Court Opinion

ID: 4204196
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-09-18 17:07:52.188202+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:41:09.592906
License: Public Domain

2017 IL App (2d) 170025
                                  No. 2-17-0025
                         Opinion filed September 15, 2017
______________________________________________________________________________

                                              IN THE

                              APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                              SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________

WARREN R. GARLICK,                     ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
                                       ) of Du Page County.
      Plaintiff-Appellant,             )
                                       )
v.                                     ) No. 14-CH-2263
                                       )
NAPERVILLE TOWNSHIP,                   ) Honorable
                                       ) Paul M. Fullerton,
      Defendant-Appellee.              ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

       JUSTICE JORGENSEN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
       Justices McLaren and Zenoff concurred in the judgment and opinion.

                                            OPINION

¶1     Plaintiff, Warren R. Garlick, sought, under the Freedom of Information Act (Act) (5

ILCS 140/1 et seq. (West 2016)), from defendant, Naperville Township, an electronic copy of its

real-property database in its native file format. The township declined to provide an electronic

copy of the database, but it directed plaintiff to its website, where he could search for the records

on a parcel-by-parcel basis. 5 ILCS 140/8.5 (West 2016). Plaintiff, pro se, filed a complaint for

declaratory and injunctive relief, arguing that access to the data on a parcel-by-parcel basis on

the website did not constitute reasonable access. See id. The trial court granted the township’s

motion to dismiss. This court reversed and remanded, holding that plaintiff properly pleaded the
2017 IL App (2d) 170025

reasonable-access claim, which presented a question appropriately addressed in a summary-

judgment motion or at trial. Garlick v. Naperville Township, 2016 IL App (2d) 150381-U, ¶ 27.

¶2     On remand, upon the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court denied

plaintiff’s motion and granted the township’s. The court rejected plaintiff’s claim that, because

industry-wide database standards could be expressed in only a few ways, there was no

intellectual-property protection over any database. It also found that two statutory exemptions

applied to preclude disclosure of the database in its native file format, because the township’s

software vendor, JRM Consulting, Inc. (JRM), asserted confidentiality, trade-secret, and

copyright claims over its intellectual property. 5 ILCS 140/7(1)(a) (West 2016) (information,

such as copyrights or trade secrets, that are prohibited from disclosure by federal or State law); 5

ILCS 140/7(1)(g) (West 2016) (proprietary or confidential trade-secret or financial information,

where disclosure would cause competitive harm). Plaintiff, pro se, appeals. We affirm.

¶3                                     I. BACKGROUND

¶4                           A. Proceedings Leading to First Appeal

¶5     Plaintiff is a resident of River Forest, which is situated in Cook County. The township is

a unit of local government situated in Du Page County and a “public body” under the Act. 5

ILCS 140/2(a) (West 2016).

¶6     The township assesses all real property within its boundaries, for local taxation purposes.

There are about 32,000 real-property records on parcels within its jurisdiction. As part of the

assessment process, the township gathers, assembles, and maintains information concerning the

valuation and assessment of the parcels. The information is entered into and stored in the

database that the township commissioned from JRM.

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¶7     As part of the database system, a webserver allows the public to retrieve property

information on a parcel-by-parcel basis from the database. The server does not allow a user to

search multiple parcels at one time. Further, a user cannot perform a search based on any other

property information on the data-display page, such as property size or age and number of

bedrooms or bathrooms. Nor can one perform a collective statistical analysis of the parcels.

¶8     On December 4, 2014, plaintiff submitted to the township a request pursuant to the Act

(FOIA request). First, he noted that the township’s website “enables the public to search for

property details based on” parcel numbers and that the details are stored in the database (“most

likely [Microsoft] SQL Server or MySQL”). Further, “[p]ursuant to FOIA, I request a copy of

this database in its native file format,” which “refers to the file format which the application

works with during creation, edition or publication of a file.” 1 Second, as to photographs,

improvement sketches, and site maps, all of which were in the form of .jpeg files and were not

contained in the database, plaintiff sought a copy of the “N07” root or parent directory and all

subdirectories, including the .jpeg files stored therein, preserved onto a suitable electronic

medium. Plaintiff stated that his request was “nothing more than a simple ‘copy and paste’ of

the database in question to a suitable electronic media (such as a DVD) along with a similar

‘copy and paste’ of the ‘N07’ directory and all subdirectories and files beneath that directory.”

¶9     On December 12, 2014, the township sent plaintiff a letter denying his request. It

asserted that, pursuant to section 8.5 of the Act (5 ILCS 140/8.5 (West 2014)), which had been

recently enacted, it was no longer required to provide these electronic records in the manner or

format that plaintiff had requested, because it had posted the information on its website. It

       1
           Subsequently, plaintiff clarified that the native file format is the SQL Server format.

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directed plaintiff to the website for the data, noting that it consisted of over 32,000 individual

property records.

¶ 10   The township further stated:

       “The property records software, as currently constituted, is incapable of generating

       assessment records on a Township-wide basis. In addition, it is not feasible to provide

       the records requested, as the Assessor’s Office does not have possession of or access to

       the database in its native file format. (See 5 ILCS 104/6(a)). Nor is the Assessor’s

       Office required to create such a file under [the Act]. (See 5 ILCS 140/1).”

The township also stated that, although plaintiff’s request was silent on the issue, the township

was treating his request as a commercial request.

¶ 11   On December 19, 2014, plaintiff filed against the township his complaint for declaratory

and injunctive relief, alleging a violation of the Act. 5 ILCS 140/11(a) (West 2014). He asserted

that his request amounted to “nothing more than a single ‘cut and paste’ operation, imposing no

significant burdens on the Township.” Plaintiff argued that the township was compelling him to

launch 32,000 independent web database search queries and to copy and paste each of them into

a table of his own creation. He estimated that such a project would involve over 2,600 hours of

his time, which could not have been the General Assembly’s intent in enacting section 8.5.

Addressing the township’s claim that it could not feasibly provide the requested records, plaintiff

asserted that the township possessed and had access to the data, which was stored on its local

server at its office and backed up in the “cloud.” He also asserted that copying the database did

not constitute the creation of a new record that the township had no statutory obligation to

provide.

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¶ 12   The township moved, under section 2-615 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (735

ILCS 5/2-615 (West 2014)), to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint, arguing that plaintiff failed to state

a cause of action under the Act, because: (1) the Act unambiguously no longer required a public

body to copy public records that are available online; (2) the undisputed facts showed that

plaintiff had reasonable access to the records he requested and that section 8.5 of the Act did not

dictate how or in what form records must be posted online; (3) the legislative history supported

the township’s position; and (4) the Act did not require a public body to spend funds to benefit

private individuals, such as by creating, maintaining, or producing records in a specific format.

Accordingly, the township sought dismissal with prejudice. (The motion did not address the

township’s statement in its denial letter that its software was incapable of generating the records

on a township-wide basis or that it did not possess or have access to the database in its native file

format.)

¶ 13   After a hearing, the trial court granted the township’s motion, finding that: (1) the

township complied with section 8.5 of the Act; (2) there were no allegations that any information

was unavailable; and (3) “[i]t just requires a little longer format and search, but it is published as

required by law.”

¶ 14   On appeal, this court reversed and remanded, holding that dismissal was improper

because plaintiff stated a claim that the requested records were not reasonably accessible

pursuant to section 8.5 of the Act, thus presenting a question appropriately addressed in a

summary-judgment motion or at trial. Garlick, 2016 IL App (2d) 150381-U, ¶ 27.

¶ 15                                B. Proceedings on Remand

¶ 16   On April 21, 2016, plaintiff moved for summary judgment (735 ILCS 5/2-1005 (West

2016)). He alleged that the effort required for him to recreate the database—over 2,600 hours of

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his time—and the ease with which the township could provide the same were not in contention;

the only remaining question was the reasonable-access issue; and the policy behind the Act

dictates that requiring him to engage in one year’s worth of effort to retrieve the records online

fails the reasonable-access threshold.

¶ 17   In its response, the township argued that plaintiff’s motion must fail because: (1) plaintiff

failed to present any verified pleadings, depositions, admissions, or affidavits to support his

claim for summary judgment; and (2) factual and legal issues precluded summary judgment in

plaintiff’s favor, including that: the township could not provide plaintiff the database in its native

file format, because it does not possess the data in that format; plaintiff rejected the spreadsheet

the township offered; and, even if the township possessed the database in its native file format,

the information plaintiff seeks is protected intellectual property that is exempt from disclosure

under the Act. The township invoked (1) section 7(1)(g) of the Act (5 ILCS 140/7(1)(g) (West

2016)), arguing that disclosure would cause competitive harm to JRM because the data contains

proprietary information; (2) section 7(1)(i) of the Act (5 ILCS 140/7(1)(i) (West 2016)), arguing

that the request was subject to JRM’s claim that the information contains valuable formulae and

designs, the disclosure of which could reasonably be expected to produce private gain; and (3)

section 7(1)(a) of the Act (5 ILCS 140/7(1)(a) (West 2016)), arguing that, under the federal

copyright statute and the Illinois Trade Secrets Act (765 ILCS 1065/1 et seq. (West 2016)), it

was prohibited from providing the requested information.

¶ 18   The township attached to its response a copy of a May 20, 2016, letter to plaintiff in

which it offered to settle the case by providing “the data maintained in the Assessors IMS©

program,” which JRM maintains and licenses to the township to use and is subject to a software

license agreement. The letter further noted that the township could have the data transferred to a

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Microsoft Excel spreadsheet upon payment of $350. The letter noted that, under its license

agreement with JRM, the township’s use and distribution of the software was restricted by

JRM’s claim of copyright protection and its claim that the unlicensed disclosure of the data in its

native file format violates JRM’s proprietary interests in the software. The letter further noted

the statutory exemptions.

¶ 19   In a scheduling order dated June 7, 2016, the trial court noted that plaintiff had rejected

the township’s offer to provide the requested data in an Excel spreadsheet.

¶ 20   On July 6, 2016, the township filed a cross-motion for summary judgment, arguing that

(1) it does not possess the database in its native file format and, by requesting the native file

format and rejecting the spreadsheet, plaintiff is actually requesting JRM’s copyrighted software,

which is not a public record under the Act; and (2) even if the township possessed the

information as requested, the information is exempt from disclosure under: (a) section 7(1)(g) of

the Act, as trade secrets or proprietary confidential information; (b) section 7(1)(i), as containing

valuable formulae and designs, the disclosure of which could reasonably be expected to produce

private gain; and (c) section 7(1)(a) of the Act, as trade secrets and copyrighted information.

¶ 21   In support of its first argument, the township attached to its motion a July 6, 2016,

affidavit from Jerry Marquardt, JRM’s president. Marquardt averred that JRM develops and

licenses custom software for small- and medium-sized businesses and provides consulting

services in connection with the use of its software. The Assessors IMS© program is a mass-

appraisal software system that JRM developed and created in 1993. The system is proprietary

and copyright-protected, and JRM is its exclusive owner. The software is “designed for the use

of real property assessment entities in maintaining, sorting and organizing real property

characteristics, data, values and other information associated with real properties located within

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their assessment jurisdictions.” Marquardt averred that the software and its data files, in their

native file format, are subject to copyright protection and contain proprietary information, trade

secrets, and valuable formulae, including “information on program code, database fields,

database names, database schemas and table layouts and are sufficiently secret to derive

economic value, actual or potential, from not being generally known to other unauthorized

persons who can obtain economic value from their disclosure or use.”           JRM licensed the

township to use the software, subject to certain terms and conditions, including that the township

is prohibited from disclosing the data from the software in its native file format and does not

possess the native file format. Marquardt averred that the data is translated to the township’s

website for public reference and that the website does not contain the copyrighted, proprietary,

and trade-secret information contained in the software. Marquardt reviewed plaintiff’s request,

and he determined that disclosing the requested information in its native file format would

disclose JRM’s protected intellectual property, trade secrets, and proprietary information. JRM

did not consent to any such disclosure, which “would cause substantial competitive harm to

JRM” because plaintiff or others could use the information for commercial gain. Specifically,

plaintiff or others could create a competing software program with similar or identical program

code, database fields, database names, database schemas, and table layouts. Finally, he averred

that JRM was willing to transfer, for $350, the requested data to a single, sortable electronic

database file, such as a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet, “which can be disclosed to Plaintiff without

the unauthorized disclosure of JRM’s intellectual property, trade secrets or proprietary

information in connection with the Assessors IMS© software.”

¶ 22   The software license agreement between JRM and the township, which the township also

attached to its motion, states that the township:

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        “has no right to transfer, disclose or otherwise make available the Software, the program

        code, the database fields, the database names and all data related items to any third

        parties, the Software, the program code, the database fields, the database names and all

        data related items being protectable intellectual property. *** [The township] will not

        attempt to access or directly access, query or analyze any of the Assessors IMS©

        database tables using any other means or software which includes but is not limited to the

        database schemas or any other portions of the Software. [JRM] maintains all copyrights

        and other property interests pertaining to the Software and ha[s] the exclusive right to

        license its use for commercial purposes. *** [The township] acknowledges and agrees

        that breach by it of any of the provisions of this agreement could cause irreparable injury

        to JRM which by its nature would be continuing and substantial, and for which no

        adequate remedy at law exists.”

¶ 23    In his response, plaintiff argued that Marquardt’s affidavit was conclusory and should be

stricken; that there is no trade-secret protection for the database in its native file format, because

the basis for the property tax is widely known to the public; that there is no copyright protection

for it, because development of a database follows well-established industry standards such that

there is very little variation in databases’ schema, tables, and field names; and, alternatively, that

plaintiff should be permitted to depose Marquardt under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 191(b)

(eff. Jan. 4, 2013).

¶ 24    Plaintiff also argued that a February 11, 2014, affidavit by Warren Dixon, the township’s

assessor, which was filed in another case, supports his claim that the township possesses the

database in its native file format. In the affidavit, Dixon averred that the township’s valuation

and assessment of real property includes “gathering, assembling, and maintaining information

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related to the property on individual Record Cards in a computerized database.” The township

hired JRM “to create a custom computer database that is capable of generating” reports; the

township inputs information it has gathered into the database; and the township uses the database

to generate reports. He further averred, and plaintiff focused on this statement, that the “property

information is stored on a local server at the Township Assessor’s office and is backed up locally

and in the cloud.” Dixon also averred that, if a report other than a sales-ratio report, equity

report, or new construction/deconstruction report needs to be generated, the township must hire a

software company to reprogram the database to generate a new report containing the specific

information in question.

¶ 25   On August 3, 2016, plaintiff moved for additional discovery under Rule 191(b), seeking

to depose Marquardt “and other [unspecified] persons possessing knowledge of material facts” to

show the “falsity of positions” the township articulated in its summary-judgment motion,

specifically, the falsity of the claim that responding to plaintiff’s request would breach trade-

secret and copyright protections. In addition to the depositions, plaintiff sought to propound

“interrogatories and request[s] for production of documents” from JRM and the township.

Plaintiff attached his affidavit to the motion, averring that the deposition topics would include:

(1) the extent to which JRM has incorporated Illinois Department of Revenue guidelines,

property-assessment formulas, and other related material into its software; (2) the extent to which

JRM has incorporated industry-wide standards common throughout the database-development

industry; and (3) all other matters relevant to defeating any claims of trade-secret and copyright

protection over the database.

¶ 26   Also in August 2016, the township offered to provide plaintiff with the data in an SQL

Server database file and waive the $350 fee. Plaintiff declined.

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¶ 27                                 C. Trial Court’s Findings

¶ 28   On September 9, 2016, the trial court issued its findings in a 17-page memorandum.

First, it addressed plaintiff’s summary-judgment motion, wherein plaintiff argued that the

township failed to comply with section 8.5 of the Act, because its website did not provide him

with reasonable access to its real-property records in their entirety. The trial court found that

plaintiff failed to provide evidence supporting his argument that it would take over 2,600 hours

to compile the requested data from the website. Accordingly, the court denied plaintiff’s motion,

determining that there remained a factual question on the reasonableness issue.

¶ 29   Second, the court addressed the township’s cross-motion for summary judgment. The

court rejected plaintiff’s argument that Marquardt’s affidavit be stricken as conclusory. See Ill.

S. Ct. R. 191(a) (eff. Jan. 4, 2013) (summary-judgment affidavits “shall not consist of

conclusions but of facts admissible in evidence”). The court noted that the affidavit was made

on Marquardt’s personal knowledge as JRM’s president; he attested to facts, not conclusions; he

relied on and referred to the license agreement; he attested that the software and its data in the

native file format are subject to copyright and trade-secret protection and contain proprietary

information and valuable formulae, including program codes and data fields; he attested that the

township has only a license to use the Assessors IMS© program and that it is nontransferable;

and he attested that providing the data in its native file format to plaintiff would cause substantial

competitive harm in that plaintiff or others could use it for commercial gain. Further, Marquardt

stated that he could competently testify if called to do so. The court also found that the facts in

Marquardt’s affidavit were deemed admitted because plaintiff had filed no counteraffidavit.

¶ 30   Next, the court addressed the township’s claim that it should be granted summary

judgment because it does not possess the database in its native file format and because the

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database in its native file format, which JRM possesses, is not a public record. The court found

that, unless an exemption applied, the database in its native file format, which is the format

maintained by the township, is a public record subject to disclosure, regardless of whether JRM

or the township possesses it. See 5 ILCS 140/7(2) (West 2016) (public record possessed not by

public body but by party with whom public body has contracted to perform governmental

function on its behalf, and that directly relates to such function and is not otherwise exempt, is

considered a public record of the public body).

¶ 31   The trial court next turned to the exemptions. Preliminarily, the court found that the

township did not forfeit the issue by failing to include them in its denial letter to plaintiff,

because the statute mandates that the trial court conduct de novo review. See 5 ILCS 140/11(f)

(West 2016).

¶ 32   First, the court addressed section 7(1)(g) of the Act, which protects trade secrets and

financial information that are proprietary or confidential and disclosure of which would cause

competitive harm. The court pointed to Marquardt’s affidavit and the license agreement, which

reflected that JRM allowed the township to use the software in exchange for the township

treating it as confidential and protectable intellectual property. The court found that, since

disclosure would have a chilling effect upon the township’s subsequent ability to receive helpful

software or tools from similar companies, the database in its native file format was exempt from

disclosure under section 7(1)(g). The court noted that the fact that the basis for taxation is

widely known under the Property Tax Code (35 ILCS 200/1-1 et seq. (West 2016)) did not

preclude a finding that the software is proprietary or that the database in its native file format is a

trade secret and contains confidential and proprietary information. Further, the court noted that

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plaintiff had not provided a counteraffidavit or other evidence to support his “blanket” argument

that the basis for taxation is widely known.

¶ 33    Next, the court addressed section 7(1)(i) of the Act, which protects valuable formulae and

designs “when disclosure could reasonably be expected to produce private gain or public loss.”

5 ILCS 140/7(1)(i) (West 2016). The court declined to grant summary judgment as to this

exemption, finding that the issues of private gain and public loss presented factual questions

here.   The court noted, however, that Marquardt’s affidavit and the license agreement

demonstrated that the database, in its native file format, includes valuable formulae and designs

the disclosure of which could reasonably be expected to produce public loss because, under the

license agreement, JRM could terminate the township’s right to use the software and JRM could

bring a breach-of-contract claim against the township.

¶ 34    As to section 7(1)(a) of the Act, which protects information―such as trade secrets and

copyrights―prohibited from disclosure by federal or state law, the trial court found that: (1)

because the Trade Secrets Act precludes disclosure of the database in its native file format

(because JRM has not consented to disclosure and the township has a contractual duty to

maintain secrecy under the license agreement), the exemption applies.           The court rejected

plaintiff’s arguments that (1) the basis for taxation is widely known, noting that plaintiff had not

provided a counteraffidavit or other evidence; and (2) because industry-wide database standards

could be expressed in only a few ways, the court should invoke the “merger doctrine,” which

dictates that, if there is only one feasible way to express an idea, the expression is not protected

by federal copyright law. The court found that the merger doctrine does not apply, because there

is not only one feasible way of creating the software and formatting work such as table layouts.

The exemption applies because JRM is the exclusive owner of the software containing the

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original program code and table layouts, which are subject to copyright law, and is the only party

that can distribute it to the public.

¶ 35    Finally, the trial court denied plaintiff’s motion for additional discovery, finding that

plaintiff’s affidavit lacked the necessary disclosures under Rule 191(b). Specifically, plaintiff

failed to allege that Marquardt is the only person with knowledge of any material facts and failed

to allege what he believed Marquardt would testify to, and plaintiff essentially challenged the

validity of JRM’s copyright and trade-secret protections, which is “far afield from” the issues in

this case and for which the trial court is not an appropriate forum.

¶ 36    In summary, the trial court denied plaintiff’s summary-judgment motion, denied his

motion for additional discovery, and granted the township’s summary-judgment motion.

¶ 37    On September 12, 2016, the trial court set the case for hearing “as to reasonableness of

making the information available [online], in Excel [s]preadsheet format or SQL Server format.”

¶ 38    On September 20, 2016, plaintiff moved for clarification on: whether the hearing would

include the factual issue of public loss/private gain; the burden of proof as to reasonable access;

and the extent of the data encompassed by the reasonable-access inquiry (i.e., the data published

online versus all public data within the database). He attached printouts of, among other things,

Department of Revenue publications and Marquardt’s emails to at least two other townships.

¶ 39    The township also moved for clarification of the court’s September 12, 2016, order,

noting that the court’s findings on September 8, 2016, were that the database in its native file

format was exempt from disclosure under sections 7(1)(g) and 7(1)(a) of the Act and, thus, no

issues remained pending (or they were rendered moot). As to the reasonable-access issue, the

township argued that the issue was moot because: (1) plaintiff never tried to retrieve the records

online; and (2) the township no longer claimed that plaintiff’s request can be satisfied by the

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online database. Further, it noted that it had offered plaintiff all of the information contained in

the requested records, in two different comparable formats. He could, it suggested, reformat his

request and “probably be entitled to receive some records from” the township. The township

reiterated that it was willing to provide plaintiff with the information in an Excel spreadsheet, an

SQL Server database file, or some other reasonable format, so long as it did not contain JRM’s

proprietary information. Thus, the township argued, no factual issues remained to be resolved,

because plaintiff could either make a new FOIA request, accept the township’s offer, or appeal.

¶ 40   Plaintiff responded that the reasonable-access issue was not moot merely because the

township had changed its position (presumably to avoid the imposition of civil penalties), also

noting that attorney fees had not been adjudicated. He also argued that the imposition of a $350

transfer fee violated the Act, where his request was not for commercial purposes, and that an

Excel spreadsheet was not the format in which he requested the data. Finally, plaintiff argued

that any ruling must include all of the disclosable public data within the database (which

consists, he stated, of considerably more data than is published online). He asserted that: (1) he

did not seek program code, which is protected; (2) the source of any valuable formulae is the

Department of Revenue and such data is not protected; (3) database fields, names, and schemas

and table layouts are not protected, because they are based on industry-wide database standards

and thus can be considered ideas (which, unlike expressions of ideas, are not copyrightable),

because the standards dictate so few ways of expressing these ideas; and (4) protecting the

expression of the ideas in this case would effectively accord protection to the ideas themselves

and confer a monopoly over them, in contravention of the Act. Finally, plaintiff argued that the

township had not proposed how proprietary information can be extracted without rendering the

database unusable, “given that the very elements that the Township alleges are proprietary

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information are integral to the database itself and have arisen from the dictates of database

industry standards.”

¶ 41   On January 10, 2017, the trial court clarified that its September 9, 2016, order granted

summary judgment to the township “in full,” for the reasons stated in the original memorandum

and order on the same date and for the “reasons stated on the record today.” 2 It further found

that its order was final and appealable and that the “hearing as to ‘reasonableness’ will not

proceed.” Plaintiff appeals.

¶ 42                                       II. ANALYSIS

¶ 43   Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment to the township

and requests that we reverse and remand for further proceedings. For the following reasons, we

conclude that the trial court correctly found that the exemption under section 7(1)(a) of the Act,

for trade secrets and copyrights, precludes the disclosure of the database in its native file format.

¶ 44   Summary judgment may be granted where “the pleadings, depositions, 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.” 735 ILCS 5/2-1005(c)

       2
           At the hearing, the court commented that “what got lost” in its September 8, 2016,

decision was that plaintiff requested the information only in its native file format. The court

clarified that there were no remaining material factual questions. “[W]hat I should have done is

granted summary judgment in full” to the township. It also found moot plaintiff’s motion for

clarification. The court reiterated that it had determined that the township does not have to

provide the database in its native file format. Thus, plaintiff could: (1) revise his FOIA request;

(2) retrieve the records online; (3) accept the township’s proposal; or (4) appeal. Also at this

hearing, plaintiff clarified that “native file format” means SQL Server format.

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(West 2016). “In making this determination the pleadings, depositions, admissions, exhibits, and

affidavits are to be construed strictly against the movant and liberally in favor of the opponent.”

Delaney Electric Co. v. Schiessle, 235 Ill. App. 3d 258, 263 (1992). “In addition, the court must

draw all reasonable inferences from the record in favor of the nonmoving party.” Id. However,

although the court may draw inferences from undisputed facts, summary judgment should be

denied where reasonable persons can “draw divergent inferences from undisputed facts.”

Outboard Marine Corp. v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., 154 Ill. 2d 90, 102 (1992). We review

de novo summary-judgment rulings. Crum & Forster Managers Corp. v. Resolution Trust

Corp., 156 Ill. 2d 384, 390 (1993). Further, whether an exemption applies under the Act is a

question of statutory construction, which we review de novo. City of Chicago v. Janssen

Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 2017 IL App (1st) 150870, ¶ 13. We also review de novo a ruling on a

motion to strike an affidavit made in conjunction with a summary-judgment ruling. Jackson v.

Graham, 323 Ill. App. 3d 766, 773 (2001).

¶ 45   Plaintiff’s data request was as follows: noting that the township’s website “enables the

public to search for property details based on” parcel numbers and that the details are stored in a

database (“most likely SQL Server or MySQL”), “[p]ursuant to FOIA, [he] request[ed] a copy of

this database in its native file format,” which “refers to the file format which the application

works with during creation, edition or publication of a file.” 3 The township maintains that its

offer, which plaintiff has rejected, to provide the contents of the database in SQL server format,

without any fee. But it seeks to protect the software in which the contents are maintained, and it

       3
           Plaintiff’s also sought .jpeg files in the root directory and subdirectories. To the extent

that these files are distinct from the property details in the database, we find any arguments

concerning the files forfeited because plaintiff does not specifically address them on appeal.

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notes that this software is provided under the license agreement and is copyrighted and furnished

under a claim that it is proprietary and confidential.

¶ 46                                   A. Preliminary Issues

¶ 47   First, we address several preliminary issues. Plaintiff argues that the township should

have been barred from raising the exemptions in its summary-judgment motion. He asserts that

the township forfeited the exemptions by failing to raise them earlier in the proceedings,

specifically, when it moved to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint. He suggests that the township

should have filed a section 2-619.1 motion to dismiss (735 ILCS 5/2-619.1 (West 2014)), raising

the exemptions as affirmative matter under section 2-619(a)(9) (735 ILCS 5/2-619(a)(9) West

2014)). 4 According to plaintiff, the township obtained a second and impermissible de novo

review after remand. See 5 ILCS 140/11(f) (West 2016) (“In any action considered by the court,

the court shall consider the matter de novo, and shall conduct such in camera examination of the

requested records as it finds appropriate to determine if such records or any part thereof may be

withheld under any provision of this Act.” (Emphasis added.)). This, he argues, runs counter to

the public policy underlying the Act, which encourages prompt disclosure and prioritizes some

cases. 5 ILCS 140/1, 11(h) (West 2016). We disagree. A party may file a summary-judgment

motion at any time, even before filing an answer, and an affirmative matter may be raised in the

motion even though it was not raised in an answer. See, e.g., Falcon Funding, LLC v. City of

Elgin, 399 Ill. App. 3d 142, 156 (2010); Metropolitan Sanitary District v. Anthony Pontarelli &

Sons, Inc., 7 Ill. App. 3d 829, 838 (1972); see also 735 ILCS 5/2-1005(a), (b) (West 2016)

(“[a]ny time after the opposite party has appeared ***, a plaintiff may move *** for summary

       4
           Plaintiff states in his brief that he is not arguing that the township forfeited the

exemptions by not including them in its denial letter.

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judgment”; a “defendant may, at any time, move *** for summary judgment”). Further, the

filing of a combined motion under section 2-619.1 is optional, not mandatory. See 735 ILCS

5/2-619.1 (West 2016) (“Motions with respect to pleadings under Section 2-615, motions for

involuntary dismissal or other relief under Section 2-619, and motions for summary judgment

under Section 2-1005 may be filed together as a single motion in any combination.” (Emphasis

added.)). Plaintiff cites no case law and relies merely on the Act’s general policy. We believe

that, had the legislature, in enacting the Act and specifying its general goals, intended to supplant

the Code’s pleading options, it would have explicitly done so. Finally, we note that nowhere in

this court’s decision in the first appeal did we limit the proceedings or available defenses on

remand.

¶ 48   Next, plaintiff argues that the trial court did not adequately address the data stored within

the database but not published online. He contends that, via FOIA requests to other townships

that license the JRM software (which he submitted with his motion for clarification, though

without any affidavits from the individuals who forwarded him the information), he has been

able to ascertain that there is “substantially more” data stored within the database than is

published online. This data, he notes, is in keeping with the Property Tax Code’s requirements.

Plaintiff contends that the township refuses to disclose this data on the basis that doing so would

violate JRM’s trade-secret and copyright protections. Plaintiff argues that this premise turns

FOIA on its ear and that, even assuming that JRM has a copyright claim to the database, it

cannot use copyright law to prevent disclosure on the ground that the public data is so

inextricably intertwined with the copyrightable elements of its design that the public data cannot

be extracted without revealing these copyrightable elements.            He relies on Assessment

Technologies of WI, LLC v. WIREdata, 350 F.3d 640 (7th Cir. 2003), to support this claim. We

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conclude that plaintiff’s argument fails because the township has offered to provide all of the

contents of the database, excluding the software. And we note that, to the extent that the

contents include more information than is available via the website, this satisfies plaintiff’s

request. The township has refused to disclose not any public records, but only the software that

it claims is protected intellectual property.          In Assessment Technologies, a copyright-

infringement case, not an open-records case, the plaintiff copyright owner of a database sued the

defendant, seeking to protect noncopyrighted data (specifically, property assessment data that

was in the public domain) in the database by blocking the defendant from obtaining it from the

plaintiff’s licensees, which were several Wisconsin municipalities that collected the raw data in

the database. The plaintiff argued that the data could not be extracted without infringing on its

copyright for the database. The court rejected the plaintiff’s claim, holding that the data was

beyond the scope of the plaintiff’s copyright, because data is not copyrightable. Id. at 646-47.

The court listed several ways in which the defendant could obtain the data without infringing on

the plaintiff’s copyright and noted that the method would be selected by each municipality, “in

light of applicable trade-secret, open-records, and contract laws.”       Id. at 647.    The court

cautioned that the plaintiff would have lost the case even if the raw data could not be extracted

without making a copy of the program. Id. at 644. This was so because the purpose of copying

would be limited to extracting only noncopyrighted material.         Id. at 645. 5   Here, plaintiff

       5
           Further, in rejecting the defendant’s argument that the plaintiff’s database was

insufficiently original to be copyrightable, the Assessment Technologies court noted that, in

contrast to patent law, copyright law “does not require substantial originality,” but “only enough

to enable a work to be distinguished from similar works that are in the public domain.” Id. at

643. The database at issue satisfied the “modest requirement *** because no other real estate

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contends that Assessment Technologies stands for the proposition that a party cannot use

copyright law to prevent disclosure of public data on the ground that the data is inextricably

intertwined with the copyrightable elements of a program’s design. We fail to see how that point

is relevant here. Again, the township has refused to disclose not any public records, but only the

software that JRM claims is protected intellectual property. Plaintiff rejected the township’s

offer to provide the contents of the database in SQL server format.

¶ 49   Next, plaintiff argues that Marquardt’s affidavit is conclusory and thus should have been

stricken.   He also contends that Marquardt’s deposition in another case “raises serious

questions” that warrant “a clearer explanation.” We reject these arguments. The trial court

correctly found that the affidavit is not conclusory and refused to strike it. Marquardt averred

that JRM develops and licenses custom software for small- and medium-sized businesses and

provides consulting services in connection with the use of its software. The Assessors IMS©

program is a mass-appraisal software system that JRM developed and created in 1993. The

system is proprietary and copyright-protected, and JRM is its exclusive owner. The software is

“designed for the use of real property assessment entities in maintaining, sorting and organizing

real property characteristics, data, values and other information associated with real properties

located within their assessment jurisdictions.” Marquardt averred that the software and its data

files, in their native file format, are subject to copyright protection and contain proprietary

information, trade secrets, and valuable formulae, including “information on program code,

assessment program arranges the data collected by the assessor in these 456 fields grouped into

these 34 categories, and because this structure is not so obvious or inevitable as to lack the

minimal originality required, [citation], as it would if the compilation program simply listed data

in alphabetical or numerical order.” Id.

                                              - 21 -
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database fields, database names, database schemas and table layouts and are sufficiently secret to

derive economic value, actual or potential, from not being generally known to other unauthorized

persons who can obtain economic value from their disclosure or use.”           JRM licensed the

township to use the software, subject to certain terms and conditions, including that the township

is prohibited from disclosing the data from the software in its native file format and does not

possess the native file format. Marquardt averred that the data is translated to the township’s

website for public reference and that the website does not contain the copyrighted, proprietary,

and trade-secret information contained in the software. Marquardt reviewed plaintiff’s request,

and he determined that disclosing the requested information in its native file format would

disclose JRM’s protected intellectual property, trade secrets, and proprietary information. JRM

did not consent to any such disclosure, which “would cause substantial competitive harm to

JRM” because plaintiff or others could use the information for commercial gain. Specifically,

plaintiff or others could create a competing software program with similar or identical program

code, database fields, database names, database schemas, and table layouts. A “public body can

meet its burden [to show that an exemption applies] only by providing some objective indicia

that the exemption is applicable under the circumstances.” (Emphasis in original.) Illinois

Education Ass’n v. Illinois State Board of Education, 204 Ill. 2d 456, 470 (2003). Affidavits can

satisfy this burden, unless they are “conclusory, merely recite statutory standards, or are too

vague or sweeping.” Id. at 469. We conclude that the trial court did not err in finding that

Marquardt’s affidavit is not conclusory, vague, or sweeping. He sufficiently provided detailed

objective facts concerning his company’s software and his claims that the software is proprietary

and protected. Plaintiff offered no counteraffidavit or other evidence to raise a material factual

issue concerning the application of the exemptions.

                                              - 22 -
2017 IL App (2d) 170025

¶ 50    Plaintiff’s reliance on Marquardt’s deposition in another case is misplaced. He contends

that Marquardt’s deposition responses in that case were “an exercise in futility and obstruction,”

because Marquardt’s attorney objected to “the majority of the questions” on the grounds that

answering them would reveal proprietary information. We find these responses consistent with

the township’s position here that it is precluded by the license agreement from disclosing JRM’s

proprietary information. Plaintiff fails in his attempt to characterize this position as obstructive

and a basis for striking the affidavit.

¶ 51    Plaintiff also argues that Marquardt was unable to competently testify to any economic

loss JRM would suffer from the release of the database in its native file format. He points to

Marquardt’s statement that the unauthorized and unlicensed disclosure of the database in its

native file format would cause JRM substantial competitive harm. Next, plaintiff points to

Marquardt’s deposition testimony in the other case, wherein he stated that he had “no idea” of

the economic value a party could derive from making the data available to the public. Assuming

that consideration of the deposition is proper, we reject plaintiff’s argument, because we do not

believe that Marquardt was required to identify the particular economic value.

¶ 52    Next, plaintiff sought to depose Marquardt and other unspecified persons and asserted

that they possessed “information demonstrating the falsity of positions articulated in” the

township’s summary-judgment motion and Marquardt’s affidavit, specifically, the trade-secret

and copyright claims. The trial court denied the motion, finding that plaintiff’s affidavit violated

Rule 191(b), by stating only generally that he sought to depose knowledgeable persons, and that

plaintiff inappropriately sought to challenge the validity of JRM’s copyright and trade-secret

claims, which “is far afield from what is at issue” here. As we address below, we agree with the

trial court’s findings and conclude that proceedings under the Act are not avenues by which to

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challenge the validity of trade-secret and copyright claims and that the trial court and this court

are not proper forums in which to challenge a copyright.

¶ 53                                      B. Exemption

¶ 54   Having resolved the preliminary matters, we turn to the merits. Plaintiff argues that

section 7(1)(a)’s exemption for trade secrets and copyrights does not apply to preclude disclosure

of the requested information. For the following reasons, we conclude that the trial court did not

err in finding that the exemption applies. 6 We conclude that plaintiff’s arguments essentially

challenge the validity of JRM’s trade-secret and copyright claims and that proceedings under the

Act are not the proper mechanism to challenge such claims and, further, that this court is not the

proper forum in which to challenge a copyright claim.

¶ 55   Under the Act, Illinois has established a public policy that all “persons are entitled to full

and complete information regarding the affairs of government and the official acts and policies

of those who represent them.”       5 ILCS 140/1 (West 2016); see also Bowie v. Evanston

Community Consolidated School District No. 65, 128 Ill. 2d 373, 378 (1989) (statute’s purpose is

“to open governmental records to the light of public scrutiny”). Courts liberally construe the Act

to achieve the goal of “provid[ing] the public with easy access to government information”

Southern Illinoisan v. Illinois Department of Public Health, 218 Ill. 2d 390, 416 (2006). The Act

also provides that “[r]estraints on access to information, to the extent permitted by this Act, are

limited exceptions to the principle that the people of this State have a right to full disclosure of

information relating to the decisions, policies, procedures, rules, standards, and other aspects of

government activity that affect the conduct of government and the lives of any or all of the

       6
           Because we affirm on this basis, we need not address the other exemptions the trial

court addressed.

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2017 IL App (2d) 170025

people.” 5 ILCS 140/1 (West 2016). Thus, the Act’s exemptions are narrowly construed.

Janssen Pharmaceuticals, 2017 IL App (1st) 150870, ¶ 15.

¶ 56   The statute also provides: “This Act shall be the exclusive State statute on freedom of

information, except to the extent that other State statutes might create additional restrictions on

disclosure of information or other laws in Illinois might create additional obligations for

disclosure of information to the public.” 5 ILCS 140/1 (West 2016).

¶ 57   “A database is an aggregation of data, not a discrete document.” Hites v. Waubonsee

Community College, 2016 IL App (2d) 150836, ¶ 71. It “is akin to a file cabinet, and the data

that populates the database is like the files. [The Act] permits a proper request for a single file,

some of the files, or all of the files.” Id. “A public body may even be compelled to turn over an

entire database to the extent that the information is not exempt from disclosure.” Id. ¶ 36.

¶ 58   Section 7(1)(a) of the Act provides that the following “shall be exempt from inspection

and copying”:

                “(a) Information specifically prohibited from disclosure by federal or State law or

       rules and regulations implementing federal or State law.” 5 ILCS 140/7(1)(a) (West

       2016).

The relevant laws here are, again, the Trade Secrets Act and federal copyright law.

¶ 59   The trial court determined that the Trade Secrets Act precludes disclosure of the database

in its native file format, because JRM has not consented to disclosure and the township has a

contractual duty under the license agreement to maintain the secrecy of the database. The court

also found that federal copyright law precluded disclosure.

¶ 60   Plaintiff acknowledges, and we agree, that the proprietary nature of the JRM software has

been somewhat conflated with an SQL Server database storing the publicly disclosable property

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data to argue that the database format, per se, is a proprietary file format developed by JRM, not

Microsoft. However, it remains that plaintiff’s arguments essentially challenge the township’s

(and JRM’s) claims that the Assessors IMS© program is a trade secret and copyrighted. For this

reason, the arguments lack merit because challenges to the validity of trade-secret or copyright

claims are not proper proceedings under the Act. Further, this court is not the proper forum for

copyright claims. Plaintiff expends many pages of his briefs addressing whether the formulae in

JRM’s software are widely known and in the public domain, arguing that the formulae cannot be

subject to trade-secret or copyright protection. But, again, proceedings under the Act are not the

proper mechanism and this court is not the proper forum in which to raise such challenges.

Further, as the trial court found, plaintiff provided no counteraffidavit or other evidence to

support his claim that, for example, the basis for taxation is widely known.

¶ 61   As the township notes, JRM’s trade-secret and copyright claims do not extend to any

data that has been entered into the database using JRM’s software. That is, the data concerning

the real property that the township assesses is not protected and has been offered to plaintiff in

the form of a sortable spreadsheet such as an Excel or an SQL Server database file, not including

JRM’s software. Plaintiff claims on appeal that he is not seeking the software, but asking only

for a copy of the SQL Server database file that contains the publicly disclosable property data.

This apparently was the file that the township offered, and plaintiff offers no explanation as to

why he rejected it. Instead, he raises challenges to JRM’s intellectual-property claims, and they

are unavailing.

¶ 62                                   III. CONCLUSION

¶ 63   For the reasons stated, the judgment of the circuit court of Du Page County is affirmed.

¶ 64   Affirmed.

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