OPINION OF THE COURT
This appeal focuses on claims of accounting malpractice and fraud against Deloitte and Touche LLP (Deloitte). Plaintiffs Houbigant, Inc. and Etablissement Houbigant (collectively, Houbigant) own the trademarks for various perfumes, the marketing and sales of which they licensed to various subsidiaries of Renaissance Cosmetics, Inc. (RCI) beginning in 1994. RCI and another of its subsidiаries, Cosmar Corp., executed guaranties in connection with those licenses, in which they warranted that they had and would maintain a net worth of at
Then, despite several years’ worth of audited financial statements certifying the financial well-being and substantial net worth of RCI and its subsidiaries, in June 1998 it was disclosed publicly that RCI’s net worth had been overstated by nearly $200 million. Because Houbigant had been induced three months earlier, in March 1998, to enter into a modification agreement with RCI in which it waived for one year its right to terminate its licensing agreements, it had to wait until March 1999 to terminate its licenses. It claims that in the intervening ninе-month period, its brand equity was severely damaged by the insolvent RCI.
We hold that Houbigant’s negligence claim against Deloitte as the auditor of RCI’s financial statements must be dismissed, since the allegations do not support a claim of privity or a relationship “approach [ing] that of privity” between Deloitte and Houbigant, a nonclient (see Ultramares Corp. v Touche,
The requisite linking was not established by Houbigant’s entitlement under the terms of thе license to receive a copy of RCI’s audited financial statement, by Deloitte’s consent to RCI forwarding a copy of the financial statements to Houbigant, or by Deloitte’s knowledge that Houbigant would rely upon the information contained in the financial statements (see Credit Alliance at 553-554). Deloitte’s task, in the course of the audit, of assessing whether RCI was complying with its contractual obligation to Houbigant to maintain a $10 million net worth,
However, the fraud cause of action should not have been dismissed. As Chief Judge Cardozo pointed out in Ultramares (
Houbigant’s claim of fraud concerns Deloitte’s certification of the accuracy of RCI’s audited financial statements for the years ending March 31, 1995, March 31, 1996 and March 31, 1997. Deloitte’s certification each year specifically stated that RCI’s consolidated financial statements “present [ed] fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Renaissance Cosmetics, Inc. and subsidiaries.” Plaintiffs have рrovided allegations containing sufficient specificity to make out a claim that these assurances by Deloitte regarding RCI’s financial statements for those three years were knowingly false.
Houbigant alleges that RCI’s net worth was materially misrepresented each year, in view of the absence of competent support for the values set forth in the financial statements for four asset accounts — inventory, accounts receivable, intangible assets and fixed assets. It relies in part upon a private letter by Deloitte to the RCI audit committee dated June 27, 1997, in which Deloitte recognized and identified various “[r]eportable conditions” and “significant deficiencies in the design or operation of thе internal control structure * * * [bearing on the] ability to * * * report financial data consistent with the assertions * * * in the financial statements.” The letter, plaintiffs assert, explained some of the causes of those deficiencies. Indeed, Houbigant asserts, these deficiencies and problems were so significant that they appear to have formed the basis for RCI’s ultimate insolvency. Yet, none of these deficiencies and problems were mentioned in Deloitte’s audit report; further, it is alleged, Deloitte took no action to verify the information called into question by these deficiencies in its subsidiaries’ internal control structure.
For one thing, it is alleged that there were deficiencies regarding net accounts receivable. It was finally publicly acknowledged in June 1998 that RCI’s sales for the period from March 31, 1996 through March 31, 1997 were overstated
Further, repeated corporate acquisitions made by RCI in 1995 and 1996 brought RCI’s reported intangible assets to $82 million in 1995, and to $184 million by 1997. It is alleged that Deloitte had an interest in overstating the values of these acquisitions, because it had performed the due diligence for those acquisitions, and had financed some of them. Houbigant claims that despite the representation in RCI’s financial statements that it regularly assessed the “recoverability” of such intangible assets, which would correct any initial overstatement, in fact these assets were not subjected to any independent appraisal until January 1997, when they were found to be overstated by $57 million. Houbigant further asserts that because of yearly cash flow losses, the $57 million overstatement should have been the basis for a write-down of fair value for the year ending March 31, 1997, but that, instead, Deloitte chose to ignore the appraisal. These allegations further support thе fraud claim. Any contention that Deloitte was in fact unaware of the appraisal must be addressed at trial.
As to the allegation of substantial overstatements in the reporting of net inventory, although Houbigant cannot yet quantify its exact amount, the allegation is supported by the claim that RCI had no system for determining the age of its inventory, and therefore ignored the requirement that it verify the age of inventory so as to determine whether it should be valued at market or cost. Deloitte’s argument that this deficiency was not significant is one which may be tested at trial, but it does not suffice to dismiss the claim here.
Other aspects of the June 27, 1997 letter provide further support for the claim that serious accounting deficienсies known to Deloitte led to the material overstatements regarding RCI’s net worth, which Deloitte certified as accurate. For instance, the letter reported that one of the RCI subsidiaries
In sum, Houbigant alleges that when Deloitte certified the accuracy of RCI’s financial statements, it knew, but failed to acknowledge, that RCI’s financial statements actually contained numerous serious irregulаrities and inaccuracies, which it knew could have a material impact on the accuracy of the financial statements’ recitation of the corporation’s net worth. This is sufficient to adequately plead misrepresentation and scienter.
There is, indeed, a body of case law dismissing fraud claims against accountants pursuant to CPLR 3016 due to insufficiencies in the allegations, especially regarding the element of scienter. However, careful review of these cases impels us to emphasize that at the pleading stage of a fraud claim against an accountant, the plaintiff need not be able to make an evidentiary showing of exactly what the accountant knew as to fаlsehoods in the certified financial statements.
Initially, in Credit Alliance Corp. v Arthur Andersen & Co. (
“[t]he cause of action for fraud repeats the allegations for the negligence cause of action and merely adds a claim that Andersen recklessly disregarded facts which would have apprised it that its reports were misleading or that Andersen had actual knowledge that such was the case. This single allegation of scienter, without additional detail concerning the facts constituting the alleged fraud, is insufficient under the special pleading standards required under CPLR 3016 (b)” (65 NY2d at 554 ).
Fairly read, this holding requires a fraud рleading to contain a particularized factual assertion which supports the inference of scienter.
The language of CPLR 3016 (b) merely requires that a claim of fraud be pleaded in sufficient detail to give adequate notice (see Foley v D'Agostino,
While some subsequent cases applying the Credit Alliance ruling seem to indicate that a fraud pleading against an accountant must contain hard evidence, requiring that it “identify the particular manner in which an item included in the financial statement relied upon has been intentionally or recklessly misrepresented” (see Lampert v Mahoney, Cohen & Co.,
Keeping in mind the difficulty of establishing in a pleading exactly what the accounting firm knew when certifying its client’s financial statements, it should be sufficient that the complaint contains some rational basis for inferring that the alleged misrepresentation was knowingly made. Indeed, to require anything beyond that would be particularly undesirable at this time, when it has been widely acknowledged that our society is experiencing a proliferation of frauds perpetrated by officers of large corporations, for their own personal gain, unchecked by the “impartial” auditors they hired {see generally
Furthermоre, there are comparable past cases in which claims of fraud against accountants have been permitted to proceed. In one case, the defendant accountant was alleged to have “recklessly failed to independently verify and investigate the documents of a corporation it knew had severe internal control and reporting problems” (Simon v Ernst & Young,
Indeed, in Ambassador Factors v Kandel & Co. (
Accordingly, plaintiffs here need not, at this time, establish the truth of their allegations that Deloitte was aware of severe irregularities in RCI’s financial statements resulting in misstatement of the corporation’s net worth. They need only allege specific facts from which it is possible to infer defendant’s knowledge of the falsity of its statements. This they have done.
In this procedural context, the court need not address Deloitte’s contention that the financial statements were
Nor is Deloitte correct in asserting that the foregoing allegations only support, at most, a claim of negligence. An auditor’s failure to independently verify financial statements may give rise to a claim for fraud, especially where the auditor “had notice of particular circumstances raising doubts as to the veracity of the such information” (Foothill Capital Corp. v Grant Thornton, L.L.P.,
As to the motion court’s reasoning that the fraud claim must fail because it cannot be inferred that Deloitte made the misrepresentations with the specific intent to induce Houbigant’s acts, the law does not require such specific intent for a fraud claim. Rather, the plaintiff must only allege facts from which it may be inferred that the defendant was aware that its misrepresentations would bе reasonably relied upon by the plaintiff, not that the defendant intended to induce the particular acts of detrimental reliance ultimately undertaken by the plaintiff (see Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Md. v Arthur Andersen & Co.,
The foregoing allegations similarly support the cause of action claiming that Deloitte aided and abetted the alleged fraud by the individual “insider” defendants, as that cause of action merely requires that the defendant affirmatively аssisted, concealed, or failed to act when required to do so, in order to enable others’ acts of fraud to proceed.
Accordingly, the order of the Supreme Court, New York County (Richard Lowe, III, J.), entered April 12, 2002, which, in an action by plaintiff licensors against defendant accountant based on audit reports and financial statements that allеgedly did not accurately reflect the financial condition of defendant’s clients, insofar as appealed from, granted defendant’s motion
Nardelli, J.P., Buckley, Ellerin and Marlow, JJ., concur.
Order, Supreme Court, New York County, entered April 12, 2002, reversed, on the law, so as to dismiss the cause of action for professional negligence, and reinstate the fraud causes of action against Deloitte & Touche LLP.
