The Tax Division of the Department of Justice (Department)
represents the Federal Government in nearly all civil tax cases in
the district courts, the courts of appeals, and the Claims Court,
and receives copies of all opinions and orders issued by those
courts in such cases. Respondent publishes a weekly magazine
containing summaries of recent federal court tax decisions,
supplemented by full texts of those decisions in microfiche form.
Respondent also publishes a daily electronic database that includes
summaries and full texts of recent federal court tax decisions.
After the Department denied its request under the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) to make available all district court tax
opinions and final orders received by the Tax Division in a certain
period, respondent appealed administratively. While the appeal was
pending, respondent agreed to withdraw its request in return for
access to the Tax Division's weekly log of federal court tax cases.
Eventually, however, respondent became frustrated with the process
of obtaining copies of decisions from district court clerks and
initiated a series of new FOIA requests for copies of all district
court opinions and final orders identified in the Tax Division's
weekly logs. The Department denied these requests and, on
administrative appeal, sustained the denial. Respondent then filed
suit in District Court seeking to compel the Department to provide
it with access to district court decisions received by the Tax
Division. The District Court granted the Department's motion to
dismiss the complaint, holding that 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(B),
which confers jurisdiction in district courts when "agency records"
have been "improperly withheld," had not been satisfied. The court
reasoned that the decisions sought had not been "improperly
withheld" because they were already available from their primary
source, the district courts. The Court of Appeals reversed, holding
that the decisions were "improperly withheld" and were "agency
records" for purposes of the FOIA.
Held: The FOIA requires the Department to make
available copies of district court decisions it receives in the
course of litigating tax cases. Pp.
492 U. S.
142-155.
(a) The requested district court decisions are "agency records."
The Department obtained those documents from the district courts,
and was in control of the documents when the requests were made.
Pp.
492 U. S.
143-148.
Page 492 U. S. 137
(b) When the Department refused to comply with respondent's
requests, it "withheld" the district court decisions for purposes
of § 552(a)(4)(B), notwithstanding that the decisions were
publicly available from the original source as soon as they were
issued. Pp.
492 U. S.
148-150.
(c) The district court decisions were "improperly" withheld
despite their public availability at the original source, since
they did not fall within any of the enumerated exemptions to the
FOIA's disclosure requirements. While under § 552(a)(3) an
agency need not make available materials that have already been
disclosed under §§ 552(a)(1) and (a)(2), these latter
subsections are limited to situations in which the requested
materials have been previously published or made available by the
agency itself. That disclosure of district court decisions
may be partially governed by other statutes, in particular 28
U.S.C. § 1914, and by rules of the Judicial Conference of the
United States, does not entitle the Department to claim that the
requested district court decisions were not "improperly" withheld,
since Congress has enacted no provision authorizing an agency to
refuse to disclose materials whose disclosure is mandated by
another statute. Moreover, the decision in
GTE Sylvania, Inc.
v. Consumers Union of United States, Inc., 445 U.
S. 375, that agency records enjoined from disclosure by
a district court were not "improperly" withheld even though they
did not fall within any of the enumerated exemptions, was not meant
to be an invitation to courts in every case to engage in balancing,
based on public availability and other factors, to determine
whether there has been an unjustified denial of information. The
FOIA invests courts with neither the authority nor the tools to
make such determinations. Pp.
492 U. S.
150-155.
269 U.S.App.D.C. 315, 845 F.2d 1060, affirmed.
MARSHALL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
REHNQUIST, C.J., and BRENNAN, STEVENS, O'CONNOR, SCALIA, and
KENNEDY, JJ., joined. WHITE, J., concurred in the judgment.
BLACKMUN, J., filed a dissenting opinion,
post p.
492 U. S.
156.
Page 492 U. S. 138
JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question presented is whether the Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA or Act), 5 U.S.C. § 552 (1982 ed. and Supp. V), requires
the United States Department of Justice (Department) to make
available copies of district court decisions that it receives in
the course of litigating tax cases on behalf of the Federal
Government. We hold that it does.
I
The Department's Tax Division represents the Federal Government
in nearly all civil tax cases in the district courts, the courts of
appeals, and the Claims Court. Because it represents a party in
litigation, the Tax Division receives copies of all opinions and
orders issued by these courts in such cases. Copies of these
decisions are made for the Tax Division's staff attorneys. The
original documents are sent to the official files kept by the
Department.
If the Government has won a district court case, the Tax
Division must prepare a bill of costs and collect any money
judgment indicated in the decision. If the Government has lost, the
Tax Division must decide whether to file a motion to alter or amend
the judgment or whether to recommend filing an appeal. The decision
whether to appeal involves not only the Tax Division but also the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the Solicitor General. A
division of the IRS reviews the district court's decision and
prepares a recommendation on whether an appeal should be taken. The
court decision and the accompanying recommendation are circulated
to the Tax Division, which formulates its own recommendation, and
then to the Solicitor General, who reviews the district court
decision in light of the IRS and Tax Division's recommendations. If
the Solicitor General ultimately approves an appeal, the Tax
Division prepares a record and joint appendix, both of which must
contain a copy of the district court decision, for transmittal to
the court of appeals. If no appeal is
Page 492 U. S. 139
taken, the Tax Division is responsible for ensuring the payment
of any court-ordered refund and for defending against any claim for
attorney's fees.
Respondent Tax Analysts publishes a weekly magazine, Tax Notes,
which reports on legislative, judicial, and regulatory developments
in the field of federal taxation to a readership largely composed
of tax attorneys, accountants, and economists. As one of its
regular features, Tax Notes provides summaries of recent federal
court decisions on tax issues. To supplement the magazine, Tax
Analysts provides full texts of these decisions in microfiche form.
Tax Analysts also publishes Tax Notes Today, a daily electronic
database that includes summaries and full texts of recent federal
court tax decisions.
In late July, 1979, Tax Analysts filed a FOIA request in which
it asked the Department to make available all district court tax
opinions and final orders received by the Tax Division earlier that
month. [
Footnote 1] The
Department denied the request on the ground that these decisions
were not Tax Division records. Tax Analysts then appealed this
denial administratively. While the appeal was pending, Tax Analysts
agreed to withdraw its request in return for access to the Tax
Division's weekly log of tax cases decided by the federal courts.
These logs list the name and date of a case, the docket number, the
names of counsel, the nature of the case, and its disposition.
Since gaining access to the weekly logs, Tax Analysts' practice
has been to examine the logs and to request copies of the decisions
noted therein from the clerks of the 90 or so district courts
around the country, and from participating attorneys. In most
instances, Tax Analysts procures copies reasonably promptly, but
this method of acquisition has proven
Page 492 U. S. 140
unsatisfactory approximately 25% of the time. Some court clerks
ignore Tax Analysts' requests for copies of decisions, and others
respond slowly, sometimes only after Tax Analysts has forwarded
postage and copying fees. Because the Federal Government is
required to appeal tax cases within 60 days, Tax Analysts
frequently fails to obtain copies of district court decisions
before appeals are taken.
Frustrated with this process, Tax Analysts initiated a series of
new FOIA requests in 1984. Beginning in November, 1984, and
continuing approximately once a week until May, 1985, Tax Analysts
asked the Department to make available copies of all district court
tax opinions and final orders identified in the Tax Division's
weekly logs. The Department denied these requests, and Tax Analysts
appealed administratively. When the Department sustained the
denial, Tax Analysts filed the instant suit in the United States
District Court for the District of Columbia, seeking to compel the
Department to provide it with access to district court decisions
received by the Tax Division.
The District Court granted the Department's motion to dismiss
the complaint, holding that 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(B), which
confers jurisdiction in the district courts when "agency records"
have been "improperly withheld," [
Footnote 2] had not been satisfied.
643 F.
Supp. 740, 742 (1986). The court reasoned that the district
court decisions at issue had not been "improperly withheld,"
because they "already are available from
Page 492 U. S. 141
their primary sources, the District Courts,"
id. at
743, and thus were "on the public record."
Id. at 744. The
court did not address whether the district court decisions are
"agency records."
Id. at 742.
The Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
reversed. 269 U.S.App.D.C. 315, 845 F.2d 1060 (1988). It first held
that the district court decisions were "improperly withheld." An
agency ordinarily may refuse to make available documents in its
control only if it proves that the documents fall within one of the
nine disclosure exemptions set forth in § 552(b), the court
noted, and in this instance, "[n]o exemption applies to the
district court opinions."
Id. at 319, 845 F.2d at 1064. As
for the Department's contention that the district court decisions
are publicly available at their source, the court observed that
"no court . . . has denied access to . . . documents on the
ground that they are available elsewhere, and several have assumed
that such documents must still be produced by the agency unless
expressly exempted by the Act."
Id. at 321, 845 F.2d at 1066.
The Court of Appeals next held that the district court decisions
sought by Tax Analysts are "agency records" for purposes of the
FOIA. The court acknowledged that the district court decisions had
originated in a part of the Government not covered by the FOIA, but
concluded that the documents nonetheless constituted "agency
records" because the Department has the discretion to use the
decisions as it sees fit, because the Department routinely uses the
decisions in performing its official duties, and because the
decisions are integrated into the Department's official case files.
Id. at 323-324, 845 F.2d at 1068-1069. The court therefore
remanded the case to the District Court with instructions to enter
an order directing the Department "to provide some reasonable form
of access" to the decisions sought by Tax Analysts.
Id. at
317, 845 F.2d at 1062.
We granted certiorari, 488 U.S. 1003 (1989), and now affirm.
Page 492 U. S. 142
II
In enacting the FOIA 23 years ago, Congress sought "
to open
agency action to the light of public scrutiny.'" Department of
Justice v. Reporters Committee for Freedom of Press,
489 U. S. 749,
489 U. S. 772
(1989), quoting Department of Air Force v. Rose,
425 U. S. 352,
425 U. S. 372
(1976). Congress did so by requiring agencies to adhere to "`a
general philosophy of full agency disclosure.'" Id. at
425 U. S. 360,
quoting S.Rep. No. 813, 89th Cong., 1st Sess., 3 (1965). Congress
believed that this philosophy, put into practice, would help
"ensure an informed citizenry, vital to the functioning of a
democratic society." NLRB v. Robbins Tire & Rubber
Co., 437 U. S. 214,
437 U. S. 242
(1978).
The FOIA confers jurisdiction on the district courts "to enjoin
the agency from withholding agency records and to order the
production of any agency records improperly withheld." §
552(a)(4)(B). Under this provision, "federal jurisdiction is
dependent on a showing that an agency has (1)
improperly' (2)
`withheld' (3) `agency records.'" Kissinger v. Reporters
Committee for Freedom of Press, 445 U.
S. 136, 445 U. S. 150
(1980). Unless each of these criteria is met, a district court
lacks jurisdiction to devise remedies to force an agency to comply
with the FOIA's disclosure requirements. [Footnote 3]
In this case, all three jurisdictional terms are at issue.
Although these terms are defined neither in the Act nor in its
legislative history, we do not write on a clean slate. Nine Terms
ago we decided three cases that explicated the meanings of these
partially overlapping terms.
Kissinger v. Reporters Committee
for Freedom of Press, supra; 445 U. S.
Page 492 U. S. 143
Harris, 445 U. S. 169
(1980);
GTE Sylvania, Inc. v. Consumers Union of United States,
Inc., 445 U. S. 375
(1980). These decisions form the basis of our analysis of Tax
Analysts' requests.
A
We consider first whether the district court decisions at issue
are "agency records," a term elaborated upon both in
Kissinger and in
Forsham. Kissinger
involved three separate FOIA requests for written summaries of
telephone conversations in which Henry Kissinger had participated
when he served as Assistant to the President for National Security
Affairs from 1969 to 1975, and as Secretary of State from 1973 to
1977. Only one of these requests -- for summaries of specific
conversations that Kissinger had had during his tenure as National
Security Adviser -- raised the "agency records" issue. At the time
of this request, these summaries were stored in Kissinger's office
at the State Department in his personal files. We first concluded
that the summaries were not "agency records" at the time they were
made, because the FOIA does not include the Office of the President
in its definition of "agency." 445 U.S. at
445 U. S. 156.
We further held that these documents did not acquire the status of
"agency records" when they were removed from the White House and
transported to Kissinger's office at the State Department, a
FOIA-covered agency:
"We simply decline to hold that the physical location of the
notes of telephone conversations renders them 'agency records.' The
papers were not in the control of the State Department at any time.
They were not generated in the State Department. They never entered
the State Department's files, and they were not used by the
Department for any purpose. If mere physical location of papers and
materials could confer status as an 'agency record,' Kissinger's
personal books, speeches, and all other memorabilia stored in his
office would have
Page 492 U. S. 144
been agency records subject to disclosure under the FOIA."
Id. at
445 U. S.
157.
Forsham, in turn, involved a request for raw data that
formed the basis of a study conducted by a private medical research
organization. Although the study had been funded through federal
agency grants, the data never passed into the hands of the agencies
that provided the funding, but instead was produced and possessed
at all times by the private organization. We recognized that
"[r]ecords of a nonagency certainly could become records of an
agency as well," 445 U.S. at
445 U. S. 181,
but the fact that the study was financially supported by a
FOIA-covered agency did not transform the source material into
"agency records." Nor did the agencies' right of access to the
materials under federal regulations change this result. As we
explained, "the FOIA applies to records which have been
in
fact obtained, and not to records which merely
could have
been obtained."
Id. at
445 U. S. 186
(emphasis in original; footnote omitted).
Two requirements emerge from
Kissinger and
Forsham, each of which must be satisfied for requested
materials to qualify as "agency records." First, an agency must
"either create or obtain" the requested materials "as a
prerequisite to its becoming an
agency record' within the
meaning of the FOIA." Id. at 445 U. S. 182.
In performing their official duties, agencies routinely avail
themselves of studies, trade journal reports, and other materials
produced outside the agencies both by private and governmental
organizations. See Chrysler Corp. v. Brown, 441 U.
S. 281, 441 U. S. 292
(1979). To restrict the term "agency records" to materials
generated internally would frustrate Congress' desire to put within
public reach the information available to an agency in its
decisionmaking processes. See id. at 441 U. S. 290,
n. 10. As we noted in Forsham, "The legislative history of
the FOIA abounds with
Page 492 U. S. 145
. . . references to records
acquired by an agency." 445
U.S. at
445 U. S. 184
(emphasis added). [
Footnote
4]
Second, the agency must be in control of the requested materials
at the time the FOIA request is made. By control, we mean that the
materials have come into the agency's possession in the legitimate
conduct of its official duties. This requirement accords with
Kissinger's teaching that the term "agency records" is not
so broad as to include personal materials in an employee's
possession, even though the materials may be physically located at
the agency.
See 445 U.S. at
445 U. S. 157.
This requirement is suggested by
Forsham as well, 445 U.S.
at
445 U. S. 183,
where we looked to the definition of agency records in the Records
Disposal Act, 44 U.S.C. § 3301. Under that definition, agency
records include
"all books, papers, maps, photographs, machine readable
materials, or other documentary materials, regardless of physical
form or characteristics, made or received by an agency of the
United States Government
under Federal law or in connection
with the transaction of public business . . . ."
Ibid. (emphasis added). [
Footnote 5] Furthermore, the requirement that the
materials
Page 492 U. S. 146
be in the agency's control at the time the request is made
accords with our statement in
Forsham that the FOIA does
not cover "information in the abstract." 445 U.S. at
445 U. S. 185.
[
Footnote 6]
Applying these requirements here, we conclude that the requested
district court decisions constitute "agency records." First, it is
undisputed that the Department has obtained these documents from
the district courts. This is not a case like
Forsham,
where the materials never, in fact, had been received by the
agency. The Department contends that a district court is not an
"agency" under the FOIA, but this truism is beside the point. The
relevant issue is whether an agency covered by the FOIA has
"create[d] or obtaine[d]" the materials sought,
Forsham,
445 U.S. at
445 U. S. 182,
not whether the organization from which the documents originated is
itself covered by the FOIA. [
Footnote 7]
Second, the Department clearly controls the district court
decisions that Tax Analysts seeks. Each of Tax Analysts' FOIA
requests referred to district court decisions in the agency's
possession at the time the requests were made.
Page 492 U. S. 147
This is evident from the fact that Tax Analysts based its weekly
requests on the Tax Division's logs, which compile information on
decisions the Tax Division recently had received and placed in
official case files. Furthermore, the court decisions at issue are
obviously not personal papers of agency employees. The Department
counters that it does not control these decisions, because the
district courts retain authority to modify the decisions even after
they are released, but this argument, too, is beside the point. The
control inquiry focuses on an agency's possession of the requested
materials, not on its power to alter the content of the materials
it receives. Agencies generally are not at liberty to alter the
content of the materials that they receive from outside parties. An
authorship-control requirement thus would sharply limit "agency
records" essentially to documents generated by the agencies
themselves. This result is incompatible with the FOIA's goal of
giving the public access to all nonexempted information received by
an agency as it carries out its mandate.
The Department also urges us to limit "agency records," at least
where materials originating outside the agency are concerned, "to
those documents
prepared substantially to be relied upon in
agency decisionmaking.'" Brief for Petitioner 21, quoting Berry
v. Department of Justice, 733 F.2d 1343, 1349 (CA9 1984). This
limitation disposes of Tax Analysts' requests, the Department
argues, because district court judges do not write their decisions
primarily with an eye toward agency decisionmaking. This argument,
however, makes the determination of "agency records" turn on the
intent of the creator of a document relied upon by an agency. Such
a mens rea requirement is nowhere to be found in the Act.
[Footnote 8] Moreover,
discerning the intent of the drafters of a
Page 492 U. S. 148
document may often prove an elusive endeavor, particularly if
the document was created years earlier or by a large number of
people for whom it is difficult to divine a common intent.
We turn next to the term "withheld," which we discussed in
Kissinger. Two of the requests in that case -- for
summaries of all the telephone conversations in which Kissinger had
engaged while serving as National Security Adviser and as Secretary
of State -- implicated that term. These summaries were initially
stored in Kissinger's personal files at the State Department. Near
the end of his tenure as Secretary of State, Kissinger transferred
the summaries first to a private residence and then to the Library
of Congress. Significantly, the two requests for these summaries
were made only after the summaries had been physically delivered to
the Library. We found this fact dispositive, concluding that
Congress did not believe that an agency
"withholds a document which has been removed from the possession
of the agency prior to the filing of the FOIA request. In such a
case, the agency has neither the custody nor control necessary to
enable it to withhold."
445 U.S. at
445 U. S.
150-151. [
Footnote
9] We accordingly refused to order the State Department to
institute a retrieval action against the Library. As we explained,
such a course
"would have us read the 'hold' out of 'withhold. . . . A refusal
to resort to legal remedies to obtain possession is simply not
conduct subsumed by the verb withhold.'"
Id. at
445 U. S. 151.
[
Footnote 10]
Page 492 U. S. 149
The construction of "withholding" adopted in
Kissinger
readily encompasses Tax Analysts' requests. There is no claim here
that Tax Analysts filed its requests for copies of recent district
court tax decisions received by the Tax Division after these
decisions had been transferred out of the Department. On the
contrary, the decisions were on the Department's premises and
otherwise in the Department's control,
supra at
492 U. S.
146-147, when the requests were made.
See
n 6,
supra. Thus, when
the Department refused to comply with Tax Analysts' requests, it
"withheld" the district court decisions for purposes of §
552(a)(4)(B).
The Department's counterargument is that, because the district
court decisions sought by Tax Analysts are publicly available as
soon as they are issued, and thus may be inspected and copied by
the public at any time, the Department cannot be said to have
"withheld" them. The Department notes that the weekly logs it
provides to Tax Analysts contain sufficient information to direct
Tax Analysts to the "original source of the requested documents."
Brief for Petitioner 23. It is not clear from the Department's
brief whether this argument is based on the term "withheld" or the
term "improperly." [
Footnote
11] But, to the extent the Department relies on the
Page 492 U. S. 150
former term, its argument is without merit. Congress used the
word "withheld" only "in its usual sense. "
Kissinger, 445
U.S. at
445 U. S. 151.
When the Department refused to grant Tax Analysts' requests for the
district court decisions in its files, it undoubtedly "withheld"
these decisions in any reasonable sense of that term. Nothing in
the history or purposes of the FOIA counsels contorting this word
beyond its usual meaning. We therefore reject the Department's
argument that an agency has not "withheld" a document under its
control when, in denying an otherwise valid request, it directs the
requester to a place outside of the agency where the document may
be publicly available.
C
The Department is left to argue, finally, that the district
court decisions were not "improperly" withheld because of their
public availability. The term "improperly," like "agency records"
and "withheld," is not defined by the Act. We explained in
GTE
Sylvania, however, that Congress' use of the word "improperly"
reflected its dissatisfaction with § 3 of the Administrative
Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 1002 (1964 ed.), which
"had failed to provide the desired access to information relied
upon in Government decisionmaking, and in fact had become 'the
major statutory excuse for withholding Government records from
public view.'"
445 U.S. at
445 U. S. 384,
quoting H.R.Rep. No. 1497, 89th Cong., 2d Sess., 3 (1966). Under
§ 3, we explained, agencies had "broad discretion . . . in
deciding what information to disclose, and that discretion was
often abused." 445 U.S. at
445 U. S. 385.
In enacting the FOIA, Congress intended "to curb this apparently
unbridled discretion" by "clos[ing] the
loopholes which allow
agencies to deny legitimate information to the public.'"
Ibid. (citation omitted); see also EPA v. Mink,
410 U. S. 73,
410 U. S. 79
(1973). Toward this end, Congress formulated a system of clearly
defined exemptions to the FOIA's otherwise mandatory disclosure
requirements. An agency must disclose agency records to any person
under § 552(a), "unless
Page 492 U. S. 151
they may be withheld pursuant to one of the nine enumerated
exemptions listed in § 552(b)."
Department of Justice v.
Julian, 486 U. S. 1,
486 U. S. 8
(1988). Consistent with the Act's goal of broad disclosure, these
exemptions have been consistently given a narrow compass.
See,
e.g., ibid.; FBI v. Abramson, 456 U.
S. 615,
456 U. S. 630
(1982). More important for present purposes, the exemptions are
"explicitly exclusive."
FAA Administrator v. Robertson,
422 U. S. 255,
422 U. S. 262
(1975);
see also Rose, 425 U.S. at
425 U. S. 361;
Robbins Tire & Rubber Co., 437 U.S. at
437 U. S. 221;
Mink, supra, at
410 U. S. 79. As
JUSTICE O'CONNOR has explained, Congress sought
"to insulate its product from judicial tampering and to preserve
the emphasis on disclosure by admonishing that the 'availability of
records to the public' is not limited, 'except as
specifically stated.'"
Abramson, supra, at
456 U. S. 642
(dissenting opinion) (emphasis in original), quoting § 552(c)
(now codified at § 552(d));
see also 456 U.S. at
456 U. S. 637,
n. 5; H.R.Rep. No. 1497,
supra, at 1. It follows from the
exclusive nature of the § 552(b) exemption scheme that agency
records which do not fall within one of the exemptions are
"improperly" withheld. [
Footnote
12]
The Department does not contend here that any exemption
enumerated in § 552(b) protects the district court decisions
sought by Tax Analysts. The Department claims nonetheless that
there is nothing "improper" in directing a requester "to the
principal, public source of records." Brief for Petitioner 26. The
Department advances three somewhat related
Page 492 U. S. 152
arguments in support of this proposition. We consider them in
turn.
First, the Department contends that the structure of the Act
evinces Congress' desire to avoid redundant disclosures. An
understanding of this argument requires a brief survey of the
disclosure provisions of § 552(a). Under subsection (a)(1), an
agency must "currently publish in the Federal Register" specific
materials, such as descriptions of the agency, statements of its
general functions, and the agency's rules of procedure. Under
subsection (a)(2), an agency must "make available for public
inspection and copying" its final opinions, policy statements, and
administrative staff manuals, "unless the materials are promptly
published and copies offered for sale." Under subsection (a)(3),
the general provision covering the disclosure of agency records, an
agency need not make available those materials that have already
been disclosed under subsections (a)(1) and (a)(2). Taken together,
the Department argues, these provisions demonstrate the
inapplicability of the FOIA's disclosure requirements to previously
disclosed, publicly available materials. "
A fortiori, a
judicial record that is a public document should not be subject to
a FOIA request."
Id. at 29.
The Department's argument proves too much. The disclosure
requirements set out in subsections (a)(1) and (a)(2) are carefully
limited to situations in which the requested materials have been
previously published or made available by the
agency
itself. It is one thing to say that an agency need not
disclose materials that it has previously released; it is quite
another to say that an agency need not disclose materials that some
other person or group may have previously released. Congress
undoubtedly was aware of the redundancies that might exist when
requested materials have been previously made available. It chose
to deal with that problem by crafting only narrow categories of
materials which need not be, in effect, disclosed twice
by the
agency. If Congress had wished to codify an exemption for all
publicly available materials,
Page 492 U. S. 153
it knew perfectly well how to do so. It is not for us to add or
detract from Congress' comprehensive scheme, which already
"balances, and protects all interests" implicated by Executive
Branch disclosure.
Mink, supra, at
410 U. S. 80,
quoting S.Rep. No. 813, 89th Congress, 1st Sess., 3 (1965).
[
Footnote 13]
It is not surprising, moreover, that Congress declined to exempt
all publicly available materials from the FOIA's disclosure
requirements. In the first place, such an exemption would engender
intractable fights over precisely what constitutes public
availability, unless the term were defined with precision. In some
sense, nearly all of the information that comes within an agency's
control can be characterized as publicly available. Although the
form in which this material comes to an agency --
i.e., a
report or testimony -- may not be generally available, the
information included in that report or testimony may very well be.
Even if there were some agreement over what constitutes publicly
available materials, Congress surely did not envision agencies
satisfying their disclosure obligations under the FOIA simply by
handing requesters a map and sending them on scavenger expeditions
throughout the Nation. Without some express indication in the Act's
text or legislative history that Congress intended such a result,
we decline to adopt this reading of the statute.
The Department's next argument rests on the fact that the
disclosure of district court decisions is partially governed by
other statutes, in particular 28 U.S.C. § 1914, and by
rules
Page 492 U. S. 154
set by the Judicial Conference of the United States. The FOIA
does not compel disclosure of district court decisions, the
Department contends, because these other provisions are "more
precisely drawn to govern the provision of court records to the
general public." Brief for Petitioner 30. We disagree. As with the
Department's first argument, this theory requires us to read into
the FOIA a disclosure exemption that Congress did not itself
provide. This we decline to do. That Congress knew that other
statutes created overlapping disclosure requirements is evident
from § 552(b)(3), which authorizes an agency to refuse a FOIA
request when the materials sought are expressly exempted from
disclosure by another statute. If Congress had intended to enact
the converse proposition -- that an agency may refuse to provide
disclosure of materials whose disclosure is mandated by another
statute -- it was free to do so. Congress, however, did not take
such a step. [
Footnote
14]
The Department's last argument is derived from
GTE
Sylvania, where we held that agency records sought from the
Consumer Products Safety Commission were not "improperly" withheld
even though the records did not fall within one of subsection (b)'s
enumerated exemptions. The Commission had not released the records
in question because a district court, in the course of an unrelated
lawsuit, had enjoined the Commission from doing so. In these
circumstances, we held, "[t]he concerns underlying the Freedom of
Information Act [were] inapplicable, for the agency . . . made no
effort to avoid disclosure." 445 U.S. at
445 U. S. 386.
We therefore approved the Commission's compliance with the
injunction, noting that, when Congress passed the FOIA, it had
not
"intended to require an agency to commit contempt of court in
order to release documents. Indeed, Congress viewed the federal
courts as the necessary protectors of the public's right to
know."
Id. at
445 U. S.
387.
Page 492 U. S. 155
Although the Department is correct in asserting that
GTE
Sylvania represents a departure from the FOIA's self-contained
exemption scheme, this departure was a slight one at best, and was
necessary in order to serve a critical goal independent of the FOIA
-- the enforcement of a court order. As we emphasized,
GTE
Sylvania arose in "a distinctly different context" than the
typical FOIA case,
id. at
445 U. S. 386,
where the agency decides for itself whether to comply with a
request for agency records. In such a case, the agency cannot
contend that it has "no discretion . . . to exercise."
Ibid.
The present dispute is clearly akin to those typical FOIA cases.
No claim has been made that the Department was powerless to comply
with Tax Analysts' requests. On the contrary, it was the
Department's decision, and the Department's decision alone, not to
make the court decisions available. We reject the Department's
suggestion that GTE Sylvania invites courts in every case to engage
in balancing, based on public availability and other factors, to
determine whether there has been an unjustified denial of
information. The FOIA invests courts neither with the authority nor
the tools to make such determinations.
III
For the reasons stated, the Department improperly withheld
agency records when it refused Tax Analysts' requests for copies of
the district court tax decisions in its files. [
Footnote 15] Accordingly, the judgment of
the Court of Appeals is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Tax Analysts also requested copies of tax decisions received
from the Claims Court and the courts of appeals. Decisions from
these courts are not at issue in this case.
[
Footnote 2]
Section 552(a)(4)(B) provides:
"On complaint, the district court of the United States in the
district in which the complainant resides, or has his principal
place of business, or in which the agency records are situated, or
in the District of Columbia, has jurisdiction to enjoin the agency
from withholding agency records and to order the production of any
agency records improperly withheld from the complainant. In such a
case the court shall determine the matter de novo, and may examine
the contents of such agency records in camera to determine whether
such records or any part thereof shall be withheld under any of the
exemptions set forth in subsection (b) of this section, and the
burden is on the agency to sustain its action."
[
Footnote 3]
The burden is on the agency to demonstrate, not the requester to
disprove, that the materials sought are not "agency records" or
have not been "improperly" "withheld."
See S.Rep. No. 813,
89th Cong., 1st Sess., 8 (1965) ("Placing the burden of proof upon
the agency puts the task of justifying the withholding on the only
party able to explain it"); H.R.Rep. No. 1497, 89th Cong., 2d
Sess., 9 (1966) (same);
cf. Federal Open. Market Committee v.
Merrill, 443 U. S. 340,
443 U. S. 352
(1979).
[
Footnote 4]
Title 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(4), which exempts from disclosure
trade secrets and commercial or financial information "obtained
from a person," provides further support for the principle that the
term "agency records" includes materials received by an agency.
See Forsham, 445 U.S. at
445 U. S.
184-185;
see also id. at
445 U. S.
183-184 (noting that the definition of "records" in the
Records Disposal Act, 44 U.S.C. § 3301, and in the
Presidential Records Act of 1978, 44 U.S.C. § 2201(2),
encompassed materials "received" by an agency).
[
Footnote 5]
In
GTE Sylvania, Inc. v. Consumers Union of United States,
Inc., 445 U. S. 375,
445 U. S. 385
(1980), we noted that Congress intended the FOIA to prevent
agencies from refusing to disclose, among other things, agency
telephone directories and the names of agency employees. We are
confident, however, that requests for documents of this type will
be relatively infrequent. Common sense suggests that a person
seeking such documents or materials housed in an agency library
typically will find it easier to repair to the Library of Congress,
or to the nearest public library, rather than to invoke the FOIA's
disclosure mechanisms.
Cf. Department of Justice v. Reporters
Committee for Freedom of Press, 489 U.
S. 749,
489 U. S. 764
(1989) ("[I]f the [requested materials] were
freely available,'
there would be no reason to invoke the FOIA to obtain access"). To
the extent such requests are made, the fact that the FOIA allows
agencies to recoup the costs of processing requests from the
requester may discourage recourse to the FOIA where materials are
readily available elsewhere. See 5 U.S.C. §
552(a)(4)(A).
[
Footnote 6]
Because requested materials ordinarily will be in the agency's
possession at the time the FOIA request is made, disputes over
control should be infrequent. In some circumstances, however,
requested materials might be on loan to another agency,
"purposefully routed . . . out of agency possession in order to
circumvent [an impending] FOIA request," or "wrongfully removed by
an individual after a request is filed."
Kissinger v. Reporters
Committee for Freedom of Press, 445 U.
S. 136,
445 U. S. 155,
n. 9 (1980). We leave consideration of these issues to another
day.
[
Footnote 7]
This point is implicit in
Department of Justice v.
Julian, 486 U. S. 1,
486 U. S. 7, and
n. 6 (1988), where it was uncontroverted that presentence reports,
which had been prepared under district court auspices and turned
over to the Department and the Parole Commission, constituted
"agency records."
[
Footnote 8]
Nonpersonal materials in an agency's possession may be subject
to certain disclosure restrictions. This fact, however, does not
bear on whether the materials are in the agency's control, but
rather on the subsequent question whether they are exempted from
disclosure under § 552(b)(3).
[
Footnote 9]
Although a control inquiry for "withheld" replicates part of the
test for "agency records," the FOIA's structure and legislative
history make clear that agency control over requested materials is
a "prerequisite to triggering
any duties under the FOIA."
Kissinger, 445 U.S. at
445 U. S. 151
(emphasis added);
see also id. at
445 U. S.
152-153;
Forsham v. Harris, 445 U.
S. 169,
445 U. S. 185
(1980).
[
Footnote 10]
Kissinger's focus on the agency's present control of a
requested document was based in part on the Act's purposes and
structure. With respect to the former, we noted that, because
Congress had not intended to "obligate agencies to create or retain
documents," an agency should not be "required to retrieve documents
which have escaped its possession, but which it has not endeavored
to recover." 445 U.S. at
445 U. S. 152
(citations omitted). As for the Act's structure, we noted that,
among other provisions, § 552(a) (6)(B) gives agencies a
10-day extension of the normal 10-day period for responding to FOIA
requests if there is a need to search and collect the requested
materials from facilities separate from the office processing the
request. The brevity of this extension period indicates that
Congress did not expect agencies to resort to lawsuits to retrieve
documents within that period.
See id. at
445 U. S.
153.
[
Footnote 11]
The Court of Appeals believed that the Department was
arguing
"that it need not affirmatively make [the district court
decisions] available to Tax Analysts, because the documents have
not been
withheld to begin with."
269 U.S.App.D.C. 315, 319-320, 845 F.2d 1060, 1064-1065 (1988)
(emphasis in original).
[
Footnote 12]
Even when an agency does not deny a FOIA request outright, the
requesting party may still be able to claim "improper" withholding
by alleging that the agency has responded in an inadequate manner.
Cf. § 552(a) (6)(C);
Kissinger v. Reporters
Committee for Freedom of Press, 445 U.S. at
445 U. S. 166
(STEVENS, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). No such
claim is made in this case. Indeed, Tax Analysts does not dispute
the Court of Appeals' conclusion that the Department could satisfy
its duty of disclosure simply by making the relevant district court
opinions available for copying in the public reference facility
that it maintains.
See 269 U.S.App.D.C. at 321-322, and n.
15, 845 F.2d at 1066-1067, and n. 15.
[
Footnote 13]
The obligations imposed under subsections (a)(1) and (a)(2) are
not properly viewed as additions to the disclosure exemptions set
out in subsection (b). If an agency refuses to disclose agency
records that indisputably fall within one of the subsection (b)
exemptions, the agency has "withheld" the records, albeit not
"improperly" given the legislative authorization to do so. By
contrast, once an agency has complied with the subsection (a)(1)
and (a)(2) obligations, it can no longer be charged with
"withholding" the relevant records.
[
Footnote 14]
It is unclear, moreover, whether 28 U.S.C. § 1914 permits a
private cause of action to compel disclosure of a court
decision.
[
Footnote 15]
On appeal, Tax Analysts limited its requests to the
approximately 25% of the district court decisions that it was
unable to procure from court clerks or other sources.
See
269 U.S.App. 13. C. at 318, n. 5, 845 F.2d at 1063, n. 5; Brief for
Respondent 8, n. 7. The Court of Appeals' remand thus was limited
to these decisions, as is our affirmance. However, the reasoning we
have employed applies equally to all of the district court
decisions initially sought by Tax Analysts.
JUSTICE WHITE concurs in the judgment.
Page 492 U. S. 156
BLACKMUN, J., dissenting.
The Court in this case has examined once again the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. § 552. It now determines
that, under the Act, the Department of Justice on request must make
available copies of federal district court orders and opinions it
receives in the course of its litigation of tax cases on behalf of
the Federal Government. The majority holds that these qualify as
agency records within the meaning of § 552(a)(4)(B), and that
they were improperly withheld by the Department when respondent
asked for their production. The Court's analysis, I suppose, could
be regarded as a fairly routine one.
I do not join the Court's opinion, however, because it seems to
me that the language of the statute is not that clear or conclusive
on the issue and, more important, because the result the Court
reaches cannot be one that was within the intent of Congress when
the FOIA was enacted.
Respondent Tax Analysts, although apparently a nonprofit
organization for federal income tax purposes, is in business, and
in that sense is a commercial enterprise. It sells summaries of
these opinions and supplies full texts to major electronic
databases. The result of its now-successful effort in this
litigation is to impose the cost of obtaining the court orders and
opinions upon the Government, and thus upon taxpayers generally.
There is no question that this material is available elsewhere. But
it is quicker and more convenient, and less "frustrat[ing],"
see ante at
492 U. S. 140,
for respondent to have the Department do the work and search its
files and produce the items than it is to apply to the respective
court clerks.
This, I feel, is almost a gross misuse of the FOIA. What
respondent demands, and what the Court permits, adds nothing
whatsoever to public knowledge of Government operations. That, I
had thought, and the majority acknowledges,
see ante at
492 U. S. 142,
was the real purpose of the FOIA and the
Page 492 U. S. 157
spirit in which the statute has been interpreted thus far.
See, e.g., Forsham v. Harris, 445 U.
S. 169,
445 U. S. 178
(1980);
NLRB v. Robbins Tire & Rubber Co.,
437 U. S. 214,
437 U. S.
242-243 (1978). I also sense, I believe not
unwarrantedly, a distinct lack of enthusiasm on the part of the
majority for the result it reaches in this case.
If, as I surmise, the Court's decision today is outside the
intent of Congress in enacting the statute, Congress perhaps will
rectify the decision forthwith, and will give everyone concerned
needed guidelines for the administration and interpretation of this
somewhat opaque statute.