Audit liability: will one size fit all?

As the UK prepares to sweep away its long standing arrangements on auditor liability, the European Commission is moving towards an EU-wide reform that will consign agreed liability to the dustbin

Written by Nicholas Heaton

The many different approaches to auditors’ liability among the EU’s 27 member states make harmonisation a thorny subject.

In the UK an auditor’s liability is based on a duty owed to the audited company and its shareholders as a body (although not to individual shareholders). But when the relevant provisions of the Companies Act 2006 come into force, for the first time in more than 75 years auditors will be allowed to agree limits on their liability to the companies they audit.

Any agreements seeking to limit auditor liability will have to comply with certain requirements, but, subject to these safeguards, the Act gives auditors and companies a great deal of freedom.

For example, any method may be used to determine the precise limit on an auditor’s liability – although any limit will be null and void in cases of fraud or dishonesty by the auditor.

The approaches most likely to be adopted are to fix a limit by reference to a specified amount or formula (for example, a multiple of fees), or to agree proportionate liability. If proportionate liability is agreed, the auditor will only be liable to the extent that it is responsible for the damage suffered, taking into account the fault of others.

Heterogeneous europe

The position in the other 26 EU states varies considerably. In some countries auditors’ liability is based in contract and some in tort (a non-contractual civil claim) and in others, like the UK, in both.

In some countries a duty is normally owed only to the company being audited, and not to third parties. In some, it is also owed to shareholders acting on their own behalf (for example, in buying or selling shares). In others, the duty is wider still and is owed to third parties such as banks. The law on when that duty is breached also varies.

In France, for example, an auditor’s duty is based in tort and is owed not only to the company but also to third parties such as creditors, banks and purchasers. French auditors cannot limit their liability.

The position in Germany, on the other hand, is quite different. The duty is owed in both contract and tort and the duty is owed to third parties only in narrowly defined exceptional cases. There is a statutory limit on a German auditor’s liability of ¤1m – or ¤4m for a quoted company. However, these caps do not apply for deliberate breaches of duty.

Four other EU states (Austria, Belgium, Greece and Slovenia) currently have a statutory limit on an auditor’s liability and a number of others allow a contractual limit on liability.

The European statutory audit directive, which came into force last year, required the European Commission to prepare a report on the impact of current national liability rules for statutory audits. Commissioners have since produced a report and initiated a consultation. The report also considers the impact of allowing auditors to limit their liability.

Perhaps the most surprising thing about the European Commission report is that it considers four options for limiting auditors’ liability and does not focus on whether, as a matter of principle, there should be a limit on liability at all. While it may be reading too much into it at this stage, it looks like the introduction of some sort of limitation is assumed.

Interventionist approach

Nor is there any mention of one of the key conclusions of a report by consultancy London Economics – namely, that the EU’s member states may require a degree of latitude to adopt an approach that fits their specific circumstances best. This suggests a more interventionist approach may be adopted by the EU than was initially contemplated.

There are still widely different approaches to auditor liability, and in particular whether it can be limited, across the EU. There does, however, appear to be an increasing momentum behind the introduction of limits on auditors’ liability. As EU internal market commissioner Charlie McCreevy said in November 2005: ‘Now that some EU countries already have limitations or are moving in that direction, we think the time is ripe for EU-wide action.’

While it is still early in the process, an EU law capping an auditor’s liability is now a real possibility. It is not yet clear what form this will take, but it seems unlikely to be a limitation of liability agreed between an auditor and the company it audits, of the kind just adopted in the UK, as this is not one of the proposals put out for consultation.

THE EU COMMISSION REPORT

The European Commission has recently published a report that seeks views on four different possible approaches to limiting auditor liability in the EU. The four options are:

● One single monetary cap on liability set at EU level
● A cap on liability depending on a company’s size
● A cap on liability depending on the audit fees charged to the company
● Proportionate liability.

Absent from this list is the option that the UK has recently adopted – namely, allowing companies and auditors to agree limitations of liability by contract.

This is not surprising when you consider that any EU-wide regime has to work in jurisdictions, such as France, where a duty of care is routinely owed to someone other than the company being audited (in other words, a party with which there is no contract).The ability to limit liability by contract would not, therefore, give the desired protection, and the UK’s soon-to-be-implemented contractual solution might not be viable on a Europe-wide basis.

The European Commission is currently seeking views on the four options. The consultation closes on 15March 2007.

Nicholas Heaton is a partner in Lovells’ professional indemnity group

Enjoyed this article? Help spread the word:

Comments

Reader comments for this story

Also Read

White papers

Related jobs

Spotlight

Find your next job

Find your next job
Salary Checker

Newsletters

Sign up here for the very latest news delivered to your inbox. Choose from the following options:

Search white papers

Search white papers

Have your say

Would rumoured Treasury moves to abolish stamp duty do anything to help the housing market?
Yes, scrapping stamp duty has been a long time coming
No, any move is far too little, too late

Job of the week

More finance jobs...

Your next job