Spooner v. Town of Topsham
Spooner v. Town of Topsham
Opinion of the Court
¶ 1. The question presented is whether, under the qualified privilege for reporters first recognized by this Court in State v. St. Peter, 132 Vt. 266, 315 A.2d 254 (1974), a newspaper reporter may properly refuse to testify as to events he witnessed at a public selectboard hearing where such events, though observed by others, are relevant to significant issues in a pending civil lawsuit. We hold that, on the facts presented, the reporter here was not entitled to withhold his testimony. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court judgment, and remand for further proceedings.
¶ 2. The material facts are largely undisputed. At a meeting held on September 10, 2001, the Town’s selectboard interviewed several candidates, including plaintiff James Spooner, for the position of road foreman. After a discussion held in executive
“He’s younger, so we can get a lot more service,” Thompson said of why Hart had been chosen over the other three candidates. Thompson added that Hart was not related to anybody [on the selectboard], “and that’s important for a position of that magnitude.”
Appleton agreed with Thompson, saying, “Bryan had some experience. I’m told he’s very capable of learning. He’s younger.”
¶ 3. Plaintiff subsequently filed an employment-discrimination complaint against the Town with the Attorney General’s office, claiming that he had been denied the position because of his age. The Town denied the charge, asserting that it had rejected plaintiff’s candidacy solely because he was related to a number of Town officials, including Anthony Spooner, a member of the Town selectboard, and Juanita Claflin, the Town clerk. The Attorney General’s investigation concluded that the evidence was sufficient to support the discrimination claim, and plaintiff thereupon filed a civil complaint against the Town under the Fair Employment Practices Act, 21 V.S.A. § 495.
¶ 4. Relying on the newspaper article, plaintiff identified Buermeyer, the Journal Opinion reporter, as a likely trial witness and issued a subpoena to depose the reporter, later explaining that he would confine the inquiry to what the reporter had heard at the meeting.
¶ 5. Although it remains a subject of continuing controversy, any discussion of the so-called reporter’s privilege must begin in 1972, with the landmark United States Supreme Court ruling in Branzburg v. Hayes, 408 U.S. 665 (1972). There, the high court held that the First Amendment does not afford a privilege to journalists to refuse to appear before a grand jury to answer questions in a criminal investigation concerning the identity of confidential news sources or information derived from those sources. Id. at 667. Courts and commentators have been analyzing the scope and meaning of the four-justice plurality opinion authored by Justice White in Branzburg ever since.
¶ 6. The source of confusion was the unusual four-one-four division on the Court. As noted, the plurality opinion authored by Justice White ruled that there was no constitutional privilege
¶ 7. In a separate concurring opinion, Justice Powell joined the four-justice plurality in finding no privilege on the facts, but emphasized the “limited nature of the Court’s holding.” Id. at 709. Justice Powell suggested that future claims should be resolved on a case-by-case basis, balancing the constitutional right to “freedom of the press and the obligation of all citizens to give relevant testimony with respect to criminal conduct.” Id. at 710. In striking such a balance, Justice Powell echoed the dissent in requiring that the government demonstrate a “legitimate need” for information that is relevant to the investigation. Id.
¶ 8. Despite the absence of a clear holding in Branzburg, nearly every federal circuit has since concluded that Justice Powell’s concurrence, in conjunction with the four-justice dissent, established a qualified First Amendment reporter’s privilege outside the grand-jury context. All but a few states have adopted some form of qualified reporter’s privilege as well, either by statute or case law. See generally A. Fargo, Analyzing Federal Shield Law Proposals: What Congress Can Learn from the States, 11 Comm. L. & Pol’y 35, 46 (2006) (noting that thirty-one states have enacted reporter’s shield laws, and appellate courts in all but a few others have recognized a qualified privilege); J. Nestler, Comment, The Underprivileged Profession: The Case for Supreme Court Recognition of the Journalist’s Privilege, 154 U. Pa. L. Rev. 201, 203 (2005) (observing that “[ajlmost every state and federal
¶ 9. Vermont was in the vanguard of state courts relying on Branzburg to recognize a qualified First Amendment reporter’s privilege. In St. Peter, several criminal defendants had sought to depose a television news reporter “to determine the source of [the reporter’s] foreknowledge” about a drug raid conducted by the state police. 132 Vt. at 268, 315 A.2d at 255. The reporter declined to answer questions on the subject, claiming a privilege under the First Amendment. The matter was referred to district court, where the reporter again refused to answer and was consequently held in contempt. The trial court certified the question for interlocutory review, which we accepted on the relatively narrow but important issue presented.
¶ 10. Writing for the Court, Justice Barney acknowledged at the outset the significance of the then-recent Supreme Court decision in Branzburg in which the Court declined to recognize a reporter’s privilege to withhold information from grand juries. Id. at 269, 315 A.2d at 255. Justice Barney went on to observe, however, that the Branzburg holding was a relatively narrow one and that the “language and attitude of the . . . majority does not indicate an entire absence of concern for the newsgathering function so relevant to the full exercise of the First Amendment.” Id. “Even more noteworthy,” he found, was “the concurring opinion of Mr. Justice Powell suggesting] that the First Amendment supports enough of a privilege in newsgatherers to require a balancing between the ingredients of freedom of the press and the obligation of citizens, when called upon, to give relevant testimony relating to criminal conduct.” Id. at 269-70, 315 A.2d at 255. Taken together, these elements of Branzburg supported the conclusion that, when a reporter “legitimately entitled to First Amendment protection” objects to questions in a deposition proceeding in a criminal case, the reporter “is entitled to refuse to answer unless the interrogator can demonstrate to the judicial officer appealed to that there is no other adequately available source for the information and that it is relevant and material on the issue of guilt or innocence.” Id. at 271, 315 A.2d at 256; see also In re Inquest Subpoena (WCAX), 2005 VT 103, ¶ 14, 179 Vt. 12, 890 A.2d 1240 (holding that “[t]he balancing test adopted in St. Peter does not apply” in the context of a criminal inquest, the equivalent to the grand jury investigation in
¶ 11. Although both Branzburg and St. Peter concerned criminal proceedings, numerous courts have since extended the privilege to the civil context as well. As the Second Circuit Court of Appeals explained in United States v. Burke: “We see no legally-principled reason for drawing a distinction between civil and criminal cases when considering whether the reporter’s interest in confidentiality should yield to the moving party’s need for probative evidence.” 700 F.2d 70, 77 (2d Cir. 1983); see also Shoen v. Shoen, 5 F.3d 1289, 1292 (9th Cir. 1993) (the qualified First Amendment shield “protects journalists against compelled disclosure in all judicial proceedings, civil and criminal alike”); Riley v. City of Chester, 612 F.2d 708, 716 (3d Cir. 1979) (“In striking the delicate balance between the assertion of the privilege . . . and the interest of either criminal or civil litigants seeking the information the materiality, relevance and necessity of the information sought must be shown.”).
¶ 12. Although the decisions are not entirely uniform, many courts have also recognized that the reporter’s privilege may extend to nonconfidential as well as confidential information. See Gonzales v. National Broadcasting Co., 194 F.3d 29, 35 n.5 (2d Cir. 1999) (summarizing federal decisions that have recognized a reporter’s privilege for nonconfidential press sources and material); O’Neill v. Oakgrove Constr., Inc., 523 N.E.2d 277, 280 n.2 (N.Y. 1988) (noting that “courts have held the privilege necessary to protect nonconfidential materials as well”); see generally A. Wasserstrom, Annotation, Reportorial Privilege as to Nonconfidential News Information, 60 A.L.R.5th § 2[a], at 93 (1998) (observing that state and federal courts “in most cases” have applied a balancing of interests to determine whether the qualified reporter’s privilege to withhold nonconfidential information has been overcome). In Gonzales, for example, the court acknowledged the important public interest in protecting a journalist’s confidential sources and material but found that “there were also broader concerns undergirding the qualified privilege . . . regardless whether the information sought from the press is confidential.” 194 F.3d at 35. These concerns include the risk that routine, unfettered access to press files would impose significant costs in time and resources for subpoena compliance, inhibit potential
¶ 13. Even while acknowledging these risks, however, courts have recognized that the threat to free-press interests in cases involving nonconfidential information is a fairly “subtle” one and relies more on intuition than empirical evidence demonstrating “how any chilling effect could result from the disclosure of statements made for publication without any expectation of confidentiality.” LaRouche, 841 F.2d at 1181-82; see also United States v. Smith, 135 F.3d 963, 970-71 (5th Cir. 1998) (characterizing the media’s fear that nonconfidential sources may shy away from the press as “speculative at best” and noting the absence of “empirical basis for assertions that the media will avoid important stories or destroy its archives” in response to discovery requests). Thus, many courts have held that while First Amendment interests may be implicated when litigants seek disclosure of unpublished nonconfidential information, those interests are relatively weaker. The absence of confidentiality therefore represents “an important element in balancing the defendant’s need for the material sought against the interest of the journalist in preventing production in a particular case.” Shoen, 5 F.3d at 1295-96 (holding that “the absence of confidentiality may be considered in the balance of competing interests as a factor that diminishes the journalist’s, and the public’s, interest in non-disclosure”). Accord Gonzales, 194 F.3d at 36 (concluding that “when protection of confidentiality is not at stake, the privilege should be more easily overcome”).
¶ 14. The case at bar, however, is distinguishable even from these decisions in one significant respect. Here the information sought not only lacked confidentiality, it was also available to virtually every other member of the public who attended the selectboard hearing and heard the statements made by the selectboard members. In contrast, Shoen, 5 F.3d at 1290, con
¶ 15. Although the trial court here concluded otherwise, we are not persuaded that compelling the reporter’s testimony in this case will unduly burden the newsgathering function of the press. No confidential sources or materials are at risk. No unpublished information, notes, or other resource materials that might infringe
¶ 16. The risk to which the trial court alluded concerning the potential “chilling” effect on the willingness of journalists to cover such public meetings does not strike us as realistic. In many cases, the local entity will have recorded the proceeding, thereby providing an objective, readily available alternative source and obviating the need for the reporter’s testimony. Even where no recording is available, however, we do not regard the risk of the occasional subpoena for a reporter’s testimony about events witnessed or statements heard at a public meeting to be an unreasonable burden for the press to bear. Absent tangible proof to the contrary, we are simply not persuaded that requiring such testimony will, in reality, deter the press from covering otherwise newsworthy public events. See Salsbury, 924 P.2d at 213 (observing that “[cjredibility balks at the idea” the media would stop covering news events because of the risk of a subsequent subpoena).
¶ 17. Even if we were to hold otherwise and apply a balancing analysis under the First Amendment, our conclusion would remain unchanged.
¶ 18. The trial court found that the reporter’s anticipated testimony was indeed relevant, and further acknowledged that the reporter “might remember the event differently from others, and he might also make a better witness.” Nevertheless, the court concluded that the availability of other witnesses from the selectboard hearing negated plaintiff’s claim that there was no “other adequately available source for the information,” St. Peter, 132 Vt. at 271, 315 A.2d at 256, and therefore defeated his effort to override the privilege. In so holding, however, we believe the trial court significantly undervalued the reporter’s potential testimony. Like many courts, we have recognized that eyewitness accounts often display discrepancies, in part because of various “psychological factors” that affect perception and memory. State v. Percy, 156 Vt. 468, 475-76, 595 A.2d 248, 252 (1990); see also United States v. Brownlee, 454 F.3d 131, 142 (3d Cir. 2006) (observing that “science has firmly established the inherent unreliability of human perception and memory”) (quotations omitted); see generally T. Singer, To Tell the Truth, Memory Isn’t that Good, 63 Mont. L. Rev. 337, 359 (2002) (reviewing the scientific literature showing that “[m]emory is inaccurate because it is not a recording process, like a video camera; rather, memory is primarily a reconstructive process.”). As Justice Mosk succinctly observed in Delaney v. Superior Court: “[T]wo percipient witnesses of the same event are not in any sense fungible.” 789 P.2d 934, 957 (Cal. 1990) (Mosk, J., concurring).
¶ 19. Thus, a journalist’s observation of an unrecorded, transitory event — such as the selectboard hearing in this case — is not the sort of objectively verifiable information that might typically be retrievable from an alternative source in the usual reporter’s privilege case. Rather, owing to the vagaries of perception and memory, the reporter and the alternative witnesses here are not in any meaningful sense “alternative sources of the same information, but sources of different information.” Id. (agreeing
¶20. We therefore conclude that, even if the qualified privilege applied, plaintiff has satisfied the elements necessary to compel disclosure under St. Peter. The reporter’s testimony concerning his contemporaneous perceptions of what transpired at the hearing cannot reasonably be obtained elsewhere. Furthermore, the information — purportedly consisting of Thompson’s statement that plaintiff was not hired because the other candidate was younger and could work longer — is relevant to significant issues in the underlying case; it not only supports plaintiffs age-discrimination claim, but rebuts the Town’s mixed-motive defense based on Thompson’s other statements attributing the hiring decision to plaintiffs family connections. Plaintiff has demonstrated, in short, that he is entitled to the reporter’s testimony here. In contrast, as noted, the reporter and newspaper have identified no risks from disclosure that pose — in our view — a realistic threat to the press’s ability or willingness to cover public or newsworthy events such as the selectboard hearing in question.
¶ 21. Accordingly, we hold that the trial court’s decision to quash plaintiffs subpoena was in error, and must be reversed. Although the Town asked the court to consider its separate subpoena, and to uphold its request for additional materials in the event that the reporter was permitted to testify, the court’s ruling rendered it unnecessary to reach these matters. In view of our decision to reverse the court’s ruling and permit the reporter to testify, we direct the court, on remand, to consider the Town’s request.
The judgment is reversed, and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with the views expressed herein.
The record reveals that the initial complaint may have been instigated by the Journal Opinion reporter, who contacted plaintiff after the meeting to advise him that the board’s action was illegal. Although plaintiff argued unsuccessfully below that the reporter had somehow waived the First Amendment privilege by his subsequent conduct, plaintiff has not renewed the claim on appeal.
The Town issued a subpoena as well, seeking the disclosure of all “documents and notes” generated in connection with the article. Although the Town later professed to be neutral as to whether the reporter testified, it made clear its intent to press for discovery beyond the events at the selectboard hearing in the event that he
The newspaper argues that plaintiffs appeal fails to meet the criteria for interlocutory review, but the motion was fully briefed, and we decline to revisit our decision.
Although the trial court purported to find support for its ruling under both the First Amendment and Article 13 of the Vermont Constitution, as well as federal and state common law, St. Peter and most of the principal eases on which we rely are based on an implied privilege under the First Amendment, and we therefore restrict our holding to that clause.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- James H. Spooner v. Town of Topsham
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published