Laura Belin, Bleeding Heartland LLC, Clark Kauffman, Iowa Capital Dispatch, Randy Evans, and Iowa Freedom of Information Council v. Governor Kim Reynolds, Michael Boal, Pat Garrett, Alex Murphy, and Office of The Governor of the State of Iowa ( 2023 )


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  •                       IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 22–0789
    Submitted February 22, 2023—Filed April 14, 2023
    LAURA BELIN, BLEEDING HEARTLAND LLC, CLARK KAUFFMAN,
    IOWA CAPITAL DISPATCH, RANDY EVANS, and IOWA FREEDOM OF
    INFORMATION COUNCIL,
    Appellees,
    vs.
    GOVERNOR KIM REYNOLDS, MICHAEL BOAL, PAT GARRETT, ALEX
    MURPHY, and OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR OF THE STATE OF IOWA,
    Appellants.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Joseph Seidlin,
    Judge.
    The Governor of Iowa, her office, and some of her staff members seek
    interlocutory review of the district court’s refusal to dismiss claims of open
    records violations. AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED AND REMANDED WITH
    INSTRUCTIONS.
    May, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all participating
    justices joined. Mansfield, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of the
    case.
    Brenna Bird, Attorney General, Samuel P. Langholz, Deputy Attorney
    General, and Eric Wessan (argued), Solicitor General, for appellants.
    2
    Thomas D. Story (argued), Rita Bettis Austen, and Leah Patton (until
    withdrawal) of ACLU Foundation of Iowa, Inc., Des Moines, for appellees.
    3
    MAY, Justice.
    The Iowa General Assembly has determined that “free and open
    examination of public records is generally in the public interest.” 
    Iowa Code § 22.8
    (3) (2021). To help Iowans gain access to public records, the general
    assembly enacted Iowa Code chapter 22, Iowa’s Open Records Act. The Act
    provides a relatively simple process for citizens to request public records from
    government entities. And, with limited exceptions, the Act requires those entities
    to honor citizens’ requests by providing requested records. If an entity refuses,
    the requesting citizen may sue.
    This case is about when the records must be produced. In 2020 and 2021,
    the plaintiffs requested public records from the defendants. In December 2021,
    the plaintiffs filed this suit under the Open Records Act. Then, in January 2022,
    the defendants provided responsive records. Because they have now produced
    responsive records, the defendants contend that they are no longer subject to
    suit. The plaintiffs respond that the defendants violated the Act through their
    delays, that is, the gaps of time between the plaintiffs’ requests and the
    defendants’ production of records. The plaintiffs say that those gaps ranged from
    five to eighteen months.
    We conclude that the Act may permit the plaintiffs to pursue claims based
    on untimeliness. The district court was right to deny the defendants’ motion to
    dismiss. We remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    4
    I. Background.
    The plaintiffs are three journalists (Laura Belin, Clark Kauffman, and
    Randy Evans), two news organizations (Bleeding Heartland, LLC, and Iowa
    Capital Dispatch), and a nonprofit organization (Iowa Freedom of Information
    Council (FOIC)). The defendants are Governor Kim Reynolds, three members of
    the Governor’s staff (Michael Boal, Pat Garrett, and Alex Murphy), and a
    government entity (the Office of the Governor of the State of Iowa).
    The plaintiffs allege that they emailed eight different open-records requests
    to the defendants.1 Each request covered a different topic.2 The first request was
    sent in April 2020. The last was sent in April 2021.
    Each of the eight requests was renewed at least once. By “renewed,” we
    mean that the plaintiffs sent follow-up emails to check on the status of their
    requests. Some requests were renewed several times. The last renewal occurred
    in August 2021.
    In December 2021, the plaintiffs commenced this action by filing a petition
    in district court. They alleged that the defendants had violated the Open Records
    Act by failing to provide the requested records. They also alleged that “[e]ven if
    1Belin and Bleeding Heartland sent five requests; Kauffman and Iowa Capital Dispatch
    sent two; Evans and FOIC sent one.
    2Belin  and Bleeding Heartland’s requests concerned information distributed to employees
    at food processing plants in Spring 2020, the Governor’s decision to sign or veto a bill concerning
    electric transmission lines, responses by the Governor’s office to requests by other news
    organizations and reporters, charity events at Terrace Hill, and communications regarding
    Senate File 567. Kauffman and Iowa Capital Dispatch’s requests concerned the use of Terrace
    Hill for a charitable auction, and Timon Oujiri, the former director of the Iowa Veteran’s Home.
    Evans and FOIC’s request concerned authorization for the deployment of the Iowa State Patrol
    to work in Texas.
    5
    Defendants were to provide” the requested records after the filing of their suit,
    the defendants had already violated chapter 22 by failing to provide the records
    “promptly and timely.” As relief, the plaintiffs sought mandamus, declaratory
    judgment, injunctive relief, court costs, and attorney fees.
    The defendants filed a motion to dismiss. Among other things, the
    defendants argued that the plaintiffs’ claims were now “moot because they’ve
    received their requested records.” As support, the defendants filed an affidavit.
    It explained that the Governor’s office had responded to the plaintiffs’ requests
    and provided responsive records on or about January 3, 2022.
    The defendants also argued that even if timeliness claims aren’t moot,
    those claims still fail “when brought against the Governor” because they present
    “a nonjusticiable political question.” Moreover, the defendants claimed that
    interpreting chapter 22 to permit timeliness claims would “infringe on the
    Governor’s executive privilege.”
    The plaintiffs resisted. They argued that the case was not moot because
    the defendants had not provided all of the requested records. Rather, the
    defendants had “redacted and withheld several” requested records under claims
    of confidentiality even though, in the plaintiffs’ view, “[t]he time to withhold
    documents . . . ha[d] long passed.” Moreover, the plaintiffs claimed that—even
    with regard to documents that had already been produced—they could still
    pursue claims for “unlawful delay” in responding to their requests. The plaintiffs
    also rejected the defendants’ arguments about nonjusticiable political questions
    and executive privilege.
    6
    The district court denied defendants’ motion. The defendants then asked
    our court to grant interlocutory review. We granted the defendants’ request.
    Before we granted interlocutory review, though, the plaintiffs filed their first
    amended petition in the district court. It repeated the plaintiffs’ original
    allegations. It also incorporated additional points raised in the plaintiffs’
    resistance to the motion to dismiss.
    II. Merits.
    We review the district court’s denial of the defendants’ motion to dismiss
    for errors of law. See Meade v. Christie, 
    974 N.W.2d 770
    , 774–75 (Iowa 2022)
    (“We review a district court’s ruling on a motion to dismiss to correct legal
    error.”). The basic question is whether any of the plaintiffs’ claims fail as a matter
    of law and, therefore, must be dismissed. See 
    id. at 775
     (“A motion to dismiss
    challenges a petition’s legal sufficiency.”). At the motion-to-dismiss stage, we
    accept the plaintiffs’ factual allegations as true and we view them in the light
    most favorable to the plaintiffs. See 
    id.
    Before we address the plaintiffs’ claims individually, we think a general
    sketch is appropriate. Speaking broadly, the plaintiffs are pursuing two kinds of
    claims: (1) claims of insufficient production, that is, failure to produce records;
    and (2) claims for delay in producing records. The plaintiffs’ insufficiency claims
    can be further divided into (a) claims about the records that have now been
    produced, and (b) claims about records that still haven’t been produced—or that
    have been produced only in a redacted state—because defendants claim they are
    confidential. Similarly, the plaintiffs’ delay claims can be divided into (a) claims
    7
    about the defendants’ delay in asserting their confidentiality objections, and
    (b) claims about the defendants’ delay in actually producing records. We address
    each category of claims in turn.
    A. Insufficiency Claims. We begin with the claims at the center of the
    plaintiffs’ original petition, namely, claims that the defendants had failed to
    produce the records that the plaintiffs had requested. As explained,
    circumstances have changed since the filing of the plaintiffs’ original petition. As
    the plaintiffs acknowledge, the defendants have now produced many of those
    records. And so, the defendants believe, any claims about production of those
    records are now moot.
    On this issue, we generally agree with the defendants. “One familiar
    principle of judicial restraint is that courts do not decide cases when the
    underlying controversy is moot.” Rhiner v. State, 
    703 N.W.2d 174
    , 176 (Iowa
    2005). “If an appeal no longer presents a justiciable controversy because the
    disputed issue has become academic or nonexistent, the appeal is ordinarily
    deemed moot.” Crowell v. State Pub. Def., 
    845 N.W.2d 676
    , 681 (Iowa 2014). “The
    key in assessing whether an appeal is moot is determining whether the opinion
    would be of force or effect in the underlying controversy.” State v. Avalos Valdez,
    
    934 N.W.2d 585
    , 589 (Iowa 2019) (quoting Puntenney v. Iowa Utils. Bd., 
    928 N.W.2d 829
    , 840 (Iowa 2019)).
    We believe that most of the claims concerning production of already-
    produced records are now moot. They are moot because an order to produce
    already-produced records would have no “force or effect in the underlying
    8
    controversy.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Puntenney, 
    928 N.W.2d at 840
    ). Also, we conclude that
    no mootness exception should apply. See Riley Drive Ent. I, Inc. v. Reynolds, 
    970 N.W.2d 289
    , 296–98 (Iowa 2022) (discussing exceptions). We have recognized
    “[a]n exception to the general rule [against deciding moot cases] exists where
    matters of public importance are presented and the problem is likely to recur.”
    Homan v. Branstad, 
    864 N.W.2d 321
    , 330 (Iowa 2015) (second alteration in
    original) (quoting In re Guardianship of Kennedy, 
    845 N.W.2d 707
    , 711 (Iowa
    2014)). But we do not worry that the defendants will withhold the already-
    produced records in the future. See 
    id.
     And we see no important public interest
    in further litigation about whether the defendants should produce records that
    they have already produced. See 
    id.
     We also emphasize the “great respect” that
    we owe to the executive branch. See id. at 332. “Part of that respect involves not
    telling” the Governor and her staff “what they can and cannot do unless the
    answer is likely to matter in this or a future case.” Id.
    We add two caveats. First, and most broadly, we do not believe mootness
    applies to any of the plaintiffs’ other claims. Although mootness prevents the
    issuance of a court order to produce the already-produced records, mootness
    would not bar any other relief that may be available under the Act, e.g., attorney
    fees incurred in filing suit to compel production. See Vroegh v. Iowa Dep’t of
    Corr., 
    972 N.W.2d 686
    , 705 (Iowa 2022).
    Second, and more particularly, we emphasize that our finding of mootness
    only applies to records that have been produced without redaction. It is
    undisputed that the defendants have withheld or redacted some requested
    9
    records based on claims of confidentiality. The parties agree that the district
    court must still determine whether the defendants must produce those records
    in unredacted form. We entrust those issues to the district court in the first
    instance.
    We believe it is appropriate to mention, though, that one aspect of the
    dispute appears to have been resolved. In their district court filings, the plaintiffs
    drew attention to section 22.8(4)(d), which states:
    4. Good-faith, reasonable delay by a lawful custodian in
    permitting the examination and copying of a government record is
    not a violation of this chapter if the purpose of the delay is any of
    the following:
    ....
    d. To determine whether a confidential record should be
    available for inspection and copying to the person requesting the
    right to do so. A reasonable delay for this purpose shall not exceed
    twenty calendar days and ordinarily should not exceed ten business
    days.
    
    Iowa Code § 22.8
    (4)(d).
    The plaintiffs asserted that section 22.8(4)(d) imposes a twenty-day
    “deadline” before which defendants were obligated to raise any claim of
    confidentiality. The plaintiffs also suggested that because the defendants’
    January 2022 assertions of confidentially occurred “clearly outside of the twenty-
    day timeframe,” the defendants had “waived the ability to withhold and redact
    records” that would otherwise be confidential under section 22.7.
    On appeal, the defendants ask us to hold that no such waiver could have
    occurred. The defendants note that “nothing in chapter 22 provides—or even
    suggests—that the consequence for failing to respond on time would be to make
    10
    an otherwise confidential document public. That interpretation would be
    absurd,” the defendants contend, “and would eviscerate the many confidentiality
    protections” provided by Iowa law. For instance, “[i]t would mean that a delayed
    response by a school would leave student records unprotected.” Or that a
    healthcare provider’s delay could lead to “personal medical and treatment
    records [being] forced into the open.”
    In their responsive brief, the plaintiffs clarify their position on this issue.
    They maintain that the defendants’ failure to assert their confidentiality claims
    in a timely manner “is a further instance of [the defendants’] untimeliness in
    responding to open records requests” and, therefore, “a violation of Chapter 22.”
    But plaintiffs clarify that “[t]his untimeliness does not mean that otherwise
    confidential records must be produced and made public.” The plaintiffs further
    clarify that they “do not seek disclosure of records which are determined to be
    properly designated as confidential.”
    In light of these clarifications, we need not decide whether—in some other
    case—untimely assertion of confidentiality could lead to waiver of the protections
    available under section 22.7. For purposes of this case, the answer is “no.”
    B. Delay Claims. We now turn to the most contentious issue in this case:
    Can the plaintiffs pursue claims that the defendants violated chapter 22 through
    delays in responding to the plaintiffs’ open record requests? With some
    qualifications, we believe the answer is “yes.”
    1. General principles. Iowa’s Open Records Act is codified in Iowa Code
    chapter 22. “[T]he policy of [chapter 22 is] that free and open examination of
    11
    public records is generally in the public interest even though such examination
    may cause inconvenience or embarrassment to public officials or others.” 
    Iowa Code § 22.8
    (3).
    The Act gives “[e]very person [a] right” to examine, copy, and publish “a
    public record.” 
    Id.
     § 22.2(1). Section 22.1 defines “[p]ublic record[]” to include
    “all records, documents,” and “other information . . . of or belonging to this state”
    or “any” of its “branch[es]” or “department[s].” Id. § 22.1(3)(a). But section 22.7
    deems certain documents—like medical records or school records—to be
    confidential and, therefore, generally protected from disclosure. Id. § 22.7.
    Iowans may exercise their rights under the Act by requesting records from
    the records’ “lawful custodian.” Id. § 22.3(1). A request can be made in person,
    “in writing, by telephone, or by electronic means.” Id. The “[l]awful custodian [is]
    the government body currently in physical possession of the public record.” Id.
    § 22.1(2). “Each government body” must “delegate to particular officials or
    employees . . . the responsibility for implementing the requirements of” the Act.
    Id. The identities of those “particular officials or employees” must be publicly
    announced. Id.
    If a request is refused, an “aggrieved person . . . may seek judicial
    enforcement of the requirements of [the Act] in an action brought against the
    lawful custodian and any other persons who would be appropriate defendants
    under the circumstances.” Id. § 22.10(1). Section 22.10(2) explains the trial
    process:
    12
    Once a party seeking judicial enforcement of [the Act]
    demonstrates to the court that the defendant is subject to the
    requirements of [the Act], that the records in question are
    government records, and that the defendant refused to make those
    government records available for examination and copying by the
    plaintiff, the burden of going forward shall be on the defendant to
    demonstrate compliance with the requirements of [the Act].
    Id. § 22.10(2).
    So, as section 22.10(2) makes clear, a plaintiff’s burden is to demonstrate
    three elements: (1) that “the defendant is subject to the requirements of” the Act,
    (2) “that the records in question are government records,” and (3) “that the
    defendant refused to make those government records available for examination
    and copying by the plaintiff.” Id. Then, the burden shifts to the defendant “to
    demonstrate compliance with the requirements of” the Act. Id. For instance, in
    Ripperger v. Iowa Public Information Board, a county assessor carried this burden
    by showing that certain records qualified as “confidential record[s]” under
    section 22.7(18) and, therefore, withholding the records did not violate the Act.
    
    967 N.W.2d 540
    , 554–55 (Iowa 2021).
    Notably, though, the assessor in Ripperger had expressly refused to
    produce the requested records. 
    Id. at 544
    . The question here is whether
    chapter 22 allows a plaintiff to sue when there is no express refusal but yet the
    defendant fails to produce the records for an extended period of time.
    To find the answer, we must look to the “text of the statute,” the “words
    chosen by the legislature.” State v. Childs, 
    898 N.W.2d 177
    , 184 (Iowa 2017)
    (quoting State v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 
    730 N.W.2d 677
    , 679 (Iowa 2007)). As explained,
    the words of section 22.10(2) make it clear that when—as here—a defendant is
    13
    subject to the Act and the records sought “are government records,” the plaintiff’s
    only burden is to demonstrate “that the defendant refused to make those
    government records available.” 
    Iowa Code § 22.10
    (2) (emphasis added). The
    crucial word, then, is “refused.” We must determine its “ordinary and fair
    meaning.” Doe v. State, 
    943 N.W.2d 608
    , 610 (Iowa 2020).
    Of course, the ordinary and fair meaning of refusal can include an explicit
    refusal, as occurred in Ripperger. See 967 N.W.2d at 545. But refusal can be also
    be implied. The idea of a “silent refusal” is not foreign to English speakers.3 And
    dictionaries confirm that a “refusal” can either be stated or shown. See Refuse,
    Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1910 (unabr. ed. 2002) (defining
    “refuse” to include “show[ing] or express[ing] a positive unwillingness to do or
    comply with” (emphasis added)); see also Refuse, Britannica Dictionary,
    https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/refuse                [https://perma.cc/S9BE-BV4T]
    (defining “refuse” to include “say[ing] or show[ing] that you are not willing to do
    something that someone wants you to do” (emphasis added)); Refuse, Cambridge
    Dictionary,        https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/refuse
    3See, e.g., Ass’n for Accessible Meds. v. James, 
    974 F.3d 216
    , 226 (2d Cir. 2020) (“But the
    legislature’s silent refusal to call a tax a tax, even though it raises revenue to provide a clear
    general public benefit, is less significant to our inquiry.”); Crossroads Invs., L.P. v. Fed. Nat’l
    Mortg. Ass’n, 
    222 Cal. Rptr. 3d 1
    , 27 (Ct. App. 2017) (“Fannie Mae’s silent refusals to accept
    tender were also privileged as they communicated Fannie Mae’s rejection of the settlement offers
    and were responses to Crossroads’ scheme to have the court approve its plan in lieu of proceeding
    through nonjudicial foreclosure.”); People v. Sherer, 
    452 P.3d 218
    , 222 (Colo. 2019) (“Garland
    received from Respondent sporadic and untimely communication, no work of any value, and a
    silent refusal to return her unearned retainer.”); Smith v. State, No. 82A05–1709–PC–2123, 
    2018 WL 1076797
    , at *4 (Ind. Ct. App. Feb. 28, 2018) (“In other words, the alleged Doyle violation in
    Sylvester did not involve the State’s use of the defendant’s silent refusal to answer questions to
    impeach him.”); Henry v. Greater Ouachita Water Co., 
    349 So. 3d 123
    , 132 (La. Ct. App. 2022)
    (“Instead, the record reflects a silent refusal on their part to even attempt adequate discovery
    responses.”).
    14
    [https://perma.cc/57PA-MS74] (noting that, as an intransitive verb, “refuse”
    can mean “to say or show that you are not willing to do, accept, or allow
    something”      (emphasis     added        and     omitted));        Refuse,   Collins,
    https://www.collinsdictionary.com/us/dictionary/english/refuse
    [https://perma.cc/4HGM-BSMT]        (“If    you   refuse   to   do    something,   you
    deliberately do not do it, or you say firmly that you will not do it.” (emphasis
    added and omitted)).
    We conclude that a defendant may “refuse” either by (1) stating that it
    won’t produce records, or (2) showing that it won’t produce records. And we
    believe that this second kind of refusal—an implied or “silent” refusal—can be
    shown through an unreasonable delay in producing records. See 2B Norman J.
    Singer & Shambie Singer, Statutes and Statutory Construction § 55:3, at 457 (7th
    ed. 2012) [hereinafter Singer & Singer] (“If a statute imposes a duty but is silent
    as to when it is to be performed, a reasonable time is implied.”). This view is
    consistent with our observation in Horsfield Materials, Inc. v. City of Dyersville
    that
    [a]lthough section 22.10(2) speaks in terms of a refusal rather than
    a delay in production, we think a refusal to produce encompasses
    the situation where, as here, a substantial amount of time has
    elapsed since the records were requested and the records have not
    been produced at the time the requesting party files suit under the
    Act.
    
    834 N.W.2d 444
    , 463 n.6 (Iowa 2013).
    It is also consistent with the text of chapter 22 as a whole. As noted,
    section 22.8(4) outlines narrow circumstances in which “[g]ood-faith, reasonable
    delay by a lawful custodian in permitting the examination and copying of a
    15
    government record is not a violation of this chapter.” 
    Iowa Code § 22.8
    (4)
    (emphasis added). This implies that unreasonable delay can constitute a
    violation.
    It is also consistent with the legislature’s stated policy, namely, to
    encourage the “free and open examination of public records.” 
    Id.
     § 22.8(3). An
    interpretation that requires timely production promotes “free and open
    examination of public records.” Id. An interpretation that condones unlimited
    delay would hamper the “free and open examination of public records.” Id.; see
    also Brenna Findley, Practical Observations on Politics and the Constitution, 
    61 Drake L. Rev. 1085
    , 1089 (2013) (“Providing information quickly and efficiently
    demystifies government.”).
    In summary, when a court evaluates whether a plaintiff has carried its
    burden under section 22.10(2), the relevant questions are: (1) Is the defendant
    “subject to the requirements of” chapter 22?; (2) Did the plaintiff ask for
    “government records”?; and (3) Has “the defendant refused to make those
    government records available” for the plaintiff? 
    Iowa Code § 22.10
    (2). The third
    element can be established either through an express refusal or through an
    implicit refusal. Extensive delay may—on its own—establish an implicit refusal.
    But other evidence may also be relevant when deciding whether, in the words of
    the statute, “the defendant refused to make th[e] government records available.”
    
    Id.
     (emphasis added). Relevant inquiries may include: (1) how promptly the
    defendant acknowledged the plaintiff’s requests and follow-up inquiries,
    (2) whether the defendant assured the plaintiff of the defendant’s intent to
    16
    provide the requested records, (3) whether the defendant explained why
    requested records weren’t immediately available (e.g., what searches needed to
    be performed or what other obstacles needed to be overcome), (4) whether the
    defendant produced records as they became available (sometimes called “rolling
    production”), (5) whether the defendant updated the plaintiff on efforts to obtain
    and produce records, and (6) whether the defendant provided information about
    when records could be expected.
    2. Electronic records. The defendants contend that even if timeliness claims
    can be available in some situations, they are unavailable when electronic records
    are involved. The defendants note that “[i]n section 22.3A, the Legislature crafted
    an extensive statutory scheme for electronic records.” And section 22.3A does
    not specify a particular deadline for production. The defendants infer that
    chapter 22 imposes no timeliness requirements for electronic records. There is
    “no textual basis,” the defendants contend, “for a timeliness claim based on a
    request for electronic records.”
    We disagree. For one thing, it is well-established that “[i]f a statute imposes
    a duty but is silent as to when it is to be performed, a reasonable time is implied.”
    Singer & Singer, § 55:3, at 457. Because section 22.3A does not specify a
    particular deadline for production, a “reasonable time” requirement may be
    inferred. See id.
    Moreover, as explained, the text of section 22.10(2) allows a plaintiff to
    establish a prima facie case by showing that a government body “refused” access
    to public records. 
    Iowa Code § 22.10
    (2). And, as discussed, unreasonable delay
    17
    can imply a refusal. As a general matter, then, chapter 22 does include textual
    grounds for a timeliness claim. And nothing in chapter 22 suggests that
    electronic-record requests should be exempted. Nothing in 22.10(2) suggests
    that its analysis applies only to paper records. Nor does section 22.3A supplant
    or even mention section 22.10. Rather, section 22.10 governs all claims for
    public records, electronic or not.
    3. Constitutional concerns. Defendants also argue that even if timeliness
    claims are generally available for electronic records, they should not be available
    against the Governor. To be clear, the Governor has not claimed general
    immunity from the requirements of chapter 22. Nor does she “contend that the
    Legislature is prohibited from imposing a deadline on the Governor to respond
    to open records requests.” Nor does she deny that, as a general matter, the courts
    are obligated to hear claims against the Governor, decide whether those claims
    have merit, and, if appropriate, impose legislatively-prescribed sanctions.
    Rather, the Governor contends that “if chapter 22 [imposes] an amorphous
    reasonableness standard for assessing the timeliness of responses to open-
    records requests, such a standard cannot be applied to the Governor. It would
    violate the separation of powers by enmeshing the courts in answering a political
    question.” By this, the Governor means that gauging the reasonableness of her
    response times would require an inquiry into her processes, e.g., “how the
    Governor and her staff—including her senior legal counsel—were spending their
    time,” and “whether her allocation of resources between responding to open-
    records requests and her other governing responsibilities was reasonable.” In the
    18
    Governor’s view, these are nonjusticiable issues. They are entrusted exclusively
    to her, not the courts. See State ex rel. Dickey v. Besler, 
    954 N.W.2d 425
    , 435
    (Iowa 2021) (“Normally we apply the political question doctrine when a matter is
    entrusted exclusively to the legislative branch, to the executive branch, or to
    both of them. The term ‘nonjusticiable’ implies that a question is not suitable for
    judicial resolution.”).
    Along similar lines, the Governor warns that “[r]equiring the Governor to
    prove the reasonableness of her response time . . . would . . . infringe on her
    executive privilege by requiring her to disclose protected information.” Cf. Ryan
    v. Wilson, 
    300 N.W. 707
    , 715 (Iowa 1941) (holding that the governor “acting
    strictly in the line of his official duties . . . was protected” by an “absolute
    privilege” against defamation claims). Here again, the Governor is concerned that
    the court could not decide timeliness claims without considering “substantial
    details about what the Governor and her staff were spending their time doing in
    relation to their time on Plaintiffs’ requests,” and “why the Governor decided to
    allocate her staff resources in that way.”
    In short, the Governor believes that the “reasonableness of her response
    time” can’t be litigated without violating our constitution. And so, to avoid a
    constitutional conflict, we should conclude that chapter 22 does not permit the
    plaintiffs’ claims of untimeliness. See State v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 
    843 N.W.2d 76
    , 85
    (Iowa 2014) (“The doctrine of constitutional avoidance suggests the proper course
    in the construction of a statute may be to steer clear of ‘constitutional shoals’
    when possible.”) (quoting Simmons v. State Pub. Def., 
    791 N.W.2d 69
    , 74 (Iowa
    19
    2010))); Simmons, 
    791 N.W.2d at 74
     (“If fairly possible, a statute will be
    construed to avoid doubt as to constitutionality.”).
    We disagree. As explained, a plaintiff’s case requires only a showing that:
    (1) the defendant is “subject to the requirements of” chapter 22, (2) the request
    seeks “government records,” and (3) “the defendant refused to make those
    government records available” for the plaintiff. 
    Iowa Code § 22.10
    (2). None of
    these inquiries requires intrusion into the defendant’s decision-making
    processes. Rather, where (as here) it is clear that the plaintiffs have sought
    government records from defendants who are subject to the requirements of
    chapter 22, the only question is whether the defendants “refused to make those
    government records available.” 
    Id.
     The answer should depend on how the
    defendants responded. It should depend on the defendants’ outward behavior
    toward the requesting plaintiffs. It should not depend on the defendants’
    thinking. It should not depend on the defendants’ internal conversations. It
    should not depend on any of the inner workings of the Governor’s office. It should
    not depend on political questions, like whether the Governor properly allocated
    resources when staffing her office. And it should not depend on potentially
    privileged information, like the details of how the Governor was spending her
    time, or what she discussed with her lawyers.
    But what about a defendant’s case? Once the plaintiff establishes a prima
    facie case, “the burden of going forward [is] on the defendant to demonstrate
    compliance with the requirements of” chapter 22. 
    Id.
     Does this require an inquiry
    into confidential information?
    20
    We don’t think so. To begin with, once the plaintiff establishes a prima
    facie case, the defendant must decide how to proceed. The defendant may put
    on evidence or not. If the defendant presents no new evidence, then, of course,
    no new inquiries are required.
    Assuming a defendant seeks to “demonstrate compliance,” though, we still
    think the inquiry should generally turn on objective public facts. For instance,
    assuming there are no timeliness issues, a defendant might demonstrate
    compliance simply by showing that it already produced all of the requested
    records that it possesses. Or, as in Ripperger, the defendant may demonstrate
    compliance by showing that the only records it withheld are confidential under
    section 22.7. Or, in the case of delayed production, the defendant may rely on
    section 22.8 which, as noted, outlines narrow circumstances in which “[g]ood-
    faith, reasonable delay by a lawful custodian in permitting the examination and
    copying of a government record is not a violation of this chapter.” 
    Id.
     § 22.8(4).
    We doubt that any of these showings would require substantial inquiries into a
    defendant’s resource-allocation choices or any other confidential decision-
    making. They should not require us to wander in constitutional minefields.
    But the defendants worry that our Horsfield opinion requires just that. In
    that case, the district court followed a “substantial compliance” standard when
    evaluating whether a city’s production of records was untimely. See Horsfield,
    
    834 N.W.2d at 451
    . And the district court concluded that because the city had
    “substantially compl[ied],” it had not violated the Act. 
    Id.
     On appeal, the plaintiff
    did not argue for a different standard. 
    Id. at 462
    . “In light of this concession,”
    21
    our court “utilize[d] substantial compliance . . . assuming without deciding that
    it [was] the appropriate test.” 
    Id.
     Ultimately, we found that the city did not meet
    its burden of showing substantial compliance. 
    Id.
     In large part, this finding was
    based on the lack of detail in the record about “how much time it really took city
    officials to work on Horsfield’s request, relative to other demands on city officials’
    time.” 
    Id.
     at 462–63.
    As the defendants correctly note, Horsfield involved a probing inquiry into
    the city’s allocations of resources. And the defendants believe that—at least as
    to the Governor—our constitution prohibits judicial examinations of that sort.
    So defendants contend that Horsfield precludes timeliness claims against the
    Governor.
    We disagree. First, we note that although the Horsfield court applied a
    substantial compliance standard, we did not adopt that standard or anything
    similar. Nor have we since. Nor has the district court determined whether that
    kind of analysis could apply in this case. At this stage, then, it is premature for
    us to address the issue in much depth.4
    Even if we assume, though, that a Horsfield-style substantial compliance
    model could apply here, we do not believe that it would require dismissal of the
    timeliness claims against the Governor. As explained, the plaintiffs’ case under
    section 22.10(2) should turn on objective public facts, namely, did the
    defendants’ response amount to a refusal? Nothing about Horsfield suggests
    4In the interest of abundant clarity, nothing in this opinion should be read as an
    endorsement or rejection of Horsfield’s substantial compliance standard or anything similar.
    Again, we leave that issue for the district court in the first instance.
    22
    otherwise. Indeed, Horsfield makes it clear that its substantial compliance
    inquiry was not part of the plaintiff’s case. Thus, Horsfield provides no basis for
    a plaintiff to contend that its burden of proof requires a Horsfield-style inquiry—
    either in discovery or at trial—into a defendant’s internal decision-making.
    Rather,   Horsfield’s   substantial     compliance   inquiry     concerned   the
    defendant’s “burden of going forward to demonstrate compliance with the Act.”
    Horsfield, 
    834 N.W.2d at 463
    . From a functional perspective, then, the Horsfield
    substantial compliance theory is not unlike an affirmative defense. A defendant
    may assert it or not. It’s the defendant’s choice. And that strategic choice will
    help shape the issues in the case, the evidence needed, and the discovery
    permitted.
    We do not suggest, though, that assertion of a “substantial compliance”
    theory would automatically open every door. Even if the defendants choose to
    assert a theory of this kind, there may still be issues to decide about how far the
    inquiry can proceed in light of the Governor’s assertions of executive sovereignty,
    executive privilege, or other protections. Fortunately, our district court judges
    are experienced in addressing issues like this. Privilege issues are a routine part
    of discovery, motion practice, and trials. In all of those settings, our judges fairly
    resolve claims of privilege and prevent unwarranted intrusions. We trust that
    they will do so if such issues arise in this case or others like it.
    Again, though, questions of this kind are for the district court in the first
    instance. Looking strictly at the record before us now, we see no reason why the
    plaintiffs cannot advance timeliness claims without inquiring into political
    23
    questions or invading executive privilege. At this stage, then, we do not believe
    that the Governor’s constitutional concerns require dismissal of the plaintiffs’
    claims.
    III. Conclusion.
    We affirm the district court’s denial of the defendants’ motion to dismiss.
    We remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
    All justices concur except Mansfield, J., who takes no part.