It’s not clear whether OPRA requires a public body to disclose a personal email address that it has in its possession. While there’s a good argument that OPRA’s privacy section protects individuals’ email addresses, as recognized by the GRC and some unpublished court opinions, there is no definitive, precedential ruling on this issue.
The Appellate Division recently addressed this question, but did so in two unpublished, non-precedential opinions that reached different conclusions due to the different circumstances presented in each. Although these opinions are fact-specific, they are instructive for how custodians should deal with a request for personal email addresses.
In Brooks v. Twp. of Tabernacle, the Appellate Division determined that the email addresses had to be released. The OPRA request sought the names and email addresses of those who had emailed with certain Township officials and employees. The court stated that OPRA’s privacy section does apply to a personal email address, because a person has a colorable claim that disclosure of this information would invade their objectively reasonable expectation of privacy. But although the claim is colorable, the court applied the required balancing test and concluded that the privacy interest of the individuals here was mimimal, and was outweighed by considerations favoring disclosure of the requested email addresses.
In reaching this conclusion, the court placed substantial emphasis on the fact that the government had the addresses due to the decision of these members of the public to engage in email exchanges with public officials and employees about public business. The court said such discussion is “an inherently public activity,” making it unreasonable for anyone to “believe they have a right to cloak their contacts relating to public business in secrecy.”
In contrast, in Rise Against Hate v. Cherry Hill, decided by the same panel of judges on the same day, the email addresses held by the government did not result from email exchanges about public business. Instead, residents had given the municipalities their email addresses for the purpose of receiving newsletters and notices from the municipalities. Applying the same legal analysis as it did in Brooks, the court this time concluded OPRA’s privacy protection required withholding the addresses from disclosure.
The key to the ruling in this case was that the residents provided their email information to the municipalities for receipt of “periodic, generic newsletters and notices,” rather than engaging in email dialogue with public officials about public business. This tipped the balance of interests in favor of privacy.
These opinions are not precedential for future OPRA requests for email addresses. However, it’s significant that the court saw OPRA requests for email addresses as presenting a colorable claim of invasion of privacy, confirming that custodians should assess such requests under the fact-specific balancing test.