A62 Jonathan HGabriel Misdirect
A62 Jonathan HGabriel Misdirect
A62 Jonathan HGabriel Misdirect
Citation:
Jonathan H. Gabriel, Misdirected - Potential Issues
with Reliance on Independent Directors for Prevention
of Corporate Fraud, 38 Suffolk U. L. Rev. 641
(2005)
Copyright Information
Mr. Bentsen: "Well, my time is up, but Mr. Chairman, it is like three blind
mice running around and their fingerprints are all over the place. The board
agrees to the parts and everything else. Either nobody was looking at the sum
of the parts or everybody was looking the other way."
Mr. Powers: "Well, we would agree that people were not minding the store.
I. INTRODUCTION
1. The Enron Collapse: Implications to Investors and the CapitalMarkets: HearingsBefore the House
Subcomm. on CapitalMkts., Ins. and Govt Sponsored Enters. of the Comm. on Fin. Servs., 107th Cong. 85-86
(2002) [hereinafter Enron Hearing] (statements of Representative Bentsen, Member, House Subcommittee on
Capital Markets, Insurance and Government Sponsored Enterprises, and William C. Powers, Jr., Director of
Enron Corporation).
2. Id.(discussing failure of corporate board's oversight function).
3. See infra notes 43-44 and accompanying text (outlining Sarbanes-Oxley Act's audit committee
requirements).
4. See infra notes 50-52 and accompanying text (discussing independent director oversight failures).
5. See Howard Witt & Cam Simpson, Enron's No. 3 Exec Pleads Guilty, CHI. TRtB., Jan. 15 2004, at C1
(observing Enron's impact on public confidence in stock market).
6. See R. William Ide, Post-EnronCorporate Governance Opportunities: Creatinga Culture of Greater
Board Collaboration and Oversight, 54 MERCER L. REv. 829, 830-31 (2003) (arguing congressional
impatience for action brought redundant legislation insensitive to federalism concerns). Prior to the WorldCom
Inc. debacle in June 2002, proposed Enron-induced reforms appeared limited to congressional accounting and
ERISA regulations, enhanced SEC disclosure requirements, and reforms by the self-regulated securities
exchanges. Id. When WorldCom filed for bankruptcy, Congress acted hastily in response to the resulting
political pressure, casting aside decades of "sound policy. . . of deference to SEC and state regulatory
SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY LAW RE VIEW [Vol. XXXVI1l:641
7
35,000 jobs and wiped out $1 billion in employee pensions. Enron's
bankruptcy alone represented a $29 billion loss to shareholders and former
workers, while the failure of WorldCom cost shareholders a staggering $200
billion.8 In each instance, corporate officers perpetrated frauds on company
shareholders and the investing public by falsifying financial
9
disclosure while
supposedly independent auditors remained complacent.
Prior to the Enron crisis, the steady rise of the securities markets over the
previous decade had reinforced public trust in America's corporate governance
system. 10 Largely the province of the states, corporation law generally vests a
company's board of directors with policy and oversight responsibility while
corporate officers manage the company's day-to-day affairs. 1 The breakdown
of the board and audit committee's monitoring functions at Enron and
WorldCom was an unnerving common thread 12
running through congressional
inquiries into those companies' downfalls.
In championing the cause of the American investor, congressional
committees focused their investigations primarily on the accountability of high-
ranking corporate officers. 13 This emphasis resulted in SOX's requirement that
prerogatives." Id.
7. David E. Rovella, Charges Unlikely for Top Execs at Enron, Worldcom, Will Justice be Served?, L.A.
Bus. J., Aug. 25, 2003, at 18.
8. Id.(providing Enron shareholders' loss total); Press Conference, Oklahoma Attorney General W.A.
Drew Edmondson, Criminal Charges Filed Against Former WorldCom Inc. Executives (Aug. 27, 2003)
(detailing harm to WorldCom shareholders).
9. See Enron Hearing, supra note 1, at 69-72 (prepared testimony of William C. Powers, Jr., Director of
Enron Corporation) (detailing conclusions of special investigative committee of Enron's board of directors);
Wrong Numbers: The Accounting Problems at WorldCom: HearingBefore The House Comm.on Fin. Servs.,
107th Cong. 1-2 (2002) [hereinafter WorldCom Hearing] (opening statement by Representative Oxley,
Chairman, House Committee on Financial Services) (alleging senior WorldCom executives doctored balance
sheets tohide true eamings performance). Once the fraud perpetrated by WorldCom executives was revealed
to the public, WorldCom's stock value plummeted. WorldCom Hearings, supra, at 2.
10. See Robert W. Hamilton, The Crisis in Corporate Governance: 2002 Style, Seventh Annual Frankel
Lecture at the University of Houston Law Center (Nov. 14, 2002), in 40 Hous. L. REV. 1, 50 (2003) (theorizing
rising security prices fueled widespread confidence in corporate self-regulation). At the end of the 1990s,
however, the fact that the SEC's corporate governance enforcement workload had grown beyond its staff's
capacity to investigate governance failures had not gained significant recognition, Id.
11. See, e.g., CAL. CORP. CODE § 300(a) (Deering 2004) (allowing board delegation of day-to-day
operations provided board ultimately directs business and affairs); N.Y. Bus. CORP. LAW § 701 (Consol. 2004)
(stating board responsible for managing business of corporation); PRINCIPLES OF CORPORATE GOVERNANCE:
ANALYSIS AND RECOMMENDATIONS § 3.02, cmt. d (A.L.I. 1994) (observing corporate boards serve general
oversight function, selecting officers and monitoring their performance).
12. See Enron Hearing, supra note 1, at 72 (statement of William C. Powers, Jr., Director of Enron
Corporation) (describing lapse of board oversight as one cause of Enron bankruptcy); WorldCom Hearing,
supra note 9, at 3 (opening statement of Representative LaFalce, Member, House Committee on Financial
Services) (deriding failure of auditors and board to protect shareholders).
13. See S. REP. No. 107-146, at 11 (2002) (stating congressional action necessary to deter corporate
malfeasors who do not fear punishment). Senators were cognizant that a majority of voters rely on capital
investments to achieve future financial goals. Id. They were similarly sensitive to the public's desire that
corporate malfeasance be punished according to the seriousness of the particular fraud, emphasizing that
federal sentencing guidelines failed to account for aggravating factors present in serious fraud cases that should
2005] PREVENTION OF CORPORATE FRAUD
result in lengthier sentences. Id.at 7. At the beginning of congressional investigations into the Enron collapse,
the criminal code's lengthiest imprisonment for securities fraud, absent criminal intent, was five years. Id.at 6.
Senator Patrick Leahy's report to the Senate Judiciary Committee concluded that Congress's job was to prevent
future Enrons and provide more serious consequences for such malfeasance. Id. at 11. During the questioning
of Enron Corporation Director and Dean of the University of Texas Law School William C. Powers, Jr., one
congressman could not refrain from asking for Mr. Powers' opinion on whether Enron officers could be held
criminally liable, revealing a legislative pre-occupation with accountability even at the preliminary fact-finding
stage. See Enron Hearing, supra note 1, at 76 (statement of Representative Castle, Member, House
Subcommittee on Capital Markets, Insurance and Government Sponsored Enterprises).
14. 15 U.S.C.S. § 7241(a) (Law. Co-op. 2003) (setting forth certification requirement); Certification of
Disclosure in Companies' Quarterly and Annual Reports, Securities Act Release No. 33-8124, 67 Fed. Reg.
57,276 (Sept. 9, 2002) (containing SEC regulation requiring certification pursuant to SOX), available at
http://www.sec.gov/rules/finalU33-8124.htm.
15. See 15 U.S.C.S. § 78j-I(m) (containing SOX audit committee requirements); Hamilton, supra note
10, at 50 (noting SOX reliance on enhanced oversight by independent directors). In essence, the SOX audit
committee requirements are not a significant advancement, but rather a federalization and extension of rules
requiring independent audit committees to be responsible for overseeing the audit process. Lawrence A.
Cunningham, The Sarbanes-Oxley Yawn. Heavy Rhetoric, Light Reform (And It Just Might Work), 35 CONN.
L. REv. 915, 947-48 (2003) (noting SEC approval in 1977 of stock exchange rules requiring "audit committee
responsibility and independence").
16. See Hamilton, supra note 10, at 50 (arguing independent directors have little incentive and minimal
access to information); see also infra notes 32-36 and accompanying text (detailing arguments devaluing
independent director contributions).
17. See infra notes 50-52 and accompanying text (discussing independent director oversight failures).
Proponents of relying on independent directors as internal watchdogs, such as the American Bar Association
Task Force on Corporate Responsibility (ABA Task Force), however, continue to argue that successful
corporate governance depends "upon the active and informed participation of independent directors ...who act
vigorously in the best interests of the corporation and are empowered effectively to exercise their
responsibilities." Preliminary Report of the American Bar Association Task Force on Corporate
Responsibility, 54 MERCER L. REv. 789, 796 (2003) [hereinafter ABA Task Force Report]. The ABA Task
Force notes that while management of company operations must Test with corporate officers, oversight by
outside directors is necessary to check officers' temptation to serve selfish wealth-maximizing interests. Id.
18. See James D. Cox, Managing and Monitoring Conflicts of Interest: Empowering the Outside
Directors with Independent Counsel, 48 VILL. L. REv. 1077, 1078 (2003) [hereinafter Cox, Conflicts of
Interest] (discussing high expectations for independent directors); E. Norman Veasey, State-Federal Tension in
Corporate Governance and the ProfessionalResponsibilitiesof Advisors, 28 IOWA J.CORP. L. 441, 444 (2003)
SUFFOLK UNIVERSITYLA WREVIEW [Vol. XX-XVIII:641
II. HISTORY
A. HistoricalState Dominance
20
Until SOX, corporate governance law was largely state-dominated. State
corporation law vests in the board of directors the responsibility to select a
company's management team and monitor its activities, assuring that proper
controls and procedures are in place. 21 State law does not, however, provide
guidance on board composition beyond the means by which directors may be
elected and removed. 22 Rather than providing guidelines for an ideal board
member's attributes, such as expertise or independence, state law generally
relies on the fiduciary duty owed by directors to shareholders. 23 Furthermore,
to ensure that corporate directors perform their oversight functions properly,
shareholders may use their power to remove directors where this duty is
24
breached. States suffer from a conflict of interest in formulating and
enforcing corporate law because their incentive to be management-friendly in
order to attract corporations and the tax dollars they represent often trumps any
desire to reform the governance process by reducing management's influence.25
(arguing Enron fallout and SOX deters qualified individuals from becoming directors): John C. Coffee, Jr.,
Sarbanes-Oxley Act Coming Litigation Crisis, NAT'L L. J., Mar. 10, 2003, at B8 (predicting audit committee
members face increased liability due to authority SOX invests in committee).
19. See infra notes 61-63 (analyzing outside directors' ability to prevent fraud); infra note 101 and
accompanying text (addressing costs of SOX compliance).
20. See supra note II and accompanying text (listing state treatments of corporate governance issues).
21. See supra note 11 and accompanying text (discussing general oversight function of board). Under
traditional governance models, the board formulates company policy on behalf of company shareholders with
corporate officers merely executing a course of action determined by the directors. See JAMES D. COX ET AL., I
CORPORATIONS § 9.1-.2 (2002). In reality, however, boards most often serve in a "legitimizing" capacity,
placing their stamp of approval on senior management's policy decisions. See id § 9.2, .4; Arthur J. Goldberg,
Debate on Outside Directors, N.Y. TIMES, Oct. 29, 1972, at 1 (remarking common board function differs
substantially from role originally contemplated by corporation law).
22. See Mark J. Loewenstein, The SEC and the Future of Corporate Governance, 45 ALA. L. REV. 783,
788 (1994) (noting state law silence on issues impacting value of director oversight). Most state corporate
governance statutes provide for shareholder election of directors, as reflected by the Delaware and model
statutes. See DEL. CODE ANN. tit. 8, § 211(b) (2004) (mandating shareholder election of directors); MODEL
BUSINESS CORPORATION ACT § 8.03(c) (1984) (containing requirement that shareholders elect corporate
directors).
23. See infra note 24 and accompanying text (discussing director's fiduciary duties).
24. See Loewenstein, supra note 22, at 788-89 (labeling approach as "legitimate" but "less than ideal");
see also MELVIN A. EISENBERG, CORPORATIONS AND OTHER BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS 169 (8th ed. 2000)
(noting state courts allow shareholders to remove director for cause without statutory provision). Professor
Loewenstein observes that the fiduciary duties of loyalty and care have eroded under state law and that
shareholders face substantial economic obstacles in removing a director favored by corporate management. See
Loewenstein, supra note 22, at 789; see also COX, supra note 21, § 9.2, .5 (commenting shareholders seldom
play effective role in director selection because management controls proxy solicitations).
25. See, e.g., EISENBERG, supra note 24, at 101-07 (detailing "race to the bottom" in competition among
2005] PREVENTION OF CORPORATE FRAUD
states for incorporations); Loewenstein, supra note 22, at 787 (noting "minimalist" approach of state law with
respect to corporate governance); Robert B. Thompson, Corporate GovernanceAfter Enron, 40 HOUS. L. REV.
99, 109 (2003) (describing corporation statutes' approach to corporate governance as "libertarian"). Delaware,
as the state of incorporation for over half of the Fortune 500 companies, not only governs a majority of large
public corporations, but also serves as a fair proxy on issues of corporate governance law due to the general
lack of variation between states on governance issues. See Thompson, supra, at 108-09. But see CONN. GEN.
STAT. § 33-753(c) (2003) (making Connecticut only state to require audit committee). Many believe
Delaware's laissez-faire attitude contributed greatly to the gap between the legal ideal of management
accountability to shareholders through the monitoring board and today's corporate reality, where most
management teams function unimpeded by active board oversight or meaningful shareholder involvement. See
Cox, supra note 21, § 9.3, .7-.8 (relating industry observers' frustration with state complacency in face of
governance problems). See generally William L. Cary, Federalism and CorporateLaw: Reflections Upon
Delaware, 83 YALE L.J. 663 (1974) (calling for federal standards of conduct governing public corporations);
Charles W. Murdock, Delaware: The Race to the Bottom-Is an End in Sight?, 9 LOY. U. CHI. L.J. 643 (1978)
(deriding Delaware's pro-management legislative tendencies).
26. See Loewenstein, supra note 22, at 788 (citing lack of state statutory requirements designed to ensure
boards perform oversight function effectively); Thompson, supra note 25, at 109 (noting statutory silence on
independence of board members).
27. See Cox, Conflicts of Interest, supra note 18, at 1077-78 (tracing increasing prevalence of
independent directors from 1970s to commonplace status in 1990s).
28. See Loewenstein, supra note 22, at 785 (listing various 1970s management abuses accentuating need
for effective board oversight); Joel Seligman, The New Corporate Law, Lecture at the Fifth Abraham L.
Pomerantz Lecture, in 59 BROOK. L. REV. 1, 53 (1993) (noting prominent 1970s audit failures and consequent
SEC pressure on NYSE to require audit committees).
29. See Thomas A. D'Ambrosio et al., Special Project: Directorand Officer Liability, 40 VAND. L. REV.
599, 706-07 (1987) (pointing to monitoring model as "spurring" push for outside director oversight). The term
"outside director" is generally understood to mean a director who, aside from his board duties, is unaffiliated
with, or independent of, the corporation. See Michael Bradley & Cindy A. Schipani, The Relevance of the Duty
of Care Standardin Corporate Governance,75 IOWA L. REV. 1, 21 (1989) (defining outside director).
30. See Donald E. Pease, Outside Directors: Their Importance to the Corporationand Protectionfrom
Liability, 12 DEL. J. CORP. L. 25, 33 (1987) (commenting on experienced independent directors' value as audit
and compensation committee members). Committees composed of outside directors to monitor audits, set
management compensation and nominate new directors are said to "facilitate free and open discussion that
might be inhibited if committee members are personally involved in the matters under discussion." Id. at 21-22
SUFFOLKUNIVERSITY LA W REVIEW [Vol. XXXVIII:641
members is evident over the last thirty years. 37 The ALI recognized the need
for reform in the 1980s when it appeared that lack of management
accountability had become the norm in large corporations. 38 An early draft of
the 1994 ALL Principles of Corporate Governance (ALl Principles)
recommended that corporate boards possess a majority of independent
members. 39 In the end, however, the ALl jettisoned this controversial proposal,
leaving a suggestion in the final version that companies have audit committees
comprised of independent directors
' 4°
whose charge is to "implement and support
the board's oversight function.
37. See D'Ambrosio, supra note 29, at 707 (noting American Law Institute's preference for audit
committee composed of independent directors); Karmel, supra note 36, at 534 (citing American Bar
Association 1976 guidebook suggesting delineation between outside and inside directors); Rowland, supra note
32, at 185 (observing increased manifestation of active, independent monitoring model in practice despite
academic doubters); Seligman, supra note 28, at 52 (summarizing 1977 SEC approval of NYSE rule requiring
audit committees). The SEC has endorsed and utilized independent board member oversight in addressing
various problems for over three decades. See Tannenbaum v. Zeller, 552 F.2d 402, 406 (2d Cir. 1977);
Rowland, supra note 32, at 185 (noting SEC embrace of monitoring model); Seligman, supra note 28, at 52
(describing SEC response 1970s audit failures). The NYSE began to require audit committees comprised
solely of independent directors in 1977. See Seligman, supra note 28, at 52 (noting advent of NYSE rule in
response to audit failures). The American Stock Exchange (AMEX), after initially recommending listed
companies have audit committees in 1980, mandated independent audit committees in the early 1990s. See
Roberta S. Karmel, The Future of Corporate Governance Listing Requirements, 54 SMU L. REV. 325, 332
(2001).
38. See Cox, supra note 21, § 9.2, 9.4-.5 (noting board monitoring ineffectiveness).
39. See Cox, supra note 21, § 9.3, 9.13-.15 (describing controversy over ALl proposals); D'Ambrosio,
supra note 29, at 707-08 (noting deletion of majority requirement from final version); Marjorie Fine Knowles
& Colin Flannery, The ALl Principlesof CorporateGovernance Compared with Georgia Law, 47 MERCER L.
REV. 1, 14 (1995) (stating ALl audit committee recommendation). The ALl Principles suggested eight duties
for independent audit committees to perform, including selecting independent accountants to perform audit
functions, appointing the internal executive responsible for the audit process, facilitating communication
between the auditors and the board, reviewing independent and internal audit reports, reviewing financial
statements and related disputes between the independent auditors and management, consulting independent
auditors on adequacy of internal controls, and considering any necessary changes to audit procedures. See
Knowles & Flannery, supra, at 15.
40. Knowles & Flannery, supra note 39, at 14; see D'Ambrosio, supra note 29, at 707-08 (noting deletion
of majority requirement from final version).
41. See supra notes 12-15 and accompanying text (describing congressional action in response to
corporate scandals).
42. See Cunningham, supra note 15, at 947-48 (deeming congressional response to scandals
"formalization" of existing practices and requirements). Companies that followed best practice guidelines,
such as the ALl Principles, had already formed outside director audit committees that served the monitoring
function reformers sought to make a formal federal requirement. See Claire Moore Dickerson, Ozymandias as
SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY LA WRE VIEW [Vol. XXXVI1l:641
The federal securities laws, enacted as part of the New Deal in the 1930s,
require publicly owned companies that disclose certain financial information to
engage an independent auditor to verify the accuracy and completeness of such
disclosures.46 The high profile audit failures of the 1970s resulted in the SEC's
E. MonitoringFailures
(CCH) 83,263, at 85,403 (Oct. 14, 1982) (stating auditors' duty to investors to assure utmost objectivity in
audit process). Independence is also recognized within the accounting profession as essential to the proper
functioning of the audit process. See Daniel L. Goelzer, The SEC and Opinion Shopping: A Case Study in the
Changing Regulation of the Accounting Profession, 52 BROOK. L. REv. 1057, 1059 (1987) (citing CPA
auditing standards that highlight need to avoid doubt regarding objectivity).
47. See Seligman, supra note 28, at 52 (citing SEC request for NYSE audit committee listing requirement
in response to accountant failures). In requesting the audit committee listing requirement, the SEC was
reacting to audit failures where accountants, despite facial independence, became complicit in, or intertwined
with, the fraudulent activity of company management. See id. at 51-52 (describing auditor criminal
participation in fraud and acceptance of oversees bribes). The stock exchange requirement did not, however,
represent a significant change in prevailing corporate practice, and therefore did not address the root cause of
auditor independence problems. See id at 52 (noting ninety percent of large companies already used audit
committees in 1976 when SEC requested listing rule). Independent auditors' reliance on management for their
continued employment gave senior officers the ability to shop for the accounting opinion that best suited their
financial disclosure needs. See MELVIN A. EISENBERG, THE STRUCTURE OF THE CORPORATION 187 (1976)
(labeling management's discretion as institutional failure compromising independent accountant objectivity);
Goelzer, supra note 46, at 1058-59 (noting practice of "opinion shopping" and management's increasing
willingness to change auditors). Additionally, accounting firms acting as independent auditors often earned
more compensation from corporations for providing non-audit services than for performing their audit function,
thus further compromising the auditors' objectivity. See JOHN C. COFFEE & JOEL SELIGMAN, SECURITES
REGULATION 1503 (9th ed. 2003) (describing vulnerability of auditors' independence due to economic
pressures created by providing non-audit services).
48. See In re Enron Corp. Sees., 235 F. Supp. 2d 549, 667 (S.D. Tex. 2002) (noting Anderson's opinion
approving fraudulent Enron financial reporting). During the reporting period in question, Anderson provided
non-audit services to Enron for which it received fees exceeding those paid for audit services. COFFEE &
SELIGMAN, supra note 47, at 1504 (noting Anderson fees and concern for auditor objectivity where auditors
receive significant non-audit compensation).
49. See 15 U.S.C.S. § 78j-l(m)(2) (Law. Co-op. 2003) (requiring selection of independent auditors by
audit committee rather than by management); id. § 78j-I (g) (prohibiting provision of certain accounting firm
services tending to compromise auditor independence); id. § 78j- I(h) (mandating audit committee pre-approval
of any other non-audit services provided by independent auditor). The SEC rules promulgated in accordance
with SOX also require companies to disclose information regarding the accounting firm's audit and non-audit
services, and prohibit an accounting firm partner from participating on the firm's audit team for a particular
company for more than five or seven years, depending on the partner's level of involvement in the audit
process. See Strengthening the Commission's Requirements Regarding Auditor Independence, Securities Act
Release No. 33-8183, 68 Fed. Reg. 6,006 (Feb. 5, 2003), available at http://www.sec.gov/rules/final/33-
8183.htm.
50. See Hamilton, supra note 10, at 50 (contending monitoring model SOX adopted has proved
SUFFOLKUNIVERSITYLA WRE VIEW [Vol. XXXVIII:641
instance, at the time its financial statements were falsified, WorldCom's audit
committee had supposedly reviewed the financials, the work of the independent
auditors, and the company's internal accounting procedures. 51 Similarly,
despite being an example of corporate governance best practices, Enron's audit
committee ignored its responsibility to review certain questionable transactions,
52
allowing Enron's ill-intentioned officers to engage in fraudulent behavior.
While SOX strengthens the best practices audit committee model utilized by
these companies through auditor independence enhancements and the audit
committee independent counsel requirement, problems such as the
compromising of director independence through compensation packages and
personal relationships with senior officers remain. 53 In light of the various
constraints outside directors face in exercising independent judgment, Vice
Chancellor Strine of the Delaware Court of Chancery suggests that the law
"cannot assume... that corporate directors are, as a general matter, persons of
unusual social bravery, who operate 54
heedless to the inhibitions that social
norms generate for ordinary folk.",
SOX attempts to address the outside director competency issue by
pressuring corporations, through an SEC disclosure requirement, to have at
least one financial expert on their audit committee. 55 Financial experts for
insufficient to deter fraudulent activity); ABA Task Force Report, supra note 17, at 796-97 (acknowledging
independent monitoring model shortcomings demonstrated by recent governance failures).
51. In re WorldCom, Inc. Sec. Litig., 294 F. Supp. 2d 392, 403 (S.D.N.Y. 2003). In reality, the audit
committee was either aware of the fraudulent nature of the financial statements or "recklessly disregarded
information which would have led them to discover the fraud." Id.
52. See WtLLLAI C. POWERS, JR. ET AL., ENRON CORP., REPORT OF INVESTtGATiON 148 (2002), available
at http://news.findlaw.com/hdocs/docs/enron/sicreport/chapter7.pdf (detailing oversight failures of Enron's
board and audit committee); Marianne M. Jennings, A Primer on Enron: Lessons From A Perfect Storm of
FinancialReporting, Corporate Governance and Ethical Culture Failures, 39 CAL. W. L. REv. 163, 197-98
(2003) (identifying Enron as model of corporate governance). Although the plaintiff ultimately failed to
establish the scienter element of his claim, one complaint filed against Enron alleged that its independent
directors actually "ignored obvious signs of potential or actual fraud." Newby v. Lay, 258 F. Supp. 2d 576, 624
(S.D. Tex. 2003) (ruling on shareholder suit against Enron directors). Professor Jennings suggests, however,
that Enron's model governance apparatus suffered from its procedure for selecting members. See Jennings,
supra, at 198 (revealing Enron priorities in board member selection). Specifically, "[b]oard members were
selected for the appearance of depth and possible connections that they brought for Enron." Id. Others note
that Enron's outside directors themselves claim they lacked the expertise and knowledge necessary to thwart
the frauds perpetrated. Lessons from Enron: A Symposium on Corporate Governance Transcript-Morning
Session, Oct. 17, 2002, 54 MERCER L. REV. 683, 699 (2003) [hereinafter Lessonsfrom Enron] (quoting Enron
directors claiming ignorance and lack of information). Some argue that Enron's director compensation package
was so substantial that it compromised their ability and incentive to function as independent monitors. See
Faith Stevelman Kahn, What are the Ways of Achieving CorporateSocial Responsibility?: Bombing Markets,
Subverting the Rule ofLaw: Enron, FinancialFraudand September 11, 2001, 76 TUL. L. REv. 1579, 1606-07
(2002) (describing Enron outside directors' financial conflicts of interest).
53. See supra note 43 and accompanying text (listing SOX audit committee rules including independent
counsel provision); supranote 49 and accompanying text (outlining auditor independence enhancements under
SOX); supra note 52 and accompanying text (noting conflict created by Enron director compensation package).
54. In re Oracle Corp. Derivative Litig., 824 A.2d 917, 938 (Del. Ch. 2003).
55. See 15 U.S.C.S. § 7265(a) (Law. Co-op. 2005); Disclosure Required by Sections 406 and 407 of the
2005] PREVENTION OF CORPORATE FRAUD
SOX purposes are those audit committee members who (1) understand
generally accepted accounting principles as they apply to financial statements,
(2) are experienced in the preparation of financial disclosure for or auditing of
similar companies, (3) are experienced with accounting controls and
56
procedures, and (4) are familiar with audit committee responsibilities.
F. IncreasedLiability Potential
Sarbanes-Oxlcy Act of 2002, SEC Release No. 33-8177, Exchange Act Release No. 34-47235, 68 Fed. Reg.
5,110 (Jan. 31, 2003). While SOX stops short of requiring financial experts on audit committees, the NYSE,
Nasdaq, and the American Stock Exchange (AMEX) go further, mandating either that the listed company audit
committee have at least one financial expert (in the case of NYSE and Nasdaq) or that the committee chair be
appropriately sophisticated in financial matters (in the case of AMEX). See Cain, supra note 43, at 631
(contrasting SOX and stock exchange requirements). Professor Cunningham points to SOX's relative laxity in
this respect as further support for his contention that the legislation as a whole is not a significant advancement.
See Cunningham, supra note 15, at 948 (asserting SOX expert requirement lacks substance and describing itas
"another dose of weak tea").
56. 15 U.S.C.S. § 7265(b).
57. See Lessons from Enron, supra 52, at 738 (2003) (noting with approval possible increased
independent director accountability following governance reforms); Tom Becker, Delaware Judge Warns
Boards of Liabilityfor Executive Pay, WALL ST. J., Jan. 6, 2003, atA14 (suggesting broadening of duty of
good faith); Coffee, supra note 18, at B8 (suggesting increased responsibility of information received by
outside directors raises increased liability potential). Professor Coffee theorizes that outside directors'
heightened knowledge of corporate affairs resulting from their SOX duties makes them similar to inside
directors, who have been more likely than outsiders to face liability in the past. See Coffee, supra note 18, at
B8.
58. See EISENBERG, supra note 24, at 544-45 (setting forth business judgment rule applied where director
duty of care violation alleged); id.at 590-92 (describing coverage of director liability insurance policies and
stating over ninety percent of corporate boards insured). Traditionally, provided a director can prove he
fulfilled his duty to monitor and make an informed decision in good faith, the director's decision itself need
only be rational to meet his duty of care. Id. at 546 (examining business judgment standard of review for
director decisions). While a reasonable person might have chosen another course of action, unless the
director's choice lacks a coherent explanation, he will not be found liable for negligence. Id.
59. See Stephen Taub, Enron Insurance Fallout: D&O Premium Surge (Feb. 22, 2002), at http://www.
cfo.com/article/1,5309,6697,00.html?f-related (reporting premium increases of fifty percent in wake of Enron
scandal).
60. See Larry Cata Backer, The Sarbanes-Oxley Act: Federalizing Norms for Officer, Lawyer, and
Accountant Behavior, 76 ST. JOHN'S L. REV. 897, 936-37 (2002) (observing SOX imposes "greater regulation
SUFFOLK UNIVERSITYLA W REVIEW [Vol. XXXVIII:641
III. ANALYSIS
Considering that corporate governance practice at the time of the Enron and
Worldcom scandals already relied greatly on oversight by outside directors,
SOX's increased emphasis on their role is misplaced.61 In situations where
SOX's deterrence measures fail to check management, it is unlikely that
independent director monitoring will prove sufficient to prevent fraud from
occurring. 62 Independent directors, even if acting diligently and in good faith,
are generally not equipped to prevent corporate fraud, especially where auditors
63
collude with management.
Tool to Focus Reform, 35 WAKE FOREST L. REv. 153, 175-76 (2000) (recognizing many directors lack
sufficient expertise to perform oversight function SOX relies on).
67. See Stabile, supra note 66, at 175-76 (observing outsiders often unable to properly assess corporate
situations); supra note 52 and accompanying text (evaluating ability of Enron's model board to prevent fraud).
Non-financial experts may lack the ability to raise red flags that would prevent future frauds. See Stabile,
supra note 66, at 175-76.
68. See supra notes 27-31 and accompanying text (discussing arguments supporting outside director
oversight).
69. See STEPHEN M. BAINBRIDGE, THE FEDERALIST SOCIETY FOR LAW AND PUBLIC POLICY STUDIES, A
CRITIQUE OF THE NYSE's DIRECTOR INDEPENDENCE LISTING STANDARDS 7 (Aug. 1, 2002), available at
http://www.fed-soc.org/pdf/NYSEStandards.pdf (citing time demands and liability potential as deterrents to
board service); supra note 18 and accompanying text (noting factors causing reluctance to serve as outside
directors); supra notes 33-34, 64 (examining time deficiencies suffered by outside directors); supra notes 57-60
and accompanying text (examining potential for increased director liability); infra note 93 and accompanying
text (discussing independence requirements as board service deterrent).
70. See Cox, supra note 21, §9.3, .4-5, .7 (lamenting outside directors' inability to exercise independent
judgment); Brudney, supra note 34, at 611-12 (recognizing social and psychological factors hampering outside
director independence); Kahn, supranote 52, at 1606-07 (describing Enron outside directors' financial conflicts
of interest).
71. See BAINBRIDGE, supra note 69, at 20 (arguing independent directors' "predisposed" to favor
management). One basis for Professor Bainbridge's theory is the tendency of many outside directors to be
current or former corporate officers themselves, thus creating at least a sub-conscious identification with
management. See id
72. See, e.g., Branson, supra note 64, at 1006 (asserting director duties under SOX "full time job");
Easterbrook, supra note 33, at 555 (arguing directors' monitoring will fail unless they work "substantially full
time" at corporation); Jerry W. Markham, Accountants Make Miserable Policemen: Rethinking the Federal
Securities Laws, 28 N.C. J. INT'L L. & COM. REG. 725, 812 (2003) (asserting time spent at corporation to
perform SOX function exposes directors to "management manipulation"); see also supra note 39 and
accompanying text (listing ALl audit committee responsibilities adopted by SOX requiring increased contact
between directors and management).
73. See, e.g., Bryan Ford, In Whose Interest: An Examination of the Duties of Directorsand Officers in
Control Contests, 26 ARIz. ST. L.J. 91, 124 (1994) (asserting director desire for "agreeable social relations"
breeds conformity with management decisions); Stabile, supra note 66, at 177 (arguing even "truly"
independent directors compromised by social factors); supra note 54 and accompanying text (quoting Delaware
chancellor on director vulnerability to social pressures).
SUFFOLK UNIVERSITYLAW REVIEW [Vol. XXXVIII:641
74. See supra note 54 and accompanying text (asserting law must be cognizant of social pressures facing
directors). Many directors are retired persons whose opportunity to serve stems from a prior relationship with
an existing board member or corporate officer. See Ford, supra note 73, at 121-22 (citing prior relationships
common between independent directors and management); id. at 124 (noting many outside directors are retired
executives). When these factors are combined with a director's desire to continue service and perhaps to serve
on additional boards controlled by the same officers, directors naturally hesitate to take positions adversarial to
management. See WILLIAM L. GARY & MELVIN A. EISENBERG, CASES AND MATERIALS ON CORPORATIONS
156-57 (6th ed. 1988) (noting outside director inability to exercise true independence due to ties to
corporation); Lucian Arye Bebchuk et al., Management and Control of the Modern Business Corporation:
Executive Compensation & Takeovers: Managerial Power and Rent Extraction in the Design of Executive
Compensation, 69 U. CHI. L. REv. 751, 771 (2002) (suggesting director's interest primary in maintaining board
seat and election to further boards).
75. See 15 U.S.C.S. § 78j-l(m) (Law. Co-op. 2003) (containing SOX provisions relying on outside
director oversight); Cox, Conflicts of Interest, supra note 18, at 1078 (asserting expectations for independent
director contributions at all-time high).
76. See JAMES D. COx & THOMAS LEE HAZEN, I CORPORATIONS § 9.02, at 402 (2d ed. 2003) (stating
negative correlation between percentage of independent directors and their utility in governance process);
Corporate Governance Issues, 8 FORDHAM J. CORP. & FN. L. 49, 61-62 (2003) [hereinafter Governance Panel
2] (pointing to studies showing inverse relation between shareholder benefit and director independence).
Compare supra notes 27-31 and accompanying text (offering support for value of outside director oversight
role), with supra notes 32-36 (criticizing outside director ability to contribute to governance process).
77. See supra note 55 and accompanying text (examining SOX financial expert requirement).
78. See Lawrence E. Mitchell, The Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the Reinvention ofCorporate Governance?,
48 VILL. L. REV. 1189, 1199 (2003) (predicting financial expert duties will require significant time
commitment); Ribstein, supra note 61, at 26 (observing directors with financial expertise usually pulled from
business field and noting time constraints faced).
79. See Markham, supra note 72, at 812 (reasoning experts' independence compromised if they spend
time at corporation necessary to perform duties adequately).
80. See Mitchell, supra note 78, at 1199 (predicting that experts' increased access to information will
heighten legal responsibility despite SEC assurances).
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Despite the ability to appoint and oversee the accountants directly, outside
directors must still rely substantially on others to perform their gatekeeper
function. 81 The effectiveness of SOX's governance measures, therefore, hinges
on auditors being more than facially independent. 82 SOX's rules intended to
enhance auditor independence from management should increase auditors'
reliability as the eyes of the audit committee. 83 Accounting firms had
motivation without legislative action, however, to avoid the audit practices that
led to Arthur Anderson's collapse. 84 Assuming legislation was indeed
necessary, Congress could have done more to ensure that auditors' ties to
management were broken. 85 So long as auditors are paid by the corporations
they audit, an inherent conflict-of-interest will persist. 86 If Anderson's role in
the accounting scandals is evidence of pervasive laxity within the profession,
re-evaluation of accepted accounting practices is necessary,87
especially in light
of the external forces that influence auditors' discretion.
Perhaps the most worthwhile aspect of SOX's governance regime is the
requirement that corporations provide audit committees with funds to hire
88
independent legal counsel. Prior to SOX, the SEC recognized the wisdom of
independent counsel in the mutual fund context, requiring in 2001 that outside
directors of funds taking advantage of safe harbors available for conflict-of-
interest transactions receive legal advice from firms with no significant
81. See Andres V. Gil, Legal Duties and Responsibilitiesof CorporateDirectorsand ControllingPersons
of U.S. Publicly-Owned Companies, 3 U.S.-MEX. L.J. 1, 22 (1995) (recognizing director dependency on
financial auditors to shield them from liability for fraudulent disclosure); Ribstein, supra note 61, at 29
(recognizing outside directors necessarily dependent on auditors to spot fraud).
82. See Ribstein, supra note 61, at 29 (identifying success of auditor independence enhancements as key
to audit committee effectiveness); supra notes 47-48 and accompanying text (discussing historical auditor
failures including Anderson's Enron role).
83. See supra note 49 and accompanying text (describing SOX auditor independence enhancements).
84. See supra note 48 and accompanying text (discussing Anderson role in Enron collapse).
85. See Patricia A. McCoy, RealigningAuditors'Incentives, 35 CONN. L. REv. 989, 1008 (2003) (opining
rotation measure fails to prevent relationships between auditors and management); supra note 49 and
accompanying text (detailing SOX auditor independence requirements including audit partner rotation). In
addition to the inadequate partner rotation measure, Professor McCoy argues that the exemption of tax services
from the non-audit service provision prohibition creates a sizeable loophole compromising the proscription's
effectiveness in enhancing auditor independence. See McCoy, supra, at 1008 (suggesting mandatory rotation
of accounting firms is only way to ensure true auditor independence).
86. See Darin Bartholomew, Is Silence Golden When it Comes to Auditing?, 36 J. MARSHALL L. REV. 57,
89-90 (2002) (noting conflict persists between auditors' duties and their working relationship with
management).
87. See McCoy, supra note 85, at 1008 (alleging "highly elastic" Generally Accepted Accounting
Practices and incentives to favor management troublesome combination).
88. See supranote 43 and accompanying text (outlining SOX requirements including independent counsel
provision). Professor Cunningham points out, however, that prior to SOX, state law granted audit committees
the power to retain such outside advisors as the committee deemed necessary. See Cunningham, supra note 15,
at 947-48 (suggesting SOX measure significant but not truly reform).
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89. See Cox, Conflicts of Interest, supra note 18, at 1087-89 (outlining investment company independent
counsel requirement). While the SEC investment company rule did not set forth specific criteria for counsel
independence, the SEC made clear that lawyers who advise directors should "not be compromised by an
historical relationship with the fund's advisor." Id. at 1088-89.
90. See Cox, Conflicts of Interest, supra note 18, at 1093-94 (noting firm refrained from informing
Enron's board of its misgivings concerning transactions).
91. See Letter from Independent Directors of Merrill Lynch Cluster A Funds to Jonathan G. Katz,
Secretary, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commisssion (Jan. 27, 2000), available at http://www.sec.gov/rules/
proposed/s72399/cruml.htm (asserting value to independent directors in oversight responsibilities of trusted
counsel of their choosing). If counseled by a lawyer employed solely to protect their interests in the fulfillment
of their oversight responsibilities, the Enron directors may have hesitated to accept auditor assurances that its
aggressive interpretations of accounting rules were within the law. See Cox, Conflicts of Interest, supra note
18, at 1094-95 (suggesting Enron directors may have benefited if advised by counsel unencumbered by
conflicts of interest); Jennings, supra note 52, at 207 (describing Enron directors' failure to understand level of
risk entailed in auditors' accounting interpretations).
92. See BAINBRIDGE, supra note 69, at 7 (citing time demands and liability potential as deterrents to board
service); supra note 18 and accompanying text (commenting prospective board members possibly deterred by
scandals and SOX requirements); supra notes 33-34, 64 (examining time deficiencies suffered by outside
directors); supra note 43 and accompanying text (noting SOX independence requirements); supra notes 57-60
and accompanying text (discussing potential for increased liability for directors due to SOX role).
93. See 15 U.S.C.S. § 78j-l(m)(3) (Law. Co-op. 2003) (setting forth SOX director independence
requirements); BAINBRIDGE, supra note 69, at 7 (summarizing problems with meeting NYSE-proposed
independence requirements as adopted by SOX); Veasey, supra note 18, at 444 (stating SOX independence
requirements' specificity may "drive away good directors").
94. See Bartholomew, supra note 86, at 90 (observing some companies' attempts to disclaim audit
committee liability in wake of SOX reform); Robert J. Jossen, Using Sarbanes-Oxley in Civil Litigation, 173
N.J. L.J. 877, 877 (2003) (describing director liability exposure as "perverse effect" of SOX attempt to improve
corporate governance); supra notes 57-60 and accompanying text (examining liability exposure under SOX
framework).
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duties delegated to the audit committee under SOX will necessarily result in
outside directors receiving greater exposure to the preparation and review of
financial disclosure. 95 This increased access to information, along with the
raised awareness of their monitoring role that is a byproduct of SOX
requirements, will make it easier to prove that outside directors were on notice
of a potentially misleading financial report, and had a duty to prevent the
report's publication. 96 Additionally, SOX's oversight responsibilities may raise
the standard for good faith monitoring necessary to receive the benefits of the
business judgment rule. 97 Even if liability standards remain the same,
independent directors likely face an increasing number of 98
lawsuits due to the
enhancement of their gatekeeper role in preventing fraud.
The benefits of outside director oversight may not be worth the cost to
shareholders of SOX compliance and the federalism concerns SOX's
enactment has raised. 99 Whether the benefits to shareholders which stem from
independent director oversight are actually enhanced by SOX requirements is
doubtful. 100 The cost to corporations, and thus to shareholders, of complying
with SOX and insuring directors is substantial. 1 1 SOX's disregard for the
E. Alternatives
(commenting compliance costs especially burdensome for smaller companies); Dennis E. Ross, The Regulatory
Aftermath: One Year Later, GCs Struggle to Decipher Sarbanes-Oxley, CORP. LEGAL TIMES, Sept. 2003, at 44
(describing counsel struggling to comply with ambiguous regulations); supra note 59 and accompanying text
(noting sharp rise in directors' liability insurance coverage premiums following scandals and SOX). But see
Ide, supra note 6, at 833 (arguing outside director oversight will generate shareholder value through better
business decisions and public trust).
102. See Branson, supra note 64, at 1006 (commenting SOX regulation of boards and board committees
does "great violence to federalism"); Karmel, supra note 36, at 551 (attacking SEC's attempted federalization
of monitoring model as unnecessary preemption of state law). The Supreme Court has recognized state
supremacy in formulating corporate law, holding that "[n]o principle of corporation law and practice is more
firmly established than a State's authority to regulate domestic corporations." CTS Corp. v. Dynamics Corp. of
Am., 481 U.S. 69, 89 (1987). By creating a uniform standard for certain aspects of corporate governance, SOX
eliminates the opportunity for states to experiment with different formulas that may work better. See
BAINBRIDGE, supra note 69, at 27-28 (asserting history proves better corporate law develops through state
experimentation).
103. See Governance Panel 2, supra note 76, at 62 (observing small companies incur substantial costs
maintaining board committees); Veasey, supra note 18, at 444 (noting SOX independence rules ironically
prohibit large individual investors from representing themselves and other shareholders on audit committee).
Not only do corporations experience problems relating to management accountability that differ in type and
seriousness, many companies would benefit more from one of the many other accountability mechanisms than
they will from independent director oversight. See BAINBRIDGE, supra note 69, at 23-24 (identifying market
controls and compensation incentives as more appropriate accountability mechanisms in some circumstances).
Further, smaller companies are finding that it takes much longer to fill vacancies on their boards now that SOX
is in effect. See Lisa Holton, Help Wanted: Filling Vacancies on Corporate Boards Creates Headaches for In-
House Lawyers, ABAJOURNAL.COM, para. 3 (2004) (on file with author) (noting post-SOX searches for new
directors taking twice as long).
104. See supra notes 33-36, 64-76 and accompanying text (questioning value of independent director
oversight).
105. See BAINBRIDGE, supra note 69, at 22-23 (asserting insider presence on key committees enhances
committee performance).
106. See supra note 85 and accompanying text (describing SOX independence enhancement
shortcomings).
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increase the frequency and depth of its field audits of large publicly-traded
companies.107
IV. CONCLUSION
JonathanH. Gabriel
107. See Hamilton, supra note 10, at 50 (describing inability of SEC to keep up regular audits under
current budget constraints); Stephen R. Howard, A National Association for Independent Directors of
Investment Companies: A Supplement to Current SEC Proposals, 44 N.Y.L. SCH. L. REV. 535, 536 (2001)
(noting ratio of investment companies to investment company field auditors is forty to one).
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