Friends of Frame Park, U.A. v. City of Waukesha ( 2022 )


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    2022 WI 57
    SUPREME COURT            OF   WISCONSIN
    CASE NO.:              2019AP96
    COMPLETE TITLE:        Friends of Frame Park, U.A.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    City of Waukesha,
    Defendant-Respondent-Petitioner.
    REVIEW OF DECISION OF THE COURT OF APPEALS
    Reported at 
    394 Wis. 2d 387
    , 
    950 N.W.2d 831
    PDC No: 
    2020 WI App 61
     - Published
    OPINION FILED:         July 6, 2022
    SUBMITTED ON BRIEFS:
    ORAL ARGUMENT:         September 9, 2021
    SOURCE OF APPEAL:
    COURT:              Circuit
    COUNTY:             Waukesha
    JUDGE:              Michael O. Bohren
    JUSTICES:
    HAGEDORN, J., delivered the majority opinion of the Court with
    respect to ¶3, in which ZIEGLER, C.J., ROGGENSACK, and REBECCA
    GRASSL BRADLEY, JJ., joined, an opinion with respect to ¶¶13-24,
    in which ZIEGLER, C.J., and ROGGENSACK, J., joined, and an
    opinion with respect to ¶¶1-2, 4-12, 25-38. REBECCA GRASSL
    BRADLEY, J., filed a concurring opinion, in which ZIEGLER, C.J.,
    and ROGGENSACK, J., joined. KAROFSKY, J., filed a dissenting
    opinion, in which ANN WALSH BRADLEY and DALLET, JJ., joined.
    NOT PARTICIPATING:
    ATTORNEYS:
    For the defendant-respondent-petitioner, there were briefs
    filed by John M. Bruce and West & Dunn, LLC, Two Rivers. There
    was an oral argument by John M. Bruce.
    For the plaintiff-appellant, there was a brief filed by
    Joseph R. Cincotta and The Law Offices of Joseph R. Cincotta,
    Milwaukee. There was an oral argument by Joseph R. Cincotta.
    An amicus curiae brief was filed by                      James A. Friedman,
    Maxted   M.   Lenz   and   Godfrey   &       Kahn,   S.C.,    Madison,   for   the
    Wisconsin     Broadcasters   Association,        the   Wisconsin    Freedom    of
    Information Council, the Wisconsin Newspaper Association, the
    Wisconsin Transparency Project, and the Reporters Committee for
    Freedom of the Press. There was an oral argument by James A.
    Friedman.
    2
    
    2022 WI 57
    NOTICE
    This opinion is subject to further
    editing and modification.   The final
    version will appear in the bound
    volume of the official reports.
    No.     2019AP96
    (L.C. No.   2017CV2197)
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                               :              IN SUPREME COURT
    Friends of Frame Park, U.A.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                                        FILED
    v.                                                            JUL 6, 2022
    City of Waukesha,                                                      Sheila T. Reiff
    Clerk of Supreme Court
    Defendant-Respondent-Petitioner.
    HAGEDORN, J., delivered the majority opinion of the Court with
    respect to ¶3, in which ZIEGLER, C.J., ROGGENSACK, and REBECCA
    GRASSL BRADLEY, JJ., joined, an opinion with respect to ¶¶13-24,
    in which ZIEGLER, C.J., and ROGGENSACK, J., joined, and an
    opinion with respect to ¶¶1-2, 4-12, 25-38. REBECCA GRASSL
    BRADLEY, J., filed a concurring opinion, in which ZIEGLER, C.J.,
    and ROGGENSACK, J., joined. KAROFSKY, J., filed a dissenting
    opinion, in which ANN WALSH BRADLEY and DALLET, JJ., joined.
    REVIEW of a decision of the Court of Appeals.                   Reversed.
    ¶1    BRIAN HAGEDORN, J.       In this public records case, the
    City   of   Waukesha      denied   access   to    a     draft     contract      with     a
    private     entity   to   protect   ongoing      negotiations         and     until     it
    consulted with the City's Common Council.                  The requester brought
    a mandamus action seeking access to the withheld contract.                            Two
    No.    2019AP96
    days later, after a meeting of the Common Council, the City
    turned over the record to the requester.
    ¶2     The first issue in this case relates to attorney's
    fees in public records cases.                   The parties disagree over the
    test we should use to determine whether the requester, in the
    statute's words, "prevail[ed] in whole or in substantial part,"
    and   is    therefore      entitled    to       attorney's    fees.       
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a) (2019-20).1             The court of appeals has previously
    employed a causal-nexus test——querying whether the release of
    records was caused in some way by the litigation.                     In this case,
    where      the    records    custodian          voluntarily      turned     over     the
    requested        record,    the    court         of    appeals     recognized        the
    limitations of a causation-based approach and considered whether
    the records were properly withheld in the first place.                          This is
    the first occasion for this court to fully analyze what it means
    for a party to "prevail[] in whole or in substantial part" under
    § 19.37(2)(a).       Faced with these varying approaches, we conclude
    we must return the analytical framework to one more closely
    tethered to the statutory text.                  The varying tests utilized by
    the court of appeals in the past do not track the meaning of the
    words the legislature used.
    ¶3     Four justices agree that to "prevail[] in whole or in
    substantial       part"    means   the   party        must   obtain   a    judicially
    1All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to
    the 2019-20 version unless otherwise indicated.
    2
    No.     2019AP96
    sanctioned       change       in      the        parties'           legal        relationship.
    Accordingly, a majority of the court adopts this principle.
    ¶4     This     conclusion          arguably          raises        other         statutory
    questions.        Prior      court    of    appeals          cases       have     held     that    a
    requester could still pursue attorney's fees even if the records
    have been voluntarily turned over.                       This conclusion rested on
    its    causation-based        theory,       however.           The       concurrence        argues
    that    under    the    proper       statutory         test        we    announce        today,   a
    mandamus      action    becomes      moot    after       voluntary             compliance,      and
    record       requesters      have      no        separate          authority        to      pursue
    attorney's fees.          We save this issue for another day.                             Even if
    record requesters can pursue attorney's fees following release
    of    the    requested     records,         an       award    of        fees    would     not     be
    appropriate here.         This is so because in temporarily withholding
    the draft contract, the City complied with the public records
    law.        Applying   the    balancing          test,       the    City       pointed     to   the
    strong public interest in nondisclosure——namely, protecting the
    City's negotiating and bargaining position and safeguarding the
    Common      Council's     prerogative            in    contract          approval.          These
    considerations outweigh the strong public policy in favor of
    disclosure.          Furthermore, the City recognized the balance of
    interests would shift after the Common Council meeting, and it
    properly disclosed the draft contract at that time.                                 Therefore,
    the City did not violate the public records law.                                 And thus, the
    requester did not and could not prevail in whole or substantial
    part in this action.           Therefore, no judicially sanctioned change
    3
    No.   2019AP96
    in the parties' relationship is appropriate and the requester is
    not entitled to any attorney's fees.
    I.     BACKGROUND
    ¶5        Friends   of      Frame     Park,      U.A.   (Friends)     is   an
    association composed of several members who own property, work,
    and pay taxes to the City of Waukesha and make use of City
    parks, including Frame Park.                 Friends sent the City a public
    records request on October 9, 2017, seeking information about
    the City's plans to bring amateur baseball to Waukesha.2                          The
    request stated in part:              "Please include any Letters of Intent
    (LOI) or Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) or Lease Agreements
    between Big Top Baseball and or Northwoods League Baseball and
    the City of Waukesha during the time frame of 5-1-16 to the
    present time frame."
    ¶6        The City responded two weeks later.             It provided all
    documents responsive to Friends' request except a draft contract
    with       Big   Top   Baseball.      The    City    explained   its   decision   to
    temporarily withhold the document as follows:
    A park use contract with Big Top Baseball is presently
    in draft form.     Because the contract is still in
    negotiation with Big Top, and there is at least one
    other entity that may be competing with the City of
    Friends' registered agent, Scott Anfinson, made this
    2
    public records request; Friends was formally established a month
    later, in November 2017.    The circuit court held that Friends
    was a proper party to bring an action in connection with the
    public records request signed by Mr. Anfinson. The City did not
    challenge this ruling on appeal.   Thus, this opinion refers to
    the records requestor as Friends.
    4
    No.   2019AP96
    Waukesha for a baseball team, the draft contract is
    being withheld from your request, pursuant to Wis.
    Stats. §§ 19.35(1)(a) and § 19.85(1)(e).      This is to
    protect   the     City's   negotiating    and  bargaining
    position.    The draft contract is subject to review,
    revision, and approval of the Common Council before it
    can be finalized, and the Common Council have not yet
    had an opportunity to review and discuss the draft
    contract.   Protecting the City's ability to negotiate
    the best deal for the taxpayers is a valid public
    policy reason to keep the draft contract temporarily
    out of public view - Wis. Stats. § 19.35(1)(a) states
    that exemptions to the requirement of a governmental
    body to meet in open session are indicative of public
    policy in this regard, and Wis. Stats. § 19.85(1)(e)
    exempts    from    open    session   "[d]eliberating    or
    negotiating the purchasing of public properties, the
    investing of public funds, or conducting other
    specified public business, whenever competitive or
    bargaining reasons require a closed session."        There
    currently is a need to restrict public access for
    competitive and bargaining reasons until the Council
    has an opportunity to review the draft and determine
    whether it wants to adopt it or set different
    parameters    for    continued   negotiations  with    the
    interested parties. If the contract's terms were made
    public, it would substantially diminish the City's
    ability to negotiate different terms the Council may
    desire for the benefit the City.
    Because the City's negotiating and bargaining position
    could be compromised by public disclosure of the draft
    contract before the Common Council have had an
    opportunity to consider the draft, after applying the
    balancing test, the public's interest in protecting
    that negotiating and bargaining position outweighs the
    public's interest in disclosing the draft contract at
    this point. You will get a copy of the contract after
    the Common Council has taken action on it.
    ¶7   Friends   believed   the       City   improperly   withheld   the
    draft contract and knew the use of Frame Park was on the Common
    Council meeting agenda for December 19, 2017.         So the day before
    the Common Council meeting, in order to preserve its remedies,
    5
    No.     2019AP96
    Friends      filed       a    mandamus      action       under    
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (1)
    seeking production of the draft contract, attorney's fees, and
    other       expenses.              The   following       evening,      the     City's     Common
    Council met.         It is unclear from the meeting minutes whether, or
    to what extent, the draft contract was discussed.                                 The minutes
    note       the   following           with   respect       to     Frame   Park:          "Citizen
    speakers registering comments against baseball at Frame Park";
    the     "City      Administrator's            Report"          included      a    "Northwoods
    Baseball League Update"; and an "item for next Common Council
    Meeting under New Business" was to, "Create an ADHOC Committee
    for the purpose to address Frame Park and Frame Park issues."
    ¶8        The next day, on December 20, 2017, the City released
    the draft contract to Friends.3                        Consistent with its explanation
    initially denying release, the City explained the documents "are
    being      released          now    because   there       is     no   longer     any    need   to
    protect the City's negotiating and bargaining position."
    ¶9        Friends then amended its complaint, asking the circuit
    court4      to    hold       that    the    City       improperly     withheld      the    draft
    contract.          In advance of trial, the City filed a motion for
    Friends included the draft contract in its appendix to its
    3
    response brief, despite the court of appeals admonition that
    submission of the draft contract was improper. Friends of Frame
    Park, U.A. v. City of Waukesha, 
    2020 WI App 61
    , ¶12 n.5, 
    394 Wis. 2d 387
    , 
    950 N.W.2d 831
    . Our review is limited to materials
    in the record. See Roy v. St. Lukes Med. Ctr., 
    2007 WI App 218
    ,
    ¶10 n.1, 
    305 Wis. 2d 658
    , 
    741 N.W.2d 256
    .     The draft contract
    was not made a part of the record before us; therefore, we do
    not consider the draft contract in making our decision.
    The Honorable Michael O. Bohren of the Waukesha County
    4
    Circuit Court presided.
    6
    No.        2019AP96
    summary judgment which the circuit court granted; Friends did
    not move for summary judgment.                    The circuit court concluded the
    City "properly withheld certain public records temporarily in
    response to the record request made by [Friends] for the reasons
    set forth in the letter . . . and appropriately relied on 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.85
    (1)(e)       as    the   basis        for   doing   so    under         the
    circumstances of this case."              It further concluded that Friends
    was not entitled to attorney's fees under 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2).5
    ¶10    Friends appealed, and the court of appeals reversed.
    Friends of Frame Park, U.A. v. City of Waukesha, 
    2020 WI App 61
    ,
    
    394 Wis. 2d 387
    , 
    950 N.W.2d 831
    .                    The court concluded that the
    City's reliance on the negotiating and bargaining "exception was
    unwarranted and led to an unreasonable delay in the record's
    release."        Id.,   ¶5.        Regarding         attorney's   fees,        the    court
    explained that in most cases the court of appeals has utilized a
    causation-based test, but it determined that test did not make
    sense in this case.         Id., ¶3.      Rather, the court of appeals held
    that "the key consideration is whether the authority properly
    invoked    the    exception        in   its       initial    decision     to    withhold
    release."        Id., ¶4.      Using this approach, and based on its
    conclusion that the City erred in withholding the record, the
    court determined that Friends was "entitled to some portion of
    its attorney's fees" and remanded the cause to the circuit court
    5 The circuit court also granted summary judgment for the
    City with respect to subsequent records requests made by
    Friends. Friends did not appeal this aspect of the decision.
    7
    No.     2019AP96
    to   ascertain      the   amount.        Id.,     ¶5.       We   granted       the    City's
    petition for review.
    II.    DISCUSSION
    ¶11    Procedurally, this case is a review of the circuit
    court's     decision      to   grant    summary       judgment,        which    we    review
    independently.       J. Times v. City of Racine Bd. of Police & Fire
    Comm'rs,     
    2015 WI 56
    ,      ¶42,    
    362 Wis. 2d 577
    ,         
    866 N.W.2d 563
    .
    Summary      judgment       "shall      be       rendered        if    the      pleadings,
    depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file,
    together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no
    genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party
    is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law."                                 
    Wis. Stat. § 802.08
    (2).
    ¶12    The    two    questions       before     us    concern     entitlement        to
    attorney's fees under 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a), and whether the
    City properly withheld the draft contract until after the Common
    Council      meeting.            These       are        questions        of         statutory
    interpretation and application which we review independently.
    J. Times, 
    362 Wis. 2d 577
    , ¶42.
    A.   Attorney's Fees Under the Public Records Law
    ¶13    When "an authority withholds a record or a part of a
    record or delays granting access to a record or part of a record
    after   a    written      request    for     disclosure       is      made"    the    record
    requester may "bring an action for mandamus asking a court to
    order   release      of    the   record"         or   may    request      the       district
    8
    No.     2019AP96
    attorney to bring a mandamus action.                   
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (1).
    Section 19.37 provides that the record requester may be entitled
    to various damages and fees as a result of the mandamus action.
    See     § 19.37(2)-(4).          Relevant      to   this    case,     § 19.37(2)(a)
    contains the following fee-shifting provision:
    Except as provided in this paragraph, the court shall
    award reasonable attorney fees, damages of not less
    than $100, and other actual costs to the requestor if
    the requester prevails in whole or in substantial part
    in any action filed under sub. (1) relating to access
    to a record or part of a record under [Wis. Stat.
    §] 19.35(1)(a).
    (Emphasis       added).       Besides    attorney's        fees,     the     law   also
    specifies that the circuit court shall award actual damages if
    "the authority acted in a willful or intentional manner" and may
    award     punitive    damages       if   the    authority      "arbitrarily         and
    capriciously denied or delayed response to a request or charged
    excessive fees."          § 19.37(2)(b), (3); see also Cap. Times Co. v.
    Doyle, 
    2011 WI App 137
    , ¶¶7, 11, 
    337 Wis. 2d 544
    , 
    807 N.W.2d 666
    (concluding actual and punitive damages are limited to mandamus
    actions).
    ¶14   Wisconsin       Stat.    § 19.37(2)(a)——the            attorney's      fees
    provision at issue here——was originally enacted in 1982 and was
    comparable to the then-existing fee-shifting provision in the
    federal Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).                   FOIA provided that
    courts "may assess against the United States reasonable attorney
    fees and other litigation costs reasonably incurred in any case
    under    this    section    in   which   a     complainant    has     substantially
    9
    No.     2019AP96
    prevailed."6        
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    (a)(4)(E) (1976) (emphasis added).
    But what does it mean to "prevail" under these statutes?
    ¶15    The    answer     to    this    question   in       Wisconsin     and   in
    federal courts has centered on two alternatives:                      a causation-
    based     approach,      and    an     interpretation       that    requires       some
    judicially sanctioned change in the parties' legal relationship.
    The latter definition is endorsed by the United States Supreme
    Court and is the better interpretation of "prevails" in 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a).           To explain why, we explore how these two
    approaches came to be.
    1.    Causal-Nexus Test
    ¶16    In Wisconsin, the court of appeals first considered
    the   meaning      of   
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a)       in    Racine      Education
    Ass'n v. Board of Education for Racine Unified School District
    (Racine I), 
    129 Wis. 2d 319
    , 
    385 N.W.2d 510
     (Ct. App. 1986).
    There, the court of appeals concluded the statutory language
    "prevails in whole or substantial part" failed to provide any
    criteria and was unclear.              Id. at 326.      It therefore turned to
    federal     case   law   interpreting        FOIA's   fee    shifting      provision.
    Id. at 326-28.
    6Under the federal statute, this is just the start of the
    inquiry into whether a party is entitled to receive attorney's
    fees.   Unlike 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a), FOIA permits but does
    not require a court to grant attorney's fees. The determination
    of whether to award fees ultimately rests with the district
    court, which is instructed to consider several non-exhaustive
    factors in making its determination. See Church of Scientology
    of Cal. v. Harris, 
    653 F.2d 584
    , 590 (D.C. Cir. 1981).
    10
    No.    2019AP96
    ¶17        It found persuasive the D.C. Circuit's decision in Cox
    v. United States Department of Justice, 
    601 F.2d 1
     (D.C. Cir.
    1979) (per curiam).                The court in Cox held that a party could
    seek       fees    under    FOIA    "in     the   absence   of   a   court   order"    if
    "prosecution         of    the     action    could    reasonably      be   regarded    as
    necessary to obtain the information and that a causal nexus
    exists between that action and the agency's surrender of the
    information."            
    Id. at 6
     (citations omitted).               This later became
    known as the "catalyst theory," an interpretation "which posits
    that a plaintiff is a 'prevailing party' if it achieves the
    desired result because the lawsuit brought about a voluntary
    change in the defendant's conduct."                   Buckhannon Bd. & Care Home,
    Inc. v. W. Va. Dep't of Health and Hum. Res., 
    532 U.S. 598
    , 601
    (2001).           The court of appeals in Racine I adopted "the Cox
    analysis for use in determining whether a party has 'prevail[ed]
    in     whole        or     in      substantial       part'"      under     
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a).            129 Wis. 2d at 328 (alteration in original).
    ¶18        Although the test has evolved somewhat since Racine I,7
    the court of appeals has generally held that a party "prevails"
    Subsequent cases mixed the federal catalyst theory with
    7
    Wisconsin's causation analysis for common law negligence.
    The test of cause in Wisconsin is whether the actor's
    action was a substantial factor in contributing to the
    result.   The phrase "substantial factor" denotes that
    the actor's conduct has such an effect in producing
    the result as to lead the trier of fact, as a
    reasonable person, to regard it as a cause, using that
    word in the popular sense.
    State ex rel. Vaughan v. Faust, 
    143 Wis. 2d 868
    , 871-72, 
    422 N.W.2d 898
     (Ct. App. 1988) (citing Merco Distrib. Corp. v. Com.
    11
    No.    2019AP96
    in a public records action if there is a causal nexus between
    the requestor bringing the action and the defendant providing
    the requested records.
    2.    Judicially Sanctioned Change in the Parties' Legal
    Relationship
    ¶19   Federal courts have not followed in step, however.                In
    2001, the United States Supreme Court concluded that the D.C.
    Circuit's    approach      in    Cox——the   case   Racine   I   relied   on——is
    inconsistent with the proper understanding of what it means to
    prevail in a lawsuit.           Buckhannon, 
    532 U.S. 598
    .       In Buckhannon,
    the Court considered the meaning of the term "prevailing party"
    in the fee-shifting provisions of the Fair Housing Amendments
    Act   (FHAA)   and   the    Americans       with   Disabilities   Act    (ADA).8
    Police Alarm Co., 
    84 Wis. 2d 455
    , 458-59, 
    267 N.W.2d 652
     (1978)
    (analyzing the causation element of common law negligence)). In
    Faust, the court of appeals further explained that "but for"
    causation was not required.   Id. at 872-73.   And in WTMJ, Inc.
    v. Sullivan, the court of appeals noted, "The action may be one
    of several causes; it need not be the sole cause." 
    204 Wis. 2d 452
    , 458-59, 
    555 N.W.2d 140
     (Ct. App. 1996).
    We have mentioned the causation test before. See J. Times
    v. City of Racine Bd. of Police & Fire Comm'rs, 
    2015 WI 56
    , ¶57,
    
    362 Wis. 2d 577
    , 
    866 N.W.2d 563
    .     In Journal Times, we noted
    that "if the failure to timely respond to a request was caused
    by an unavoidable delay accompanied by due diligence in the
    administrative    processes, . . . the    plaintiff    has   not
    substantially prevailed." 
    Id.
     However, we went on to conclude
    that the plaintiff was not entitled to attorney's fees because
    it "did not prevail in substantial part."    Id., ¶104. We have
    not previously been presented a question squarely addressing the
    causation test or its contours.
    8The fee-shifting provision under the FHAA provided, "[T]he
    court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party . . . a
    12
    No.     2019AP96
    Id. at     601.         It        expressly   rejected       Cox's       causation-based
    interpretation, concluding instead that "the term 'prevailing
    party'" refers to "one who has been awarded some relief by the
    court."       Id. at 603.
    ¶20        The    Court       explained     that      "prevailing      party"      is    a
    "legal term of art."                 Id. at 603.          It referenced Black's Law
    Dictionary,         which    defined     "prevailing        party"    as    a   "party      in
    whose favor a judgment is rendered, regardless of the amount of
    damages    awarded . . . .——Also              termed      successful       party."          Id.
    (citing       Black's       Law    Dictionary      1145    (7th    ed.     1999)).       The
    question therefore was simply whether there was a "court-ordered
    change in the legal relationship between the plaintiff and the
    defendant."          Id. at 604 (alteration omitted) (quoting another
    source).       And while a consent decree incorporating a settlement
    agreement may suffice to establish one's status as a prevailing
    party,    a    "defendant's          voluntary     change     in     conduct,      although
    perhaps accomplishing what the plaintiff sought to achieve by
    the lawsuit" does not suffice because it "lacks the necessary
    judicial imprimatur on the change."                    Id. at 605.
    ¶21        In    Buckhannon's        aftermath,        federal       circuit      courts
    promptly       applied       its     interpretative         analysis       to   the     term
    reasonable attorney's fee and costs."    Buckhannon Bd. & Care
    Home, Inc. v. W. Va. Dep't of Health and Hum. Res., 
    532 U.S. 598
    , 601 (2001) (quoting FHAA, 
    42 U.S.C. § 3613
    (c)(2)).
    The fee-shifting provision under the ADA provided, "[T]he
    court . . . , in its discretion, may allow the prevailing
    party . . . a reasonable attorney's fee, including litigation
    expenses, and costs." 
    Id.
     (quoting ADA, 
    42 U.S.C. § 12205
    ).
    13
    No.     2019AP96
    "substantially        prevailed"     in      FOIA's   fee     shifting      provision.
    E.g., Oil, Chem. & Atomic Workers Int'l Union, AFL–CIO v. Dep't
    of   Energy,   
    288 F.3d 452
    ,      456–57     (D.C.   Cir.    2002);          Union    of
    Needletrades,        Indus.   &    Textile      Emps.,   AFL–CIO,      CLC       v.     U.S.
    Immigr. & Naturalization Serv., 
    336 F.3d 200
    , 205-06 (2d Cir.
    2003).      Shortly thereafter, however, Congress amended FOIA to
    state that "a complainant has substantially prevailed if the
    complainant has obtained relief through either——(I) a judicial
    order, or an enforceable written agreement or consent degree; or
    (II) a voluntary or unilateral change in position by the agency,
    if the complainant's claim in not insubstantial."                                
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    (a)(4)(E)(ii); see also Or. Nat. Desert Ass'n v. Locke, 
    572 F.3d 610
    , 614-15 (9th Cir. 2009).                 Several circuits since have
    interpreted     the     amendment     as     reinstating       the    pre-Buckhannon
    catalyst theory of recovery in the FOIA context.                             See First
    Amend. Coal. v. U.S. Dept. of Just., 
    878 F.3d 1119
    , 1128 (9th
    Cir. 2017) (collecting cases).                Wisconsin's public records law,
    however, has not been similarly amended and does not contain the
    "voluntary or unilateral change" language of the amended FOIA
    provision.
    ¶22   The      understanding      of    prevailing      party    expressed         in
    Buckhannon is not unique to federal law.                     It has a long history
    in Wisconsin as well.             In our earliest laws, numerous statutory
    provisions     tied    the    concept      of   prevailing      in    an     action      to
    success in a judicial proceeding.                E.g., Wis. Stat. ch. 102, § 6
    (1849) ("[T]he plaintiff in error on the trial anew shall be the
    successful     and    prevailing      party.");       Wis.    Stat.   ch.        109,    § 6
    14
    No.   2019AP96
    (1849) ("If the plaintiff in such action prevail therein, he
    shall have judgment for double the amount of damages found by
    the   jury.").9    This     was   also    true    when    § 19.37(2)(a)'s     fee-
    shifting provision was enacted in 1982; many Wisconsin statutes
    on the books clearly tied a party's prevailing status to success
    in    some   judicial    proceeding.10        Our      cases   reinforced     this
    understanding.          Whiting   v.     Gould,    
    1 Wis. 198
    ,   199    (1853)
    9See also Wis. Stat. ch. 64, § 21 (1849) ("If . . . it
    shall appear to the court, that either the petition or the
    objection thereto is unreasonable, said court may, in its
    discretion, award costs to the party prevailing, and enforce the
    payment thereof."); Wis. Stat. ch. 106, § 29 (1849) ("[T]he
    judgment in the action, if the plaintiff prevail, shall be that
    the plaintiff recover the possession of the premises . . . .").
    E.g., 
    Wis. Stat. § 52.10
    (6)(c) (1981-82) ("If proceedings
    10
    have been initiated and the person demanded has prevailed
    therein the governor may decline to honor the demand."); 
    Wis. Stat. § 109.03
    (6) (1981-82) ("In any [wage claim] proceeding the
    court may allow the prevailing party, in addition to all other
    costs, a reasonable sum for expenses."); 
    Wis. Stat. § 655.19
    (1)
    (1981-82) ("In the case of a trial . . . the court may award
    actual court costs and reasonable attorney fees in excess of
    statutory limitations to the prevailing party."); 
    Wis. Stat. § 807.01
    (2)   (1981-82)   ("If   the   plaintiff   accepts   the
    offer . . . and prevails upon the trial, either party may file
    proof of service of the offer and acceptance and the damages
    will be assessed accordingly."); 
    Wis. Stat. § 811.21
     (1981-82)
    ("If the defendant prevails in the action or if the action be
    discontinued the damages sustained by him . . . shall be
    assessed and he shall have judgment therefore."); 
    Wis. Stat. § 823.03
     (1981-82) ("[W]hen the plaintiff prevails, he shall, in
    addition to judgment for damage and costs, also have judgment
    that the nuisance be abated unless the court shall otherwise
    order."); 
    Wis. Stat. § 879.33
     (1981-82) ("Costs may be allowed
    in all appealable contested matters in court to the prevailing
    party . . . ."); 
    Wis. Stat. § 879.45
    (4) (1981-82) ("In all jury
    cases costs shall be allowed as a matter of course to the
    prevailing party.").
    15
    No.     2019AP96
    ("Therefore,      interlocutory      costs . . . must         follow    the     final
    adjudication, and may be taxed, by items, by the ultimately
    prevailing party . . . .").11         Conversely, we have explained that
    a party does not prevail if "there is no final determination on
    the merits and the action does not end in judgment for one party
    or the other."          DeGroff v. Schmude, 
    71 Wis. 2d 554
    , 568, 
    238 N.W.2d 730
     (1976).
    ¶23    When the legislature uses a legal term of art with a
    broadly      accepted   meaning——as    it   has    here   with      "prevails"       in
    § 19.37(2)(a)——we       generally     assume   the    legislature        meant      the
    same    thing.     Mueller    v.    TL90108,   LLC,    
    2020 WI 7
    ,        ¶19,   
    390 Wis. 2d 34
    , 
    938 N.W.2d 566
     (noting that terms "with specific and
    distinct      meaning   in   our   common   law"     should    be   given      "their
    accepted legal meaning"); 
    Wis. Stat. § 990.01
    (1) ("[T]echnical
    words and phrases and others that have a peculiar meaning in the
    law shall be construed according to such meaning.").                           If the
    idea that a party could prevail in a lawsuit in the absence of
    court action was unknown in Wisconsin when this statute was
    adopted, we should not read that interpretation into the statute
    See also McCaffrey v. Nolan, 
    1 Wis. 361
    , 364 (1853)
    11
    (noting that following a successful replevin action, an officer
    should "deliver the property to the prevailing party in the
    suit"); Pietsch v. McCarthy, 
    159 Wis. 251
    , 255, 
    150 N.W. 482
    (1915) (holding a party was "the prevailing party" after
    obtaining a reversal on appeal); Farmers Grain Exch., Inc. v.
    Crull, 
    50 Wis. 2d 161
    , 164, 
    183 N.W.2d 41
     (1971) (using the term
    "prevailing party" juxtaposed against a "losing party" that
    "attempts to relieve itself of a judgment").
    16
    No.     2019AP96
    now given the absence of any evidence that it was understood to
    have that meaning when enacted.
    ¶24   Buckhannon's   interpretation         comports      with     Wisconsin
    law.    A causation or catalyst theory is not a comfortable fit
    with statutory text that allows recovery of attorney's fees "if
    the requester prevails in whole or in substantial part in any
    action."      
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a).            The better course is to
    follow the United States Supreme Court's lead and return to a
    textually-rooted understanding of when a party prevails in a
    lawsuit.     Absent a judicially sanctioned change in the parties'
    legal relationship, attorney's fees are not recoverable under
    § 19.37(2)(a).
    3.   Friends Is Not Entitled to Attorney's Fees
    ¶25   Previously, under the causal-nexus test, the court of
    appeals has held that although a mandamus action under 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (1)    becomes    moot     when    the    records        custodian
    provides the requested records, the question of attorney's fees
    remains live and can be litigated.           See Racine I, 129 Wis. 2d at
    324-25.      Without a causation-based theory governing the meaning
    of prevailing party under the statute, however, it is unclear
    whether voluntary compliance following the filing of a lawsuit
    could still allow a requester to pursue fees.                    Cf. Bjordal v.
    Town Bd. of Town of Delavan, 
    230 Wis. 543
    , 545-46, 
    284 N.W. 534
    (1939); Buckhannon, 
    532 U.S. at 609
    .               We reserve this question
    for another day.       Even if attorney's fees may be awarded after
    the    voluntary    production    of   records,    the    City    here     did   not
    17
    No.     2019AP96
    violate the law, as explained below.                    Friends therefore would
    not be entitled to any judicial relief——that is, it would not
    prevail in whole or substantial part——even if fees are available
    in   this    context.         Accordingly,    Friends      is    not   entitled      to
    attorney's fees either way.
    B.        The Draft Contract Was Properly Withheld
    ¶26    To explain why the City properly withheld the draft
    contract, we begin by discussing the general principles which
    animate the public records law.
    1.    Public Records Law General Principles
    ¶27    Wisconsin's public records law begins with a strong
    declaration of public policy which provides in part, "The denial
    of public access generally is contrary to the public interest,
    and only in an exceptional case may access be denied."                              
    Wis. Stat. § 19.31
    .           In light of this policy, "Except as otherwise
    provided     by    law,    any   requestor    has   a    right    to   inspect       any
    record."12        
    Wis. Stat. § 19.35
    (1)(a).         Therefore, once a legal
    custodian of a record receives a request, the custodian "shall,
    as   soon    as    practicable     and   without    delay,       either      fill   the
    request or notify the requester of the authority's determination
    "Requester" and "Record" are statutorily defined terms in
    12
    
    Wis. Stat. §§ 19.32-19.39
    . § 19.32(2), (3). The City does not
    argue that the draft contract fails to meet the definition of a
    record as defined in § 19.32(2).
    18
    No.       2019AP96
    to    deny    the     request       in    whole        or    in   part     and     the       reasons
    therefor."13        § 19.35(4)(a).
    ¶28     When    responding         to     the    request,         the    custodian        must
    first       determine       if   there      is    a    record       or    records        that     are
    responsive to the request.                  J. Times, 
    362 Wis. 2d 577
    , ¶55.                        If
    a    requested       record      exists,       and     if    no     other       statute        either
    requires      access        or   exempts       the     record,14         the    custodian        must
    conduct       the    balancing        test.           See    
    Wis. Stat. § 19.35
    (1)(a)
    ("Substantive         common      law     principles          construing         the     right     to
    inspect,      copy     or    receive      copies        of    records          shall    remain     in
    effect.").          The balancing test is a common-law limitation "that
    the inspection [of a record] not be permitted if there is a
    specific showing that the public interest would be adversely
    affected."          State ex rel. J. Co. v. Cnty. Ct. for Racine Cnty.,
    
    43 Wis. 2d 297
    ,           306,     
    168 N.W.2d 836
               (1969).            If,     after
    conducting the balancing test, the records custodian determines
    the     records       should     be      withheld,          the     custodian          must,    with
    specificity,            provide           reasons            "for         withholding             the
    records . . . sufficient to outweigh the strong public policy
    favoring disclosure."15                  Portage Daily Reg. v. Columbia Cnty.
    The legal custodians of various records are defined in
    13
    
    Wis. Stat. § 19.33
    .
    14   See, e.g., 
    Wis. Stat. §§ 19.36
    , 346.70(4)(f).
    This denial must be in writing (if the request was in
    15
    writing) and contain "the reasons for denying the written
    request."    
    Wis. Stat. § 19.35
    (4)(b).     If denied for public
    policy reasons, the statement must be specific and include more
    than "a mere citation to the exemption statute."       Chvala v.
    Bubolz, 
    204 Wis. 2d 82
    , 86-87, 
    552 N.W.2d 892
     (Ct. App. 1996).
    19
    No.      2019AP96
    Sheriff's      Dept.,     
    2008 WI App 30
    ,          ¶12,    
    308 Wis. 2d 357
    ,           
    746 N.W.2d 525
    .
    ¶29    As previously discussed, if a record is withheld in
    whole or in part, or its release delayed, an action for mandamus
    can    be    brought     to    compel    the    record's       release.           
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (1).         In reviewing a mandamus action, we "examine the
    sufficiency of the custodian's stated reasons for denying the
    request."      Osborn v. Bd. of Regents of Univ. of Wis. Sys., 
    2002 WI 83
    , ¶16, 
    254 Wis. 2d 266
    , 
    647 N.W.2d 158
    .
    2.   The Record Was Not Unlawfully Withheld
    ¶30    The City's decision to withhold the draft contract was
    based on the balancing test.16                      Although record custodians are
    obligated to conduct their own analysis, we conduct the public
    policy      analysis     the    balancing       test     calls       for    independently.
    Wis.    Newspress,       Inc.    v.     Sch.    Dist.    of    Sheboygan          Falls,     
    199 Wis. 2d 768
    , 784, 
    546 N.W.2d 143
     (1996).
    ¶31    The      City     cited      
    Wis. Stat. §§ 19.35
    (1)(a)              and
    19.85(1)(e) as public policy reasons supporting its decision to
    withhold      the   record.           Section       19.35(1)(a)       is    not       itself   a
    statutory exception to disclosure.                    Rather, it explains that the
    policies      behind     the    open    meetings       exemptions          in   § 19.85      are
    indicative of the public policy interests that might exempt a
    There is no dispute that the City's written response
    16
    denying access to the contract was sufficiently specific.    The
    City referenced the pertinent statutes and public policy
    interests at play, and expressly weighed those interests against
    the public interest in disclosure.
    20
    No.     2019AP96
    record    from    disclosure   under   the   balancing      test.17      Section
    19.85(1)(e), in turn, states:          "Deliberating or negotiating the
    purchasing of public properties, the investing of public funds,
    or   conducting       other    specified     public     business,       whenever
    competitive or bargaining reasons require a closed session."                    In
    other words, these types of issues may allow governmental bodies
    to meet in closed session, and therefore reflect strong public
    policy interests in nondisclosure that could also serve as a
    basis to withhold records.
    ¶32    Invoking the language in 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.85
    (1)(e), the
    City explained that "the contract [was] still in negotiation
    with Big Top."       Withholding disclosure was important to "protect
    the City's negotiation and bargaining position" and "the City's
    ability     to    negotiate    the   best    deal     for   the   taxpayers."
    Disclosure "would substantially diminish the City's ability to
    negotiate different terms the Council may desire for the benefit
    [of] the City" and "compromise[]" "the City's negotiating and
    bargaining       position."    The   City    further    explained       that   the
    "draft contract is subject to review, revision, and approval of
    17   In relevant part, 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.35
    (1)(a) provides:
    The exemptions to the requirement of a governmental
    body to meet in open session under [Wis. Stat.
    §] 19.85 are indicative of public policy, but may be
    used as grounds for denying public access to a record
    only if the authority or legal custodian under [Wis.
    Stat. §] 19.33 makes a specific demonstration that
    there is a need to restrict public access at the time
    that the request to inspect or copy the record is
    made.
    21
    No.        2019AP96
    the Common Council before it can be finalized, and the Common
    Council [has] not yet had an opportunity to review and discuss
    the draft contract."                 The City indicated it would disclose the
    draft contract after the Common Council had taken action.
    ¶33    The circuit court correctly concluded the reasons set
    forth in the City's letter supported temporarily withholding the
    draft    contract.             Without     question,        the    public       interest         in
    matters of municipal spending and development is significant.
    There    is   good    reason         for   the     public    to    know    how       government
    spends    public      money.           This      ensures    citizen       involvement           and
    accountability for public funds.                       However, contract negotiation
    often     requires         a        different         calculus.         Wisconsin            Stat.
    § 19.85(1)(e)        identifies         the      public    interest     in      protecting        a
    government's "competitive or bargaining" position in adversarial
    negotiation.          It       is    not   uncommon        for    the     state        or    local
    municipalities        to       negotiate         certain     contracts          in      private,
    especially     in    competitive           business       environments.           See,        e.g.,
    State ex rel. Citizens for Responsible Dev. v. City of Milton,
    
    2007 WI App 114
    ,            ¶19,       
    300 Wis. 2d 649
    ,        
    731 N.W.2d 640
    ("Developing a negotiation strategy or deciding on a price to
    offer for a piece of land is an example of what is contemplated
    by 'whenever competitive or bargaining reasons require a closed
    session.'" (quoting § 19.85(1)(e))).
    ¶34    As illustrated here, the City communicated its belief
    that    it    was    more      likely      to     secure     a    better     deal       if      its
    negotiations were not revealed early.                            The City was in talks
    with both Big Top Baseball and Northwoods League to bring a
    22
    No.    2019AP96
    baseball team to the City.                Revealing its hand by disclosing the
    terms    of   a    draft   contract        with     Big    Top   Baseball      could    have
    negatively impacted the City's ability to bring a baseball team
    to the City on favorable terms.                   While no third-party competitor
    for a contract with Big Top Baseball or the Northwoods League
    was identified, this does not diminish the competitive nature of
    the     negotiation.         In      a    competitive       bilateral         negotiation,
    confidentiality       is     often       critical    to    advancing      a    negotiation
    strategy.         An identified third party may increase competition,
    but it is not a prerequisite for a competitive negotiation.
    ¶35     These negotiations were by no means a secret.                               In
    fact, in response to the records request, the City turned over
    other "correspondence with Big Top Baseball or Northwoods League
    Baseball related to a baseball project in Frame Park during 5-1-
    16 to the present time."                 The only responsive document the City
    withheld was the draft contract; every other responsive document
    was provided in a timely manner.
    ¶36     Moreover,      while        City    employees        were   on-the-ground
    operators in a competitive negotiation with Big Top Baseball, it
    was ultimately the Common Council that bore the responsibility
    for the contract.            "The general rule of municipal law is that
    only a duly authorized officer, governing body, or board can act
    on behalf of a city, and a valid contract with the municipality
    cannot be created otherwise."                Town of Brockway v. City of Black
    River     Falls,      
    2005 WI App 174
    ,           ¶24,     
    285 Wis. 2d 708
    ,         
    702 N.W.2d 418
    .        Here, the City explained to Friends that once the
    Common      Council    had     an        opportunity       to    consider      the     draft
    23
    No.     2019AP96
    contract,    the     balance       of     interests      would    shift.            The    City
    therefore said it would disclose the draft contract to Friends
    after the Common Council took action on it.                       In this context, it
    was reasonable to wait for consultation with the Common Council
    before    revealing       the     current     status     of     the    negotiations            to
    others.
    ¶37    Under       these    circumstances,         the     City's       interest         in
    withholding        the    draft     contract        to   protect        its     bargaining
    position     until       the     Common     Council      had     the    opportunity            to
    consider     the     contract       outweighed        the      public's       interest         in
    immediate release.             The City properly applied the balancing test
    and   did   not     violate       the     public    records      law    by     temporarily
    withholding the draft contract, nor did it delay release of the
    contract unreasonably.             Accordingly, regardless of whether the
    issue of attorney's fees is moot, Friends is not entitled to
    attorney's    fees       because     it    did     not   prevail       in    whole        or   in
    substantial part on the merits of its mandamus action.
    III.     CONCLUSION
    ¶38    When ascertaining if a records requester is entitled
    attorney's fees as a part of a mandamus action under 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (1), a party must "prevail[] in whole or in substantial
    part," which means the party must obtain a judicially sanctioned
    change in the parties' legal relationship.                       § 19.37(2)(a).            With
    respect to the mandamus action before us, the City properly
    applied     the    balancing       test     when    it      decided     to     temporarily
    withhold access to the draft contract in response to Friends'
    24
    No.   2019AP96
    open    records    request.       Accordingly,    regardless       of    whether
    Friends     may   pursue   fees    after    voluntary    delivery        of   the
    requested record, Friends cannot prevail in its mandamus action
    and is not entitled to attorney's fees.
    By   the   Court.—The   decision    of   the   court   of    appeals    is
    reversed.
    25
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    ¶39       REBECCA GRASSL BRADLEY, J.                    (concurring).             "What a
    metamorphosis would be produced in the code of law if all its
    ancient         phraseology    were     to   be      taken      in its       modern      sense."
    Letter from James Madison, to Henry Lee (June 25, 1824).1                                     The
    judiciary         risks      destabilizing          the     law       and        usurping     the
    legislature's         law-making       power       when   it    fails       to    give    "legal
    terms of art" in a statute their "accepted legal meaning."                                    See
    Bank Mut. v. S.J. Boyer Const., Inc., 
    2010 WI 74
    , ¶23, 
    326 Wis. 2d 521
    ,         
    785 N.W.2d 462
            (quoting          Estate       of    Matteson     v.
    Matteson, 
    2008 WI 48
    , ¶22, 
    309 Wis. 2d 311
    , 
    749 N.W.2d 557
    ).                                   In
    a series of cases interpreting the public records law, the court
    of appeals modified the accepted legal meaning of a "prevailing
    party" in a court proceeding.                  That interpretive error requires
    correction.
    ¶40       Wisconsin     Stat.    § 19.37(2)(a)            (2017–18)2         employs     a
    legal term of art.             It states, in relevant part:                       "[T]he court
    shall award reasonable attorney fees . . . to the requester if
    the requester prevails in whole or in substantial part in any
    action filed under sub. (1) relating to access to a record or
    part of a record under s. 19.35 (1)(a)."                               § 19.37(2)(a).           A
    party prevails in an action, in whole or in substantial part,
    only       if   it   obtains    favorable          relief      from     a    court.         E.g.,
    Prevailing party, Black's Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).
    1   https://www.loc.gov/resource/mjm.20_0907_0909/?sp=2&st=tex
    t.
    All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to
    2
    the 2017–18 version unless otherwise indicated.
    1
    No.   2019AP96.rgb
    ¶41       The court of appeals has repeatedly failed to give the
    legal term of art in § 19.37(2)(a) its accepted legal meaning.
    In at least six cases,3 the court of appeals has instead endorsed
    the now-defunct "catalyst theory," under which a party may be
    deemed    to    have    prevailed——even    in   the   absence    of    favorable
    relief from a court——if the lawsuit achieved at least some of
    the party's desired results by causing a voluntary change in the
    defendant's conduct.4        See generally Buckhannon Bd. & Care Home,
    Inc. v. W. Va. Dep't of Health & Hum. Res., 
    532 U.S. 598
    , 601
    (2001).    This line of court of appeals precedent (the "Racine
    Education Association I Line") relied on federal decisions that
    have been abrogated.         More than 20 years ago, the United States
    Supreme    Court       decisively   rejected    the    catalyst       theory   in
    Buckhannon, 
    532 U.S. at
    602–05.            In an even greater departure
    from the statutory text than the reasoning adopted in the Racine
    3 WTMJ, Inc. v. Sullivan, 
    204 Wis. 2d 452
    , 
    555 N.W.2d 140
    (Ct. App. 1996); Eau Claire Press Co. v. Gordon, 
    176 Wis. 2d 154
    , 
    499 N.W.2d 918
     (Ct. App. 1993); State ex rel. Eau
    Claire   Leader-Telegram  v.   Barrett, 
    148 Wis. 2d 769
    ,  
    436 N.W.2d 885
     (Ct. App. 1989); Racine Educ. Ass'n v. Bd. of Educ.
    for Racine Unified Sch. Dist., 
    145 Wis. 2d 518
    , 
    427 N.W.2d 414
    (Ct. App. 1988); State ex rel. Vaughan v. Faust, 
    143 Wis. 2d 868
    , 
    422 N.W.2d 898
     (Ct. App. 1988); Racine Educ. Ass'n
    v. Bd. of Educ. for Racine Unified Sch. Dist., 
    129 Wis. 2d 319
    ,
    328, 
    385 N.W.2d 510
     (Ct. App. 1986).
    4 As the majority/lead opinion notes, "[w]e have mentioned
    the causation test before;" however, "[w]e have not previously
    been presented a question squarely addressing the causation test
    or its contours." Majority/Lead op., ¶18 n.7. See generally J.
    Times v. City of Racine Bd. of Police & Fire Comm'r, 
    2015 WI 56
    ,
    ¶57, 
    362 Wis. 2d 577
    , 
    866 N.W.2d 563
    .
    2
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    Education Association I Line, in two cases,5 (the "Young/Portage
    Cases") the court of appeals arguably abandoned the catalyst
    theory.      According to the Young/Portage Cases, if a custodian
    improperly invokes an exception to the public records law and
    provides the requested record after the filing of a mandamus
    action,     the    requester   is   deemed    to     have    prevailed     and   is
    entitled to attorney fees.
    ¶42    In this case, the court of appeals6 erred in applying
    the       Young/Portage    Cases,        embracing     a      purposivist        and
    consequentialist       approach     to     statutory        interpretation,      in
    derogation of the textualist approach Wisconsin courts are bound
    to follow.        See State ex rel. Kalal v. Cir. Ct. for Dane Cnty.,
    
    2004 WI 58
    , 
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    , 
    681 N.W.2d 110
    .7                     Because these
    decisions     are    objectively    wrong,    we     must    overturn     them   in
    fulfilling our duty to properly interpret the law.                 See Wenke v.
    Gehl Co., 
    2004 WI 103
    , ¶21, 
    274 Wis. 2d 220
    , 
    682 N.W.2d 405
     ("We
    are not required to adhere to interpretations of statutes that
    are objectively wrong."        (internal citations omitted)).
    5See State ex rel. Young v. Shaw, 
    165 Wis. 2d 276
    , 292–93,
    
    477 N.W.2d 340
     (Ct. App. 1991); Portage Daily Reg. v. Columbia
    Cnty. Sheriff's Dep't, 
    2008 WI App 30
    , ¶8, 
    308 Wis. 2d 357
    , 
    746 N.W.2d 525
    .
    6Friends of Frame Park, U.A. v. City of Waukesha, 
    2020 WI App 61
    , 
    394 Wis. 2d 387
    , 
    950 N.W.2d 831
    .
    7The same results-driven rationalizations permeate Justice
    Jill Karofsky's dissent, which does not even mention Kalal much
    less apply it.
    3
    No.   2019AP96.rgb
    ¶43    I write separately because the majority/lead opinion8
    does not acknowledge this case is moot, obviating any need to
    address the merits.         All records were given to the requester
    before the circuit court ever rendered a decision.                       See Racine
    Educ. Ass'n v. Bd. of Educ. for Racine Unified Sch. Dist., 
    129 Wis. 2d 319
    , 322, 
    385 N.W.2d 510
     (Ct. App. 1986) (hereinafter
    "Racine Educ. Ass'n I").            A writ of mandamus under 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (1) has a singular purpose:                "to compel performance of a
    particular act by . . . a governmental officer, usu. to correct
    a   prior   action    or   failure    to       act."   Mandamus,     Black's      Law
    Dictionary.     In this case, the act requested had already been
    performed, so neither the circuit court nor the court of appeals
    nor this court needed to address the merits of Friends' public
    records claim.9       Because this case is moot, we need not consider
    whether     Friends   is   entitled     to       relief.      Without     favorable
    relief,     Friends   cannot      recover      attorney    fees.     Because      the
    majority/lead opinion reaches the merits of this case without
    any   explanation     of   what    possible       favorable    relief     could    be
    granted, I respectfully concur.
    8Wis.  Sup.   Ct.   IOP           III.G.5  ("If . . . the  opinion
    originally circulated as the           majority opinion does not garner
    the vote of a majority of the          court, it shall be referred to in
    separate writings as the 'lead         opinion[.]'").
    9See Portage County v. J.W.K., 
    2019 WI 54
    , ¶12, 
    386 Wis. 2d 672
    , 
    927 N.W.2d 509
     ("Appellate courts generally decline
    to reach moot issues, and if all issues on appeal are moot, the
    appeal should be dismissed. We may, however, choose to address
    moot issues in 'exceptional or compelling circumstances.'"
    (citations omitted)).
    4
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    I.    BACKGROUND
    A.   The Public Records Request
    ¶44   Friends    was      concerned       about    contract       negotiations
    between the City of Waukesha ("City") and Big Top Baseball ("Big
    Top")   to   re-purpose       Frame      Park    into     a    for-profit      baseball
    stadium.     Friends filed a public records request with the City
    in October 2017.       The City disclosed some requested records, but
    withheld drafts of a proposed contract between the City and Big
    Top.    In a letter to Friends, the City Attorney explained the
    City temporarily withheld the draft contracts because:                         (1) They
    had not yet been reviewed by the City's Common Council; (2)
    under 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.85
    (1)(e), the Common Council could meet in
    closed session to review them; and (3) therefore, an exception
    to the public records laws, 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.35
    (1)(a), applied.
    The letter stated:          "You will get a copy of the contract after
    the Common Council has taken action on it."
    B.    The Mandamus Action
    ¶45   Friends    learned        the   City   Council      might     review   the
    draft contracts at a meeting on December 19, 2017.                             The day
    before the meeting, Friends filed a mandamus action under 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (1)(a) to compel disclosure of the draft contracts.
    In Friends' own words, it needed "to preserve its remedies"——
    i.e., an award of statutory attorney fees.                       The day after the
    meeting, the City Attorney emailed Friends copies of the draft
    contracts,    explaining         they   were     "being       released   now    because
    there is no longer any need to protect the City's negotiating
    and bargaining position."
    5
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    ¶46    The      City   moved     for    summary    judgment,        arguing      the
    action      was    moot     because     it    had   turned    over   all    responsive
    records——including the draft contracts.                      Friends countered that
    a live controversy existed regarding whether it could be awarded
    attorney fees.          It argued:      "The issue at stake here would never
    be litigated if a City could withhold records and then produce
    them after the court action was filed.                       The issue at stake is
    whether the exception invoked by the City was applicable under
    the law and thus validly invoked."                  Specifically, Friends argued
    the City incorrectly invoked 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.85
    (1)(e) to delay
    releasing the draft contracts.                    Friends also seemed to assert
    that    its       lawsuit     somehow    caused     the   release     of    the    draft
    contracts.
    ¶47    The circuit court granted the City's summary judgment
    motion.10     It concluded Friends did not prevail in the action and
    therefore was not entitled to an award of attorney fees under
    
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a) because the action was not a cause of
    the release of the draft contracts.                   In its written order, the
    circuit court explained:                "The Plaintiff has not provided any
    evidence      indicating       that . . . records         were   disclosed        by    the
    Defendant         in    response   to    Plaintiff's         commencement     of       this
    litigation."           Instead, the circuit court found the City released
    The Honorable Michael O. Bohren, Waukesha County Circuit
    10
    Court, presided.
    6
    No.     2019AP96.rgb
    the draft contracts because the exception on which it relied no
    longer applied.11
    C.    The Appeal
    ¶48    The court of appeals reversed the circuit court and
    remanded with directions for the circuit court to determine the
    amount of attorney fees to be awarded.12                             It began by noting 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.35
    (4)(a) instructs custodians to comply with requests
    "as soon as practicable and without delay."13                             It then concluded,
    "[a] plaintiff with standing to seek a withheld record in a
    mandamus          action     should          generally          be     considered      to     have
    'substantially prevailed' where it demonstrates a violation of
    this    statute;      that        is,   an     unreasonable           delay   caused     by    the
    improper reliance on an exception."14
    ¶49    The court of appeals' reasoning seemed to rest on a
    desire       to     avoid     what       that           court    considered      to      be    the
    consequences         of     bad    public       policy          because     interpreting       the
    statute      according       to    its       text       might    encourage     custodians       to
    engage in bad-faith gamesmanship.15                             Specifically, a custodian
    might withhold requested records——perhaps in bad faith——but if
    litigation         ensues,    only      then     turn       over      a   requested    record.16
    The circuit court also concluded the City had properly
    11
    invoked   
    Wis. Stat. § 19.85
    (1)(e)  to  withhold  the  draft
    contracts.
    12   Friends of Frame Park, 
    394 Wis. 2d 387
    .
    13   Id., ¶4 (quoting 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.35
    (4)(a)).
    14   
    Id.
    15   See 
    id.,
     ¶¶28–30.
    16   
    Id.
    7
    No.      2019AP96.rgb
    Instead of analyzing the statutory text, the court opted to
    incentivize       "voluntary       compliance"       by    increasing              the    risk
    custodians face if an action is brought.17
    ¶50    To     reach    its       conclusion,       the     court        of     appeals
    endeavored to "reconcile what, at least superficially, appears
    to be inconsistent language from prior decisions addressing how
    and whether a public records plaintiff can recover attorney fees
    following voluntary release during litigation."18                             The Racine
    Education        Association       I    Line      unambiguously            requires        the
    requester to show the action was a cause of the release of the
    record.     E.g., WTMJ, Inc. v. Sullivan, 
    204 Wis. 2d 452
    , 458, 
    555 N.W.2d 140
     (Ct. App. 1996) (quoting State ex rel. Vaughan v.
    Faust, 
    143 Wis. 2d 868
    , 871, 
    422 N.W.2d 898
     (Ct. App. 1988)).
    In   the    Young/Portage       Cases,     however,       the        court    of     appeals
    arguably eliminated the element of causation for at least a
    subset of disputes in which the custodian withheld the record in
    reliance     on    an     exception      rather    than        due    to     "unavoidable
    delays."     See State ex rel. Young, 
    165 Wis. 2d 276
    , 292–93, 
    477 N.W.2d 340
        (Ct.   App.   1991);     see    also    Portage       Daily       Reg.    v.
    Columbia     Cnty.       Sheriff's      Dep't,    
    2008 WI App 30
    ,      ¶8,    
    308 Wis. 2d 357
    , 
    746 N.W.2d 525
    .              The Young/Portage Cases focused on
    whether the custodian was, in fact, entitled to withhold the
    record rather than what caused its release.
    17   Id., ¶29 (quoting Racine Educ. Ass'n I, 129 Wis. 2d at
    328).
    18   Id., ¶4.
    8
    No.   2019AP96.rgb
    ¶51     In    this     case,    the    court    of    appeals     applied     the
    Young/Portage Cases.19             The court also relied heavily on Church
    of Scientology of California v. United States Postal Services,
    
    700 F.2d 486
     (9th Cir. 1983), abrogated in part on other grounds
    as    recognized      by    First     Amendment     Coalition     v.   United    States
    Department of Justice, 
    878 F.3d 1119
    , 1127 (9th Cir. 2017) (lead
    opinion).       Under that case, three factors determine whether a
    requester prevailed:            "(1) when the documents were released; and
    (2) what actually triggered the documents' release . . . ; and
    (3) whether the . . . [requester] was entitled to the documents
    at     an     earlier       time      in     view     of    the   fact       that    the
    exemption . . . [no longer applied]."                  Id. at 492.       Our court of
    appeals deemed this three-factor test "a more flexible inquiry,
    one     that        permits     consideration         of    factors      other      than
    causation."20
    ¶52     Notably, the court of appeals seemed to prioritize the
    third factor:
    The third factor——whether the requester was entitled
    to the record at an earlier time——should control where
    a delay in a voluntary release can be attributed to
    the   authority's   reliance  on   a   public  records
    exception.   Where that is the case the trial court
    must scrutinize the claimed exception, rather than
    whether the lawsuit caused the release, to determine
    whether a requesting party has prevailed[.21]
    See id., ¶¶26, 32 (quoting Portage Daily Reg.,
    19                                                                            
    308 Wis. 2d 357
    , ¶8 and citing Young, 165 Wis. 2d at 286–91).
    20   Id., ¶32.
    21   Id., ¶33.
    9
    No.   2019AP96.rgb
    Applying this third factor——and seemingly only this factor——the
    court of appeals concluded:
    Here, there can be no question that the City withheld
    the draft contract on the claimed basis that a public
    records exception required nondisclosure; it later
    released the contract because it believed there was no
    longer a "competitive or bargaining" rationale to
    continue withholding it. There also is no doubt that
    the delay in disclosing this document . . . was not
    insignificant and the triggering event (according to
    the City) was the expiration of the exception on which
    nondisclosure was based. . . .    Friends' claim for
    attorney's fees must hinge on whether the City
    appropriately invoked WIS. STAT. § 19.85(1)(e) to
    withhold disclosure until after the December 19 common
    council meeting.[22]
    The court of appeals then turned to whether the exception was
    properly invoked, concluding Friends——not the City——was entitled
    to summary judgment, even though Friends never moved for summary
    judgment.23     Accordingly,    it   reversed    the    circuit   court   and
    remanded the case, directing the circuit court to calculate the
    appropriate     award   of     attorney   fees     to     Friends.        The
    majority/lead opinion concludes the court of appeals erroneously
    held the exception codified in 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.85
    (1)(e) did not
    apply.     The City filed a petition for review, which we granted.
    II.   ANALYSIS
    A.   Standard of Review
    ¶53    We review a grant of summary judgment independently.
    Kemper Indep. Ins. v. Islami, 
    2021 WI 53
    , ¶13, 
    397 Wis. 2d 394
    ,
    
    959 N.W.2d 912
     (quoting Talley v. Mustafa, 
    2018 WI 47
    , ¶12, 381
    22   
    Id.,
     ¶34
    23   Id., ¶51.
    10
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    Wis. 2d 393, 
    911 N.W.2d 55
    ).            Summary judgment is appropriate if
    no material facts are at issue and a moving party is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law.                See 
    Wis. Stat. § 802.08
    (2) (2019–
    20).     Under 
    Wis. Stat. § 802.08
    (6) (2019–20), "[i]f it shall
    appear to the court that the party against whom a motion for
    summary judgment is asserted is entitled to a summary judgment,
    the summary judgment may be awarded to such party even though
    the party has not moved therefor."
    ¶54    Whether a requester prevailed in an action despite the
    absence of favorable court relief requires us to interpret 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a).             Statutory      interpretation           presents    a
    question of law, which we review independently.                         T.L.E.-C. v.
    S.E., 
    2021 WI 56
    , ¶13, 
    397 Wis. 2d 462
    , 
    960 N.W.2d 391
     (citing
    State    v.    Stephenson,    
    2020 WI 92
    ,   ¶18,     
    394 Wis. 2d 703
    ,         
    951 N.W.2d 819
    ); see also Zellner v. Cedarburg Sch. Dist., 
    2007 WI 53
    , ¶17, 
    300 Wis. 2d 290
    , 
    731 N.W.2d 240
     (citation omitted).
    B.    Stare Decisis & Court of Appeals Precedent
    ¶55    The    Latin   term    "stare      decisis"    means    "to     stand    by
    things       decided."       Stare     decisis,      Black's      Law       Dictionary.
    Sometimes called "[t]he doctrine of precedent," stare decisis
    beseeches judges to "follow earlier judicial decisions when the
    same points arise again in litigation."                
    Id.
    ¶56    Stare    decisis      encompasses     two     related     but    distinct
    concepts——vertical stare decisis and horizontal stare decisis:
    Vertical stare decisis applies between higher and
    lower courts in a single system——for example, the
    Wisconsin Supreme Court and the Wisconsin court of
    appeals and circuit courts . . . .      The doctrine
    requires  lower  courts  to  faithfully   apply  the
    11
    No.   2019AP96.rgb
    decisions of higher courts in their system——even if
    the lower courts believe those decisions erroneous——
    unless those higher courts have overturned them. This
    doctrine, that higher courts bind lower courts, is
    absolute and near-universally accepted . . . .
    Horizontal stare decisis . . . operates within the
    same court, requiring it to adhere to its own prior
    decisions . . . .
    Daniel R. Suhr & Kevin LeRoy, The Past and the Present:                                     Stare
    Decisis in Wisconsin Law, 
    102 Marq. L. Rev. 839
    , 844-45 (2019).
    Compare      Vertical       stare    decisis,        Black's        Law   Dictionary        ("The
    doctrine that a court must strictly follow the decisions handed
    down    by   higher       courts     within       the   same       jurisdiction."),          with
    Horizontal stare decisis, Black's Law Dictionary ("The doctrine
    that a court, esp. an appellate court, must adhere to its own
    prior decisions, unless it finds compelling reasons to overrule
    itself.").
    ¶57     We    have    recognized       a      third    form       of    stare    decisis,
    which    may    be       unique    to    Wisconsin:           "the       doctrine      of   stare
    decisis      applies       to     published       court      of    appeals       opinions     and
    requires this court 'to follow court of appeals precedent unless
    a compelling reason exists to overrule it.'"                                  Manitowoc County
    v.    Samuel    J.H.,       
    2013 WI 68
    ,     ¶5    n.2,       
    349 Wis. 2d 202
    ,        
    833 N.W.2d 109
     (quoting Wenke, 
    274 Wis. 2d 220
    , ¶21); see also 
    Wis. Stat. § 752.41
    (2) (2019–20) ("Officially published opinions of
    the     court       of     appeals       shall       have         statewide       precedential
    effect.").
    ¶58     This third type of stare decisis is not recognized in
    other jurisdictions in America.                   See Bryan A. Garner et al., The
    Law of Judicial Precedent 255 (2016) ("Inferior-court decisions
    12
    No.   2019AP96.rgb
    have less precedential worth because courts superior in rank
    aren't   bound     by   them    and    may    overrule,    vacate,    reverse,     or
    depublish them."); H. Campbell Black, The Principle of Stare
    Decisis, 34 Am. L. Reg. 745, 751 (1886) ("The opinion of a Nisi
    Prius court, though, perhaps, admissible as persuasive evidence
    of the principle contended for, is of course, not binding as
    precedent upon the appellate court[.]").                  But see     John Cleland
    Wells, A Treatise on the Doctrine of Res Adjudicata and Stare
    Decisis 553 (1878) ("Moreover, the decisions of inferior courts
    are binding upon superior courts, sometimes, although, perhaps,
    more on the principle of res adjudicata which relates chiefly to
    fact, than on that of stare decisis which relates to law.").
    ¶59   This    third       form    of     stare    decisis      is    "somewhat
    paradoxical[.]" Suhr & LeRoy, Stare Decisis in Wisconsin Law, at
    844   n.25.         Article      VII     of     the    Wisconsin      Constitution
    unequivocally makes this court "a supreme judicial tribunal over
    the whole state[.]"            Petition of Heil, 
    230 Wis. 428
    , 436, 
    284 N.W. 42
     (1938) (per curiam) (quoting Attorney General v. Chi. &
    N.W. Ry., 
    35 Wis. 425
    , 518 (1874)).                   The court of appeals was
    created in 1978 by constitutional amendment so that this court
    could focus on its law-developing function.                  Matthew E. Garbys,
    Comment, A Shift in the Bottleneck:                     The Appellate Caseload
    Problem Twenty Years After the Creation of the Wisconsin Court
    of Appeals, 
    1998 Wis. L. Rev. 1547
    , 1548.                  A 1973 report to the
    governor explained:
    In the rush to cope with its increasing calendar, the
    Supreme Court must invariably sacrifice quality for
    quantity.   Increasing appellate backlogs necessarily
    produce   a  dilution  in   craftsmanship. . . .  The
    13
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    Supreme Court is cast in the role of a "case-deciding
    court"——one which merely reacts to individual cases
    and thus slights its law-stating function.
    . . . .
    The size of this caseload can only have a detrimental
    effect on the quality of the Supreme Court's work.
    Cases involving major questions of substantive law may
    be decided on the basis of superficial issues.
    Citizens Study Comm. on Jud. Org., Report to Governor Patrick J.
    Lucey 78 (1973) (on file at the David T. Prosser Jr. State Law
    Library).
    ¶60     Deference      to     decisions        of    the     court       of    appeals
    conflicts with this court's constitutional role as the "final
    arbiter" on questions of Wisconsin law.                      See Tetra Tech EC, Inc.
    v. Wis. Dep't of Revenue, 
    2018 WI 75
    , ¶78, 
    382 Wis. 2d 496
    , 
    914 N.W.2d 21
     (lead opinion) (explaining this court is the "final
    arbiter"      on     questions      of    state     law).      By    lending         court   of
    appeals decisions stare decisis effect, we give the court of
    appeals       power    that    is    inconsistent          with     the   constitutional
    structure of the Wisconsin judiciary.                        See Cook v. Cook, 
    208 Wis. 2d 166
    , 189, 
    560 N.W.2d 246
     (1997) (noting this court has
    been "designated by the constitution and the legislature as a
    law declaring court" (quoting State ex rel. La Crosse Tribune v.
    Cir.    Ct.    for    La   Crosse        Cnty.,     
    115 Wis. 2d 220
    ,     229–30,          
    340 N.W.2d 460
     (1983))); State ex rel. Wis. Senate v. Thompson, 
    144 Wis. 2d 429
    , 436, 
    424 N.W.2d 385
     (1988) ("[I]t is this court's
    function to develop and clarify the law."                      (citations omitted));
    State    v.    Hermann,       
    2015 WI 84
    ,   ¶154,    
    364 Wis. 2d 336
    ,    
    867 N.W.2d 772
     (Ziegler, J., concurring) ("Unlike a circuit court or
    the court of appeals, the supreme court serves a law development
    14
    No.   2019AP96.rgb
    purpose[.]"); Sussex Tool & Supply, Inc. v. Mainline Sewer &
    Water, Inc., 
    231 Wis. 2d 404
    , 416 n.4, 
    605 N.W.2d 620
     (Ct. App.
    1999) ("We are primarily an error-correcting court, not a law-
    declaring court."             (citation omitted)); State v. Grawien, 
    123 Wis. 2d 428
    , 432, 
    367 N.W.2d 816
     (Ct. App. 1985) ("The Wisconsin
    Supreme Court, unlike the court of appeals, has been designated
    by    the    constitution        and   the   legislature    as    a    law-declaring
    court.       While the court of appeals also serves a law-declaring
    function, such pronouncements should not occur in cases of great
    moment."       (internal citation omitted)).            We must not "slight[]"
    our "law-stating function"——the precise problem the people of
    this state sought to prevent by creating the court of appeals.
    See    Citizens       Study    Comm.    on   Jud.   Org.,   Report      to    Governor
    Patrick J. Lucey, at 78.
    ¶61     The heavy docket of the court of appeals renders that
    court       better    suited     for   deciding     cases   in   accordance        with
    established          precedent    rather     than   formulating       new    precedent
    itself:
    One reason why lower-court decisions are often
    unsuited to establish precedent is the nature of the
    decisional process itself.      Generally, lower-court
    decisions are shorter than published opinions of
    higher courts and contain less reasoning because those
    courts' primary job is to rule on cases then pending,
    not shape the law. . . .    In states that provide a
    right of first appeal, intermediate appellate courts
    may . . . have a heavy caseload.       So intermediate
    appellate courts . . . don't have as much time or as
    many resources to devote to resolving a case as high
    courts with discretionary jurisdiction.   The press of
    judicial business may result in opinions that aren't
    so thoroughly researched and closely reasoned.    They
    may prove therefore less valuable as precedent.
    15
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    Garner et al., The Law of Judicial Precedent, at 256–57.                                In
    Wisconsin, litigants have a constitutional right to a direct
    appeal, and the legislature has designated the court of appeals
    as the institution responsible for effectuating that right.                            See
    State v. Pope, 
    2019 WI 106
    , ¶21, 
    389 Wis. 2d 390
    , 
    936 N.W.2d 606
    (citing Wis. Const. art. I, § 21(1) and 
    Wis. Stat. § 808.02
    ).
    Approximately 2059 cases were filed in the court of appeals last
    year.24         Each   court    of     appeals    judge    was     responsible         for
    deciding, on average, 132 cases.25                In contrast, last term this
    court resolved 97 cases——including attorney disciplinary cases,
    judicial disciplinary cases, and bar admissions cases.26
    ¶62     Perhaps     implicitly         recognizing     that        giving       stare
    decisis effect to court of appeals decisions is inconsistent
    with our constitutional structure, we have overturned court of
    appeals decisions without even mentioning stare decisis.                              See,
    e.g.,     Waukesha     County     v.   E.J.W.,    
    2021 WI 85
    ,     ¶¶37–38,      
    399 Wis. 2d 471
    ,       
    966 N.W.2d 590
             (overturning        parts     of     Marathon
    County     v.    R.J.O.,       
    2020 WI App 20
    ,     
    392 Wis. 2d 157
    ,         
    943 N.W.2d 898
     without any discussion of stare decisis).                           Twice this
    term, we have suggested court of appeals decisions are entitled
    to significantly less weight than our own decisions.                           See State
    24   Court   of    Appeals   Annual    Report   1    (2020),
    https://www.wicourts.gov/ca/DisplayDocument.pdf?content=pdf&seqN
    o=391847.
    25   Id. at 2.
    26  Wisconsin Supreme Court Annual Statistical Report 1
    (October                        6,                         2021),
    https://www.wicourts.gov/sc/DisplayDocument.pdf?content=pdf&seqN
    o=439770.
    16
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    v.   Yakich,      
    2022 WI 8
    ,     ¶31,      
    400 Wis. 2d 549
    ,           
    970 N.W.2d 12
    ("While respecting court of appeals precedent is an important
    consideration,       it   is     not      determinative."               (quoting       State       v.
    Lira, 
    2021 WI 81
    , ¶45, 
    399 Wis. 2d 419
    , 
    966 N.W.2d 605
    )); Lira,
    
    399 Wis. 2d 419
    , ¶45 ("This court has never applied the five
    factors commonly used in a decision to overturn supreme court
    caselaw to override an interpretation derived solely from the
    court of appeals.         Further, we have shown a repeated willingness
    to interpret and apply the law correctly, irrespective of a
    court of appeals decision that came to a different conclusion."
    (internal    citation          omitted));        see    also     Suhr      &     LeRoy,       Stare
    Decisis in Wisconsin, at 844 n.25 ("In practice, the Wisconsin
    Supreme     Court    likely         grants       less       stare       decisis      effect       to
    opinions of the Court of Appeals than of its own."                                     (citation
    omitted)).
    ¶63   This     court's         practice,         if    not        always       its     words,
    confirms    that    published          court      of    appeals         decisions          are   not
    entitled     to     stare       decisis        effect.           These         decisions         are
    precedential;       lower      courts       throughout        the       state     must       follow
    them.     The supreme court, however, is not so bound.                               Referencing
    stare decisis in the context of court of appeals precedent has
    created     confusion       with       no     benefit.           We      should       take       this
    opportunity to unequivocally correct this court's misspeak in
    Manitowoc County.
    ¶64   Regardless,          stare       decisis        is      a    judicially-created
    policy and "not an inexorable command;" for this reason, we will
    overturn     precedent         if    it     is      objectively          wrong.            Johnson
    17
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    Controls, Inc. v. Employers Ins. of Wausau, 
    2003 WI 108
    , ¶97,
    
    264 Wis. 2d 60
    , 
    665 N.W.2d 257
     (citing Hohn v. United States,
    
    524 U.S. 236
    , 251 (1998)); see also Smith v. Allwright, 
    321 U.S. 649
    , 665 (1944) ("[W]hen convinced of former error, this Court
    has     never         felt       constrained      to        follow      precedent.").
    Historically, the judiciary has prioritized declaring the law
    correctly over perpetuating errors in judgment in the name of
    stability in the law.                "We cannot mistake 'the law' for 'the
    opinion of the judge' because "the judge may mistake the law.'"
    Johnson     v.    Wis.        Elections    Comm'n,     
    2022 WI 14
    ,     ¶259,     
    400 Wis. 2d 626
    ,          
    971 N.W.2d 402
         (Rebecca        Grassl    Bradley,         J.,
    dissenting)           (quoting        Introduction,          William         Blackstone,
    Commentaries *71)).              Because judges are not infallible, their
    decisions must not be insulated from later review:
    A Court is not bound to give the like judgment, which
    had been given by a former Court, unless they are of
    opinion that the first judgment was according to law;
    for any Court may err; and if a Judge conceives, that
    a judgment given by a former Court is erroneous, he
    ought not in conscience to give the like judgment, he
    being sworn to judge according to law.          Acting
    otherwise would have this consequence; because one man
    has   been  wronged   by  a   judicial  determination,
    therefore every man, having a like cause, ought to be
    wronged also.
    Kerlin's Lessee v. Bull, 
    1 Dall. 175
    , 178 (Pa. 1786).
    ¶65   To        avoid    the    injustice      of    subjecting        parties     in
    perpetuity       to     erroneous     holdings,      "[t]he     primary       and      most
    important factor to weigh in considering whether to overrule an
    earlier decision is its correctness."                     Johnson, 
    400 Wis. 2d 626
    ,
    ¶259 (quoting Garner et al., The Law of Judicial Precedent, at
    397).     "[W]e do more damage to the rule of law by obstinately
    18
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    refusing to admit errors, thereby perpetuating injustice, than
    by overturning an erroneous decision."                        State v. Roberson, 
    2019 WI 102
    , ¶49, 
    389 Wis. 2d 813
    , 
    935 N.W.2d 813
     (quoting Johnson
    Controls,    
    264 Wis. 2d 60
    ,         ¶100).         "By    applying          demonstrably
    erroneous      precedent           instead         of         the      relevant            law's
    text[,] . . . the         Court      exercises          'force'       and        'will,'     two
    attributes    the     People       did   not     give    it."         Gamble        v.   United
    States, 
    139 S. Ct. 1960
    , 1981 (2019) (Thomas, J., concurring)
    (quoting    The     Federalist      No.    78,    at     465    (Alexander           Hamilton)
    (Clinton Rossiter ed. 1961)).
    ¶66     Although judges are particularly reluctant to depart
    from the doctrine of stare decisis with respect to a holding
    repeatedly applied, "[e]ven a series of decisions are not always
    conclusive    evidence      of      what    is    law;    and        the    revision        of   a
    decision very often resolves itself into a mere question of
    expediency[.]"        1 James Kent, Commentaries on American Law 476
    (New York, Clayton & Norden, 3d ed. 1836).                                 Courts tend to
    follow   their      earlier      decisions       because        it    is     easy     but    not
    necessarily because the decisions were correct.                             See Bartlett v.
    Evers, 
    2020 WI 68
    , ¶200, 
    393 Wis. 2d 172
    , 
    945 N.W.2d 172
     (Kelly,
    J., concurring/dissenting).                No matter how long a decision has
    enjoyed judicial acquiescence, no amount of time can cure the
    error:      "[T]he    law     of    precedent      has        less    relation        to    mere
    numbers,     than    to     the     decisive       nature        of        the     conclusions
    announced, and the deliberation and care with which they have
    been investigated."           Wells, A Treatise on the Doctrine of Res
    Adjudicata and Stare Decisis, at 535; see also Monroe v. Pape,
    19
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    
    365 U.S. 167
    ,      220–21        (1961)         (Frankfurter,         J.,        dissenting)
    ("[T]he     relevant        demands          of   stare       decisis      do      not        preclude
    considering, for the first time thoroughly and in the light of
    the best available evidence . . . , a statutory interpretation
    which    started       as    an       unexamined        assumption       on       the     basis    of
    inapplicable        citations          and    has      the    claim   of      a    dogma        solely
    through reiteration.").
    ¶67      Revisiting         erroneous             precedent          is       particularly
    imperative when the precedent under review was established by
    the Wisconsin Court of Appeals.                          As explained in our seminal
    decision       in    Cook        v.     Cook,       the       court     of        appeals        lacks
    constitutional           authority           to   overrule,       modify,           or        withdraw
    language from its published decisions.                           
    208 Wis. 2d at
    189–90.
    Consequently,        a      single      erroneous            interpretation             can     easily
    permeate a line of cases without any reconsideration by the
    court of appeals of its correctness.                          In Cook, we encouraged the
    court of appeals to "signal its disfavor to litigants, lawyers
    and     this    court       by    certifying            the    appeal        to     this       court,
    explaining that it believes a prior case was wrongly decided."
    
    208 Wis. 2d at 189
    .               We also noted the court of appeals could
    apply its prior decision while expressly stating its concern
    that the decision was erroneous.                        
    Id.
         As an empirical matter,
    however, the court of appeals rarely exercises these options.
    In this case, for example, the court of appeals acknowledged
    conflicting precedent but nonetheless utilized neither of the
    20
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    options we outlined in Cook.27    Last term we received only seven
    requests for certification from the court of appeals.28
    ¶68    The people of Wisconsin established this court as the
    supreme judicial tribunal and in fulfilling our constitutional
    27 Friends of Frame Park, 
    394 Wis. 2d 387
    , ¶29.     In this
    case, the court of appeals violated Cook by following Young,
    which modified the Racine Education Association I Line.
    Although Young pre-dated Cook, our decision in Cook applies
    retroactively.   State v. Bolden, 
    2003 WI App 155
    , ¶10, 
    265 Wis. 2d 853
    , 
    667 N.W.2d 364
     ("Although Jackson        and Kuehl
    preceded Cook, this makes no difference. Cook based its ruling
    on 'power' not policy.     If the court of appeals lacked the
    'power' to overrule or modify its prior decisions after Cook, it
    certainly also lacked that power before Cook.").
    Before Cook, if two published court of appeals decisions
    conflicted, the court often "pick[ed] the one [it] like[d]."
    Adam S. Bazelon, Practice Tips: Dealing with Conflicting Court
    of Appeals Opinions, Wis. Law., Dec. 2009, at 22, 23,
    https://www.wisbar.org/NewsPublications/WisconsinLawyer/pages/ar
    ticle.aspx?Volume=82&Issue=12&ArticleID=1794#16 (quoted source
    omitted) (second and third modification in the original). Post-
    Cook, the earlier decision prevails because the court of appeals
    lacked the power to modify it:
    If a court finds that the later court of appeals
    decision overruled or modified a prior court of
    appeals decision, the court must follow the earlier
    decision. This is because the court of appeals lacks
    the power to overturn its own precedent and exceeds
    its jurisdiction by doing so.    In contrast, when the
    court of appeals is confronted with conflicting
    supreme court precedent, it must follow the supreme
    court's most recent pronouncement.
    
    Id.
     In this case, the court of appeals acknowledged it had to
    "reconcile   what,  at  least   superficially, appears  to   be
    inconsistent language from prior decisions addressing how and
    whether a public records plaintiff can recover attorney fees
    following voluntary release during litigation."     Friends of
    Frame Park, 
    394 Wis. 2d 387
    , ¶4. Had the court applied Cook, it
    would have been bound to apply the Racine Education Association
    I Line instead.
    28   Wisconsin Supreme Court Annual Statistics, at 3.
    21
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    duty to declare the law in this state, we may overturn any
    incorrect court of appeals opinion with no consideration of the
    stare decisis doctrine.               Of particular relevance in this case,
    "the principle of stare decisis . . . does not require us 'to
    adhere       to    interpretations        of    statutes       that     are    objectively
    wrong.'"          Samuel J.H., 
    349 Wis. 2d 202
    , ¶5 n.2 (quoting Wenke,
    
    274 Wis. 2d 220
    ,        ¶21).      "Reflexively           cloaking    every    judicial
    opinion with the adornment of stare decisis threatens the rule
    of    law,    particularly         when    applied      to     interpretations      wholly
    unsupported by the statute's text."                     Manitowoc v. Lanning, 
    2018 WI 6
    , ¶81 n.5, 
    379 Wis. 2d 189
    , 
    906 N.W.2d 130
     (Rebecca Grassl
    Bradley, J., concurring).                 While court of appeals opinions may
    be helpful to this court in ascertaining a statute's meaning,
    "[i]t should be borne in mind that the mere text [of the law],
    and only the text . . . was adopted[.]"                       Frederick Douglass, The
    Constitution of the United States:                     Is It Pro-Slavery or Anti-
    Slavery?,         Speech   Delivered       at       Glasgow,    Scotland       (March   26,
    1860); see also Michael Sinclair, Traditional Tools of Statutory
    Interpretation 13 (1942) ("After the plain text of a statute,
    precedent is the most significant, the most ubiquitous, and the
    most     powerful          of   the       traditional          tools      of     statutory
    construction."         (emphasis added)).              "By recognizing that 'a law
    is the best expositor of itself,' courts can faithfully fulfill
    their function as neutral arbiters."                    Wis. Jud. Comm'n v. Woldt,
    
    2021 WI 73
    , ¶92, 
    398 Wis. 2d 482
    , 
    961 N.W.2d 854
     (Rebecca Grassl
    Bradley, J., concurring/dissenting) (quoting Pennington v. Coxe,
    6 U.S. (2 Cranch) 33, 52 (1804)).
    22
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    C.    The Court of Appeals Precedent
    ¶69    The Racine Education Association I Line is objectively
    wrong,    and      the   Young/Portage         Cases     applied     by    the    court    of
    appeals in this case depart even further from proper statutory
    interpretation.          I would overturn the line and the Young/Portage
    Cases and instead apply the actual statutory text.
    ¶70    For     context,        the     legislature         rewrote       Wisconsin's
    public    record       laws      in   1982,    inspired      in   part     by    Congress's
    enactment of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) in the late
    1960s.       Linda De La Mora, Comment, The Wisconsin Public Records
    Law, 
    67 Marq. L. Rev. 65
    , 65 (1983).                         FOIA permitted federal
    district      courts        to    award     attorney      fees     to     requesters      who
    "substantially prevailed" in an action.                      
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    (a)(4)(E)
    (1976).       Although 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a), which was created
    during this re-write, uses slightly different language, it seems
    to have been based on the language in FOIA.
    ¶71    A    student-authored           law   review    comment       published      in
    1983 suggested Wisconsin courts should look to "existing federal
    case law"         to interpret        
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a).          Mora,    The
    Wisconsin Public Records Law, at 104 & nn.293–95.                           The court of
    appeals has done just that, parroting federal decisions that
    have     been        abrogated        instead       of    applying        the     text     of
    § 19.37(2)(a).
    1.    The Racine Education Association I Line
    ¶72    In 1986, the court of appeals interpreted 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a) for the first time in Racine Education Association
    I, 
    129 Wis. 2d 319
    .              A teachers union requested records from a
    23
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    school district showing who was a member of a bargaining unit.
    
    Id. at 323
    .        The district did not respond, so the union filed a
    mandamus action.          
    Id.
         The district argued an exception applied—
    —specifically,       
    Wis. Stat. § 19.35
    (1)(l),           which     states       that
    compliance with a request is not mandated if a new record would
    need to be made by extracting information from existing records.
    
    Id.
        The district did note, however, that it was in the process
    of    compiling     the    information         for       reasons         unrelated     to    the
    request.      
    Id.
             While       the   action       was   pending,       the    district
    released     the    requested          records.          
    Id.
             The     circuit        court
    dismissed the action as moot.                  Id. at 322.           The union appealed,
    arguing it was entitled to an award of attorney fees.                              Id.
    ¶73   The    court       of     appeals       reversed        and      remanded       for
    factfinding.        Id.    at 330.           Ostensibly following the student
    comment's    guidance,          the    court       looked      to    federal       decisions,
    primarily Cox v. United States Department of Justice, 
    601 F.2d 1
    (D.C. Cir. 1979) (per curiam), abrogated on other grounds by
    Benavides v. Bureau of Prisons, 
    993 F.2d 257
     (D.C. Cir. 1993).
    Cox held a requester could be deemed to have prevailed, even in
    the absence of favorable relief from a court, if it showed:
    (1) its action "could reasonably be regarded as necessary," and
    (2) "a causal nexus exists between that action and the agency's
    surrender    of    information."             Id.    at    6.        In    Racine     Education
    Association I, the court explicitly adopted Cox's holding.                                   
    129 Wis. 2d at
    326–28.          The court stated the case, on remand, would
    turn "largely [on] a question of causation[.]"                            
    Id. at 327
    .
    24
    No.   2019AP96.rgb
    ¶74     At   least     five    subsequent         cases    endorsed       the   causal
    nexus requirement articulated in Racine Education Association I.
    See WTMJ, Inc., 204 Wis. 2d at 460; Eau Claire Press Co. v.
    Gordon, 
    176 Wis. 2d 154
    , 162, 
    499 N.W.2d 918
     (Ct. App. 1993);
    State    ex     rel.    Eau     Claire     Leader-Telegram           v.     Barrett,      
    148 Wis. 2d 769
    ,        772–73,     
    436 N.W.2d 885
             (Ct.    App.     1989);      Racine
    Educ. Ass'n v. Bd. of Educ. for Racine Unified Sch. Dist., 
    145 Wis. 2d 518
    , 522–23, 
    427 N.W.2d 414
     (Ct. App. 1988); Vaughan,
    143 Wis. 2d at 871–73.                Despite each case invoking the causal
    nexus test, some reached apparently contradictory results.                                For
    example, in State ex rel. Eau Claire Leader-Telegram v. Barrett,
    a   newspaper        requested       sealed    settlement         documents       filed    in
    several circuit court cases (the "Edson case").                            148 Wis. 2d at
    770.    Eventually, the newspaper filed a mandamus action.                                The
    clerk of court and the circuit court judge who presided over the
    Edson case, Judge Roderick Cameron, reached a stipulation with
    the newspaper, under which Judge Cameron agreed to release the
    records if no party to the Edson case objected.                              Id. at 771.
    Several parties did object, the newspaper intervened to argue
    for disclosure, and Judge Cameron released an edited version of
    the    documents.        Id.         The   newspaper       moved     for    an    award   of
    attorney fees in the mandamus action.                            The court of appeals
    concluded the newspaper's intervention in the Edson case caused
    the release of the records——not the mandamus action——so it was
    not entitled to attorney fees.                 Id. at 772.
    ¶75     In Eau Claire Press Co. v. Gordon, 
    176 Wis. 2d 154
    ,
    the    court    of     appeals       reached       the    opposite    conclusion.           A
    25
    No.   2019AP96.rgb
    newspaper requested records from a city related to a settlement
    in a discrimination case.           
    Id. at 157
    .       The city attorney denied
    the request, citing a confidentiality agreement the city had
    entered into with the plaintiff.               
    Id.
          The newspaper filed a
    mandamus action, and during its pendency, the plaintiff in the
    discrimination case agreed not to consider the release of the
    settlement records a breach of the confidentiality agreement.
    
    Id. at 158
    .         Thereafter, the city released the records.                      
    Id.
    The circuit court denied the newspaper's motion for an award of
    attorney fees because, in its view, the plaintiff's agreement
    not   to    consider   the    release   a    breach    was    the   cause    of     the
    release.       
    Id. at 161
    .     The    court     of    appeals      concluded,
    irrespective of the plaintiff's agreement, the mandamus action
    was a substantial factor in causing the release of the records,
    so an award of attorney fees was appropriate.                 
    Id. at 162
    .
    2.    The Young/Portage Cases
    ¶76    In two cases, the court of appeals departed from its
    own precedent requiring a causal nexus.                 In State ex rel. Young
    v. Shaw, 
    165 Wis. 2d 276
    , the requester was allegedly involved
    in a "hit and run" in February 1989.                    
    Id. at 283
    .              He was
    charged with leaving the scene of an accident on March 6.                           
    Id.
    On March 9, the requester made a written demand to the district
    attorney's office for the officer's narrative and photographs.
    
    Id.
     at 283–84.         On March 22, the assistant district attorney
    responded that, because the State filed criminal charges, his
    demand was governed by discovery statutes applicable to criminal
    cases,     rather    than    
    Wis. Stat. § 19.35
    .        Id.    at    284.      She
    26
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    informed the requester he would have to wait until the initial
    appearance on March 29 to receive the officer's narrative.                           Id.
    The requester filed a mandamus action on March 27.                        Id. at 285.
    At   the    March    29   initial      appearance,    the     assistant        district
    attorney released the officer's narrative to the requester.                           Id.
    at 291.      The photographs were released at a later conference on
    May 9.      Id. at 284.      Apparently, the assistant district attorney
    released     the     records    only    because    she   thought      the      statutes
    governing criminal discovery compelled release——not because of
    the public records laws.           See id. at 293.
    ¶77    The court of appeals concluded the requester prevailed
    in his mandamus action.             It acknowledged the Racine Education
    Association I Line requires a requester to establish "a causal
    nexus" between the action and the release of the record.                        Id. at
    292–93 (citing        Racine Educ. Ass'n I, 
    129 Wis. 2d at
    328 and
    quoting Cox, 
    601 F.2d at 61
    ).                   In the admitted absence of a
    causal nexus, the court fashioned an exception based on what the
    court considered an unreasonable delay in the release of the
    officer's     narrative      and    the   photographs——grounded           in    a   good
    faith but legally unavailing reliance on the criminal discovery
    statutes.      See 
    id.
     at 293–95.          Under "these circumstances," the
    court    reasoned,     to    "deprive"    a     requester     of   his    ability      to
    recover attorney fees would "frustrate and indeed negate the
    purpose of the open records law rather than encourage compliance
    with it."       Id. at 293.         The court nevertheless concluded the
    requester      was     not     entitled    to     attorney     fees       because     he
    represented     himself      pro   se——apparently,       in   the     court's       view,
    27
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    that would also frustrate and indeed negate the law's purpose.
    Id. at 295–96.
    ¶78    In the second case to ignore the causal nexus text, a
    newspaper requested a copy of an investigative report from a
    sheriff.      Portage Daily Reg., 
    308 Wis. 2d 357
    , ¶1.                 The sheriff
    denied the request because the district attorney was considering
    criminal charges.         
    Id.
          The newspaper filed a mandamus action;
    thereafter, the report was made public.               Id., ¶6.       The newspaper
    moved for an award of attorney fees, which the circuit court
    denied.         It    concluded       that    the    denial    was     stated    in
    "sufficiently specific" terms and satisfied the balancing test.
    Id., ¶1.      The issue on appeal was whether the denial was legal.
    Notably,      the    court    of   appeals    did   not   decide      whether   the
    newspaper was entitled to an award of attorney fees; it simply
    said a decision on the merits was warranted, i.e., the case was
    not moot, because the decision would impact whether attorney
    fees could be awarded.             Id., ¶8 & n.4.      Portage Daily Register
    did not address any precedent on what it means for a party to
    prevail.
    D.   The Meaning of Prevailing Party
    ¶79    The court of appeals' varying interpretations of the
    statute      governing       the   recovery   of    attorney   fees     in   public
    records cases are "objectively wrong."                Wenke, 
    274 Wis. 2d 220
    ,
    ¶21.    Wisconsin Stat. § 19.37(2)(a) provides, in relevant part:
    "[T]he court shall award reasonable attorney fees . . . to the
    requester if the requester prevails in whole or in substantial
    part in any action filed under sub. (1) relating to access to a
    28
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    record or part of a record under s. 19.35 (1)(a)."                                (Emphasis
    added.)        The      court     of        appeals     never    considered         whether
    "prevails . . . in any action" bears an accepted legal meaning.
    It does.
    ¶80    As   we   explained       in     Kalal,    "[s]tatutory       language       is
    given its common, ordinary, and accepted meaning, except that
    technical or specially-defined words or phrases are given their
    technical or special definitional meaning."                          
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    ,
    ¶45 (citing Bruno v. Milwaukee County, 
    260 Wis. 2d 633
    , ¶¶8, 20,
    
    260 Wis. 2d 633
    , 
    660 N.W.2d 656
    ).                     "Legal terms of art" qualify
    as technical words or phrases, so we give them "their accepted
    legal meaning."         Bank Mut., 
    326 Wis. 2d 521
    , ¶23 (quoting Estate
    of Matteson, 
    309 Wis. 2d 311
    , ¶22).
    ¶81    "When the legislature adopts a phrase from the common
    law that has a specific legal meaning and does not otherwise
    define it, we presume that the legislature adopts the phrase's
    specific legal meaning."           State v. Matthews, 
    2021 WI 42
    , ¶9, 
    397 Wis. 2d 1
    , 
    959 N.W.2d 640
     (citing Bank Mut., 
    326 Wis. 2d 521
    ,
    ¶39 and Strenke v. Hogner, 
    2005 WI 25
    , ¶28, 
    279 Wis. 2d 52
    , 
    694 N.W.2d 296
    ); see also Buckhannon, 
    532 U.S. at
    615–16 (Scalia,
    J., concurring) ("[W]here Congress borrows terms of art in which
    are accumulated the legal tradition and meaning of centuries of
    practice, it presumably knows and adopts the cluster of ideas
    that   were    attached      to    each        borrowed       word   in    the     body   of
    learning[.]"            (quoting       Morissette        v.     United      States,       
    342 U.S. 246
    ,     263    (1992)));         2A    Sutherland       Statutory     Construction
    § 47:30 n.1 (7th ed. updated Nov. 2020) ("Courts presume that a
    29
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    legislature that employs a term of art knows and adopts the
    cluster of ideas attached to each borrowed word in the body of
    learning from which it is taken."                  (citations omitted)); Antonin
    Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law:                       The Interpretation of
    Legal Texts 320 (2012) ("A statute that uses a common-law term,
    without defining it, adopts its common-law meaning.").
    ¶82        Consultation       of      legal    dictionaries        is     not      only
    appropriate,       but,     to      some      extent,      necessary     to     properly
    interpret       
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a).            See,    e.g.,      State      v.
    Schaefer, 
    2008 WI 25
    , ¶¶29–31, 
    308 Wis. 2d 279
    , 
    746 N.W.2d 547
    (consulting Black's Law Dictionary to determine the meaning of
    "discovery").           Black's     Law    Dictionary       defines    "prevail"        as:
    "(17c) 1.       To obtain the relief sought in an action; to win a
    lawsuit     ."
    Prevail, Black's Law Dictionary.                   "Relief" is defined as:              "3.
    The redress or benefit, esp. equitable in nature (such as an
    injunction or specific performance), that a party asks of a
    court. — Also termed remedy."                  Relief, Black's Law Dictionary.
    Similarly, Black's Law Dictionary defines "prevailing party" as:
    "(17c) A party in whose favor a judgment is rendered, regardless
    of the amount of damages awarded .                                — Also
    termed    successful         party."          Prevailing     party,     Black's         Law
    Dictionary; see also Union of Needletrades, Indus. & Textile
    Emps., AFL-CIO, CLC v. U.S. Immigr. & Naturalization Serv., 
    336 F.3d 200
    , 207–08 (2d Cir. 2003) ("UNITE's primary contention on
    appeal    is    that    a   party      that    'substantially      prevails'        (or   a
    30
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    'substantially      prevailing        party')    under   FOIA    is        necessarily
    different        from     a     'prevailing      party' . . . .                Several
    considerations          leave   us     unconvinced.").          As     Black's      Law
    Dictionary notes, the definitions of "prevail" and "prevailing
    party" trace to the seventeenth century——long before the 1982
    enactment of 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a).
    ¶83     The meaning of "prevailing party" had endured in the
    law, unaltered.          Black's Law Dictionary notes that "prevailing
    party" is synonymous with "successful party."                  Prevailing party,
    Black's Law Dictionary.              Another legal dictionary, published in
    1920, provides a single definition of "successful":                         "The word
    'successful' . . . in relation to the allowance of attorney fees
    to the plaintiff . . . means a termination of the action in his
    favor   by   a    decree[.]"         Successful,    Legal     Definitions       (1920)
    (emphasis added) (citation omitted).
    ¶84     A legal dictionary from 1879 illustrates the meaning
    of   "prevail"      by     summarizing     the     holdings     of     five     cases.
    Prevail, Dictionary of Terms and Phrases Used in American or
    English Jurisprudence (1879).
    • In Bangor & Piscataquis R. R. Co. v. Chamberlain, a
    landowner sued a railroad company for damages stemming
    from a taking. 
    60 Me. 285
    , 285 (1872).               County
    commissioners awarded the landowner $650.      
    Id. at 286
    .
    The railroad company appealed.     
    Id.
       On appeal, a jury
    reduced the award to $435. 
    Id.
     A Maine statute provided
    that: "When an appeal is taken, the losing party is to
    pay the cost thereon." 
    Id.
     The Maine Supreme Court had
    to decide which party was to pay the costs of the appeal,
    framing the issue as:       "[W]hich was the prevailing
    party?" 
    Id.
     Logically, because the losing party did not
    prevail,   the  court   held   the   landowner   prevailed,
    concluding he "successfully maintained his claim for
    damages[.]" 
    Id.
    31
    No.   2019AP96.rgb
    • In Hawkins v. Nowland, the Missouri Supreme Court
    concluded that the plaintiff was a "prevailing party,"
    although the favorable judgment he recovered was not
    "what he claimed[.]" 
    53 Mo. 328
    , 330 (1873).
    • In Henry v. Miller, the Maine Supreme Court concluded a
    creditor was a "prevailing party" even though he obtained
    a judgment for less than he sought.      
    61 Me. 105
    , 105
    (1872).
    • In Rogers v. City of St. Charles, the Missouri Supreme
    Court concluded a city that obtained a verdict of
    condemnation was a "prevailing party," entitled to costs.
    
    54 Mo. 229
    , 233–34 (1873) (per curiam).
    • In Weston v. Wright, the Vermont Supreme Court concluded
    an orator had "prevailed" because he had established he
    was entitled to a decree, although the decree was less
    favorable than the relief he sought. 
    45 Vt. 531
    , 535–37
    (1873).
    None    of     these       cases     declared       a   party    "prevailed"       without
    obtaining favorable relief from a court.
    ¶85     Consistent with these settled definitions, a statute
    renumbered by this court in 1975 stated:                         "Judgment.        In such
    actions, when the plaintiff prevails, he shall, in addition to
    judgment for damages and costs, also have judgment that the
    nuisance       be   abated       unless    the      court    shall   otherwise      order."
    Sup. Ct. Order, 
    67 Wis. 2d 585
    , 762 (1975) (codified as amended
    at     
    Wis. Stat. § 823.03
    )       (emphasis         added).       This     statute
    presupposes         that     a     prevailing        party     obtained     a     favorable
    judgment in court.
    ¶86     As        evidenced        by     its        stable     legal      history,
    "'[p]revailing party' is not some newfangled legal term invented
    for      use        in      late-20th-century               fee-shifting        statutes."
    Buckhannon, 
    532 U.S. at 610
    .                     In Buckhannon, Justice Antonin
    Scalia wrote in concurrence he was aware of "no cases, state or
    32
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    federal" prior to 1976 that endorsed the catalyst theory.                         
    Id. at 611
    .     After 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a) was enacted in 1982, the
    court of appeals adopted the catalyst theory, which conflicts
    with the longstanding meaning of what it means to prevail in a
    court case.      A "fair reading" of a statute requires adherence to
    the statute's text as it was understood at the time of the
    statute's enactment.       Scalia & Garner, Reading Law, at 33.
    ¶87     To "prevail[] in whole or in substantial part in any
    action filed under sub. (1)," a requester must obtain through a
    court order at least some of the relief it sought.                See Meinecke
    v. Thyes, 
    2021 WI App 58
    , ¶1, 
    399 Wis. 2d 1
    , 
    963 N.W.2d 816
    ("[The plaintiff] contends she prevailed in substantial part in
    her mandamus action when the circuit court ordered the release
    of some but not all of the records that she requested from
    public officials.       We agree.").
    ¶88     The accepted legal meaning of "prevails . . . in any
    action" also matches its common, ordinary meaning.                     See Kalal,
    
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    , ¶45 (citing Bruno, 
    260 Wis. 2d 633
    , ¶¶8, 20).
    In   common    parlance,   prevailing       in   a   mandamus   action       is   not
    equivalent     to   obtaining    access     to   a   public   record    by     other
    means.        Justice   Scalia    illustrated        the   difference     in      his
    Buckhannon concurrence:
    If a nuisance suit is mooted because the defendant
    asphalt plant has gone bankrupt and ceased operations,
    one would not normally call the plaintiff the
    prevailing party. And it would make no difference, as
    far as the propriety of that characterization is
    concerned, if the plant did not go bankrupt but moved
    to a new location to avoid the expense of litigation.
    In one sense the plaintiff would have "prevailed"; but
    he would not be the prevailing party in the lawsuit.
    33
    No.   2019AP96.rgb
    
    532 U.S. at 615
    .        In designating a plaintiff who obtained access
    to records by means other than a court judgment a "prevailing
    party," the court of appeals either excised "in any action filed
    under sub. (1)" from the statutory text or rewrote the phrase to
    say "after any action filed under sub. (1)."                   We have no power
    to rewrite the words chosen by the legislature.                    E.g., State v.
    Fitzgerald, 
    2019 WI 69
    , ¶30, 
    387 Wis. 2d 384
    , 
    929 N.W.2d 165
    .29
    ¶89 The court of appeals' interpretations of what it means
    to prevail in a mandamus action have also been undermined by
    "changes     or   developments      in   the   law."         See    Roberson,    
    389 Wis. 2d 190
    ,      ¶50   (quoting    Bartholomew,       
    293 Wis. 2d 38
    ,       ¶33).
    Specifically, they rest on the now-defunct "catalyst theory,"
    which the United States Supreme Court rejected more than 20
    years ago.        Buckhannon, 
    532 U.S. at 600
     (majority opinion).
    ¶90   In Buckhannon, the plaintiff brought claims under the
    Fair    Housing    Amendments      Act   (FHAA)   and    the       Americans    with
    Disabilities Act (ADA) against West Virginia (and two of its
    agencies), arguing that a state statute violated these federal
    Even following the Racine Education Association I Line
    29
    defeats Friends' claim for attorney fees.       "[A]n allegedly
    prevailing complainant must assert something more than post hoc,
    ergo propter hoc[.]" Racine Educ. Ass'n I, 
    129 Wis. 2d at
    326–
    27 (quoting Cox v. U.S. Dep't of Just., 
    601 F.2d 1
    , 6 (D.C. Cir.
    1979) (per curiam)).    Timing is not sufficient to demonstrate
    causation.     If it were, causation would effectively be
    eliminated as an element altogether because any time an action
    were filed and a custodian thereafter released the requested
    record, as in this case, the requester would be able to recover
    attorney fees.
    34
    No.   2019AP96.rgb
    laws.      Id.    at    601.    Before    the   district   court    rendered   a
    decision, the West Virginia Legislature eliminated the statutory
    requirement.      Id.     The defendants then moved to dismiss the case
    as moot.     Id.       The district court granted the motion and the
    Fourth Circuit affirmed, rejecting the plaintiff's claim that it
    was entitled to attorney fees.30          Id. at 601–02.
    ¶91    The    United      States    Supreme   Court    interpreted     the
    meaning of "prevailing party" in fee-shifting schemes permitted
    in the FHAA31 and the ADA.32        Id. at 601.     The Court stated:
    Now that the issue is squarely presented, it behooves
    us to reconcile the plain language of the statutes
    with our prior holdings.      We have only awarded
    attorney's fees where the plaintiff has received a
    judgment on the merits, or obtained a court-ordered
    30The majority/lead opinion is confusing. On the one hand,
    it claims to endorse the test articulated in Buckhannon. On the
    other, it refuses to acknowledge this case is moot. The entire
    point of Buckhannon was to determine under what circumstances,
    if any, a party could be deemed to have prevailed even though
    the case became moot, thereby barring favorable relief.
    The majority/lead opinion's misunderstanding of Buckhannon
    has serious implications.      While the majority/lead opinion
    states the test correctly (to prevail, a party must receive
    favorable relief from a court), it never applies the test.
    Instead, it turns to the merits without identifying any
    favorable relief to which Friends might be entitled at this
    point. The prevailing party test is not a merits determination;
    if it were, Buckhannon would have been about the merits of the
    plaintiff's FHAA and ADA claims, which it never addressed.
    
    3142 U.S.C. § 3601
    (c)(2) (2001) ("[T]he court, in its
    discretion, may allow the prevailing party . . . a reasonable
    attorney's fee and cost.").
    
    3242 U.S.C. § 12105
     (2001) ("[T]he court . . ., in its
    discretion, may allow the prevailing party . . . a reasonable
    attorney's fee[.]").
    35
    No.   2019AP96.rgb
    consent   decree . . . .    Never  have   we  awarded
    attorney's fees for nonjudicial alterations of actual
    circumstances.
    
    Id.
     at 605–06 (second emphasis added) (internal quotations and
    citations omitted).        The Court noted that "prevailing party" was
    a "rather clear" phrase, which did not encompass the catalyst
    theory.      Id.    at   607.        It    explicitly        relied   on   Black's    Law
    Dictionary.        Id. at 603 (quoting Prevailing party, Black's Law
    Dictionary (7th ed. 1999)).
    ¶92     Buckhannon destroyed the foundation of the court of
    appeals    precedent.       The      Racine       Education     Association      I   Line
    rests on federal decisions interpreting FOIA and employing the
    catalyst    theory,      specifically,           Cox,   
    601 F.2d 1
    .     Buckhannon
    abrogated Cox and similar federal cases.                         The Ninth Circuit
    recognized this in Oregon Natural Desert Association v. Locke,
    noting     that    Buckhannon's           rejection     of    the     catalyst   theory
    logically extends to FOIA.33                 
    572 F.3d 610
    , 614–16 (9th Cir.
    2009).        Similarly,        in        Oil,    Chemical      &     Atomic     Workers
    International Union, AFL-CIO v. Department of Energy, the D.C.
    Circuit, quoting Buckhannon, held "that in order for plaintiffs
    in FOIA actions to become eligible for an award of attorney's
    fees, they must have 'been awarded some relief by [a] court,'
    either in a judgment on the merits or in a court-ordered consent
    decree."     
    288 F.3d 452
    , 456–57 (D.C. Cir. 2002), superseded by
    33 The Ninth Circuit noted a 2007 amendment to FOIA
    "modified FOIA's provision for the recovery of attorney fees to
    ensure that FOIA complainants who relied on the catalyst theory
    to obtain an award of attorney fees would not be subject to the
    Buckhannon proscription."   Or. Nat. Desert Ass'n v. Locke, 
    572 F.3d 610
    , 615 (9th Cir. 2009).
    36
    No.       2019AP96.rgb
    statute as stated by Summers v. Dep't of Just., 
    569 F.3d 500
    (D.C. 2009) (quoting Buckhannon, 
    532 U.S. at 603
    ).
    ¶93   Even       if    the      United        States      Supreme          Court       had    not
    disavowed the catalyst theory, our own court of appeals cases
    are    nonetheless       "unsound         in       principle."              See    Roberson,         
    389 Wis. 2d 190
    ,      ¶50        (quoting         Bartholomew,         
    293 Wis. 2d 38
    ,             ¶33).
    They failed to follow our well-established rule of statutory
    interpretation          that       legal       terminology             must       be        given    its
    "accepted       legal    meaning."             Bank       Mut.,       
    326 Wis. 2d 521
    ,            ¶23
    (quoting Estate of Matteson, 
    309 Wis. 2d 311
    , ¶22).                                           Choosing
    alternative        meanings,            particularly             to      advance             preferred
    policies, destabilizes the law.                          See Scalia & Garner, Reading
    Law, at 320.            Additionally, judicial tampering with accepted
    legal meaning interferes with the legislature's ability to make
    law.     See Wisconsin Bill Drafting Manual § 2.03(2)(a)(2019–20)
    (advising       drafters         at     the     Legislative            Reference            Bureau    to
    consider     whether         a     word       or     phrase       is     "self-defining"              by
    consulting "standard or legal dictionaries").
    ¶94   Problematically,                  the        Young/Portage                 Cases        are
    principally grounded in public policy rather than the text of
    
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a).                In       Young,    the       court      reasoned       to
    "deprive" a requester of his ability to recover attorney fees
    would    "frustrate          and      indeed       negate    the       purpose         of    the     open
    records law rather               than encourage compliance with it."                                 
    165 Wis. 2d at 293
    .         This      sort     of      consequentialist               reasoning      is
    antithetical to our textualist approach, articulated in Kalal,
    
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    .             See Clean Wis., Inc. v. Dep't Nat. Res., 2021
    37
    No.   2019AP96.rgb
    WI 71, ¶86, 
    398 Wis. 2d 346
    ,                 
    961 N.W.2d 346
     (Rebecca Grassl
    Bradley, J., dissenting) (explaining Kalal is Wisconsin's "most
    cited    case     of     modern      times"     (quoting         Daniel    R.         Suhr,
    Interpreting Wisconsin Statutes, 
    100 Marq. L. Rev. 969
    , 969–70
    (2017))).       Consequentialists           "urge    that    statutes      should        be
    construed to produce sensible, desirable results, since that is
    surely   what   the      legislature    must     have      intended.       But    it     is
    precisely because people differ over what is sensible and what
    is desirable that we elect those who will write our laws——and
    expect   courts     to   observe     what     has   been    written."       Scalia        &
    Garner, Reading Law, at 22.
    ¶95     Kalal         rejected      the         very         purposivism            and
    consequentialism employed by the court of appeals in this case
    as well as its predecessors.                "It is the enacted law, not the
    [legislature's]        unenacted      intent,       that    is    binding        on    the
    public."    Kalal, 
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    , ¶44.                Faithfulness to the text
    of a law rather than advancing an imagined purpose underlying
    its enactment or avoiding a consequence deemed unsavory (in the
    subjective opinion of the judge) is a condition precedent to the
    rule of law:
    The principles of statutory interpretation that we
    have restated here are rooted in and fundamental to
    the rule of law.    Ours is "a government of laws not
    men," and "it is simply incompatible with democratic
    government, or indeed, even with fair government, to
    have the meaning of a law determined by what the
    lawgiver meant, rather than by what the lawgiver
    promulgated."   "It is the law that governs, not the
    intent of the lawgiver . . . .    Men may intend what
    they will; but it is only the laws that they enact
    which bind us."
    38
    No.   2019AP96.rgb
    Id., ¶52 (quoting Antonin Scalia, A Matter of Interpretation 17
    (1997)); see also J. Times v. City of Racine Bd. of Police &
    Fire Comm'r, 
    2015 WI 56
    , ¶117, 
    362 Wis. 2d 577
    , 
    866 N.W.2d 563
    (Abrahamson,      J.,     concurring)      (explaining     "it    seems    that    the
    Newspaper       was    sandbagged"      but    nonetheless        concluding       "the
    Newspaper       has not    sufficiently       tethered    its    argument    to     the
    language of 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a)").
    ¶96     When courts lose sight of this first principle, when
    they "fail to follow the . . . letter of the positive law," too
    easily      are        "the      most    valuable         privileges        of      the
    people . . . rendered            illusory"      "under      the      pretense        of
    explaining and extending them[.]"                Francis Stoughton Sullivan,
    Lectures on the Constitution and Laws of England                          64 (1805).
    Although judges may profess well-intentioned justifications for
    "improving" the law, "interpretive approaches can be used for
    all kinds of purposes, not just beneficent ones."                           Bryan A.
    Garner, Old-Fashioned Textualism Is All About Interpretation,
    Not Legislating from the Bench, ABA J., Apr. 2019.34                        Ignoring
    the law's plain meaning because the result in a particular case
    is,   in    a    judge's      subjective      judgment,    "appealing,"          causes
    "considerable mischief."           Force v. Am. Family Mut. Ins., 
    2014 WI 82
    ,   ¶148,      
    356 Wis. 2d 582
    ,     
    850 N.W.2d 866
           (Roggensack,       J.,
    dissenting).          "One can always do 'more' in pursuit of a goal,
    but statutes have limits."              N.A.A.C.P. v. Am. Fam. Mut. Ins.,
    
    978 F.2d 287
    , 298 (7th Cir. 1992).               Those limits are prescribed
    by    the     people's        representatives     in      the    legislature       and
    34  https://www.abajournal.com/magazine/article/textualism-
    means-what-it-says.
    39
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    discarding them disrupts the constitutional order by allowing
    judges     to    act       as      policy-makers.              "While       textualism            cannot
    prevent     the        incursion            of     policy          preferences            into      legal
    analysis . . . without                 textualism,                 such        encroachment            is
    certain."        Woldt, 
    398 Wis. 2d 482
    , ¶92.                       The people of Wisconsin
    elect judges to interpret the law, not make it.
    ¶97        Even      a     cursory      reading          of    the     court         of     appeals
    precedent       on     awarding       attorney          fees       in    public      records        cases
    reveals     it       is       "incoherent"         and        "unworkable           in     practice,"
    presenting yet another reason to overturn it.                                  See Roberson, 
    389 Wis. 2d 190
    , ¶50 (quoting Bartholomew, 
    293 Wis. 2d 38
    , ¶33).                                           In
    this case, the court of appeals struggled to "reconcile what, at
    least superficially, appears to be inconsistent language from
    prior     decisions           addressing         how    and    whether         a    public       records
    plaintiff can recover attorney fees following voluntary release
    during litigation."35                Applying the statutory text would ensure
    consistent and predictable application of the law, eliminating
    the subjectivity inherent in determining who "prevailed" in a
    suit.
    ¶98        When      the      United    States       Supreme         Court      rejected        the
    catalyst        theory        in    Buckhannon,          it        criticized        the       theory's
    subjectivity.             
    532 U.S. at 609-10
    .                  The dissent proposed four
    conditions       precedent           for    a     plaintiff         to    be       deemed      to    have
    prevailed under the catalyst theory:
    • "A plaintiff first had to show that the defendant
    provided some of the benefit sought by the lawsuit." 
    Id.
    35   Friends of Frame Park, 
    394 Wis. 2d 387
    , ¶29.
    40
    No.    2019AP96.rgb
    at   627  (Ginsburg,        J.,    dissenting)       (citations         and
    quotations omitted).
    • "[A] plaintiff had to demonstrate as well that the suit
    stated a genuine claim, i.e., one that was at least
    colorable, not frivolous, unreasonable, or groundless."
    
    Id.
     (citations and quotations omitted).
    • "Plaintiff . . . had to establish that her suit was a
    substantial or significant cause of defendant's action
    providing relief." Id. at 628 (citations and quotations
    omitted).
    • "[Sometimes] plaintiff had to satisfy the trial court
    that the suit achieved results by threat of victory, not
    by dint of nuisance and threat of expenses."         Id.
    (citations and quotations omitted).
    ¶99    The   majority   opinion    dismissed    this    version      of   the
    catalyst     theory    as     "clearly    not     a      formula     for    ready
    administrability" and likely to "spawn[] a second litigation of
    significant    dimension[.]"       Id.    at    609-10    (majority     opinion)
    (quoting Tex. State Tchrs. Ass'n v. Garland Indep't Sch. Dist.,
    
    489 U.S. 782
    ,    791     (1989)).         Determining    a      plaintiff's
    entitlement to attorney fees would require litigating the merits
    of a moot public records case, but the United States Supreme
    Court has cautioned "[a] request for attorney's fees should not
    result in a second major litigation[.]"            
    Id.
     (quoting Hensley v.
    Eckerhart, 
    461 U.S. 424
    , 437 (1983)).             Disregarding Buckhannon,
    the majority/lead opinion's approach will produce unnecessary
    litigation.
    ¶100 The legislature forcefully declared the purpose of the
    public records laws:
    In recognition of the fact that a representative
    government is dependent upon an informed electorate,
    it is declared to be the public policy of this state
    that all persons are entitled to the greatest possible
    information regarding the affairs of government and
    41
    No.   2019AP96.rgb
    the official acts of those officers and employees who
    represent them.   Further, providing persons with such
    information is declared to be an essential function of
    a representative government and an integral part of
    the routine duties of officers and employees whose
    responsibility it is to provide such information.   To
    that end, ss. 19.32 to 19.37 shall be construed in
    every instance with a presumption of complete public
    access, consistent with the conduct of governmental
    business.   The denial of public access generally is
    contrary to the public interest, and only in an
    exceptional case may access be denied.
    
    Wis. Stat. § 19.31
    .            A declaration of policy is a permissible
    indicator of a statute's plain meaning——but only to a degree.
    Scalia & Garner, Reading Law, at 217–18.                        In this case, 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a)      employs     legal    terminology      with      a   meaning
    ensconced in the law long ago and used in substantially similar
    form in many other statutes.36                    Legal terms of art employed
    throughout a code of law must be interpreted consistently to
    preserve stability and predictability in the law.
    III.      CONCLUSION
    ¶101 This       court    properly      reverses      the     metamorphosis         in
    public records law created by the court of appeals' atextual
    interpretation of what it means to prevail in a court action.
    Friends did not obtain any favorable relief in court.                          This case
    was moot almost as soon as it began.                      We should say so, and
    overturn      court   of    appeals       precedent      crafted    to    advance       the
    policy preferences of judges at the expense of the law's text.
    The   majority/lead        opinion    reached      the    right    outcome        for   the
    wrong      reasons,   declining      to    recognize      the    case    is    moot     and
    See,
    36      e.g.,   
    Wis. Stat. § 19.59
    (8)(d);                        
    Wis. Stat. § 30.49
    (2)(b); 
    Wis. Stat. § 134.49
    (6)(b).
    42
    No.   2019AP96.rgb
    instead allowing litigation over the merits.               I respectfully
    concur with the mandate.
    ¶102 I am authorized to state that Chief Justice ANNETTE
    KINGSLAND   ZIEGLER   and   Justice    PATIENCE   DRAKE   ROGGENSACK    join
    this concurrence.
    43
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    ¶103 JILL J. KAROFSKY, J.                          (dissenting).             "Sunshine is a
    great disinfectant."                Milwaukee J. Sentinel v. DOA, 
    2009 WI 79
    ,
    ¶103,       
    319 Wis. 2d 439
    ,      
    768 N.W.2d 700
            (Abrahamson,           J.,
    dissenting).             That's          the    theory          behind     Wisconsin's            public
    records laws.            Shine light on the government's work product and
    citizens will engage and hold to account their representatives,
    achieving         a     purer      democracy.               A    majority           of     this     court
    frustrates        that        goal,      seeding          clouds    as    it     eviscerates           the
    mandatory fee shifting provisions integral to keeping the sun
    shining in our great state.                     By reinterpreting the law to reward
    government actors for strategically freezing out the public's
    access      to    records,         today's          decision       will   chill          the   public's
    right to an open government.                        And the majority/lead opinion does
    not     stop      there.            It     also       condones        the       City's         patently
    inapplicable "competitive or bargaining" excuse to deny Friends
    timely      access       to    a   proposed          contract.            The       result     is    that
    Friends are denied the attorney fees to which it is entitled for
    bringing a claim to enforce its rights when Friends had no other
    recourse.         Because the majority/lead opinion reimagines the fee
    shifting          standard          too        narrowly,           while         construing            the
    "competitive and bargaining reasons" exception too broadly, all
    at    the    expense          of   our     public         records     laws,         I    respectfully
    dissent.
    I.       ANALYSIS
    ¶104 "In         recognition            of    the    fact     that       a    representative
    government        is     dependent         upon       an    informed       electorate,            it    is
    declared to be the public policy of this state that all persons
    1
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    are entitled to the greatest possible information regarding the
    affairs    of   government[.]"              
    Wis. Stat. § 19.31
    .            Providing
    citizens meaningful and timely access to government documents is
    "an essential function of a representative government and an
    integral part of the routine duties of officers and employees
    whose responsibility it is to provide such information."                                      
    Id.
    This   transparency       mandate      promotes            public    involvement,           which
    sits at the core of Wisconsin's representative democracy.                                     See
    Nichols v. Bennet, 
    199 Wis. 2d 268
    , 273, 
    544 N.W.2d 428
     (1996)
    ("The open records law serves one of the basic tenets of our
    democratic      system     by       providing         an     opportunity         for    public
    oversight of the workings of government.").                         Our state and local
    governments      have    traditionally           committed          themselves         to   this
    democracy-promoting transparency, so much so that former Chief
    Justice Abrahamson declared, "[i]f Wisconsin were not known as
    the Dairy State it could be known, and rightfully so, as the
    Sunshine    State."        Schill       v.    Wis.         Rapids     Sch.    Dist.,         
    2010 WI 86
    , ¶1, 
    327 Wis. 2d 572
    , 
    786 N.W.2d 177
    .
    ¶105 A majority of this court tarnishes Wisconsin's proud
    history    of   transparent         government         by     transforming        a    routine
    records    request      into    a    catalyst      to       decimate      Wisconsin's        fee
    shifting    structure.         This    analysis         begins       by   addressing         the
    majority's      grievous       perversion        of     the    public        records        laws'
    critical fee shifting provisions.                     Then, the analysis turns to
    the case at hand, first explaining how unjustified delays in
    releasing    records      burden      the    public.           Lastly,       this      analysis
    dismantles the City's flawed excuses for concealing the proposed
    2
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    contract      by    highlighting         that:      (1) the     record   implicated      no
    "competitive or bargaining" concern; and (2) the Common Council
    did not enter into a closed session as is required to invoke the
    "competitive or bargaining" excuse in the first place.
    A.    Attorney Fees
    ¶106 Attorney fees are integral to open records litigation
    as they enable members of the public to compel the government to
    work transparently.           This section begins with an overview of fee
    shifting      provisions      and       their       important    role    in    our   public
    records laws.            Next is an explanation of how the long-standing
    "causation test" for awarding attorney fees is consistent with
    the     plain      meaning    of    
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a)         and   deters
    gamesmanship from all parties in a public records action.                               Last
    is a warning about how the deleterious new standard for attorney
    fees    may     disincentivize          government      actors    from    making      timely
    disclosures, eviscerating the very purpose of the public records
    laws.
    1.    Fee shifting is integral to transparency.
    ¶107 In      an    action    to    enforce       Wisconsin's      public      records
    laws, a requester is entitled to his or her attorney fees when
    "the requester prevails in whole or in substantial part."                               
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (2)(a).               This fee shifting provision serves two
    important purposes:           (1) it enables people, particularly those
    with limited means, to bring enforcement actions; and (2) it
    incentivizes the government's voluntary compliance by penalizing
    3
    No.   2019AP96.jjk
    non-compliance.1     Fee shifting is often implemented when laws
    rely on the public to bring enforcement challenges.2                           In the
    arena of public records, the government holds the records and no
    other entity reviews the government's decision to withhold or
    delay    the   release   of   a       record.        As     a   result,     the   only
    enforcement     mechanism     is        a       citizen's       mandamus     action.3
    § 19.37(1)(a).      Without       a    robust     fee     shifting    mechanism     in
    public records laws, record requesters face a no-win scenario
    when a request is denied.              They can either acquiesce to the
    1 See Thomas D. Rowe Jr., The Legal Theory of Attorney Fee
    Shifting: A Critical Overview, 
    1982 Duke L.J. 651
    , 652, 54, 62,
    73 (1982) (explaining that "the different concerns underlying
    fee shifting rationales have three major strains——equity,
    litigant incentives, and externalities." At a basic level "the
    prevailing party, having been adjudged to be in the right,
    should not suffer financially for having to prove the justice of
    his position." Furthermore, in explaining the "private attorney
    general" theory, "potential plaintiffs may well refrain from
    bringing socially beneficial suits because the gains would not
    sufficiently further their private interests." And finally, "it
    can be important to effective deterrence to show by example that
    violators will bear the victims' enforcement costs.").
    2 See, e.g., 
    Wis. Stat. § 100.20
    (5) (authorizing suit by any
    person harmed by unfair trade practices to recover double
    damages    and    reasonable    attorney    fees);  
    Wis. Stat. § 111.18
    (2)(a)(3)    (authorizing   employees   of  health   care
    institutions to commence an action to enforce prohibitions on
    unfair labor practices and providing for optional fee shifting
    to successful plaintiffs); Shands v. Castrovinci, 
    115 Wis. 2d 352
    , 358, 
    340 N.W.2d 506
     (1983) (explaining that a tenant suing
    under 
    Wis. Stat. § 100.20
    (5) "acts as a 'private attorney
    general' to enforce the tenants' rights," and thus, "not only
    enforces his or her individual rights, but the aggregate effect
    of individual suits enforces the public's rights").
    3 A citizen may also request that the district attorney or
    attorney general bring a mandamus action on his or her behalf, a
    decision entirely up to the district attorney's or attorney
    general's discretion. See 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.37
    (1)(b).
    4
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    government's potentially unlawful withholding of the record, or
    they can bring a mandamus action to enforce their right to the
    record at the risk of substantial legal fees.
    ¶108 Legal          fees      can    create      significant         hurdles      for    two
    common     public         record     requesters:              concerned       citizens        (like
    Friends) and local news media (appearing as amici in this case).
    Often, these two groups simply cannot afford the required legal
    costs     of    a    mandamus       action.4          And    without       mandamus     actions,
    government violations of public records laws would go largely
    unchecked,          undermining           these       laws'     legislatively           declared
    purpose to promote democracy through transparency.                                     See 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.31
    ; State ex rel. Newspapers, Inc. v. Showers, 
    135 Wis. 2d 77
    , 81, 
    398 N.W.2d 154
     (1987) ("[I]f the media is denied
    access     to       the    affairs        of   government,           the     public     for    all
    practical       purposes       is    denied       access      as     well.      A     democratic
    government          cannot    long    survive         that    burden.").         Furthermore,
    without fee shifting, the government has little incentive to
    timely comply with records requests——it could simply delay until
    the     requester         sinks      considerable            funds    into      litigating       a
    mandamus action.             Absent robust fee shifting, the promise of our
    public records laws is rendered a dead letter for all but the
    select few with means, leading to fewer record requests, more
    delays in the release of information, and, ultimately, a less
    informed electorate.
    4The once powerful and lucrative news media industry has
    weakened   considerably  in   modern  times, with  local  news
    organizations often working on a shoe-string budget.   See PEN
    America, Losing the News: The Decimation of Local Journalism
    and the Search for Solutions 24-31 (2019).
    5
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    2.    The "causation" test is efficient and textually supported.
    ¶109 Having        established           the     critical            importance       and
    function of fee shifting, next is a discussion about when courts
    should implement this remedy.                   The court of appeals has long
    relied     upon    the     causation       test        to       determine       whether      the
    government should pay for a requestor's attorney fees.                                     Under
    the causation test, a reviewing court looks for a "causal nexus"
    between    the    filing    of     a    mandamus       action         and    the   document's
    release.     Eau Claire Press Co. v. Gordon, 
    176 Wis. 2d 154
    , 160,
    
    499 N.W.2d 918
     (Ct. App. 1993) ("The test of cause in Wisconsin
    is    whether     the    actor's       action    was        a    substantial        factor    in
    contributing to the result.").
    ¶110 The     causation      test     appropriately              captures       what    it
    means to "prevail . . . in substantial part" in a public records
    case and is a workable, practical test.                               A majority of this
    court, however, rejects the causation test.                           In its place, they
    would now condition attorney fees on a "judicially sanctioned
    change     in     the    parties'        legal        relationship."                Both     the
    majority/lead and concurring opinions insist that "prevailing
    party" is a "legal term of art" according to Buckhannon Board
    and Care Home, Inc. v. West Virginia Department of Health and
    Human Services, 
    532 U.S. 598
     (2001).                            See majority/lead op.,
    ¶20;   concurring       op.,    ¶40.      There        is       one   glaring      error   with
    applying    Buckhannon         here.      The     phrase         "prevailing        party"    is
    conspicuously       absent       from     Wisconsin's             public      records      law.
    Instead,    § 19.37(2)(a)          states       that    costs         and    fees     must    be
    6
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    awarded "if the requester prevails in whole or in substantial
    part" in an action relating to a record's request.
    ¶111 An       interpretation        that    equates    the     two       phrases   is
    flawed because a "term of art" is "a word or phrase having a
    specific, precise meaning in a given specialty, apart from its
    general meaning in ordinary contexts."                     See Term of Art Black's
    Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).                    The fact that a phrase is a
    term of art does not mean each word within that phrase, when
    used   separately        and   independently,        carries       the     same     special
    meaning.        Specifically, a specialized meaning for "prevailing
    party" does not impose that meaning on the independent use of
    either "party" or "prevail."
    ¶112 In       addition,      the    words    the    legislature          chose     are
    meaningfully distinct.               The legislature used the phrase "the
    requester       prevails"      in    § 19.37(2)(a)         instead    of        "prevailing
    party."     (Emphasis added.)             The use of "requester" rather than
    "party"    is       instructive     as    "party"    connotes        litigation       while
    "requester" places the phrase in the broader context of the
    records request.           Thus, the test derived from the term of art
    "prevailing         party,"    which      requires     a     judicially         sanctioned
    change    in    a    litigant's      position,      does     not    fit    the     specific
    language in Wisconsin's statutes.
    ¶113 Because the phrase "the requester prevails" lacks a
    specialized         or   technical       meaning,   the     common,       ordinary,       and
    accepted meaning of those words controls.                     See, e.g., Stroede v.
    Soc'y Ins., 
    2021 WI 43
    , ¶11, 
    397 Wis. 2d 17
    , 
    959 N.W.2d 305
    .
    "Prevail" commonly means "to succeed."                     Prevail, Oxford English
    7
    No.   2019AP96.jjk
    Dictionary.             Even under a legal-specific definition, "prevail"
    means "to obtain the relief sought in an action."                               Prevail,
    Black's Law Dictionary 1438 (11th ed. 2019).                         Under the legal
    definition,         a    requester     "prevails"   if    the    requester      files   a
    mandamus action seeking a record's release and then receives
    that       record       because   it   obtained     the   relief      sought.5       The
    causation test cabins this reading slightly by requiring that
    the filing of the action be a cause of the record's release.
    This limitation keeps record requesters from filing frivolous
    mandamus actions before obtaining records that were never in
    doubt of being released simply to extract fees.
    ¶114 Frivolous         actions     are   one   way       to   obstruct    public
    records cases.             Delayed disclosures represent a second way to
    game the system.              Faust illustrates the value of addressing
    delayed disclosures with fee shifting as a remedy.                           State ex
    rel. Vaughan v. Faust, 
    143 Wis. 2d 868
    , 
    422 N.W.2d 898
     (Ct. App.
    The majority/lead opinion cites other Wisconsin Statutes
    5
    where a final adjudication by the court is inherently necessary
    to establish a party has prevailed. But in those statutes, this
    "judicially sanctioned change in the parties' positions" concept
    comes not from the use or plain meaning of "prevail" but instead
    from the context in which those statutes appear. See Wis. Stat.
    ch. 102, § 6 (1849) ("[T]he plaintiff in error on the trial anew
    shall be the successful and prevailing party."); Wis. Stat. ch.
    109, § 6 (1849) ("If the plaintiff in such action prevail
    therein, he shall have judgment for double the amount of damages
    found by the jury."). Chapter 102 § 6 discusses the designation
    of parties on appeal. For there to be an appeal there must have
    been a judicially sanctioned resolution at trial.    Chapter 109
    § 6 refers to damages awarded by a jury, which again require a
    judicially sanctioned resolution at trial. The context of those
    specific statutes narrow the meaning of "prevail" in a manner
    not required by its plain meaning and which does not carry over
    to the distinct context of the public records laws.
    8
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    1988).     In Faust, an inmate requested records on January 26 and,
    having     received       no    response,       re-requested        the     records    on
    February 19.        Id. at 869.          After again receiving no response,
    the inmate filed a mandamus action on March 13, and shortly
    thereafter the custodian of the records voluntarily supplied the
    inmate with the requested records along with an apology for the
    delay.     Id.    The court held that the mandamus action "was the
    precipitating cause" of the release of the records and awarded
    attorney fees and costs to the inmate.                   Id. at 872.          The Faust
    court correctly recognized that "[i]f the government can force a
    party into litigation and then deprive that party of the right
    to recover expenses by later disclosure, it would nullify the
    statute's purpose."             Id.     Although nothing in Faust indicated
    that     the   record     custodian       delayed     the     release       of    records
    purposefully,       a    rule    that    allows   such      delay    for    any    reason
    without fee shifting unnecessarily harms the record requester
    and    encourages       the    government   to    deprioritize        or    flout     this
    "integral part of [its] routine duties."                  
    Wis. Stat. § 19.31
    .
    ¶115 In   addition        to     encouraging      timely     compliance        with
    public records laws, the causation test also promotes judicial
    efficiency.      In circumstances where the government releases a
    record before the end of trial, the test eliminates the need to
    adjudicate the merits of a now-moot record request.                         It is well
    established that plaintiffs in public records actions may seek
    attorney fees and costs despite the underlying action being moot
    because of the voluntary release of records.                        See Racine Educ.
    Ass'n v. Bd. of Educ. for Racine Unified Sch. Dist., 
    129 Wis. 2d 9
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    319, 322, 
    385 N.W.2d 510
     (Ct. App. 1986); Cornucopia Inst. v.
    U.S. Dept. of Agric., 
    560 F.3d 673
    , 676-77 (7th Cir. 2009).                      The
    causation test sensibly premises an award of fees and costs on a
    finding that filing the mandamus action was reasonably necessary
    to receive the record and that there was a causal connection
    between the action and the record's release.                This test allows a
    court to make a grounded determination on the necessary attorney
    fees question without fully litigating the underlying merits.
    The factual inquiry required under a causation test is thus
    necessarily limited and has been reliably applied by the lower
    courts for decades.            Thus, we should continue to employ this
    textually faithful and practical test.
    3.     The "judicially sanctioned change" test is detrimental.
    ¶116 The new test, which looks for a "judicially sanctioned
    change" in the parties legal relationship, will result in one of
    two    detrimental     changes    in   how     circuit   courts   handle      public
    records disputes.           Which detrimental change actually occurs will
    depend on how courts apply the test in cases where the records
    are voluntarily released before the underlying mandamus action
    reaches        a     final       order.           The      new       test     would
    either:       (1) completely forego the option of awarding attorney
    fees     to    a   record     requester    when   an     authority      voluntarily
    releases a record, no matter the length of delay or the stage of
    the action at the time of release; or (2) require that circuit
    courts make a determination on the underlying merits of every
    public     records    case     that    comes    before    them.         The   former
    approach, which is sanctioned by the concurrence, nullifies our
    10
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    public records laws and allows governmental authorities to delay
    the release of records; the latter is judicially inefficient.
    The   effects     of    a    "judicially          sanctioned      change"        test    have
    already played out in the federal context and we should learn
    from those mistakes, not repeat them.                     Put simply, the new test
    casts storm clouds over our once clear public records laws.
    ¶117 The     first       possible       effect        from     the        "judicially
    sanctioned change" test would occur if the test is applied to
    remove     a   party's      ability     to        seek    attorney       fees     when   the
    underlying      case    becomes      moot    through      voluntary       disclosure       of
    documents.       Under this application, the new regime creates a
    perverse incentive for the government to strategically delay the
    release of records.           If public records cases can be mooted out
    by the government's voluntary release of a record, then the
    government could escape any sanction for unlawfully delaying the
    record's release so long as the government releases the record
    at any point before the court orders the release.                           Although the
    record ultimately gets released, the requester is left paying
    potentially hefty attorney fees and costs for a record he or she
    was already entitled to receive.                   See Milwaukee J. Sentinel, 
    341 Wis. 2d 607
    , ¶40 ("Increasing the costs of public records for a
    requester may inhibit access to public records and, in some
    instances,       render      the     records        inaccessible.").               As    the
    government can easily avoid paying a requester's attorney fees,
    members of the public will be disinclined to bring mandamus
    actions.        Fewer       mandamus    actions          will    chill     the     public's
    informed       involvement      in     government          and     lead     to     a     less
    11
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    participative         democracy.            Rather    than   aspiring        to     be    the
    "sunshine        state"        of     government      transparency,     we         will    be
    relegated to the long, dark winter of obfuscation.
    ¶118 Alternatively, the second possible effect would occur
    if the new test is applied to allow an award of attorney fees
    even when the government has already voluntarily disclosed the
    requested records.             This approach is consistent with precedent.6
    In this situation, the new test creates judicial inefficiency
    because a circuit court would be required to fully adjudicate
    the underlying public records claim in any action alleging undue
    delay in a record's release.                 Specifically, under the new test a
    circuit    court        must    determine      if    it   officially    sanctioned         a
    change     in     the    parties'         legal     relationship   before          shifting
    attorney fees.          This will unnecessarily burden lower courts with
    intensive factual disputes.
    ¶119 In detrimentally changing Wisconsin's public records
    law, a majority of this court ignores the teachings of the past.
    Although        the     court       of   appeals     found   the   federal          courts'
    interpretation          of      the      Freedom     of   Information        Act     (FOIA)
    persuasive when trying to give meaning to the phrase "prevail in
    whole or in substantial part,"7 it is important to recognize that
    6  See Racine Educ. Ass'n v. Bd. of Educ. for Racine Unified
    Sch. Dist., 
    129 Wis. 2d 319
    , 322, 
    385 N.W.2d 510
     (Ct. App.
    1986); Cornucopia Inst. V. U.S. Dept. of Agric., 
    560 F.3d 673
    ,
    676-77 (7th Cir. 2009).
    7    See Racine Educ. Ass'n, 
    129 Wis. 2d 319
    .
    12
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    the state and federal statutes are far from identical.8                                   This
    court       must      interpret      the   language         of     our    state      statute
    independently, and thus we are given the opportunity to avoid
    the mistakes made by the federal courts in interpreting what it
    means to "prevail."
    ¶120 The          United       States         Supreme       Court         interpreted
    "prevailing party," in a non-public records context, to mean the
    party that was awarded some relief by the court.                                 Buckhannon,
    
    532 U.S. at 603
    .               That interpretation was read to alter FOIA's
    similar "prevailing party" fee shifting provision.                                 
    5 U.S.C. § 552
           (2018).       In    response   to       this    judicial     change,     and    to
    protect         the   plain     meaning    of   FOIA's       fee   shifting        rule    and
    underlying purpose, Congress found it necessary to amend FOIA to
    make       it   as    clear    as   possible    that       the   catalyst      theory     (the
    federal counterpart to Wisconsin's causation test) still applied
    to FOIA's prevailing party test.                    See First Amend. Coal. V. U.S.
    Dept. of Just., 
    878 F.3d 1119
    , 1128 (9th Cir. 2017).
    ¶121 History repeats itself.                   This court commits the same
    error as the federal courts, but does so egregiously within the
    context         of    Wisconsin's     public        records      laws    and     with     full
    Wisconsin's public records law is not modeled on FOIA and
    8
    no Wisconsin court has held that our interpretation of the
    public records law is in lock-step with FOIA.        Among other
    significant differences, Wisconsin's law provides for mandatory
    fee shifting while FOIA's fee shifting is optional, Wisconsin's
    fee shifting provision references "the requestor" while FOIA
    references "the complainant," and Wisconsin's law includes the
    strong declaration of policy that is entirely absent from FOIA.
    See 
    Wis. Stat. §§ 19.31
     & 19.37 as compared to 
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    .
    13
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    knowledge of the fallout.9          We should avoid repeating this error
    and rely on the plain text.               The plain text contemplates the
    long-standing        causation    test   that   better    realizes    our   public
    records laws' textually expressed purpose and promotes judicial
    efficiency.
    B.   Importance of Timely Access to Documents
    ¶122 Deviation from absolute governmental transparency is
    permitted "when not detrimental to the public interest."                     State
    ex rel. Youmans v. Owens, 
    28 Wis. 2d 672
    , 681, 
    137 N.W.2d 470
    (1965); see 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.35
    (1)(a) (incorporating common law
    principles construing access rights to government records).                     In
    practice, governmental authorities are to perform a balancing
    test       to   determine   whether      "the   public    interest     would    be
    adversely affected" by the record's release.                See State ex rel.
    J. Co. v. Cnty. Ct. for Racine Cnty., 
    43 Wis. 2d 297
    , 306, 
    168 N.W.2d 836
     (1969).          Withholding a record requires exceptional
    circumstances as "only in an exceptional case may access be
    denied."        § 19.31.
    ¶123 Here exceptional circumstances do not exist.                 At issue
    is the City's denial of Friends' access to a proposed contract.
    The    proposed      contract    involved     Big   Top   Baseball's     plan   to
    repurpose Frame Park, a public space, to host a private for-
    profit baseball team.            In October 2017, Friends filed a public
    records request with the City seeking the proposed contract.
    Cf. Catherine R. Albiston & Laura Beth Nielsen, The
    9
    Procedural Attack on Civil Rights: The Empirical Reality of
    Buchannon for the Private Attorney General, 
    54 UCLA L. Rev. 1087
    (2007).
    14
    No.   2019AP96.jjk
    Later that same month, the City declared it was withholding the
    proposed contract "for competitive and bargaining reasons" until
    the Common Council had an opportunity to take action on it.                        The
    next opportunity for the Common Council to take action on the
    proposed contract was at the December 19 Common Council meeting.
    Having been denied access to the record in time to meaningfully
    engage and hold to account their representatives, Friends filed
    a mandamus action the day before the meeting to preserve its
    right        to    a   remedy.      The   December   19   Common    Council   meeting
    minutes           indicate   that   the   Council:   (1) never      entered   into   a
    closed session to discuss the proposed contract; and (2) did not
    vote to either approve or deny the contract terms.                     Unclear from
    either the minutes or the record is to what extent the Council
    discussed the proposed contract, if at all.                        The next day the
    City released the proposed contract to Friends saying no further
    competitive or bargaining concerns existed.
    ¶124 Friends was entitled to the release of the proposed
    contract not only in spite of its draft status, but because of
    it.10        The contract's non-final nature was significant.                 As long
    There is no dispute that the "draft contract" here is a
    10
    "record" subject to disclosure under 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.32
    (2).
    This is because at the time of Friends' request, Big Top
    Baseball had already seen the proposed contract and was actively
    negotiating its terms.   See Fox v. Bock, 
    149 Wis. 2d 403
    , 414,
    
    438 N.W.2d 589
     (1989) (clarifying that the statutory definition
    of a "record" subject to release includes "a document prepared
    for something other than the originator's personal use, whether
    it is in preliminary form or stamped 'draft.'"). Here, despite
    the   majority/lead   opinion's  contrary   assertion,   it   is
    inconsequential to the balancing test that the Common Council
    had not yet finalized the contract because finality is not
    required.
    15
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    as the contract was not final, Friends had the opportunity to
    meaningfully participate in the Common Council's review of the
    document.      Said differently, once the Common Council voted on
    the    proposed    contract,    Friends'       participation        would      be   moot.
    This situation exemplifies why Wisconsin's public records law
    demands that responses to record requests be made "as soon as
    practicable and without delay."               
    Wis. Stat. § 19.35
    (4)(a).              Only
    when    citizens     are     timely    informed       about        the     actions       of
    government     officials      may     they     meaningfully        participate           and
    create a more responsive representative government.                             This is
    particularly true at the local government level where informed
    citizens often have direct access to their officials and have
    the ability to plead their case face-to-face.                       In other words,
    the delayed release of public records "in effect eliminate[es]
    that information from the public debate" thereby "defeat[ing]
    the    purpose . . . of      providing        the   public    with       the   greatest
    information       possible    about    the     affairs       of    government"           and
    completely denying the opportunity to meaningfully participate
    in government.        State ex rel. Auchinleck v. Town of LaGrange,
    
    200 Wis. 2d 585
    , 595, 
    547 N.W.2d 587
     (1996).
    ¶125 Such detrimental denial occurs even when the delay is
    short-lived.        Here,    Friends    requested      the        proposed     contract
    ostensibly to evaluate how the possible terms of a privately run
    baseball park operating on public park grounds would affect its
    members   as   neighbors     and    taxpayers.        For     that       review     to    be
    meaningful,       however,   Friends     needed     the     document       before        the
    Common Council finalized the contract.                    Once the contract is
    16
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    final and binding, public input is rendered irrelevant.                                   Because
    Friends     was    "entitled      to       the       greatest      possible         information
    regarding      the     affairs       of        government,"          
    Wis. Stat. § 19.31
    (emphasis added), the City carries the burden to prove that it
    did not unduly delay the release of the requested record.
    C.    The City Withholding the Proposed Contract Lacked
    Justification
    ¶126 The       City     claims       that       "competitive          or      bargaining"
    reasons     were     sufficiently         exceptional         to     tip    the     balance     in
    favor of denying access to the proposed contract.                                   This excuse
    fails.      The    "competitive           or    bargaining"          excuse      derives      from
    Wisconsin's       related     open     meetings        law,     which       is    incorporated
    into the public records laws.                    See 
    Wis. Stat. §§ 19.35
    (1)(a) &
    19.85(1)(e).          Under      the       open       meetings       law,        access    to   a
    government meeting may be denied (that is, a "closed session"
    may be held) for "[d]eliberating or negotiating the purchasing
    of    public      properties,        the       investing        of     public        funds,     or
    conducting other specified public business, whenever competitive
    or bargaining reasons require a closed session."                              § 19.85(1)(e).
    Importantly, the government may withhold a record on this ground
    "only if the authority . . . makes a specific demonstration that
    there is a need to restrict public access at the time that the
    request to inspect or copy the record is made."                             § 19.35(1)(a).
    ¶127 The City's "competitive or bargaining" rationale fails
    for   two    reasons     in    this        case.        First,        no    competitive         or
    bargaining concerns remained at the time the City denied the
    records request.         Second, the City Council never entered into a
    closed session during its December 19th meeting.                              Therefore, the
    17
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    City improperly balanced the public interest by concluding that
    the proposed contract's release would have adversely affected
    the public.      See State ex rel. J. Co., 
    43 Wis. 2d at 306
    .
    1.    No competitive or bargaining reasons existed.
    ¶128 Let's turn first to the "competitive or bargaining"
    interests that were absent at the time the proposed contract was
    withheld.       A competitive or bargaining concern relating to the
    proposed contract may have arisen in one of three ways, none of
    which apply here:          (1) the City and another municipality could
    have been competing for the same baseball team; (2) the City
    could    have    been      negotiating      with     more       than     one      baseball
    organization to host a team at Frame Park; or (3) the manner of
    the City's negotiations with Big Top could require that the
    proposed contract terms be secreted from Big Top to strengthen
    the City's bargaining position.
    ¶129 Regarding the first possible concern, the City does
    not allege that another municipality was competing to host the
    same    baseball      team.      Rather,   the     City       claims    that      the   mere
    possibility      of    another    municipality's      interest          in    a   baseball
    team is enough to invoke the exception.                   And yet the City fails
    to explain how another municipality's possible interest in a
    baseball    team      implicates      competitive     or        bargaining        concerns
    sufficient      to    justify    nondisclosure.           A    mere     possibility       of
    competition      is    a   nebulous    standard      that       could    plausibly       be
    invoked for any public business the City conducts, a far cry
    from the "exceptional case" that may justify a denial or delay
    of a record request.          See 
    Wis. Stat. § 19.31
    .
    18
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    ¶130 The second possible concern would emerge if the City
    were negotiating with two or more baseball teams competing for
    the Frame Park location.             Under this scenario, the City would
    arguably    have    an    interest      in    concealing         the       details    of    any
    proposed contracts from the competing teams so that the City
    could negotiate the best terms from each team and ultimately
    choose between them.          But here, the record makes clear that the
    City did not consider partnering with any baseball team besides
    Big Top after August of 2016——long before the record request and
    denial in October 2017.
    ¶131 The       third    possible         concern         would    be    that     publicly
    revealing     a     proposed        contract's           unapproved          terms      would
    necessarily give Big Top access to those terms, weakening the
    City's   negotiating       position.          This       too    fails       because,       as    a
    conceded fact, Big Top already had access to the entire proposed
    contract    during    their      negotiations           and    had    provided       drafting
    suggestions.
    ¶132 In        sum,    the    competitive           or     bargaining         benefit       of
    withholding the proposed contract from the public did not exist.
    According to the City, the only relevant party not to have seen
    the proposed contract before the December 19 meeting was the
    Common Council, and the City cannot seek a bargaining advantage
    against its own Common Council.
    ¶133 Curiously,              although         the        Common        Council      never
    substantially addressed the proposed contract or entered into a
    closed session at the December 19 meeting, the City released the
    proposed    contract       the    day   after       the        meeting      indicating          no
    19
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    further competitive or bargaining concerns existed.                                 That all
    but     concedes         there        never    were      competitive        or    bargaining
    concerns.       If       no     competitive         or   bargaining      concerns     existed
    after    a   meeting          where    the     Common     Council    never       meaningfully
    addressed the proposed contract, then how could competitive or
    bargaining concerns be implicated before the meeting took place?
    ¶134 The           City     argues       that      there      were,    nevertheless,
    bargaining reasons for the Common Council to go into closed
    session to review the proposed contract.                         Specifically, the City
    argues that the Council's reactions to the proposed contract
    terms would weaken its ability to further negotiate terms with
    Big Top.       But if the City wanted to hide the Common Council's
    reactions to proposed contract terms, the solution was to have
    the   Common        Council      go     into    a    closed      session,    not     withhold
    disclosure of the proposed contract Big Top had already seen and
    red-lined.          In short, no qualifying competitive or bargaining
    concerns regarding the proposed contract exist in the record.
    2.        A closed session was not "required."
    ¶135 Even          if     competitive         or   bargaining      concerns     existed
    prior to the December 19 meeting, the City still improperly
    withheld the proposed contract because the Common Council never
    entered      into    a    closed       session.          The    City's   only     reason   for
    denying disclosure applies "whenever competitive or bargaining
    reasons require a closed session."                             
    Wis. Stat. § 19.85
    (1)(e)
    (emphasis added).               But the Common Council never entered into a
    closed session at the December 19 meeting.                           How could a closed
    20
    No.    2019AP96.jjk
    session have been required when the Common Council never met in
    closed session?
    ¶136 The      facts      indicate          an   alternative         motive     for
    withholding        the   proposed   contract——the         City    sought       to   avoid
    public input before the Common Council had the opportunity to
    act on it.         The City admitted as much in its letter explaining
    that it would delay disclosure until "after the Common Council
    has taken action on it."            That is not a legal basis to withhold
    a record from the public.
    ¶137 Because the City's alleged competitive or bargaining
    concerns were speculative at best, and disproven by the record
    at worst, the City improperly applied the balancing test.                             The
    public's interest in disclosure outweighs the City's nonexistent
    competitive        or    bargaining          concerns;     the     disclosure         was
    unlawfully delayed.
    II.   CONCLUSION
    ¶138 The     City      improperly     withheld     the    proposed       contract
    when    it   cited       to    nonexistent        "competitive        or     bargaining"
    concerns, and the public interest would not have been adversely
    affected by the release of the proposed contract.                            Friends was
    denied its statutory right to access documents that would have
    informed     its    participation       in    government.        As    such,     Friends
    should have prevailed in its action against the City and been
    awarded appropriate fees and costs.                    The unnecessarily narrow
    "judicially sanctioned change" test for the award of attorney
    fees is not supported by the statute's plain meaning and will
    undercut the public records laws' entire purpose.                             We should
    21
    No.   2019AP96.jjk
    remain with the causation test, which encourages citizens to
    bring   meritorious   claims   for    the    release    of   records     while
    discouraging gamesmanship on all sides.          We should continue to
    disinfect with sunshine.
    ¶139 I   am   authorized   to    state    that     Justices    ANN   WALSH
    BRADLEY and REBECCA FRANK DALLET join this dissent.
    22
    No.   2019AP96.jjk
    1
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2019AP000096

Filed Date: 7/6/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/7/2022

Authorities (49)

Union of Needletrades, Industrial and Textile Employees, ... , 336 F.3d 200 ( 2003 )

The National Association for the Advancement of Colored ... , 978 F.2d 287 ( 1992 )

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Church of Scientology of California v. Patricia R. Harris , 653 F.2d 584 ( 1981 )

Oregon Natural Desert Ass'n v. Locke , 572 F.3d 610 ( 2009 )

Cornucopia Institute v. United States Department of ... , 560 F.3d 673 ( 2009 )

Texas State Teachers Ass'n v. Garland Independent School ... , 109 S. Ct. 1486 ( 1989 )

Eddie David Cox v. United States Department of Justice , 601 F.2d 1 ( 1979 )

Oil, Chemical & Atomic Workers International Union v. ... , 288 F.3d 452 ( 2002 )

Eduardo M. Benavides v. Bureau of Prisons , 993 F.2d 257 ( 1993 )

Smith v. Allwright , 64 S. Ct. 757 ( 1944 )

Monroe v. Pape , 81 S. Ct. 473 ( 1961 )

Bangor & Piscataquis R. R. v. Chamberlain , 60 Me. 285 ( 1872 )

Henry v. Miller , 61 Me. 105 ( 1872 )

Fox v. Bock , 149 Wis. 2d 403 ( 1989 )

State Ex Rel. La Crosse Tribune v. Circuit Court for La ... , 115 Wis. 2d 220 ( 1983 )

Buckhannon Board & Care Home, Inc. v. West Virginia Dept. ... , 121 S. Ct. 1835 ( 2001 )

Hohn v. United States , 118 S. Ct. 1969 ( 1998 )

Hensley v. Eckerhart , 103 S. Ct. 1933 ( 1983 )

Gamble v. United States , 204 L. Ed. 2d 322 ( 2019 )

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