COURT OF APPEALS DECISION DATED AND RELEASED October 17, 1996 |
NOTICE |
A party may file with the Supreme
Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the Court of Appeals. See § 808.10 and Rule 809.62, Stats. |
This opinion is subject to
further editing. If published, the
official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. |
No. 95-2540
STATE
OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF
APPEALS
DISTRICT IV
STATE OF WISCONSIN
EX REL. STEPHEN W.
JONES,
Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
ELEANOR SWOBODA,
Respondent-Respondent.
APPEAL from an order of
the circuit court for Dane County:
STUART A. SCHWARTZ, Judge. Affirmed.
Before Eich, C.J.,
Dykman, P.J., and Robert D. Sundby, Reserve Judge.
PER
CURIAM. Stephen Jones appeals from an order substantially
denying relief on his petition for a writ of mandamus. Jones was formerly an inmate at Columbia
Correctional Institution (CCI). The
respondent, Eleanor Swoboda, is the record custodian at CCI. Jones commenced this action because he was
dissatisfied with the response to his open records requests. The only relief the trial court provided
Jones was to order access to records Swoboda had already offered to
disclose. We reject Jones's arguments
why further relief should be available, and therefore affirm.
Jones filed two written
requests for access to cell inspection cards, warning cards and other relevant
documents pertaining to searches of his cells during part of his stay at
CCI. Swoboda responded to the request
by telling Jones that
Staff on [your unit] assure me that all
you have to do to see your Cell Inspection Cards and Warning Cards to is ask
staff to review them. Via this letter,
I am instructing you to ask staff for an opportunity to see these cards;
Sergeant Peebles will assist you.
She
also informed him that other information was available in the unit search
log. Because the log for the relevant
period covered approximately sixty pages, and because Jones could only see a
blacked-out copy of it to protect other inmates, Swoboda told him he could see
it when he had enough money to pay the fifteen cents a page copying charge, or
nine dollars.
As Swoboda instructed,
Jones asked Sergeant Peebles for access to the search and warning cards. Peebles informed him that all of the cards
were lost, with one exception. According to Peebles, he showed Jones that card. Jones submitted an affidavit stating that
Peebles did not show him the remaining card.
The card in question was subsequently destroyed, as a matter of routine
procedure, after Jones was transferred to another correctional facility.
Jones construed the
responses of Swoboda and Peebles to his request as denying access, and filed an
administrative appeal. When that was
denied, he commenced this action. In response
to Jones's arguments, the trial court held that Jones was not denied access to
the search log because Swoboda was allowed by statute to charge him a nine
dollar copying fee. The court also held
that Jones was not entitled to damages for a willful and intentional denial of
access and that Jones failed to prove that the remaining search card was
destroyed in violation of § 19.35(5), Stats. On appeal, Jones argues that the trial court
erred by finding no violation of § 19.35(5), and by finding that Swoboda
acted reasonably when she withheld a copy of the search log until Jones paid
the copying fee.
The trial court properly
determined that Jones showed no violation of § 19.35(5), Stats.
That section prohibits destruction of any record after a request for
inspection of it is received until after the request is granted or until at
least sixty days after the request is denied.
Here, a dispute of fact remains as to whether the request was granted or
denied as to the one card that was not lost.
However, even if Peebles denied the request, Jones did not offer any
evidence on when Jones received the denial or when he was transferred to
another facility, thereby triggering the destruction of the card. The trial court properly denied relief under
§ 19.35(5) because it could only speculate as to whether the card was
destroyed within sixty days of the alleged denial of access.
Swoboda did not deny
Jones access to the search log by requiring prepayment of the copying fee. The record custodian may require prepayment
of a copying fee if it exceeds five dollars.
§ 19.35(3)(f), Stats. Jones contends that the trial court should
have inspected the log in camera to determine whether it was necessary
to copy sixty pages. While the trial
court could have done so, it reasonably chose to rely on Swoboda's decision to
copy and disclose the entire log. Jones
made a very broad request for access to all relevant documents for all searches
conducted on his cells. Swoboda could
reasonably conclude that disclosure of the entire search log was necessary to
satisfy Jones that all the information she had on searches of his cells was
disclosed to him. If Jones knew the
dates of the searches he was interested in, he could have provided a more
specific request to Swoboda and allowed her to respond with only portions of
the log.
Jones identifies other
issues in his brief but does not present any argument in support of them. An issue raised but not argued is deemed
waived. Reiman Assocs., Inc. v.
R/A Advertising, Inc., 102 Wis.2d 305, 306 n.1, 306 N.W.2d 292, 294
(Ct. App. 1981).
By the Court.—Order
affirmed.
This opinion will not be
published. See Rule 809.23(1)(b)5, Stats.