State of Delaware, Department of Finance v. Univar, Inc. ( 2020 )


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  •    IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    STATE OF DELAWARE,                        )
    DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE,                    )
    )
    Plaintiff,        )
    )
    v.                         )   C.A. No. 2018-0884-JRS
    )
    UNIVAR, INC.,                             )
    )
    Defendant.        )
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Date Submitted: August 14, 2020
    Date Decided: October 29, 2020
    Melanie K. Sharp, Esquire, Martin S. Lessner, Esquire, Mary F. Dugan, Esquire and
    Michael A. Laukaitis, II, Esquire of Young Conaway Stargatt & Taylor, LLP,
    Wilmington, Delaware and Steven S. Rosenthal, Esquire, Tiffany R. Moseley,
    Esquire and John David Taliaferro, Esquire of Loeb & Loeb LLP, Washington, DC,
    Attorneys for Plaintiff State of Delaware, Department of Finance.
    Michael P. Kelly, Esquire, David A. White, Esquire and Matthew J. Rifino, Esquire
    of McCarter & English LLP, Wilmington, Delaware and Jameel S. Turner, Esquire
    and James G. Ryan, Esquire of Bailey Cavalieri LLC, Columbus, Ohio, Attorneys
    for Defendant Univar, Inc.
    SLIGHTS, Vice Chancellor
    Plaintiff, the State of Delaware, Department of Finance (the “State”), is in the
    midst of a years-long examination of Defendant, Univar, Inc.’s compliance with
    Delaware’s unclaimed property law. In connection with that examination, the State,
    through its agent and chosen auditor, Kelmar Associates LLC (“Kelmar”), directed
    Univar to supply certain documents. When Univar did not respond to that direction
    to the State’s satisfaction, the State issued an administrative subpoena to Univar
    under a new provision of the statutory scheme governing unclaimed property in
    Delaware (the “Escheat Law”). The State now seeks a court order enforcing its
    subpoena.
    Univar maintains that it need not comply with the State’s subpoena on three
    grounds. First, it argues that changes in Delaware’s Escheat Law, as amended in
    2017 (the “New Law”), including the State’s newly authorized subpoena power,
    cannot be applied retroactively to facilitate the State’s examination of Univar since
    that examination was initiated well before the New Law was enacted.1 Second,
    Univar argues the State’s inability to protect the confidentiality of Univar’s
    information by ensuring that the Kelmar auditors assigned to the Delaware
    examination will not share the information with other in-house auditors compels a
    finding that enforcement of the subpoena would be unreasonable. Finally, Univar
    1
    See generally 12 Del. C. §§ 1130–90.
    1
    argues that the four specific categories of documents sought in the subpoena are too
    broad to satisfy the prerequisites for enforcement of an administrative subpoena
    under Delaware law.
    As for Univar’s retroactivity argument, even though its examination of Univar
    began before the New Law was enacted, I am satisfied the State has properly invoked
    its subpoena power under the New Law on a prospective basis. And, while Univar’s
    confidentiality concerns are well-founded, the State has adequately addressed those
    concerns by consenting to certain conditions that will ensure Kelmar, as auditor,
    cannot improperly disseminate Univar’s confidential documents. Finally, I disagree
    with Univar’s characterization of the subpoena as unreasonably broad or
    burdensome under Delaware law. Accordingly, I will enter an order directing
    Univar to comply with the administrative subpoena, subject to strict confidentiality
    protections.
    I. BACKGROUND
    The facts are drawn from the well-pled allegations in the State’s Complaint,
    admissions in Univar’s Answer, documents incorporated in those pleadings by
    reference and judicially noticeable facts.2
    2
    Verified Compl. (“Compl.”) (D.I. 1).
    2
    A. The Parties and Relevant Non-Parties
    Delaware’s Department of Finance is responsible for enforcing Delaware’s
    Escheat Law.3 Brenda Mayrack, as the State Escheator, is designated by statute and
    by the Secretary of Finance as the principal enforcement officer.4
    Defendant, Univar, is a Delaware corporation.5 As a Delaware corporation,
    Univar is subject to examination under the Escheat Law as a potential holder of
    unclaimed property.6
    3
    Compl. ¶ 3; 12 Del. C. § 1102.
    4
    Id. With no support and little fanfare, Univar has argued the State’s Complaint fails
    because “[n]either the Secretary [of Finance] nor its delegate are [named] parties to this
    Action.” Def.’s Answering Br. in Opp’n to J. on the Pleadings (“AB”) (D.I. 78) at 14
    n.44. I disagree. The Complaint’s first line makes clear that the action is brought by “[t]he
    State of Delaware, Department of Finance (the “State”), by and through Brenda R.
    Mayrack, the State Escheator.” See generally Compl. Indeed, the State Escheator
    contemporaneously filed a Verification to the Complaint certifying its
    accuracy. See Verification, Dep’t of Fin. v. Univar, Inc., 2018-0884-JRS (Del. Ch. Dec. 7,
    2018) (D.I. 1). Not only does Univar’s argument ignore the Complaint’s plain language,
    it ignores the purpose of Chancery Rule 17(a). That rule requires that actions be brought
    by the real party in interest to “protect[] against multiple litigation and the risk of double
    liability.” 6A CHARLES A. WRIGHT, ARTHUR R. MILLER & MARY KAY KANE,
    FEDERAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE § 1553 (3d ed. 2004); see also White v.
    Metzer, 
    159 A.2d 788
    , 790 (Del. Super. Ct. 1960) (“This rule was taken verbatim from the
    Federal Rules of Civil Procedure . . . .”). Given the manner in which the Complaint is
    framed, there is no risk that Univar will be subjected to further claims from the Department
    of Finance or State Escheator based on the same claim being adjudicated here.
    5
    Compl. ¶ 1.
    6
    Compl. ¶ 2; 12 Del. C. § 1130(9).
    3
    Nonparty, Kelmar, is a private auditing firm specializing in unclaimed
    property. It acts as an agent of the State to conduct unclaimed property examinations
    of Delaware businesses under the Escheat Law.7
    B. The Escheat Law
    Delaware’s Escheat Law allows the State to acquire title to abandoned or
    unclaimed property after the statutory waiting period has lapsed. 8 The statutory
    waiting period differs depending on the type of property that has or potentially has
    been abandoned.9
    Delaware has had an Escheat Law for years, but the law was revised rather
    substantially in 2017 in response to the United States District Court for the District
    of Delaware’s 2016 decision in Temple-Inland, Inc. v. Cook.10 There, the court
    determined that certain aspects of the pre-2017 Escheat Law (the “Old Law”) were
    unconstitutional as applied.11
    7
    Compl. ¶ 10, Ex. A.
    8
    See 12 Del. C. §§ 1130–90; Dep’t of Fin. v. AT&T Inc., 
    2020 WL 3888310
     (Del. Ch.
    July 10, 2020) (providing a thorough explication of Delaware’s Escheat Law).
    9
    12 Del. C. §§ 1133–34; Def.’s Answer to Pl.’s Verified Compl. ¶ 5 (D.I. 71) (describing
    the purpose and operation of the Escheat Law).
    10
    Temple-Inland, Inc. v. Cook, 
    192 F. Supp. 3d 527
     (D. Del. 2016).
    11
    Id. at 550 (holding that the State’s application of the Old Law violated substantive due
    process because “defendants: (i) waited 22 years to audit plaintiff; (ii) exploited loopholes
    in the statute of limitations; (iii) never properly notified holders regarding the need to
    maintain unclaimed property records longer than is standard; (iv) failed to articulate any
    legitimate state interest in retroactively applying Section 1155 except to raise revenue;
    4
    The New Law, like the Old Law, authorizes the State Escheator to examine
    records and take testimony to determine compliance with the Escheat Law.12 Unlike
    the Old Law, however, the New Law now expressly authorizes the State Escheator
    to “[i]ssue an administrative subpoena to require that the records . . . [or] testimony
    specified . . . be provided.”13 The subpoena may be enforced through “an action in
    the Court of Chancery.”14
    C. Procedural History
    In December of 2015, the State provided notice of its intent to examine
    Univar’s books and records to determine compliance with the Escheat Law.15
    On September 23, 2016, Kelmar sent its initial document request to Univar,
    requesting: (1) certain “Returns,” (2) “Detailed State Apportionment Schedules,”
    (3) a list of “Cash Managers, Shared Services Entities, [and] Common Paymaster
    Entities” and (4) copies of “Prior Audits or [Voluntary Disclosure Agreements].”16
    (v) employed a method of estimation where characteristics that favored liability were
    replicated across the whole, but characteristics that reduced liability were ignored; and
    (viii) subjected plaintiff to multiple liability”).
    12
    12 Del. C. § 1171(1), (2).
    13
    12 Del. C. § 1171(3).
    14
    12 Del. C. § 1171(4).
    15
    Compl. ¶ 9, Ex. A.
    16
    Compl., Ex. B.
    5
    After Univar did not respond to the document request to the State’s satisfaction, the
    State issued the administrative subpoena at issue on October 30, 2018, directing
    Univar to provide the requested documents by December 3, 2018.17 Rather than
    respond to the subpoena, Univar sued the Secretary of Finance, State Escheator and
    assistant director of the Department of Finance on December 3, 2018, in federal
    court.18 The gravamen of that complaint is that the New Law is unconstitutional on
    its face and as applied to Univar.19
    The State filed this action to enforce the subpoena on December 7, 2018.20
    I granted Univar’s motion to stay in favor of the first-filed federal action on April 8,
    2019, after concluding that Univar’s constitutional challenges to the New Law,
    including the State’s subpoena power, should be decided before I addressed the
    State’s enforcement action on the merits.21 The federal court granted in part and
    17
    Compl. ¶ 13, Ex. C.
    18
    Compl. ¶ 14; Def.’s Opening Br. in Supp. of Mot. to Dismiss or Stay (D.I. 7), Ex. A
    (“District Court Compl.”).
    19
    District Court Compl. at 35–37 (seeking in its Prayer for Relief, among other things, a
    declaration that the New Law, on its face and as applied to Univar, violates the Fourth
    Amendment’s search and seizure clause and the Fourteenth Amendment’s due process
    clause).
    20
    (D.I. 1).
    21
    Dep’t of Fin. v. Univar, Inc., C.A. No. 2018-0884-JRS (Del. Ch. April 18, 2019)
    (ORDER) (D.I 32); Dep’t of Fin. v. Univar, Inc., C.A. No. 2018-0884-JRS (Del. Ch.
    Apr. 8, 2019) (TRANSCRIPT) (D.I. 35).
    6
    denied in part the State’s motion to dismiss on September 17, 2019.22 The court then
    stayed the federal action to allow this Court to decide whether the subpoena is
    enforceable as a matter of Delaware law.23 After I lifted the stay of this action,
    Univar moved to dismiss again, this time on ripeness grounds.24 In a Letter Opinion
    dated May 21, 2020, I determined that the State had well pled a justiciable claim for
    enforcement of the subpoena and denied the motion to dismiss.25
    The State moved for judgment on the pleadings on July 10, 2020. That motion
    has been argued and submitted for decision.26
    22
    Univar, Inc. v. Geisenberger, 
    409 F. Supp. 3d, 273
    , 273 (D. Del. 2019).
    23
    
    Id.
     at 284–85.
    24
    Def.’s Opening Br. in Supp. of Mot. to Dismiss Pl.’s Verified Compl. (D.I. 51) at 2.
    25
    Dep’t of Fin. v. Univar, Inc., 
    2020 WL 2569703
    , at *5 (Del. Ch. May 21, 2020)
    (“Univar MTD”).
    26
    Dep’t of Fin. v. Univar, Inc., C.A. No. 2018-0884-JRS (Del. Ch. Aug. 10, 2020)
    (TRANSCRIPT) (D.I. 86.) (“JOP Tr.”).
    7
    II. ANALYSIS
    The State’s motion invokes Court of Chancery Rule 12(c).27 Judgment on the
    Pleadings is appropriate “where there are no material issues of fact and the movant
    is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”28 “On a Rule 12(c) motion, the Court
    may consider documents integral to the pleadings, including documents
    incorporated by reference and exhibits attached to the pleadings, and facts subject to
    judicial notice.”29 Here, even though the Complaint is light on facts, as explained
    below, the State’s request for relief is not fact intensive, and the few facts that are
    relevant to the determination of whether to enforce this subpoena are not subject to
    “reasonabl[e] question[].”30
    As noted, Univar has argued the State improperly seeks to enforce the New
    Law retroactively and cannot, in any event, ensure that the documents it obtains will
    27
    Because the State has not promulgated rules or regulations regarding the procedure to be
    followed in subpoena enforcement actions under 12 Del. C. § 1171(4), I previously
    determined that the Court of Chancery rules will apply to all aspects of these proceedings.
    Dep’t of Fin. v. Univar, Inc., C.A. No. 2018-0884-JRS, at 22 (Del. Ch. June 23, 2020)
    (TRANSCRIPT) (D.I. 75.); see also State ex rel Koster v. Charter Commc'ns, Inc., 
    461 S.W.3d 851
    , 853 (Mo. Ct. App. 2015) (ordering trial court to enter judgment on the
    pleadings enforcing administrative subpoena issued by the state Attorney General);
    Houston Indus. v. Kaufman, 
    1996 WL 580418
    , at *1–2, 4–5 (S.D. Tex. Mar. 7, 1996)
    (granting judgment on the pleadings to enforce a DOJ administrative subpoena).
    28
    Airborne Health, Inc. v. Squid Soap, LP, 
    984 A.2d 126
    , 136 (Del. Ch. 2009).
    29
    Jiménez v. Palacios, 
    2019 WL 3526479
    , at *8 (Del. Ch. Aug. 2, 2019).
    30
    D.R.E. 201(b) (codifying Delaware’s judicial notice doctrine).
    8
    be properly protected from dissemination. I address these threshold issues first
    before turning to the enforceability of the subpoena under Delaware law.31
    A. The State is Not Retroactively Applying the New Law
    Univar argues the State has no authority to issue the subpoena because
    Section 1171(3), which authorizes the subpoena, was not in effect when the State’s
    examination began.32 The State acknowledges the New Law was enacted after it
    commenced its examination of Univar, but notes that its subpoena was issued well
    after the New Law went into effect.
    At Sections 1172(b) and 1172(c), the New Law makes clear that the
    procedures outlined in the statute are available for examinations authorized prior to
    31
    The State argues that Univar has waived its England reservation as relates to its federal
    constitutional claims by asserting those claims (or defenses) here. England v. Louisiana
    State Board of Medical Examiners, 
    375 U.S. 411
     (1964); Pl.’s Opening Br. in Supp. of
    J. on the Pleadings (“OB”) (D.I. 74) at 43. The so-called England doctrine, in simplified
    terms, allows a party who brings state claims in state court to reserve its related federal
    claims (including constitutional claims) for adjudication in federal court without waiving
    those claims. 
    Id. at 422
    . I previously held in this case, and reiterate here, that the State’s
    waiver and abstention arguments, principally based on federal law, are best left for the
    federal court to decide. Univar MTD, 
    2020 WL 2569703
    , at *5 (“[T]hat decision is
    properly left to the District Court.”). Not surprisingly, “the State has pointed to no authority
    where a Delaware state court took it upon itself to decide whether a party had preserved
    constitutional arguments for presentation in a federal court.” 
    Id.
     Moreover, I disagree that
    Univar has presented constitutional claims or defenses here, and, as will be evident, my
    decision is based entirely on Delaware law.
    32
    12 Del. C. § 1171(3).
    9
    July 22, 2015, and February 2, 2017, respectively.33 These provisions reveal that the
    General Assembly intended that the State could issue subpoenas in aid of
    examinations that predated enactment of the New Law. Moreover, a statute may not
    be applied retroactively only to the extent it “change[s] the legal consequence of acts
    completed before it[s] effective date.”34 It is indisputable that the State had the
    power to issue administrative subpoenas before the New Law went into effect, albeit
    under a differently worded, and perhaps less precise, statute.35 Thus, there is no
    retroactivity problem here.36
    33
    12 Del. C. § 1172(b) (“for any examination authorized by the State Escheator on or
    before July 22, 2015 . . .”); § 1172(c) (“For any examination authorized by the State
    Escheator before February 2, 2017 . . .”); see also 12 Del. Admin. C. § 104-2.3
    (“The effective date of these Regulations shall be the date they are adopted, and the
    standards contained therein shall apply to all examinations commenced after that date.
    To the extent practical, the Regulations shall apply to any ongoing examinations that
    commenced prior to the effective date of these Regulations. . . .”) (emphasis added).
    34
    Miller v. Florida, 
    482 U.S. 423
    , 430 (1987).
    35
    See 12 Del. C. § 1155 (2015) (“The State Escheator may at reasonable times and upon
    reasonable notice examine the records of any person or business association or organization
    to determine whether the person has complied with any provision of this chapter and may
    by summons require the attendance of any person having knowledge in the premises, and
    may take testimony and require proof material for the investigation, with the power to
    administer oaths to such person or persons . . . .”).
    36
    Univar cites In re McGowen in support of its argument that “a subpoena based on
    statutory authority that was not in force when the investigation commenced could never be
    sufficiently grounded in statutory authority as required by law.” AB at 16–17 (citing In re
    McGowen, 
    303 A.2d 645
    , 647 (Del. 1973)). McGowen does not say that. Rather, the court
    determined an administrative subpoena issued by the Attorney General was unenforceable
    because it was technically defective (it was returnable to a police officer not the Attorney
    10
    B. The State Meets the New Law’s Confidentiality Requirements
    From the outset of this litigation, Univar has maintained that the State, and
    more particularly its hired auditor, Kelmar, will not keep its sensitive business
    information confidential should the Court order Univar to comply with the subpoena.
    According to Univar, because Kelmar represents other states in their unclaimed
    property examinations of Univar, the Kelmar auditors assigned to the Delaware
    examination will likely share the information they obtain through the Delaware
    subpoena with auditors examining Univar on behalf of other states.37 This, in turn,
    may result in the dissemination of Univar’s sensitive information since many states
    lack the privacy protections that are featured in Delaware’s New Law.38 According
    to Univar, under these circumstances, the State cannot demonstrate that it will
    comply with the confidentiality requirements set forth in Sections 1174 and 1189 of
    the New Law and, thus, cannot meet the statutory prerequisites for enforcement of
    the subpoena.39
    General) and because it was not issued to further an Attorney General’s or grand jury
    investigation. 
    Id.
     The court said nothing of retroactivity.
    37
    AB at 26 (“Kelmar’s receipt of confidential information in the Examination is
    synonymous with and identical to that information [being] provided to all of the
    [seventeen] states that Kelmar represents . . . .”).
    38
    AB at 27.
    39
    AB at 21–28; 12 Del. C. § 1174(1) (emphasizing that records obtained in an unclaimed
    property examination are “subject to the confidentiality and security provisions of § 1189
    of this title”); 12 Del. C. § 1174(2) (providing that records obtained in a Delaware
    11
    Univar’s concerns are well-founded.40 Kelmar represents various states in
    unclaimed property examinations throughout the country and there is no evidence in
    the record regarding how Kelmar staffs its audits or whether Kelmar allows auditors
    conducting an examination in one state to work on an examination of the same
    subject entity in another state. Nor is there any indication that the other states that
    might examine Univar, through Kelmar, impose the same statutory privacy
    protections that are in place in Delaware under the New Law. Notwithstanding these
    legitimate concerns, I am satisfied this Court possesses the authority to require that
    Univar provide the requested material to the State subject to a confidentiality order
    that requires the State Escheator and her designated auditor to follow Delaware
    confidentiality laws.41
    examination may be shared with examiners in another state only if such examiners are
    required to maintain records confidential to the same extent required by § 1189); 12 Del. C.
    § 1189 (imposing detailed requirements upon the State Escheator to maintain the
    confidentiality of documents obtained in examinations).
    40
    AB at 24 (“(1) Kelmar is conducting an audit of Univar on behalf of seventeen states,
    including Delaware; (2) Kelmar is acting as agent for all seventeen states simultaneously;
    (3) Kelmar will conduct the Examination using the same audit team; (4) the same audit
    team from Kelmar will receive confidential information on behalf of all seventeen states;
    and (5) the same audit team from Kelmar will review and analyze the confidential
    information it is provided on behalf of seventeen states.”); id. (“Kelmar cannot ‘unsee’
    confidential information obtained from the Examination.”).
    41
    Univar MTD, 
    2020 WL 2569703
    , at *4 (“This Court has the authority, backed by its
    inherent contempt powers, to order that any books and records Univar produces in response
    to the subpoena be subject to a confidentiality order that complies with (and imposes)
    Delaware law.”).
    12
    Apparently recognizing the Court was inclined to impose confidentiality
    conditions whether the State agreed or not, in submissions to the Court in support of
    this motion and again at the hearing on the motion, the State represented that
    “the Kelmar people now who are working on the Delaware-only audit, will not be
    working on the audit for any other state, and will, in fact, wall themselves—an
    ethical walling off of what they are doing for Delaware from anybody else.”42 This
    arrangement, coupled with a court order that will require everyone involved in the
    Delaware examination of Univar to comply with Delaware’s confidentiality laws,
    answer the concerns Univar has raised about confidentiality.43
    C. The Subpoena is Enforceable Under Powell
    As a general matter, Delaware courts look to the factors laid out by the United
    State Supreme Court in United States v. Powell when deciding whether to enforce
    42
    JOP Tr. at 30–31 (“I’m going to say this is a representation that the State is making in
    this case, that this is what they and Kelmar will do in this case.”); Letter from Martin
    Lessner to Vice Chancellor Slights 4 (Aug. 7, 2020) (D.I. 83) (“Kelmar will maintain
    ethical walls to insulate its personnel working on the Delaware-only Univar examination
    from working on a Univar examination for another state.”). I note that the State has
    maintained throughout these proceedings that there is no ongoing multi-state examination
    of Univar. See OB at 38; Pl.’s Reply Br. in Supp. of J. on the Pleadings (“RB”) (D.I. 80)
    at 23; Univar MTD, 
    2020 WL 2569703
    , at *3. Given the protections that will be imposed
    by my implementing order, I need not inquire whether the State has accurately portrayed
    the existence or extent of other states’ examinations of Univar’s compliance with their
    respective unclaimed property regimes.
    43
    See 12 Del. C. § 1189(d) (“Any violation of this section shall be a misdemeanor,
    punishable upon conviction by a fine not to exceed $1,000, or imprisonment not to exceed
    6 months, or both.”).
    13
    an administrative subpoena.44 In Powell, the Court addressed the enforceability of
    an administrative subpoena issued by the Internal Revenue Service and held that an
    agency’s subpoena will be enforced when it demonstrates: (1) “the investigation will
    be conducted pursuant to a legitimate purpose,” (2) “the inquiry may be relevant to
    the purpose,” (3) “the information sought is not already within the [agency’s]
    possession” and (4) “the administrative steps required . . . have been followed.”45
    If the agency issuing the subpoena meets these elements, then the burden
    shifts to the objecting party to show that enforcement of the subpoena would be an
    abuse of the Court’s process.46 “Such an abuse would take place if the summons
    had been issued for an improper purpose, such as to harass . . . or for any other
    purpose reflecting on the good faith of the particular investigation.”47         This
    necessarily involves a consideration of reasonableness, such as whether the requests
    are specified with “reasonable particularity,” “are relevant to the investigation” and
    do not “cover an unreasonable amount of time.”48
    44
    United States v. Powell, 
    379 U.S. 48
    , 57–58 (1964); Univar MTD, 
    2020 WL 2569703
    ,
    at *4 (applying Powell); AT&T, 
    2020 WL 3888310
    , at *14 (same); Bob’s Discount Adult
    Books, Inc. v. Att’y Gen., 
    1983 WL 471443
    , at *2–3 (Del. Super. Mar. 24, 1983) (same).
    45
    Powell, 
    379 U.S. at
    57–58.
    46
    
    Id. at 58
    .
    47
    
    Id.
    48
    In re Blue Hen Country Network, 
    314 A.2d 197
    , 201 (1973); see also AT&T, 
    2020 WL 3888310
    , at *16 (“This decision therefore concludes that Delaware law contemplates
    14
    The subpoena at issue here seeks four categories of documents. I take up each
    category in turn to assess whether the State has demonstrated its entitlement to the
    documents under Powell.
    1. Category 1: “Returns”
    The State has directed Univar to “[p]rovide the following sections of the 2014
    filed Federal Form 1120 for Univar, Inc. If Univar files multiple Federal Form 1120s
    or separate partnership returns, provide the requested corresponding information for
    each 2014 filing.”49 The request then narrows the documents within this category to
    six specific forms or financial records: (a) “Form 1120, pp. 1 to 5.”; (b) “Form 1125-
    A Cost of Goods Sold.”; (c) “Form 851 Affiliations Schedule.”; (d) “Consolidating
    Income Statement . . . .”; (e) “Consolidating Balance Sheet . . . .”; and
    (f) “Consolidating Cost of Goods Sold schedule . . . .”50
    an inquiry into the reasonableness of an administrative subpoena under the Escheat Law,
    albeit one that is deferential to the State Escheator.”); Okla. Press Pub. Co. v. Walling, 
    327 U.S. 186
    , 209 (1946) (explaining that the consideration of reasonableness “cannot be
    reduced to formula”). The New Law embraces this reasonableness inquiry in other
    contexts by providing that a subpoena may be issued “at reasonable times and on
    reasonable notice.” 12 Del. C. § 1171.
    49
    Compl., Ex. C.
    50
    Id.
    15
    Univar has not directly addressed Category 1 in its brief, and for good
    reason.51 The request for basic financial information in this category easily satisfies
    the Powell elements. An examination of compliance with the Escheat Law is a
    legitimate purpose, as evidenced by the fact that it is expressly authorized by statute.
    And, as explained by the State, the documents within this category will allow the
    State Escheator “to identify legal entities that are likely to have unclaimed property
    reportable to Delaware.”52 The State does not appear to have any of these documents
    in its possession, the request targets a single year (2014) and the State has followed
    proper steps to secure the information.53
    2. Category 2: “Detailed State Apportionment Schedules”
    In the second request, the State directs that Univar:
    Provide the consolidated sales, property, and payroll state tax
    apportionment detail for all states for Univar, Inc. and affiliates for tax
    year 2014 (used in preparation of the corporate state income tax
    returns). Provide the applicable apportionment factor amounts by legal
    entity, by state, in electronic format. This information should segregate
    and identify all corporate entities as well as those disregarded for
    federal/state tax purposes.54
    51
    AB at 29.
    52
    OB at 27.
    53
    Id. at 31.
    54
    Compl., Ex. C.
    16
    Here again, there is no suggestion the State already possesses the requested
    information.       Thus, the question of enforceability turns on relevancy and
    reasonableness. According to the State, this request will “allow [it] to identify legal
    entities that are likely to have unclaimed property reportable to Delaware” and
    “allow Delaware to narrow the scope of the examination in order to eliminate any
    entities unlikely to have reportable property.”55 Univar counters that because the
    request applies to “apportionment detail[s] for all states,” it is overly broad and
    irrelevant.56 I disagree. First, it is important for the State Escheator to understand
    whether the address of a property owner is known by Univar in order to assess
    Delaware’s position of priority with respect to the property.57 Second, contrary to
    Univar’s suggestion, both federal and Delaware cases establish that there is no
    requirement that the issuing agency demonstrate probable cause, or some similar
    standard of proof, to justify the request for documents. The agency need only
    demonstrate that the documents “may be relevant to the purpose of the inquiry.”58
    55
    OB at 27.
    56
    AB at 29–30 (emphasis in original).
    57
    Texas v. New Jersey, 
    379 U.S. 674
    , 682 (1965).
    58
    See Powell, 
    379 U.S. at 57
     (“Reading the statutes as we do, the Commissioner need not
    meet any standard of probable cause to obtain enforcement of his summons, either before
    or after the three-year statute of limitations on ordinary tax liabilities has expired.”);
    Blue Hen, 
    314 A.2d at 201
     (“Blue Hen fails to point to any case that would support its
    position that subpoenas duces tecum must be supported with probable cause.”); AT&T,
    
    2020 WL 3888310
    , at *18 (“A statute certainly could require an agency to provide some
    17
    Finally, the Court’s order will ensure that Kelmar will preserve the Delaware
    examination’s confidentiality even as the State seeks information that may be of
    relevance to examinations conducted by other states. Because this request seeks
    relevant information, the second Powell factor is satisfied.
    Enforcing this request is also reasonable. Like the first request, this second
    request is stated with particularity. Substantively, it is clear what is being requested,
    and temporally, the request seeks documents limited to a single tax year. There is
    no indication of bad faith or an improper purpose. The simple fact that this request
    seeks information “for all states” does not make it unreasonable—meaning there
    would be no abuse of the Court’s process if the subpoena seeking this information
    were enforced.59
    3. Category 3: “Cash Managers, Shared Services Entities, Common
    Paymaster Entities”
    The State’s third request directs that Univar:
    Provide a list of all legal entities from the corporate organizational chart
    which pay liabilities (e.g., A/P, payroll, rebates, or refunds) on behalf
    of other legal entities. For each entity identified, provide a list of all
    entities involved in the arrangement, and the date that each entity began
    participating in the arrangement.60
    reason or make some showing before conducting an investigation or obtaining an order
    enforcing a subpoena. The Escheat Law does not contain any such requirement.”).
    59
    Compl., Ex. C; see Blue Hen, 
    314 A.2d at 201
    .
    60
    Compl., Ex. C.
    18
    Similar to the second category of documents, this third request also turns on
    relevancy and whether enforcement would be an abuse of this Court’s process. As to
    relevancy, the State explains that “sophisticated entities frequently consolidate
    payroll, accounts payable and receivables in a single shared service entity.”61
    “If Univar has a shared service entity, the State may be able to narrow any
    subsequent requests for information to that shared service entity.”62 This clearly is
    connected to the State’s chief goal of determining Univar’s compliance with the
    Escheat Law.
    Given the request’s limited scope, it would likewise not abuse this Court’s
    process to require Univar to provide responsive documents. While Univar argues
    this request is “not sufficiently limited in time,” I disagree.63 The plain language of
    the request makes clear that Univar need not produce documents about legal entities
    that no longer exists. The State expects “only [] information about cash management
    and shared services as it exists now.”64 Because this request is temporally and
    substantively specific, relevant and not a product of bad faith, it is reasonable.
    61
    OB at 27–28.
    62
    Id. at 28.
    63
    AB at 31.
    64
    OB at 29.
    19
    4. Category 4: “Prior Audits or [Voluntary Disclosure Agreements]”
    Request four directs Univar to “[p]rovide copies of reports and work papers,
    including demands for payment and release agreements, from any prior unclaimed
    property audits or Voluntary Disclosure Agreements with the state of Delaware.”65
    While the request implies an indefinite time period, as explained below, it is cabined
    by the Escheat Law.
    The State maintains that information related to prior audits and voluntary
    disclosure agreements (“VDAs”) is relevant because it “will assist the State
    (and Univar) by eliminating periods of time for which liability has already been
    determined and assessed.”66 “It may also eliminate certain Univar entities from
    review, particularly if the corporate structure has changed over time through
    acquisitions or spinoffs.”67 Particularly at this early stage, that type of information
    is sufficiently tied to the purpose of determining compliance to meet the relevancy
    requirement.
    Univar asserts the request is irrelevant to the extent the statute of limitations
    in the Old Law time-bars the underlying claims. While the State assumes the New
    Law’s 10-year statute of limitations period applies, that may well not be correct.
    65
    Compl., Ex. C.
    66
    OB at 28.
    67
    Id.
    20
    The “current examination” start date governs the statutory period since
    “the commencement of the investigation would toll the statute of limitations.”68
    Here, the State’s examination of Univar began in 2015, well before the General
    Assembly enacted the New Law.69
    Beyond pegging the statute of limitations analysis to the Old Law, however,
    it is difficult at this stage to proceed further in that analysis without more
    information. The Old Law tied the imposition of the statute of limitations to the
    filing of annual reports, only permitting the State to recover unreported unclaimed
    property if the State Escheator issued a notice of deficiency for an annual report.70
    A three-year statutory period applied for the State to issue a notice of deficiency,
    extended to six-years if “an omission of abandoned or unclaimed property from a
    report ha[d] a value in excess of 25% of the amount of abandoned or unclaimed
    68
    AT&T, 
    2020 WL 3888310
    , at *20.
    69
    Compl. ¶ 9. At first glance, there might appear to be inconsistency in my determination
    that the State may rely upon the New Law’s subpoena authority but may not rely upon the
    New Law’s statute of limitations. On closer inspection, however, there is no inconsistency.
    The New Law clarified but did not alter a right belonging to the State Escheator that already
    existed. The New Law’s statute of limitations is just that—new. The State’s authority to
    examine a subject for compliance with the Escheat Law must be governed by the statute of
    limitations in effect at the time the examination was commenced. See AT&T, 
    2020 WL 3888310
    , at *20–21. Here, given that the Old Law was in effect when the State began its
    investigation of Univar in 2015, that law’s statute of limitations controls.
    70
    12 Del. C. § 1142 (2015); 73 Del. Laws ch. 417, § 1 (2002); AT&T, 
    2020 WL 3888310
    ,
    at *19.
    21
    property disclosed in [the] report.”71 Given the early stage of the examination here,
    no information has been provided as relates to the filing of annual reports or their
    alleged deficiencies.72
    The abandonment period, or period of dormancy, is likewise unclear. The
    period of dormancy dictates at what point the property becomes escheatable; only
    when the property is deemed abandoned does the statutory period begin to run.73
    In AT&T, Vice Chancellor Laster noted that, as relevant to the stage of that
    examination, the checks and rebates the State sought to claim had a five-year
    statutory period.74 Here, it is uncertain at this stage of the examination precisely
    which types of unclaimed property the State might identify.
    More to the point, even if the statutory limitations period was clear, there is
    no “bright-line limitation on an agency’s authority to conduct an investigation based
    71
    73 Del. Laws ch. 417, § 1 (2002); AT&T, 
    2020 WL 3888310
    , at *19.
    72
    In AT&T, decided at a more advanced stage of the examination, Vice Chancellor Laster
    was able to observe that it “appears correct there are reports covering years for which the
    Old Statute of Limitations would bar the State Escheator from seeking to recover
    escheatable property.” AT&T, 
    2020 WL 3888310
    , at *21. Given that this examination,
    while years old, is still in its nascent stages, I cannot make that observation here.
    73
    12 Del. C. § 1198(9) (2016) (“‘Period of dormancy’ means the full and continuous
    period . . . during which an owner has ceased, failed or neglected to exercise dominion or
    control over property . . . .”).
    74
    AT&T, 
    2020 WL 3888310
    , at *20 n.6. Importantly, the period of dormancy is different
    depending on the unclaimed property at issue. For example, a traveler’s check is not
    presumed abandoned until 15 years after it was issued, but a money order is presumed
    abandoned after 5 years. 12 Del. C. §§ 1133.
    22
    on the running of the statute of limitations that would apply if the agency sought a
    remedy.”75 While the statute of limitations issue can certainly prove relevant in
    assessing whether the State abused the court’s process, it is not determinative as to
    the relevancy of the State’s request.76 In contrast to the court’s thorough analysis in
    AT&T, I am unable to discern at this stage of the State’s examination whether
    “the State Escheator could reach property from a given year.”77 Before such a
    determination could be made, the State Escheator (and the Court) would require the
    information the State seeks here.78
    Finally, Univar argues that prior audit and VDA information must already be
    in the State’s possession since it would have been supplied in connection with past
    examinations.79 The State counters that it still needs this information to help Univar
    by “confirm[ing] whether and to what extent the holder has resolved historical
    liability in a prior exam or VDA and [] verify[ing] that the State has complete
    75
    Id. at *21; see also EEOC v. Del. State Police, 
    618 F. Supp. 451
     (D. Del. 1985) (“It would
    be an inappropriate exercise of judicial power in an administrative subpoena enforcement
    proceeding to determine the merits of a statute of limitations defense that might be raised
    to a hypothetical future complaint.”).
    76
    AT&T, 
    2020 WL 3888310
    , at *22.
    77
    Id.; see also id. at *27 (“The Department seems to be pursuing information about
    property that it knows it cannot recover . . . .”).
    78
    Univar does not dispute that the documents requested here had already been produced
    in AT&T. JOP Tr. at 54 (“There was never a dispute about it.”).
    79
    AB at 31 n.108.
    23
    records, should remediation become necessary.”80 It further notes that the Secretary
    of State has administered a VDA program since 2013, separate and apart from the
    Department of Finance, and therefore there may be VDA records outside of the State
    Escheator’s reach.81 Finally, the State asserts that in its transition from paper to
    digital information in 2015, it is possible that certain records regarding past
    examinations were not retained. Since the point of this request is to ensure that the
    State Escheator acts with knowledge of past examinations when conducting this
    examination, the production of these records inures to Univar’s benefit.82
    While it is true that Powell requires the Court to consider the extent to which
    information sought in a subpoena may be available to the state agency from other
    sources, in this instance, I am satisfied this factor should not be dispositive. The
    State has demonstrated the information it seeks in this fourth category will assist the
    State Escheator in ensuring that the State acts consistently with past examinations of
    Univar and that it does not unnecessarily expand the scope of this examination. The
    request is not overly burdensome and I see no reason to conclude it is the product of
    bad faith.
    80
    RB at 15 n.2.
    81
    Id. According to the State, access to information possessed by other state agencies would
    be shielded from the State Escheator by “ethical walls.” RB at 14.
    82
    RB at 15 (“[I]t is only to Univar’s benefit to provide any information about other audits
    or VDAs.”).
    24
    *****
    The four requests, when considered together, are enforceable and lack any
    semblance of abusing this court’s process. Only the second category’s request for
    information from all states and the fourth category’s lack of time boundaries could
    even conceivably create an aura of unreasonableness. Whether considered together
    or individually, neither triggers the concerns that animated the Court’s concerns in
    Powell.
    D. Univar’s Concerns Regarding Future Abuses Do Not Justify Denying
    Enforcement of this Subpoena
    As noted, the examination at issue in AT&T had progressed significantly
    further than the State’s examination of Univar at issue here. Indeed, AT&T had
    already produced most, if not all, of the information the State seeks from Univar by
    the time the State sought to enforce its subpoena against AT&T. 83             In a
    demonstration of perhaps understandable pessimism, Univar argues that it “will be
    subjected in the near future to the overly broad and irrelevant Kelmar-inspired
    83
    AT&T, 
    2020 WL 3888310
    , at *2; JOP Tr. at 54 (“In AT&T, the documents that Univar’s
    complaining that they’re not going to produce, [the same documents] were already
    produced much earlier in the [AT&T] examination.”).
    25
    requests that were imposed on AT&T.”84 That may or may not prove true.85 In this
    case, I must set my focus on the subpoena the State seeks to enforce now.
    For reasons stated here, that subpoena complies with our law and is enforceable.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the State’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings
    is GRANTED, with the understanding that the implementing order will include the
    strict confidentiality protections outlined above. The parties shall confer and submit
    a proposed implementing order, or competing proposed orders, within ten (10) days.
    Once entered, the effect of that Order will be stayed pending the resolution of
    Univar’s claims in federal court.
    84
    AB at 33.
    85
    For what it is worth, should the State issue to Univar the kind of subpoena it directed to
    AT&T, and then seek to enforce that subpoena in the same posture it presented the AT&T
    subpoena to Vice Chancellor Laster, it will likely meet the same result.
    26