Can a party to a Florida worker's compensation case file something with the Judge and not disclose the contents of that document? There are a couple of valid points to be discussed on this general topic.
It is important
to note that all documents filed by attorneys with the Office of Judges of
Compensation Claims "shall" be filed electronically:
All documents filed with the OJCC, except documents filed by parties who are not represented by an attorney, shall be filed by electronic means through the OJCC website. Rule 60Q-6.108(1)(a).
And, all
documents shall be served:
In the event a represented party files a pleading or other paper with the OJCC by electronic means, that party shall be required to serve the other party or parties, or their designated representative, with a copy of that pleading or paper simultaneously by electronic means, if available. Rule 60Q-6.108(1)(b).
Thus, it is not appropriate under the rules for an attorney to deliver documents to the assigned judge's office. In fact, any documents that are submitted in a manner not consistent with the electronic requirement are to be sent to Tallahassee:
Any document filed in paper form by U.S. mail, facsimile, or delivery shall be filed only with the OJCC clerk in Tallahassee. Rule 60Q-6.108(1)(a).
(i) The clerk of the OJCC shall, upon order of the assigned judge, place a document under seal and render it thereby viewable only upon further order of the assigned judge.
This rule allows
items that could pose a potential for embarrassment or other harm to be
“sealed.” That action (placing under seal) does not mean that the document
(1) Is not a public record of the State of Florida (it likely is as soon as it is filed with the OJCC) or (2) Will not be produced by the OJCC in response to a public record request.
Sealing a
document does not prevent its disclosure by the OJCC. Sealing only makes disclosure a
multi-step process for someone to obtain it (as opposed to an attorney on a
case just clicking on a link in the case docket). When it is sealed, the document does not
“go away,” it is just stored elsewhere so a user's click will not open it. But it is
still a public record.
If a party wishes to have a document placed under seal, the party should file a motion. See Rule 60Q-6.115(1). The motion should state the legal basis for the motion, and the assigned judge should enter an order adjudicating that motion. The order, all orders, should be uploaded to the appropriate case docket. If the party has some reason for the OJCC not to publish an order on the case docket, the party should say so, provide legal authority for that suppression of the order, and the judge will decide whether the order is public or not.
As a general proposition, all orders entered by the OJCC are viewable by the public on the case docket. This affords the public with transparency as to the operations of this office and the litigation of Florida workers' compensation cases. Transparency is of value to this Office, the State, and the people.
As an aside, there is no
method or practice for a judge to order that some portion of a document is
“sealed.” Either the document is sealed in its entirety or it is not sealed at
all. The parsing of a particular document to seal part, but not all, generally requires more resources than the OJCC can devote. Thousands of documents are filed each day.
Therefore,
(1) if a party wants to seal a filing, it should file a motion for the judge to enter an order to that effect, Rule 60Q6.108 Filing and
Service.
(2) if a party wants to seal an order, a judge might order that, if the party can through a motion provide both a valid reason to seal the order and a legal authority that
justifies it. But, that authority must overcome the presumption of public access to public records. In other words, the party must cite a law that overrides the law requiring public access (I am not aware of one, but it could exist).
(3) If a party wants to seal part of a document, The OJCC simply cannot – the only solution is to seal the entire document as described in either (1) or (2).
Fundamentally, secrets are not for the government. The filings and orders in litigation before the OJCC are public records. Therefore, those records will generally be accessible to all. Preventing such access will be the exception, a rare and special exception, to that rule.
Fundamentally, secrets are not for the government. The filings and orders in litigation before the OJCC are public records. Therefore, those records will generally be accessible to all. Preventing such access will be the exception, a rare and special exception, to that rule.