Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Court Upholds $118 Million Award Against Negligent Livent Auditor Deloitte

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jan, 2016 12:44 PM
    TORONTO — The corporate auditor to the once high-flying Livent theatre company run by disgraced mogul Garth Drabinsky was partly responsible for the hundreds of millions of dollars creditors ended up losing, Ontario's top court ruled Friday.
     
    In upholding an $85.6-million award against Deloitte and Touche — $118 million with interest — the Court of Appeal sided with a judge who found the auditor had been negligent in failing to detect, and act on, the fraudulent behaviour of Drabinsky and his partner, Myron Gottlieb, in the 1990s.
     
    After all, there had been numerous red flags for several years that Deloitte essentially ignored, the court found.
     
    "Deloitte knew that Drabinsky and Gottlieb were aggressive entrepreneurs who pushed the envelope in terms of accounting and financial measures," the Appeal Court said in a 100-page judgment.
     
    "It is more likely than not that a careful and objective investigation into Livent's financial statements, pursued with 'an attitude of professional skepticism,' would have revealed the fraud."
     
    Under the flamboyant Drabinsky, Livent Inc. brought popular shows like "Phantom of the Opera," "Show Boat," "Kiss of the Spider Woman," and "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat" to stages across North America. But the apparent success was based on a massive sleight of hand that included cooking the books, kickbacks and manipulated expenses.
     
    The shenanigans were discovered in mid-1998 when a new management team took over. Within months, Livent went bust — leaving investors and banks about $500 million out of pocket. Drabinsky and Gottlieb went to prison for fraud and forgery.
     
    Livent's bankruptcy receiver sued Deloitte — which had audited the company's books from 1989 through to 1998 — on behalf of those owed money.
     
    In a novel ruling that followed a 68-day trial in April 2014, Superior Court Justice Arthur Gans found Deloitte largely liable for Livent's losses after August 1997, saying company creditors had been hapless victims of a fraud the auditor should have brought to their attention had it done a proper job.
     
    Barring such a claim, Gans said, would deprive innocent parties a remedy for an auditor's negligence in those cases where the services of an auditor are most critical — namely, the detection of wrongdoing by high-level management.
     
    Deloitte appealed, arguing among other things that it should not have been held responsible for the fraud, or for the fact investors lost money.
     
    The Appeal Court disagreed, siding with the judge's finding the auditor was liable for most of the post-August 1997 losses.
     
    Deloitte knew the impresarios were using Livent's financial statements to help them raise money but failed miserably in scrutinizing those statements, the Appeal Court found. In addition, the court rejected Deloitte's argument that Livent's losses all flowed from the "inherent vicissitudes" of its risky business rather than from its failure do to a proper audit.
     
    "The trial judge distinguished between losses generated from Livent's unprofitable but legitimate theatre business, operating within the changed environment, and those losses attributable to Deloitte's negligence," the Appeal Court ruled.
     
    The court also dismissed a Livent cross-appeal that sought to extend the period of losses for which Deloitte should have been liable.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Apple's Tim Cook Got A Raise Of More Than $1 Million Last Year, Earning More Than $10 Million

    Apple's Tim Cook Got A Raise Of More Than $1 Million Last Year, Earning More Than $10 Million
    Apple CEO Tim Cook got a raise of more than $1 million last year, though he didn't make as much as his top lieutenants.

    Apple's Tim Cook Got A Raise Of More Than $1 Million Last Year, Earning More Than $10 Million

    Schools Threaten Students With Suspensions Over Outdated Immunization Records

    Schools Threaten Students With Suspensions Over Outdated Immunization Records
    Thousands of Ontario students face suspensions from school because they haven't provided updated immunization records, but public health officials can't say exactly how many young people across the province are affected.

    Schools Threaten Students With Suspensions Over Outdated Immunization Records

    On Thin Ice: Scientists Study Safety Of Skating On Urban Storm-Water Ponds

    On Thin Ice: Scientists Study Safety Of Skating On Urban Storm-Water Ponds
    Mark Loewen and his research team spent the last two winters hauling around a radar machine and drilling through ice as children and adults raced around on skates and fired slapshots.

    On Thin Ice: Scientists Study Safety Of Skating On Urban Storm-Water Ponds

    CRTC Launches New Code To Make Tv Service Bills Clearer For Customers

    CRTC Launches New Code To Make Tv Service Bills Clearer For Customers
    Canada's broadcast regulator has laid out details for a new industry code that cable and satellite companies will have to follow when they're billing customers.

    CRTC Launches New Code To Make Tv Service Bills Clearer For Customers

    Application Aims To Shed Light On Closed-door Hearings In B.C. Terror Trial

    A British Columbia Supreme Court judge is tasked with deciding how much the public should be allowed to know about the involvement of Canada's spy agency in a terrorism probe.

    Application Aims To Shed Light On Closed-door Hearings In B.C. Terror Trial

    UBC Faculty Members Apologize For 'Not Demanding Better' On Sexual Assaults On Students

    UBC Faculty Members Apologize For 'Not Demanding Better' On Sexual Assaults On Students
    More than 80 faculty members from a wide range of disciplines have signed the letter dated Jan. 6 and addressed to the UBC community.

    UBC Faculty Members Apologize For 'Not Demanding Better' On Sexual Assaults On Students