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AMALIA URIBE, Petitioner,
v.
ROBERT M. HOWIE, as Agricultural Commissioner, etc., Respondent;
WASHBURN & BELL et al., Interveners and Respondents; THE
PEOPLE, Intervener and Appellant
19 Cal.App.3d 194
Civ. No. 10718. Court of Appeals of California, Fourth Appellate
District, Division Two.
August 10, 1971.
Opinion by Gardner, P. J., with Gabbert and Tamura, JJ., concurring.
COUNSEL
Thomas C. Lynch and Evelle J. Younger, Attorneys General,
Robert H. O'Brien and Andrea Sheridan Ordin, Deputy Attorneys
General, for Intervener and Appellant.
Ray T. Sullivan, Jr., County Counsel, Bruce M. Cook and Steven
A. Broiles, Deputy County Counsel, for Respondent.
Reid, Babbage & Coil, John D. Babbage and William R. Bailey,
Jr., for Interveners and Respondents.
No appearance for Petitioner.
GARDNER, P. J.
Petitioner Amalia Uribe filed a petition for writ of mandate
on April 8, 1969, seeking to compel respondent Robert Howie,
as Riverside County Agricultural Commissioner, to permit her
to inspect and copy pest control operator reports in his possession.
An order to show cause why the mandate should not issue was
issued and Jose Uribe was appointed guardian ad litem to prosecute
the action for the minor petitioner.
Certain interested individuals and business (Washburn &
Bell, et al.) were allowed to intervene, and thereafter filed
a complaint in intervention for an order enjoining respondent
Howie from disclosing any of the information contained in said
reports. An order to show cause regarding a preliminary injunction
was issued, and at the same time, interveners noticed a motion
to strike the order to show cause why the peremptory writ of
mandate should not issue.
Thereafter, the People of the State of California were allowed
to intervene, joining petitioner in her claim, and filed their
complaint in intervention.
Interveners' demurrer to the People's complaint was overruled.
Trial ensued, at the conclusion of which the court filed its
notice of intended decision, which indicated denial of the petition,
granting of the injunction preventing disclosure, and denial
of the relief sought by the People. Thereafter on February 17,
1970, findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgment granting
permanent injunction and denying peremptory {Page 19 Cal.App.3d
199} writ of mandamus were signed and filed. The People filed
a timely notice of appeal on their behalf alone.
Petitioner, 19 years of age and a resident alien, has for
nine years lived in the City of Coachella, California. She is
a farm worker in the Coachella Valley, in Gilroy and in Yuba
City.
In early 1968 and on one occasion in 1969, while petitioner
was working in the vineyards of the Coachella Valley in Riverside
County, she suffered from blurred vision, itchy eyes and nausea.
This condition continued for about a month after she ceased work.
When petitioner returned to work she again suffered from blurred
vision and itchy eyes. During the time she worked in the Coachella
Valley she heard other workers complain about powder that was
used on the leaves and about itchy eyes and blurred vision. They
also complained about excessive sweating, nausea and dizzness
experienced while working. Also, petitioner's brother was injured
while working in the fields. He had some red spots on his back
like a rash. Her brother did not have the rash before he started
working in the grapes in the Coachella valley. The rash bothers
him a great deal; when he works in the fields, it gets worse.
A doctor did not come out to the field, and neither the foreman
nor the grower of the field provided any medical assistance to
the complaining workers. Petitioner once asked a foreman what
the white powder on the leaves was; he said he did not know.
Petitioner is worried about eating fruit and vegetables which
have been treated with pesticides. From what she has heard and
read, she believes that DDT hurts the consumer and that it may
cause cancer. After suffering injuries in the field and becoming
concerned about the possibility of danger in the foods that she
was eating, petitioner asked her attorney to go with her to see
the records of the pesticides that are applied in the Coachella
Valley.
On April 1, 1969, petitioner, accompanied by her attorney
David S. Averbuck, appeared in respondent's office. Petitioner's
attorney demanded that petitioner be allowed to inspect or copy
reports submitted by commercial pest control applicators in Riverside
County that were in respondent's custody. These reports specify
the name of the pesticide operator, the location and owner of
the field or fields to which pesticides are applied, the chemical
or combination thereof used, the quantities and concentration
of pesticides employed, the crop to which they are applied, the
pests being treated for, and the date of application. Petitioner
sought to inspect and copy all such reports from throughout the
county filed after January 1, 1969. Respondent Howie did not
allow petitioner to inspect the records. {Page 19 Cal.App.3d
200}
Petitioner wishes to inspect these records because she wants
to take a blood test. By means of blood tests, she could be examined
to see if she had been hurt by exposure to pesticides. She learned
that only by obtaining the records could a doctor complete the
tests. The test she was referring to is the cholinesterase base
line test. Further, petitioner wants to know what kind of pesticides
are being used and the amount and place they are used in order
to ascertain whether her family is being injured.
Respondent Howie offered to and did present to petitioner
and her attorney a copy of an annual summary report prepared
by his office from reports received from commercial applicators
showing the total quantity of various pesticides used in Riverside
County, and the type of crops and the total crop acreage upon
which such pesticides were applied. However, such summary does
not reveal the specific property treated, the nature of any particular
application, the name of any pest control operator, or the name
of the owner of any specific parcel of property treated. Such
annual report is furnished by respondent to the state Department
of Agriculture yearly and is open to public inspection in respondent's
office.
Interveners are licensed commercial pest control operators.
They, and other commercial pest control operators, prepare monthly
pest control operator reports of their operations pursuant to
Agricultural Code section 11733. fn. 1 The reports are then submitted
to respondent on forms labeled "Riverside County Spray Report."
As noted, the reports show the name of the commercial operator,
the location and owner of the grove, vineyard or other crop being
sprayed, the date of application, the number of trees or acres
treated, the kind of trees being treated, pests being treated
for, the type of pesticide, including combinations of one or
more pesticides and strength used, the dosage of each pesticide
material used, and the amount of each concentrated pesticide
material used in each application.
Each of the interveners and other commercial operators has
developed over a period of years equipment with special modifications
for his own use, combinations of pesticide materials used, and
specific dosage and strength variations in applications which
are unique to the commercial operators, including each of the
interveners, in conducting operations for various customers.
They do not disclose the nature of their own individually designed
operations, procedure or equipment to the general public or to
other commercial operators at meetings or otherwise. The reports
prepared {Page 19 Cal.App.3d 201} by interveners and by other
commercial operators are private business records while in their
possession and contain information which, if made available to
each of the other interveners or their other commercial operator
competitors, would provide information from which each could
determine the kind of equipment being used, the combinations
of materials used, and the dosages and strength of materials
used by other commercial operators in their pest control operations
on specific groves or crops for specific owners.
The information contained in the subject reports would permit
applicators to closely approach the services supplied by others
but it is not sufficient to allow competitors to duplicate one
another's techniques. An operator would need to know the weather
conditions, the projected future weather conditions, the soil
conditions, the condition of the tree or crop to be sprayed,
the color of the fruit to be sprayed and the intensity of the
insect population in order to duplicate a competitor's operation.
In addition, the competitor would need a good judgment of the
population dynamics of the insects involved.
Moreover, even though pesticide applicators have developed
equipment with special modifications, such equipment is generally
open to public view when not in use.
Persons who intend to apply a chemical which has been declared
an injurious material by the state Director of Agriculture must
apply to respondent's office for a permit to use it. In 1968,
there were approximately 13,000 such pesticide applications in
Riverside County. Respondent's office follows up and investigates
to see whether the permittee used the injurious material in a
proper manner, either by actually observing the application or
by studying the monthly pest control operator reports. His office
was able to see about 40 percent of the 1968 applications, leaving
60 percent to be studied through the subject reports. Respondent
indicated it was important to his office that these reports be
accurate because the integrity of the reports was really the
essence of over half of his pesticide control program. Respondent
has absolute confidence in the integrity and the accuracy of
the reports supplied to him by commercial operators, including
interveners, but he would lack such confidence in the accuracy
and integrity of the reports if they were made public. (It should
be noted that respondent was unable to articulate why he would
lose confidence in these reports should they lose their confidential
nature.) Consequently, the reports received by respondent, under
a pledge and long standing policy of confidentiality, are not
made public.
The policy of confidentiality maintained by respondent's office
is supported by a policy letter No. I-3, issued by the California
state Director {Page 19 Cal.App.3d 202} of Agriculture, since
the reports are obtained under a pledge of confidentiality. However,
even though the policy of the State Department of Agriculture,
as reflected in the policy letter, coincides with respondent's
own policy, it does not compel respondent to maintain the subject
reports in confidence.
In spite of respondent's policy of maintaining the reports'
confidentiality, he has provided the information contained in
the reports -- but not the reports themselves -- to certain people,
such as insurance adjusters, physicians, beekeepers, and alfalfa
growers.
The trial court found that there is public concern regarding
the effect of pesticides on public health and the environment.
In particular, there is a problem in California regarding organic
phosphate poisoning. Organic phosphates are pesticides, generally
considered hazardous materials that can result in injuries and
death. The Department of Public Health received approximately
100 to 200 reports of organic phosphate poisoning to farm workers
between 1967 and the trial of this action in 1969.
Organic phosphates inhibit enzymes vital to the transmission
of nerve impulses. The effect upon the body will depend upon
the nerve which is short-circuited. For example, if a nerve that
supplies eye muscles is short-circuited, vision will be altered
and weakness or headache may ensue.
A proper preventative medical program or monitoring program
can be established to prevent serious illness in workers exposed
to pesticides; however, sufficient data is essential in order
to provide the necessary information to establish such a program.
The program would be set up to monitor the levels of enzyme by
blood test, known as the cholinesterase base line test. If a
person were showing a lowering of his enzyme level, exposure
to pesticides could be limited for the length of time required
for him to rebuild his enzyme to the proper level. The purpose
of such a program would be to make a recommendation to management
that a particular worker be withdrawn from subsequent exposure.
In order to make the program work, it would be necessary to
know the toxicity of the particular chemical, the dosage and
the time to which individuals are exposed to the particular chemical,
the date that a certain organic phosphate is applied, and location
of the fields.
Thus, information contained in the subject reports would assist
clinics and health officials in properly maintaining a cholinesterase
monitoring program. Respondent has been authorized by interveners
to release information from their reports for use in a cholinesterase
monitoring program sponsored or approved by the Riverside County
Health Department, but not to release the reports themselves.
{Page 19 Cal.App.3d 203}
The work of Dr. Robert van den Bosch, a professor of entomology
at the University of California at Berkeley, is principally concerned
with the control of agricultural pests through biological control,
which consists of the utilization of biotic natural enemies,
that is, parasites and predators that affect these pests. He
is also involved with the development of integrated control programs:
pest control combining biological and chemical methods, largely
based on ecological considerations. Dr. van den Bosch's studies
include analyzing the cause and effect of pesticides, including
(1) the costs to the growers, (2) secondary outbreaks of other
pests, (3) target pest resurgences, (4) drift causing problems
in adjacent crops, and (5) environmental pollution.
The information required by Agricultural Code section 11733,
which is the subject of this lawsuit, would aid Dr. van den Bosch
in several ways. It would establish the pattern of insecticide
use. When Dr. van den Bosch and his team are trying to analyze
the impact or the secondary effects of a given insecticide, the
ability to establish an area-wide pattern of its use and to correlate
secondary problems that develop following that use would be very
helpful. Also, the information would be helpful in studying the
economics of pest control. The reports would greatly aid study
of the effect that specific materials, combinations or practices
have on the growers' costs. And, the information relating to
the volume of use of certain kinds of insecticides is pertinent
to area-wide problems of drift and environmental pollution. The
information in the records would assist in the study of the effect
of pesticides on the environment and in the study of economical
and ecologically safe pest control within California. There are
patterns of ecological disruption today due to pesticide use.
One of the ways that society has to attack this is to analyze
patterns of use and what evolves from these usages. The information
from the subject records would be very useful in ascertaining
the effect that various materials, combinations and practices
are having on costs to the grower and environmental disruption.
Finally, the information would have a relationship to the recommendations
that the university makes to the growers. If it is established
from this type of information that a chemical is engendering
a costly pest pattern following its use, it is important to warn
the growers against the use of this material.
Dr. van den Bosch does not have the information now on the
scale that would be available through the subject records.
The summary of pesticide use which is made public by respondent
Howie is not sufficient for these purposes.
As noted, the trial court denied petitioner's writ of mandate
to compel disclosure of the records submitted by commercial applicators
of agricultural {Page 19 Cal.App.3d 204} pesticides to the county
agricultural commissioner pursuant to Agricultural Code section
11733.
The trial court found that disclosure of those records, although
public records, had been exempted from disclosure by Government
Code section 6254, in that they were trade secrets, records for
law enforcement or licensing purposes, and crop reports. Further,
the court found that respondent had justified nondisclosure of
the records pursuant to Government Code section 6255, and specifically
that the public interest served by not making the records public
outweighs the public interest served by disclosure.
In this appeal, the People assert that while the trial court
was correct in ruling that the pest control applicators reports
were public records in the hands of respondent Howie, it committed
error in denying the petition for a writ of mandate to compel
disclosure of the reports because they do not constitute crop
reports, are not used for licensing or law enforcement purposes,
do not contain trade secrets (all within the meaning of Gov.
Code, § 6254) and that further, the public interest served
by disclosure of these reports outweighs that served by nondisclosure.
(Gov. Code, § 6255.) Further, the People assert that if
Government Code sections 6254 and 6255 bar public disclosure
of the pest control operators' reports, the sections as applied
are unconstitutional, as violative of the public right to information.
[1] Initially, we note our agreement with the determination
of the trial court that the pest control operators' reports in
the hands of the county agricultural commissioner are public
records within the meaning of the California Public Records Act.
(Gov. Code, § 6250 et seq.) Government Code section 6252,
subdivision (d), as it read at the time of trial, stated: "'Public
records' includes all papers ... and other documents containing
information relating to the conduct of the public's business
...." Thus, the inquiry centers on the question of whether
the county spray reports fall within some exception to the general
rule of Government Code section 6253, making all public records
open to public inspection.
At the time of the trial in this proceeding, Government Code
section 6254 read, in pertinent part: "... nothing in this
chapter shall be construed to require disclosure of the records
that are:
"* * *
"(d) Trade secrets;
"(e) ... crop reports, which are obtained in confidence
from any person;
"(f) Records of complaints to or investigations conducted
by, or records of intelligence information or security procedures
of, the office of the {Page 19 Cal.App.3d 205} Attorney General
and the Department of Justice, and any state or local police
agency, ... for correctional, law enforcement or licensing purposes;
"* * *
"(k) Records the disclosure of which is exempted or prohibited
pursuant to provisions of federal or state law, including, but
not limited to, provisions of the Evidence Code relating to privilege.
"* * *
"Nothing in this section is to be construed as preventing
any agency from opening its records concerning the administration
of the agency to public inspection, unless disclosure is otherwise
prohibited by law."
Government Code section 6255 stated: "The agency shall
justify withholding any record by demonstrating that the record
in question is exempt under express provisions of this chapter
or that on the facts of the particular case the public interest
served by not making the record public clearly outweighs the
public interest served by disclosure of the record."
Evidence Code section 1040 states in pertinent part:
"(a) As used in this section, 'official information'
means information acquired in confidence by a public employee
in the course of his duty and not open, or officially disclosed,
to the public prior to the time the claim of privilege is made.
"(b) A public entity has a privilege to refuse to disclose
official information, and to prevent another from disclosing
such information, if the privilege is claimed by a person authorized
by a public entity to do so and:
"* * *
"(2) Disclosure of the information is against the public
interest because there is a necessity for preserving the confidentiality
of the information that outweighs the necessity for disclosure
in the interest of justice; but no privilege may be claimed under
this paragraph if any person authorized to do so has consented
that the information be disclosed in the proceeding. In determining
whether disclosure of the information is against the public interest,
the interest of the public entity as a party in the outcome of
the proceeding may not be considered."
Evidence Code section 1060 states: "If he or his agent
or employee claims the privilege, the owner of a trade secret
has a privilege to refuse to disclose the secret, and to prevent
another from disclosing it, if the {Page 19 Cal.App.3d 206} allowance
of the privilege will not tend to conceal fraud or otherwise
work injustice."
As noted, the trial court denied disclosure of the spray reports,
basing its ruling on four separate grounds: (1) the reports contain
trade secrets within the meaning of then Government Code section
6254, subdivision (d) and Evidence Code section 1060, as incorporated
into the Government Code by section 6254, subdivision (k); (2)
the reports constituted crop reports within the meaning of Government
Code section 6254, subdivision (e); (3) they were reports of
a local agency compiled for correctional, law enforcement or
licensing purposes (Gov. Code, § 6254, subd. (f)); (4) the
public interest served by nondisclosure of the reports outweighed
that served by disclosure. We must review these determinations
individually.
I. Trade Secrets
As noted above, at the time of trial of this case, trade secrets
were exempt from the requirement that public records be open
for inspection by two provisions of Government Code section 6254.
They were specifically exempted by subdivision (d), and by reference
through subdivision (k) which incorporated the terms of Evidence
Code section 1060. Then subdivision (d) appeared to grant a per
se exemption to public inspection for all material containing
trade secrets, while Evidence Code section 1060 grants such exemption
only if "allowance of the privilege will not tend to conceal
fraud or otherwise work injustice." Thus, a balancing of
interests is necessary to determine whether the exemption will
be allowed under Evidence Code section 1060. (See code commissioner's
notes following Evid. Code, § 1060.) Strong policy considerations
militate in favor of interpreting subdivision (d) in a similar
manner, as providing for a balancing of interests. An absolute
privilege for all trade secrets could amount to a legally sanctioned
license for unfair competition or fraud and enable the continued
use of dangerous materials by a party asserting the privilege.
[2] The final paragraph of section 6254 makes clear the exemptions
contained in that section are not absolute. This interpretation
is strengthened by the fact that in 1970, the Legislature amended
subdivision (d) so as to repeal the trade secret exemption created
therein; as currently constituted, Government Code section 6254
grants exemption from disclosure to public records containing
trade secrets only under the provisions of subdivision (k) as
that incorporates the provisions of Evidence Code section 1060.
Thus, we find that, as it read from the time of its enactment
in 1968 to its amendment in 1970, subdivision (d) of Government
Code section 6254, allowed {Page 19 Cal.App.3d 207} nondisclosure
of public records containing trade secrets only when to do so
would not tend to conceal fraud or otherwise work injustice.
The protection thus afforded trade secrets by subdivisions (d)
and (k) between 1968 and 1970 was identical; in each case, the
trade secret might be protected only if the interests of justice
are thus best served. (See Terzian v. Superior Court, 10 Cal.App.3d
286, 294 [88 Cal.Rptr. 806].)
[3] Initially, we would note that in determining whether the
pesticide spray reports here in issue contain trade secrets,
we are not bound by the determination made by the trial court.
What constitutes a trade secret is a question of law, not the
finding of fact respondents seem to suggest it is. (Futurecraft
Corp. v. Clary Corp., 205 Cal.App.2d 279 [23 Cal.Rptr. 198];
By-Buk Co. v. Printed Cellophane Tape Co., 163 Cal.App.2d 157,
166 [329 P.2d 147].)
Restatement, Torts, volume 4, section 757, comment b, page
5, states: "b. Definition of trade secret. A trade secret
may consist of any formula, pattern, device or compilation of
information which is used in one's business, and which gives
him an opportunity to obtain an advantage over competitors who
do not know or use it. It may be a formula for a chemical compound,
a process of manufacturing, treating or preserving materials,
a pattern for a machine or other device, or a list of customers.
It differs from other secret information in a business (see §
759) in that it is not simply information as to single or ephemeral
events in the conduct of the business, as, for example, the amount
or other terms of a secret bid for a contract or the salary of
certain employees, or the security investments made or contemplated,
or the date fixed for the announcement of a new policy or for
bringing out a new model or the like. A trade secret is a process
or device for continuous use in the operation of the business.
Generally it relates to the production of goods, as, for example,
a machine or formula for the production of an article. It may,
however, relate to the sale of goods or to other operations in
the business, such as a code for determining discounts, rebates
or other concessions in a price list or catalogue, or a list
of specialized customers, or a method of bookkeeping or other
office management.
"Secrecy. The subject matter of a trade secret must be
secret. Matters of public knowledge or of general knowledge in
an industry cannot be appropriated by one as his secret. ...
Substantially, a trade secret is known only in the particular
business in which it is used. It is not requisite that only the
proprietor of the business know it. He may, without losing his
protection, communicate it to employees involved in its use.
He may likewise communicate it to others pledged to secrecy.
Others may also know of it independently, as, for example, when
they have discovered the process {Page 19 Cal.App.3d 208} or
formula by independent invention and are keeping it a secret.
Nevertheless, a substantial element of secrecy must exist, so
that, except by the use of improper means, there would be difficulty
in acquiring the information. An exact definition of a trade
secret is not possible. Some factors to be considered in determining
whether given information is one's trade secret are: (1) the
extent to which the information is known outside of his business;
(2) the extent to which it is known by employees and others involved
in his business; (3) the extent of measures taken by him to guard
the secrecy of the information; (4) the value of the information
to him and to his competitors; (5) the amount of effort or money
expended by him in developing the information; (6) the ease or
difficulty with which the information could be properly acquired
or duplicated by others."
[4] The Restatement definition of a trade secret has been
adopted by the courts of this state. (Diodes, Inc. v. Franzen,
260 Cal.App.2d 244, 251 [67 Cal.Rptr. 19]; Futurecraft Corp.
v. Clary Corp., supra, 205 Cal.App.2d 279, 288-289; By-Buk Co.
v. Printed Cellophane Tape Co., supra, 163 Cal.App.2d 157, 166;
see also Winston Research Corp. v. Minnesota Min. & Mfg.
Co., 350 F.2d 134, 145; Sarkes Tarzian, Inc. v. Audio Devices,
Inc., 166 F.Supp. 250, 257-259; Sperry Rand Corporation v. Rothlein,
241 F.Supp. 549, 560-561.)
A similar definition is given in Government Code section 6254.7,
relating to the status as public records of air pollution data.
While not controlling because applicable only to that section,
and by its terms not meant to be a limiting definition, it is
useful in formulating a concept of what the Legislature intended
to protect in subdivision (d) of section 6254. "'Trade Secrets,'
... may include, but are not limited to, any formula, plan, pattern,
process, tool, mechanism, compound, procedure, production data,
or compilation of information which is not patented, which is
known only to certain individuals within a commercial concern
who are using it to fabricate, produce, or compound an article
of trade or a service having commercial value, and which gives
its user an opportunity to obtain a business advantage over competitors
who do not know or use it."
[5] Applying the above definitions, we find that the material
contained in the pest control spray reports does not constitute
trade secrets. The reports contain information stating the chemical
composition of the pesticide spray, the quantity of the compound,
the field to which the compound applied, the type of crop, the
pest sprayed for, and the date of application. The first two
items would perhaps fit within the general definition of a trade
secret. The pest control applicators use their personal compounds
of various types of prepared pesticides, and apply the compounds
in various intensities. However, it is doubtful that this constitutes
a process or device {Page 19 Cal.App.3d 209} for continuous use
in the operation of the business. Government Code section 6254.7's
definition, significantly, is couched in the present tense: "who
are using," and "which gives." The reports at
issue here reveal only a past decision, based on transitory conditions,
as to the mixture and quantity of pesticide to be used. It appears
from the evidence that various compounds in various intensities
would be used to combat a given pest, depending upon the weather
conditions, present and future, the condition of the crop to
be sprayed and the soil upon which it is growing, and intensity
of the insect population. Since the nature of the compound and
the intensity of its application are being varied on the basis
of these other factors, the mixture and dosage elements cannot
be said to have the continuity of use envisioned by the Restatement
definition.
Access to the reports would permit competitors to determine
the kind of equipment which was used from among the general types
of commercially available equipment, but there was no evidence
the applicator's individual modifications could be discovered
from the reports. And only these modifications could even arguably
be considered trade secrets.
On balance, the six factors listed by the Restatement further
indicate that the material contained in the spray reports are
not trade secrets. The information contained in the reports is
available to some individuals outside the pesticide application
business: doctors, insurance adjusters, growers, etc., who, in
the opinion of respondent Howie, have a need to know the information
contained therein. Further, the evidence indicated that it was
the practice of the pesticide applicators to specify the types
and quantities of pesticide applied on their bills to the growers.
Since the growers know the size of the land on which the application
is made, they are in a position to calculate both the composition
of the pesticide mix used and the strength of the application
-- the two factors of information the applicators are least anxious
to have disclosed. And the equipment used to apply the pesticides
is open to public view. Thus, while the information contained
in the spray reports is not readily accessible to the general
public, it may be procured by a number of people outside the
pesticide application industry.
The applicators contend that the information contained in
the reports is of considerable value to them. However, there
was no evidence presented to indicate that the applicators had
invested any great amount of time, money, or expertise above
and beyond that common to the industry to develop the pesticide
mixes and the dosage levels. From the nature of the processes
involved, it seems more probable that the compounds and dosage
levels were developed on an ad hoc basis, through trial and error.
Thus, there would not seem to be any substantial investment in
research and development to be protected by a policy of nondisclosure.
{Page 19 Cal.App.3d 210}
It does not appear from the evidence with what degree of ease
or difficulty the compound formulae and dosage level techniques
might be duplicated by others. It should be noted that the compounds
are synthesized from commercial pesticides available to many.
And if the techniques were evolved on a trial and error basis,
they would not appear overly difficult to duplicate.
The materials used and the services performed in the analogous
area of termite control work do not constitute trade secrets.
(Fortna v. Martin, 158 Cal.App.2d 634, 639-640 [323 P.2d 146].)
[6a] Alternatively, even if the information in the spray reports
does contain trade secrets, we believe that the public interest
is far better served by disclosure than by the converse. The
public interest served by nondisclosure which the trial court
found paramount was the effectiveness of the Commissioner's pesticide
control program. Because he would lack confidence in the reports
if the applicators knew they would be made public, he would not
require reports to be filed with his office in the future. This
would unquestionably weaken his control program. However, the
weight of this consideration is lessened by the fact the Commissioner
did not articulate the reasons he would lack confidence in the
reports, expressly denying any expectation the applicators would
falsify or withhold information. If there were no falsification
or withholding of information, the control program could be continued
in its present form without impairing its effectiveness.
Against this must be measured the interest of the public in
having access to the contents of the spray reports. There was
testimony presented that the information contained in the reports
is important to the study of the effect of pesticides on man.
The information would be useful to study the long range effects
of pesticides on humans, and in the treatment of present illnesses
traceable in whole or part to exposure to these chemicals.
Moreover, uncontradicted evidence is to the effect that the
information in the reports would be most helpful to entomologists
attempting to devise even more effective pesticide programs.
The perfection of such programs would be of commercial benefit
to the growers, who would be able to increase productivity and
to the consumer, who would be able to obtain produce at reduced
prices. These considerations far outweigh the interests of the
pesticide spray applicators in barring inspection of the spray
reports by the public. Further, we would note that if public
disclosure of the spray reports is compelled, one applicator
will not be able to gain a competitive advantage over his fellows.
The reports of all applicators will be open to inspection, and
each applicator may inspect the methods of the other. If anything,
this interchange of ideas might improve the level of proficiency
in the industry.
The California Department of Agriculture on May 14, 1971,
adopted {Page 19 Cal.App.3d 211} an emergency regulation specifying
time intervals in which farm workers may not be allowed to enter
fields after pesticide spraying. The regulation, title 3, section
2475 of the California Administrative Code, is applicable to
citrus, grape, peach and nectarine crops; it lists pesticides
and the interval in days required after an application to each
crop. It further provides that when a mixture of two or more
organic phosphate pesticides is applied, the interval shall be
prolonged by adding to the longest applicable interval an additional
50 percent of that interval. All pesticides listed must contain,
on their labels or in supplementary printed directions distributed
with them, this worker safety information. (Admin. Code, tit.
3, § 2403.) The adequacy and appropriateness of these new
regulations, e.g., the length of the interval for each agent
and the crops to which the regulation applies, are subjects of
significant public interest. The spray reports at issue here
would be a valuable source of data for members of the public
who wish to comment on the regulations. And the reports, if the
Commissioner continues to require them filed with his office,
could be a significant aid to self-enforcement by farm workers
of the waiting time regulation.
The Commissioner testified that if the court compelled disclosure
of the spray reports, he would henceforth require the applicators
to keep the reports in their offices, where he would inspect
them in their custody. Under this system, the public would be
denied access to the information contained in the reports, and
the task of the county agriculture commissioner's office would
be made more onerous. Under the provisions of the Agricultural
Code as now constituted, i.e., section 12005, respondent Howie
cannot be compelled to force the pesticide applicators to file
spray reports with his office; respondent is legally free to
initiate such a program, assuming he can do so consistent with
the discharge of the obligations of his position. However, we
have concluded that the public interest is best served by requiring
disclosure of the spray reports currently on hand and such reports
as respondent Howie may require filed hereafter.
II. Crop Reports
The trial court ruled that the pesticide spray reports were
crop reports within the meaning of Government Code section 6254,
subdivision (e), and hence again exempt from the disclosure provisions
of California Public Records Act. Appellant argues that this
determination is erroneous as a matter of law. The People suggest
that by crop reports, the Legislature intended to exempt from
disclosure the reports filed under the provisions of the California
Marketing Act of 1937, division 21, part 2, chapter 1, Agricultural
{Page 19 Cal.App.3d 212} Code section 58601 et seq., and the
Agricultural Producers Marketing Law, division 21, part 2, chapter
2, Agricultural Code section 59501 et seq.
[7] We need not pass upon appellant's contention in this regard.
For we are of the opinion that crop reports within the meaning
of Government Code section 6254, subdivision (e) refer only to
reports specifying the nature, extent, type or magnitude of crops
being grown. The statute does not define the term, but the purpose
of the exemption would seem to be to protect the financial confidentiality
of growers' enterprises. The standardized pricing that exists
in the commodity markets permits estimating, fairly accurately,
a growers' income from knowledge of the quantity of a commodity
he will or has harvested. And making such records public might
interfere with trading in futures on commodity markets. [8] The
spray applicators' reports here in question do list the type
of crop to which the pesticide was applied. However, they do
not yield information concerning the magnitude of that crop,
its state of preparation, or its likely marketing date. They
contain no financial data; no indication of the probable price
of the harvested crop, and no indication of the price paid for
the pesticide spraying service. They can neither affect the privacy
of either the growers' or applicators' financial dealings, nor
affect prices in commodity markets. Thus, we do not feel that
these reports contain the type of information to which the Legislature
wished to extend a disclosure exemption.
III. Reports Compiled for Licensing Purposes
The trial court ruled that the pesticide spray reports had
been compiled for correctional law enforcement or licensing purposes
within the meaning of Government Code section 6254, subdivision
(f). The parties have not cited to us, and we have been unable
to find any California authority defining the scope of the exemption
created by this subsection. [9] However, the Federal Information
Act (5 U.S.C.A. § 552) has an exemption similar to the one
contained in Government Code section 6254, subdivision (f). The
federal statute, in pertinent part, reads as follows: "(b)
This section does not apply to matters that are --
"* * *
"(7) investigatory files compiled for law enforcement
purposes except to the extent available by law to a party other
than an agency; ..."
This section has been interpreted to apply only when the prospect
of enforcement proceedings is concrete and definite. (Bristol-Myers
Company v. F.T.C., 424 F.2d 935, 939.) It is not enough that
an agency label its {Page 19 Cal.App.3d 213} file "investigatory"
and suggest that enforcement proceedings may be initiated at
some unspecified future date or were previously considered. (Bristol-Myers
Company v. F.T.C., supra; Cooney v. Sun Shipbuilding & Drydock
Company, 288 F.Supp. 708, 711-712.)
We adopt the definition propounded by the federal courts.
In their course of activities the regulatory agencies of this
state accumulate numerous records which may, under certain circumstances,
be used in disciplinary proceedings. Virtually any record so
kept could be put to such use. To say that the exemption created
by subdivision (f) is applicable to any document which a public
agency might, under any circumstances, use in the course of a
disciplinary proceeding would be to create a virtual carte blanche
for the denial of public access to public records. The exception
would thus swallow the rule. This could not have been the intent
of the Legislature.
[10] In the instant case, pesticide applicator spray reports
had been used to review the licenses of the applicators on various
occasions. However, this was not the primary purpose they were
compiled. Nor was there any testimony that any of the reports
were being put to such a purpose at the time of trial. If some
reports were currently being used to investigate an applicator,
the reports relating to that applicator would be exempt, but
not all the reports. Thus, we conclude that the spray reports
here in question were not compiled for a correctional law enforcement
or licensing purpose within the meaning of Government Code section
6254, subdivision (f).
IV. Public Interest Served by Disclosure
[6b] The trial court ruled that on balance, public interest
is better served by granting the spray reports exemption from
public inspection than by opening them to the public in general.
The court concluded that the reports were thereby exempted from
disclosure under the provisions of Government Code section 6255.
We have already discussed the public interests served by disclosure
and nondisclosure at considerable length and have concluded that
disclosure best serves the public interest. There is no need
to repeat that discussion here. Suffice to say that we have concluded
that the pesticide applicator spray reports are not exempt from
public disclosure under the provisions of Government Code section
6255. fn. 2 {Page 19 Cal.App.3d 214}
Thus, in summary, we conclude that the trial court erred in
denying appellant's petition for a writ of mandate and in granting
respondents' petition for permanent injunction. We find that
the pesticide applicators' spray reports are not exempted from
public disclosure under any of the applicable sections of Government
Code sections 6254 or 6255.
In light of our conclusions in this regard, it is unnecessary
to pass upon appellant's contentions concerning any constitutionally
guaranteed right to access to these reports.
The orders of the trial court are reversed and the cause remanded
for further considerations consistent with this opinion.
Gabbert, J., and Tamura, J., concurred.
FN 1. Agricultural Code section 11401 et seq. provides for
the licensing and regulation of the agricultural pest control
business. Section 11733 prescribes the records to be kept by
the registrant in each of the properties treated and provides
that the information shall be furnished to the commissioner when
and as required.
FN 2. At trial, respondent Howie asserted that the spray reports
were exempt from disclosure under the provisions of Evidence
Code section 1040, as incorporated by Government Code section
6254, subdivision (k). Evidence Code section 1040 states in pertinent
part: "(a) As used in this section, 'official information'
means information acquired in confidence by a public employee
in the course of his duty and not open, or officially disclosed,
to the public prior to the time the claim of privilege is made.
"(b) A public entity has a privilege to refuse to disclose
official information, and to prevent another from disclosing
such information, if the privilege is by a person authorized
by the public entity to do so and:
"* * *
"(2) Disclosure of the information is against the public
interest. ..."
In light of our discussion relative to the claim of exemption
under the trade secrets provision, we find that the spray reports
are not exempted from disclosure by the provisions of Evidence
Code section 1040: Disclosure is not against the public interest.
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