Department of Finance
Division of Unclaimed Property
PROPOSED
PUBLIC NOTICE
Regulation on Practices and Procedures for Appeals of Determinations of the Audit Manager
NATURE OF PROCEEDINGS; SYNOPSIS OF THE SUBJECT AND SUBSTANCE OF THE PROPOSED REGULATION
In accordance with procedures set forth in 29 Del.C., Ch. 11, Subch. III and 29 Del.C., Ch. 101, the Department of Finance is proposing to adopt a regulation on practices and procedures for appeals of determinations of the Audit Manager as described in 12 Del.C. §1156. The proposed regulation sets forth the rules governing practices and procedures for those appeals.
STATUTORY BASIS AND LEGAL AUTHORITY TO ACT
12 Del.C. §1154; 12 Del.C. §1156; 12 Del.C. §1208.
OTHER REGULATIONS AFFECTED
None.
HOW TO COMMENT ON THE PROPOSED REGULATION
Members of the public may receive a copy of the proposed regulation at no charge by United States Mail by writing or calling Mr. Mark Udinski, Department of Finance, Escheator of the State of Delaware, Carvel State Building, 820 North French Street, P.O. Box 8763, Wilmington, Delaware 19899-8763, phone (302) 577-8260, or facsimile (302) 577-8565. Members of the public may present written comments on the proposed regulation by submitting such written comments to Mr. Mark Udinski at the address of the Delaware Department of Finance as set forth above. Written comments must be received on or before January 31, 2012.
Regulation on Practices and Procedures for Appeals of Determinations of the Audit Manager
1.1 Unless otherwise provided, these Rules of Practice govern appeals to the Secretary of Finance of any determination by the Audit Manager brought under 12 Del.C. §1156.
1.2 For purposes of these rules: (1) any term in the singular includes the plural, and any term in the plural includes the singular, if such use would be appropriate; and (2) any use of a masculine, feminine, or neuter gender encompasses such other genders as would be appropriate.
2.1 In any appeal, a person may be represented by an attorney at law admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of the State of Delaware. Attorneys who are not so admitted must apply for admission pro hac vice through Rule 2.2 below.
2.2 Pursuant to Rule 72(a) of the Delaware Supreme Court Rules, attorneys who are not members of the Delaware Bar may be admitted pro hac vice in an appeal in the discretion of the independent reviewer upon written motion by a member of the Delaware Bar who maintains an office in this State for the practice of law ("Delaware Counsel"). Pursuant to Delaware Supreme Court Rule 72(c), Delaware Counsel for any party shall appear in the matter for which admission pro hac vice is filed and shall sign or receive service of all notices, orders, pleadings or other papers filed in the matter and shall attend all proceedings before the independent reviewer, unless excused by the independent reviewer.
2.3 Designation of address for service; notice of appearance; withdrawal.
2.3.1 When an attorney first makes any filing or otherwise appears in a representative capacity before an independent reviewer in an appeal, he or she shall file with the independent reviewer, and keep current, a written notice of appearance stating the name of the appeal; the attorney's name, bar identification number, business address, telephone number, and electronic mail address; and the name and address of the person or persons represented.
2.3.2 Withdrawal by any attorney shall be permitted only by written order of the independent reviewer. A motion seeking leave to withdraw shall state with specificity the reason for such withdrawal.
If a holder timely files a written notice of appeal with the Secretary of Finance of a determination of the Audit Manager, the Secretary of Finance shall designate a qualified person to act as the independent reviewer in a particular appeal, or indefinitely until the authority is transferred. If no independent reviewer has been generally designated, the Audit Manager shall give notice to the Secretary of Finance requesting the appointment of an independent reviewer for the particular appeal.
If at any time an independent reviewer believes himself or herself to be disqualified from considering an appeal, the independent reviewer shall issue a notice stating that he or she is withdrawing from the appeal and setting forth the reasons therefor.
5.1 No party to an appeal, or counsel to or representative of a party to an appeal, shall make or knowingly cause to be made an ex parte communication relevant to the merits of that appeal to the independent reviewer.
5.2 No independent reviewer with respect to an appeal shall make or knowingly cause to be made to a party to that appeal, or counsel to a party to that appeal, an ex parte communication relevant to the merits of that appeal.
6.1 Generally. Unless made during a hearing or conference, a motion shall be in writing, shall state with particularity the grounds therefor, shall set forth the relief or order sought, and shall be accompanied by a written brief of the points and authorities relied upon and a proposed order. All written motions shall be served in accordance with Rule 7.0, be filed in accordance with Rule 8.0, meet the requirements of Rule 9.0, and be signed in accordance with Rule 10.0. The independent reviewer may order that an oral motion be submitted in writing. No oral argument shall be heard on any motion unless the independent reviewer otherwise directs.
6.2 Opposing and reply briefs. Briefs in opposition to a motion shall be served and filed within 20 days after service of the motion. Reply briefs shall be served and filed within 10 days after service of the brief in opposition.
6.3 Length limitation. A brief in support of or opposition to a motion shall not exceed 10 pages, exclusive of pages containing any table of contents, table of authorities, and/or addendum. Requests for leave to file briefs in excess of 10 pages are disfavored.
7.1 Service initiating an appeal. At the outset of an appeal, the notice of appeal and any accompanying papers shall be served on the Audit Manager by certified mail, return receipt requested. The return of a return receipt signed by the Audit Manager is not required for service to be effective.
7.2 Service of all other filings.
7.2.1 When required. In every appeal, each paper, including each notice of appearance, written motion, brief, or other written communication, shall be served upon each party in accordance with the provisions of this section until such time as a notice of appearance has been served by counsel for the party or other person represented pursuant to Rule 2.0, after which time service shall be made pursuant to paragraph 7.2.2 of this section upon counsel for the party or other person represented, unless service upon the party or other person represented is ordered by the independent reviewer.
7.2.2 How made. Service shall be made by delivering a copy of the filing. “Delivering” means:
7.2.2.1 Personal service by handing a copy to the person required to be served; or leaving a copy at the person's office with a clerk or other person in charge thereof, or, if there is no one in charge, leaving it in a conspicuous place therein; or, if the office is closed, or the person to be served has no office, leaving it at the person's dwelling house or usual place of abode with some person of suitable age and discretion then residing therein;
7.2.2.2 Mailing the papers through the U.S. Postal Service by first class, registered, or certified mail or Express Mail delivery addressed to the person;
7.2.2.3 Sending the papers through a commercial courier service or express delivery service; or
7.2.2.4 Transmitting the papers by facsimile machine or electronic mail transmission where the following conditions are met:
7.2.2.4.1 The persons serving each other by facsimile transmission or electronic mail transmission have agreed to do so in a writing, and
7.2.2.4.2 Receipt of each document served is confirmed electronically or by a manually signed receipt.
7.2.3 When service is complete. Personal service, service by U.S. Postal Express Mail or service by commercial courier or express delivery service is complete upon delivery. Service by mail is complete upon mailing. Service by facsimile or electronic mail transmission is complete upon confirmation of transmission.
8.1 When to file. All papers required to be served by a party upon any person shall be filed with the independent reviewer at the time of service. Papers required to be filed with the independent reviewer must be received within the time limit, if any, for such filings.
8.2 Where to file. Filing of papers shall be made by filing the original papers or duplicates of the original papers with the independent reviewer.
8.3 To whom to direct the filing. All motions, objections, applications or other filings made during an appeal shall be directed to and decided by the independent reviewer.
8.4 Certificate of service. Papers filed with the independent reviewer shall be accompanied by a certificate stating the name of the person or persons served, the date of service, the method of service and the mailing address, facsimile telephone number, or electronic mail address to which service was made, if not made in person.
9.1 Specifications. Papers filed in connection with any administrative appeal shall:
9.1.1 Be on one grade of unglazed white paper measuring 8-1/2 x 11 inches, except that, to the extent that the reduction of larger documents would render them illegible, such documents may be filed on larger paper;
9.1.2 Be typewritten or printed in either ten or twelve-point typeface or otherwise reproduced by a process that produces permanent and plainly legible copies;
9.1.3 Include at the head of the paper, or on a title page, the title of the appeal, the names of the parties, the subject of the particular paper or pleading, and the file number assigned to the appeal;
9.1.4 Be paginated with all margins at least one inch wide;
9.1.5 Be double-spaced, with single-spaced footnotes and single-spaced indented quotations; and
9.1.6 Be stapled, clipped or otherwise fastened in the upper left corner.
9.2 Signature required. All papers must be dated and signed as provided in Rule 10.0.
9.3 Suitability for record keeping. Documents which, in the opinion of the independent reviewer, are not suitable for computer scanning or microfilming may be rejected. The party submitting the document shall have 10 days within which to provide a suitable copy.
10.1 General requirements. Every filing of a party represented by counsel shall be signed by Delaware Counsel of record in his or her name and shall state that counsel's bar identification number, business address, electronic mail address, and telephone number.
10.2 Effect of signature.
10.2.1 The signature of counsel or a party shall constitute a certification that:
10.2.1.1 the person signing the filing has read the filing;
10.2.1.2 to the best of his or her knowledge, information and belief, formed after reasonable inquiry, the filing is well grounded in fact and is warranted by existing law or a good faith argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law; and
10.2.1.3 the filing is not made for any improper purpose, such as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of adjudication.
10.2.2 If a filing is not signed, the independent reviewer shall strike the filing, unless it is signed promptly after the omission is called to the attention of the person making the filing.
11.1 Computation. In computing any period of time prescribed in or allowed by these Rules of Practice or by order of the independent reviewer, the day of the act, event or default from which the designated period of time begins to run shall not be included. The last day of the period so computed shall be included unless it is a Saturday, Sunday or State legal holiday in which event the period runs until the end of the next day that is not a Saturday, Sunday or State legal holiday. Unless otherwise specified, intermediate Saturdays, Sundays and State legal holidays shall be excluded from the computation when the period of time prescribed or allowed is 10 days or less, not including any additional time allowed for service by mail in paragraph 11.2 of this section. If on the day a filing is to be made, weather or other conditions have caused the designated filing location to close, the filing deadline shall be extended to the end of the next day that is neither a Saturday, Sunday nor State legal holiday.
11.2 Additional time for service by mail. If service is made by mail, three days shall be added to the prescribed period for response.
12.1 Each notice of appeal shall be in writing and signed by the holder’s Delaware Counsel. The notice of appeal shall specify in reasonable detail the matters in which the holder asserts that the Audit Manager erred in the determination of the protest of the holder, and any statutory provision, rule or regulation the Audit Manager is alleged to be violating or to have violated.
12.2 If the appeal consists of several claims, each claim shall be stated separately.
12.3 Upon filing of the notice of appeal, the holder shall within 20 days designate all evidence it deems necessary to include in the record on appeal. The Audit Manager shall then have an additional 10 days within which to designate all evidence he or she deems necessary to include in the record on appeal.
12.4 It shall not be necessary to include copies of any evidence as a part of the record if (and to the extent that) all parties having an interest in the outcome of the appeal shall execute within 10 days after the filing of the appeal a written stipulation that the evidence may be omitted as part of the record, in which case the stipulation shall be included as part of the record; provided that the independent reviewer or any Chancellor or Vice Chancellor of the Court of Chancery (as the case may be) may order copies of all or part of the omitted evidence to be filed as a part of the record at any time during the pendency of the appeal.
13.1 At any time prior to the end of the thirty days after the date on which the determination by the Audit Manager of the holder’s protest is mailed, the holder may amend the notice of appeal, after which period the notice of appeal may not be amended.
13.2 The holder may withdraw the notice of appeal without prejudice at any time prior to the end of the thirty days after the date on which the determination by the Audit Manager of the holder’s protest was mailed, but the holder may only re-file before the end of the thirty days after the date on which the determination by the Audit Manager of the holder’s protest was mailed. Otherwise the withdrawal shall be with prejudice.
14.1 Independent reviewer order requiring hearing. Upon the filing of the notice of appeal, the independent reviewer should promptly schedule an oral hearing on the appeal to be held, absent agreement of the parties, within 90 days after the date on which the Secretary of Finance appoints the independent reviewer.
14.2 Notice of hearing. Upon scheduling a hearing, the independent reviewer shall issue a notice stating the date, time and place of the hearing, and shall serve such notice on the parties.
15.1 Submissions generally. At least 5 days prior to the oral hearing date, or at such other time ordered by the independent reviewer, the holder and the Audit Manager shall each submit to the independent reviewer and each other a brief containing argument and referencing supporting documentation from the record before the Audit Manager or an explanation as to why such supporting documentation is not available.
15.2 Timing of production. The independent reviewer may modify the time limits for production of evidence set by these rules.
16.1 Oral Hearings. The oral hearing on the appeal shall be held upon order of the independent reviewer.
16.1.1 All hearings shall be conducted in a fair, impartial, expeditious and orderly manner.
16.1.2 All hearings shall open to the public unless otherwise ordered by the independent reviewer.
16.1.3 All hearings shall be recorded by sound, sound-and-visual, or stenographic means. The cost of recording shall initially be borne by the Audit Manager, subject to later assessment as costs against a party or between the parties in the independent reviewer’s discretion, and subject to confirmation by the Secretary of Finance. Any party may at its own expense arrange for a transcription to be made from the recording of any oral hearing recorded by non-stenographic means.
16.2 Continuance. Any motion for a continuance of the hearing date shall be filed as far in advance of the hearing date as practicable. Motions must be for good cause and state with specificity the reason for the continuance request. Any motion for a continuance filed within 10 days of a scheduled hearing is disfavored and will be denied in the absence of extraordinary circumstances.
16.3 Hearing procedure. In the hearing, each party is entitled to present its case or defense by oral argument.
17.1 Admissibility. The independent reviewer may consider all relevant evidence de novo on the record.
17.1.1 The independent reviewer may make reference to and be guided by the Delaware Uniform Rules of Evidence. Notwithstanding those rules, the independent reviewer may consider any evidence that reasonable and prudent individuals would commonly accept in the conduct of their affairs, and give probative effect to that evidence.
17.1.2 Evidence may not be excluded solely on the ground that it is hearsay, but the weight to be given to any such evidence is subject to the independent reviewer’s discretion.
17.2 Objections. Objections to the admission or exclusion of evidence must be made on the record and shall be in short form, stating the grounds relied upon.
18.1 At the discretion of the independent reviewer, the parties may be ordered to file proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, or post-hearing briefs, or both. The independent reviewer may order that such proposed findings and conclusions be filed together with, or as part of, post-hearing briefs.
18.2 Proposed findings of fact or other statements of fact in briefs shall be supported by specific references to the record.
18.3 In any case in which the independent reviewer has ordered the filing of proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, or post-hearing briefs, the independent reviewer shall, after consultation with the parties, prescribe the period within which proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law and/or post-hearing briefs are to be filed. The period shall be reasonable under all the circumstances but the total period allowed for the filing of post-hearing submissions shall not exceed 30 days after the conclusion of the hearing unless the independent reviewer permits a different period and sets forth in an order the reasons why a longer period is necessary.
18.4 Unless the independent reviewer orders otherwise, no post-hearing submission shall exceed 25 pages, exclusive of cover sheets, tables of contents and tables of authorities, and exclusive of the evidence in the record to which the post-hearing submission refers.
19.1 In any appeal in which a hearing is held, the independent reviewer shall issue a written decision. The decision shall be submitted to the Secretary of Finance within 90 days after the last day of the hearing or the filing of any post-hearing submission, whichever is later. The decision shall include: (i) a brief summary of the evidence; (ii) findings of fact based on the evidence; (iii) conclusions of law; and (iv) an assessment of costs, including the independent reviewer’s fee, against a party or between the parties in the independent reviewer’s discretion.
19.2 The Secretary of Finance may adopt or reject the independent reviewer’s decision in whole or in part. If the Secretary of Finance modifies or rejects, in whole or in part, the decision of the independent reviewer, the Secretary of Finance shall issue a determination in writing setting forth the basis of any rejection or modification of the independent reviewer’s decision.
A party’s failure to appear at a hearing that has been duly noticed shall not be cause to continue the hearing. If the independent reviewer so orders, the hearing shall proceed in the party’s absence, which shall be noted in the record.
If a party, or counsel to a party, engages in conduct in violation of an order of the independent reviewer, or other disruptive conduct during an oral hearing, the independent reviewer may impose non-monetary sanctions therefor, including the issuance of an order: (i) excluding the party and/or his or her counsel from any further participation in the hearing; (ii) striking briefs from the record; (iii) providing that certain facts shall be taken to be established for purposes of the appeal; or (iv) providing for such other relief as is just and equitable under the circumstances.
22.1 Any holder aggrieved by a final determination of the Secretary of Finance may file an appeal to the Court of Chancery. A copy of the notice of appeal shall be promptly filed with the Secretary of Finance.
22.2 Upon the filing of an appeal to the Court of Chancery, the administrative record shall be filed with the Court in accordance with Court of Chancery Rule 72.
22.3 Any party that files an appeal to the Court of Chancery shall be responsible for filing with the Court in a timely manner the transcript of that portion of the appeal in which error allegedly occurred. Each party on appeal shall bear his, her or its own costs of transcription.