SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-1762-94T5
HUNTERDON COUNTY
POLICEMEN'S BENEVOLENT
ASSOCIATION LOCAL 188,
Plaintiff-Respondent/
Cross-Appellant,
v.
TOWNSHIP OF FRANKLIN,
Defendant-Appellant/
Cross-Respondent.
___________________________________
Submitted: June 14, 1995 - Decided: January 17,
1996
Before Judges Baime, Kestin and A.A. Rodríguez.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Hunterdon County.
Dorf & Dorf, attorneys for appellant/cross-respondent (Gerald L. Dorf and Richard B.
Robins, on the brief).
Benjamin Luke Serra, attorney for respondent/
cross-appellant.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
KESTIN, J.A.D.
In a complaint in lieu of prerogative writ, plaintiff, a local
police union, asserted the Right-to-Know Law, N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1 to
-4, specifically N.J.S.A. 47:1A-2, as a basis for seeking an order
granting it access to "copies of any and all bills from any
attorneys, arbitrators, or other professionals of any kind, hired
by the Township [of Franklin (defendant)] in connection with any
policy matter from January, 1990 through and inclusive of [April
26, 1994]." Plaintiff also sought attorneys fees and costs.
Plaintiff did not plead its common law right of access to the
documents in question.
Defendant, in its answer, denied that the statute conferred a
right of access to the indicated information. Among the
affirmative defenses pleaded were the protection of the attorney-client privilege, and waiver and estoppel by reason of a written
agreement between representatives of the parties wherein plaintiff
"agreed to withdraw and not pursue in any forum any then
outstanding issues between the parties."
Defendant also asserted in two counterclaims that the
agreement not to pursue further claims against defendant was a
fraudulent inducement on defendant to enter into the parties'
collective bargaining agreement, or that violation of the agreement
not to pursue outstanding issues was a breach of the collective
bargaining agreement. Defendant sought recission of the collective
bargaining agreement, reimbursement for all paid increases in
salary, benefits and other compensation provided in that agreement,
damages and counsel fees.
Without answering the counterclaims, plaintiff moved for
summary judgment on its complaint, together with counsel fees
pursuant to N.J.S.A. 47:1A-4 and N.J.S.A. 2A:15-59.1, and a
dismissal of the counterclaims. Defendant cross-moved for summary
judgment on both the complaint and the counterclaims.
After argument on the return date of the motions, the trial
judge rendered an oral opinion holding that the requested documents
were public records under the Right-to-Know Law, rejecting
defendant's affirmative defense that the documents were protected
by the attorney-client privilege, and denying counsel fees to both
parties. Defendant's counterclaims were seen as moot, and the
trial judge did not address the waiver/estoppel defense. The order
memorializing the trial court's ruling required defendant to
produce the disputed documents within five days and formally
dismissed the counterclaims as moot.
After defendant's notice of appeal was filed, we granted a
stay pending appeal. Plaintiff cross-appealed from the denial of
counsel fees.
We affirm the trial court's determinations that N.J.S.A.
47:1A-1 and -2 require disclosure of the disputed documents, and
that the documents are not insulated from disclosure by the
attorney-client privilege. We are in substantial agreement with
the trial judge's reasoning that the billings sought are subject to
disclosure because they are required by law to be submitted before
any payment may be made and that, in preparing, processing and
submitting them, defendant and its attorneys are obliged to conform
with specific requirements of law, N.J.S.A. 40A:5-16a; because the
billings are required by statute to carry a certification from an
appropriate local officer that the goods provided or services
rendered were received, N.J.S.A. 40A:5-16b, thereby establishing
the billings as documents "required by law to be made...by" the
local officer, N.J.S.A. 47:1A-2; and because a record, "open to the
public," must be kept of "[a]ll claims approved for payment",
N.J.S.A. 40A:5-18. The latter provision, not only requires that a
record of such documents must be kept by a public officer,
satisfying a criterion for public disclosure under the Right-to-Know Law, but it is also a separate public disclosure statute
because it provides that "[t]he record of approval shall be open to
the public."
We note also that the trial judge was correct to perceive the
"made...by" criterion of N.J.S.A. 47:1A-2 to be a separate standard
from the "maintained...by" and "kept on file by" tests. A document
that satisfies any one of these three criteria is subject to
disclosure under the statute.
As a separate basis for inclusion within the ambit of the
Right-to-Know Law, we are also in substantial agreement with the
trial judge's observation: "There can't be any credible argument by
defendant that these documents are not required to be kept or
maintained[ ]" by the standards of good fiscal practice embodied in
the Local Fiscal Affairs Law, N.J.S.A. 40A:5-1 to -42, even if
there were no particular statutory provision requiring that they be
kept or maintained. See Board of Ed. of Newark vs. Department of
the Treasury,
279 N.J. Super. 489, 498-502 (App. Div.), leave to
appeal granted,
142 N.J. 440-41 (1995). Furthermore, and most
generally in respect of the legislative design in enacting the
Right-to-Know Law, see North Jersey Newspapers Co. v. Passaic
County,
127 N.J. 9, 18 (1992), we can conceive of nothing more
within the scope of the public's legitimate interest than the
submissions a public entity receives from its providers of goods
and services, on the basis of which public funds are paid out. A
contrary view negates the citizenry's right to know how tax monies
are used.
We are also in substantial agreement with the trial judge's
rationale that the attorney-client privilege, N.J.S.A. 2A:84A-20,
does not apply to insulate billings from disclosure:
The billings of an attorney are not
likely to contain information which is
confidential. In the experience of this
court, it will contain a few word description
of the general category of work performed, the
number of hours required to perform the work,
the date of the performance, and the total
cost to the client.
In reviewing the bills submitted...as an
example with the motion that was filed today,
defense counsel was not able to point out
anything that was confidential on the sample
of the billings presented.
We have held in different circumstances that "the [attorney-client] privilege accords the shield of secrecy only with respect to confidential communications [see State vs. Schubert, 235 N.J. Super. 212, 220-21 (App. Div. 1989), certif. denied, 121 N.J. 597, cert. denied, 496 U.S. 911, 110 S.Ct. 2600, 110 L.Ed.2d 280 (1990)] made within the context of the strict relation of attorney and client," Matter of Grand Jury Subpoenas, 241 N.J. Super. 18, 30 (App. Div. 1989), even as to public officers and bodies, and that it ordinarily does not apply to lawyers' bills for services to a public entity. Id. at 36. This is not to say that, where appropriate, a court should not first require production of such
documents for in camera inspection to assure that no bill contains
confidential matter protected by the privilege.
Related issues remain in both the appeal and cross-appeal
concerning the trial court's denial of counsel fees to both
parties. As to the elements of those issues so far dealt with by
the trial court, it is clear that neither party has taken a
position that could reasonably be characterized as frivolous,
N.J.S.A. 2A:15-59.1. Further, there is no basis in the record to
question the trial judge's exercise of discretion in denying
plaintiff as much as $500 in attorney's fees authorized by N.J.S.A.
47:1A-4.
Finally, we differ with the trial judge's determination that
the claims embodied in defendant's counterclaim are moot. We
discern that these are fact-sensitive issues unsuited to resolution
on summary judgment, at least on the record developed before the
trial court on the parties' instant cross-motions for summary
judgment. See Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of America,
142 N.J. 520 (1995). A decision against defendant on the right-to-know
issue and the correlative attorney-client privilege question,
cannot logically be seen as rendering moot its claims that the
collective bargaining agreement between the parties has been
breached, or was, in its formation, attended by fraud in the
inducement. What the remedy might be if a breach is established or
if the fraud allegation is proved, is yet another, separate,
question that might need to be addressed. See Ridgefield Park
Educ. Ass'n v. Ridgefield Park Bd. of Educ.,
78 N.J. 144, 154-155
(1978). The related question also exists of the effect of
plaintiff's omission to file a formal answer to the counterclaims.
Even before these questions are reached, however, and directly
related to the trial court's order requiring disclosure within a
specified period of time, defendant is entitled to a ruling on its
waiver/estoppel claim, another fact-sensitive issue. If it is
determined, notwithstanding the eligibility of the documents at
issue for disclosure pursuant to the Right-to-Know Law, that this
plaintiff by reason of its dealings with this defendant may not
assert the Right-to-Know Law in this circumstance, it is the
remaining issues in the case (i.e., those embodied in the
counterclaims, along with those already decided) that may be moot.
We affirm as to the trial court's determinations on the Right-to-Know Law, attorney-client privilege, and related counsel fee
questions. We remand for consideration of the remaining questions
including any further proceedings that may be necessary. Our
November 10, 1994 stay of the trial court's order shall continue
pending the trial court's rulings on the remanded issues, and until
the trial court sees fit to vacate the stay. We do not retain
jurisdiction.