v.
Snohomish County
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON RON GIPSON, ) ) No. 76826-3-1 Appellant, ) ) DIVISION ONE v. ) ) SNOHOMISH COUNTY, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION a municipal corporation, ) ) Respondent. ) FILED: July 9, 2018 ) LEACH, J. — Ron Gipson appeals a summary judgment dismissing his Public Records Act (PRA)1 claim against Snohomish County (County). In December 2014, Gipson requested records related to an open investigation involving him. The investigation concluded in February 2015. After the investigation closed, the County produced the substantially redacted records in installments, claiming the exemption under RCW 42.56.250(6)2 for records related to an active and ongoing investigation applied to Gipson's request. Gipson challenges this exemption claim because the County produced the records after the investigation ended. But an agency makes its determination of No. 76826-3-1/ 3 No. 76826-3-1 /4 No. 76826-3-1 /5
[*2][*3][*4]responded, it is irrelevant whether a claimed exemption ceases to apply because "[a]n agency is not obligated to supplement responses.'"13 Instead, the requester may submit a "refresher" request.[14] To support its decision, this court cited WAC 44-14-04004(4),15 which states, in part, that "if a public record is created or comes into the possession of the agency after the request is received by the agency, it is not responsive to the request and need not be provided." The court explained that the no-standing-requests rule is consistent with the PRA's policy to provide public access to existing, nonexempt records: "The legislature requires agencies of government to respond to requests in a timely and clear fashion. But it does not require that agencies provide updates to previous responses, or monitor whether documents properly withheld as exempt may later become subject to disclosure."16 The Washington State Bar Association's Public Records Act Deskbook reiterates the no-standing-requests rule and states, similarly, [T]he determination of whether a record is exempt is made at the time the request is received. If, for example, a temporal exemption expires after the request is made, the agency is not required to produce the record; but the record must be identified on an No. 76826-3-1 /6
[*5]exemption log, and as a practical matter it may be advisable for the agency to produce the record if it has not yet closed the request.E171
This case does not involve a standing request because the County had not yet produced the installments containing the requested records when the relevant exemption ceased to apply. But this court's reasoning in Sargent still applies. Sargent reasoned that the PRA does not permit standing requests because, as the WAC and deskbook indicate, an agency determines whether a record exists or is exempt at the time that it receives the request.
Although the County provided installments two, three, and five containing heavily redacted records after the close of the investigation, Gipson submitted the PRR providing the basis for his claim on December 1, 2014, two months before the investigation ended on February 2, 2015. Because he submitted his request while the investigation into the allegations against him for employment discrimination was ongoing, the exemption for records related to an "active and ongoing" investigation into employment discrimination under RCW 42.56.250(6) applied. To receive records subject to this exemption after the investigation ended, the PRA requires that Gipson's submit a refresher request. He did this in February 2016 and ultimately received unredacted copies of the records in
BAR ASS'N PUBLIC RECORDS ACT DESKBOOK: WASHINGTON'S No. 76826-3-1/ 7
[*6]dispute. Gipson has not shown the existence of any genuine issue of material fact about his PRA claim or that the trial court misapplied the PRA. Gipson also makes an equitable estoppel claim. He asserts that the County misrepresented that the investigation was ongoing by claiming the exemption after the investigation's conclusion. He contends that the County should thus be estopped from claiming that it did not have to produce the records based on the no-standing-requests rule and the requester's obligation to submit a refresher request. But because Gipson's trial counsel did not make an adequate record to preserve this issue for review, we decline to consider it. The trial court properly granted summary judgment. CONCLUSION We affirm. WE CONCUR: 4.4
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