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COLDWELL
v.
BOARD OF PUBLIC WORKS OF CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO
et al.
Cite as: 187 Cal. 510, 202 P. 879
S. F. 9694.
Supreme Court of California
Dec. 9, 1921.
In Bank.
Petition for writ of mandamus by Colbert Coldwell against
the Board of Public Works of the City and County of San Francisco
and others. From judgment granting petition with certain exceptions,
the defendants appeal, and from such judgment, and also from
order denying his motion to vacate and set aside the judgment
entered and to amend the conclusions of law contained in the
court's findings, the petitioner appeals. Affirmed as modified.
LAWLOR, J.
This is an appeal by both petitioner, Colbert Coldwell, and
defendants, the board of public works of the city and county
of San Francisco, the individual members thereof, and M. M. O'Shaughnessy,
the city engineer, from a judgment granting, with certain exceptions,
a petition to the superior court of the city and county of San
Francisco for a writ of mandate to compel the defendants to allow
petitioner to view and take copies of certain documents and data
in the office of the city engineer of the city and county of
San Francisco, and by the petitioner from an order of the court
denying petitioner's motion to vacate and set aside the judgment
entered and to amend the conclusions of law contained in the
court's findings. As the same questions are involved in both
appeals, they may be considered together.
The petition alleged that the city and county of San Francisco
was engaged in the acquisition and construction of a municipal
water supply with engineering works at Hetch Hetchy, in the state
of California; that in connection with the Hetch Hetchy project
the board of public works and M. M. O'Shaughnessy as city engineer
had done a large amount of work; that the board of public works
had in its possession a large number of plans, specifications,
reports, contracts, estimates, certificates, receipts, surveys,
field notes, maps, plats, profiles, and other papers relating
to the Hetch Hetchy project, which included records of certain
specified structures, drill borings, and a proposed section of
the dam; that petitioner, a citizen of the city and county of
San Francisco, desired to inform himself and others with regard
to the work; that he desired to investigate the records of the
Hetch Hetchy project, including both those generally described
and those specifically described; that **880 he had made demand
on the defendants that he be given access to and inspection of
the records mentioned, which demand had been refused; and petitioner
prayed that defendants be ordered to allow petitioner to inspect
all the records mentioned, with *513 the privilege of taking
notes, copies and other data therefrom.
In their answer, the defendants alleged that---- 'There are
in the office of the city engineer a large number of incompleted
and unapproved maps, plans, estimates, studies, reports, and
memoranda relating more or less directly to the Hetch Hetchy
project, some of which have been prepared or are in the course
of preparation by the city engineer's assistants, some of which
have been left there by employees of previous administrations,
but none of which have been finally approved by the city engineer
or filed with the board of public works or made a part of any
public or official transaction. As to the last-described maps,
plans, estimates, studies, reports and memoranda, defendants
allege that the city engineer has not had the opportunity of
passing on such data either in the way of approval or disapproval;
that as at present constituted, said data is of the kind and
type which may be modified, corrected or destroyed at the will
of the city engineer or the assistant in charge of the same;
that they have not been made the basis of and are not records
of any public or official acts or transactions; that they are
not public records, public books, public writings, public documents
of public matters; that the interests of the public and the Hetch
Hetchy project require that said data be kept and withheld from
inspection by the petitioner or his agents'; that defendants
deny that 'until the city engineer completes, approves, and files
said data or other matter with the board of public works, that
the same passes into the possession, custody, or control of the
board of public works, or becomes a part of any public record
whatever. Defendants deny that they, or either or any of them,
have ever refused or still refuse to petitioner or his representatives
or agents access to that portion of the hereinabove described
data which is a matter of public record, and allege that all
such data or matter which constitutes part of the public records
of the city and county of San Francisco has at all times been,
and is still open to said petitioner.'
Then followed certain allegations that it was necessary to
keep private the information concerning the work on the Hetch
Hetchy project until the plans for it had been approved, and
impugning the motives of petitioner in seeking *514 the information
he wanted, and that 'part of the data in the city engineer's
office to which access is sought by petitioner consist of confidential
reports, estimates and data collected and compiled by assistants
and other engineers employed for that purpose, and held for use
in pending litigation and investigations affecting the Hetch
Hetchy project; that it would be extremely detrimental to the
interests of said project and the interests of the people and
citizens of the city and county of San Francisco if such data
should be given publicity'; and that in refusing inspection of
the data asked by petitioner, defendant city engineer was acting
under authority and instruction from the board of supervisors
of the city and county of San Francisco.
The court found that all the allegations of the petition were
true, except those of paragraph X, which concerned the making
of a demand for inspection by petitioner, his agents and representatives.
In that connection the court found in detail that petitioner
had demanded of defendants that he, his agents and representatives,
be given access to and inspection of all the records mentioned,
with the privilege of taking copies, notes, and data therefrom,
but that the defendants had refused such demand, except that
petitioner had been accorded the right to inspect the detailed
specifications of the tunnel aqueduct between Early Intake and
Moccasin creek, including the record of certain drill borings
and the city engineer's estimate thereon, and other records which
defendants admitted constituted public records. It was also found
that the purpose of the petitioner was not to mislead or prejudice
the public mind against the Hetch Hetchy project, and that it
was not the petitioner's motive to find in the records to which
access was sought a basis for unfair or sinister criticism of
the Hetch Hetchy project; that there was data consisting of confidential
reports, estimates, and data prepared for use in pending litigation,
which it would be detrimental to the interests of the people
of the city and county of San Francisco to disclose prior to
the time at which it would become necessary to use it in connection
with the litigation; that the city engineer had permitted all
of the records and other matters
mentioned in the petition to be examined by an investigating
committee from the Civic League of Improvement Clubs, and that
they had been examined by such committee; that the *515 board
of supervisors had instructed the city engineer to refuse inspection
to petitioner, as alleged in the answer.
The conclusions of law were to the effect that petitioner
was entitled to a writ of mandate as prayed, 'except that such
writ shall not decree to said petitioner the right to inspect
or take copies, notes or data from any of the confidential reports,
estimates or data, collected or compiled by assistants or other
engineers employed for that purpose for the use of the city attorney
of the city and county of San Francisco, or other attorney at
law acting for said city and county, in advising the defendants
in respect to their official rights and action or for use by
said attorneys or either of them in legal proceedings * * * to
which proceedings the defendants or any of them in their official
capacity, **881 or the city and county of San Francisco are or
may be parties litigant; except further from said writ any advice
given in reference to such privileged data by the city attorney
or other attorney in the course of his professional employment
as attorney for said city and county of San Francisco, or for
said defendants in their official capacities.'
Defendants state: 'We may summarize the description of this
data by saying that it consists of maps, plans, estimates and
studies in the possession and control of the city engineer and
his assistants upon which no official judgment or action had
been taken at the date of the petition. It was and is defendants'
contention that a public record is not made every time a public
employee puts his pencil on paper; that it must be a record of
some official act and not merely a tentative study or design
concerning which no official action has been taken either in
the way of approval or rejection;' that 'the data to which access
is sought is not required by law to be kept, has not been approved
by the city engineer, has not been filed with the board of public
works, has not been made a part or basis of any public transaction.
For the most part it consists of preliminary maps lacking detailed
drawings and working plans necessary to make it available for
use even if officially approved and filed. The line of demarcation
between public records and documents and data or memoranda in
the course of preparation must, of course, be drawn somewhere,'
*516 and that 'the tentative conclusion of an assistant may or
may not be correct, and until the city engineer finally passes
upon it, it does not become a record of the opinion of his office.'
Petitioner's contention is: That 'the fundamental issue on
this appeal is not the right of these petitioners to inspect
the Hetch Hetchy records. The question is whether the citizens
of San Francisco, in their capacity as citizens and distinguished
from their corporate entity, have a right to see these records,
whether they have a right to go behind the conclusions of the
city engineer and whether they have the right to see the work
for which their money was paid.' That 'we believe that any document
prepared in a public office within the scope of the duties of
that office, for the purpose of conducting public business and
the expense of which is borne by the municipality, belongs to
the municipality That it is a matter of public interest and that
the citizens of the municipality by virtue of their citizenship
are entitled to inspect that document and draw from it such conclusions
as they choose. We submit that it is immaterial whether one branch
of a particular department has transmitted the document to another
or not, and that it is immaterial whether in the course of days
or months or years, the head of the subordinate department has,
or has not, seen fit to stamp it with his mental approval. It
makes no difference whether it is a correct or erroneous document;
it is a document which belongs to the public, and if it belongs
to the public, the citizens have the right to inspect it,' and
that 'the real rule, however, is that a document prepared by
a public offical or his subordinate in the course of duty and
at public expense, is a public document and every citizen has
the right to inspect it.'
Section 1888, Code of Civil Procedure, is as follows: 'Public
writings are: (1) The written acts or records of acts of the
sovereign authority, of official bodies and tribunals, and of
public officers, legislative, judicial, and executive. * * *
(2) Public records, kept in this state, of private writings.'
Section 1892 provides that---- 'Every citizen has a right
to inspect and take a copy of any public writing of this state,
except as otherwise expressly provided by statute.' And section
1893 that----
'Every public officer having the *517 custody of a public
writing, which a citizen has a right to inspect, is bound to
give him, on demand, a certified copy of it, on payment of the
legal fees therefor.' Section 1894 provides in part that----
'Public writings are divided into four classes: * * * (3) Other
official documents; (4) public records, kept in this state, of
private writings.'
Section 1032 of the Political Code provides that---- 'The
public records and other matters in the office of any officer
are at all times, during office hours, open to the inspection
of any citizen of this state.'
Section 6 of article 6 of the charter of the city and county
of San Francisco is as follows: 'The board [of public works]
shall keep and preserve a record of all its proceedings, and
copies of all plans, specifications, reports, contracts, estimates,
certificates, receipts, surveys, field notes, maps, plats, profiles,
and of all papers pertaining to the transactions of the board.'
Section 13 of article 16 provides that---- 'All books and
records of every office and department shall be open to the inspection
of any citizen at any time during business hours, * * * but the
records of the police department shall not be subject to such
inspection except permission be given by the police commissioner
or by the chief of police.'
On appeal the defendants waived the objection they made in
the court below on the score of petitioner's motives, so even
if the motives of a citizen have any place in the consideration
of such a question, the point is eliminated here.
Although there is no express finding that all documents to
which access is sought are public records or 'other matters'
which the public is entitled to inspect, such a finding is to
be implied form the conclusion of law **882 that petitioner is
entitled to inspect all of them, with the exception of those
which were prepared for the use of the city attorney in litigation.
An examination of the authorities shows that there is no single
test which can be applied to determine what are and what are
not 'public records.' In Barrickman v. Lyman, 155 Ky. 710, 160
S. W. 267, the distinction was held to rest on whether or not
the documents were required by law to be kept. In the case of
Kyburg v. Perkins, 6 Cal. 674, cited by petitioner, it was said
that---- 'To entitle a book to the character of an official register
it is not necessary that it be required by an express *518 statute
to be kept.'
And as pointed out, petitioner insists that all documents,
prepared by public officials at public expense, are public documents.
In Mushet v. Department of Public Service of the City of Los
Angeles, 35 Cal. App. 630, 170 Pac. 653, petitioner, a taxpayer,
brought an action to compel the defendant department of public
service to allow him to inspect certain books of account, records,
papers, and documents connected with an electric heat, light,
and power system which the city was operating. The inspection
was allowed over the objection of defendants that the documents
were not public records. In that case it was said: 'The appellants,
it is true, are by the charter of Los Angeles made officers of
the municipality; but the books and papers which respondent seeks
to examine are not made official documents merely because they
are kept under the direction of city officials. Their character
is fixed by the considerations which we have already advanced.'
The considerations advanced to determine whether or not the
documents were public records were as follows: 'Returning to
the language of sections 1894 and 1888 of the Code, it is plain
that the books and papers mentioned in the petition are not described
in either subdivisions 1, 2 or 4 of section 1894, or subdivision
2 of section 1888. If the sections cover them at all they must
fall within the language of the one remaining subdivision of
each; in other words, consolidating the language of those subdivisions,
they must answer this description: They must be 'official documents'
other than laws or judicial records, and must be the 'written
acts or records of the acts * * * of official bodies' or 'tribunals'
or 'of public officers * * * of this state.''
In that case it was held that the documents were public records,
although the city in operating the electric system was engaging
in a private enterprise as a proprietor. It papears from that
case that the only means of deciding whether or not a document
is a public writing is by determining whether or not it falls
within the statutory definition.
In Egan v. Board of Water Supply of the City of New York,
205 N. Y. 147, 98 N. E. 467, 41 L. R. A. (N. S.) 280, Ann. Cas.
1913E, 56, petitioner asked for and was allowed inspection of
certain correspondence which would tend to show why the board
had failed to grant a contract *519 to the lowest bidder. The
court said in part: 'It may not be denied that there are papers
concerning governmental matters which are properly treated as
secret and confidential, such for example as diplomatic correspondence
and letters and dispatches in the detective police service.'
[1] In the case at bar the record shows that the city engineer,
as an officer of the board of public works, is in charge of the
Hetch Hetchy project, and that he is assisted by a large number
of assistants and subordinates. These assistants prepare data
connected with the project, which consists of estimates, plans,
drawings, maps, or the like. This data is all submitted to the
city engineer for his approval, unless a subordinate is formally
appointed to take charge of a particular branch of the work,
in which case the subordinate's approval of such work is final.
When an estimate of the plan, which is considered acceptable,
is completed it is approved by the city engineer, and usually
is at once forwarded to the board of public works. Defendants
concede that after such approval the documents are public records.
Until finally approved by the city engineer, with the exception
noted, all the data is but tentative, and is liable to change,
and much of it is destroyed when it is refused approval. It is
this preliminary matter which defendants, as stated above, contend
should not be submitted to public inspection. Defendants do not
contend that surveys and maps, complete in themselves, of the
territory which the project will occupy are not open to public
inspection. The data referred to here, consisting of preliminary
estimates, plans and the like, are computations based on such
surveys.
We are of the opinion that the preliminary estimates and details
which form this incompleted data are not of such a character
as would constitute them public records. Until they receive some
official approval the documents cannot be considered the act
or the record of an act of the city engineer or the board of
public works. They cannot be considered the official acts of
the city engineer because compiled in his office, for he testified
that 'I don't allow anything to go out of my office except it
has my final, definite approval.' Before approved they have not
attained the character and dignity of completed acts or documents
of any kind. **883 Until a satisfactory plan or estimate is completed,
the documents are but preliminaries in the course of *520 what
will eventually be an act of the city engineer. When a satisfactory
plan is adopted, all the others are discarded unless, as testified
by the city engineer, they relate to the plan which is finally
adopted, in which case they are included in the files with the
accepted plan. Therefore these preliminary matters are not 'public
records in the office of an officer,' within the meaning of the
sections of the Codes and the charter.
We are of the opinion, however, that these documents and data
are of such character as constitutes them 'other matters' within
the meaning of section 1032 of the Political Code. In Whelan
v. Superior Court, 114 Cal. 548, 46 Pac. 468, petitioner sought
to be allowed to inspect certain instructions given to a sheriff
by an execution creditor. In refusing the inspection, the court
said:
'It does not by reason of being in writing, become a 'public
record,' or any other public matter, in the office of the sheriff.
The 'other matters' referred to in section 1032 [of the Political
Code] which a citizen is entitled to inspect, is a matter which
is 'public' and in which the whole public may have an interest.'
The word 'public' is defined in both the Standard and Webster's
dictionaries as 'of, pertaining to, or affecting, the people
at large or the community.' That the Hetch Hetchy project is
a public matter, in which the public has an interest, cannot
be doubted. It follows that the public has an interest in the
plans and designs which are adopted for the completion of the
project. The preliminary specifications and estimates are all
steps in the process of forming an acceptable plan for carrying
out the work. Although many of them are never completed, and
many are destroyed, they all represent work which is being done
in the course of completing the project. Not only is the work
being done in the course of completing a public project, but
it is being done by public officers and employees at public expense.
That these plans are tentative and are subject to error or alteration
cannot change their character, for, while they may not represent
the final result of the work of the city engineer's office, they
are important parts of that work. As such they are matters which
affect the public, and in which the public has an interest, if
that interest is only to see that the city engineer is taking
steps toward the completion of *521 the Hetch Hetchy project.
It must be held that the implied finding of the trial court that
they are of such a character was justified. It is therefore unnecessary
to consider whether these documents are such as the board of
public works is required to keep.
[2] As pointed out, there was a finding to the effect that
'There exists data in said city engineer's office consisting
of confidential reports, estimates and data collected and compiled
by assistants and other engineers employed for that purpose and
held therein for use by the attorneys for said city and county
of San Francisco in pending litigation and anticipated litigation
affecting the Hetch Hetchy project,' and that 'defendant M. M.
O'Shaughnessy, as city engineer of said city and county of San
Francisco, has permitted all of the records and other matters
to which access is sought by the petitioner in this proceeding
to be examined by an investigating committee appointed by the
Civic League of Improvement Clubs of said city and county of
San Francisco, and that the same have been examined by such committee,'
In support of that portion of the judgment which exempts from
petitioner's right of inspection all this data, we are referred
to subdivision 2 of section 1881 of the Code of Civil Procedure,
which provides that----
'An attorney cannot, without the consent of his client, be
examined as to any communication made by the client to him, or
his advice given thereon in the course of his professional employment.'
And to subdivision 5, to the effect that---- 'A public officer
cannot be examined as to communications made to him in official
confidence, when the public interest would suffer by the disclosure.'
The first of these provisions applies to the examination of
an attorney as to communications made to him by his client. The
right of the city attorney to refuse to testify, if he were examined
concerning the documents under consideration here, is not involved.
If the documents are public records or 'other matters' which
the public has a right to inspect, the fact that the city engineer
had communicated them to the city attorney cannot prevent a citizen
from inspecting them.
[3] In Title Insurance & Trust Co. v. California Development
Co., 171 Cal. 173, 220, 152 Pac. 542, 562, it was said: 'It is
argued that the court erred in admitting in evidence certain
letters written by and to officials and employees of the *522
Southern Pacific Company. While some of these communications
were originally privileged, there was evidence justifying the
court in concluding, in each case, that the privilege had been
waived by voluntarily giving the letter into the hands of third
persons.'
The record in the case at bar shows that the city engineer
testified:
'Q. You would have been willing to have any committee of the
Civic League of Improvement Clubs go through all this data? A.
I would, and they did. Q. And they did? A. And they **884 did.
Q. How long did it take them to go through it? A. They took part
of one day and pretty nearly the whole of another. Q. Examined
it quite exhaustively? A. Examined it quite exhaustively.'
This testimony sustains the finding that the city engineer
has permitted this data to be inspected. Since it has been opened
to inspection, it cannot be claimed that it is any longer confidential,
as was held in Title Insurance & Trust Co. v. California
Development Co., supra, and the finding to that effect is erroneous.
Inasmuch as the data is not privileged merely because communicated
to the city attorney, and as it has lost its confidential character
because already made public, it follows that that portion of
the judgment excepting it from the matter which petitioner is
entitled to inspect cannot be upheld.
The judgment must be modified to omit from the writ the exception
of all confidential reports, estimates, or data collected or
compiled by assistants or other engineers for the use of the
city attorney or other attorneys representing the city and county
of San Francisco in legal proceedings, and, as so modified, the
judgment is affirmed.
In view of the foregoing conclusions, it becomes unnecessary
to consider the contentions of petitioner relating to his appeal
from the order denying his motion to vacate the judgment and
amend the conclusions of law. The judgment is affirmed as above
modified.
We concur: SHAW, C. J.; LENNON, J.; WILBUR, J.; SLOANE, J.;
SHURTLEFF, J.; WASTE, J.
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