• make those minutes—which the OMA deems "public records"—available for inspection and copying upon request. See OMA §§ 551.002, .021–.23. Consequently, to the extent York has requested records that constitute "minutes" from TGSL’s board meetings, the OMA, standing alone, would plainly make these records "public records" and require TGSL to make them available to York for inspection and copying. See id. § 551.022. But the parties have joined issue in three ways with respect to whether this mandate from the OMA requires disclosure of the particular records in dispute here.
OMA vs. PIA
First, TGSL asserts that the OMA mandates that governmental bodies disclose open-meeting "minutes" is qualified by the PIA’s exceptions from mandatory disclosure. York and the Attorney General disagree, contending that the PIA exceptions do not apply to records made public by the OMA. We agree with York and the Attorney General to the extent of concluding that the PIA exceptions on which TGSL relies do not limit its obligation under the OMA to disclose its "minutes."
Similar to OMA, the Texas Legislature enacted the PIA with the express purpose of providing the public "complete information about the affairs of government and the official acts of public officials and employees." PIA § 552.001(a); Jackson v. State Office of Admin. Hearings, 351 S.W.3d 290, 293 (Tex. 2011) (citing City of Garland, 22 S.W.3d at 355–56). The PIA is aimed at preserving a fundamental tenet of representative democracy: "that the government is the servant and not the master of the people, " PIA § 552.001(a); Jackson, 351 S.W.3d at 293, and reflects the public policy that the people of Texas "remain[] informed so that they may retain control over the instruments they have created, " PIA § 552.001(a); see Jackson, 351 S.W.3d at 293 (citing Texas Comptroller of Pub. Accounts v. Attorney Gen. of Tex., 354 S.W.3d 336, 343 (Tex. 2010)). To advance these policy goals, the Legislature has directed that we liberally construe the PIA in favor of disclosure of requested information. PIA § 552.001; Jackson, 351 S.W.3d at 293 (citing City of Garland, 22 S.W.3d at 356).
Section 552.021 of the PIA creates a general right of public access to "public information" during the governmental body’s normal business hours. PIA § 552.021. "Public information" is defined within the PIA as "information collected, assembled, or maintained under a law or ordinance or in connection with the transaction of official business" by or for a governmental body. Id. § 552.002(a). There is no dispute that all of the TGSL records in dispute, whether or not they are considered "minutes" under the OMA, are "public information" under the PIA. Consequently, all of the records at issue would, all other things being equal, be subject to public disclosure by virtue of PIA section 552.021.
But subchapter C of the PIA qualifies the public’s right of access to certain types of "public information." See id. §§ 552.101–.153. TGSL has invoked two such exceptions to resist disclosure under both the PIA and the OMA; section 552.104, which excepts "information that, if released, would give advantage to a competitor or bidder, " see id. § 552.104, and section 552.110; subsection (b), which excepts "[c]ommercial or financial information for which it is demonstrated based on specific factual evidence that disclosure would cause substantial competitive harm to the person from whom the information was obtained, " see id. § 552.110(b). However, both of these limitations are explicitly addressed solely to the right of public access created by PIA section 552.021. See id. §§ 552.104 ("Information is excepted from the requirements of Section 552.021 if it is information that, if released, would give advantage to a competitor or bidder.") (emphasis added), .110(b) ("Commercial or financial information for which it is demonstrated based on specific factual evidence that disclosure would cause substantial competitive harm to the person from whom the information was obtained is excepted from the requirements of Section 552.021.") (emphasis added). They do not, in other words, purport to operate more generally against public-access or disclosure requirements created or imposed by other law. Consequently, these exceptions would not operate against the OMA’s requirement that open-meeting "minutes" be made available upon request.
This relationship between these PIA exceptions and public-access requirements created by external law is further confirmed by section 552.006 of the PIA, which emphasizes that "[t]his chapter [of the PIA] does not authorize the withholding of public information or limit the availability of public information to the public, except as expressly provided by this chapter." Id. § 552.006. Nothing in the text of PIA sections 552.104 or 552.110, subsection (b), expressly provides or authorizes TGSL to withhold or limit access to public information where the claimed right of access is based on law other than PIA section 552.021.
In contending otherwise, TGSL urges that the PIA and its exceptions should trump the OMA’s public-access requirements regarding "minutes" because the PIA is the "more specific" of the two statutes. See Tex. Gov’t Code § 311.021(2) (Code Construction Act provision providing that "a specific statutory provision prevails as an exception over a conflicting general provision"). As an initial observation, we question whether the PIA would be considered the "more specific" of the two statutes with regard to public access to TGSL’s meeting minutes. While the PIA, and thus its exceptions, apply to "public information" generally, the OMA speaks specifically to open-meeting minutes, a narrow category of public information. See OMA §§ 551.022, 552.021. But this principle of statutory construction would not apply in the first place because it operates only where there is an irreconcilable conflict between two statutes, and there is none here—again, the PIA exceptions on which TGSL relies purport to operate only as against the duty of disclosure under PIA section 552.021, not as against other statutes like the OMA. See DeQueen, 325 S.W.3d at 637. Likewise, we would only resort to such canons of construction in the event of an ambiguity, see id. at 637, and there is none here: the OMA unambiguously makes TGSL’s board "minutes" open to the public, and there is nothing in the two PIA exceptions on which TGSL relies that would limit that right. Finally, even if we agreed that the OMA is ambiguous in this regard, we would defer to the Attorney General’s reasonable construction, see Greater Houston P’ship v. Abbott, ___S.W.3d ___, No. 03–11–00130–CV, 2013 WL 491016, at *3 (Tex. App.—Austin Jan. 31, 2013, no pet. h.), which in this case is that the PIA exceptions do not apply to TGSL’s minutes.
On the other hand, TGSL cites three Attorney General open records letter rulings that, in its view, reflect contrary conclusions that governmental bodies can withhold sensitive information from open-meetings minutes that must otherwise be disclosed under the OMA. See Tex. Att’y Gen. OR2011-09372; Tex. Att’y Gen. OR2010-13038; Tex. Att’y Gen. OR2008-14985. We are unpersuaded that these rulings are inconsistent with the Attorney General’s decision below.[4]In two of the decisions, it is unclear whether minutes are among the disputed records that the Attorney General is addressing. See Tex. Att’y Gen. OR2010-13038; Tex. Att’y Gen. OR2008-14985. As for the third, letter ruling 2011-09372, it is clearly distinguishable from the situation here. Although the Attorney General determined that the City of Plano could withhold from its minutes the civil-service promotional examination that it had discussed at one of its open meetings, it did so in reliance on a provision of the Local Government Code that expressly made the exam confidential and prohibited its disclosure. See Tex. Att’y Gen. OR2011-09372, at 2 (citing Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code § 143.032(h) (making it misdemeanor offense to reveal promotional examination)). By contrast, TGSL does not rely upon any provision of the PIA or other statute that makes its minutes confidential or otherwise prohibits their disclosure, but solely upon exceptions to mandatory disclosure compelled by PIA section 552.021.[5] In sum, these letter rulings do not provide support for TGSL’s position that the PIA exceptions upon which it relies trump the OMA’s plain requirement that a governmental entity’s "minutes" are public records that must be disclosed upon request.
"Minutes" subject to disclosure under the OMA
TGSL next argues that the "minutes" made "public records" and subject to disclosure under the OMA encompassed only the portions of its board meeting minutes that satisfied the OMA’s minimum requirements for the content of the "minutes" that governmental bodies must keep under that act. See OMA § 551.021(b). Specifically, TGSL reasons that any portions of its minutes that divulge more than "the subject of each deliberation" and "each vote, order, decision, or other action taken, " the content required by the OMA, see id. § 551.021(b), are not "minutes" that the OMA requires it to disclose. Similarly, TGSL maintains that the OMA does not require it to disclose any attachments to its minutes because these documents are not, in themselves, "minutes, " and are certainly not the type of "minutes" contemplated by the OMA. Again, we disagree with TGSL.
Although the OMA specifies minimum information that "minutes" must convey about an open meeting, it does not purport to define that term. See id. In the absence of statutory definitions, we look to the ordinary meaning of "minutes, " or, alternatively, to a technical meaning the term has acquired, [6] and from either standpoint "minutes" simply refer to the record or notes of a meeting or proceeding, whatever they might contain. See Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary 1440 (2002) (a "record of proceedings"); Black’s Law Dictionary 1087 (9th ed. 2009) ("[m]emoranda or notes of a transaction, proceeding, or meeting"). Thus, the record of the proceedings at a meeting of directors or shareholders of a company is called the "minutes." Nothing in these definitions of "minutes" imply any sort of limitation on the information about the proceedings that a body might choose to include in the minutes.
The TGSL board meeting minutes at issue here, as well as the attachments, plainly fall within these definitions of "minutes." Those minutes are labeled collectively as "[year] Board Minutes" and individually as "Minutes, Board of Directors, [specific date], " and include exhibits that are referenced in and attached to the minutes. Further, it appears that most of the exhibits were "incorporated into [the minutes] for all purposes as if set forth verbatim." But even if that had not been the case, "attaching" referenced documents to minutes necessarily made them a part of TGSL’s "minutes, " and subject to disclosure under the OMA.
Alternatively, to the extent the OMA might contemplate a narrower definition of "minutes" that are made public by that statute, TGSL’s decision to include additional information with those "minutes"—a type of record that the OMA deems public records subject to disclosure—would amount to voluntary disclosure of the additional information under the PIA. Section 552.007 of the PIA emphasizes that it "does not prohibit a governmental body . . . from voluntarily making part or all of its information available to the public, unless the disclosure is expressly prohibited by law or the information is confidential by law." PIA § 552.007(a). As noted, TGSL does not assert that any of the information at issue is made confidential by law or that disclosure is prohibited, as opposed to merely being excepted from mandatory disclosure under PIA section 552.021. And once this voluntary disclosure has occurred, TGSL’s minutes "must be made available to any person, " including York. Id. § 552.007(b).
In contending otherwise, TGSL cites Houston Municipal Employees Pension System v. Abbott, 192 S.W.3d 862 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2006, pet. denied), in which the Texarkana Court of Appeals suggested that unspecified documents that had been discussed in a governmental body’s minutes and "filed along with the minutes" were not equivalent to being part of the "minutes" made open to the public under the OMA. Id. at 866. But this issue was not before the court and, as a result, the Abbott opinion provides very little information about the documents’ relationship to the minutes—the court simply notes that the documents were "considered" during the meeting and then were "filed" with the minutes. To the extent Houston Municipal stands for the proposition that the OMA confines the "minutes" subject to disclosure solely to information regarding "the subject of each deliberation" and "each vote, order, decision, or other action taken, " we respectfully disagree, for reasons we have already explained.
In sum, we hold that under the OMA’s plain language, TGSL must disclose to York its board meeting minutes, including any attachments or exhibits, and that the PIA exceptions it claims are unavailing. Accordingly, we overrule TGSL’s issues challenging the district court’s summary judgment requiring disclosure of the disputed excerpts from "the actual provisions of the Minutes themselves, " and sustain York’s challenge to the district court’s judgment permitting TGSL to withhold attachments and exhibits to the minutes, including the President’s Reports and Strategic Plan.
Pricing information
The foregoing holdings resolve the parties’ dispute with respect to all records except the pricing information contained in TGSL’s VFA application, the only one to which York claims a right of access solely under the PIA and not the OMA.[7] York urges that the district court erred in denying his motion for summary judgment seeking disclosure of this information, and TGSL and the Attorney General counter that we should instead affirm. We agree with TGSL and the Attorney General.
A party seeking to withhold public information requested under the PIA has the burden of proving that an exception to disclosure applies. See Thomas v. Cornyn, 71 S.W.3d 473, 488 (Tex. 2002); Arlington Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Texas Att’y Gen., 37 S.W.3d 152, 157 (Tex. App.—Austin 2001, no pet.). TGSL has maintained that the pricing information contained in its VFA application to the federal government is shielded from mandatory disclosure by PIA section 552.104, which, again, excepts "information, that, if released, would give advantage to a competitor or bidder." See PIA § 552.104. The Attorney General has construed PIA section 552.104 to impose a two-part test to qualify for this exception. See Tex. Att’y Gen. ORD-593 (1991). First, the entity seeking to avoid disclosure must show that it has a specific marketplace interest and, second, that release of the information requested would cause specific harm to its marketplace interests in a particular competitive situation. Id. TGSL and York do not dispute that this is a reasonable construction of PIA section 552.104, so we will apply it here.
To meet this two-part test and establish the applicability of section 552.104, TGSL presented summary-judgment evidence explaining the legal and competitive landscape surrounding its VFA application. In 2010, the United States Congress enacted legislation that significantly revamped the federal student-loan program, including eliminating the fees paid to private agencies acting as intermediaries in providing loans to college students and mandating that all future student loans be made directly from the federal government rather than through intermediate, private agencies. See Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 Pub. L. 111-152, 124 Stat. 1029 (HCERA). In 2011, partly in response to HCERA, the DOE published a notice in the Federal Register seeking proposals from guaranty agencies to enter into VFAs with the DOE. See Federal Family Education Loan Program, 76 Fed. Reg. 31312, 31312–31317 (May 31, 2011). VFAs, which existed before the 2010 legislative reforms, allow the DOE to enter into more flexible agreements with guaranty agencies—i.e., to waive certain statutory requirements—to encourage development of programs and techniques to help borrowers avoid student-loan default and all of its negative consequences. See id. at 31313. Acknowledging the loss of revenue facing the guaranty agencies as a result of HCERA’s reforms and the potential deleterious effect of those losses on the guaranty agencies’ ability to meet their prior student-loan responsibilities, the DOE’s 2011 notice for VFA bids indicated the DOE’s intent to establish new guaranty agency structures and financing mechanisms. See id. at 31314. Specifically, the 2011 notice sought proposals "from guaranty agencies . . . that will lead to the development of VFAs that will enhance the integrity and stability of the FFELP Program, improve services to students, schools and lenders, and use Federal resources more cost-effectively and efficiently." See id. at 31312. The deadline for submission of bids was August 1, 2011. Id. And as part of the request for bids, the DOE indicated that any "pricing and financing information included in the proposals" would be exempt from disclosure under the federal public information act "as confidential business information." See id. at 31317. TGSL submitted two bids to the DOE, both seeking to provide services in "Lender Claims/Collections, " which TGSL maintains is the only "financially rewarding VFA" area.
Given the changes in the student-loan marketplace resulting from HCERA’s reforms and the potential financial impact of that legislation, TGSL asserts, and the Attorney General agrees, that the competitive award of the VFAs creates a marketplace interest for TGSL. York does not dispute that TGSL satisfied the first element of the Attorney General’s test for applying PIA section 552.104, but complains that because the bids have already been submitted, TGSL can point to no specific harm that the release of this information would cause. To the contrary, TGSL presented uncontroverted summary-judgment evidence that the DOE has not yet awarded any of the VFAs or provided a definite timeline for when it would do so, and that it is still negotiating with bidders. TGSL’s evidence also established that the corporation would be harmed in its negotiating process if the pricing information becomes public because, until the DOE awards the contracts, TGSL and presumably its competitors are free to vary previously submitted proposals and negotiate terms and conditions. Based on the evidence, TGSL has shown that release of the pricing information will cause it harm. Accordingly, we hold that TGSL’s pricing information in its application to the DOE is protected from disclosure under PIA section 552.104.
Finally, while disclaiming any reliance of a subject-matter-waiver theory of public access to the pricing information, York asserts that the mere fact that the TGSL’s VFA application was discussed in an open meeting makes the pricing information included within that VFA application—but that is not revealed in any minutes or attachments, or was even discussed in an open meeting—subject to disclosure under the OMA. We disagree. There is nothing in the OMA to suggest that simply mentioning a document makes the document a public record, nor is there anything in the PIA suggesting that mentioning the existence of a document somehow waives any applicable exceptions to disclosure of the contents of that document.
We overrule York’s challenge to the district court’s judgment permitting TGSL to withhold the pricing information contained in the corporation’s VFA application.
Attorney’s fees
Finally, York challenges the district court’s judgment denying him recovery of any attorney’s fees. Where, as here, a governmental body sues to challenge an Attorney General’s open-records decision, the PIA grants discretion to the trial court to award litigation costs and reasonable attorney’s fees "incurred by a plaintiff or defendant who substantially prevails." PIA § 552.323(b). In exercising such discretion, "the court shall consider whether the conduct of the governmental body had a reasonable basis in law and whether the litigation was brought in good faith." Id.
In support of summary judgment on his attorney’s fee claim, York presented an affidavit in which he purported to prove up attorney’s fees of approximately $25, 000, plus contingent appellate fees, that he had "incurred" or would "incur" in the case.[8] In its cross-motion for summary judgment seeking to deny York attorney’s fees, filed on the same day as York’s motion, TGSL asserted that even if York "substantially prevailed" in the litigation, he was barred from recovery because it is established that pro se litigants, including attorneys like York who litigate pro se, cannot, as a matter of law, "incur" attorney’s fees (i.e., become liable for them) as the PIA requires. See Jackson, 351 S.W.3d at 299–300.[9] In his response to TGSL’s summary-judgment motion, York shifted focus and presented a second affidavit in which he averred that the attorney’s fees to which he had previously testified had, in fact, been incurred by a client who "wishes to remain anonymous, " who had requested York to request the information from TGSL, was liable for the fees, and had paid some of the fees and would be billed for the others.
Emphasizing this second affidavit, his evidence proving up attorney’s fees that "someone is liable for, " and the PIA’s provisions allowing a real party in interest behind a request to remain anonymous, [10] York argues on appeal that the district court abused its discretion by "essentially forc[ing] York’s client to make the untenable choice between surrendering the anonymity he, she, or it is entitled to under the PIA or recovering attorney’s fees." However, we conclude that this choice is imposed by the PIA itself.
PIA section 552.323, the provision that governs York’s claim for attorney’s fees, permits recovery solely by a "plaintiff or defendant" in a suit by a governmental body seeking declaratory relief against an Attorney General decision ordering disclosure of records. PIA §§ 552.323, .324. Under the PIA, the potential "plaintiffs" in such a suit are limited to the "governmental body, officer for public information, or other person or entity that files a suit seeking to withhold information from a requestor, " such as an affected third party, [11] and the defendant" is the Attorney General. See id. § 552.324. While the "requestor" cannot be named as a defendant in the first instance, he, she, or it "is entitled to intervene in the suit." See id. § 552.325(a). While York presented summary-judgment evidence that he had acted on behalf of an unidentified real party in interest, it remains that he, not the client, was the "requestor" under the PIA. Consequently, York, not the unidentified client, was the person with standing to intervene in TGSL’s suit and thereby become a "defendant" who could potentially recover attorney’s fees. And because York cannot "incur" attorney’s fees as a matter of law where he has acted pro se, see Jackson, 351 S.W.3d at 299–300, the district court properly granted TGSL’s summary-judgment motion against that claim.[12]
CONCLUSION
In light of the foregoing holdings, we:
• Affirm the district court’s summary judgment that TGSL must disclose "the actual provisions of the Minutes themselves, " including those pertaining to EAS.
• Reverse the district court’s summary judgment that TGSL is not required to disclose its Strategic Plan, President’s Reports, and any other attachments or exhibits to its minutes, and render judgment that TGSL must make these records available to York.
• Affirm the district court’s summary judgment that TGSL is not required to disclose the pricing information in its VFA application.
• Affirm the district court’s summary judgment denying York recovery of attorney’s fees.
Affirmed in part; Reversed and Rendered in part
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