Hollis v. U.S. Dept. of Army

Citation272 U.S.App. D.C. 379,856 F.2d 1541
Decision Date16 September 1988
Docket NumberNo. 86-5598,86-5598
PartiesAndrew HOLLIS, Appellant, v. U.S. DEPARTMENT OF the ARMY.
CourtUnited States Courts of Appeals. United States Court of Appeals (District of Columbia)

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Columbia (Civil Action No. 85-03218).

Lawrence M. Baskir, Washington, D.C., for appellant.

Jeffrey Hunter Moon, Asst. U.S. Atty., with whom Joseph E. diGenova, U.S. Atty., Royce C. Lamberth and R. Craig Lawrence, Asst. U.S. Attys., Washington, D.C., were on the brief, for appellee.

Before ROBINSON and EDWARDS, Circuit Judges, and PARKER, * Senior District Judge.

Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III.

SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Circuit Judge:

This litigation concerns the propriety of two accountings by the Department of the Army of deductions made from a soldier's pay to effectuate a child-support allotment. Appellant, Andrew Hollis, sues on the theory that releases of that information--first to the congressman and later to the attorney of his ex-wife, Phyllis D. Hollis--transgressed the Privacy Act. 1 The District Court dismissed the action for failure to state an actionable claim. 2 We conclude that the questioned disclosures were not forbidden by the Act, and accordingly we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Andrew and Phyllis Hollis were divorced in Michigan in 1973. He then was a sergeant in the Army. The Michigan court ordered him to maintain for specified periods the usual military allotment for the three minor children of the marriage. 3 About ten years later, Phyllis Hollis, asserting that her ex-husband had only "marginally" complied with the order, asked the Army's Finance and Accounting Center to furnish to her attorney a record of the amounts deducted from his pay and presumably remitted to her. 4 Somewhat later, through her attorney, she called upon her congressman for help, and he wrote a letter in her behalf. 5 The Army then responded, revealing to the congressman the child-support deductions during part but not all of the period following the divorce, 6 and the congressman forwarded this information to Phyllis Hollis.

Subsequently, Phyllis Hollis' attorney solicited a sworn statement incorporating the same data. 7 The Army again complied, 8 and afterwards the child-support payments were judicially declared to be in arrears. 9 The parties eventually settled the matter of back payments. 10

In the case at bar, Andrew Hollis charges that the Army's accountings to the congressman and the attorney of the child-support deductions violated the Privacy Act, causing him "great loss and embarrassment." 11 The District Court, on the Army's motion, dismissed his complaint under Federal Civil Rule 12(b)(6) 12 for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. 13 The court held that no disclosure within the meaning of the Act had occurred because Phyllis Hollis, as the direct recipient of the child-support payments, already knew what had been remitted to her. 14 Additionally, the court, noting that materials mandatorily disclosable under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) 15 are excluded from the Privacy Act's strictures, 16 reasoned that provision of the allotment record to Phyllis Hollis did not constitute "a clearly unwarranted invasion of [Andrew Hollis'] personal privacy" under FOIA Exemption 6, 17 and thus that its release was required by FOIA. 18

Andrew Hollis presses three primary theses here. First, he argues that the District Court drew from materials outside his complaint factual inferences favorable to the Army, and impermissibly transformed the Army's motion to dismiss into a motion for summary judgment. 19 Second, he insists that release of the child-support record was proscribed by the Privacy Act, and that in any event there was a factual dispute precluding summary judgment. 20 Third, he asserts that FOIA did not compel the Army to disclose this information, and that the District Court misapplied the factors relevant to the FOIA Exemption 6 balancing test. 21 We turn to analyze these contentions to the extent that they bear on our disposition. 22

II. THE MOTION TO DISMISS

There was an early period during which some courts held that on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss a complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted, materials extrinsic to the complaint could not be considered. 23 Since 1948, however, Rule 12(b) has provided that if "matters outside the pleading are presented to and not excluded by the court, the motion shall be treated as one for summary judgment and disposed of as provided in Rule 56." 24 Nonetheless, the court's authority to turn a motion to dismiss into one for summary-judgment is not wholly unbridled. When a motion to dismiss is converted into a motion for summary judgment, Rule 12(b) provides that "all parties shall be given reasonable opportunity to present all materials made pertinent to such a motion by Rule 56." 25 Rule 56(c) requires a summary-judgment motion to be served at least ten days before the time fixed for hearing, and allows the parties to support or oppose the motion with specified materials, including extrinsic matter presented by affidavit, deposition or in some other fashion. Then, if there "is no genuine issue as to any material fact ... and the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law," the motion must be granted; otherwise, it must be denied. 26

When the District Court made the ruling contested here, it had before it Andrew Hollis' complaint, the Army's motion to dismiss and attached exhibits, and the opposition to that motion. There is no indication in the record that the court excluded any of these materials, nor did the court announce that it would deal with the motion as one for summary judgment. This, it is urged, was reversible error, but we cannot subscribe to this position.

There was substantial agreement between the parties respecting the facts constituting the predicate for the District Court's determination that there had been no disclosure actionable under the Privacy Act. The complaint contained only a skeletal recital, but the Army's memorandum advocating dismissal summarized the context, including specific references to the child-support allotment 27 to Phyllis Hollis as the direct recipient of the support payments, 28 and to the several requests for the allotment record and the Army's response thereto. 29 Attached to the Army's memorandum were copies of the documents attesting these facts. 30 Not only did the memorandum in opposition to the Army's motion rely upon some of the same factual materials, 31 but it also stated explicitly that "[t]he background set forth in Defendant's Memorandum is essentially correct." 32

This acknowledgement seals the fate of the procedural assault on the District Court's ruling. It was nothing less than a concession that the critical facts, as portrayed by the Army, were not and could not be contested. Since Rule 12(b)'s notice-and-opportunity requirement is designed to "insure[ ] that both parties shall be given a reasonable opportunity to submit affidavits and extraneous proof to avoid taking a party by surprise through the conversion of the motion into a motion for summary judgment," 33 no useful purpose can be served by its application where it is clear that the dispositive facts will remain undisputed and unchanged. By the same token, no prejudice can result from its nonobservance in any situation of that sort. 34 Since it appeared without controversy that Phyllis Hollis was the designated payee of the child-support allotment and that the information obtained from the Army concerned only the payments made pursuant thereto, the District Court had before it an ample basis for determining whether release of that information impinged upon the Privacy Act.

III. THE PRIVACY ACT

The Privacy Act forbids an agency to "disclose any record which is contained in a system of records by any means of communication to any person ... except pursuant to a written request by, or with the prior written consent of, the individual to whom the record pertains...." 35 We do not doubt that the compilation of the child-support payments made to Phyllis Hollis was a record within the meaning of the Act. 36 The District Court was convinced, however, that communication of these data on request of her representatives--her congressman and her attorney--was not the sort of disclosure proscribed by the Act. 37 The court depicted prohibited disclosure as " 'the imparting of information which in itself has meaning and which was previously unknown to the person to whom it is imparted.' " 38 Since the Army had remitted the child-support payments directly to Phyllis Hollis, the court reasoned that she learned nothing from the transmitted record of which she was not already aware. Other courts have echoed the sentiment that when a release consists merely of information to which the general public already has access, 39 or which the recipient of the release already knows, 40 the Privacy Act is not violated.

Issue is taken with the District Court's analysis on the ground that it necessitated an inference favorable to the Army--that Phyllis Hollis had knowledge of the released data. If, indeed, that were true, we would be faced with a technique improper under both Rules 12(b)(6) and 56. 41 The objection, however, is overstated, for the notion underlying it is simply that "one does not request nor have need to request information already known." 42 While that may be a correct statement of a general trait of human behavior, it does not withstand scrutiny here. Both Phyllis Hollis and her attorney, in their respective requests for the allotment record, indicated to the Army plainly enough that it was needed for purposes of imminent litigation over past-due payments. 43 Any countervailing inference would have to ignore the undeniable fact that Phyllis...

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