Gilman v. Marsh & McLennan Cos., No. 15-0603 (2d Cir. 2016)

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Justia Opinion Summary

In 2004, an AG investigation focused on an alleged bid‐rigging scheme involving Marsh and several insurance carriers. Marsh's counsel asked two employees, William Gilman and Edward McNenney, Jr., to sit for interviews, but neither employee complied with the request. The employees subsequently filed suit against Marsh after the company fired them "for cause," and denied them unvested, deferred compensation as well as severance. The district court granted summary judgment for Marsh. The court concluded that the interview demands were reasonable as a matter of law because at the time they were made, the employees were Marsh employees who had been implicated in an alleged criminal conspiracy for acts that were within the scope of employment and that imperiled the company. The court also concluded that there are no triable issues of facts as to whether Marsh fired the employees for cause. The court rejected the employees' argument that they were let go routinely as part of a reduction in force and the argument that Gilman could not be fired because he had preemptively resigned. Finally, the court rejected the employees' contention that, in light of Marsh’s cooperation with the AG, Marsh’s requirement that they answer potentially incriminating questions amounted to state action, and was thus unreasonable. Accordingly, the court affirmed the judgment because Marsh had cause to fire the employees and they were not entitled to the employment benefits at issue.

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15 0603 Gilman v. Marsh & McLennan Cos. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT August Term, 2015 (Argued: January 13, 2016 Decided: June 16, 2016) Docket No. 15 0603 cv(L) x WILLIAM W. GILMAN, EDWARD J. McNENNEY, JR., Plaintiffs Appellants, v. MARSH & McLENNAN COMPANIES, INC., MARSH INC., MARSH USA INC., MARSH GLOBAL BROKING INC., MICHAEL CHERKASKY, Defendants Appellees. x 1 Before: 2 Faced with the prospect of criminal indictment premised on the actions of 3 two employees, a company demanded that those employees explain themselves 4 under the threat of termination. They refused, and were fired. The ex employees 5 seek to recover certain employment benefits they lost by reason of termination. 6 We agree with the summary judgment ruling of the United States District Court 7 for the Southern District of New York (Oetken, J.) that the company had cause to 8 fire the two employees for refusal to comply with its reasonable order, and did so. Affirmed. 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 KEARSE, WINTER, and JACOBS, Circuit Judges. DAVID I. GREENBERGER (Jeffrey L. Liddle, Blaine H. Bortnick, James W. Halter, on the brief), Liddle & Robinson, LLP, New York, NY, for Plaintiffs Appellants. JONATHAN D. POLKES (Gregory Silbert, Nicholas J. Pappas, on the brief), Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP, New York, NY, for Defendants Appellees Marsh. JAMES O. HEYWORTH (Andrew W. Stern, on the brief), Sidley Austin LLP, New York, NY, for Defendant Appellee Cherkasky. 2 1 DENNIS JACOBS, Circuit Judge: 2 Faced with the prospect of criminal indictment premised on the actions of 3 two employees, a company demanded that those employees explain themselves 4 under the threat of termination. They refused, were fired, and in this suit seek to 5 recover employment benefits they lost by termination. They appeal from the 6 judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New 7 York (Oetken, J.), dismissing their complaint on summary judgment. We agree 8 with the district court that the defendant company – Marsh (i.e., Marsh & 9 McLennan Cos., Marsh Inc., Marsh USA Inc., and Marsh Global Broking Inc.) – 10 had cause to fire William Gilman and Edward McNenney, Jr., for refusal to 11 comply with its reasonable order. Accordingly, we affirm.1 BACKGROUND 12 In April 2004, the New York Attorney General (the “AG”) began 13 14 investigating “contingent commission” arrangements by which insurance brokers We also affirm the district court’s dismissal of Gilman and McNenney’s claims for (i) abuse of process against Marsh and the CEO of Marsh, Michael Cherkasky, and (ii) misconduct against Cherkasky as an attorney, in a summary order filed simultaneously with this Opinion. 1 3 1 were thought to be steering clients to particular insurance carriers. Marsh, as one 2 of the brokers under investigation, retained outside counsel, Davis Polk & 3 Wardwell LLP, to conduct an internal investigation of the AG’s allegations. The 4 internal investigation included interviews with Gilman and McNenney in the 5 spring and summer of 2004. 6 The focus of the AG investigation shifted, in September 2004, to an alleged 7 bid rigging scheme involving Marsh and several insurance carriers. On October 8 13, 2004, two individuals at American International Group, Inc. (“AIG”) pleaded 9 guilty to felony complaints charging them with participation in a bid rigging 10 scheme with Marsh. In the allocution of one of the AIG employees, Gilman and 11 McNenney were identified as co conspirators. The next day, the AG filed a civil 12 complaint against Marsh for alleged fraudulent business practices and antitrust 13 violations. 14 The fallout from the civil complaint was swift and severe. Marsh’s stock 15 price plunged, a raft of private civil suits were filed, and Marsh’s directors, 16 clients, and shareholders demanded answers to the bid rigging allegations. 4 1 Marsh responded by expanding the ongoing internal investigation; on October 19, 2 2004, Marsh suspended Gilman and McNenney (with pay). More or less at the 3 same time, Marsh’s counsel asked Gilman and McNenney to sit for interviews 4 and warned that failure to comply would result in termination. Gilman was 5 asked to interview with a lawyer from Davis Polk as soon as possible. McNenney 6 alleges that he was asked to submit to an interview with a lawyer from the AG 7 and that he was told to do so without presence of counsel. (Marsh vigorously 8 denies that McNenney was asked to interview with the AG, let alone to do so 9 without counsel.) 10 On October 25, 2004, the CEO of Marsh’s parent company resigned and 11 was replaced by Michael Cherkasky. The same day, Cherkasky met with Eliot 12 Spitzer, then Attorney General of New York, to discuss the investigation. Gilman 13 and McNenney contend that the upshot of the meeting was that the AG would 14 forgo criminal prosecution of Marsh itself in exchange for its cooperation with the 15 AG’s investigation, including waivers of attorney client privilege and work 16 product immunity for information developed in the (expanding) internal 5 1 investigation. That day, an AG press release announced that a civil proceeding 2 would suffice to punish and reform Marsh, and that criminal prosecutions arising 3 out of the alleged bid rigging scheme would be limited to individuals. This press 4 release was widely understood to mean the AG would indict Gilman and 5 McNenney – as it eventually did. 6 By the time of the October 25 meeting and agreement between Cherkasky 7 and Spitzer, neither Gilman nor McNenney had complied with Marsh’s counsel’s 8 requests that they sit for interviews. On October 27, 2004, McNenney’s attorney 9 conveyed McNenney’s refusal to Davis Polk; Marsh fired him the next day. On 10 October 28, 2004, Gilman’s attorney scheduled an interview for his client on 11 November 2. But on November 1, 2004, Gilman submitted paperwork purporting 12 to effectuate an early retirement; later that day, his attorney conveyed Gilman’s 13 refusal to be interviewed. Marsh fired Gilman the next day, and did not accept 14 Gilman’s purported retirement. 15 As Marsh employees, Gilman and McNenney were eligible for some 16 valuable employment benefits. Under Marsh’s Stock Award Plans, they received 6 1 grants of stock options, stock bonus units, and/or deferred stock units, some of 2 which they could have been entitled to upon termination if (for example) they 3 had retired or were fired without cause. If, however, they were terminated “for 4 cause,” any unvested stock benefits were forfeited. Under Marsh’s ERISA 5 governed Severance Pay Plan, Gilman and McNenney were entitled to severance 6 if, inter alia, they remained in good standing with Marsh on their last day of work 7 and if their employment terminated (i) because they lacked job skills, or (ii) in 8 connection with a restructuring, or (iii) because Marsh had eliminated their 9 position. An otherwise eligible employee whose employment was terminated 10 “for cause” was not entitled to severance. Marsh took the position that it fired 11 Gilman and McNenney “for cause,” and denied them unvested, deferred 12 compensation as well as severance. 13 As relevant here, Gilman and McNenney sued Marsh to obtain the lost 14 employment benefits, alleging violations of ERISA, breach of contract, and breach 15 of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The district court granted 16 summary judgment in favor of Marsh, concluding that the interview requests 7 1 were reasonable, that Gilman’s and McNenney’s refusal to sit for interviews gave 2 Marsh cause for termination, that Marsh did in fact fire them for cause (and did 3 not breach the implied covenant), and that Gilman’s purported retirement was 4 ineffective. Gilman and McNenney appeal. DISCUSSION 5 6 We review the grant of summary judgment de novo, construe the evidence 7 in the light most favorable to the non moving party, and draw all reasonable 8 inferences in its favor. Noll v. Int’l Bus. Mach. Corp., 787 F.3d 89, 93 94 (2d Cir. 9 2015). 10 The first question is whether the demand that Gilman and McNenney 11 submit to interviews was reasonable as a matter of law. If so, Marsh had cause to 12 fire them and deny them employment benefits. If not, Gilman’s and McNenney’s 13 claims against Marsh for benefits should have withstood summary judgment. We 14 conclude that the interview demands were reasonable as a matter of law because 15 at the time they were made, Gilman and McNenney were Marsh employees who 16 had been implicated in an alleged criminal conspiracy for acts that were within 8 1 the scope of employment and that imperiled the company. The second question 2 is whether there is a triable issue of fact as to whether Marsh fired them for cause. 3 We conclude that there is not and reject the argument that Gilman and McNenny 4 were let go routinely as part of a reduction in force and the argument that Gilman 5 could not be fired because he had preemptively resigned. Finally, we reject 6 Gilman’s and McNenney’s contention that, in light of Marsh’s cooperation with 7 the AG, Marsh’s requirement that they answer potentially incriminating 8 questions amounted to state action, and was thus unreasonable. Accordingly, 9 Marsh had cause to fire them, as it did, and Gilman and McNenney are entitled to 10 11 none of the employment benefits they seek. I 12 Under Delaware law, which governs Marsh’s employment contracts with 13 Gilman and McNenney, “cause” for termination includes the refusal to “obey a 14 direct, unequivocal, reasonable order of the employer.” Unemployment Ins. 15 Appeal Bd. v. Martin, 431 A.2d 1265, 1268 (Del. 1981). Gilman and McNenney do 16 not dispute that Marsh’s orders that they sit for interviews were direct and 9 1 2 unequivocal. So the decisive issue is whether the orders were reasonable. When Gilman and McNenney were named as co conspirators in a criminal 3 bid rigging scheme for their conduct as Marsh employees, it was obvious (as 4 Gilman and McNenney themselves affirmatively argue) that the AG intended to 5 prosecute them criminally. At that time, Marsh had sufficient basis to act on the 6 allegations, made under oath in open court, and would have had cause to 7 terminate Gilman and McNenney, regardless of the ultimate resolution of the 8 allegations. See Smallwood v. Allied Waste N. Am., Inc., 2010 WL 5556177, at *2 9 (Del. Super. Ct. Dec. 30, 2010) (holding that an employer had “just cause” to fire 10 an employee for allegedly criminal conduct notwithstanding the employee’s 11 eventual acquittal on criminal charges). “When an employer, because of an 12 employee’s wrongful conduct, can no longer place the necessary faith and trust in 13 an employee, [the employer] is entitled to dismiss such employee without 14 penalty.” Barisa v. Charitable Research Found., Inc., 287 A.2d 679, 682 (Del. 15 Super. Ct. 1972); cf. Moeller v. Wilmington Sav. Fund Soc., 723 A.2d 1177, 1179 16 (Del. 1999) (concluding that, for purposes of claiming unemployment benefits, an 10 1 employer would have “just cause” to terminate employees if they had engaged in 2 illegal or criminal conduct). If Marsh had indeed fired them then, it would have 3 been for cause, and Gilman and McNenney would for that reason have been 4 ineligible for the employment benefits they currently seek. It is difficult to see 5 how their claims for benefits improved because Marsh instead gave them the 6 chance to explain themselves, and they refused to comply. 7 Marsh was presumptively entitled to seek information from its own 8 employees about suspicions of on the job criminal conduct. Marsh could take 9 measures to protect its standing with investors, clients, employees, and 10 regulators. Marsh also had a duty to its shareholders to investigate any 11 potentially criminal conduct by its employees that could harm the company. See, 12 e.g., In re Caremark Int’l Inc. Derivative Litig., 698 A.2d 959, 968 70 (Del. Ch. 13 1996). And as corporate officers, Gilman and McNenney had a duty to Marsh to 14 disclose information they had about the AG’s allegations. See, e.g., Beard 15 Research, Inc. v. Kates, 8 A.3d 573, 601 (Del. Ch. 2010). 16 11 1 Marsh’s demands placed Gilman and McNenney in the tough position of 2 choosing between employment and incrimination (assuming of course the truth 3 of the allegations). But though Gilman and McNenney “may have possessed the 4 personal rights to [not sit for interviews], that does not immunize [them] from all 5 collateral consequences that come from [those] act[s],” including leaving Marsh 6 “with no practical option other than to remove [them].” Hollinger Int’l, Inc. v. 7 Black, 844 A.2d 1022, 1077 (Del. Ch. 2004). “[T]here would be a complete 8 breakdown in the regulation of many areas of business if employers did not carry 9 most of the load of keeping their employees in line and have the sanction of 10 discharge for refusal to answer what is essential to that end.” United States v. 11 Solomon, 509 F.2d 863, 870 (2d Cir. 1975). Marsh had to use the “sanction of 12 discharge for refusal to answer,” id., because in the absence of an exculpatory 13 explanation, Marsh needed to assume the worst: that the bid rigging allegations 14 were true and that Marsh was vicariously liable for their criminal conduct. 15 16 Gilman and McNenney argue that the October interview requests were unreasonable because Marsh had already interviewed them earlier in the year. 12 1 This is nonsense. In the spring and summer of 2004, the AG was investigating 2 potential civil infractions involving insurance brokers steering clients to certain 3 insurance carriers. Come September, however, the AG shifted focus to a criminal 4 bid rigging scheme. Then, in mid October, Gilman and McNenney were named 5 as co conspirators in the criminal conspiracy and the AG filed a civil complaint 6 against Marsh in which Gilman and McNenney were named. Circumstances had 7 altered and stakes were raised. There is no reason to believe the October 8 interviews would have been duplicative of the earlier interviews; and even if all 9 Marsh sought was updated reassurance, the demand for interviews would have 10 been reasonable. No doctrine limits a company’s inquiries as to allegations of 11 employee misconduct. 12 Gilman and McNenney also argue that the interviews were intended to 13 produce incriminating evidence that Marsh could turn over to the AG to assist in 14 the looming prosecution of Gilman and McNenney, and that Marsh did that as 15 quid pro quo to save itself from criminal prosecution by the AG. But this 16 argument ignores the incontestable fact that Marsh’s interview requests predated 13 1 Cherkasky’s October 25 meeting with Spitzer in which (Gilman and McNenney 2 contend) the AG agreed not to prosecute Marsh, and Marsh agreed to waive 3 attorney client privilege and work product immunity. 4 Given the circumstances, Marsh’s demand that Gilman and McNenney 5 explain themselves in an interview under the penalty of termination was 6 unassailable, even routine. It did what any other company would do, and 7 (arguably) what any company should do. Marsh’s interview demands were 8 reasonable and it had cause to fire Gilman and McNenney for refusing to comply. 9 II 10 There is no genuine issue of material fact that Marsh fired Gilman and 11 McNenney for their refusal to cooperate. It was objectively plain (and no witness 12 has denied being aware) that the failure of Gilman or McNenney to comply with 13 the interview requests would result in termination. Therefore, it was no surprise 14 that each was fired the day after Marsh was notified of his refusal. Gilman and 15 McNenney nevertheless posit that they may have been fired as part of a 16 reduction in force or restructuring, which (if so) would entitle them to severance. 14 1 Gilman and McNenney fail to proffer evidence in support, and certainly create no 2 triable issue of fact on this question. 3 Gilman also argues that he successfully pulled off what disgruntled 4 employees eventually tell their employers: “You can’t fire me; I quit.” However, 5 Delaware courts “read a contract as a whole and . . . will give each provision and 6 term effect, so as not to render any part of the contract . . . meaningless or 7 illusory.” Osborn ex rel. Osborn v. Kemp, 991 A.2d 1153, 1159 (Del. 2010) 8 (internal quotation marks omitted). The definitions of “cause” in the Stock 9 Award and Severance Plans would be rendered “meaningless or illusory” if an 10 employee could preempt a known, imminent, for cause termination with a 11 voluntary retirement, and thereby reap all of the benefits of being a faithful 12 employee.2 The Severance Plan defines “cause” as including “insubordination,” “willful misconduct,” “failure to comply with [Marsh] policies or guidelines,” and “commission of an act rising to the level of a crime.” The Stock Award Plans governing stock bonus units and deferred stock units define “cause” as including “willful misconduct in the performance of the employee’s duties,” “continued failure after notice, or refusal, to perform the duties of the employee,” “breach of fiduciary duty or breach of trust,” and “any other action likely to bring substantial discredit to [Marsh].” To the extent this footnote (or any other record citation in this opinion) is drawn from the sealed appendix, the sealed material that is referenced is hereby deemed 2 15 1 There is no genuine dispute that Gilman filed his retirement papers in 2 direct response to Marsh’s (reasonable) interview request, or that Gilman would 3 be fired immediately if he did not comply with Marsh’s (reasonable) interview 4 request. Marsh’s internal investigators tried for weeks to schedule Gilman for an 5 interview; they were finally able to pin him down for November 2; and just the 6 day before, Gilman faxed retirement paperwork to Marsh. Coincidence is not that 7 convenient. 8 9 For the same reasons, Gilman’s and McNenney’s argument that Marsh breached its duty of good faith and fair dealing also fails. Delaware law implies a 10 “covenant of good faith and fair dealing” in every contract, which “requires a 11 party in a contractual relationship to refrain from arbitrary or unreasonable 12 conduct which has the effect of preventing the other party to the contract from 13 receiving the fruits of the bargain.” Dunlap v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 878 14 A.2d 434, 441 42 (Del. 2005) (internal quotation marks omitted). But the conduct 15 complained of here – Marsh’s interview requests and subsequent termination of unsealed. 16 1 2 3 4 their employment – was neither arbitrary, nor, as just discussed, unreasonable. III Gilman and McNenney argue that Marsh’s interview demands constitute 5 state action that infringed their right against self incrimination. This is “the legal 6 equivalent of the ‘Hail Mary pass’ in football.” In re Lionel Corp., 722 F.2d 1063, 7 1072 (2d Cir. 1983) (Winter, J., dissenting). They advance the following argument: 8 if Marsh’s request that Gilman and McNenney sit for interviews under the 9 penalty of termination is deemed state action (because of Marsh’s cooperation 10 with the AG), and if that demand and threat violated their Fifth Amendment 11 right, then Marsh’s request was unreasonable as a matter of law, and their refusal 12 to comply with the interview demands cannot support their loss of benefits. 13 The claim that Marsh was a state actor leans heavily on United States v. 14 Stein, 541 F.3d 130 (2d Cir. 2008); but Stein cannot support that weight. In Stein, 15 federal prosecutors were investigating potential criminal conduct by employees 16 of the accounting firm KPMG. Under a longstanding policy, the firm was bound 17 1 to pay the legal defense bills of its employees, and it was willingly doing so. 2 During its discussions with prosecutors, KPMG got the unsubtle message that, if 3 it wished to avoid its own indictment, it would have to adopt a new Fees Policy 4 and stop paying for its employees’ defense. We upheld the district court’s finding 5 of fact that this change was “a direct consequence of the government’s 6 overwhelming influence,” id. at 136, which would not have happened “but for” 7 the prosecutors’ conduct, id. at 144. In effect and in fact, the prosecution arranged 8 to strip criminal defendants of their chosen counsel by stopping at the source the 9 defense fees to which defendants were entitled by contract from an employer 10 willing to pay. The government’s influence in Stein was “overwhelming” in 11 several respects: KPMG’s “survival depended on its role in a joint project with the 12 government to advance government prosecutions,” id. at 147; “the government 13 forced KPMG to adopt its constricted Fees Policy,” id. at 148; the government 14 “intervened in KPMG’s decisionmaking,” id.; the prosecutors “steered KPMG 15 toward their preferred fee advancement policy and then supervised its 16 application in individual cases,” id; and “absent the prosecutors’ involvement . . . 18 1 KPMG would not have changed its longstanding fee advancement policy,” id. at 2 150. Since the government steered KPMG to adopt a policy it otherwise would 3 not have adopted, and then supervised KPMG’s implementation of that policy, 4 KPMG’s conduct was found to constitute state action. 5 Stein has no bearing on this case. Marsh had good institutional reasons for 6 requiring Gilman and McNenney to sit for interviews or else lose their jobs: the 7 company’s stock price was sinking and its clients, directors, investors, and 8 regulators were demanding answers about the allegations. There is no evidence 9 that the AG “forced” Marsh to demand interviews, “intervened” in Marsh’s 10 decisionmaking, “steered” Marsh to request interviews, or “supervised” the 11 interview requests. Nor is there evidence that the nature and scope of the 12 pending interviews were framed by the government, or changed after 13 Cherkasky’s October 25 meeting with Spitzer. The expansion of Marsh’s internal 14 investigation was precipitated by allegations advanced by the government, but it 15 is not a measure it would have forgone “but for” the AG’s influence. 16 19 1 Even if, as McNenney contends, Davis Polk sought to interview him 2 without counsel and with the AG present, that request occurred well before 3 October 25, and McNenney adduced no evidence that Marsh’s request for an 4 interview arose out of pressure or coercion from the AG. And Marsh, which 5 already had cause to fire McNenney, could presumably put additional conditions 6 on its interview request anyway, as it still gave McNenney fundamentally the 7 same choice to explain himself or be fired. 8 Gilman and McNenney invite us to consider that the occasion for the 9 corporate investigation was a criminal initiative by government, and that a likely 10 use of the internal investigation was that Marsh would offer up its findings 11 (together with the employees’ testimony) in the nature of a sacrifice to an angry 12 prosecutor. No doubt, Marsh was compelled by circumstances to conduct an 13 investigation (with expectation that any privileges attached to it would be 14 waived) and that one mighty circumstance was a possible prosecution of the firm. 15 But in the ordinary course, allegations of serious wrongdoing would provoke 16 such an investigation, whether or not the allegations were made by prosecutors 20 1 and whether or not the company itself was at risk of prosecution. The interests of 2 prudent directors alone would justify or compel such a measure. Stein is properly 3 distinguished because (among other things) KPMG had no institutional interest in 4 stripping its employees of their chosen defense counsel and KPMG was forced to 5 abandon a longstanding policy that it had decided to continue; it was therefore 6 found that government compulsion was the “but for” reason for the new Fees 7 Policy. 8 This is not a Stein case. This case is more nearly an analog of D.L. 9 Cromwell Investments, Inc., v. NASD Regulation, Inc., 279 F.3d 155 (2d Cir. 2002), 10 in which the government and a private actor, NASD, simultaneously investigated 11 certain stockbrokers for suspected criminal activity. The stockbrokers argued that 12 the Fifth Amendment protected them from complying with NASD’s demand for 13 on the record interviews (made on the pain of expulsion from their profession) 14 because NASD had become a state actor. As Stein recognized, the holding of D.L. 15 Cromwell is that there was no state action because NASD “had independent 16 regulatory interests and motives for making [its] inquiries and for cooperating 21 1 with [a] parallel investigation[] being conducted by the government.” Stein, 541 2 F.3d at 150. That is, “[NASD] would have requested interviews regardless of 3 governmental pressure.” Id. We arrived at this conclusion notwithstanding 4 “informal and formal sharing of documents and information between the 5 government and the NASD” and “the fact that the NASD interview demands 6 followed shortly after [the stockbrokers] contested grand jury subpoenas.” Id. 7 Gilman and McNenney urge that we adopt, in effect, this categorical rule: 8 acts that are taken by a private company in response to government action, and 9 that have as one goal obtaining better treatment from the government, amount to 10 state action. But a company is not prohibited from cooperating, and typically has 11 supremely reasonable, independent interests for conducting an internal 12 investigation and for cooperating with a governmental investigation, even when 13 employees suspected of crime end up jettisoned. A rule that deems all such 14 companies to be government actors would be incompatible with corporate 15 governance and modern regulation. See Solomon, 509 F.2d at 870. 16 22 1 2 CONCLUSION For the foregoing reasons, we affirm. 23

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