Court Opinion

ID: 9650085
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-23 15:24:22.009457+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:43:48.611897
License: Public Domain

CRAIG, President Judge.
Petitioner Randall Sipe has appealed from a decision of the Department of Public Welfare (DPW) denying his request under the Right-to-Know Act1 that he be allowed to examine and copy “Settlement and Appeal Activity Reports” as to nursing homes for the period of July, 1989 through June, 1992. In refusing, DPW’s chief counsel contended that such reports are not “public records” under the Act. Pursuant to Sipe’s request for reconsideration of that denial, DPW stated that the reports are not public records because they are “monthly summaries of information compiled for management monitoring and budgeting purposes.”
When the case reached argument before the court, the insufficiency of the record, consisting only of correspondence *234in which each party presented differing characterizations and descriptions of the documents involved, became apparent. Although, under the Act, DPW has no duty to conduct an administrative agency hearing, and neither DPW nor an applicant has any power or right to insist upon an administrative agency hearing before judicial relief is sought under the Act, the unique need in this case for information, concerning the requested records, forced this court to exercise its discretion to remand the case for an administrative hearing to make a factual record as to Sipe’s claim that the desired documents constituted accounts dealing with the disbursement of funds, covered by the Act, and DPW’s characterization that they are secondary records, drawn up from actual accounting records of disbursements and assembled solely to plan and manage departmental operations.
Pursuant to that remand order, DPW did conduct the necessary, hearing, and the court now has the benefit of the transcribed testimony of department officials, together with descriptions of the records sought to be obtained and exhibits constituting examples of those records.
QUESTION INVOLVED
Because § 3 of the Act, 65 P.S. § 66.3, states that “[a]ny citizen of the Commonwealth ... shall have the right to ... make copies of public records____,” the general question of law in this case is whether a Settlement and Appeal Activity Report constitutes a “Public Record” under the Act’s definition of that term, which states in § 1(2):
(2) ‘Public Record.’ Any account, voucher or contract dealing with the receipt or disbursement of funds by an agency ■or its acquisition, use or disposal of services or of supplies, materials, equipment or other property and any minute, order or decision by an agency fixing the personal or property rights, privileges, immunities, duties or obligations of any person or group of persons____
65 P.S. 66.1(2).
Sipe makes no claim which would characterize the requested Reports as a “voucher” or “contract” under the statutory *235definition. Moreover, DPW does not rely upon any of the exceptions to the definition, which bar public access to documents disclosing investigations, operating to the impairment of reputation or personal security, or subjecting a public agency to loss of federal funds.
Accordingly, the central issue can be briefly stated with accuracy: Does a Settlement and Appeal Activity Report come within the Act’s definition of a public record subject to disclosure to the citizenry by virtue of being an “account ... dealing with the receipt or disbursement of funds by an agency....”?
FACTS
One helpful result of the agency hearing upon remand has been to provide this court with an example of a “Settlement and Appeal Activity Report” relating to nursing homes. There follows an exemplar of such a report, for June, 1992, one of the months requested, consisting of parts of DPW Exh. 2, as follows:
1. The title page
2. Key to codes
3. Detail of settlement & appeal activity (one of four pages)
4. Summary of payments and collections (two pages).
DPW COMPTROLLER OFFICE
SETTLEMENT AND APPEAL ACTIVITY REPORT
JUNE, 1992
*236KEY TO CODES
SETTLEMENT APPEAL"!"X&TIVITY REPORTS
PROVIDER TYPE TABLE
11 General Hospital
12 Rehabilitation Hospital
13 Private Psychiatric Hospital
24 Contracts
25 Private ICF-MR
26 Rural Health Center
35 County Nursing Home
36 Private Nursing Home
AUDIT/APPEAL CODES TABLE
AS Audit Settlement
ARA Audit Report Appeal
IAS Interim Audit Settlement
IRA Interim Rate Appeal
IRS Interim Rate Stipulation
ARS Audit Report Stipulation
DRS DRG Rate Stipulation
DRA DRG Rate Appeal
DCS Denied Claim Stipulation
DCA Denial Claim Appeal
ACTION CODES TABLE
N New Report Logged In - No Action,
p Payment to Provider
C Collected from Provider (Gross «aj..)
CR Check Received from Provider
EFC Estimated Future Collections
REFC Reduction to Estimated Future Collections
AP Payment to Provider - Adjustment
AC Collected from Provider - Adjustment
ACR Check Received from Provider - Adjustment
AEFC Estimated Future collections - Adjustment
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In the hearing, the testimony of DPW’s Assistant Comptroller was as follows:
Cost settlement is a reconciliation of the amount of money owed to a medical assistance provider based upon an analysis of audited costs compared to an amount of money that has *240been paid to the facility on an interim basis during a given period of time. (T 23) The department implements cost settlement after it receives an audited cost report from the agency in charge of preparing audits. Where an underpayment has been made, DPW advises the facility that it is owed a specified amount of money. DPW sends a letter with a worksheet that documents the reconciliation process between audited costs and interim payments. (T 26) Where an overpayment has occurred, DPW notifies the facility by letter of the overpayment and of the department’s demand for it. (T 26)
The department regards the letter and worksheet as the documentation which DPW enters into the Medical Assistance Management Information System as a debit in the case of an overpayment, or a credit in the case of an underpayment. (T 26, 27) After the entry of such debit or credit, the department makes appropriate payment or initiates collection of the amount owed. (T 27)
The Settlement and Appeal Activity Reports are generated monthly as summaries of payment activities related to medical assistance providers. (T 29) The reports are prepared after the transactions have been completed. (T 36-37) The office of the assistant comptroller sends the reports to the Deputy Secretary for Medical Assistance, the Deputy Secretary of Administration and the Deputy Secretary for Mental Retardation, and also retains copies as summaries of monthly activities. (T 38)
To the Medical Assistance Section, the significance of the reports is that they reflect trends of payments and levels of payment activities. (T 80) That office uses the reports to obtain estimates on how much money long-term pooling agreements and inter-governmental transfers will cost the department. (T 81, 82) The Reports support budgetary estimates of the amount of funding from inter-governmental transfers that will be used for current cost settlements. (T 82)
Departmental budget officials and the Division Director of the Office of Medical Assistance Programs also testified. The *241Office of Medical Assistance Programs sets interim rates for nursing homes that participate in the Medical Assistance Program. The Reports have no real significance to that division but are used only to gage productivity during the course of each month.
ANALYSIS
The testimony concerning the Reports, and examination of the Reports themselves, makes clear that they unquestionably are documents “dealing with the receipt or disbursement of funds by an agency,” in that they deal with the disbursement of funds to providers entitled to a credit, and with the receipt of funds from providers who owe a repayment to the department.
Thus the pivotal issue comes down to whether or not a Report constitutes an “account.” The differing views are illuminated by examination of the various definitions of the noun “account” given in Webster’s Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged (1986). No-one argues for the general narrative sense of “account” as meaning “9a: a statement of facts or events” or “b: an informative report or descriptive narration.” Instead, there is agreement that the question here relates to “account” in the accounting sense, and the dictionary, with respect to that use of the word “account” in the singular, lists the following:
2a: a record of debit and credit entries chronologically posted to a ledger page from books of original entry to cover transactions involving a particular item (as cash or notes receivable) or a particular person or concern b: a statement of transactions during a fiscal period showing the resulting balance
5a: a periodically rendered reckoning (as one listing charge purchases and credits)....
DPW here seeks to shield its Settlement and Appeal Activity Reports from public view principally by contending that they do not constitute the individual original accounting *242entries generating a debit or a credit; they are not journal entries in the accounting sense of a listing of original credits and debits during a time period, such as a day, nor are they ledger entries, comprised of those debits and credits which relate to a particular entity, posted to the ledger of fiscal relationships with that particular person or entity.
On the other hand, Sipe’s argument amounts to a claim that the Reports do consist of “a statement of transactions during a fiscal period showing the resulting balance” and that they are “a periodically rendered reckoning (as one listing charges and credits).... ”
Examination of DPW Exh. 2, set forth above, shows that it does not constitute original entries of debits and credits in the context of a journal or ledger. On the other hand, it clearly represents, for a number of persons with whom DPW deals, a statement of transactions during a fiscal period resulting in a balance due or payable and is a reckoning compiled periodically-
DPW contends that the individual letter or worksheet for each provider constitutes the only account in the sense used by the Act, and that such letter and worksheet amount to the only periodically rendered reckoning communicated to a particular provider.
Therefore, if Sipe had requested DPW to allow copying of all of the many individual letters and worksheets compiled by DPW for all nursing home providers throughout the period from July 1989 through June 1992, that request would have to be honored under the Act, according to DPW’s position confining the concept of public records to such individual provider documents. Of course, the logistics involved, with respect to the citizen making the request and DPW, would obviously be enormous under such a narrowed concept. DPW, in order to inform its respective offices and divisions concerning the dollar impact of the reconciliation of debits and credits to providers over a period, does not bundle up the entire mass of letters and worksheets to communicate with its divisions, so that it would be sending two or more documents for each of *243hundreds of providers. Instead, DPW simply sends compilations of that accounting. And the requested Reports constitute those compilations.
The judicial interpretation of the Right-to-Know Act has not confined the concept of “account” only to original debit and credit entries.
Listings and compilations of fiscal data have been treated as public records, such as the list of uncashed checks in Anders v. Department of Treasury, 137 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 111, 585 A.2d 568 (1991). This court has construed “account” to include any “record of business dealings between the parties” as well as the “documentary record of a business transaction.” Carbondale Township v. Murray, 64 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 465, 440 A.2d 1273 (1982).
This court has never limited the concept of public records solely to records dealing singularly with an individual. Young v. Armstrong School District, 21 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 203, 344 A.2d 738 (1975), held that a list of names of school children was a public record. A list of bidders submitting proposals was a public record in Vartan v. Department of General Services, 121 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 470, 550 A.2d 1375 (1988). A list of persons who have taken an examination is a public record under Friedman v. Fumo, 9 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 609, 309 A.2d 75 (1973). Attendance records of school employees are public records, Kanzelmeyer v. Eger, 16 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 495, 329 A.2d 307 (1974). A list of subscribers to a public periodical concerning wild game was treated as a public record under the Act, Hoffman v. Pennsylvania Game Commission, 71 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 99, 455 A.2d 731 (1983).
In construing the Act, the narrowest technical accounting connotation which this court has ever expressed was as follows:
We are convinced that when the Legislature used the word ‘account’ in the definition of a public record it intended that word to have the meaning of a record of debit and credit entries to cover transactions during a fiscal period of *244time and did not intend the word ‘account’ to mean a statement of facts or events.
Butera v. Commonwealth, 29 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 343, 346, 370 A.2d 1248, 1249 (1977).
Thus this court confirmed rejection of the narrative sense of “account,” but we did not confine the meaning of account to an isolated debit or credit. Instead, that opinion embraces a “record” of such entries “to cover transactions during a fiscal period of time.... ” And each Report in this case is precisely that.
In some cases, involving statistical data or administrative reports, this court has based its allowance of public access upon the existence of such data as a basis for agency decision-making rather than upon describing those data as accounts or accountings. Pennsylvania Association v. Department of Education, 91 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 531, 498 A.2d 16 (1985); Patients of Philadelphia State Hospital v. Department of Public Welfare, 53 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 126, 417 A.2d 805 (1980).
Of course, that principle — that the foundations of bureaucratic decision-making should be open to the public — soundly contradicts DPW’s contention here that these Reports should not be public because they are for management purposes, i.e., decision-making.
Thus, in the final analysis we see that the dichotomy expressed by DPW before the remand was not a valid one. The relationship between (1) an account dealing with the disbursement of funds, and (2) an accounting of disbursements assembled for the purpose of internal management is not mutually exclusive. Both of those classes of information involve accounting for public funds and hence can be, and are, public records open to the citizenry which provides those funds.
Indeed, public examination of an isolated debit or credit entry will yield little or no enlightenment to anyone other than the particular individual to whom it pertains, but a compiled accounting of a large series of transactions can well apprise *245the public as to how the public’s servants are performing. And that obviously is one important purpose of the Right-to-Know Act.
Public agency management data should be open to top management — the public.
CONCLUSION
The Act implements, with the specificity recited above, the broad concept that the citizens of the Commonwealth are entitled to have access to records dealing with public funds.
The action of DPW must be reversed and an order issued to allow petitioner Sipe to copy the requested records in accordance with reasonable rules as authorized by § 3 of the Act.

ORDER

NOW, April 6, 1994, it is ORDERED that the refusal actions of the Department of Public Welfare (DPW), dated June 23, 1992, and July 13, 1992, and August 17, 1992, are reversed, and DPW is directed to provide to petitioner an opportunity to copy nursing home Settlement and Appeal Activity Reports for the monthly periods of July, 1989 through June, 1992, inclusive.
PELLEGRINI, J., filed dissenting opinion in which SMITH, J., joined.

. The title commonly used to describe the Act of June 21, 1957, P.L. 390, as amended, 65 P.S. §§ 66.1-66.4.