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Appeals Court Rules Underhill’s Facebook Messages Are Public Records, Must Pay Legal Fees

A federal appeals court dealt a significant blow to former Escambia County Commissioner Doug Underhill, affirming that his Facebook posts and private messages with constituents were public records subject to disclosure under Florida law, and that his refusal to turn them over was unlawful, leaving him on the hook for attorney’s fees.

Background: A Commissioner & Facebook

While serving as an Escambia County Commissioner, Doug Underhill used his personally owned Facebook account to communicate with constituents about county business. He maintained two pages under a single account: a personal “Douglas Underhill” page and a quasi-official “Commissioner Douglas Underhill” page. Underhill, himself, publicly acknowledged he was out of compliance with the county’s social media policy.

Through early 2019, Underhill operated the commissioner page as a public forum and told visitors that “everything here is a public record.” He later shifted his approach, trying to reframe the page as a simple electronic bulletin board. He used administrator settings to selectively filter and hide certain comments.

The Public Records Requests

To get to the truth, Bear filed three public records requests—to the county and to Underhill directly—seeking:

The county responded that the messages were under Underhill’s control, not the county’s. Underhill was not willing to fully comply. Bear contended the responses were incomplete and filed suit.

Discovery, Withheld Records and a Motion to Compel

During discovery, Underhill produced roughly 12,000 pages of Facebook records while insisting that none were public records because he personally owned the account. At the same time, he withheld more than 24,000 additional pages.

After reviewing the disputed documents in camera, the magistrate judge recommended compelling production of 129 pages and directed Underhill to redact another batch that mixed public records with personal messages.

The District Court Rules on Attorney’s Fees

On March 25, 2023, the district court revisited the attorney’s fees issue and ruled in Bear’s favor. In 2024, the fees were $130,425.50, according to court documents.

The court rejected the magistrate judge’s finding of reasonable uncertainty, holding that Underhill should have known he was required to comply with the Public Records Act.

Underhill appealed.

The Appeals Court: Three Questions, Three Answers Against Underhill

The Eleventh Circuit framed the appeal around three statutory questions under Florida’s Public Records Act.

Was Underhill an “agency” under the Act?

The court said yes. Florida’s Public Records Act defines “agency” to include any municipal officer or any private person acting on behalf of a public agency. Underhill argued that county commissioners aren’t “county officers” under the Florida Constitution and that only governmental entities—not individuals—can be agencies. The court rejected both arguments.

Were the Facebook messages “public records”?

Again, yes. The Public Records Act covers documents made or received in connection with the transaction of official business. The court found that Underhill’s Facebook messages—requests for commissioner action, responses to constituent inquiries, positions on matters coming before the board—were squarely within that definition.

Did Underhill unlawfully withhold the records, triggering mandatory attorney’s fees?

Yes. Florida law requires a court to award attorney’s fees when an agency is found to have unlawfully refused to allow inspection or copying of public records. The Florida Supreme Court has held that “unlawful” simply means a violation of the Act—no requirement of bad faith. Underhill attempted to invoke the so-called PHH exception, which shields private entities from attorney’s fees when they had a reasonable and understandable uncertainty about their status as an agency and acted quickly to clarify it, such as by filing a declaratory judgment action.

The court found Underhill qualified for neither prong of that exception.

The Bottom Line

The Eleventh Circuit affirmed the district court’s judgment in full. Underhill must pay attorney’s fees. His Facebook messages with constituents about county business were public records. And his personal ownership of the account provided no legal shield.

The ownership of social media accounts doesn’t matter. What matters is whether official business is being conducted.

Read Underhill_Bear Opinion

 

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