Daily Press, Inc. v. Commonwealth ( 2013 )


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  • PRESENT:   All the Justices
    THE DAILY PRESS, INC., ET AL.
    OPINION BY
    v.   Record No. 120858                    JUSTICE WILLIAM C. MIMS
    February 28, 2013
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA, ET AL.
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF NEWPORT NEWS
    H. Vincent Conway, Jr., Judge
    This appeal involves a circuit court order sealing certain
    exhibits introduced during a criminal trial.   First, we
    consider whether this appeal is moot because the sealing order
    no longer is in effect and the exhibits now are available for
    public inspection.   Having concluded that it is not moot, we
    consider whether the sealing order violates constitutional and
    statutory guarantees of public access to criminal proceedings.
    I.   BACKGROUND AND MATERIAL PROCEEDINGS BELOW
    In August 2010, a grand jury in the City of Newport News
    indicted Lillian Callender and her boyfriend, Michael Stoffa,
    for felony child neglect of Callender’s seventeen-month-old and
    twenty-seven-month-old daughters, and for second-degree murder
    of Callender’s seventeen-month-old daughter.   Callender and
    Stoffa were tried separately.   Following bench trials on
    January 24 and May 26, 2011, respectively, Callender and Stoffa
    were found guilty of all three charges.
    In the meantime, in March 2011, prior to Callender’s
    sentencing and Stoffa’s trial, Ashley Kelly, a reporter for The
    Daily Press, Inc., requested permission of the clerk of the
    circuit court to review the file related to Callender’s trial.
    Specifically, Kelly requested to review the trial exhibits,
    including photographs of and an autopsy report concerning the
    deceased child.    The clerk denied this request and, on March
    28, 2011, the circuit court entered an order sealing the entire
    Callender file from public inspection until the conclusion of
    Callender’s and Stoffa’s cases (the “March 28 order”).
    The Daily Press and Kelly (collectively, “Daily Press”)
    filed a consolidated motion to intervene and motion for
    withdrawal of the sealing order.     The circuit court granted the
    motion to intervene and rescinded the March 28 order,
    concluding that the order “was overbroad in sealing the entire
    file.”    However, the court expressed concern over protecting
    the rights of Stoffa and the Commonwealth in Stoffa’s pending
    trial.    Thus, it allowed the attorneys for Callender and the
    Commonwealth “to withdraw the original exhibits from the
    Callender file to be used in the trial of the co-defendant’s
    [Stoffa’s] case, said exhibits to be returned to the Callender
    file should an appeal be noted in her case (the “April 20
    order”).” 1   Daily Press requested that photocopies of the
    withdrawn exhibits remain in the public file, but the court
    instead directed that photocopies of the original exhibits be
    1
    Callender filed an appeal in July 2011.
    2
    placed in the file under seal.     The court subsequently ordered
    that the original exhibits be returned to the public file at
    the conclusion of Stoffa’s trial (the “April 22 order”).
    Daily Press petitioned the Court of Appeals for a writ of
    mandamus directing the circuit court to vacate the April 22
    order.    It argued that the April 22 order was contrary to the
    constitutional and statutory protections affording public
    access to criminal proceedings and was not the least
    restrictive alternative available to the court.     The Court of
    Appeals denied the mandamus petition and, in light of that
    ruling, Daily Press filed a petition for appeal with the Court
    of Appeals.   The Court of Appeals granted that petition, but
    subsequently held that it did not have jurisdiction to hear
    appeals from sealing orders.      Daily Press, Inc. v.
    Commonwealth, 
    60 Va. App. 213
    , 222-23, 
    725 S.E.2d 737
    , 741-42
    (2012).   It transferred the appeal to this Court pursuant to
    Code § 8.01-677.1.    Id.    We awarded Daily Press this appeal.
    II.    THE MOOTNESS ISSUE
    The April 22 order expired by its own terms at the
    conclusion of Stoffa’s trial. 2    Furthermore, when Callender
    2
    Stoffa’s trial concluded in May 2011. The Court of
    Appeals denied Stoffa’s petition for appeal in April 2012, and
    this Court refused Stoffa’s second-tier petition for appeal in
    August 2012. Thus, even if the “conclusion” of Stoffa’s
    criminal trial included any direct appeals in addition to the
    circuit court prosecution, that case has concluded.
    3
    appealed her convictions in July 2011, the original exhibits
    were returned to the public file and sent to the Court of
    Appeals.    Thus, Daily Press now has been able to review the
    exhibits.   Consequently, the Commonwealth argues that the case
    is moot.
    Generally, a case is moot and must be dismissed when the
    controversy that existed between litigants has ceased to exist:
    Whenever it appears or is made to appear that
    there is no actual controversy between the litigants,
    or that, if it once existed, it has ceased to do so,
    it is the duty of every judicial tribunal not to
    proceed to the formal determination of the apparent
    controversy, but to dismiss the case. It is not the
    office of courts to give opinions on abstract
    propositions of law . . . . Only real controversies
    and existing rights are entitled to invoke the
    exercise of their powers.
    E.C. v. Va. Dep’t of Juvenile Justice, 
    283 Va. 522
    , 530, 
    722 S.E.2d 827
    , 831 (2012) (quoting Franklin v. Peers, 
    95 Va. 602
    ,
    603, 
    29 S.E. 321
    , 321 (1898)).   However, the Supreme Court of
    the United States has recognized that the mootness doctrine may
    be inapplicable when a proceeding is short-lived by nature.
    See, e.g., Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia, 
    448 U.S. 555
    ,
    563 (1980); Gannett Co. v. DePasquale, 
    443 U.S. 368
    , 377
    (1979); Nebraska Press Ass’n v. Stuart, 
    427 U.S. 539
    , 546-47
    (1976).    “If the underlying dispute is capable of repetition,
    yet evading review, it is not moot.”    Richmond Newspapers,
    4
    Inc., 448 U.S. at 563 (internal quotation marks and citation
    omitted).
    The Commonwealth argues that this exception to the
    mootness doctrine should be applied sparingly.    See Virginia
    Dep’t of State Police v. Elliott, 
    48 Va. App. 551
    , 554, 
    633 S.E.2d 203
    , 204-05 (2006).   We agree.   But the controversy
    between the parties in this case fits squarely within the
    exception.
    First, Daily Press, as the publisher of a daily newspaper
    that routinely covers cases in the Hampton Roads area, will be
    subjected to similar sealing orders.     See Gannett Co., 443 U.S.
    at 377-78.   The April 22 order itself reflected the circuit
    court’s routine administrative process.    The trial judge,
    noting that he was “the Chief Judge for this circuit,” stated,
    “The [c]ourt is familiar with many cases in which the
    Commonwealth has [moved] to withdraw original exhibits until
    all defendants have been prosecuted, and the [c]ourt has
    frequently granted that motion.”    (Emphasis added.)   “[T]he
    [c]ourt has often administratively allowed [evidence admitted
    in the trial of a defendant], upon proper documentation, to be
    withdrawn” until subsequent prosecutions of related defendants
    are completed.   The trial judge also referred to “secur[ing]
    the withdrawal of any exhibits by the means customarily used.”
    5
    (Emphasis added.)   These statements leave no doubt that this
    controversy is capable of repetition.
    Second, if we decline to address the issues in this case
    on grounds of mootness, the dispute clearly will evade review.
    The April 22 order is “by nature short-lived.”     See Nebraska
    Press Ass’n, 427 U.S. at 547.   By its express terms, the order
    expired at the conclusion of Stoffa’s trial.      The Commonwealth
    argues that there was ample time to review the order before the
    end of Stoffa’s trial.   We disagree.   Criminal trials are
    typically of short duration and, as in this case, sealing
    orders will frequently be lifted before our appellate review is
    completed. 3
    More importantly, the Commonwealth’s argument ignores the
    contemporaneous need of a daily newspaper for access to
    criminal proceedings.    See Gannett Co., 443 U.S. at 380.    The
    benefits of public access to criminal proceedings have been
    recognized since before the Magna Carta.   Such access ensures
    that proceedings are conducted fairly, discourages perjury,
    safeguards against secret bias or partiality, and imparts
    legitimacy to the decisions of our judiciary. 4    See Richmond
    3
    The fact that Daily Press was unable to obtain expedited
    review of the April 22 order through a writ of mandamus
    underscores the evasive nature of the present dispute.
    4
    Significant societal value has also been recognized from
    public access to criminal proceedings: when a shocking crime
    occurs, a community reaction of outrage typically follows, and
    6
    Newspapers, Inc., 448 U.S. at 569-70.    Yet, to work
    effectively, public access must be contemporaneous – the public
    must be able to scrutinize the judicial process as it takes
    place.    Newspapers, such as Daily Press, serve as “surrogates
    for the public.”    Id. at 573.   They are “the first rough draft
    of history,” 5 providing immediate descriptions of events as they
    unfold.    However, the newsworthiness of a particular story is
    often fleeting.    To delay or postpone disclosure undermines the
    benefits of public scrutiny and may have the same result as
    complete suppression.
    In this case, Daily Press was prohibited from accessing
    the exhibits from March until July 2011, when Callender
    appealed her convictions and the exhibits were returned to the
    public file.   Unlike in Commonwealth v. Harley, 
    256 Va. 216
    ,
    
    504 S.E.2d 852
     (1998) and Baldwin v. Commonwealth, 
    43 Va. App. 415
    , 
    598 S.E.2d 754
     (2004), where the issues on appeal were
    moot because the appellants suffered no harm, Daily Press was
    harmed at the time its access was restricted.    Neither the
    expiration of the sealing order nor the later availability of
    the exhibits cured this deprivation of the right to
    thereafter the open process of justice serves an important
    prophylactic purpose, providing an outlet for community concern
    and emotion. See Richmond Newspapers, Inc., 448 U.S. at 570-
    71.
    5
    Alan Barth popularized this phrase as an editorial writer
    for the Washington Post in the 1940s.
    7
    contemporaneously review the files.    The Commonwealth cannot
    use the mootness doctrine to sidestep this deprivation.       If
    every appeal of a sealing order were moot upon the expiration
    of the order, the right to contemporaneous review would have no
    value, causing irreparable injury to the public’s interest in
    open trials.    We therefore conclude that the controversy before
    us is not moot.    We now turn to the merits. 6
    III. THE MERITS
    Daily Press argues that the April 22 order violated its
    constitutional and statutory right of access to criminal
    proceedings.    We agree.
    A. CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT OF ACCESS
    The public’s constitutional right of access to criminal
    proceedings and records is well-established.      The Supreme Court
    of the United States has held that “the right to attend
    criminal trials is implicit in the guarantees of the First
    Amendment.” 7   Richmond Newspapers, Inc., 448 U.S. at 580.    This
    6
    The Commonwealth now concedes that the sealing order was
    erroneous. However, we do not allow parties to define Virginia
    law by their concessions. See Tuggle v. Commonwealth, 
    230 Va. 99
    , 111 n.5, 
    334 S.E.2d 838
    , 846 n.5 (1985); Logan v.
    Commonwealth, 
    47 Va. App. 168
    , 172, 
    622 S.E.2d 771
    , 773 (2005)
    (en banc) (“Our fidelity to the uniform application of law
    precludes us from accepting concessions of law made on
    appeal.”). Consequently, we will consider the merits.
    7
    Daily Press asserts that it has a constitutional right of
    access under the First Amendment of the Constitution of the
    United States and Article I, § 12 of the Constitution of
    Virginia. These provisions are virtually identical. See,
    8
    constitutional right of access extends to the inspection of
    documents filed in such proceedings.   Globe Newspaper Co. v.
    Commonwealth, 
    264 Va. 622
    , 628, 
    570 S.E.2d 809
    , 812 (2002).
    Although the right of access to criminal proceedings is of
    constitutional stature, it is not absolute.   See Nebraska Press
    Ass’n, 427 U.S. at 570.   However, the circumstances in which
    criminal trial exhibits can be sealed are limited.   The
    public’s right of access can only be denied upon a strong
    showing of a compelling governmental interest, and any closure
    must be narrowly tailored to serve that interest.    Globe
    Newspaper Co. v. Superior Court, 
    457 U.S. 596
    , 606-07 (1982).
    The governmental interest asserted here as the basis for
    the sealing order was Stoffa’s Sixth Amendment right to a fair
    trial.   In assessing whether closure is appropriate, there is a
    presumption in favor of openness.   Richmond Newspapers, Inc.,
    448 U.S. at 573.   This presumption can only be overcome if
    specific findings are made that: (1) there is a substantial
    probability that the defendant’s right to a fair trial will be
    prejudiced by publicity and that closure would prevent that
    e.g., Black v. Commonwealth, 
    262 Va. 764
    , 785, 
    553 S.E.2d 738
    ,
    750 (2001) (Hassell, C.J., dissenting) (observing that “[t]he
    freedom of speech guaranteed by Article I, § 12 of the
    Constitution of Virginia is co-extensive with the protections
    guaranteed by the First Amendment of the Constitution of the
    United States”), aff’d in part, vacated in part, and remanded,
    
    538 U.S. 343
     (2003). Thus, for purposes of this opinion, we
    make no distinction between them.
    9
    prejudice; and (2) reasonable alternatives to closure cannot
    adequately protect the defendant’s fair trial rights.      Press-
    Enterprise Co. v. Superior Court, 
    478 U.S. 1
    , 14 (1986).       To
    ensure stringent safeguarding of the constitutional rights at
    stake, courts are required to justify any decision to close
    with specific reasons and findings on the record.    Id. at 13.
    We will review such findings de novo.    In re Charlotte
    Observer, 
    882 F.2d 850
    , 853 (4th Cir. 1989).
    In this case, the circuit court failed to make specific
    findings necessary to justify the sealing order.    The court’s
    rationale for sealing the exhibits was the possibility that
    they might be used in Stoffa’s impending trial.    The court
    expressed concerns over (1) potential prejudice from
    publication of the information contained in the exhibits; and
    (2) physical damage to the original exhibits that could affect
    their admissibility in Stoffa’s trial.   These rationales were
    speculative and not supported by particularized factual
    findings.
    First, there was no evidence that publication of the
    information contained in the exhibits would prejudice Stoffa’s
    right to a fair trial, or that sealing the exhibits would
    prevent any such prejudice.   At the time of the March 28 and
    April 22 orders, Stoffa was scheduled to be tried without a
    jury, which made concerns over tainting the jury pool
    10
    irrelevant. 8    Furthermore, while protecting the original
    exhibits from damage was a valid concern, the April 22 order
    was not the least restrictive means to satisfy it.     The court
    could have protected the rights of Stoffa and the Commonwealth,
    while also protecting the public’s right of access, by allowing
    the original exhibits to be withdrawn but requiring photocopies
    of the exhibits to remain in the public file.
    B. CODE § 17.1-208
    Daily Press also argues that the April 22 order violated
    the statutory presumption of open court records.     Code § 17.1-
    208 explicitly states that any records and papers maintained by
    the clerk “shall be open to inspection by any person.”        With
    respect to our analysis, Code § 17.1-208’s statutory
    presumption of access is equivalent to the constitutional right
    of access.      Court documents can only be sealed on the basis of
    “an interest so compelling that it cannot be protected
    reasonably by some measure other than a protective order,” and
    “any such order must be drafted in the manner least restrictive
    of the public’s interest.”      Shenandoah Publ’g House, Inc. v.
    Fanning, 
    235 Va. 253
    , 259, 
    368 S.E.2d 253
    , 256 (1988).
    8
    Stoffa subsequently could have elected to be tried by a
    jury. However, this possibility alone was not a sufficient
    rationale for sealing the exhibits. The court could have
    considered concerns regarding a potential jury at a later date,
    through less restrictive alternatives such as extensive voir
    dire or jury instructions addressing prejudice. See Press-
    Enterprise Co., 478 U.S. at 15.
    11
    For the same reasons that the April 22 order violated the
    Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of
    Virginia, it also violated Code § 17.1-208.   There was no
    showing of a compelling governmental interest that justified
    permitting the exhibits to be withdrawn from the Callender file
    and copies of those exhibits to be placed under seal.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    Accordingly, we will vacate the order of the circuit
    court.
    Vacated.
    12