Professional Documents
Culture Documents
The financial statements indicated a Receivable from General Partner in the amount of $30,332,000. This
receivable was worthless because the general partner could not pay the amount due.
Piece Goods erroneously increased the reported value of this receivable by recording accrued interest on
the balance sheets although the company knew it was not collectible.
The financial statements reflected nearly all payables for certain pattern inventories as noncurrent, long-term
liabilities, but reflected the inventories themselves as current assets. This resulted in an overstatement of
Piece Goods' working capital.
One of the largest checks listed in Piece Goods' accounts payable was made out to Marcus. It may be
inferred, therefore, that the CPA firm knew Marcus was one of the company's major creditors.
The firm had been Piece Goods' auditor for the preceding six years.
Marcus argued that the auditors knew Piece Goods would provide it with the 1992 financial statements to influence
Marcus's decision to extend credit to the company.
The Defendant's Case
The CPA firm argued that under North Carolina law it was not enough to claim that the firm should have known that
Piece Goods might provide the financial statements to trade creditors such as Marcus. Instead the firm argued that
Marcus had to prove that the firm knew Piece Goods intended for creditors to rely on the 1992 financial statements in
extending credit.
The Appeal
In overturning the summary judgment, the court ruled there was a genuine issue of material fact concerning whether
the CPA firm knew that Piece Goods supplied the audited financial statements to its creditors.
The court noted as evidence an internal firm memorandum. The memorandum, which was initialed by a partner, said:
the firm has historically reported on the financial statements of Piece Goods, and vendors and factors are
accustomed to receiving the company's financial statements.
The CPA firm argued unsuccessfully that the memorandum merely established it knew that Piece Goods' audited
financial statements were customarily used in a variety of financial transactions by the company and that they may
have been relied upon by lenders, creditors and others in a variety of transactions.
In the appeal, the court applied the following standard: The text requires only that the auditor know that his client
intends to supply information to another person or limited group of persons. Whether the auditor acquires this
knowledge from the client or elsewhere should make no difference. If he knows at the time he prepares his report that
specific persons, or a limited group of persons, will rely on his work, and intends or knows that his client intends such
reliance, his duty of care should extend to them.
Limit Access And Limit Liability
This case illustrates the importance of limiting access to client statements to a select group of third parties. In this
way a firm limits its exposure to third-party suits.
In this case an internal memorandum of a CPA firm's partner was used to support an inference that the firm knew
lenders, creditors and others were relying on its client's financial statements in a variety of transactions. This was the
most significant piece of evidence the court cited in overturning the earlier summary judgment by the trial court.
( Marcus Brothers Textiles, Inc. v. Price Waterhouse, LLP , 498 S.E. 2d 196, 1998 N.C. App. LEXIS 428)