Court Opinion

ID: 9914361
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-12-30 14:14:25.428844+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:11:30.177622
License: Public Domain

Reversed or other gtouds ,
ZOl) VT 46 C294)

FILED

JUL 2 0 2009

!

i

STATE OF VERMONT i
ORANGE COUNTY

ANGE SUPERIOR COURT

$a,

TIMOTHY PRICE )
) Orange Superior Court
v. ) Docket No. 197-8-08 Oecv
)
TOWN OF FAIRLEE )
DECISION

Defendant’s Second Motion to Dismiss, filed Dec. 3, 2008

Petitioner Timothy Price is a resident of the Town of Fairlee who seeks to review
the performance of the members of the Board of Civil Authority with respect to their role
in counting election ballots. After the 2006 election for both federal and state offices, he
asked the Town Clerk for an opportunity to examine the ballots and tally sheets. He
explained that the 2006 recount for the office of state auditor had revealed an undercount
in the tally sheets for that race in an amount significant enough to change the outcome,
and he wanted to reexamine all of the tally sheets, related to the other offices involved in
the election, “to see if this was a single error, or whether the undercount was repeated in
other races as well.” He was and is explicit that he was not seeking information to
challenge the results of any particular race, which would be time-barred in any event, but
to review the performance of the elected Board of Civil Authority officials as a matter of
public accountability.

By law, the election materials at issue were to remain sealed for a specified period
after the election.’ Mr. Price alleges that the Town Clerk and members of the Board of
Civil Authority supported his request to review the materials when they became
available, and that the Town Clerk, after consultation with the Secretary of State’s office,
had told him they wanted him to get an order from the court and they would then make
the materials available for review. This was the reason he filed the action in August
2008. There is no dispute that he filed it prior to the expiration of the sealing period.

In his petition, Mr. Price requested a declaration that he had a right to inspect the
ballots after the end of the required sealing period, but prior to their destruction. See 17
V.S.A. § 2590(d) (explaining that ballots and tally sheets must be retained under seal for
a specified period of time, after which they “may be destroyed” by the town clerk). Mr.
Price also requested an injunction prohibiting the Town Clerk from destroying the ballots
and tally sheets until after the review. The Town moved to dismiss the complaint on the
grounds that it failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. The State of
Vermont moved to intervene, and supported the motion to dismiss.

17 V.S.A. § 2590 (d) requires that the materials be sealed for 90 days “except as otherwise provided by
federal law.” The 2006 election involved election for federal office, resulting in a sealing period of 22
months.
A hearing was held on November 10, 2008 on the motions to intervene and
dismiss. The hearing also addressed Mr. Price’s request for a preliminary injunction.”
Mr. Price represented himself pro se. The Town was represented by Attorney Frank H.
Olmstead. The State was represented by Assistant Attorney General Jacob A. Humbert.

The State’s motion to intervene was granted. The court denied the request for a
temporary injunction on the grounds that irreparable injury was not shown, but denied the
Town’s motion to dismiss as the petition presented a valid question: whether ballots and
tally sheets that remain in the Town Clerk’s possession after expiration of the secure
period are subject to inspection under the Public Records Act, 1 V.S.A. § 316, if they
have not yet been destroyed. The court accordingly provided time for Mr. Price to
comply with the procedure for requesting public records, and to file an amended
complaint.

The Amended Complaint alleges that two days after the hearing, Mr. Price sent a
letter to the Town Clerk requesting an opportunity to view the ballots and tally sheets
under the Public Records Act. The Town responded by informing Mr. Price that the
ballots and tally sheets had been destroyed by the Town Clerk following the November
10th hearing. The Town therefore denied the public records request, claiming an
inability to comply. The Town also filed its second motion to dismiss, this time on
mootness grounds, which is the motion now before the court.

The question presented is whether the destruction of the requested tally sheets and
ballots has made the request for public access moot. “The general rule is that a case
becomes moot when the issues presented are no longer live or the parties lack a legally
cognizable interest in the outcome. A case is moot if the reviewing court can no longer
grant effective relief.” In re Moriarty, 156 Vt. 160, 163 (1991) (quotations omitted);
Doria v. Univ. of Vermont, 156 Vt. 114, 117 (1991).

In this case, the Amended Complaint requested access to the ballots and tally
sheets from the 2006 election for the purpose of reviewing the accuracy of the officials’
counting of the ballots in that election. The court can no longer grant the request for
public access, since the ballots and tally sheets have been destroyed, and cannot be
reproduced for inspection. For that reason, the case is moot.

Mootness generally results in dismissal of the complaint for lack of jurisdiction.
Doria, 156 Vt. at 118. However, there are several exceptions to the mootness doctrine
that permit review under certain circumstances, even when the case is otherwise moot.
The exceptions reflect the fundamental concern underlying all mootness problems:
“whether decision of a once living dispute continues to be justified by a sufficient
prospect that the decision will have an impact on the parties.” All Cycle, Inc. v.

* The court had denied Mr. Price’s request for an ex parte temporary restraining order included in his initial
filing of the petition, but the court provided that the request would be reviewed after service and an
opportunity to respond.
Chittenden Solid Waste Dist., 164 Vt. 428, 432 (1995); 13B Wright, Miller & Cooper et
al, Federal Practice and Procedure: Jurisdiction 3d § 3533.

One of these narrow exceptions permits review in cases where the challenged
action was “capable of repetition yet evading review,” meaning cases where “(1) the
challenged action was in its duration too short to be fully litigated prior to its cessation or
expiration, and (2) there was a reasonable expectation that the same complaining party
would be subjected to the same action again.” Houston v. Town of Waitsfield, 2007 VT
135, {11 (mem.) (quoting Jn re Vt. State Employees’ Ass’n, 2005 VT 135, 4] 12, 179 Vt.
578 (mem.)); 13C Federal Practice and Procedure, supra, at § 3533.8.

The factual circumstances of the case changed between the time it was originally
filed and the Amended Complaint. Originally, Mr. Price made an anticipatory request to
have public access to the ballots and tally sheets from the 2006 election once they
became unsealed, and prior to their destruction. After the sealing period expired, the
records remained undestroyed in the possession of the Town Clerk, but a request for
public access had been made by the filing of this case. The request was clarified by the
court on November 10, 2008 as one under the Public Records Act, and the court provided
Mr. Price with an opportunity to formalize his request under Statutory procedures.
Subsequently, the Town destroyed the documents and claimed an inability to comply
with the request for public access. Those are the factual circumstances now presented by
the case, and which must be used in analyzing the motion to dismiss.

There is no question that if no request for access to the records had been made
prior to November 10, 2008, the Town Clerk would have been authorized under 17
V.S.A. § 2590(d) to destroy the records on that date. If there is no reason for the
materials to be retained any longer, the statute clearly authorizes a town clerk to destroy
them. In the case as it now presents itself, the Town Clerk destroyed the records after
having clear notice that a citizen was making a public records request for existing,
undestroyed election materials no longer subject to sealing. The action of a public
official in destroying records after a public records request was made appears contrary to
the public policy favoring the right of access to public documents and records, Finberg v.
Murnane, 159 Vt. 431, 434 (1992), yet the Town and State argue that the provisions of
election laws trump the right of public access to the materials, even after the expiration of
the sealing period. This is a legal issue that requires resolution by a court after careful
research and consideration of competing arguments concerning the statutory provisions at
issue and underlying constitutional and statutory principles and policies.

This case demonstrates that the time period between the records request and the
destruction of the records by the Town Clerk was too short for the legal issue to be fully
litigated, and this is likely to true with respect to any future such request. The situation is
highly capable of repetition in the future since, by statute, the Town Clerk is the guardian
of ballots and tally sheets, 17 V.S.A. § 2590, and given that the State of Vermont has
intervened in these proceedings and takes the position that a citizen has no right to access
the election materials, there is no reason to believe that the Fairlee Town Clerk will not
follow the same course of conduct in the future in response to another request for access
to ballots and tally sheets. See Town of Brattleboro v. Garfield, 2006 VT 56, 47, 180 Vt.
90 (reviewing election dispute as “capable of repetition yet evading review” even though
election had passed, since there was a “strong likelihood” that municipality would follow
the same disputed policy for filling vacant selectboard positions in the future).

The question presented is a legal issue of general applicability and significant
importance in relation to public accountability of public officials and the interface
between laws relating to elections and those providing for public access to records:
whether ballots and tally sheets that are retained by a town clerk beyond the secure period
are public records, and if so, whether (and under what standard of review) they may be
accessed for public inspection upon a request made prior to their destruction. These
issues are not uniquely factual in nature, but rather present threshold questions that would
likely be involved in any similar request in the future. See /n re P.S., 167 Vt. 63, 68
(1997) (explaining that general standards of review are more likely to be raised in future
litigation than specific factual questions); see also State v. Tallman, 148 Vt. 465, 469
(1987) (reviewing request for public access to court proceedings even though case was
moot, since closure order was short-lived and likely to occur again in future).

Mr. Price asserts a continuing interest in evaluating the accuracy of town election
officials, promoting transparency in local elections, and “strengthen[ing] the processes of
democracy.” There is reason to believe that Mr. Price will request access to ballots and
tally sheets following future elections, that the Fairlee Town Clerk will follow the same
course of conduct as in the present case, and that the parties will become involved in the
same controversy again.

For these reasons, the court concludes that the case is moot, but that the issues
presented are capable of repetition, yet evading review. Therefore, there is a sound
jurisdictional basis for the court to decide the issue. The Town’s Second Motion to
Dismiss on grounds of mootness must therefore be denied.

ORDER

The Town’s Second Motion to Dismiss (MPR #5), filed December 3, 2008, is
denied.

Based on the pleadings and arguments to date, it appears that the issue is a matter
of law and that it is unlikely that there are disputes of material fact. Accordingly, the
court sets August 17, 2009 as the deadline for the filing of motions for summary
judgment. Either party may move for a different pretrial scheduling plan.

Dated at Chelsea, Vermont this 20" day of July, 2009.

Hon. Mafy Miles Teachout
Superior Court Judge