
ENROLLED
H. B. 2764



(By Delegates H. White, Hrutkay
and R. M. Thompson)



[Passed March 8, 2003; in effect ninety days from passage.]
AN ACT
to amend and reenact section four, article two, chapter
thirty-three of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine
hundred thirty-one, as amended, relating to the subpoena power
of the insurance commissioner; setting forth requirements for
contents of subpoena; providing for subpoenas to be issued to
persons and to corporations; providing that pendency of
another action does not relieve a person's duty to respond to
subpoena of the commissioner; and providing that evidence
produced in response to subpoena and interrogatories are
exempt from the disclosure requirements of the freedom of
information act.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:

That section four, article two, chapter thirty-three of the
code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as
amended, be amended and reenacted to read as follows:
ARTICLE 2. INSURANCE COMMISSIONER.
§33-2-4. Authority to take depositions, subpoena witnesses, etc.



(a) For the purpose of any investigation or proceeding under
this chapter, the commissioner or any officer designated by him or
her may administer oaths and affirmations, subpoena witnesses,
compel their attendance, take evidence and require the production
of any books, papers, correspondences, memoranda, agreements or
other documents or records which the commissioner considers
relevant or material to the inquiry. The commissioner's authority
to subpoena witnesses and documents outside the state shall exist
to the maximum extent permissible under federal constitutional law.



(b) Subpoenas may be issued to any person and may require that
person, among other things, to:



(1) Testify under oath;



(2) Answer written interrogatories under oath;



(3) Produce documents and tangible things; and



(4) Permit inspection and copying of documents.



(c) Content of subpoena. A subpoena shall:



(1) Describe generally the nature of the investigation;



(2) If the subpoena requires testimony under oath, specify the
date, time and place for the taking of testimony;



(3) If the subpoena requires answers to written
interrogatories, contain a copy of the written interrogatories;



(4) If the subpoena requires the production of tangible things
or documents:



(A) Describe the things and documents to be produced with
reasonable specificity; and



(B) Specify a date, time, and place at which the things and
documents are to be produced;



(5) Notify the person to whom the subpoena is directed of the
obligation to supplement responses;



(6) Advise the person to whom the subpoena is directed that
the person may be represented by counsel; and



(7) Identify a member of the office of the insurance
commissioner who may be contacted in reference to the subpoena.



(d) For subpoenas to corporations and other entities, the
following apply:



(1) A subpoena directed to a corporation, partnership or other
business entity that requires testimony under oath shall describe
with reasonable particularity the subject matter of the testimony;



(2) An entity that receives a subpoena to answer written
interrogatories or to testify under oath shall designate one or
more of its officers, agents, employees or other authorized persons
familiar with the subject matter specified in the subpoena to
respond to the subpoena on its behalf;



(3) The persons designated by an entity to respond to a
subpoena on its behalf shall answer the interrogatories or testify
as to all matters known or reasonably available to the entity; and



(4) A subpoena directed to an entity that requires testimony under oath or answers to written interrogatories shall advise the
entity of its obligations under this section.



(e) Effect of other proceedings. The institution or pendency
of administrative or judicial proceedings against a person by the
commissioner does not relieve the person of his or her obligation
to respond to a subpoena issued under this section.



(f) Subpoenas for interrogatories and answers and requests for
production of documents or tangible things and answers propounded
and obtained under this section pursuant to an investigation are
exempted from disclosure under the provisions of article one,
chapter twenty-nine-b of this code, and are not open to public
inspection. The commissioner may not disclose facts or information
obtained from the investigation except as the official duty of the
commissioner requires.



(g) Nothing in this section prohibits the commissioner from
providing information or receiving information from any local,
state, federal or international law-enforcement authorities,
including any prosecuting authority; from complying with subpoenas
or other lawful process in criminal proceedings or other action by
the state; or from taking action as may otherwise be provided in
this article.