Media Advisory
November 30, 2006
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Contact: MATT KOVARY
(212) 382-6713 |
NYC Bar Association Urges
Stronger Role
For Lawyers in
Corporate Governance
In a report released today, the New York City
Bar Association urges strengthening the role of
corporate lawyers representing public companies,
recognizing that lawyers can play a critical role
in preventing corporate scandals.
The 190-page report by the Association’s
Task Force on The Lawyer’s Role in Corporate
Governance was issued after a 20 month study, including
a review of the public record concerning recent
scandals such as Enron and WorldCom. The Chair
of the Task Force, Thomas Moreland, commented:
“Lawyers did not cause any of these recent
scandals, and undoubtedly many potential scandals
have been prevented by strong legal advice. But
it does appear that at least some of these scandals
might have been avoided had lawyers been more assertive
in questioning management and more willing to bring
their concerns to Boards of Directors.”
The Task Force calls for a “new determination
by the corporate bar to play its proper role as
confidential advisor counseling compliance with
the law—and conduct exceeding its minimum
requirements—in a clear and forthright manner”,
and advances a series of recommendations to enhance
the effectiveness of both in-house and outside
corporate lawyers.
“The time to focus on this challenge is
now”, commented Association President Barry
Kamins , “and not after another wave of corporate
scandals creates pressure for increased government
regulation of lawyers, which might well be detrimental
to both the profession and sound corporate governance.”
The Task Force proposes that New York amend its
ethical rules for lawyers to permit them to disclose
to regulatory authorities, such as the SEC , criminal
or fraudulent conduct by a client company’s
management utilizing the lawyer’s services,
as well as clearly illegal conduct likely to cause
substantial injury to the client. Such a permissive
right to disclose would be recognized only as a
last resort, after the lawyers have been unable
to persuade the client’s Board to act.
This will be a “very rare event,” according
to the report: any responsible Board can be expected
to act whenever a lawyer, as now required by SEC
rules under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, “reports
up” to the Board “evidence of a material
violation” of law by corporate managers.
But in the Task Force’s view lawyers should
not be ethically prohibited, when confronted with
this extraordinary circumstance, from “reporting
out” the wrongdoing to protect the company
and its investors.
The Task Force report opposes, however, imposing
on lawyers any mandatory duty to report client
wrongdoing to the SEC . It states that such an
obligation would undermine “the confidential
nature of a lawyer’s relationship with his
or her client” and “represent an overreaction
to the recent scandals and a cure worse than the
disease.” The Task Force argues that it is
by rendering clear and confidential advice to their
clients that “lawyers can play their most
productive role in avoiding future corporate scandals.”
The Task Force report also advances a series
of “best practice” recommendations
for lawyers counseling public companies. The Task
Force views the role of General Counsel as critical
to maintaining a company’s high ethical standards
and compliance with the law. The Task Force points
to WorldCom and HealthSouth as examples of companies
victimized by management fraud where the General
Counsel appears to have been blocked by a dominant
CEO from effectively advising the Board. To strengthen
the General Counsel’s position, the Task
Force urges that the General Counsel i) have an
express mandate from the Board to promote a corporate
culture of integrity, ii) have ready access to
the Board whenever needed, iii) have regular meetings
with independent directors in the absence of management,
and iv) have ultimate authority over the hiring
and supervision of both in-house and outside lawyers.
With respect to outside lawyers, the Task Force
notes that today public companies often engage
outside lawyers only to provide specialized services.
In this context, it urges that lawyers make sure
they understand the context in which and the purpose
for which their services are requested. If they
become seriously concerned about management conduct,
the Task Force advises it is best practice for
outside lawyers to report up their concern to the
General Counsel, or the Board if necessary, even
if the circumstances do not mandate such reporting
under the SEC ’s rules. The Task Force also
advocates that law firms play an active role in
promoting ethical conduct by their attorneys. It
recommends model “reporting up” procedures,
and a statement of best practices, to further this
mission.
Because most of the recent corporate scandals
have involved accounting fraud, the Task Force
recommends that lawyers advising public companies
be actively consulted in connection with preparation
of their client’s financial disclosures,
and that lawyers advising on such disclosures be
familiar with the accounting concepts impacting
those disclosures.
The Task Force report also offers detailed guidelines
and recommendations for law firms conducting internal
investigations for companies, an increasingly common
mechanism for addressing corporate wrongdoing.
The report emphasizes that the investigating firm
should maintain unquestioned independence from
any accused wrongdoers so that the results of its
investigation will have credibility with regulators
and the public.
Concern is expressed about the state of “due
diligence,” especially in connection with
securities offerings by well-established companies
(such as WorldCom). The report notes that the time
available for due diligence by underwriters has
been severely curtailed by the accelerated offering
procedures now permitted companies under SEC regulations.
It urges the private bar, and its public company
and underwriter clients, to develop new techniques
to protect the investing public that are better
suited to the realities of the current marketplace
than traditional due diligence.
The Task Force takes a wait-and-see position
with respect to the controversial issue of whether
Congress should restore aiding and abetting liability
for conduct by lawyers (and other “secondary” actors)
found to have assisted corporate fraud. The Task
Force views consideration of this issue to be premature
until the impact on lawyer conduct of the SEC ’s
interpretation and enforcement of its Sarbanes-Oxley “reporting-up” rules
can be assessed.
The Task Force is comprised of 30 members, including
law firm practitioners, corporate general counsel,
law professors and government attorneys. Chair
Thomas Moreland is a partner at Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel
LLP.
About the Association
The New York
City Bar Association (www.nycbar.org)
was founded in 1870, and since then has been
dedicated to maintaining the high ethical standards
of the profession, promoting reform of the law,
and providing service to the profession and the
public. The Association continues to work for
political, legal and social reform, while implementing
innovative means to help the disadvantaged. Protecting
the public’s welfare remains one of the
Association’s highest priorities.
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