Nissan investigates claims CEO put deputy under surveillance
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[June 24, 2023] By
Daniel Leussink, Norihiko Shirouzu and Maki Shiraki
TOKYO (Reuters) - Nissan has launched an investigation into claims by a
senior adviser that Chief Executive Makoto Uchida carried out
surveillance of his deputy Ashwani Gupta, four people with direct
knowledge of the matter said.
The surveillance claims, first reported by the Financial Times, were
made by Hari Nada, 58, a senior adviser at Nissan, in a letter dated
April 19 to the independent directors on the Japanese automaker's board.
Reuters, which has reviewed the letter, is the first to disclose its
specific details. They relate to the surveillance claims, a stark split
in senior management over Nissan's relationship with Renault and
concerns about transfers of intellectual property to the French
carmaker.
In the letter, Nada said Uchida carried out surveillance over a long
period. Nada said it was an effort to acquire leverage to remove an
executive and board member the Nissan chief executive regarded as an
obstacle to reaching a new deal with alliance partner Renault.
Gupta, appointed chief operating officer in 2019, had questioned the
terms of the revised agreement Uchida is looking to finalise with
Renault, according to Nada's letter and the four people with knowledge
of the matter.
Asked to comment on the surveillance investigation, Nissan said in
response to Reuters: "Independent third parties have been retained to
verify facts and carry out appropriate actions."
Nissan declined any further comment for this story.
Reuters was unable to determine who was conducting the investigation for
Nissan. It started in late May, one person with direct knowledge of the
matter said.
Nada did not detail in the letter how he knew of the alleged
surveillance of Gupta. Reuters was unable to confirm independently that
any surveillance took place.
HARASSMENT ALLEGATION
Under Japanese law, a company can monitor communications on corporate
phones and computers and investigate an employee's conduct outside work
in protecting its business interests, said Akira Takeuchi, a lawyer and
certified fraud examiner in Tokyo.
"In other cases, actions outside the company could be considered private
and investigation there could be viewed as excessive," he said,
emphasising that he was speaking in general and not about Nissan.
Gupta and Nada did not comment in response to requests from Reuters.
Nissan declined to make Uchida, its board directors, or other recipients
of Nada's letter available for comment.
Other recipients included Nissan's chief human resources officer, its
global general counsel, and head of intellectual property.
Nissan said on May 12 that Gupta, 52, who had been widely seen as a
candidate to become chief executive, would not be reappointed to the
board when his term expired.
Nissan announced last week that Gupta had chosen to leave the company on
June 27, the day of the automaker's annual shareholder meeting, to
pursue other opportunities.
Nada said in the letter that Nissan reviewed allegations about Gupta's
conduct in the week of April 10 and that he had been asked to resign. He
said he understood Japanese law firm Anderson Mori & Tomotsune had led
an investigation into the allegations against Gupta.
Three sources with direct knowledge of the matter said the investigation
was into an allegation of harassment against Gupta from a female
employee. The allegation was made in March and the investigation had not
been concluded at the time Gupta's resignation was announced, one person
said.
Reuters was unable to confirm independently the nature of the harassment
complaint, or any findings of the investigation.
Anderson Mori & Tomotsune declined to comment.
NISSAN DIVIDED
The previously unreported details of the letter underscore how five
years after the arrest of Nissan's former chief executive Carlos Ghosn
for allegedly hiding his income, among other financial charges, Nissan
remains divided over its ties to Renault.
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Ashwani Gupta, Nissan's chief operating
officer, speaks during a news conference at Nissan's Sunderland
plant in Sunderland, Britain, July 1, 2021. REUTERS/Phil Noble
Ghosn was dispatched by Renault in 1999 to turn Nissan around after
the French company bailed it out and became the driving force behind
a strategic alliance struck later that year, in which both companies
took stakes in each other.
More recently, after months of tense talks, Nissan and Renault
announced new partnership terms in February under which the Japanese
automaker would take a stake of up to 15% in Ampere, an electric
vehicle unit Renault is spinning off, and Renault would reduce its
43% stake in Nissan.
The automakers aimed to have a final deal approved by their boards
by the middle of the year, but that target has slipped to the end of
2023, two people with knowledge of the talks said.
Senior executives at the French carmaker, such as Chairman
Jean-Dominique Senard and Chief Executive Luca de Meo, had viewed
Gupta as slowing down or blocking the completion of the deal, a
person with knowledge of Renault's position said.
A Renault spokesperson declined to comment and said both executives
declined to comment.
Nada said in his April letter that he believed Nissan CEO Uchida had
overstepped his authority by making concessions and commitments in
what he called backroom deals with de Meo. Nada cited two cases,
both involving provisions relating to Nissan's intellectual
property.
A Renault spokesperson declined to comment and said de Meo also
declined to comment.
Anything Uchida discussed with his Renault counterpart would be
subject to review by Nissan's board with input from executive
committees, one person with knowledge of the deliberations said.
ANTI-RENAULT
In his letter, Nada also criticised Uchida for pressing ahead with
the decision to buy a stake in Ampere without establishing a
strategic rationale and called for an independent financial adviser
to review the deal.
Reuters was unable to determine if the directors had acted on Nada's
call for a review.
Nada's letter marks the second time he has squared off against
Nissan's top boss over the Japanese automaker's dealing with
Renault.
Ghosn had been considering a full merger of the companies before his
arrest in 2018. After fleeing to Lebanon to avoid trial in Japan, he
has repeatedly described the case against him as a coup by Nissan
executives, including Nada, who were alarmed by the prospect of a
merger.
Nada, who had cooperated with prosecutors in exchange for avoiding
prosecution in the Ghosn case, testified in the related prosecution
of former Nissan director Greg Kelly that he believed a merger with
Renault had to be stopped to protect Nissan's interests.
Nada is a member of two executive committees established by Nissan
in 2019 as part of a governance reform after the Ghosn scandal. He
said in his letter that one of those committees had been trying to
develop a rationale for Nissan's agreed Ampere investment, but had
been unable to provide anything credible.
Reuters was unable to confirm independently Nada's characterisation
of the Ampere investment review.
Gupta's sudden removal would serve as a warning to others perceived
as being difficult or anti-Renault, Nada also wrote.
(Additional reporting by David Dolan in Tokyo and Gilles Guillaume
in Paris; Editing by Kevin Krolicki and David Clarke)
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