Court Opinion

ID: 4682737
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-04-30 14:04:07.749491+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:02:02.035458
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
                               No. 20–0477

           Submitted February 16, 2021—Filed April 30, 2021

ROB SAND, Auditor of the State of Iowa,

      Appellee,

vs.

JOHN DOE, in His Official Capacity and UNNAMED STATE AGENCY,
STATE OF IOWA,

      Appellants.

      Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Heather

Lauber, Judge.

      A state agency appeals the district court’s order enforcing the

auditor of state’s subpoena for information on a potential transaction as

part of an audit. AFFIRMED.

      Christensen, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which Appel,
McDonald, Oxley, and McDermott, JJ., joined.         Mansfield, J., filed a

special concurrence in which Waterman, J., joined.

      Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Jeffrey S. Thompson (argued),

Solicitor General, Christopher J. Deist, Assistant Attorney General, for

appellants.

      John McCormally (argued), Chief of Staff/General Counsel, Office of

the Iowa Auditor of State, for appellee.
                               2

      Alan R. Ostergren, Des Moines, for amicus curiae Kirkwood

Institute, Inc.
                                     3

CHRISTENSEN, Chief Justice.

      In this case a state agency (Agency) and a state institution

(Institution) that the Agency oversees reached out to Iowa Auditor of State

Rob Sand (Auditor Sand) to discuss a potential transaction they were

considering that was expected to create a multi-billion dollar obligation for

the Agency.     Following the meeting, Auditor Sand emailed Agency

representatives and requested information on the potential investors

involved in the transaction.       The Agency would not provide the

information, claiming it was confidential until the transaction was

approved and finalized. The situation escalated, and Auditor Sand served

a subpoena on the Agency for various categories of information related to

the transaction. According to the subpoena, the requested documents

were “relative to an audit.” The district court enforced the subpoena. On

appeal, the Agency claims the subpoena is invalid because Auditor Sand

was not actually engaged in an audit. We disagree.

      I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

      In December of 2019, officials from the Institution requested Auditor

Sand meet with them regarding a potential financial transaction between

the Institution, the Agency, and a private consortium. The meeting took
place in Auditor Sand’s office on December 10, where an Agency

representative and an Institution representative presented information

about the transaction. That same day, the Institution, the Agency, and

the private consortium signed a concessionaire agreement. The agreement

required the concessionaire to finalize its financial plan with financial

service firms to fund the $1.165 billion payment to the Institution at

financial close, which was expected to occur between March 10, 2020 and
                                              4

March 12, 2020.1 The transaction would not be considered complete until

financial close. According to the agreement, if the Concessionaire failed to

complete its obligation at financial close, the request for proposal (RFP)

period would end and the Concessionaire would forfeit its closing deposit

of $100 million to the Institution.

          On December 12, 2019, Auditor Sand emailed the Agency

representative and Institution representative he met with regarding the

transaction and asked for the names of potential investors in the

transaction.           He   was    directed   to   contact   two    different   Agency

representatives and subsequently forwarded them his original message.

This led to the following email exchange, which provides in relevant part:

                [AUDITOR SAND:]         Please see below.     [Agency
          representative] sent me your way. As a reminder, this Office
          has access to confidential documents. If you can send these
          material[s] over early next week, that is fine. Enjoy your
          weekends!

                  ....

          Thanks again for the meeting and your time. I have found the
          contract online, but not the other bids. Apologies if I missed
          them, but please send them over. In addition, please send
          over the list of all investors, whether they make up the 21.5%
          from Iowa or they are elsewhere.2 Also, if there’s someone else
          I should aim requests to in the future in order to be more
          direct/efficient, let me know.

                  ....

                [AGENCY:] Auditor Sand: The RFP proposals of the
          three proposers who were not selected are considered
          confidential pending completion of the process, which will
          occur at financial close. Following completion of the process,
          the [Agency] and the [Institution] intend to publicly release the

          1The   parties agree that the case is not moot even though the transaction has
closed.
          2A
          document related to the transaction on the Agency’s public website represented
that “21.5% of the [Institution]’s committed private placement financing comes from Iowa-
based investors.”
                                      5
      remaining RFP proposals with confidential trade secret
      information redacted, as required by law.

            Information regarding the list of investors and their
      financial information has been identified as trade secret and
      is confidential in accordance with Iowa Code section 22.7(3)
      and other applicable law.

              ....

           [AUDITOR SAND:] Thanks for the prompt response.
      Our office does not operate under Chapter 22, but rather
      Chapter 11. Confidentiality is immaterial under Iowa Code
      11.413 and we are legally granted access to all materials,
      without redaction.

            Let me know if you have any questions. Again, next
      week is fine for production.

      Auditor Sand followed up several days later, resulting in the

following exchange:

             [AUDITOR SAND:]          I’d also like details on the
      [Institution entity] that will be handling the payment and its
      investing, including for now how it is organized and whether
      it is agreed to be a public entity subject to disclosure
      requirements and to what degree. I’d also like to see any RFPs
      for independent investment managers and any subsequent
      contracts or other agreements.

              ....

             [AGENCY:] Auditor Sand: The RFP process has yet to
      be completed, which will occur at financial close. Additional
      information regarding the RFP proposals will be made
      available following financial close, with confidential
      information redacted as required by law.         Additionally,
      [Institution entity] has yet to be finally formed and
      incorporated, so there is no information to share at this time
      beyond that which was publicly disclosed as part of the
      December 10 meeting of the [Agency].

              ....

      3Iowa  Code section 11.41 (2020) provides the auditor of state access to
information required by law to be kept confidential when conducting an audit or
examination.
                                6
         [AUDITOR SAND:] Please call me Rob, thank you. This
is . . . similar to what I requested for [Institution transaction],
and those items were produced.

      I’m not aware of any legal basis to withhold bids from
the AOS Office due to where the RFP process may be, nor a
basis to redact anything confidential. The same goes for
information regarding investors and the organizational nature
and obligations of the [Institution entity]. Again, I point you
to Iowa Code Chapter 11.41.

        If I do not have these items by COB on January 3, we
will serve a subpoena and an action to enforce it. Feel free to
call if you think a discussion may help.

      ....

      [AGENCY:] Auditor Sand: Iowa Code section 11.41
provides the Auditor of State with access to confidential
information when conducting an audit or examination
permitted or required by the Chapter. The [Agency] is not
aware of any pending audit of the [Institution] under which
your office would have access to this confidential information
as permitted by section 11.41.

      ....

       [AUDITOR SAND:] I would hope the [Agency] is aware
that we conduct multiple audits for the [Agency] and its
institutions every year, and that Chapter 11 not only
specifically authorizes but requires we perform those audits.
Bid testing and conflict-of-interest testing are normal parts of
a financial audit. I’m not sure what better notifies one that
an audit is underway than a request from one’s auditor for
normal audit documentation.

While I realize it might be unusual to receive a request from
the Auditor of State rather than a staff member, my approach
to running this office includes contributing to the actual
audits as a part of the team. This is a request from my official
office email account. Moreover, individuals from the [Agency]
and the [Institution] reached out to me personally to discuss
the [transaction] and answer questions. We met during
normal business hours in my official office. I informed them
at that time that I’d likely want to see all bid[s], and that I’d
likely have additional requests.

I’m happy to continue a discussion around the parameters of
Chapter 11 via email or via phone if you like. But ultimately,
if I don’t have the materials by January 3, we’ll have a
subpoena with a response date of January 4 followed
promptly by an action to enforce.
                                     7

      On January 8, 2020, Auditor Sand served a subpoena on the Agency

requesting thirteen categories of documents related to the transaction be

provided to his office by January 22 as part of what he claimed was an

audit. According to the subpoena, information received pursuant to it

would be maintained as confidential under Iowa Code section 11.42. On

January 14, the Agency acknowledged service of the subpoena.            On

January 21, Auditor Sand and representatives from the Agency discussed

the subpoena on a phone call. Auditor Sand claims he agreed to rolling

production of items that would take time to collect, but reasserted that the

items requested via email on December 12, 2019, needed to be produced

the following day. In a letter dated January 22, 2020, the Agency pointed

Auditor Sand to publicly available resources for some of the subpoena

requests.   For the remaining subpoena requests, including the items

requested on December 12, 2019, the Agency stated the Institution would

work to provide available information once the transaction reached

financial close.

      On February 3, 2020, twenty days after the subpoena was

acknowledged by the Agency, Auditor Sand filed an application with the

district court, asking it to enforce the subpoena served on January 8. On
February 13, the district court issued a ruling enforcing the subpoena and

ordering all requested materials to be produced by February 17 at 5:00

p.m. The Agency submitted a motion to reconsider and to stay the order,

claiming the original notice of application for enforcement of subpoena

stated they had twenty days after service of the notice to file a motion or

answer in response to the application.      Thus, the Agency argued the

deadline was February 25 based on the date service was accepted. It then

filed a response to the application for enforcement of subpoena and a

motion to quash arguing that Auditor Sand was not authorized to issue
                                     8

the subpoena because he was not engaged in an authorized audit, he

subpoenaed the wrong party by subpoenaing the Agency rather than the

Institution, and the subpoena was unduly burdensome.

      The district court stayed its order. On February 28, the district

court held a hearing in which the Agency’s counsel conceded at the

hearing that chapter 11 grants the auditor of state “broad scope and broad

power.” However, counsel explained the Agency needed assurance as to

whether or not Auditor Sand was engaged in an authorized audit, because

of “a legitimate concern with my client that this could be viewed as not

being part of an audit or examination and, therefore, we could lose

confidentiality if we turn it over.” Thus, the question before the district

court was whether the requests and subpoena were part of an audit. The

Agency was also concerned Auditor Sand would jeopardize the transaction

by publicizing confidential information.

      Following the hearing, the district court entered an order sustaining

the subpoena. The district court’s order provides, in relevant part:

      The [Agency] asserts that the Auditor’s request is not part of
      a formal audit or examination because the request came prior
      to the entrance conference for the FY 2020 audit, and because
      the Auditor never specifically mentioned the 2020 audit when
      making his initial request for documents. The [Agency]
      concedes, however, that the Auditor would have the authority
      to audit the [transaction] specifically. The [Agency] also
      concedes that if the Auditor made his request after the
      entrance examination, the Board would produce the
      requested documents and would not be asking to quash the
      subpoena. Both parties agree that members of the auditor’s
      staff reside in [the location of the Institution], working on the
      [Institution’s] audit year round, receiving a rolling production
      of documents relating to the audit. Under these facts, the
      court finds that the Auditor’s request, and subsequent
      subpoena, was made as a part of the authorized FY 2020
      audit. According[ly], the court also finds that any documents
      produced by the [Agency] or the [Institution] must be
      protected by the confidentiality requirements of Chapter 11.
                                      9

The district court limited its order to enforce production only of documents

actually in the possession of the [Agency]. Defendants, John Doe in his

official capacity and the Agency, filed the present appeal and have not yet

produced the documents Auditor Sand initially requested on December

12, 2019.

        II. Standard of Review.

        We review a district court’s order enforcing an agency’s subpoena

for abuse of discretion. State ex rel. Miller v. Publishers Clearing House,

Inc.,   633   N.W.2d     732,   736   (Iowa   2001)   (en   banc);   Citizens’

Aide/Ombudsman v. Grossheim, 498 N.W.2d 405, 407 (Iowa 1993). We

review a district court’s ruling on statutory construction for correction of

errors at law. Iowa Individual Health Benefit Reins. Ass’n v. State Univ. of

Iowa, 876 N.W.2d 800, 804 (Iowa 2016).

        III. Analysis.

        As a preliminary matter, we must first address whether Iowa Code

section 679A.19 (2020), which mandates arbitration between certain

governmental agencies, applies to the present case.         For the reasons

discussed below, we conclude section 679A.19 does not apply.

        A. Iowa Code Section 679A.19. First, we must decide whether
Iowa Code section 679A.19 applies to the present controversy. Iowa Code

section 679A.19 provides,

              Any litigation between administrative departments,
        commissions or boards of the state government is prohibited.
        All disputes between said governmental agencies shall be
        submitted to a board of arbitration of three members to be
        composed of two members to be appointed by the departments
        involved in the dispute and a third member to be appointed
        by the governor. The decision of the board shall be final.

The purpose of the statute is to reduce taxpayers’ cost of resolving disputes

between two state agencies. Individual Health Benefit Reins. Ass’n, 876
                                       10

N.W.2d at 811.          Section 679A.19 only applies to administrative

departments, commissions, and boards of state government. Id. at 809–

10. In this case, litigation is between a state agency and the auditor of

state.

         In State ex rel. Turner v. Iowa State Highway Commission, we

determined the office of attorney general does not fall within section

679A.19’s provisions because the attorney general is a constitutional

officer. 186 N.W.2d 141, 145 (Iowa 1971), abrogated on other grounds by

Rants v. Vilsack, 684 N.W.2d 193 (Iowa 2004). In doing so, we explained,

“[I]n our judgment, the Legislature did not contemplate in the enactment

of [section 679A.19], that executive officers should come within the

proscription of the section.”    Id.   That same reasoning applies here to

Auditor Sand as a constitutional officer. See Iowa Const. art. IV, § 22 (“A

secretary of state, an auditor of state and a treasurer of state shall be

elected by the qualified electors . . . .”); Iowa Admin. Code r. 81—25.1

(2020) (“The auditor of state is a constitutional officer of the state of Iowa

. . . .”).

         Moreover, the Iowa Code differentiates “constitutional offices” from

“departments.” Compare Iowa Code § 7E.2(1) (“The elective constitutional
and statutory officers who do not head operating departments each head

a staff to be termed the ‘office’ of the respective elective officer”), with id.

§ 7E.2(2) (“The principal administrative unit of the executive branch is a

‘department’ and there may be one or more ‘independent agencies.’ ”). If

the legislature intended for “offices” to be included within the provisions

of section 679A.19, it presumably would have done so, as it has done in

other statutes. See, e.g., id. § 19B.1(2) (“ ‘State agency’ means an office,

bureau, division, department, board, or commission in the executive

branch of state government.”); id. § 8G.3(1) (“ ‘Agency’ means a state
                                     11

department, office, board, commission, bureau, division, institution, or

public institution of higher education.”); id. § 17A.2(1) (“ ‘Agency’ means

each board, commission, department, officer or other administrative office

or unit of the state.”).

      Furthermore, the auditor of state is given express statutory

authority to issue subpoenas and apply to the district court to enforce

them. Iowa Code section 11.51 provides,

            The auditor of state shall, in all matters pertaining to
      an authorized audit or examination, have power to issue
      subpoenas of all kinds, administer oaths and examine
      witnesses, either orally or in writing, and the expense
      attending the same, including the expense of taking oral
      examinations, shall be paid as other expenses of the auditor.

Iowa Code section 11.52 gives the auditor of state’s subpoena power teeth

by providing,

             In case any witness duly subpoenaed refuses to attend,
      or refuses to produce documents, books, and papers, or
      attends and refuses to make oath or affirmation, or, being
      sworn or affirmed, refuses to testify, the auditor of state or the
      auditor’s designee may apply to the district court, or any judge
      of said district having jurisdiction thereof, for the enforcement
      of attendance and answers to questions as provided by law in
      the matter of taking depositions.

Based on the specific grant of authority in section 11.52 for the auditor of
state to apply to a district court to enforce a subpoena and the auditor of

state’s designation as a constitutional officer, we conclude section 679A.19

is not applicable to the present controversy.

      B. Iowa Code Chapter 11. Next, we must determine whether the

district court abused its discretion in granting Auditor Sand’s motion to

enforce the subpoena. A district court will grant a motion to enforce an

agency’s subpoena if the subpoena is: “(1) within the statutory authority

of the agency, (2) reasonably specific, (3) not unduly burdensome, and (4)

reasonably relevant to the matters under investigation.” Grossheim, 498
                                    12

N.W.2d at 406 (quoting Iowa City Hum. Rts. Comm’n v. Roadway Express,

Inc., 397 N.W.2d 508, 510 (Iowa 1986)). The Agency only challenges the

first factor on appeal, arguing Auditor Sand was not actually engaged in

an audit when he issued the subpoena because the transaction was not

yet complete.    For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the district

court’s order to enforce the subpoena.

      Iowa Code section 11.2(1) provides, “The auditor of state shall

annually, and more often if deemed necessary, audit the state and all state

officers and departments receiving or expending state funds . . . .” The

Iowa Code grants the auditor of state broad access to all information when

conducting an audit, as the statute establishes:

             1. The auditor of state, when conducting any audit or
      examination required or permitted by this chapter, shall at all
      times     have    access   to    all   information,    records,
      instrumentalities, and properties used in the performance of
      the audited or examined entities’ statutory duties or
      contractual responsibilities. All audited or examined entities
      shall cooperate with the auditor of state in the performance of
      the audit or examination and make available the information,
      records, instrumentalities, and properties upon the request of
      the auditor of state.

            2. Auditors shall have the right while conducting
      audits or examinations to have full access to all papers, books,
      records, and documents of any officers or employees . . . .

             3. If the information, records, instrumentalities, and
      properties sought by the auditor of state are required by law
      to be kept confidential, the auditor of state shall have access
      to the information, records, instrumentalities, and properties,
      but shall maintain the confidentiality of all such information
      and is subject to the same penalties as the lawful custodian
      of the information for dissemination of the information.
      However, the auditor of state shall not have access to the
      income tax returns of individuals.

Id. § 11.41.    Additionally, the auditor of state has the power to issue

subpoenas “in all matters pertaining to an authorized audit or
                                     13

examination” and apply to the district court for enforcement. Id. §§ 11.51–

.52.

       Chapter 11 does not define the term “audit.” We have described an

audit as “a snapshot of a client’s financial condition at a given time.”

Eldred v. McGladrey, Hendrickson & Pullen, 468 N.W.2d 218, 220–21 (Iowa

1991). The district court looked to Black’s Law Dictionary’s definition of

an audit, which defines it as “[a] formal examination of an individual’s or

organization’s accounting records, financial situation, or compliance with

some other set of standards.”     Audit, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed.

2019). Chapter 11 defines an “examination” as “procedures that are less

in scope than an audit but which are directed toward reviewing financial

activities and compliance with legal requirements.” Iowa Code § 11.1(b).

Therefore, we know an audit is greater in scope than an examination.

       We can gain further insight on what an audit entails by looking at

the auditor of state’s reporting requirements.       The auditor of state is

required to make and file a report of all audits and examinations. Id.

§ 11.4. The report shall include, if applicable:

             a. The financial condition of the state or department.

             b. Whether, in the auditor’s opinion,

            (1) Funds have been expended for the purpose for
       which appropriated.

            (2) The department so audited or examined is efficiently
       conducted, and if the maximum results for the money
       expended are obtained.

             (3) The work of the departments so audited or
       examined needlessly conflicts with or duplicates the work
       done by any other department.

             c. All illegal or unbusinesslike practices.

            d. Any recommendations for greater simplicity,
       accuracy, efficiency, or economy in the operation of the
       business of the several departments and institutions.
                                     14
           e. Any other information which, in the auditor’s
      judgment, may be of value.

Id. § 11.4(1).   Chapter 11 additionally mandates the auditor of state’s

reports “make recommendations as may be deemed of advantage and to

the best interests of the taxpayers of the state.” Id. § 11.28.

      There is also a question as to whether an audit may be conducted

on a transaction prior to its financial close. The Agency claims Auditor

Sand’s request threatened to upend the transaction at the final hour.

However, accountants have been chastised for failing to ensure the legality

of transactions, and the public tends to blame the auditor of state for
negative consequences resulting from a business failure. See, e.g., Lincoln

Sav. & Loan Ass’n v. Wall, 743 F. Supp. 901, 920 (D.D.C. 1990) (finding a

savings and loan institution entered into multiple improper transactions,

thus asking, “[w]here also were the outside accountants and attorneys

when these transactions were effectuated?”); Eldred, 468 N.W.2d at 221.

      The Government Auditing Standards outline various forward-looking

objectives an audit may have, such as “prospective analysis audit

objectives” which “provide analysis or conclusions about information that

is based on assumptions about events that may occur in the future, along
with possible actions that the entity may take in response to the future

events.”   U.S. Gov’t Accountability Off., GAO–18–568G, Government

Auditing     Standards     12     (2018),     https://www.gao.gov/assets/

files.gao.gov/assets/gao-18-568g.pdf        [https://perma.cc/JU56-7ZP8]

[hereinafter Government Auditing Standards].         An auditor may base

conclusions on:

            a. current and projected trends and future potential
      impact on government programs and services and their
      implications for program or policy alternatives;

            b. program or policy alternatives, including forecasting
      program outcomes under various assumptions;
                                    15
            c. policy or legislative proposals, including advantages,
      disadvantages, and analysis of stakeholder views;

            d. prospective information prepared by management;

            e. budgets and forecasts that are based on (1)
      assumptions about expected future events and (2)
      stakeholders’ and management’s expected reaction to those
      future events; and

            f. management’s assumptions on which prospective
      information is based.

Id. at 14. Compliance objectives include analyzing whether “incurred or

proposed costs are in compliance with applicable laws, regulations,

contracts, or grant agreements.” Id.

      Auditor Sand argues bid testing and conflict-of-interest testing are

normal parts of an audit and allowed under section 11.4. See Iowa Code

§ 11.4 (requiring an audit report to include “all illegal or unbusinesslike

practices,” whether the work of the auditee is “efficiently conducted” or

“needlessly conflicts with or duplicates the work done by any other

department,” and “[a]ny other information which, in the auditor’s

judgment, may be of value”). At the hearing, Auditor Sand argued that he

has performed a similar audit on an Institution transaction prior to

financial close, which resulted in a one-page report stating that the
transaction was reviewed, appears to comply with the law, and is in the

best interests of Iowa taxpayers.

      Auditor Sand further asserts the fact that the transaction creates a

huge financial liability for the Institution and taxpayers makes it worthy

of scrutiny prior to financial close. Although the auditor of state’s office

has staff working in the Institution’s city on the Institution year-round,

Auditor Sand claims a lack of scrutiny of the Institution’s transaction

could be perceived as a failure to do his job. This would be especially true

in light of the one-on-one meeting the defendants initiated regarding the
                                      16

multi-billion dollar transaction. Furthermore, the Institution had publicly

posted that approximately 21.5% of the investors in the transaction were

Iowa-based, thus reasonably leading to the inference that the investors

had been chosen and conflict-of-interest testing was appropriate. Auditor

Sand asserts he has the authority to audit an agency transaction prior to

financial close.   “When an agency or state officer is charged with the

responsibility of implementing a statute and has interpreted a statute in a

particular way, that interpretation is entitled to considerable weight . . . .”

Hennessey v. Cedar Rapids Cmty. Sch. Dist., 375 N.W.2d 270, 273 (Iowa

1985) (giving official interpretation of a statute by the auditor of state

weight at least comparable to that given to state agencies). See generally

Hawkeye Land Co. v. Iowa Utils. Bd., 847 N.W.2d 199 (Iowa 2014)

(discussing analysis for determining interpretive authority of an agency).

      The Agency argues we must demand a clear beginning and end to a

Chapter 11 audit to ensure compliance with section 11.41’s confidentiality

provision. Section 11.41 gives the auditor of state, when conducting an

audit, access to information the law requires to be kept confidential and

requires the auditor of state to maintain its confidentiality until a report is

issued. Iowa Code § 11.41; see also id. § 11.42 (requiring information
received in the course of an audit to be kept confidential until completion

of the audit and issuance of a report). The auditor of state may be subject

to penalties if confidential information is redisseminated.      Id. § 11.41.

Auditor Sand concedes not every action he takes is considered part of an

audit. However, when the auditor of state serves a subpoena on a state

agency that provides it is requesting information “relative to an audit,” the

confidentiality provisions of sections 11.41 and 11.42 apply.

      We agree with the Agency that the initial email request from Auditor

Sand to Agency and Institution representatives was not an audit. The
                                     17

Agency had a reasonable concern about whether the confidentiality

provisions of chapter 11 would apply.       The initial emails were casual

(“Please call me Rob”) and could be construed as requests for follow-up

information from the meeting rather than formal demands for documents

as part of an audit.     Audits generally require specific objectives and

identified standards against which the objectives are measured. See, e.g.,

Government Auditing Standards, at 7 (“All GAGAS engagements begin with

objectives, and those objectives determine the type of engagement to be

conducted and the applicable standards to be followed.”). That does not

mean the auditor of state is necessarily required to provide a formal

engagement letter identifying those objectives and standards to initiate an

audit, as suggested by the Agency.

      We need not decide the exact moment the request for information

turned into an audit.     However, it certainly happened by the time a

subpoena was served on the Agency. Furthermore, we need not determine

whether or not the subpoena was served as part of the fiscal year 2020

audit of the Institution. Iowa Code section 11.2 directs the auditor of state

to conduct an audit of the Agency “annually, and more often if deemed

necessary,” clearly placing the determination of when additional audits are
necessary with the auditor of state. The subpoena stated it was served as

part of an audit and the confidentiality provisions of chapter 11 would

attach. At that point, it is clear that Auditor Sand had determined an

audit was necessary, and any confidentiality concerns of the Agency would

have been misplaced. Despite the Agency’s concern that Auditor Sand

could have jeopardized the transaction by publicizing confidential

information, section 11.42 permits him to put confidential information in

his postaudit public report.
                                           18

       The Agency also argues the district court’s finding that Auditor Sand

was engaged in an audit renders the qualifying language in Iowa Code

section 11.51 meaningless. Under section 11.51, the auditor of state is

empowered to “issue subpoenas of all kinds” when engaged in “an

authorized audit or examination.”                 Id.    The Agency argues the

confidentiality provisions in sections 11.41(3)4 and 11.425 are not triggered

unless the auditor of state is engaged in an “authorized” audit. The auditor

of state is not empowered to audit every entity. For example, the auditor

of state cannot audit a private entity that receives no public funds. See

id. § 11.24(3) (granting the auditor of state the ability to review private

entities that receive public funds in certain circumstances).                 To do so

would be an unauthorized audit. Additionally, the auditor of state is not

always authorized to audit local governments. See id. § 11.6 (providing

that local governments may hire a private certified public accountant to

perform their required annual audits). Thus, a private entity receiving no

public funds and a local government that hires a private certified public

accountant to perform its audit are not subject to the auditor of state’s

subpoena power because the auditor of state would not be engaged in an

authorized audit.

               4If the information, records, instrumentalities, and properties
       sought by the auditor of state are required by law to be kept confidential,
       the auditor of state . . . shall maintain the confidentiality of all such
       information and is subject to the same penalties as the lawful custodian
       of the information for dissemination of the information.
Iowa Code § 11.41(3).
       5“[I]nformation  received during the course of any audit or examination, including
allegations of misconduct or noncompliance, and all audit or examination work papers
shall be maintained as confidential.” Iowa Code § 11.42(1). The auditor of state may
disclose confidential information as necessary to complete the audit and, to the extent he
or she is required by law, to report the information or testify in court. Id. § 11.42.
However, once the audit is complete a report must be prepared and all the information in
the report becomes public information. Id.
                                    19

      This is not the case for the Agency, as the law establishes “[t]he

auditor of state shall annually, and more often if deemed necessary, audit

the state and all state officers and departments receiving or expending

state funds.” Id. § 11.2. Here, Auditor Sand served a subpoena as part of

an audit on a state agency he is authorized to audit as often as deemed

necessary.    For these reasons, we conclude the district court’s

determination that Auditor Sand was engaged in an authorized audit does

not render the term “authorized” meaningless in section 11.51.

      We also reject the Agency’s claim that the district court abused its

discretion by relying in part on its concession that Auditor Sand has

authority to audit the transaction specifically or as a performance audit.

It claims the concession is irrelevant because Auditor Sand requested the

documents as part of a financial audit in his emails. The district court

reasonably considered the concession in its order because it shows the

Agency is not objecting to the relevancy of the audit—only to the form and

timing of the requests.

      Auditor Sand asserts the distinctions between a performance audit

and financial audit are fluid. For example, staff in the financial audit

division may work on a performance engagement and vice versa.
Government Auditing Standards likewise separate financial audits from

performance audits and explain “some engagements may have objectives

that could be met using more than one approach.” Government Auditing

Standards, at 7. According to the standards, a financial audit will include

reports on internal control over financial reporting and compliance with

laws, regulations, and contracts. Id. at 8. Reports on internal control and

legal compliance are key categories of a performance audit as well. Id. at

11. Consequently, the district court did not abuse its discretion in relying
                                     20

in part on the Agency’s concession Auditor Sand is authorized to conduct

a performance audit when enforcing the subpoena.

      Lastly, we address the Agency’s claim that the district court

determined year-round presence of the auditor of state’s staff is evidence

that the auditor of state is effectively always engaged in the annual

financial audit of the Institution. This misconstrues the district court’s

order. The district court’s order did not conclude every action the auditor

of state takes is considered part of the financial audit. Rather, the district

court determined the subpoena was part of an authorized audit.

Consequently, the district court did not abuse its discretion in considering

this fact when enforcing the subpoena.

      IV. Conclusion.

      For these reasons, we affirm the district court’s order to enforce the

subpoena.

      AFFIRMED.

      Appel, McDonald, Oxley, and McDermott, JJ., join this opinion.

Mansfield, J., files a special concurrence in which Waterman, J., joins.
                                     21

                                                     #20–0477, Sand v. Doe

MANSFIELD, Justice (specially concurring).

      I specially concur. I join in division III.A of the court’s opinion. As

to division III.B, I concur as to result only because I have a narrower view

of the Iowa State Auditor’s authority than the majority does.

      The State Auditor claims to have sweeping authority to gather

confidential information. Give us the information we ask for first; then

we’ll connect it to an audit. The State Auditor’s counsel described this

two-step process to the district court as follows:

      [F]or State agencies, the auditor is supposed to have access to
      all information at all times.

              ....

            An audit begins with requests for information. And
      from there, the auditors determine where . . . we need to go[.]

      At oral argument in this case, the State Auditor denied there were

any legal limits on his ability to obtain documents in the possession of a

state employee (other than individual income tax returns).        Thus, for

example, health care records at the University of Iowa Hospitals & Clinics,

student academic records at Iowa State University, and faculty research

files at the University of Northern Iowa would all be fair game. So would

confidential security information in the possession of the Iowa Department

of Public Safety or the Iowa Department of Homeland Security and

Emergency Management.        In sum, any request for documents in the

custody of a state employee must be granted, because the document

request is the commencement of the audit.
      This approach reverses the proper order set forth in Iowa Code

chapter 11.     The State Auditor is authorized to conduct audits and

examinations. See Iowa Code § 11.2 (2020). And, while conducting such
                                           22

audits or examinations, the State Auditor shall have full access to

information. Id. § 11.41. In other words, the existence of an authorized

audit or examination entitles the State Auditor to have access to

information; the State Auditor does not get to make free-standing requests

for information which, ipso facto, create an audit. The job is auditor, not

“investigator.”6

       Iowa has other officials to perform investigations: law enforcement

agencies to conduct criminal investigations, and the 150 members of the

general assembly and their staff to investigate policy decisions made by

state entities.    Iowa also has a state ombudsman to investigate “any

administrative action of any agency.” Id. § 2C.9(1). An administrative

action “means any policy or action taken by an agency or failure to act

pursuant to law.” Id. § 2C.1(1).

       What our state would otherwise lack is a centralized auditing office,

i.e., a counterpart to the federal U.S. Government Accountability Office.

That is the role of the State Auditor.

       An audit begins with objectives. See U.S. Gov’t Accountability Off.,

GAO–18–568G, Government Auditing Standards 7 (2018) [hereinafter

Government Auditing Standards] (“All GAGAS engagements begin with
objectives, and those objectives determine the type of engagement to be

conducted and the applicable standards to be followed.”).

       An audit generally looks at what has already happened. See Op.

Iowa Att’y Gen. No. 92–6–3(L) (June 3, 1992), 1992 WL 470358, at *2 (“[W]e

find the dictionary definition of the word ‘audit’ is ‘a formal or official

       6See  Oriana House, Inc. v. Montgomery, 844 N.E.2d 323, 328 (Ohio 2006)
(explaining that under Ohio law, the state auditor’s subpoena power is limited by the
words “in the performance of any audit”); see also Iowa Code § 11.51 (providing that the
State Auditor “in all matters pertaining to an authorized audit or examination” shall have
“power to issue subpoenas of all kinds”).
                                     23

examination of an account book.’ ” (quoting Webster’s Seventh New

Collegiate Dictionary 58 (1967))).      One typically does not “audit” a

transaction that has not yet occurred with the possible goal of blocking

that transaction.

      The Government Auditing Standards likewise make clear the

essentially   backward-looking    nature   of   government    audits.     See

Government Auditing Standards, at 7–9, 11–15 (describing financial audits

and performance audits).        As noted by the majority, one type of

performance audit may have “prospective analysis” as an objective. Id. at

12. Objectives of a prospective analysis include forecasting how future

events will impact government programs and budgets, evaluating

management’s     own    forecasts,   and   weighing    “program    or   policy

alternatives” and “policy or legislative proposals, including advantages,

disadvantages, and analysis of stakeholder views.”        Id. at 14.    Thus,

prospective analysis falls into two categories: (1) forecasting and

(2) evaluating policy alternatives or proposals. But the State Auditor does

not contend he was doing either of these things. He wasn’t forecasting and

he wasn’t evaluating a proposal, but instead was probing for information

on a pending transaction that hadn’t happened yet.
      Iowa Code section 11.5B further supports the notion that “audit” is

supposed to have a circumscribed meaning. This section provides that as

to many agencies, including the one involved in this case, the State Auditor

“shall be reimbursed . . . for performing audits or examinations.” Iowa

Code § 11.5B. This charge-back provision is logical if we read these terms

in their traditional accounting sense. It is reasonable for regular, formal

reviews of an agency (or more limited versions of the same) to be charged

to the agency’s budget as part of the regular cost of doing business. But

it would be disconcerting to an agency if it could be forced after the fact to
                                     24

pay for the costs of another office’s ad hoc investigations that it had no

way to anticipate and budget for.

      The most significant error the court makes is when it selectively

quotes from a 1985 decision to support the position that this court will

defer to the State Auditor’s view of his own audit authority. In Hennessey

v. Cedar Rapids Community School District, we said,

             When an agency or state officer is charged with the
      responsibility of implementing a statute and has interpreted a
      statute in a particular way, that interpretation is entitled to
      considerable weight, especially if it is of long standing, without
      legislative intervention.

375 N.W.2d 270, 273 (Iowa 1985). The court lops off the last part of this

statement so it reads instead, “When an agency or state officer is charged

with the responsibility of implementing a statute and has interpreted a

statute in a particular way, that interpretation is entitled to considerable

weight.” In any event, the issue in Hennessey was a technical point of

government accounting, not the fundamental question of the State

Auditor’s overall authority.

      Since Renda v. Iowa Civil Rights Commission, we have generally not

deferred to an agency or officer’s view of their own authority. 784 N.W.2d

8, 10–11 (Iowa 2010); see also City of Des Moines v. Iowa Dep’t of Transp.,

911 N.W.2d 431, 439 (Iowa 2018) (“[W]e are not persuaded here that the

legislature clearly vested the IDOT with interpretive authority to determine

its own authority.”). I would not defer to the State Auditor’s view of his

audit authority any more than I would defer to the Governor’s view of her

executive authority. If the intra-governmental controversy is justiciable, it
is our job to resolve it without deference to either side.

      All this being said, I too would affirm the order enforcing the State

Auditor’s subpoena. I would do so for the following three reasons.
                                      25

         First, in early December 2019, the agency reached out to the State

Auditor, made a presentation on the prospective transaction to him, and

offered to provide additional information if requested. Thus, the agency

arguably initiated an audit process on its own for the transaction.

         Second, given the size and scope of the transaction, an audit of the

transaction for bid-testing and conflict-of-interest purposes would have

been warranted. In this special case, in light of the size and scope of the

transaction, a preclosing audit would be appropriate. The taxpayers of

Iowa, who bear the ultimate financial risk for this transaction, are entitled

to know if the agency got the best deal available and if anyone had a

conflict of interest. Many of the items in the subpoena are pertinent to

these subjects.

         Third, although the subpoena appears to me to be somewhat

broader and more burdensome than necessary for these purposes, the

agency made no effort to challenge specific subpoena items. Instead, it

asked the district court for an all-or-nothing ruling. So, while the State

Auditor’s subpoena reads more like a litigation subpoena than something

a CPA might prepare, that is not a reason to disturb the district court’s

order.
                                     ***

         The government in our state possesses considerable power. Take

the judicial branch.     Our court has the “power to issue all writs and

process necessary to secure justice to parties.” Iowa Const. art. V, § 4.

We are “conservators of the peace throughout the state.” Id. § 7. But all

of that power can be wielded only when we are carrying out a traditional

judicial role.    We do not get to tell officials what to do unless we are

deciding an actual court case.
                                         26

       So too with the State Auditor.            He has great power to obtain

essentially any document in the hands of a state employee except an

individual tax return. See Iowa Code § 11.41. But that power is regulated;

it can only be exercised in the context of a bona fide audit or examination.

Id.7

       For these reasons, I specially concur.

       Waterman, J., joins this special concurrence.

       7Iowa  has not adopted a statute as in Massachusetts that requires privatization
contracts to be submitted to the state auditor for advance review and an opportunity to
object. See Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 7 §§ 52–55 (West, Westlaw current through chapter
3 of 2021 1st Ann. Sess.).