DocketNumber: Nos. CV00-0093035-S; CV00-0093202-S; CV00-0092528; CV00-0092936-S; CV00-0093248-S; CV00-0093389-S; CV00-0092504-S; CV00-0092577-S; CV00-0093517-S; CV00-0093552-S
Judges: MIANO, JUDGE.
Filed Date: 7/31/2001
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
The cases come before this count in Complaints to Quash Subpoenas filed by the various named plaintiffs against the Attorney General as defendant. CT Page 10443-a
The Attorney General is engaged in an ongoing investigation and claims authority for the issuance of the subpoena pursuant to the investigatory powers provided in Conn. General Statutes §
The plaintiffs filed suit in the Superior Courts throughout the state seeking an order quashing the subpoenas. The Honorable Judge Robert C. Leuba, then Chief Court Administrator, ordered the cases consolidated, and said cases were assigned to this court. During the pendency of these actions a constitutional amendment was passed which abolished the office of High Sheriff. Conn. Const., amend. art. XXX., Sec. 1. On December 1, 2000 the county sheriff's functions were transferred to the Judicial Branch. General Statutes §§
The plaintiffs have raised various claims as to why the subpoenas should be quashed. Based on the arguments of the parties, and a review of the relevant cases, this court determines that the complaints to quash the subpoenas are DENIED. The plaintiffs are ordered to comply with the outstanding subpoenas within twenty (20) days of the filing of this Memorandum of Decision.
This court does not intend to present an exhaustive history of the administrative power of investigation. For such an overview, the court will direct the interested party to the Administrative Law Treatise, Third Edition, Davis and Pierce, Vol. I, § 4.1. (David and Pierce). A modest review of federal case law in this area would be helpful to our task. We must be mindful that the study of administrative law is a relatively new filed in our jurisprudence and brings with its study a different perspective as to the scope of judicial review. According to Davis and Pierce in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the Justices (of the U.S. Supreme Court) perceived governmental intervention as an evil to be tolerated only in unusual circumstances. They also acknowledged only a limited role for the national government. By 1940, the Court had internalized the prevailing political views of the electorate, as those views were revealed by Congress and the president. The Court accepted the concept of positive government and the potential for governmental intervention to produce desired results. It also CT Page 10443-b acquiesced in a much broader role for the national government. Once the Court accepted the possibility of beneficial positive government at the national level, it had no choice but to acquiesce in the exercise of broad investigatory powers by federal agencies.
The authors go on to state that the action taken in Fleming v.Montgomery Ward Co.,
In 1943 the Secretary of Labor issued a subpoena for records relating to payrolls in certain plants of a company, under the Walsh-Healey Act, which provided that government contracts shall not be awarded to those who violate minimum-wage requirements. The company refused compliance with the subpoena and sought to have the district court determine, in the first instance, whether the Act and the contracts covered the employees and plants in question. Id., 139. The U.S. Supreme Court in EndicottJohnson Corp. v. Perkins,
In 1946 the U.S. Supreme Court in Oklahoma Press Publishing Co. v.Walling,
"The very purpose of the subpoena . . . is to discover and procure evidence, not to prove a pending charge or complaint, but upon which to make one if, in the Administrator's judgment, the facts thus discovered should justify doing so," Id., at 201.
In the words of Davis and Pierce, "the capstone of the revolutionary developments of the 1940's" came in United States v. Morton Salt Co.,
"We must not disguise the fact that sometimes, especially early in the history of the federal administrative tribunal, the courts were persuaded to engraft judicial limitations upon the administrative process. The courts could not go fishing, and so it followed neither could anyone else. Administrative investigations fell before the colorful and nostalgic slogan "no fishing expeditions". It must not be forgotten that the administrative process and its agencies are relative new comers in the field of law and that it has taken and will continue to take experience and trial and error to fit this process into our system of judicature . . ." Id., 642.
"The only power that is involved here is the power to get information from those who best can give it and who are most interested in not doing so. Because judicial power is reluctant if not unable to summon evidence until it is shown to be relevant to issues in litigation, it does not follow that an administrative agency charged with seeing that the laws are enforced may not have any exercise powers of original inquiry. It has a power of inquisition, if one chooses to call it that, which is not derived from the judicial function. It is more analogous to the Grand Jury, which does not depend on a case or controversy for power to get evidence but can investigate merely on suspicion that the law is being violated, or even just because it wants assurances that it is not. When investigative and accusatory duties are delegated by statute to an administrative body, it, too, may take steps to inform itself as to whether there is probable violation of the law." Id. 642-643.
"Even if one were to regard the request for information in this case as caused by nothing more than official curiosity, nevertheless law enforcing agencies have a legitimate right to satisfy themselves that corporate behavior is consistent with the law and the public interest." Id. 653.
On the state level, the Connecticut Supreme Court clearly recognized CT Page 10443-d the necessity of the legislature having delegated certain powers to administrative agencies.
In Gentile v. Altermatt,
"Individual rights and remedies must at times and of necessity give way to the interests and needs of society. If the law is to continue on the path of homogeneity to be the means of order in the complex social scheme of our growing populace, the legislature must be allowed to create alternate remedies for ills where the machinery of justice is so burdened that justice is, in fact, denied to many. We are in an age of the nascence of a new form of government. which might best be labeled an "administocracy" — rule by administrative agencies. Even the legislature branch of government, both state and federal, must so delegate many of its tasks or fail to provide the people all that their government should. Id., 308. Emphasis added.
Although the majority of the precedents with respect to administrative investigatory powers arise under federal law, a number of decisions in the Connecticut courts have adopted the federal rules as our own. SeeShulansky v. Rodriguez,
This brings us to the modern day in Connecticut where our Connecticut Supreme Court has reaffirmed the proposition that "applicable precedents vest substantial discretion in the administrative agency to engage in pretrial discovery to gather evidence in advance of the filing of specific charges. Unless the administrative inquiry is plainly irrelevant, a party resisting compliance with an investigatory subpoena may not challenge the applicability of the regulatory statute to the conduct under investigation." Shulansky v. Rodriguez,
Both state and federal courts reviewing investigatory subpoenas in the context of enforcement proceedings have traditionally refused to adjudicate questions of coverage; that is, whether activities under investigation are subject to regulation by the administrative body conducting the investigation. Heslin v. Connecticut Law Clinic ofTrantolo Trantolo,
In the case of In re Application of Ajello v. Moffie, supra, 326, which involved a proceeding initiated by the Attorney General to enforce an investigative subpoena based on suspected violations of the Connecticut Anti-Trust Act, the Supreme Court held: "While courts which enforce such subpoenas may inquire into most questions of legality, they may not inquire into questions concerning the coverage or even the probable coverage of the statute under which the Attorney General is acting." InHeslin v. Connecticut Law Clinic of Trantolo Trantolo, supra, 514, the Supreme Court explained that the aforementioned holding in Moffie was based on the court's recognition that the legislature, when it endows an administrative body with responsibility for a statute's enforcement, may authorize that body, rather than the trial court, to determine the question of coverage in the preliminary investigation of possible violations. The Supreme Court further stated where an administrative body has been authorized by the legislature to enforce a statute the body may "develop, without interference or delay, a factual basis for the determination of whether particular activities come within its regulatory authority. Securities Exchange, Commission v. Brigadoon ScotchDistributing Co.,
In Securities Exchange Commission v. Wall Street TranscriptCorporation,
It is clear from the aforementioned authorities that in cases to enforce investigative subpoenas, the initial determination of whether a particular person or entity comes within the coverage of a regulatory statute is made by the agency, not by the court. Id. The Attorney General's determination that the sheriffs are subject to the investigatory flashlight which §
Notwithstanding the due deference referred to, this court finds that §
It is also important to note at the outset that the records sought by the Attorney General relate to the conduct of "public officials" as that term is defined in General Statute §
It would be a anachronism for a statute whose purpose is to root out waste and corruption in government to not reach the various constitutional officers of the state as the plaintiffs have proposed in argument. The office of the sheriff was created by our Connecticut Constitution. Conn. Const. art.
Additional support for the proposition that "state department or agency" includes the sheriff and their deputies can be found by looking at other statutes which in fact define those terms.
For example, in CGS §
The plaintiffs have raised three claims in their attack on the constitutionality of the statute:
First, that the plaintiff's rights to due process are violated when a statute with criminal implications does not provide the person charged with proper constitutional safeguards.
Second, that the probable cause requirement of the
fourth amendment to the U.S. Constitution is circumscribed by §4-61dd .Finally, the subpoenas under the statute require the plaintiffs to produce documents, the production of which may have some self incrimination effect, in violation of the
fifth amendment to the U.S. Constitution, yet the statute fails to establish a mechanism for immunity from prosecution upon production.
The requirement that the Attorney General forward information to the Chief State's Attorney if warranted does not make §
The first class of plaintiffs whose claims must fail would be the sheriffs, with respect to the papers of the offices of the sheriff's. Production of papers of an entity are not protected from production by the
A number of the plaintiffs are organizations. The
A number of the plaintiffs are organizations. The
The plaintiffs have also claimed
The only parties for whom there may be a possible
The plaintiff's final argument directed at the constitutionality of §
Therefore the facial attacks on the constitutionality of the statute must fail.
General Statutes §
Article
When determining what the legislature intends when it enacts legislation, the court is guided by a number of rules of statutory construction. One of the many rules is that the legislature is presumed to have acted properly, and "[t]here is a presumption that the legislature, in enacting a law, did so in view of existing relevant statutes and intended it to be read with them so as to make one consistent body of law." Cagiva North America v. Schenk,
The volume of the documents, in terms of the cost of production, has been addressed by the parties, the Attorney General agreeing to resolve issues concerning the cost of production of the requested documents if and when that issue arises. Because the parties have agreed to attempt to work out this issue, this court will not address it in the context of CT Page 10443-o whether to quash the various subpoenas.
The determination of breadth of scope of an investigatory subpoena is to be determined in the first instance by the agency serving the subpoena. Shulansky v. Rodriguez, supra,
The plaintiffs have not attempted to explain to this court how the subpoenas violate the rule set out in Shulansky, instead they have simply stated that the subpoenas are overbroad, and amount to a rummaging through the private papers of the plaintiffs. Even were this to be so, in the administrative investigatory context, as long as the information sought is "not plainly irrelevant" the courts have vested substantial discretion in administrative agencies conducting statutorily authorized investigations. id. The authority of the Attorney General to conduct the investigation has been previously discussed in this memorandum. The subpoenas have not requested the plaintiffs to produce all of their documents "forever" but have limited the inquiry to the specific time frame being investigated. The classes of documents sought have also been particularized. After a reading of the various subpoenas, and considering the argument by both the plaintiffs and the defense, this court finds the information sought by the Attorney General to be reasonably relevant to the investigation being conducted by the Attorney General.
The plaintiffs have also argued that the subpoenas should be quashed because production of the information would be "unduly burdensome" on the various plaintiffs. The test of whether something is "unduly burdensome" is rather elusive. In Shulansky, the Supreme Court adopted the trial court's view interpreting "unduly burdensome" as relating to how difficult it would be for the subpoenaed party to comply. Shulansky v.Rodriguez, supra,
The final test under Shulansky is that the investigation not be conducted for an improper purpose. id. Although allegations have been made by the plaintiffs that the investigation is being conducted solely to persecute the sheriffs for the political gain of the Attorney General, this court finds those allegations to be without merit.
THEREFORE, for the forgoing reasons, the plaintiffs complaint to quash subpoenas are DENIED. The plaintiffs are hereby ORDERED to produce all documents responsive to the Attorney General's subpoena within twenty (20) days of this Order. This Memorandum of Decision filed in July 31, 2001, compliance is ordered within 20 days of this filing. Accordingly; compliance is ordered by August 21, 2001.
Miano, J.
[1] General Statutes §
Sec.
4-61dd . Disclosure of information to Auditors of Public Accounts.
Investigation by Attorney General. Report to General Assembly.
(a) Any person having knowledge of any matter involving corruption, unethical practices, violation of state laws or regulations, mismanagement, gross waste of funds, abuse of authority or danger to the public safety occurring in any state department or agency or any quasi-public agency, as defined in section
1-120 , or any person having knowledge of any matter involving corruption, violation of state or federal laws or regulations, gross waste of funds, abuse of authority or danger to the public safety occurring in any large state contract, may transmit all facts and information in his possession concerning such matter to the Auditors of Public Accounts. The Auditors of Public Accounts shall review such matter CT Page 10443-q and report their findings and any recommendations to the Attorney General. Upon receiving such a report, the Attorney General shall make such investigation as he deems proper. At the request of the Attorney General or on their own initiative, the auditors shall assist in the investigation. The Attorney General shall have power to summon witnesses, require the production of any necessary books, papers or other documents and administer oaths to witnesses, where necessary, for the purpose of investigation. Upon the conclusion of his investigation, the Attorney General shall where necessary, report his findings to the Governor, or in matters involving criminal activity, to the Chief State's Attorney. The Auditors of Public Accounts and the Attorney General shall not, after receipt of any information from a person under the provisions of this section, disclose the identity of such person without his consent unless the Auditors of Public Accounts or the Attorney General determine that such disclosure is unavoidable during the course of the investigation.(b) No state officer or employee, as defined in section
4-141 , no quasi-public agency officer or employee, no officer or employee of a large state contractor and no appointing authority shall take or threaten to take any personnel action against any state or quasi-public agency employee or any employee of a large state contractor in retaliation for such employee's disclosure of information to the Auditors of Public Accounts or the Attorney General under the provisions of this section. A state or quasi-public agency employee alleging that such action has been threatened or taken may file an appeal within thirty days of knowledge of the specific incident giving rise to such claim with the Employees' Review Board under section5-202 , or, in the case of a state or quasi-public agency employee covered by a collective bargaining contract, in accordance with the procedure provided by such contract. An employee of a large state contractor alleging that such action has been threatened or taken may, after exhausting all available administrative remedies, bring a civil action in accordance with the provisions of subsection CT Page 10443-r (c) of section31-51m .(c) Any employee of a state or quasi-public agency or large state contractor, who is found to have knowingly and maliciously made false charges under subsection (a) of this section shall be subject to disciplinary action by his appointing authority up to and including dismissal. In the case of a state or quasi-public agency employee, such action shall be subject to appeal to the Employees' Review Board in accordance with section
5-202 , or in the case of state or quasi-public agency employees included in collective bargaining contracts, the procedure provided by such contracts.(d) On or before September first, annually, the Auditors of Public Accounts shall submit to the clerk of each house of the General Assembly a report indicating the number of matters for which facts and information were transmitted to the auditors pursuant to this section during the preceding state fiscal year and the disposition of each such matter.
(e) Each contract between a state or quasi-public agency and a large state contractor shall provide that, if an officer, employee or appointing authority of a large state contractor takes or threatens to take any personnel action against any employee of the contractor in retaliation for such employee's disclosure of information to the Auditors of Public Accounts or the Attorney General under the provisions of this section, the contractor shall be liable for a civil penalty of not more than five thousand dollars for each offense, up to a maximum of twenty per cent of the value of the contract. Each violation shall be a separate and distinct offense and in the case of a continuing violation each calendar day's continuance of the violation shall be deemed to be a separate and distinct offense. The executive head of the state or quasi-public agency may request the Attorney General to bring a civil action in the superior court for the judicial district of Hartford to seek imposition and recovery of such civil penalty. CT Page 10443-s
(f) Each large state contractor shall post a notice of the provisions of this section relating to large state contractors in a conspicuous place which is readily available for viewing by the employees of the contractor.
(g) As used in this section:
(1) "Large state contract" means a contract between an entity and a state or quasi-public agency, having a value of five million dollars or more, except for a contract for the construction, alteration or repair of any public building or public work; and
(2) "Large state contractor" means an entity that has entered into a large state contract with a state or quasi-public agency.
[2] Sec.
(a) Whenever the Attorney General, his deputy, or any assistant attorney general designated by the Attorney General, has reason to believe that any person has violated any of the provisions of this chapter, he may, prior to instituting any action or proceeding against such person, issue in writing and cause to be served upon any person, by subpoena duces tecum, a demand requiring such person to submit to him documentary material relevant to the scope of the alleged violation.
(b) Such demand shall (1) state the nature of the alleged violation, and (2) describe the class or classes of documentary material to be reproduced thereunder with such definiteness and certainty as to be accurately identified, and (3) prescribe a date which would allow a reasonable time to assemble such documents for compliance.
(c) All documents furnished to the Attorney General, his deputy, or any assistant attorney general designated by the Attorney General, shall be held in CT Page 10443-t the custody of the Attorney General, or his designee, shall not be available to the public, and shall be returned to the person at the termination of the attorney general's investigation or final determination of any action or proceeding commenced thereunder.
(d) No such demand shall require the submission of any documentary material, the contents of which would be privileged, or precluded from disclosure if demanded in a grand jury investigation.
(e) The Attorney General, his deputy, or any assistant attorney general designated by the Attorney General, may during the course of an investigation of any violations of the provisions of this chapter by any person (1) issue in writing and cause to be served upon any person, by subpoena, a demand that such person appear before him and give testimony as to any matters relevant to the scope of the alleged violations. Such appearance shall be under oath and a written transcript made of the same, a copy of which shall be furnished to said person appearing, and shall not be available for public disclosure; and (2) issue written interrogatories prescribing a return date which would allow a reasonable time to respond, which responses shall be under oath and shall not be available for public disclosure.
(f) In the event any person shall fail to comply with the provisions of this section, (1) the Attorney General, his deputy, or any assistant attorney general designated by the Attorney General, may apply to the superior court for the judicial district of Hartford for compliance, which court may, upon notice to such person, issue an order requiring such compliance, which shall be served upon such person; (2) the Attorney General, his deputy, or any assistant attorney general designated by the Attorney General, may also apply to the superior court for the judicial district of Hartford for an order, which court may, after notice to such person and hearing thereon, issue an order requiring the payment of civil penalties to the state in an amount not to exceed five hundred CT Page 10443-u dollars.
(g) The Attorney General shall cooperate with officials of the federal government and the several states, including but not limited to the sharing and disclosure of information and evidence obtained under the purview of this chapter.
(h) Service of subpoenas ad testificandum, subpoenas duces tecum, notices of deposition, and written interrogatories, as provided herein, may be made by: (1) Personal service or service at the usual place of abode; or (2) by registered or certified mail, return receipt requested, a duly executed copy thereof addressed to the person to be served at his principal place of business in this state, or, if said person has no principal place of business in this state, to his principal office, or to his residence.
[3] Sec.
There is hereby established the Division of Criminal Justice within the executive department, which shall be in charge of the investigation and prosecution of all criminal matters in the Superior Court.The Division of Criminal Justice shall be an agency within the executive department with all management rights except appointment of all state's attorneys.
[4] Sec.
The Attorney General shall appoint a deputy, who shall be sworn to the faithful discharge of his duties and shall perform all the duties of the Attorney General in case of his sickness or absence.He shall appoint such other assistants as he deems necessary, subject to the approval of the Governor. The Attorney General may also appoint not more than four associate attorneys general who will serve at the CT Page 10443-v pleasure of the Attorney General and will be exempt from the classified service. The Attorney General shall have general supervision over all legal matters in which the state is an interested party, except those legal matters over which prosecuting officers have direction. He shall appear for the state, the Governor, the Lieutenant Governor, the Secretary, the Treasurer and the Comptroller, and for all heads of departments and state boards, commissioners, agents, inspectors, committees, auditors, chemists, directors, harbor masters, and institutions and for the State Librarian in all suits and other civil proceedings, except upon criminal recognizances and bail bonds, in which the state is a party or is interested, or in which the official acts and doings of said officers are called in question, and for all members of the state House of Representatives and the state Senate in all suits and other civil proceedings brought against them involving their official acts and doings in the discharge of their duties as legislators, in any court or other tribunal, as the duties of his office require; and all such suits shall be conducted by him or under his direction. When any measure affecting the State Treasury is pending before any committee of the General Assembly, such committee shall give him reasonable notice of the pendency of such measure, and he shall appear and take such action as he deems to be for the best interests of the state, and he shall represent the public interest in the protection of any gifts, legacies or devises intended for public or charitable purposes. All legal services required by such officers and boards in matters relating to their official duties shall be performed by the Attorney General or under his direction. All writs, summonses or other processes served upon such officers and legislators shall, forthwith, be transmitted by them to the Attorney General. All suits or other proceedings by such officers shall be brought by the Attorney General or under his direction. He shall, when required by either house of the General Assembly or when requested by the president pro tempore of the Senate, the speaker of the House of Representatives, or the majority leader or the minority leader of the Senate or House of CT Page 10443-w Representatives, give his opinion upon questions of law submitted to him by either of said houses or any of said leaders. He shall advise or give his opinion to the head of any executive department or any state board or commission upon any question of law submitted to him. He may procure such assistance as he may require. Whenever a trustee, under the provisions of any charitable trust described in section
45a-514 , is required by statute to give a bond for the performance of his duties as trustee, the Attorney General may cause a petition to be lodged with the probate court of the district in which such trust property is situated, or where any of the trustees reside, for the fixing, accepting and approving of a bond to the state, conditioned for the proper discharge of the duties of such trust, which bond shall be filed in the office of such probate court. The Attorney General shall prepare a topical and chronological cross-index of all legal opinions issued by the office of the Attorney General and shall, from time to time, update the same.
[5] The plaintiffs were to have filed any briefs concerning the articulation of any
* * * * * * * *
It is not the place of the court to inquire into questions concerning coverage, or probable coverage of the statute under which the Attorney General is acting. In re Application of Ajello v. Moffie, supra,
Additional support for the proposition that "state department or agency" includes the sheriff and their deputies can be found by looking at other statutes which in fact define those terms.
United States v. Morton Salt Co. ( 1950 )
Shulansky v. Rodriguez ( 1994 )
Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 94,017 Securities and Exchange ... ( 1973 )
Kastigar v. United States ( 1972 )
Braswell v. United States ( 1988 )
Heslin v. Connecticut Law Clinic of Trantolo & Trantolo ( 1983 )
Shulansky v. Cambridge-Newport Financial Services Corp. ( 1992 )