who have the responsibility of recording and archiving such documents, throughout the country.
In January 2004, Data Tree, pursuant to FOIL, wrote to the Records Access Officer of the Suffolk County Clerkâs Office requesting copies of various public land records from January 1, 1983 to the present. It asked the Clerk to provide these records in âTiff images or images in the electronic format regularly maintained by the County ... on CD-ROM or other electronic storage medium regularly used by the County ... If electronic images are not maintained, then [in] microfilm [format].â
The Clerk failed to respond to the request within the five-day period required by Public Officers Law § 89 (3), thereby constructively denying the request. Upon Data Treeâs administrative appeal, the Suffolk County Attorney also denied the request, identifying three reasons: (1) the FOIL request would require rewriting and reformatting of the data, which the Clerkâs Office is not required to do; (2) disclosure would constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy due to the volume of the records requested and the commercial nature of Data Treeâs business; and (3) the records are available for copying and/or downloading from the computer terminals at the Clerkâs Office.
Data Tree then brought the instant CPLR article 78 proceeding seeking a judgment directing the Clerk to provide the records sought along with costs and attorneysâ fees.
Supreme Court held that â[t]he Clerkâs Office has rightly denied petitionerâs requestâ (2005 NY Slip Op 30134[U], *3). It noted that many of the requested documents are available either by computer or in paper form at the Clerkâs Office or on its Web site. Additionally, the court adopted the argument of the *461 Clerk that the bulk of the remaining documents could not be transferred to the requested form (TIFF) or any other electronic medium without creating a new record. It noted that the Clerkâs Office was not required to create a new record where none existed, âparticularly when that would be at considerable expense to the taxpayersâ (id. *4). Finally, the court granted Data Treeâs application âfor access ... to the extent the documents are maintained and available in the Clerkâs Office, or on the internetâ (id.). In essence, the court limited the relief sought by Data Tree to allowing it to attend the Clerkâs Office during regular business hours and make individual copies of the public documents and/or download the documents available on the Internet at Data Treeâs expense.
The Appellate Division affirmed, holding first that the Clerkâs Office established an exemption to FOIL, namely, that disclosure of the documents sought would entail an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy (36 AD3d 804 [2d Dept 2007]). The Appellate Division stated that the burden was on the Clerk to prove this exemption and that the Clerk here demonstrated âin a plausible fashionâ that the exemption applied (id. at 805). The court then shifted the burden to Data Tree to establish that the claim of exemption was erroneous or that the Clerk acted in an arbitrary and capricious manner in attempting to invoke an exemption. The court held that Data Tree failed to meet that burden, stating:
âTo the extent that the request was viewed by the Clerk as data mining, the Clerk determined that such request was clearly within the ambit of the enumerated exemptions to FOIL. In view of the rapid advances in technology, the misuse of that data for purposes unfathomable only a few short years ago is now possible. Whether such raw data (as opposed to the records actually maintained) should be available, and what constraints, if any, should be placed on that access, is a public policy better addressed by the appropriate legislative bodiesâ (id. at 805-806).
The Appellate Division noted that the right to access and copy such public records has not been construed to ârequire extraordinary efforts by the agency to provide the records in any manner requested and without regard to other statutorily mandated obligations to take prudent efforts to protect the guaranteed privacy interests of the citizens of the stateâ (id. at *462 806). Thus, it held that the Clerkâs refusal was justified in this case both as to the burden imposed and the legitimate desire to protect the privacy of the citizens of Suffolk County. We granted Data Tree leave to appeal.
II.
FOIL provides the public with broad âaccess to the records of governmentâ (Public Officers Law § 84). The term ârecordâ is defined to include:
â[A]ny information kept, held, filed, produced or reproduced by, with or for an agency or the state legislature, in any physical form whatsoever including, but not limited to, reports, statements, examinations, memoranda, opinions, folders, files, books, manuals, pamphlets, forms, papers, designs, drawings, maps, photos, letters, microfilms, computer tapes or discs, rules, regulations or codesâ (Public Officers Law § 86 [4] [emphasis supplied]).
An agency must âmake available for public inspection and copying all recordsâ unless it can claim a specific exemption to disclosure (see Public Officers Law § 87 [2]; § 89 [3]). However, the exemptions are to be narrowly interpreted so that the public is granted maximum access to the records of government (Matter of Capital Newspapers, Div. of Hearst Corp. v Whalen, 69 NY2d 246, 252 [1987]).
In denying Data Treeâs FOIL request, the Clerk relied in part on the privacy exemption, which authorizes each agency to deny access to records or portions of such records that, if disclosed, would constitute an âunwarranted invasion of personal privacyâ (Public Officers Law § 87 [2] [b]). The law defines an âunwarranted invasion of personal privacyâ with a nonexclusive list of examples (see Public Officers Law § 89 [2] [b] [i]-[vi]).
Data Tree contends that the Appellate Division used an improper burden-shifting analysis to determine whether the privacy exemption applied in this case. We agree. FOIL is based on a presumption of access to the records, and an agency (in this case the Clerk) carries the burden of demonstrating that the exemption applies to the FOIL request (see Public Officers Law § 89 [4] [b]; Matter of Hanig v State of N.Y. Dept. of Motor Vehs., 79 NY2d 106, 109 [1992]). Contrary to the Appellate Divisionâs view, the Clerk must meet this burden in more than just a âplausible fashion.â In order to deny disclosure, the Clerk must show that the requested information âfalls squarely within *463 a FOIL exemption by articulating a particularized and specific justification for denying accessâ (Matter of Capital Newspapers Div. of Hearst Corp. v Burns, 67 NY2d 562, 566 [1986]; see Matter of M. Farbman & Sons v New York City Health & Hosps. Corp., 62 NY2d 75, 80 [1984]; Matter of Fink v Lefkowitz, 47 NY2d 567, 571 [1979]). If the Clerk fails to prove that a statutory exemption applies, FOIL âcompels disclosure, not concealmentâ (Matter of Westchester Rockland Newspapers v Kimball, 50 NY2d 575, 580 [1980]). In short, the burden of proof rests solely with the Clerk to justify the denial of access to the requested records.
Similarly, it was error for the Appellate Division to conclude that as a matter of law the Clerk met its burden in establishing that the privacy exemption to FOIL applies in this case. Although the court failed to articulate the specific basis for its holding, it remarked that Data Tree is a commercial enterprise and was seeking the documents for âdata miningâ purposes. However, FOIL does not require the party requesting the information to show any particular need or purpose (see Matter of Daily Gazette Co. v City of Schenectady, 93 NY2d 145, 156 [1999]; Farbman, 62 NY2d at 80). Data Treeâs commercial motive for seeking the records is therefore irrelevant in this case and constitutes an improper basis for denying the FOIL request.
We note, however, that motive or purpose is not always irrelevant to a request pursuant to FOIL. Public Officers Law § 89 (2) (b) (iii) includes as an âunwarranted invasion of personal privacyâ the âsale or release of lists of names and addresses if such lists would be used for commercial or fund-raising purposesâ (emphasis added; see Matter of Federation of N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Clubs v New York City Police Dept., 73 NY2d 92 [1989] [organizationâs request denied under FOIL for use in direct mail membership solicitation of names and addresses of persons holding rifle or shotgun permits]). That particular exemption does not apply in this case however because Data Tree is not seeking a list of names and addresses to solicit any business. Rather, Data Tree is seeking public land records for commercial reproduction on line.
We conclude that a question of fact exists in this case as to whether the privacy exemption applies to the records because some of the documents requested may contain private information, such as Social Security numbers and dates of birth (see Matter of Seelig v Sielaff, 201 AD2d 298 [1st Dept 1994] [release *464 of officersâ Social Security numbers in response to request pursuant to FOIL constituted unwarranted invasion of officersâ privacy]). However, even when a document subject to FOIL contains such private, protected information, agencies may be required to prepare a redacted version with the exempt material removed (see Public Officers Law § 89 [2] [c] [i]; see e.g. Matter of Scott, Sardano & Pomeranz v Records Access Officer of City of Syracuse, 65 NY2d 294 [1985]). We therefore remit this matter to Supreme Court to determine (upon an in camera inspection of a representative sample of the documents, if necessary) whether any of the records contain information exempt from disclosure on the basis of privacy, and whether that information can be redacted.
III.
As another basis for its denial of disclosure, the Clerk contends that Data Treeâs FOIL request requires the creation of a new record. An agency is not required to create records in order to comply with a FOIL request, as Public Officers Law § 89 (3) (a) provides: âNothing in this article shall be construed to require any entity to prepare any record not possessed or maintained by such entity.â Thus, an agency has no obligation to accommodate a request to compile data in a preferable commercial electronic format when the agency does not maintain the records in such a manner.
Nonetheless, FOIL does not differentiate between records stored in paper form or those stored in electronic format. As stated earlier, the term ârecordâ means, among other things, âcomputer tapes or discs.â Disclosure of records is not always necessarily made by the printing out of information on paper, but may require duplicating data to another storage medium, such as a compact disc. * Thus, if the records are maintained electronically by an agency and are retrievable with reasonable effort, that agency is required to disclose the information. In *465 such a situation, the agency is merely retrieving the electronic data that it has already compiled and copying it onto another electronic medium. On the other hand, if the agency does not maintain the records in a transferable electronic format, then the agency should not be required to create a new document to make its records transferable. A simple manipulation of the computer necessary to transfer existing records should not, if it does not involve significant time or expense, be treated as creation of a new document.
This does not mean, however, that an agency must accord a commercial entity any more or less access to records than any other citizen. Section 89 (3) of the Public Officers Law requires that upon receipt of a request, an agency has five business days in which it must either grant access to the records, deny access or furnish a written acknowledgment of the receipt of such request. When such acknowledgment is given, it must include a statement of the approximate date when the request will be granted or denied. Further, Public Officers Law § 87 provides that the agency may establish procedures including the time and place when such records will be made available, the persons from whom such records may be obtained and the fees for copies of records. Thus, there is no specific time period in which the agency must grant access to the records. Indeed, the time needed to comply with the request may be dependent on a number of factors, including the volume of the request and the retrieval methods. Therefore, complying with a commercial entityâs request for an enormous number of records may require substantial time and expense by the Clerkâs Office and may not, absent an agreement providing otherwise, require the Clerk to provide such records in a time other than that which is reasonable in view of the attendant circumstances.
Here, the Clerk argues that he does not maintain the information in the electronic form requested by Data Tree. The Clerk submitted the affidavit of the Director of Optical Imaging for the Suffolk County Clerkâs Office who avers that the Clerkâs Office would need to have a separate computer program written that would permit the information to be readable on a compact disc or other electronic means. He further states that under the current computer system he is unable to redact all of the private information prior to reproduction. In response, Data Tree proffered the affidavit of its senior software engineer, who claims, by giving examples, that the Clerk could comply with the FOIL request without any computer programming. Further, Data Tree *466 emphasizes that its FOIL request merely asks that the records be provided in any âelectronic format regularly maintained by the County.â Based on these submissions, questions of fact exist as to whether disclosure may be accomplished by merely retrieving information already maintained electronically by the Clerkâs Office or whether complying with Data Treeâs request would require creating a new record.
Further, privacy concerns may also exist with respect to the information contained in the electronic format requested by Data Tree. If such information cannot be reasonably redacted from the electronic records, then such records may not be subject to disclosure under FOIL. We therefore remit the matter to Supreme Court to consider these issues in determining whether the Clerk must comply by providing the records in an electronic format requested by Data Tree.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division, insofar as appealed from, should be reversed, without costs, and the matter remitted to Supreme Court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Ciparick, Graffeo, Read, Smith and Jones concur.
Order, insofar as appealed from, reversed, etc.
Indeed, the Legislature contemplated disclosure by electronic means when Public Officers Law § 89 (3) was amended by adding a new paragraph (b) to read:
âAll entities shall, provided such entity has reasonable means available, accept requests for records submitted in the form of electronic mail and shall respond to such requests by electronic mail, using forms, to the extent practicable, consistent with the form or forms developed by the committee on open government pursuant to subdivision one of this section and provided that the written requests do not seek a response in some other form.â