Court Opinion

ID: 9404583
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-06-23 15:09:27.151564+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:20:15.387955
License: Public Domain

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Stacy L. Garrity,                               :
in her official capacity as the                 :
Treasurer of the Commonwealth,                  :
                    Plaintiff                   :   No. 272 M.D. 2019
                                                :
               v.                               :   Argued: June 23, 2022
                                                :
PPL Corporation,                                :
                      Defendant                 :

BEFORE:        HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
               HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
               HONORABLE LORI A. DUMAS, Judge

OPINION BY JUDGE McCULLOUGH                                  FILED: June 23, 2023

               Presently before the Court in our original jurisdiction is the application for
partial summary relief in the nature of a motion for judgment on pleadings
(Application) filed by Plaintiff, Stacy L. Garrity, in her official capacity as the
Treasurer of the Commonwealth (Treasurer), in connection with a complaint against
defendant PPL Corporation (PPL).              Through the Application, Treasurer seeks a
determination from this Court declaring, as a matter of law, that Treasurer, in
performing an audit of the records of an unclaimed securities property holder (here,
PPL), has the statutory authority under Article XIII.1 of The Fiscal Code, known as the
Disposition of Abandoned and Unclaimed Property Act (DAUPA),1 and Article XVI

       1
         Article XIII.1 was added to The Fiscal Code, Act of April 9, 1929, P.L. 343, as amended,
72 P.S. §§ 1-1805, by section 5 of the Act of December 9, 1982, P.L. 1057, 72 P.S. §§ 1301.1-1301.29.
of The Fiscal Code, 72 P.S. §§ 1601-1602, to: (1) direct a holder’s2 production of
shareholder records in electronic format; (2) perform accuracy tests and cross-checks
to verify the accuracy of records produced by a holder; and, further, (3) utilize this
statutory power despite PPL’s claim that it is preempted by federal law. In addition,
Treasurer requests that the Court dismiss PPL’s Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth New Matters
in their entirety, which, in notable part, are inexorably intertwined with Treasurer’s
above-mentioned requests for determinations as a matter of law.
               Upon review, we grant Treasurer’s Application, with specific
qualifications, as more fully set forth below.

                         I.    Factual and Procedural History
               The factual and procedural history of this case has been thoroughly
detailed in our previous decision, Torsella v. PPL Corporation (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 272
M.D. 2019, filed July 20, 2021) (en banc) (unreported),3 and is incorporated herein by
reference. Briefly, Treasurer filed a complaint asking this Court to order PPL to
produce information and documents that Treasurer requested from PPL in a March 13,
2019 subpoena (Subpoena), contending that the information and documents that PPL
submitted did not fully comply with the request,

               by producing heavily edited, redacted, and incomplete
               records concerning PPL’s shareholders and by proposing an
               onsite visual view of PPL’s unredacted, unedited original
               data that spans 1,000 or more pages, at PPL’s offices,

       2
         DAUPA defines “holder” in relevant part, as “a person obligated to hold for the account of
or delivery or pay to the owner property which is subject to this article and shall include any person
in possession of property subject to this article belonging to another . . . .” Section 1301.1 of DAUPA,
72 P.S. § 1301.1.

       3
         At the time the complaint was filed, Joseph M. Torsella was the Treasurer. Subsequently,
Stacy Garrity was elected Treasurer at the November 3, 2020 general election and was sworn into
office on January 19, 2021.

                                                   2
             using a PPL computer terminal and the limited software
             that PPL intended to make available. According to
             Treasurer, instead of producing copies of its original data,
             which includes names, addresses and related information and
             which PPL possesses in readily-transferable format, PPL
             created new documents that replaced the name and other
             identifying information associated with an account with an
             ACCTKEY placeholder. PPL also withheld information that
             PPL believed related to individual shareholders with
             addresses in states that are not participating in the audit.
             Given how PPL produced the requested data, Kelmar[
             Associates, Treasurer’s designee to conduct, on Treasurer’s
             behalf, an unclaimed property audit of PPL’s shareholder
             records,] was unable to run analytics to cross-check the
             accuracy of PPL’s data.

Id., slip op. at 8 (internal citations, quotation marks, and alterations omitted; emphasis
added).
             On July 1, 2020, PPL filed revised preliminary objections to the
complaint, asserting that the complaint was legally deficient on a variety of grounds.
“PPL first argue[d] that Treasurer does not have the authority to compel PPL to produce
its shareholders’ [personally identifiable information (PII)], and it has already fully
complied with DAUPA by producing electronic records having some of the data
Treasurer requested, and by allowing Treasurer to review the full records, including
PII, at PPL’s corporate office.” Torsella, slip op. at 11. “Second, PPL contend[ed]
that the law does not entitle Treasurer to verify the accuracy of PPL’s shareholder
records using software analytics.” Id. “Third, PPL submit[ted] that Treasurer is
attempting, through [her] [c]omplaint, to enforce the Subpoena, but the Subpoena is
improper because it is not limited in scope and specific in directive so that compliance
will not be unreasonably burdensome, as electronically producing its shareholders’ PII
exposes those shareholders to needless risk.” Id. at 11-12.

                                            3
                 In Torsella, a five-judge, en banc panel of this Court overruled PPL’s
preliminary objections, addressing three issues: (1) “[w]hether Treasurer has [f]ailed
to [s]tate a [c]laim [b]ecause Treasurer is not [a]uthorized to [c]ompel the [e]lectronic
[p]roduction of PPL’s [s]hareholder [r]ecords”; (2) “[w]hether Treasurer has [f]ailed to
[s]tate a [c]laim [b]ecause Treasurer is not [a]uthorized to [v]erify the [a]ccuracy of
PPL’s [s]hareholder [r]ecords [u]sing [s]oftware [a]nalytics”; and (3) “[w]hether
Treasurer has [f]ailed to [s]tate a [c]laim [b]ecause Treasurer may not [c]ompel PPL to
[p]roduce its [s]hareholders’ PII.” See id., slip op. at 12, 20, and 28.
                 With regard to the first issue, this Court cited what we referred to as
“DAUPA’s Examination Provisions,” 72 P.S. § 1301.23(b)-(c),4 and “The Fiscal
Code’s Examination and Adjustment Provision,” 72 P.S. § 1602(a). Based on the plain
language of these statutes, and reading them in pari materia, we concluded that they

       4
           This provision, in relevant part, reads as follows:

                 (b) . . . Treasurer, at reasonable times and upon reasonable notice, may
                 examine the records of any person or agent thereof to determine
                 whether the person has complied with this article. The administrator
                 may conduct the examination even if the person believes it is not in
                 possession of any property that must be reported, paid or delivered
                 under this article . . . . Treasurer may contract with any other person to
                 conduct the examination on behalf of . . . Treasurer, the selection of
                 whom shall not be questioned.

                 (c) . . . Treasurer at reasonable times may examine the records of an
                 agent, including a dividend disbursing agent or transfer agent, of a
                 business association or financial association that is the holder of
                 property presumed abandoned if the administrator has given the notice
                 required by subsection (b) to both the association or organization and
                 the agent at least 90 days before the examination.

Section 1301.23(b)-(c) of DAUPA, 72 P.S. § 1301.23(b)-(c) (emphasis added). Pursuant to
subsection (d), any work papers that Treasurer has “obtained or compiled” during the course of an
examination “are confidential and are not public records . . . .” 72 P.S. § 1301.23(d).

                                                     4
“empower[] Treasurer to examine PPL’s shareholder records” and “clearly give[]
Treasurer the power to compel the exhibition or delivery of records . . . .” Torsella,
slip op. at 18-19 (emphasis in original). Moreover, finding Treasurer’s “interpretation
of the statutory language [] persuasive,” this Court concluded that The Fiscal Code’s
Examination and Adjustment Provision authorized Treasurer to compel PPL to produce
the records to Treasurer in electronic format. Id., slip op. at 19.
             Concerning the second issue, this Court determined, in general, that “PPL
may not refuse to produce unredacted documents because it believes those documents
do not contain information on assets reportable to Pennsylvania.” Id., slip op. at 23
(emphasis in original; internal quotation marks omitted). We further rejected PPL’s
contention “that Treasurer may not use software analytics to verify PPL’s shareholder
data and [that] Treasurer’s Subpoena is overbroad, as PPL has already produced to
Treasurer all the information necessary to complete its audit.” Id., slip op. at 25. In so
doing, this Court stated:

             [T]he plain language of DAUPA and The Fiscal Code
             recognizes that a holder’s records may not be accurate and
             thus Treasurer may examine and revise them as necessary.
             See 72 P.S. § 1301.23(a) (stating a holder’s report may be
             inaccurate, false, and/or incomplete). Moreover, The Fiscal
             Code’s Examination and Adjustment Provision authorizes
             Treasurer to “examine and revise” unclaimed property
             accounts. 72 P.S. § 1602(a). These provisions support that
             Treasurer is authorized to verify the accuracy of a holder’s
             unclaimed property records.

Id., slip op. at 25-26. In addition, relying upon and discussing a decision from the
United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, Marathon Petroleum v. Secretary
of Finance for Delaware, 876 F.3d 481, 488 (3d Cir. 2017), this Court concluded that

                                            5
the “Texas trilogy” line of cases from the United States (U.S.) Supreme Court5 “does
not foreclose a state from conduct[ing] an appropriate examination to determine if there
is fraud or another basis for determining that property may be escheated,” and, further,
that “United States Supreme Court precedent does not preclude a state from examining
a holder’s unclaimed property records in order to verify their accuracy, so long as the
state’s information requests do not appear to be obviously pretextual or insatiable.” Id.,
slip op. at 27-28. Reviewing the allegations in Treasurer’s complaint, and accepting
them as true, this Court determined that “Treasurer’s information requests do not
appear obviously pretextual or accurately described as insatiable.” Id., slip op. at 28.
              Finally, in disposing of the third issue, this Court referenced a statutory
provision from DAUPA, determined that “it does not appear that DAUPA exempts PII
from the scope of Treasurer’s examination,” and noted that “[i]f a holder fails to report
this information to Treasurer, then Treasurer may seek to obtain it pursuant to The
Fiscal Code’s Examination and Adjustment Provision.” Id., slip op. at 31-32. Given
the averments in the complaint, we stated that “there is reason to believe that PPL has
failed to satisfy DAUPA’s reporting requirements,” “Treasurer may be authorized to
compel the electronic production of that information,” and, consequently, “Treasurer
has stated a claim because it does not appear with certainty that Treasurer is precluded
from compelling PPL to produce its shareholders’ PII.”                  Id., slip op. at 32.
Parenthetically, we buttressed our conclusion with the fact, under a decision from the
Delaware Court of Chancery, Department of Finance v. Univar, Inc. (Del. Ch., No. CV
2018-0884-JRS, filed May 21, 2020), “this Court is capable of fashioning a
confidentiality order that would ensure that [Treasurer’s auditor,] Kelmar[ Associates,

       5
        Texas v. New Jersey, 379 U.S. 674 (1965); Pennsylvania v. New York, 407 U.S. 206 (1972),
and Delaware v. New York, 507 U.S. 490 (1993).

                                               6
LLC],[6] complies with Pennsylvania law,” and does not disclose shareholder
information to third parties. Id., slip op. at 32 n.14; see also 72 P.S. § 1301.23(d)
(“Documents and working papers obtained or compiled by the State Treasurer, or the
State Treasurer’s agents, employees or designated representatives, in the course of
conducting an examination are confidential and are not public records . . . .”).
               For these reasons, we overruled PPL’s revised preliminary objections,
ultimately concluding that Treasurer stated claims upon which relief can be granted.
               On August 19, 2021, PPL filed an Answer and New Matter. Pertinent
here are PPL’s Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth New Matters, which mimic the arguments
raised in its revised preliminary objections.

                                  FOURTH NEW MATTER
               In its Fourth New Matter, PPL lodges the following legal challenge to
Treasurer’s authority to require PPL to produce its documents in electronic format:

                    [4]d. [] Treasurer fails to cite any authority to support
                    its position that it is entitled to an electronic file
                    production of PPL’s comprehensive shareholder
                    records, including all shareholder PII, regardless of
                    when the shares were purchased or where the
                    shareholder resides. There is no requirement in
                    DAUPA that a holder must electronically transmit
                    data (especially sensitive shareholder PII) to the
                    Treasurer or its third-party auditor after PPL has on
                    multiple occasions offered to facilitate Kelmar’s on-
                    site examination of PPL’s unredacted shareholder
                    files. Thus, the [c]omplaint fails to state a claim for
                    relief.

       6
        In 2017, the Treasurer retained Kelmar Associates, LLC (Kelmar) as its designated agent to
conduct an examination of all unclaimed property liabilities attributed to the issuance of securities for
PPL. See Compl. ¶ 16.

                                                   7
(Answer and New Matter, at 16-17.)

                              FIFTH NEW MATTER
            In its Fifth New Matter, PPL raises the following legal challenges to
Treasurer’s authority to test and check the accuracy of PPL’s records and also contends
that Treasurer’s claims for injunctive and declaratory relief to enforce the Subpoena
are barred under the doctrine of federal preemption:

                [5]a. In its [c]omplaint, Treasurer pleads on multiple
                occasions that [she] requires the electronic
                production of all of PPL’s shareholder records in
                order to perform “software analytics,” “accuracy
                tests,” and “cross-checks” using third-party data sets
                that presumably include the Social Security
                Administration’s Death Master file or other internet-
                based databases, which Treasurer presumes may be
                used to contradict or “correct” PPL’s official
                shareholder records.

                b. [] Treasurer’s claims for injunctive and declaratory
                relief are preempted by federal common law
                governing the choice of law rules designed to resolve
                conflicts among states over unclaimed intangible
                property and by federal securities regulations
                governing the maintenance and contents of master
                securityholder files.

                c. Treasurer’s and Kelmar’s expressed intent to
                conduct such analytics and to contradict or “correct”
                PPL’s master securityholder files violates the plain
                command federal common law established by the
                U.S. Supreme Court in Texas v. New Jersey, 379 U.S.
                674 (1965) and its progeny, as well as federal
                securities regulations [].

                                          8
                d. While [] Treasurer has the authority to determine
                compliance with DAUPA (e.g., whether PPL has
                properly reported to Treasurer those shareholders
                with whom PPL has lost contact for three years),
                Treasurer lacks authority under DAUPA or any other
                statute to determine whether PPL’s shareholder
                records, as maintained by its transfer agent under
                [Securities and Exchange Commission] rules, are
                “incorrect” or “wrong” as alleged in §§ 13 and 28 of
                the Complaint.
(Answer and New Matter, at 17-18) (footnotes omitted).

                              SIXTH NEW MATTER
            In its Sixth New Matter, PPL raises the following additional legal
challenge to Treasurer’s authority to enforce the Subpoena in order to conduct
“software analytics,” “accuracy tests,” or “cross-checks”:

            6. [Treasurer’s] claims for injunctive and declaratory relief
            to enforce the Subpoena in order to conduct “software
            analytics,” “accuracy tests,” or “cross checks” are barred
            under Pennsylvania law, 72 P.S. § 1301.23(a)(2)).

                a. Pennsylvania law provides that each class of
                potentially escheatable property is modified by “what
                is shown by the records of the holder,” not what is
                shown in the records of the Treasurer, or Kelmar, or
                anyone else.

                b. [] Treasurer lacks authority under DAUPA or any
                other statute to determine whether PPL’s shareholder
                records, as maintained by its transfer agent under
                SEC rules, are “incorrect” or “wrong” as alleged in
                §§ 13 and 28 of the Complaint.
(Answer and New Matter, at 18-19.)

                                          9
               On November 22, 2021, Treasurer filed the Application currently before
the Court.7 Treasurer asks the Court to dismiss PPL’s Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth New
Matters and grant it judgment on the pleadings in its favor and against PPL, declaring
as a matter of law that: in performing an audit of the records of an unclaimed securities
property holder under DAUPA, and The Fiscal Code, (1) Treasurer has the authority
to require holder to produce their shareholder records in electronic format; (2)
Treasurer has the authority to test the accuracy of the holder’s unclaimed property
records and make adjustments to the unclaimed property reports as necessary to ensure
they are correct; and (3) federal law and federal securities regulations do not preempt
Treasurer’s power in these areas.              Treasurer argues that this Court has already
addressed and resolved these legal issues when it overruled PPL’s preliminary
objections and that PPL has merely repackaged these objections in its Fourth, Fifth,
and Sixth New Matters, in an attempt to re-litigate them.8

       7
           Partial summary relief may be granted on one or more issues in an action. See Angino &
Rovner v. Jeffrey R. Lessin & Associates, 131 A.3d 502, 511 (Pa. Super. 2016) (affirming order
granting motion for partial judgment on the pleadings); Pa. R. Civ. P. 1035.2 note (“Partial summary
judgment, interlocutory in character, may be rendered on one or more issues of liability, defense or
damages.”). Applications for judgment on the pleadings serve to resolve expeditiously legal
questions and undisputed factual matters that do not require further development in discovery or at
trial. See UGI Utilities, Inc. v. City of Reading, 179 A.3d 624, 628, 632 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2017) (granting
petitioner’s application for partial summary relief); UGI Utilities, Inc. v. City of Lancaster, 125 A.3d
858, 860, 865-66 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015) (same).
         8
           The Court is not precluded by the earlier decision from ruling on the present motion. Even
after the denial of an earlier demurrer, as in this case, a motion for judgment on the pleadings permits
the trial court to re-examine the legal sufficiency of the case in light of any additional facts and legal
theories developed as a result of new matter and the reply thereto. DiAndrea v. Reliance Savings &
Loan Association, 456 A.2d 1066, 1069 (Pa. Super. 1983); see also Koresko v. Farley, 844 A.2d 607,
614 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004) (entertaining motion for judgment on the pleadings filed after denial of a
demurrer).

                                                   10
                                          II.    Issues

           A. Fourth New Matter - Whether, as a Matter of Law, Treasurer is
                    Authorized to Direct the Production of Unclaimed
                         Property Records in Electronic Format

              First, Treasurer requests relief in the nature of judgment on the pleadings
in its favor and against PPL, declaring as a matter of law that Treasurer has the authority
to direct a holder’s production of shareholder records in electronic format. Treasurer
asserts that PPL’s position in its Fourth New Matter is contrary to what this Court has
already held in this case. Treasurer raises the same arguments it successfully raised in
opposition to PPL’s preliminary objections.
              PPL, for its part, concedes that this Court already answered this question
in its July 20, 2021 Order, and denies that there is an existing dispute that Treasurer
may command PPL to produce records electronically to facilitate that compliance
audit.9 Instead, it asserts that it is the scope of the information demanded that is the
subject of its Fourth New Matter, not the format of the production. On that question,
it is PPL’s position that Treasurer may not seek sensitive shareholder PII, especially
with regard to shareholders lacking a connection to Pennsylvania. More specifically,
PPL argues “that Treasurer does not and cannot justify its demands for the electronic
production of all PPL shareholder records for all of PPL’s thousands of shareholders
regardless of the state or country in which they reside. Th[e] [S]ubpoena broadly
captures sensitive personal and financial account information related to thousands of
shareholders who have no connection to Pennsylvania, or to any category of property

       9
         We note that PPL did previously argue in litigating its preliminary objections that DAUPA
and The Fiscal Code’s Examination and Adjustment Provision only authorized Treasurer to
“examine” a holder’s records not to compel the production of them and argued that these statutes do
not require electronic production. See Torsella, slip op. at 12-13 (citing PPL’s brief).

                                                11
even theoretically escheatable under DAUPA.” (PPL’s Brief at 23-34) (emphasis in
original).
             To reiterate, Treasurer has only asked the Court to declare as a matter of
law that it is authorized under DAUPA and The Fiscal Code’s Examination and
Adjustment Provision to compel electronic production of records. This is purely a legal
issue that we may resolve at the pre-trial stage. As noted, this Court en banc rendered
an opinion on that legal issue by holding that the Treasurer has that authority. In
concluding that Treasurer had stated a claim for relief, we stated:

             Treasurer responds that the [c]omplaint states valid claims
             for relief because Treasurer has the authority to compel PPL
             to electronically produce its shareholder records. First,
             Treasurer claims that DAUPA authorizes it to “conduct
             record examinations in any medium[,]” including electronic
             media, because DAUPA defines a “record” as “information
             that is inscribed on a tangible medium or that is stored in an
             electronic or other medium and is retrievable in perceivable
             form.” (Treasurer’s Br. at 18-19 (quoting 72 P.S. § 1301.1).)

                                         ***

             In addition, Treasurer contends that case law supports
             Treasurer’s position that Treasurer may require PPL to
             produce electronic records for examination even though PPL
             has offered to make its records available for on-site
             examination. Treasurer relies on several cases, including
             Department of Finance v. AT&T Inc., 239 A.3d 541 (Del. Ch.
             2020), explaining that the Delaware Court of Chancery held
             that “language identical to DAUPA’s authorization to
             ‘examine’ unclaimed property records entails the authority to
             require a holder to query a database and ‘provide that
             information in an electronically useable format.’”
             (Treasurer’s Br. at 20 (quoting AT&T, 239 A.3d at 574).)

                                         ***

                                           12
              Treasurer’s interpretation of the statutory language is
              persuasive, especially because there is no mention in The
              Fiscal Code’s Examination and Adjustment Provision of any
              powers reserved to unclaimed property holders, and there is
              no language allowing holders to decide whether to exhibit or
              deliver their records. Thus, we cannot say at this stage of the
              proceedings that Treasurer’s interpretation is incorrect.
Torsella, 2021 WL 3046660, slip op. at *18-19.
              Neither party has identified any change in law or circumstances that would
warrant a deviation from our prior ruling on the issue. Accordingly, the Court
concludes, consistent with our decision in Torsella, that Treasurer possesses the
statutory authority under DAUPA and The Fiscal Code’s Examination and Adjustment
Provision to direct the production of unclaimed property records in electronic format.
Consequently, we grant Treasurer’s Application to the extent she requests such
declaratory relief and strike/dismiss PPL’s Fourth New Matter. That said, however,
we decline at this juncture to address the separate fact-specific issue of whether the
Subpoena is overly broad on its face because it requests records that may not be
escheatable under Pennsylvania law. Notably, Treasurer does not currently seek a
determination of law on that issue, as it is contained within PPL’s Second New Matter,
which Treasurer did not request to be dismissed/stricken in her present Application.10

       10
          According to Treasurer, to address PPL’s concerns that the Subpoena is overbroad, she has
provided draft revised subpoenas, calling for a two-stage process to narrow the information sought
from PPL and requesting PPL’s comments. Treasurer submits the revised two-stage process should
moot PPL’s narrow, fact-specific First, Second, and Third New Matters. The first subpoena will seek
more limited information about all of PPL’s shareholders, including minimal information about
shareholders whose property would not be escheatable to Pennsylvania according to PPL’s current
records. The second subpoena will seek more detailed information only about shareholders as to
whom review of the information produced in response to the first subpoena reveals an anomaly.
Treasurer concedes that the revised subpoenas would not resolve the questions of law raised in the
present Application. See Treasurer’s Br. at 17, n. 5.

                                                13
   B. Fifth and Sixth New Matters - Whether DAUPA and The Fiscal Code
      Authorize Treasurer to Verify the Accuracy of PPL’s Records
             Next, Treasurer requests a determination that PPL’s Fifth and Sixth New
Matters fail as a matter of law. Both the Fifth and Sixth New Matters challenge
Treasurer’s authority to conduct accuracy tests or cross-checks of PPL’s shareholder
records to ensure compliance with her obligations.
             Treasurer argues that the plain language of DAUPA’s Examination
Provisions and The Fiscal Code’s Examination and Adjustment Provision “confirm
Treasury’s authority to meaningfully evaluate PPL’s compliance, which requires the
ability to run accuracy tests and cross-checks.” (Treasurer’s Br. at 29.) According to
Treasurer,
             [n]either [DAUPA’s Examination Provisions nor The Fiscal
             Code’s Examination and Adjustment Provision] imposes any
             limitation on how Treasury and its agents may analyze data
             obtained from a holder. To the contrary, those statutes state
             that their purpose is to ensure appropriate reporting of
             unclaimed property and compliance with DAUPA.
             Compliance requires that Treasury and its agents be able to
             cross-check holder data in order to determine, for example,
             whether that data contains errors. Mistakes happen; numbers
             are transposed; state codes or addresses contain typos; and
             misspellings occur. There is no statutory requirement that
             Treasury accept on faith representations made by a holder.
Id. at 29-30. Further, citing Torsella, Treasurer contends that PPL’s “records do not
conclusively determine escheatability, and Treasury may look at other records to
confirm them”; “the accuracy of a holder’s records is relevant to its compliance with
its unclaimed property obligations”; and DAUPA’s Examination Provisions and The
Fiscal Code’s Examination and Adjustment Provision “expressly recognize[] that a
holder’s report may be ‘inaccurate’ or ‘false’ as well as incomplete [and] specifically
employ Treasury to ‘examine and revise’ unclaimed property records.” Id. at 31-32.

                                          14
             In response, PPL concedes that Treasurer has the statutory authority “to
audit PPL’s compliance with DAUPA[] and examine PPL’s records to verify that PPL
has properly reported any unclaimed property consistent with its official records and
its legal obligations.” (PPL’s Brief at 22.) However, again relying on federal common
law, specifically the “Texas trilogy” line of cases from the U.S. Supreme Court, as it
did in Torsella, PPL suggests that—as a matter of federal common law—Kelmar, on
behalf of Treasurer, cannot engage in “analytics,” “cross-checks,” and/or an
“independent examination of PPL’s shareholder records against the Social Security
Administration’s Death Master File or other Internet databases . . . to ‘assess the
accuracy’ of PPL’s underlying shareholder records . . . .” (PPL’s Br. at 31.)
Furthermore, PPL asserts that “Treasurer has no legal authority under any Pennsylvania
law to override or ‘correct’ the official records of PPL or any holder with different
names, addresses, accounts, or other information based upon conflicting data provided
by Kelmar, or any other third-party datasets or software.” (PPL’s Br. at 22) (emphasis
in original). In this vein, PPL refers to DAUPA’s Examination Provisions and The
Fiscal Code’s Examination and Adjustment Provision and states as follows:

             Nowhere in these provisions is Treasurer (or [her] auditor)
             authorized to modify the holder’s underlying, official
             shareholder records. Treasurer and auditor may only demand
             correction of the unclaimed property reports to the extent
             the audit examination comparing the underlying records to
             the reports reveals an inconsistency.

                                        ***

             Neither Kelmar nor Treasurer may change or “correct” those
             records in order to assert claims over intangible securities
             property to which there is no lawful entitlement.

Id. at 33, 35 (emphasis in original).

                                         15
             The Court concludes, consistent with our decision in Torsella, that
Treasurer possesses the statutory authority to verify the accuracy of PPL’s shareholder
record using software analytics. The plain language of DAUPA and The Fiscal Code
recognizes that a holder’s records may not be accurate and thus Treasurer may examine
and revise them as necessary. See 72 P.S. § 1301.23(a) (stating a holder’s report may
be inaccurate, false, and/or incomplete). Moreover, The Fiscal Code’s Examination
and Adjustment Provision authorizes Treasurer to “examine and revise” unclaimed
property accounts. 72 P.S. § 1602(a). These provisions support that Treasurer is
authorized to verify the accuracy of a holder’s unclaimed property records. Neither
statute prohibits Treasurer from verifying the accuracy of a holder’s records using
software analytics or by cross-checking data against third-party databases.
             PPL’s Fifth and Sixth New Matters are stricken, with the following
proviso. However, at this juncture, we shall refrain from ruling on the issue of whether
Treasurer may make actual alterations or modifications to the shareholder documents
themselves. Treasurer does not seek a ruling to this effect in its Application. As such,
the Fifth New Matter is preserved to the limited extent that subsections (a) and (c)
challenge Treasurer’s authority to alter or modify PPL’s official shareholder records.
(New Matter, pp. 17-18.)

                                C.   Federal Preemption
             In PPL’s Fifth New Matter, PPL asserts that Treasurer’s claims for
injunctive and declaratory relief to enforce the Subpoena are barred under the doctrine
of federal preemption. PPL asserts that Treasurer’s authority to compel production of
PPL’s shareholder records and audit them to ensure their accuracy is preempted by
federal common law governing the choice of law rules designed to resolve conflicts
among states over unclaimed intangible property and by federal securities regulations

                                          16
governing the maintenance and contents of master securityholder files. (PPL New
Matter ¶ 5(b).) It asserts that Treasurer’s intent to conduct analytics and to contradict
or “correct” PPL’s master securityholder files violates the plain command federal
common law established by the U.S. Supreme Court in Texas v. New Jersey and its
progeny, as well as federal securities regulations.
             Presently, Treasurer asks us to conclude as a matter of law that federal
law, including the securities regulations cited by PPL, do not preempt or conflict with
Treasurer’s authority to compel production of PPL’s shareholder records and audit
them to verify their accuracy.
             In response, PPL candidly admits that generally “[f]ederal common law
and securities regulations . . . do not prevent Treasurer or its auditor from performing
a (properly[-]scoped) compliance audit to verify that a holder’s unclaimed property
reporting under DAUPA conforms to the information shown in its official shareholder
records.” (PPL’s Br. at 22) (double emphasis in original). According to PPL, its
challenge to Treasurer’s audit authority is more nuanced. Its dispute is limited “to the
extent [Treasurer] seeks to change the records, for example to change a shareholder’s
address from one state to another based on a third-party data source, such change would
be prohibited by both federal common law and federal securities regulations.” Id. PPL
maintains that

             well established federal common law, federal securities
             regulations governing shareholder recordkeeping and
             reporting, and the DAUPA statute itself all consistently
             reinforce that it is PPL’s records alone that control whether
             intangible securities property is abandoned, whether a
             shareholder contact is “lost,” and to which state the holder
             must report such unclaimed property. Neither Kelmar nor
             Treasurer may change or “correct” those records in order to
             assert claims over intangible securities property to which

                                           17
             there is no lawful entitlement.

(PPL’s Brief at 35.)
             In Torsella, we rejected PPL’s contention that federal law precludes
Treasurer from verifying the accuracy of PPL’s records. See Torsella, 2021 WL
3046660, slip op. at *26-28. PPL has presented no persuasive argument that warrants
a departure from our prior ruling. Accordingly, we conclude as a matter of law that
federal law, including the securities regulations cited by PPL, do not preempt or
conflict with Treasurer’s authority to compel production of PPL’s shareholder records
and audit them to verify their accuracy.
             Thus, PPL’s Fifth New Matter is also dismissed/stricken for this reason,
in addition to the reasons stated in resolution of the second issue.

                                   III.    Conclusion
             Based on the foregoing, we grant Treasurer’s Application and its request
for determinations of law, specifically that (1) Treasurer possesses the statutory
authority to direct the production of unclaimed property records in electronic format;
(2) Treasurer possesses the statutory authority to verify the accuracy of PPL’s
shareholder record using software analytics; and (3) federal law does not preempt
Treasurer’s authority to compel production of PPL’s shareholder records and audit
them to ensure their accuracy. Based on these legal determinations, the corresponding
and incompatible averments in PPL’s Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth New Matters are hereby
stricken. However, for reasons explained, the Fifth New Matter is preserved to the
limited extent that subsections (a) and (c) dispute Treasurer’s power to make alterations
and actually make corrections to PPL’s official shareholder records themselves.
                                            _______________________________
                                            PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge

                                            18
              IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Stacy L. Garrity,                          :
in her official capacity as the            :
Treasurer of the Commonwealth,             :
                    Plaintiff              :    No. 272 M.D. 2019
                                           :
              v.                           :
                                           :
PPL Corporation,                           :
                    Defendant              :

                                       ORDER

              AND NOW, this 23rd day of June, 2023, in accordance with the
foregoing Opinion, Treasurer’s Application for Partial Summary Relief in the Nature
of a Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings, requesting determinations of law,
specifically that: (1) Stacy L. Garrity (Treasurer) possesses the statutory authority to
direct the production of unclaimed property records in electronic format, (2)
Treasurer possesses the statutory authority to verify the accuracy of PPL
Corporation’s (PPL) shareholder records using software analytics, and (3) federal
law does not preempt Treasurer’s authority to compel production of PPL’s
shareholder records and audit them to ensure their accuracy, is GRANTED. Based
on these legal determinations, the corresponding and incompatible averments in
PPL’s Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth New Matters are hereby DISMISSED/STRICKEN.
For the reasons stated in the Opinion, PPL’s Fifth New Matter is preserved only to
the limited extent that subsections (a) and (c) dispute Treasurer’s power to make
alterations and actually make corrections to PPL’s official shareholder records
themselves.
                                               _______________________________
                                               PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge