Joseph Thurura v. Department of Corrections ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                         FILED
    DECEMBER 8, 2020
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    )
    JOSEPH THURURA,             )                          No. 36512-3-III
    )
    Appellant,    )
    )
    v.                     )
    )                          UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT )
    OF CORRECTIONS,             )
    )
    Respondent.   )
    SIDDOWAY, J. — After inmate Joseph Thurura sued the state Department of
    Corrections (DOC) for violating the Public Records Act (PRA), chapter 42.56 RCW, the
    DOC conducted a further search better calculated to locate and produce records
    responsive to his public record request. The trial court dismissed his action in response to
    a show cause motion brought by DOC and Mr. Thurura appeals, challenging the show
    cause procedure and arguing that the evidence revealed that DOC had initially conducted
    an inadequate record search, as he had claimed.
    The show cause procedure was not an authorized procedure, but the error in using
    it was harmless. Because we find that DOC’s initial search was inadequate, Mr. Thurura
    is entitled to be awarded his costs of the action, although not a penalty. We remand with
    directions to award Mr. Thurura his costs.
    No. 36512-3-III
    Thurura v. Dep’t of Corr.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On May 19, 2017, Joseph Thurura, an inmate at the Airway Heights Corrections
    Center, was accused of being involved in a fight with another inmate in the prison’s
    textile department. That day, two of the department’s correctional industries supervisors,
    Geraldine Sauter and Chris Burnette, drafted incident reports on what they observed. Mr.
    Burnette’s report stated that he did not see a fight, but after hearing “banging, rustling
    noises,” he left his office and observed Mr. Thurura walking out of the worker restroom
    in the textile department looking “somewhat winded, agitated and disheveled.” Clerk’s
    Papers (CP) at 65. When Mr. Burnette called Mr. Thurura into the office and asked him
    what happened, he said, “I’m not saying anything.” Id. Mr. Burnette’s report stated that
    Ms. Sauter than called to report a fight in the textiles department.
    Ms. Sauter’s report stated that Mr. Thurura and another inmate walked by her
    office toward the restroom that morning and both appeared “agitated/off baseline.”
    CP at 66. Her incident report stated that after a “possible fight” was reported, custody
    staff responded and the two inmates were strip searched and escorted to the
    administrative segregation unit. Id.
    Mr. Thurura complains that during the June 2017 hearing on the infraction,
    hearing staff did not have incident reports but found him guilty anyway. Evidently, the
    fact that the two incident reports existed was in evidence, but the reports themselves were
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    No. 36512-3-III
    Thurura v. Dep’t of Corr.
    not. Believing his right to due process had been violated, Mr. Thurura began in July
    2017 to request any records reflecting the evidence against him and followed up on
    responses with which he was dissatisfied. The record of his efforts in 2017 and early
    2018 is sketchy because he did not designate relevant documents as part of the clerk’s
    papers.1 Although Mr. Thurura provided background information in the show cause
    hearing below, there are many gaps in the transcript of his argument, identified as
    “unintelligible.”
    On February 11, 2018, Mr. Thurura submitted the public record request that is the
    subject matter of this appeal. He requested:
    1) The metadata associated with the Incident Report (IR) written by Chris
    Burnette (CISA), on 05/19/2017; specifically, I want to know the date
    and time this Incident Report (IR) was created (generated).
    2) The metadata associated with the Incident Report (IR) written by G.
    Sauter (CISA), on 05/19/2017; specifically, I want to know the date and
    time this Incident Report (IR) was created (generated).
    CP at 45.
    DOC received the public record request on February 16. Its public records
    specialist Davis Needham acknowledged receipt on February 26. That same day, Mr.
    Needham made the following request of DOC’s public disclosure unit:
    Please gather the following records: The Incident report written by Chris
    Burnette on 5/19/2017 in regard to Joseph Thurura, DOC # 332733,
    1
    We will not consider documents attached to Mr. Thurura’s opening brief because
    they were not properly designated as part of the record. See RAP 9.6, 10.3(a)(5).
    3
    No. 36512-3-III
    Thurura v. Dep’t of Corr.
    The incident report written by G. Sauter on 5/19/2017 regarding Joseph
    Thurura, DOC # 332733.
    [H]e has requested the metadata for this record, so I will need an unaltered
    electronic version if available, if unavailable, please provide any records
    which show the date and time at which this IR was produced.
    CP at 49.
    DOC disclosure unit employee Anne Graves forwarded the request to the prison’s
    captain’s office. After no responsive records were located in the captain’s office, Mr.
    Needham sent Mr. Thurura a letter on March 13 that stated, “A search has been
    conducted and no records were found responsive to your request.” CP at 43.
    Mr. Thurura then filed the action below, alleging that DOC failed to adequately
    search for and produce records in response to his request. Among Mr. Thurura’s
    allegations was that because DOC tracks employees’ computer use, it had the ability to
    identify the date and time employees create incident reports.
    In response to the filing of the lawsuit, DOC staff performed a further search. The
    further search evidently involved inquiring of Mr. Burnette, because on May 2, 2018, he
    sent an e-mail to Janet Nelson that forwarded an e-mail Ms. Sauter had sent to her shift
    lieutenant and 11 others on the day of the alleged fight.2 (Ms. Sauter was no longer
    employed by DOC.) Ms. Nelson is the legal liaison officer for the prison, whose duties
    2
    Her e-mail was sent “to” the shift lieutenant and three others; it was “cc’ed” to
    eight additional recipients.
    4
    No. 36512-3-III
    Thurura v. Dep’t of Corr.
    include assisting with facilitating discovery and other aspects of litigation when prison
    staff or DOC is a party to a lawsuit.
    Ms. Sauter’s e-mail had provided her shift lieutenant and the others with a pdf of
    her and Mr. Burnette’s signed incident reports. It was sent at 12:11 p.m. on the day of the
    fight. The subject line of her e-mail was “Lang 862769 & Thurura 332733 Textiles
    Incident 5/19/2017.” Id. It is apparent from Ms. Sauter’s e-mail that the pdf of her and
    Mr. Burnette’s signed reports was created at 9:59 a.m. on May 19. (She “received” the
    pdf at that time from copier@doc1.wa.gov.) Id.
    A little over a week later, DOC answered Mr. Thurura’s complaint, generally
    denying all his allegations.
    On May 30, 2018, an assistant attorney general (AAG) sent Mr. Thurura a letter
    saying she had confirmed with DOC’s information technology department that the
    metadata Mr. Thurura requested did not exist. The letter said that “[a]ny incident report
    saved would be in a scanned format that would not include metadata associated with the
    date and time the report was written.” CP at 18. The AAG threatened to seek costs for a
    frivolous action if Mr. Thurura went forward with his suit. Id.
    In October 2018, DOC filed a “motion to show cause,” asking the trial court to
    determine whether there had been a violation of the PRA. CP at 27 (capitalization
    omitted). Among its support for the motion were declarations from Ms. Nelson and from
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    No. 36512-3-III
    Thurura v. Dep’t of Corr.
    the chief digital forensics investigator for the DOC’s information technology department.
    Included among exhibits supporting the motion was the Sauter e-mail that Ms. Nelson
    obtained from Mr. Burnette in early May.
    Ms. Nelson’s declaration explained why communication of the pdf of the incident
    reports to and from Ms. Sauter on the day of the fight was not located in responding to
    Mr. Thurura’s February 11, 2018 record request:
    3. Incident reports are used to document inmate behavior. Staff may
    access incident report forms online and fill out various information on the
    form. Staff then print out the form and add their signature. Then the
    signed form will likely be scanned and emailed to the Shift Lieutenant and
    Shift Sergeant along with any other relevant staff pertaining to the incident.
    4. In some cases, the incident report may be used as evidence for an
    inmate infraction. In those cases, the incident report is submitted with the
    infraction packet for the Hearings Officer’s consideration. Infraction
    records are maintained in the Captain’s Office until they have met their
    applicable retention period. It is not the responsibility of staff to retain
    additional infraction documents or reports that they may have submitted as
    part of the infraction.
    5. On May 19, 2017, two Airway Heights Corrections Center
    employees, Geraldine Sauter and Chris Burnette, drafted incident reports in
    response to an event that indicated Joseph Thurura, DOC #332733, had
    been fighting with another inmate. Both staff members printed the reports,
    signed the reports, scanned the signed reports and emailed the scanned
    copies to necessary staff. However, the incident reports were not submitted
    as part of the infraction packet.
    CP at 61. Ms. Nelson explained that in processing Mr. Thurura’s February 11, 2018
    record request, DOC employees only inquired of the prison captain’s office and it was
    “[a]fter Thurura filed his lawsuit [that] a subsequent search was conducted and identified
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    No. 36512-3-III
    Thurura v. Dep’t of Corr.
    the scanned copies of the incident reports on Chris Burnette’s work computer drive in
    PDF format.” CP at 61.
    The DOC forensic investigator’s declaration addressed Mr. Thurura’s belief that
    DOC maintained records of Mr. Burnette’s and Ms. Sauter’s computer usage, stating,
    “[O]nly limited information is maintained on a user’s computer usage for 90 days. For
    that short period, only domain logs, users logon/logoff times and the equipment being
    used is accessible. Information on when specific documents were created/generated
    would not be maintained.” CP at 70.
    Mr. Thurura’s response to DOC’s motion argued that DOC’s own submissions
    demonstrated it had conducted an inadequate search, since it did not contact Mr. Burnette
    or ensure that his or Ms. Sauter’s computer files were searched until after he filed his
    lawsuit.
    At the conclusion of its hearing on DOC’s motion, the trial court orally ruled that
    DOC accurately responded to Mr. Thurura’s request that no records existed and its search
    was reasonable. It denied DOC’s request that it find Mr. Thurura’s lawsuit frivolous.
    Mr. Thurura timely appealed the court’s written order dismissing his action with
    prejudice.
    ANALYSIS
    Mr. Thurura contends the trial court erred in finding that DOC did not violate the
    7
    No. 36512-3-III
    Thurura v. Dep’t of Corr.
    PRA. He also argues that the trial court erred by allowing DOC to rely on an
    inapplicable show cause procedure.
    Under Washington’s Public PRA, agencies must make identifiable public records
    available for public inspection and copying. RCW 42.56.080. “Public record” is broadly
    defined by the act as “any writing containing information relating to the conduct of
    government . . . prepared, owned, used, or retained by any state or local agency
    regardless of physical form or characteristics.” RCW 42.56.010. “[A]n electronic
    version of a record, including its embedded metadata, is a public record subject to
    disclosure.” O’Neill v. City of Shoreline, 
    170 Wn.2d 138
    , 147, 
    240 P.3d 1149
     (2010).
    “When a PRA request is made, a government agency must hold onto . . . records,
    including their metadata; they cannot be deleted.” Id. at 150.
    Procedure
    We begin with Mr. Thurura’s challenge to the procedure followed by DOC. The
    PRA provides that a record requestor may bring a show cause proceeding to require an
    agency to demonstrate why it refuses to allow inspection or copying of a public record or
    to demonstrate why its estimate of response time is reasonable. See RCW 42.56.550(1)
    and (2). In O’Neill v. City of Shoreline, the Supreme Court cited a regulation that
    addressed why the procedure is provided for requestors:
    “The act provides a speedy remedy for a requestor to obtain a court hearing
    on whether the agency has violated [RCW 42.56.550]. The purpose of the
    8
    No. 36512-3-III
    Thurura v. Dep’t of Corr.
    quick judicial procedure is to allow requestors to expeditiously find out if
    they are entitled to obtain public records.”
    170 Wn.2d at 153 (alteration in original) (emphasis added) (quoting former WAC 44-14-
    08004(1) (2006)).
    A show cause procedure is essentially an accelerated motion procedure. Kittitas
    County v. Allphin, 2 Wn. App. 2d 782, 790-91, 
    413 P.3d 22
    , review denied sub nom.
    Kittitas County v. Sky Allphin, 
    191 Wn.2d 1014
    , 
    426 P.3d 740
     (2018). While the show
    cause procedure is not available to an agency in a PRA action, an agency may invoke the
    judicial review provided for by RCW 42.56.550(3) with a motion under CR 7(c).
    Allphin, 2 Wn. App. 2d at 792. Under RCW 42.56.550(3), the agency’s motion may be
    heard based solely on affidavits. 
    Id.
     Judicial review is de novo. 
    Id.
    In Allphin, we held that an agency’s mischaracterization of its motion as one for
    an order to show cause had not required the trial court to refuse judicial review in that
    case, because the agency acknowledged it bore the burden of proof and the record
    requestor was not prejudiced by the accelerated procedure. Similar circumstances are
    presented here: DOC acknowledges its burden of proof, see CP at 31, and Mr. Thurura
    fails to demonstrate prejudice. The procedure followed by DOC, while unauthorized by
    court rule or statute, was harmless.
    Failure to perform an adequate search
    The PRA violation on which Mr. Thurura relies for his appeal is DOC’s failure to
    9
    No. 36512-3-III
    Thurura v. Dep’t of Corr.
    conduct a reasonable search.3
    Under the PRA, to determine whether the agency’s search was adequate, “the
    focus of the inquiry is not whether responsive documents do in fact exist, but whether the
    search itself was adequate.” Neigh. All. of Spokane County v. Spokane County, 
    172 Wn.2d 702
    , 719-20, 
    261 P.3d 119
     (2011). Our Supreme Court has held the “[t]he
    adequacy of a search is judged by a standard of reasonableness, that is, the search must be
    reasonably calculated to uncover all relevant documents.” 
    Id. at 720
    . The agency does
    not have to search every possible location, “but only those places where it is reasonably
    likely to be found.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis omitted). The search should not be limited to one
    record system if there are others that are likely to turn up the information requested. 
    Id.
    DOC explains that Ms. Graves assumed the reports would be found in the
    captain’s office because they pertained to an infraction and that is where she expected
    infraction records to be found. But DOC’s declarations establish that incident reports that
    are not used in an infraction proceeding will not be found in the captain’s office. DOC’s
    search should have extended to locations where incident reports that are not part of an
    infraction packet are likely to repose—and computers used by the persons who created
    the reports are obvious places to look. DOC’s argument that it did not need to contact
    3
    Mr. Thurura does not contend that his lawsuit resulted in him obtaining the
    record and information he requested. He implicitly agrees with DOC’s assumption that
    the electronic documents whose metadata he had in mind were the original electronic
    forms completed by Mr. Burnette and Ms. Sauter, which they did not save.
    10
    No. 36512-3-III
    Thurura v. Dep’t of Corr.
    Mr. Burnette because he was not the person responsible for retaining the record ignores
    the relevant standard.
    The captain’s office was a reasonable place to start the records search but not a
    reasonable place to end it. Reviewing the DOC’s actions de novo, we agree with Mr.
    Thurura that the agency conducted an inadequate search.
    Alleged improper deletion of a record
    Mr. Thurura also alleges that DOC improperly deleted records of Mr. Burnette’s
    and Ms. Sauter’s computer usage after receiving a record request that required that they
    be preserved. His complaint averred that “DOC tracks employees’ computer use,” and
    “DOC has the ability to identify the date/time employees create incident reports.”
    CP at 4. In asking the trial court to find no PRA violation, DOC provided the court with
    its information technology employee’s testimony that when it comes to generic employee
    computer usage information,
    Only limited information is maintained on a user’s computer usage for 90
    days. For that short period, only domain logs, users [sic] logon/logoff
    times and the equipment being used is accessible. Information on when
    specific documents were created/generated would not be maintained.
    CP at 70.
    In arguing that DOC engaged in improper destruction, Mr. Thurura asserts that he
    served his first record request on July 2, 2017, and relies on the “Record Retention Act,”
    chapter 40.14 RCW, DOC record retention policies, and RCW 42.56.100, which requires
    11
    No. 36512-3-III
    Thurura v. Dep’t of Corr.
    agencies to retain possession of records past their scheduled destruction date if it receives
    a request for such records. Violations of the Record Retention Act do not give rise to a
    cause of action under the PRA. West v. Dep’t of Nat. Res., 
    163 Wn. App. 235
    , 244-46,
    
    258 P.3d 78
     (2011). As for the PRA provision, the record on appeal designated by Mr.
    Thurura does not include a request for records that he made within 90 days of May 19,
    2017, that should have caused DOC to preserve records responsive to his February 11,
    2018 record request.4
    Mr. Thurura’s remedy
    RCW 42.56.550(4) provides that a person prevailing against an agency in any
    action in the courts seeking the right to inspect or copy a public record “shall be awarded
    all costs, including reasonable attorney fees, incurred in connection with such legal
    action.” When an agency conducts an inadequate search but no responsive documents
    are ultimately found and produced, a prevailing party “is at least entitled to costs and
    reasonable attorney fees.” Neigh. All., 
    172 Wn.2d at 724-25
    . Our Supreme Court has so
    far not held that a daily penalty is available. See 
    id.
     This court has denied penalties for
    violations that do not deny the right to copy or inspect public records, even when no other
    remedy is available. See Hikel v. City of Lynnwood, 
    197 Wn. App. 366
    , 379, 
    389 P.3d 4
    We assume without deciding that the computer usage records would be a public
    record. Cf. Belenski v. Jefferson County, 
    187 Wn. App. 724
    , 735, 
    350 P.3d 689
     (2015)
    (deciding as a matter of first impression that Internet access logs that county deleted after
    13 months were public records), rev’d in part on other grounds, 
    186 Wn.2d 452
    , 
    378 P.3d 176
     (2016).
    12
    No. 36512-3-III
    Thurura v. Dep 't of Corr.
    677 (2016) (only attorney fees and costs available where agency's sole violation was
    failing to provide a reasonable estimate of the time for response); Mitchell v. Dep 't of
    Corr., 
    164 Wn. App. 597
    ,606,
    277 P.3d 670
     (2011) ('"Penalties are available only for a
    party who prevails on a claim of being denied the right to inspect or copy public
    records.").
    Because DOC's inadequate search did not result in a denial of Mr. Thurura's right
    to inspect or copy a public record, he is entitled to costs but not a penalty. (Mr. Thurura
    has proceeded prose, so reasonable attorney fees are not at issue.) We reverse the order
    dismissing Mr. Thurura's complaint and remand with directions to award him costs.
    A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW
    2.06.040.
    d}aM~,ff_.
    "ddoway, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    ~~,.:r.
    J:
    Fearing,
    13