MARATHON PETROLEUM CORPORATION; Speedway LLC; Marathon Prepaid Card LLC; Speedway Prepaid Card LLC, Appellants v. SECRETARY OF FINANCE FOR the State of DELAWARE; State Escheator of the State of Delaware; Audit Manager for the State of Delaware
No. 16-4011
United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit.
Argued June 15, 2017 (Opinion Filed: December 4, 2017)
876 F.3d 481
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we will reverse the District Court‘s order granting Mathias a writ of habeas corpus and deny Mathias‘s application for a certificate of appealability.
Diane Green-Kelly, Esq. [ARGUED],
Marc S. Cohen, Esq., Loeb & Loeb, 10100 Santa Monica Boulevard, Suite 2200,
Jameel S. Turner, Esq., Bailey Cavalieri, 10 West Broad Street, Suite 2100, Columbus, OH 43215, Counsel for Amicus Curiae
Before: CHAGARES, JORDAN, and KRAUSE, Circuit Judges.
OPINION OF THE COURT
JORDAN, Circuit Judge.
Whether or not money makes the world go around, it is certainly the motive force in this case. Two Delaware business entities, Marathon Petroleum Corporation (“Marathon“) and Speedway LLC (“Speedway“) (collectively “the Companies“), may have a particular pot of money that the State of Delaware wants to take. The companies are naturally not eager to assist the State in that effort. They challenge Delaware‘s right to conduct an audit examining whether certain funds paid for stored-value gift cards issued by their Ohio-based subsidiaries (the “Ohio Subsidiaries“) are held by Marathon and Speedway and thus subject to escheatment. Their argument relies on Supreme Court precedent that lays out a strict order of priority among states competing to escheat abandoned property. Constructed as federal common law, that order of priority gives first place to the state where the property owner was last known to reside. If that residence cannot be identified or if that state has disclaimed its interest in escheating the property, second in line for the opportunity to escheat is the state where the holder of the abandoned property is incorporated. Any other state is preempted by federal common law from escheating the property. In this case, money left unclaimed by owners of the stored-value gift cards is—at least according to Marathon and Speedway—held by the Ohio Subsidiaries, and Delaware can have no legitimate escheatment claim on the property. Marathon and Speedway have therefore filed suit and argue that, under the rules of priority and preemption laid down by the Supreme Court, Delaware is not permitted to escheat the gift-card money. Therefore, the argument goes, the State must also be barred from auditing Marathon and Speedway in connection with the gift cards.
Delaware responds that the Companies’ preemption claim is not ripe because no action has been taken to enforce compliance with the audit and thus participation in the audit has been and still is voluntary. The District Court ruled that the dispute is ripe because Marathon and Speedway challenge Delaware‘s authority to conduct the audit at all. But the Court also concluded that private parties, such as the Companies here, cannot invoke the escheatment priority and preemption rules laid down by the Supreme Court, so it dismissed the Companies’ suit.
The District Court treated this case with due care and admirable skill but, in the end, we disagree with its conclusion that private parties cannot invoke federal common law to challenge a state‘s authority to escheat property. We also have a somewhat different approach to the question of ripeness. We see two ways to construe Marathon‘s and Speedway‘s arguments. Viewed one way, their claim is ripe; viewed the other, it is not. More specifically, to the extent the Companies are challenging Delaware‘s authority to initiate an audit in the first instance, the claim is ripe but
I. BACKGROUND2
A. Marathon and Speedway
Marathon and Speedway are Delaware corporations with their principal places of business in Ohio. Marathon refines, markets, retails, and transports petroleum, and also sells its gasoline through independently owned gas stations located in the Midwest and Southeast. Speedway is an indirect subsidiary of Marathon and
B. The State Escheator
Like the law of other states, Delaware law presumes the right of the State to lay claim to abandoned property. Carrying into the present the language of feudal property concepts, the exercise of that power is called “escheatment.”
The Escheator is permitted to rely on third party auditors to conduct an audit, and the vast majority of Delaware‘s audits are in fact farmed out to an entity called Kelmar Associates, LLC. Kelmar has a financial incentive to classify property as escheatable because it is compensated, at least in part, based on the value of property that Delaware is able to escheat.8
An abandoned property holder receiving the Escheator‘s request for payment may then choose among the following options: (1) pay the amount demanded; (2) pay and then seek a refund by filing an action in the Delaware Court of Chancery; or (3) refuse to pay and file an action in that same court.
C. The Audit
On March 31, 2007, the Escheator, through Kelmar, commenced an examination of Marathon and Speedway. At first, the audit concerned uncashed checks and
Another three years passed and, in April 2015, Kelmar expanded its audit to include the stored-value gift cards at issue now, requesting “extensive detailed information” about the Ohio Subsidiaries. (App. at 7.) Marathon and Speedway responded by arguing that, since the Ohio Subsidiaries were Ohio corporations, Delaware lacked authority to escheat any sums associated with the unredeemed gift cards. After having produced a selection of documents (including the governing contracts, articles of incorporation for the Ohio Subsidiaries, and W-2 forms for Speedway‘s Ohio Subsidiary) to prove that the Ohio Subsidiaries were incorporated in Ohio and had no property in Delaware, the Companies objected to producing any further information. Nevertheless, in October 2015, Kelmar sent a letter demanding further documentation. The Companies’ counsel then sent a letter to the State Escheator objecting to the requests and repeating the argument that Delaware lacked jurisdiction to inquire further. At the beginning of 2016, Kelmar sent another letter to Marathon and Speedway, this time threatening that “continued failure to provide the requested information will result in the Office referring the matter to the Attorney General‘s Office for consideration of enforcement action.” (App. at 48.)
D. The Lawsuit
Marathon and Speedway responded by filing a complaint in the District Court, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. They alleged that “any action by [the State] to enforce the request for documents is unlawful” because Delaware‘s escheat law “violates and is preempted by the federal common law ... by authorizing the State Escheator to claim purported unclaimed property that Delaware lacks standing to claim under federal law.” (App. at 34.) The Companies also asserted that the document requests constituted an unreasonable search in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
Delaware filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, which the District Court granted, though it rejected Delaware‘s argument that the case was not ripe. The Court held instead that the interests of the parties were adverse and that a judgment would be conclusive and of practical utility to the parties. More particularly, it noted that, even though Marathon and Speedway were “not currently the subject of an enforcement action, the aggressive and persistent nature of [the] audit, in conjunction with [the] letter threatening referral to the Attorney General,” placed them in the difficult position of facing a lengthy audit or the risk of large penalties. (App. at 13.) The Court acknowledged “the real and detrimental effects of the audit process” and the impact of con-
Turning to the merits of the preemption claim, the District Court concluded that the rules governing priority to escheat unclaimed property applied only to conflicting claims between states and not to disputes between a private party and a state. Therefore, the preemption claim failed. The Court also dismissed the Companies’ Fourth Amendment claim because there had been no compulsion to cooperate with the audit. Marathon and Speedway have filed this timely appeal, challenging only the dismissal of their preemption claim.
II. DISCUSSION9
This case poses several intertwined questions concerning Delaware‘s power to search for revenue by auditing companies and escheating abandoned property. The first, is whether, under the Supreme Court‘s rules of priority, private parties have standing to challenge a state‘s authority to conduct such an audit and escheat abandoned property. We conclude that they do. The second question is whether Marathon‘s and Speedway‘s challenge to Delaware‘s authority to conduct an audit is ripe, even though there has been no formal effort to compel cooperation. We conclude that the challenge to the authority to audit is ripe but that any challenge to the scope of this specific audit is not. Finally, we consider the merits of the one ripe dispute: whether, consistent with federal common law, Delaware can conduct an audit to determine whether abandoned property ostensibly held by Marathon‘s and Speedway‘s Ohio Subsidiaries is escheatable in Delaware. Before we delve into any of those issues, however, we begin with an overview of the governing precedent concerning a state‘s authority to escheat abandoned property.
A. Escheat Priority and Preemption
Every state and the District of Columbia has a set of escheat laws, under which holders of abandoned property must turn such property over to the State “to provide for the safekeeping of abandoned property and then to reunite the abandoned property with its owner.” N.J. Retail Merchs. Ass‘n v. Sidamon-Eristoff, 669 F.3d 374, 383 (3d Cir. 2012). But, “in recent years, state escheat laws have come under assault for being exploited to raise revenue rather than” to safeguard abandoned property for the benefit of its owners. Plains All Am. Pipeline L.P. v. Cook, 866 F.3d 534, 536 (3d Cir. 2017). Two Justices of the United States Supreme
Whether a state can properly escheat property is therefore often a high-stakes question. “With respect to tangible property, real or personal, it has always been the unquestioned rule in all jurisdictions that only the State in which the property is located may escheat.” Texas v. New Jersey, 379 U.S. 674, 677 (1965). Intangible property, by comparison, presents a challenge because it cannot “be located on a map.”
1. The Texas Trilogy
In Texas v. New Jersey, the Supreme Court took up the question of which among several competing states was entitled to escheat abandoned intangible property. 379 U.S. at 677. At least four states wanted the money that backed uncashed checks held by the Sun Oil Company. Id. at 675-77. Sun Oil, now widely known as Sunoco, was incorporated in New Jersey and had its principal offices and place of business in Pennsylvania. Id. at 676. Many of the people to whom the checks were issued were in Texas while others were in Florida or in parts unknown. Id. at 675-77. Texas sued New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Sunoco, and Florida moved to intervene.
The Supreme Court considered several possible rules to govern the order of priority among the states. Id. at 678. It emphasized the importance of adopting bright line rules rather than a test that would require case-by-case analysis.11 Id. at 679-80. Using the
Having determined which state had first priority, the Supreme Court then considered which state should have priority when there is no record of any address for the creditor, or when the “last known address is in a [s]tate which does not provide for escheat of the property owed[.]” Id. at 682. The Court concluded that in such cases the state of the debtor‘s state of incorporation would be entitled to escheat the property. Id. at 683. The Court acknowledged that the “case could have been resolved otherwise.”
In Pennsylvania v. New York, 407 U.S. 206 (1972), the Supreme Court considered in greater detail the situation in which there is no record of the creditors’ addresses. Pennsylvania sought to escheat unclaimed funds from money orders purchased within the state, and, naturally, it argued that “the [s]tate where the money orders are bought should be presumed to be the [s]tate of the sender‘s residence.” Id. at 209, 212. The Court acknowledged that “Pennsylvania‘s proposal has some surface appeal.” Id. at 214. Notwithstanding that appeal, however, the Court said that not knowing where many of the creditors lived did not justify a departure from the rule laid down in Texas: “[T]o vary the application of the Texas rule according to the adequacy of the debtor‘s records would require [us] to do precisely what we said should be avoided—that is, ‘to decide each escheat case on the basis of its particular facts or to devise new rules of law to apply to ever-developing new categories of facts.‘” Id. at 215 (quoting Texas, 379 U.S. at 679).
Finally, in Delaware v. New York, 507 U.S. 490 (1993), the Court rejected any efforts to loosen or change the priority rules by broadening the concept of a property-holding “debtor,” id. at 502, or by allowing the state of the debtor‘s principal place of business to escheat the property, id. at 506. The Court succinctly summarized the priority rules from Texas in three steps. First, one must “determine the precise debtor-creditor relationship as defined by the law that creates the property at issue.” Id. at 499. “Second ... the
2. New Jersey Retail Merchants
Applying the guidance given in the Texas cases, our opinion in New Jersey Retail Merchants Ass‘n v. Sidamon-Eristoff, resolved a significant question that had been left unsettled, namely whether the priority rules set out by the Supreme Court are exclusive. 669 F.3d at 391-96. In other words, if both of the two states empowered to escheat property under the Texas trilogy—i.e., the creditor‘s last known state of residence and the debtor‘s state of incorporation—are unwilling or unable to escheat the property, may another state attempt to do so? We said no.
In New Jersey Retail Merchants, a variety of sellers of stored-value cards brought a challenge to New Jersey‘s abandoned property law. Reminiscent of the law at issue in Pennsylvania v. New York, the New Jersey law contained a place-of-purchase presumption whereby, if the address of a purchaser of a card was unknown, the law would presume the address to be the place where the stored-value card was purchased. Id. at 394. After reviewing the Texas trilogy, we concluded that New Jersey‘s presumption was invalid because the State did “not have a sufficient connection with any of the parties to the transaction to claim a right to escheat the abandoned property.”
We thus expressly rejected New Jersey‘s argument “that[,] without the place-of-purchase presumption, [debtors] that are incorporated in states that do not escheat abandoned property would unfairly have the right to retain the abandoned property.” Id. at 395. We said that that “potential of a windfall” did not justify
The implications of New Jersey Retail Merchants for this case are clear. If it is true, as Marathon and Speedway allege, that the Ohio Subsidiaries are the holders of the abandoned gift card money, then Delaware cannot escheat that money even though Ohio has disclaimed any interest in doing so. And Delaware does not contest that conclusion. Indeed, it asserts that its law is fully consistent with the Texas trilogy and that it does not claim the right to escheat such property. See
B. Private Party Standing
The Texas cases involved states suing each other over escheatment rights. Not surprisingly, then, the language of those decisions focuses on resolving claims among states. See, e.g., Texas, 379 U.S. at 679 (“[W]e are faced here with the ... problem of deciding which [s]tate‘s claim to escheat is superior to all others.“). The Supreme Court did not have occasion to determine whether a private party has standing to challenge a state‘s application of the priority rules to escheat property.13 As a result, a split has emerged
Our decision in New Jersey Retail Merchants, has already said as much, albeit by implication. See generally 669 F.3d 374. The United States District Court for the District of New Jersey had rejected the State of New Jersey‘s argument that private parties were without standing to challenge the State‘s escheat guidelines. Am. Exp. Travel Related Servs. Co. v. Sidamon-Eristoff, 755 F.Supp.2d 556, 597 (D.N.J. 2010), order clarified (Jan. 14, 2011), aff‘d sub nom. Am. Exp. Travel Related Servs., Inc. v. Sidamon-Eristoff, 669 F.3d 359 (3d Cir. 2012), and aff‘d sub nom. N.J. Retail Merchs. Ass‘n v. Sidamon-Eristoff, 669 F.3d 374 (3d Cir. 2012). The district court emphasized that private parties have a significant interest in requiring compliance with the rules of priority. Id. at 598. If a stored value card issuer is incorporated in a state that does not escheat certain types of abandoned property, then that party is “entitled to retain the abandoned [property] when the address of the owner is unknown.” Id. at 597. Accordingly, any priority rules contrary to the Texas trilogy would “deprive[] corporations of the benefit of the secondary rule.”
On appeal to us, the parties in New Jersey Retail Merchants fully briefed the question of private party standing to sue for enforcement of the Texas priority rules. We affirmed on the merits, without discussing the question of standing or the right of private parties to bring suit, N.J. Retail Merchs., 669 F.3d at 400, but because the issue had been framed as a question of standing, our decision to address the merits certainly suggests that we accepted there was standing.
In any event, even if our decision in that case had not effectively determined that a private party can enforce the Texas priority rules, we would come to that conclusion here. In Texas, the Supreme Court noted that the escheatment priority scheme it provided was the product of a particular need. “Since the States separately are without constitutional power to provide a rule to settle this interstate controversy
Moreover, the Supreme Court has strictly applied its priority rules to prevent “intangible property rights” from “be[ing] cut off or adversely affected by state action ... in a forum having no continuing relationship to any of the parties to the proceedings.” Pennsylvania, 407 U.S. at 213; Delaware, 507 U.S. at 504. That concern for action by a state without a “continuing relationship” to the people whose property is at issue would make little sense if the Texas trilogy were solely concerned with the competing interests of states. After all, a state with a superior interest could seek to recover property even after it has been escheated by another state. See Texas, 379 U.S. at 682 (noting that a state escheating property under the Texas trilogy “retain[s] the property for itself only until some other [s]tate comes forward with proof that it has a superior right to escheat“). Additionally, one of the defendants in the original Texas case was in fact a private party, which strengthens the conclusion that such parties can sue to enforce the Texas priority rules. See Texas, 379 U.S. at 675-76 (acknowledging that the Sun Oil Company was a party to the suit and had asked “to be protected from the possibility of double liability“). It makes little sense to require a private party to wait to be sued by a state before that party can assert its rights. If private parties may be defendants in disputes over the priority rules when their interests are at stake, they by rights should also be allowed to sue for enforcement of the priority rules to ensure protection of those same interests.
In reaching the opposite conclusion, the District Court in this case relied on an earlier opinion from the District of Delaware, Temple-Inland, Inc. v. Cook, 82 F.Supp.3d 539 (D. Del. 2015). The Temple-Inland court decided that the ”Texas cases apply to disputes among [s]tates, not to disputes between private parties and [s]tates[.]” Id. at 549. It cited “the well-established principle that federal courts may not ordinarily displace state law,” absent clear indications to the contrary. Id. at 550. We share the Temple-Inland court‘s concern about turning ordinary matters of state law into questions of federal law. But without a private cause of action, the Texas trilogy‘s protections of property against escheatment would, in many instances, become a dead letter. Denying a private right of action would leave property holders largely at the mercy of state governments for the
Finally, allowing private parties to sue also provides secondary benefits that serve the public interest. In protecting their own interests, private parties may also be aiding states in the maintenance of their sovereignty. As we noted in New Jersey Retail Merchants, states are entitled to choose not to escheat property. They may well choose to do so “to incentivize companies to incorporate in their jurisdiction.” N.J. Retail Merchs., 669 F.3d at 395. Ohio could have made the decision to not exercise its power to escheat for precisely that reason, and Marathon and Speedway responded by choosing to incorporate their gift-card subsidiaries in Ohio. If Marathon and Speedway cannot sue, then Ohio is wrongly placed in a dilemma. It can either do nothing, allow the property of Ohio corporations to be seized by another state, and thus see the incentive to incorporate in Ohio being undermined, or it can engage in costly litigation to defend property it has no interest in escheating.16 Allowing private parties to sue thus provides a check against one state undercutting another‘s decision not to escheat.
Delaware argues against a private cause of action by saying it is unnecessary since a holder of abandoned property has no lawful interest in the funds. From the Supreme Court opinion that bears its name, Delaware quotes the Court‘s statement that “[f]unds held by a debtor become subject to escheat because the [holder] has no interest in the funds” and that “a law requiring the delivery of such [funds] to the [s]tate affects no property interest belonging to the [holder].” Delaware, 507 U.S. at 502. Delaware reasons that if a holder has “no property interest” in the funds, the holder does not need to be able to enforce the Texas prior-
But that is, at bottom, the very argument we rejected in New Jersey Retail Merchants. And adopting that position would leave us blind to reality. In this case, there are no records indicating where the purchasers reside. Ohio has disclaimed any interest in escheating abandoned gift card property. That means the Ohio subsidiaries are entitled to keep the property (assuming that they have it) unless and until someone holding a gift card comes forward to claim the value of the card. Delaware would have us shut our eyes and pretend that Marathon‘s and Speedway‘s very real entitlement to hold the property did not exist. There is no persuasive precedent counseling that approach.
C. Ripeness
Having decided that Marathon and Speedway have standing to raise their federal common law claim based on the Texas trilogy priority rules, we must next determine whether that claim presents a ripe “case[]” or “controversy[.]”
“[T]he contours of the ripeness doctrine” are particularly difficult to define “with precision” when a party seeks a declaratory judgment. Step-Saver Data Sys., Inc. v. Wyse Tech., 912 F.2d 643, 646 (3d Cir. 1990). Yet, as we recently discussed in deciding Plains All American Pipeline, 866 F.3d at 540, there are three key considerations that guide our judgment: “the adversity of the interest of the parties, the conclusiveness of the judicial judgment[,] and the practical help, or utility, of that judgment.” Step-Saver, 912 F.2d at 647.
Marathon‘s and Speedway‘s preemption claim is equivocal. Read one way, the claim is not ripe; read another way, it is ripe but fails on the merits. More specifically, to the extent the Companies question the scope and intensity of Delaware‘s audit, that claim is not ripe at this time. On the other hand, to the extent they argue that Delaware cannot even conduct an audit to verify the allegation that the abandoned property in question is held by the Ohio Subsidiaries, that is a ripe but meritless claim.
1. Challenge to the Scope of the Audit
The first variation of the Companies’ claim—focusing on the scope and intensity of the audit—is like one we recently agreed was unripe in Plains All American Pipeline. The district court there rejected the claim on ripeness grounds, Plains All Am. Pipeline, L.P. v. Cook, 201 F.Supp.3d 547, 559 (D. Del. 2016), and we affirmed, with a limited exception not relevant here.17 The reasons for our affirmance are fully present now. The Companies’ challenge is predicated on the speculative assumption that Delaware will ultimately attempt to escheat property that it is not entitled to escheat. But at this point, Delaware has not even formally demanded compliance with the audit, so Marathon and Speedway are “not yet in a place where [they] must choose between submitting to the audit or facing penalties[.]”18 Plains All Am. Pipeline, 866 F.3d at 542. And even if Delaware makes a formal demand for documents, “the costs of administrative investigations are usually not sufficient, however substantial, to justify review in a case that would otherwise be unripe.”
To be sure, Marathon and Speedway make troubling accusations about Delaware‘s escheat auditing process. And those allegations are supported by the thorough opinion in Temple-Inland, Inc. v. Cook, 192 F.Supp.3d 527 (D. Del. 2016). The court in that case noted that Kelmar, the State‘s contract auditor, had “relie[d] heavily on property escheatable only to other states to increase the amount of unclaimed property owed to Delaware.” Id. at 537. Accordingly, Marathon and Speedway may have good reason to be concerned that Delaware may claim property that it is not entitled to escheat, placing them “at risk of multiple liability.” Id. at 541. In addition, if Delaware‘s examination process proves in this case to be “a game of ‘gotcha’ that shocks the conscience,” id. at 550, as it did in Temple-Inland, then Marathon and Speedway are justified in their fear that Delaware will draw out the audit and continue to find new reasons for a prolonged investigation. And Kelmar‘s financial incentive to claim as much escheatable property as possible taints the entire process with an appearance of self-interested overreaching. Nevertheless we cannot ignore that, at this junction, Marathon and Speedway are effectively in control: they can simply refuse to cooperate.
We are also cognizant of the availability of state law remedies if Delaware does make a formal demand for documents. In light of recent amendments to Delaware‘s abandoned property laws, there are some unanswered questions that bear on the audit.19 As a matter of comity,
2. Challenge to Delaware‘s Auditing Authority
If one considers the Companies’ claim, as the District Court did, to be a challenge to Delaware‘s authority to conduct any audit at all, then this case is distinguishable from Plains. “[T]he adversity of the interest of the parties, the conclusiveness of [a] judicial judgment and the practical help, or utility, of [a] judgment” would all then favor resolving Marathon‘s and Speedway‘s complaint.
D. Delaware‘s Auditing Authority
Marathon and Speedway argue that Delaware has abused its examination authority and violated the Texas trilogy by conducting an audit into property that is not escheatable. In essence, they say that Delaware must take them at their word and cannot inquire into their books and records to see if the property belongs to them or the Ohio Subsidiaries.
We disagree. The Texas cases do not prevent Delaware from examining books and records to determine the true holder of abandoned property. To the contrary, the Supreme Court has noted that the first step in determining the right to escheat property involves a “determin[ation] [of] the precise debtor-creditor relationship as defined by the law that creates the property at issue.” Delaware, 507 U.S. at 499. By requesting an opportunity to look at the books and records of Marathon and Speedway and their Ohio Subsidiaries, Delaware is seeking information that it says will help make that determination. It is possible that once the debtor-creditor and parent-subsidiary relationships have been fairly examined, Delaware may determine that some portion of the property is actually held by Marathon and Speedway rather than the Ohio Subsidiaries and is therefore subject to escheatment in Delaware. At the very least, that is not
The Companies argue that Delaware is entitled only to look within the four corners of their contracts with their Ohio Subsidiaries but no further. (See Opening Br. at 42 (arguing that all that is needed is “simple contract interpretation.“).) Because the contracts state that the Ohio Subsidiaries are ultimately responsible for the gift cards, Marathon and Speedway say the case is closed. (See Oral Arg. Tr. at 10 (positing that “there can be no further inquiry” by the State after a contract is shown).) But the Texas trilogy does not stand for the proposition that states must ignore anything beyond the pages of a contract. “[D]etermining the precise debtor-creditor relationship,” Delaware, 507 U.S. at 499; may at times be a fact-based inquiry into whether the formalities of corporate separateness have been observed, not just in theory but in practice. Cf. Pearson v. Component Tech. Corp., 247 F.3d 471, 484-85 (3d Cir. 2001) (noting that the test for determining if one corporation is merely an alter ego involves consideration of a variety of factual questions such as the “nonpayment of dividends” or the “nonfunctioning of officers and directors“); United States v. Kayser-Roth Corp., 910 F.2d 24, 27 (1st Cir. 1990) (determining whether a parent corporation is an operator of a subsidiary by examining a variety of factual matters such as the existence of overlapping directors and officers).24
According to Marathon‘s and Speedway‘s rendering of the law, a corporation can avoid an audit or any other inquiry merely by setting up a shell company. All the corporation needs is a well-worded contract. And Delaware indeed alleges that some corporations have been taking exactly that route to hide abandoned property. See State ex rel. French v. Card Compliant, LLC, No. N13C-06-289PRWCCLD, 2017 WL 1483523, at *1 (Del. Super. Ct. Apr. 21, 2017) (discussing Delaware‘s argument that a number of the State‘s corporate citizens had “attempted to cheat Delaware out of its portion of unused gift card balances via use of out-of-state ‘shell’ enti-
Our decision today does not, however, foreclose the possibility that a state‘s demands for information may become so obviously pretextual or insatiable, and the record so clearly developed, that “it is evident that the result of [the] process must lead to conflict preemption[.]” NE Hub, 239 F.3d at 348. In such circumstances, “it would defy logic to hold that the process itself cannot be preempted.”
At some point, consistent application of the Texas trilogy‘s priority rules may require the adoption of a uniform federal standard for determining corporate separateness. Cf. Texas, 379 U.S. at 677, 683 (indicating that the priority scheme was developed as a matter of federal common law); United States v. Pisani, 646 F.2d 83, 87-89 (3d Cir. 1981) (crafting a federal common law alter ego test for determining personal liability under the federal Medicare statute); United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc., 440 U.S. 715, 728-29 (1979) (supporting adoption of a uniform federal common law rule when state law would frustrate specific objectives of a federal scheme, a need for national uniformity exists, and a federal rule would not disrupt commercial relationships founded upon state law). But that is an issue for another day. It is enough for now to note that there is well developed law on that subject under various state and federal precedents. The only question properly before us today is whether Delaware has the authority to dig for information about who, a parent or a subsidiary, is the true holder of escheatable funds, and the answer to that is plainly yes. The preemption claim brought by Marathon and Speedway is otherwise unripe and subject to dismissal.
E. Dismissal Shall Be Without Prejudice
Even though we agree with the District Court‘s determination to dismiss the preemption claim, we will nevertheless vacate and remand so that the Court can clarify that the claim is dismissed without prejudice. See Presbytery of N.J. of Orthodox Presbyterian Church v. Florio, 40 F.3d 1454, 1461 (3d Cir. 1994) (noting that dis-
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we will vacate the District Court‘s judgment and remand with instructions to enter an order of dismissal of Marathon‘s and Speedway‘s preemption claim that is without prejudice to it being revived at a later date, if appropriate.
James L. JOYCE, Appellant v. MAERSK LINE LTD
No. 16-3553
United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit.
Argued October 18, 2017 (Opinion Filed: December 4, 2017)
