California courts adopt new requirements for sealing records
By The Associated Press
10.30.00
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SAN FRANCISCO California's trial judges no longer can seal
court records automatically under a new rule adopted late last week.
The rule, an outgrowth of a California Supreme Court decision last
year, requires judges to explain in writing why they are sealing a record. The
reasons must be in accordance with guidelines spelled out by the high
court.
Open-records advocates hailed the rule, approved 18-1 on Oct. 27 by
the Judicial Council the administrative arm of California's court
system.
The only negative vote came from John Collins, a Pasadena lawyer
appointed by the state bar to sit on the council. He said the Judicial Council
has no place adopting such a controversial rule, adding that doing so is the
state Legislature's job.
"There is an awful lot of stuff that may get daylight that shouldn't,"
said Collins, whose vote does not reflect the position of the state bar that
represents all of California's lawyers.
Advocates said the rule would stop judges from the common practice of
"casually" sealing records at the request of attorneys.
"It's not going to stop all sealings. But I think it will cut down on
the number of casual sealings that occur without any good reason except that
the parties in the case think it is OK," said Terry Francke, counsel of the
California First Amendment Coalition.
Sacramento Superior Court Judge Ronald Robie agreed with Francke.
Robie, a Judicial Council member, said judges immediately seal records at the
request of or by so-called "stipulations" of lawyers, regardless of whether the
documents should remain open.
Now a judge must conduct a hearing and state the reasons for sealing,
which might make judges leery of sealing a record, Robie said.
"It eliminates stipulations," he said. "That happens frequently."
When a judge seals a record, the judge must find an "overriding"
interest. That is the standard the California Supreme Court spelled out last
year when the high court ruled in
NBC Subsidiary (KNBC-TV) v. Superior
Court that a lower court erred when it excluded the public and
media from portions of a civil trial in which the jury was not present. The
trial was over a lawsuit filed against actor Clint Eastwood.
The high court said there was a First Amendment right to access courts
and the justices requested the Judicial Council propose how and when court
records could be sealed.
Even so, the definition of an overriding interest is at the judge's
discretion. Such interests include sealing trade-secret information in a
lawsuit, the addresses and phone numbers of witnesses and, in some cases,
psychiatric and medical reports.
However, even under the new rule, settlement agreements of lawsuits
remain confidential as well as a host of juvenile court records and documents
of family mediation disputes.
Some lawmakers have said they may introduce legislation next year
requiring that lawsuits settled out of court become public records.
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