Court Opinion

ID: 6341669
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-05-17 21:07:22.085899+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:15:04.714729
License: Public Domain

STATE OF LOUISIANA

                                         COURT OF APPEAL

                                           FIRST CIRCUIT

                                            2021 CA 1167

                                            ZILLOW, INC.

                                               VERSUS

                   WAYNE BLANCHARD, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS
                     ASSESSOR FOR THE PARISH OF ASSUMPTION

                                                Judgment Rendered:      MAY17 2022

GN
                          On Appeal from the 23rd Judicial District Court
     j                            In and for the Parish of Assumption
                                           State of Louisiana
            t                           Trial Court No. 38094

                              Honorable Jason Verdigets, Judge Presiding

         Scott L. Sternberg                           Attorneys for Plaintiff/Appellant,
         Michael S. Finkelstein                       Zillow, Inc.
         M. Suzanne Montero
         Graham Williams
         New Orleans, Louisiana

         Brian A. Eddington
                                                      Attorney for Defendant/Appellee,
         Baton Rouge, Louisiana                       Wayne Blanchard, Assumption Parish
                                                      Assessor

                   BEFORE:        WHIPPLE, C. J., PENZATO, AND RESTER, JJ.
  PENZATO, J.

          Zillow, Inc.,
                          the plaintiff in this public records proceeding, appeals the trial
  court' s May 28, 2021 judgment denying its petition for writ ofmandamus and related
  request for attorney fees and costs. For the following reasons, the May 28, 2021

 judgment is affirmed.

          On October 27, 2020, Zillow, Inc.
                                            made a public records request to

 Assumption Parish Assessor Wayne Blanchard requesting " an opportunity to obtain
 an electronic copy of the current ( 2020) Assessment File( s) for all parcels in

 Assumption Parish."
                              Zillow identified the fields of data it sought to obtain,

 including parcel/ account numbers, owner names, addresses, breakdowns of assessed
 and market values, and tax and sales information. Zillow requested that Assessor

 Blanchard advise "
                         what information is available, if any cost is associated with this
 request,   data format ( i.e.: Excel, database,     text), media ( CD, FTP,      etc.)   and

 procedure to acquire the files( s)."

         Assessor Blanchard responded the same day, advising that the fee to obtain a
 copy of the 2020 tax roll is $
                                  800.00, and that Zillow needs to speak to the Assessor' s
software company, Software & Services, " concerning the technical aspect of the

roll,"   as Software &    Services has to release that information to   Zillow. Zillow was

further advised that additional charges would be associated with the release by
Software &     Services and was instructed to     contact Software &
                                                                         Services to verify
what is included in its file.

         Zillow followed up with Assessor Blanchard on October 29, 2020, inquiring
about what Zillow characterized as an " authorization fee" to acquire the records from
Software & Services.
                     Zillow requested that the " authorization fee" be waived and

that it be allowed to purchase the file from Software & Services for "a fee reflective

of the actual cost of providing the data." Without further communication, Assessor

                                              2
  Blanchard sent a disc to Zillow on November 3, 2020, containing a PDF of the 2020
  Assessment File.

         Unsatisfied with this production, Zillow filed a petition for writ of mandamus
  in February 2021 against Assessor Blanchard pursuant to La. R.S. 44:35 of the
 Louisiana Public Records Law. Zillow maintained that a PDF is not the format it

 requested and was not the format it received from Assessor Blanchard in prior years,
 when it paid the Assessor' s " authorization fee without challenge."
                                                                      Zillow urged that

 it needs " current data in its native format"
                                                  and further asserted that the data sought

 in the format requested is in the custody of Assessor Blanchard and/ or Software &
 Services.   Zillow prayed for an order directing Assessor Blanchard "            to produce

 copies of the records sought" in its public records       request "   for a fee reflective of

 actual costs of providing an electronic copy." Zillow also prayed for attorney fees

 and costs pursuant to La. R.S. 44: 35.      Zillow' s October 27, 2020 public records

 request, Assessor Blanchard' s October 27th response, and Zillow' s October 29th
 follow up regarding the "   authorization fee" are attached to and became a part of

 Zillow' s petition. See La. C. C.P. art. 853.

       In opposition to Zillow' s mandamus action, Assessor Blanchard asserted that
he provided the assessment record requested by Zillow, i.e.,
                                                                       a complete electronic

copy of the 2020 Assumption Parish              assessment roll.   After the petition for

mandamus was filed, it became apparent to Assessor Blanchard that Zillow wanted
the same information it received in previous years, when Zillow paid Software &
Services to " create a data file."
                                     Via email on March 26, 2021, Wendy Baldwin,

Administrative Assistant for the Assumption Parish Assessor, advised Zillow that
Assessor Blanchard does not " have the ability to
                                                  provide the data file" it requested.

She further explained that Assessor Blanchard no longer authorized Software &
Services to release " these files" to third parties, such as Zillow, due to concerns over
the release of confidential taxpayer information. Ms. Baldwin offered to have

                                            3
 Software &     Services " extract the information in [the Assessor' s] software and create

 a data file in the format" Zillow wants. Ms. Baldwin further explained to Zillow,

  We can provide you with a copy of this data file for a fee of $780, which represents

 the actual cost we will have to pay Software and Services to create the data file in

 the format you want plus the expense to review each parcel listing entry and verify
 that no confidential data is included."

        The trial court considered the merits of Zillow' s petition for mandamus on
 April 28, 2021.      After taking the matter under advisement, the trial court issued

 written reasons on May 28, 2021, finding that Zillow was not entitled to mandamus

 relief or attorney fees and costs. The trial court accepted Assessor Blanchard' s

 uncontroverted assertion that he does not have the data file in the format requested

 by Zillow and noted that a public body is not required to create a new document to

 satisfy a public records request.
                                          Instead, it is only obligated to produce existing
records.
             The trial court concluded that Assessor Blanchard complied with the

Louisiana Public Records Law by providing "the 2020 Assessment in electronic .pdf
format" to Zillow in November 2020
                                                   A judgment in conformity with this ruling
was signed on May 28, 2021. 1

        Zillow filed the instant appeal seeking to reverse the May 28, 2021 judgment,
asserting that the trial court erred by denying its petition for writ of mandamus.

1 In its petition for mandamus, Zillow also prayed for an award of civil penalties for Assessor
Blanchard' s purportedly arbitrary and capricious failure to produce records for a reasonable fee.
The judgment is silent on this issue. In its brief to this court, Zillow states that this claim was
withdrawn prior to judgment. This is not evident from the record. However, to the extent the claim
remained viable when judgment was rendered, we note that " silence in a judgment of the district
court as to any issue, claim, or demand placed before the court is deemed a rejection of the claim
and the relief sought is presumed to be denied."
                                                   Unisys Corporation v. Louisiana Office ofMotor
Vehicles Through Hodges, 2018-0556 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 12/ 28/ 18),   270 So. 3d 637, 654.

                                                   il
                                          DISCUSSION

 Public Records Law and Standard of Review

         The Public Records Law provides that any person who has been denied the

 right to obtain a copy or reproduction of a record may institute proceedings for the
 issuance of a writ of mandamus, injunctive or declaratory relief, together with

 attorney fees, costs, and damages. La. R.S. 44: 35( A). The court has jurisdiction to

 issue a writ of mandamus ordering the production of any records improperly
 withheld from the person seeking disclosure. The court shall determine the matter

 de novo, and the burden is on the custodian to sustain his action. La. R.S. 44: 35( B).

        An appellate court reviews a trial court' s judgment on a writ of mandamus

 under an abuse of discretion standard, but applies the manifest error standard of

 review to all findings of fact.
                                       Odoms v. Cammon, 2021- 0828 ( La. App.              1st Cir.

 3/ 3/ 22), 2022 WL 620773, * 3 ( unpublished).

 Zillow' s Assignments of Error

        On appeal, Zillow asserts that the trial court erroneously gave "               credit"   to

argument made by Assessor Blanchard' s counsel that the requested data file is not
in his possession.'     It maintains that, by " holding that the Assessor would have to

create a new document, the trial court assumed a fact completely unsupported by
evidence."
               Contrary to this assertion, we conclude that the evidence sufficiently
established that a data file must be created to satisfy Zillow' s request, and Zillow

failed to introduce evidence to rebut this showing.
        During the trial court proceeding, Zillow introduced Ms. Baldwin' s March 26,
2021 email, discussed above, into evidence.               Ms. Baldwin,
                                                                             responding in her

capacity as Administrative Assistant in the Assumption Parish Assessor' s Office,

  Zillow uses various terms to identify the requested record, such as document, assessment
database in its native format, text file, and electronic record. For ease of reference and based on
the description of the record at issue, we refer to the item sought by Zillow as a " data file."

                                                5
  stated multiple times that Software &      Services must " create" the requested data file.3

  Zillow also introduced Assessor Blanchard' s April 2021 responses to its requests for
  admission, wherein he again repeatedly stated that Software &               Services has the

  ability to " create a data record in the format         requested"
                                                                        by Zillow.     Assessor

 Blanchard explained in his responses that, in previous years, he authorized Software
     Services to access the database maintained by his office and to "              create"   and

 release a data record in the format requested by Zillow. However, he no longer

 authorizes Software &        Services to access the assessment database for the purposes

 of "creating data records"        for direct release to third parties due to confidentiality
 concerns.

         On appeal, Zillow argues that neither Assessor Blanchard nor Software &
 Services need to create anything, because the data file it seeks already exists.        Zillow

 makes various assertions concerning the nature of the data file, its purported

 existence, and the simplicity of producing it. However, Zillow offered no evidence

 to establish these facts or to rebut Assessor Blanchard' s evidence that a new file

 must be created to satisfy Zillow' s       request.
                                                       Argument of counsel and briefs, no

matter how artful, are not evidence. Seale & Ross, P.L.C. v. Holder, 2019- 1487 ( La.

App. 1st Cir. 8/ 3/ 20), 310 So. 3d 195, 204.

        The Third Circuit Court of Appeal recently rejected a similar argument made
by Zillow.     In Zillow, Inc. v. Taylor, 2021- 739 (La. App. 3d Cir. 3/ 30/22) ---       So. 3d

     2022 WL 946615, Zillow submitted a public records request to Catahoula Parish
Assessor Matt Taylor to obtain assessment records in their native format. Through

documentary evidence and testimony, Assessor Taylor established that he does not
have the capability to generate a database of the native data that Zillow requested.
Id. at * 1.   Software &
                             Services, the Catahoula Parish Assessor' s software vendor,

3 Ms. Baldwin' s email was attached as an exhibit to Assessor Blanchard' s memorandum in
opposition to Zillow' s petition for writ of mandamus. However, Zillow introduced the email into
evidence before the trial court.

                                               Con
   has this capability, but Assessor Taylor explained that he intended to charge a higher
   fee for the production of the requested data than he had in                    prior years "   due to the

   amount of work that goes into creating the data."                Id. at * 1- 2. ( Emphasis added.) To

  refute this, Zillow relied on an "
                                            inference that if the assessor can produce an image
  of a text — a . pdf file —
                            then         he can also produce the underlying text." Id. at *                 4.

  Zillow offered only argument to establish that Assessor Taylor had access to the
  requested data file in its native format.4 The               court noted, "   The flaw in its argument

  is that direct testimony indicated that Mr. Taylor does not have access to the native
  data." Id. (Emphasis original.)
                                          Thus, Zillow failed to rebut its opponent' s evidence,

  and the court concluded that Assessor Taylor satisfied Zillow' s public records
  request by producing the assessment as            a PDF. Id. at * 4- 5.

         Zillow relies on the same unsupported inference here to support its argument
 that the data file at issue already exists and is in Assessor Blanchard' s possession or
 control.'
              However, as with any other adversarial proceeding, Zillow was required
 to produce evidence to support its position and, particularly, to refute its opponent' s
 evidence once Assessor Blanchard satisfied his burden of proof. See Zillow, Inc. v.
 Taylor, --- So. 3d ---,      2022 WL, 946615           at *   4.   The only evidence in the record

 41stThisCir.court  recently
              4/ 8/ 22),      considered
                         --- So. 3d ---, a similar matter in Zillow, Inc. v. Gardner, 2021- 1172 ( La. App.
                                  2022 WL 1052232. There, the documentary evidence established
 that the East Feliciana Parish Assessor only possessed the assessment as a PDF. This court rejected
Zillow' s assertion that the East Feliciana Assessor should be ordered to have Software &          Services
create the assessment record in the text file format to satisfy Zillow' s request and concluded that
the Assessor satisfied Zillow' s public records request by producing an electronic ( PDF) copy of
the requested assessment. Id. at *
2/ 2/ 22), 333 So. 3d 854, 861- 62,   6. See also Zillow, Inc. v. Bealer, 2021- 545 ( La. App. 3d Cir.
                                    writ denied, 2022- 00378 ( La. 5/ 10/ 22) --- So. 3d ---,   wherein the
testimony and evidence adduced similarly        established that Software &       Services was capable of
creating the requested data file but that it did not yet exist. Again, the court concluded that the
Vernon Parish Assessor had no duty to create a new document and satisfied Zillow' s public records
request by producing a PDF of the requested assessment. Id. at 862- 63.
5 Zillow further asserts that the data file is in Assessor Blanchard' s control because he admits that
Software &
behind"      Services is capable of producing it. It argues that Assessor Blanchard may not " hide
Software his
          & third -party vendor. However, as noted, the unrebutted evidence establishes that
             Services
issue of whether  the must  create betheadata
                      file would              file. Since the requested data file does not yet exist, the
                                          public record if     maintained by Software & Services is not
before us. See Russell
                         v. Cantrelle, 2019- 0815 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 5/ 11/ 20), 303 So. 3d 1081, 1086
courts will not decide abstract or hypothetical controversies or render advisory opinions with
respect to such controversies).
                                   For the same reason, we do not address the appropriate fee that
may be charged to obtain the data file.

                                                    7
   establishes that the data file must be     created.
                                                         It is well-settled that the custodian

   need only produce or make available for copying, reproduction, or inspection the
   existing records containing the requested information and is not required to create
   new documents in the format requested.
                                                  Williams Law Firm v. Board ofSupervisors
  ofLouisiana State University, 2003- 0079 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 4/ 2/ 04),      878 So. 2d 557,
  563.
          For this reason, we agree with the trial court that Assessor Blanchard had no
  duty to create a new record and that he satisfied Zillow' s public records request by
  producing an electronic copy (PDF) of the 2020 Assessment.

          Finally, Zillow also asserts that the trial court erred in holding that the data
  file is not a public record. This purported holding is not reflected in the judgment or
  the written reasons, which explain the basis for the trial court'
                                                                    s judgment. To the

  contrary, the trial court concluded that the assessment is a public record, which was
 properly produced to Zillow, but it did not reach the issue of whether the data file,
 which Assessor Blanchard proved does not exist, is
                                                            a public record.   Thus, we find

 no merit in this argument or in Zillow' s assertion that the trial court erred by denying
 its petition for mandamus.

         We also agree with the trial court' s denial ofZillow' s request for attorney fees
 and costs.
             Louisiana Revised Statutes 44:35(D) provides that a person seeking the
 right to receive or obtain a copy or reproduction of a public record, who prevails in
such suit, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and other costs of litigation.
Since Zillow has not prevailed in its suit, it is not entitled to such an award.

         For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the May 28, 2021 judgment denying
Zillow, Inc' s petition for writ of mandamus against Assumption Parish Assessor
Wayne Blanchard and further denying Zillow's request for attorney fees and costs
pursuant to La. R.S. 44: 35.
                               All costs of this appeal are assessed against Zillow, Inc.
      AFFIRMED.

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