Federal securities law won’t help City of Menasha delay public
records request in bond case
A federal district court in Indiana stayed a discovery request against
the City of Menasha in a case involving the city's default on issued
bonds. But a panel for the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals reversed,
holding that public records are not discovery under federal securities
law.
By Joe Forward, Legal Writer,
State Bar of Wisconsin
Dec. 6, 2010
– The City of Menasha cannot use federal securities law to delay a
bondholder’s request for public records under Wisconsin’s
public records law, a U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
panel recently held.
American Bank filed a class-action lawsuit under federal securities law
against the City of Menasha stemming from bonds the city issued to
finance the conversion of an electric power plant to a steam-generating
plant. The project went about $27 million over budget, and the city
eventually defaulted on the bonds. American Bank was a bond-holder.
Shortly after American filed suit, it requested records from the city
pursuant to Wisconsin’s Public Records Law, Wis. Stat. sections
19.31-.39. When the city failed to produce the records, American Bank
obtained a state court mandamus order to compel production.
The city asked the federal district court in Indiana, where the suit
was filed, to stay discovery under a provision of the Securities
Litigation Uniform Standards Act of 1998 (SLUSA). The district court
granted the city’s request and stayed discovery of the public
records.
In American
Bank v. City of Menasha, No. 10-1963 (Nov. 29, 2010), the 7th
Circuit appeals panel – in an opinion written by Judge Richard
Posner – concluded that SLUSA does not authorize the district
court “to enjoin a private securities plaintiff from gaining
access to records that a state’s public-records law entitles
members of the public to see and copy at their own expense.”
The city argued, and the appeals panel agreed, that discovery orders
are generally not appealable in the federal court system.
However, the bank argued, and the appeals panel agreed, that
“inspecting public records pursuant to a state statute is not
discovery within the meaning of the [SLUSA] stay provision.”
Rather, a stay of such an inspection is an “injunction against
enforcement of a state law and appealable as such.”
The appeals panel reasoned that requests for federal or state public
records under public records laws are not considered
“discovery” requests even when the request “is made
for the purpose of obtaining information to aid in a litigation and is
worded much like a discovery demand.” Thus, the appeals panel
reversed the federal district court’s judgment granting stay.