Title: Legal duties of the external auditor
1Auditing I Week 4
- Legal duties of the external auditor
- Duties under common law
- Professional duties
- Expectation gap
2Rights, Responsibilities and Duties
- Defined by 4 separate institutions
- Parliament (in statute law)
- Courts (in common/case law)
- Profession (APB for UK and Ireland)
- Other Regulators whose role is derived from
Statute e.g. FSA, UKLA..
3Statutory Audit Requirement
- Most audit work relates to companies (public and
private) incorporated under the Companies Act
1985 (NI Order 1986). - CA1985 requires that
- The Directors of all companies must prepare and
provide to all share and debenture holders and to
the Registrar of Companies a balance sheet and
profit and loss account for each financial year. - These F/S must comply with the form and content
set out in Schgedule 4 of CA1985 (s.226) and
present a True and Fair view of - State of affairs
- Profit or Loss AND
- Cashflow (where applicable).
4Statutory Audit Requirement
- NOTE
- The meaning of True and Fair is not defined in
legislation or by the courts but it is generally
accepted that to be True and Fair they must
comply with FRSs and SSAPs issued by the
Accounting Standards Board (ASB).
5Statutory Audit Requirement
- CA1985 also sets out
- Who may be an auditor.
- Who is responsible for appointing and
remunerating auditors. - How auditors may resign or be removed.
- Basic rights and duties of auditors.
6Statutory Audit Requirement
- Section 384 of the Act requires every company
incorporated to appoint an auditor. - Now relaxed to exclude companies which qualify as
small and with less than 5.6m turnover and 2.8m
balance sheet total. - Casual vacancy can be appointed by the directors.
- Appointed at general meeting or for first
auditors by directors until general meeting. - If none appointed the Secretary of State shall
appoint. - Section 236 the auditor shall make a report to
the members.
7Statutory Audit Requirement
- S 236 states
- The auditors report shall state whether in the
auditors opinion the annual accounts have been
properly prepared in accordance with this Act,
and in particular whether a true and fair view is
given. - S 237 states
- Proper accounting records are kept.
- Financial statements are in agreement with
underlying accounting records. - Right of access at all times to the companys
books, accounts.and entitled to require from the
companys officers such information and
explanations he thinks necessary. - Need to report if they fail to obtain
information. - Need to report if Directors emoluments, employee
information and loans to Directors are not
disclosed in accordance with Sch. 5 Parts V and
VI and Sch. 6 Parts I to III. - Information in directors report consistent with
financial statements.
8Statutory Audit Requirement
- Who may be an auditor S. 389 (CA 1985)
- Member of a body of accountants established in UK
and recognised by Secretary of State - ICAEW
- ICAS
- ICAI
- ACCA
- Authorised by Secretary of State with similar
qualifications. - Cannot be
- An officer or servant of the company
- A person who is a partner or employee of above
- A body corporate.
9Statutory Audit Requirement
- Who may be an auditor S. 25-27 (CA 1989)
- As 1985 Act.
- Introduced a regime for regulating auditors in
line with EU 8th Directive. To ensure that - only people who are properly supervised and
appropriately qualified are appointed as company
auditors, and that audits are carried out
properly, with integrity and with the proper
degree of independence - Need to qualify with one of the RQBs
- Need to register with one of the RSBs.
10Statutory Audit Requirement
- Audit remuneration S 385
- Power to appoint hence also to fix the
remuneration in general meeting. - however this power is normally delegated by the
members to the directors in general meeting. - Note To allow transparency audit and non audit
fees are disclosed in the notes to the financial
statements.
11Statutory Audit Requirement
- Removal of an auditor s.391
- Ordinary resolution required.
- Special notice given 28 days before meeting.
- Existing auditor has right to make
representations. - Concerning the facts which they consider should
be brought to the members attention. - Representations may be read out at the meeting.
12Statutory Audit Requirement
- Resignation of the auditor.
- Resign at any time.
- By depositing a written notice of resignation.
- Notice must contain
- Either a statement that there are no
circumstances connected with the resignation
which the auditor considers should be brought to
the members attention. - A statement of any such circumstances.
13Statutory Audit Requirement
- Auditors right to an EGM s392A 1985.
- The auditor may require the directors to
- Convene an EGM for the purpose of receiving and
considering their statement of circumstances.
14Auditors Statutory Rights
- Right of access at all times to accounting and
other records. - Right to require directors and employees to
provide information and explanations necessary
for performance of duties. - Right to attend any AGM.
15Auditors duty under common law
- Re Kinston Cotton Mill 1896
- London Oil Storage 1904
- Pacific Acceptance Corporation Ltd v Forsyth
(Aus) 1970 J Moffit - Underlies the Auditing Standards of today.
16Auditors duty under common law
- Pacific Acceptance Corporation Ltd v Forsyth
(Aus) 1970. - Need to conduct such examination as is necessary
to form their opinion and to take due skill
care in doing so. - Duties not confined to an examination of books
and records. - Pay due regard to the possibility of fraud.
- Make prompt and frank disclosure to appropriate
level of management of material matters
discovered during the course of the audit. - Report at general meeting.
- Paramount duty to check for him/herself material
matters, reliance on others is an aid but not a
substitute. - Negligence is not established by use of
inexperienced staff etc., but may be seen as
evidence of negligence.
17Auditors duties under professional standards
- APB Re-established 2002 replacing the one
established in 1991. - Part of FRC.
- Committed to leading the development of auditing
practice in UK and Ireland by - Establishing high standards.
- Meeting developing needs of users of financial
information. - Ensuring public confidence.
18Publications of the APB
- Standards produced serve 2 purposes
- Inform auditors about standard of work required.
- Help to protect the reputation of the profession
as a whole. - Three categories of publications
- Statements of Auditing Standards SASs (Now
aligned with ISAs) - Practice Notes (PNs)
- Bulletins
- Also Ethical Standards.
19Who is responsible for the accounts preparation ?
- Clearly the Companies Act 1985 states it is the
responsibility of the Directors of the company. - Research by Lee Tweedie (1975) Porter and
Gowthorpe (2001). - 25 of financial community and
- 25 of Non Audit beneficiaries
20Who is responsible for the accounts preparation ?
- Think the auditors are responsible for the
preparation of financial statements of a company. - Hence we have the
21Expectation Gap
- Mismatch
- between what duties society expects of auditors
and what it perceives it receives from them. - Because of this mismatch auditors fail to meet
societys expectations and therefore - Considerable litigation against the audit
profession and - Loss of public confidence in audits.
22Identification of the Gap
- Reasonableness gap
- The duties that society unreasonably expects
auditors to perform. - Performance gap
- The gap between societys reasonable expectations
and what society perceives auditors actually
accomplish. Comprising - Deficient standards gap
- Deficient performance gap
23The Gaps
- Reasonableness gap
- Should be cost beneficial for auditors to
perform. - E.g. 100 testing, newly emerging issues.
24The Gaps
- Standards gap
- Reasonably expected of auditors but not required
- Reporting material theft to appropriate
authority. - Corporate governance issues e.g. controls and
risk management reporting. - Performance gap
- Where the audit is performed below existing
standards required by the profession. - Detecting material theft
- Reporting to appropriate authorities
- Going concern reporting
- Liability gap
- Where the public does not know to whom an auditor
is legally responsible.
25Closing the gap
- Biggest issue is narrowing the reasonableness gap
with better understanding of financial statements
and the audit report EDUCATION! - Better quality control should reduce performance
gap ISA 220. - Standards which embrace cost effective duties
e.g. corporate governance issues. - Monitoring by RSBs.
26Understanding financial statements and the audit
report
- Public perception
- Education
- More informational audit report
- Meaningful statements
27Closing the gap
- NOTE Since 1989 two reasonable but not required
duties have become existing duties - Reporting theft and other illegal acts by company
officials to appropriate authorities when in the
public interest. - Stronger going concern guidance.
- Also Anti-money laundering regulation.