Galvin v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance

20 Mass. L. Rptr. 533
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 2006
DocketNo. 054602BLS
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Mass. L. Rptr. 533 (Galvin v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Galvin v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance, 20 Mass. L. Rptr. 533 (Mass. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Garsh, E. Susan, J.

This matter is before the court on a request by William Francis Galvin, Secretary of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts (the “Secretary”), pursuant to G.L.c. 110A, §407(c), for an order requiring Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. (“Mass Mutual”) to comply with a subpoena duces tecum issued on June 15, 2005 (the “Subpoena”), as narrowed by a letter from the Secretary1 dated July 28, 2005. More specifically, the Secretary requests that Mass Mutual be ordered to produce portions of a report prepared in connection with an investigation by a Special Committee of Mass Mutual’s Board of Directors (the “Report”) into alleged misconduct at Mass Mutual by its then president.2 Mass Mutual opposes the request and seeks dismissal of the complaint on the grounds that the Secretary lacks jurisdiction to enforce the Subpoena because the Report does not relate to any alleged fraud in connection with the purchase or sale of a security or fraud in connection with the provision of investment advice and because the Secretary issued the Subpoena for the illegitimate purpose of harassing Mass Mutual.3 For the reasons set forth below, the Secretary’s request is allowed, and the cross motion to dismiss the complaint is denied.

BACKGROUND

On June 2, 2005, the Board of Directors of Mass Mutual sent to Robert J. O’Connell, who was its president (the “President”), a notice of intention to terminate his employment for cause and to remove him from the Board of Directors (the “Notice”). The Notice followed receipt by the Board of Directors of the Report. Mass Mutual concedes that the June 2nd action of its Board of Directors was based in part on “the findings” contained in the Report. The Notice stated that the Board of Directors had determined that the President had engaged in a systematic and pervasive pattern of willful abuse of authority. Specifically, the Board found that the President had engaged in five independent types of misconduct that individually and in the aggregate resulted in material harm to Mass Mutual, the third of which was:

Interfering with the investigation and reprimand of your son-in-law and son relating to improper disclosure by your son Jared O’Connell, an employee of Oppenheimer Funds, to your son-in-law Rex Hampton, an employee of the Company, of confidential and proprietary information relating to Oppenheimer’s portfolio trading strategies. In particular, you failed to direct that there be an investigation of the facts and circumstances surrounding the improper disclosures of Oppenheimer’s confidential information and whether this information was used to engage in improper and/or illegal securities trading when such facts became known to you. Furthermore, you improperly caused the records relating to the underlying facts and circumstances and to the formal reprimand of your son and son-in-law to be removed from their personnel files and destroyed.

None of the other reasons in the Notice mentioned either Jared O’Connell (“O’Connell”), Rex Hampton (“Hampton”) or the Oppenheimer Funds and, with the possible exception of the basis for termination relating to shadow investments, none of the other reasons had any relationship to the purchase or sale of securities or to any possible misconduct by O’Connell or Oppenheimer Funds. For example, the second grounds for termination set forth in the Notice related to the President’s haring caused Mass Mutual to sell a condominium unit in Florida to himself for a price substantially below what Mass Mutual could have obtained in an arms-length transaction.

The Secretary’s Securities Division commenced an investigation on June 7, 2005. Oppenheimer refers to a group of affiliated entities, including Oppenheimer Funds Distributor, Inc., that, according to the Secretary, offer mutual fund securities for sale in Massachusetts and elsewhere and provide investment advice. Oppenheimer is owned by Mass Mutual. Oppenheimer Funds, Inc. is a registered investment adviser. Oppenheimer Funds Distributor, Inc. is a registered broker-dealer. O’Connell is listed on the Central Registration Depositoiy, a securities industry record-keeping database owned and maintained by the National Association of Securities Dealers, as having had general securities representative status with Oppenheimer Funds Distributor, Inc. from August 2002 until July of 2004.

In connection with an investigation, on June 10, 2005, the Secretary requested, in a letter of inquiry, that certain records voluntarily be produced by Oppenheimer Funds Distributor, Inc. relating to the investigation and/or disciplining of O’Connell.4 On that same date, in another letter of inquiry, the Secretary requested that Mass Mutual voluntarily produce voluminous files, including the entire fifty-nine-page Report. The Secretary’s request was not limited to records relating to Oppenheimer Funds Distributor, Inc. or O’Connell.

Mass Mutual responded on June 15, 2005 that it had already voluntarily produced documents relating to the President’s termination to the Massachusetts Insurance Commissioner and to the Attorney General of Massachusetts and that while it did “not understand the basis for the Securities Division’s jurisdiction over this matter,” it would not object to the Secretary’s obtaining copies of material provided or to be provided to the Attorney General. Mass Mutual also pointed out that it could not comply with the production request within the short time frame set out in the Secretary’s letter and represented that, if the Secretary [535]*535identified particular documents relating to subjects within his jurisdiction that had not been provided to the Attorney General, Mass Mutual would promptly provide them on reasonable notice.

On June 15, 2005, the Secretary served the Subpoena upon Mass Mutual. The Subpoena required production, by the following day, of the entire Report and all documents relating to the President’s termination, as well as documents evidencing communications between O’Connell and Hampton and documents evidencing communications between the President and Oppenheimer concerning O’Connell and/or Hampton.

In an article that appeared in the Wall Street Journal on June 15, 2005, the Secretary is said to have stated that “he has requested documents related to the Mass Mutual board probe’s allegations that [the President] had suppressed efforts to discipline relatives, one of whom was employed at Oppenheimer Funds.”5 In the same article, Attorney General Thomas Reilly is quoted as having said that his office is “reviewing serious allegations of wrongdoing uncovered by the company,” following a preliminary review of documents submitted by Mass Mutual. In an article that appeared about the Subpoena in the Boston Globe on June 16, 2005, Galvin is said to have accused Mass Mutual of “stonewalling his office’s investigation of the circumstances behind the abrupt firing of [its President] on June 2.” With reference to Mass Mutual’s having provided records to state insurance regulators and to the Massachusetts Attorney General, the Secretary is quoted in that article as having said that “[this] is not a situation where they get to choose [with whom they cooperate on investigations because Mass Mutual has brokerage operations] licensed by my office, and therefore are obligated to respond to our legitimate inquiries.” In an Associated Press story that appeared in The Republican

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Bluebook (online)
20 Mass. L. Rptr. 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galvin-v-massachusetts-mutual-life-insurance-masssuperct-2006.