FOR PUBLICATION
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:
MICHAEL B. CRACRAFT STEVE CARTER
STEVEN W. KROHNE Attorney General
Hackman Hulette & Cracraft
Indianapolis, Indiana
FRANCES BARROW
Deputy Attorney General
ALAN M. HUX Indianapolis, Indiana
Kortepeter McPherson Hux Freihofer
& Minton
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
CELLCO PARTNERSHIP, et al., ))
OPINION- FOR PUBLICATION
Appellants App. p. 17.
[A] statutory construction analysis of the relationship between Indiana code 5-14-3-4(a)(4) and
5-14-3-4(a)(5) reveals, in the context of the financial information under consideration in these
consolidated Causes, that section 4(a)(5) (confidential financial information) is more specific than section
4(a)(4) (records containing trade secrets). Indianas supreme court has said: when
faced with a general statute and a specific statute on the same subject,
the more specific one should be applied.
Ross v. State, 729 N.E.2d
113, 116 (Ind. 2000).
Since confidential financial information includes the competitive effects issues raised by petitioners, it
is a reasonable conclusion, and we so find, that the financial information for
which confidentiality is sought in these consolidated Causes is financial information and could
be confidential financial information if Petitioners could demonstrate that disclosure would result in
substantial harm to their competitive positions. Though filed in the context of
trade secrets, the Petitions and sworn statements filed in these consolidated Causes have
been submitted for the purpose of making such a demonstration. A resolution
as to whether the financial information at issue is, in fact, confidential is
not crucial to this Order. This is so, because so long as
the financial information, which is claimed to be confidential, is required to be
filed or submitted pursuant to state statute, it will be excluded from the
exception to disclosure provided in Indiana Code 5-14-3-4(a)(5).
Appellants App. p. 14 (emphasis added).
We find it noteworthy in this proceeding, . . . overall, a minority
of all Indiana telephone companies has sought confidential treatment of the Wireless survey,
the Fee Report and the Annual Report. . . . We also
note that some Petitioners in these consolidated Causes are not consistently requesting that
the same information in different public records be treated as confidential. . .
. We note, too, that not all telephone companies requesting confidential treatment
of this years Fee Report and Annual Report have made the same confidentiality
request for past years reports. The Commission has required the submission of
this information for many years. We do not know whether all or
only some Indiana telephone companies consider the responses to the reports at issue
in these consolidated Causes to be trade secrets or confidential financial information.
What is obvious, though, is that not all affected Indiana telephone companies desire
that the Commission treat the responses to the Wireless, Survey, the Fee Report
and/or the Annual Report as nondisclosable public records. While not dispositive of
this issue in this Order, this lack of unanimity, or even a consensus
as to the need for confidentiality, and lack of consistency in seeking confidential
treatment for the same information, among affected Indiana telephone companies, is a factor
that weighs against a finding that the responses should be excepted from public
disclosure.
Appellants App. p. 18-19 (emphasis added).
The information to be submitted to the Commission in Sections II and III
of the Fee Report, requesting Indiana intrastate revenues, is financial information that is
filed with the Commission pursuant to Indiana Code 8-1-6-5 and, therefore, is excluded
from the relevant exception to public disclosure found in Indiana Code 5-14-3-4(a)(5).
All remaining information in the Fee Report is nonfinancial in nature and is
not information that derives independent economic value, actual or potential, from not being
generally known to, and not being readily ascertainable by proper means by, other
persons who can obtain economic value from its disclosure and use and, therefore,
is not subject to the trade secret exception to public disclosure found in
Indiana Code 5-14-3-4(a)(4).
Appellants App. p. 19 (emphasis supplied).
The information that the Commission has prescribed to accompany the balance sheet is
standard accounting information that is necessary in order to fully understand the balance
sheet. Indiana Code 8-1-2-16 provides a statutory directive with enough specificity to
reasonably conclude that all of the F Schedules in the Annual Report should
be considered information that is filed with or received by the Commission pursuant
to state statute. It is our conclusion that the responses to Schedules
F-2 through F-22 of the Annual Report contain financial information that is filed
with the Commission pursuant to Indiana Code 8-1-2-16 and, therefore, are excluded from
the relevant exception to public disclosure found in Indiana Code 5-14-3-4(a)(5).
Appellants App. p. 20 (emphasis added).
Responses to Schedule G-1 of the Annual Report (Personnel Data), requesting number of
employees within certain salary ranges, and to Schedule G-3 of the Annual Report
(Officers and Executives Salaries), contain financial information that is filed with or received
by the Commission pursuant to Indiana Code 8-1-2-26 and, therefore, are excluded from
the relevant exception to public disclosure found in Indiana Code 5-14-3-4(a)(5).
Appellants App. p. 16 (emphasis added).
As to the information requested in the Annual Report that is not financial
information, we concluded that Schedule G-4 (Access Lines in Service by Customer) and
Schedule G-5 (Telephone Company Statistics) seek information that is the same as, or
very similar to, the information regarding the number of access lines and other
provided services sought in the Wire Line survey. As such, these are
public records . . . and are not trade secrets and not exempt
from public disclosure.
Appellants App. p. 20-21 (emphasis added).
In its order, the IURC went on to note, as it did in
the SBC case, that:
This Commission is directed to give a narrow construction to the trade secret
exception to the disclosure of public records. Based on our findings that
much of the information in the Survey can be obtained from other sources;
that the Survey provides only general information about a companys customer base, containing
neither financial information nor customer specific information; that the overall immature condition of
competition in the telephone industry in Indiana is well known; and that this
Commission, not competition itself, still needs to provide competitive direction to the telephone
industry, we find that the Survey responses are not trade secret information, and
therefore, are not excepted from public disclosure under Indiana Code 5-14-3-4(a).
Appellants App. p. 21.
Finally, the IURC observed:
[T]he non-financial information sought in the Annual Report [and schedules]. . . is
not information that derives independent economic value, actual or potential, from not being
generally known to, and not being readily ascertainable by proper means by, other
persons who can obtain economic value form its disclosure or use and, therefore,
is not trade secret information and not exempt from public disclosure under Indiana
Code 5-14-3-4(a)(4).
Appellants App. p. 21 (emphasis added).
Thereafter, on July 15, 2003, the Wireless Carriers filed a petition for reconsideration
and moved for a stay pending reconsideration, which was ultimately denied. The
IURC expanded on its original reasoning, stating:
The June 26, 2003 Order did not conclude that financial information could not
be subject to nondisclosure pursuant to Indiana Code 5-14-3-4(a)(4). The June 26,
2003 Order discussed confidential financial information as that term is used in Indiana
Code 5-14-3-4(a)(5). . . . As we concluded, the financial information under
consideration in our June 26, 2003 Order was, for the most part, factually
consistent with the exception to nondisclosure found in Indiana Code 5-14-3-4(a)(5).
Appellants App. p. 76. The Wireless Carriers now appeal from this order.
(4) Records containing trade secrets.
(5) Confidential financial information obtained, upon request, from a person. However, this
does not include information that is filed with or received by a public
agency pursuant to state statute.
(Emphasis added).
As set forth above, the IURCs order examined these exceptions, and the agency
specifically determined that the information should be considered under the confidential financial information
exception set forth in subsection (5) above. Thus, inasmuch as the trade
secret exception does not apply to the requested information in this case, a
determination of whether the information was confidential was not required. That said,
we further note that the IURC correctly observed that Indiana Code section 8-1-6-5
requires public utilitiesincluding the Wireless Carriersto file a report of their annual gross
revenue which includes intrastate operating revenue. See I.C. § 8-1-6-3. As
the findings indicate above, the order goes on to outline and analyze all
of the statutory filing requirements that are satisfied by the financial information sought
in the forms. Put another way, the order contains those findings necessary
to support the conclusion that the data at issue was financial information that
must be publicly disclosed within the meaning of subsection (5) of the statute.
Finally, we note that the Wireless Carriers urge that the requested financial material
should be protected under the trade secret exception, notwithstanding the IURCs determination that
it did not fall within the exception pursuant to Indiana Code section 5-14-3-4(a)(5).
However, even if the trade secret exception would be applicable here, the
Wireless Carriers have failed to demonstrate that the requested material constituted the same.
We thus incorporate our discussion regarding the trade secret exception in the SBC
case, and further note that the Wireless Carriers have only demonstrated that the
disclosed information has limited economic value. Also, there is no showing that
the data could not have been ascertained through other means, in light of
the inconsistent manner in which other carriers have treated this same data.
Thus, the Wireless Carriers arguments that the order may not stand on
this basis must fail.
Appellants App. p. 7.
When construing this portion of the order in conjunction with the remaining findings
and conclusions, it is apparent that the IURC has fully examined the issues
in this case, and it has made relevant factual findings in support of
the judgment. Moreover, as explained in the findings, only a minority of
the telephone companies has sought confidential treatment of the survey and the reports.
The companies also have not shown consistency in requesting that the same
information in different public records be treated as confidential. Additionally, not all
of the companies requesting confidential treatment of the material have made the same
confidentiality request for the reports in years past. In our view, the
IURC got it right when it concluded that such a lack of unanimity
or consensus as to the need for confidentiality, along with the lack of
consistency in seeking confidential treatment for the same information, are factors that weigh
against a finding that the various responses should be excepted from public disclosure.
As a result, we reject the Wireless Carriers claim that the IURC
failed to adequately explain why it chose to take a different approach and
depart from its prior treatment of this data.
Judgment affirmed.
ROBB, J., concurs.
BARNES, J., concur in result with opinion.
IN THE
BARNES, Judge, concurring in result with separate opinion
I concur in result with the majoritys opinion. Relying on the IURCs
categorization of the information that the Wireless Carriers sought to keep confidential, the
majority concluded that such information constituted confidential information filed with a public agency
and was subject to disclosure pursuant to Indiana Code Section 5-14-3-4(a)(5). I
disagree with the majoritys assertion that confidential financial information filed with a public
agency is subject to disclosure even if that same information constitutes a trade
secret.
Indiana Code Section 5-14-3-4(a)(4) provides that public records containing trade secrets generally may
not be disclosed by a public agency. Indiana Code Section 5-14-3-4(a)(5) provides
that confidential financial information may not be disclosed unless it is filed with
a public agency. I read these two sections to mean that public
records containing trade secrets may not be disclosed and that confidential financial information,
which does not rise to the level of a trade secret, may be
subject to disclosure if it is filed with a public agency. Thus,
I would conclude that if a record contains a trade secret, it may
not be disclosed even if it may also be categorized as confidential financial
information.
Although I disagree with the majority in this regard, I concur in result
because I do not believe the Wireless Carriers have established that this information
is in fact a trade secret. Indiana Code Section 24-2-3-2 defines a
trade secret as:
information, including a formula, pattern, compilation, program, device, method, technique, or process, that:
derives independent economic value, actual or potential, from not being generally known to,
and not being readily ascertainable by proper means by, other persons who can
obtain economic value from its disclosure or use; and
(2) is the subject of efforts that are reasonable under the circumstances to
maintain its secrecy.
A protectable trade secret has the following characteristics: (1) information, (2) that
derives independent economic value, (3) is not generally know, or readily ascertainable by
proper means by other persons who can obtain economic value from its disclosure
or use, and (4) the subject of efforts reasonable under the circumstances to
maintain its secrecy. Harvest Life Ins. Co., v. Getche, 701 N.E.2d 871,
876 (Ind. Ct. App. 1998), trans. denied (1999). Whether information is a
trade secret depends on the facts of each case. Id.
The Wireless Carriers submitted affidavits to the IURC in support of the nondisclosure
of their intrastate revenues. The multiple affidavits generally contain summary assertions in
an attempt to categorize this information as a trade secret. Even if
the bare assertions of the affidavits are sufficient to determine whether the requested
intrastate revenues constitute trade secrets, the Wireless Carriers have not established that this
information has independent economic value.
All of the affiants assert that his or her companys intrastate revenues are
of economic value to its competitors because this information is indicative of their
respective market shares. However, based on the limited assertions in the affidavits,
it appears that this information is indicative of their respective market shares only
as it relates to the other companies intrastate revenues. In other words,
one could only determine market share of one company by comparing its intrastate
revenues with that of the various companies intrastate revenues. Thus, I cannot
conclude that each companys intrastate revenues alone derive independent economic value to its
competitors. Without demonstrating that the information has independent economic value, the Wireless
Carriers cannot establish that the information is a protectable trade secret.
Based on the minimal contents of the affidavits provided by the Wireless Carriers,
they have not established that the intrastate revenues are protectable trade secrets subject
to the disclosure exception in Indiana Code Section 5-14-3-4(a)(4). For this reason,
I concur in result.