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Unacceptable risk
By Mindy Paskell-Mede
Practitioners who offer financial planning services may have to compensate clients for
trading losses.
Illustration by Geneviève Côté
Chartered accountants are among the many professional groups who are expanding the
selection of services being offered to clients. One growing area of expertise is financial planning but,
unfortunately for practitioners, it is also a fertile ground for lawsuits. The specific problem that the
courts are facing is to determine whether, and to what extent, the investment losses suffered by a client
were simply the result of the downside risk that is present in all such activity, or whether the financial
planner's advice or behaviour was to blame.
In previous articles, we have looked at cases where the courts determined that
CAs who give tax advice to clients or introduce them to potential investments have further duties to those
clients regarding the creditworthiness of the investments. In the cases that follow, the defendant expressly
offered financial planning services and the clients had understood that at least some degree of risk was
inevitable. In both cases, however, the professional advisers were obliged to compensate their clients for
trading losses. In the first case, the problem lay in the fact that the client did not fully appreciate the
degree of risk and complexity in the trades. In the second case, the financial planner acted as portfolio
manager and failed to maintain the composition of the portfolio as set out by both parties.
In the case of Secord v. Global Securities
Corp. [2000] B.C.J. No. 2096, the British Columbia Supreme Court
ruled that an investment adviser had breached his duties (contractual, in tort and fiduciary) with respect to
the options account of the client's portfolio.
As is usual in such cases, where the basic issue before the court is one of
credibility - principally on questions regarding the client's level of sophistication and the degree of risk
accepted by her - a meticulous investigation of the facts pertaining to the case was undertaken. Although the
client had already completed numerous forms prior to trading with the defendants, and although their
testimony agreed on certain matters, their respective views of the client's involvement in the decisions
leading to the losing transactions could not have been more opposed. The client presented herself to the
court as a virtual neophyte, relying entirely and blindly on her adviser. The defendants insisted that the
client had followed the trades with understanding, and had approved them in full knowledge of the
risks.
The court rejected the plaintiff's attempt to show that she was so naïve as to
have been unaware that stocks could go down in value. It did, however, recognize a significant gulf between
her level of understanding and the knowledge required to direct trading in complex instruments. The adviser
accepted that he was supposed to have acted as her "teacher," yet there were no documents showing a
careful explanation of the potential risks that are unique to options trading.
The British Columbia Supreme Court determined that the client was not as
inexperienced as she had attempted to demonstrate - that she had, in fact, authorized the specific trades,
and that the composition of the portfolio as a whole was consistent with her investment objectives. The
client, however, had never obtained sufficient sophistication to understand the options account.
The court found that, with respect to this portion of the portfolio, her reliance
on the defendants was "almost total." The defendants did not adequately explain the risks to her,
nor did the client truly understand the investment strategy being employed. Given the client's level of
knowledge as well as her stated objectives, said the judge, options trading was "inordinately
complex" and unnecessary. In other words, although the actual transactions were not themselves
inconsistent with the client's objectives, it was not suitable for her to have engaged in this particular
type of trading activity.
The court ruled that the defendants' duty on these facts was fiduciary. It also
determined that the trading that had occurred was a breach of contractual and tort duties, but that the same
damages would be awarded under each regime.
In its ruling, the court recognized that there is a spectrum of possible duties
that are owed to client investors. At one end are the "mere order-takers," whose obligations would
not be fiduciary but who would presumably execute instructions only in an appropriate fashion. At the other
end of the spectrum are portfolio managers with trading discretion, who have the highest possible duty. The
court concluded that the defendants' role in this particular case lay between these two areas, but that the
duties were onerous enough to be considered fiduciary.
A debate on damages led to the conclusion that the defendants could not insist on
being credited with eventual profits made from certain of the investments into which they had put the client.
The court ruled that the time period in which to consider profits is the same as that given to the plaintiff
in other cases for mitigation of losses, and it will vary with the marketability of the property in question.
In situations where the property is highly marketable, such as shares, the date at which damages crystallize
is shortly after the date of the breach.
The second ruling concerning defendants who offer financial services
was the Quebec Superior Court judgment in the case of La Financière McLario v. Groupe Albatros
International Inc et al., J.E.2001-478, delivered in January of last year. Although the concept of
"fiduciary duty" is not part of traditional civil law, reference was in fact made to the Supreme
Court of Canada case in Hodgkinson v. Simms [1994] 3 S.C.R. 377, which dealt with the standard of
care, or "intensity of obligation," owed by the defendant.
The engagement in this case was clearly one concerning portfolio management - in
fact, the financial planner became a director and treasurer of the plaintiff's company. There would appear to
be little doubt then, in this particular case, that a fiduciary duty was owed. The initial contract
determined the percentage composition of the portfolio, as well as the fees and profit-sharing to be earned
by the defendant. In the lawsuit, the plaintiff complained that the composition of the portfolio was not
maintained in the manner in which it had been agreed upon originally, and that the defendant had also
withdrawn excessive fees. The Quebec Superior Court ruled in agreement with the plaintiffs.
The defendants argued that the owner of the plaintiff company was an experienced
investor who well understood the speculative nature of the portfolio they had designed. The court ruled,
however, that although he was an educated individual (a chemist), he was a careful and cautious investor
without much experience in stock market trading.
The defendants were unable to persuade the court of any compelling reason as to
why they had put a greater proportion of the plaintiff's portfolio into junior companies than had been
originally agreed upon. Although the judge accepted that the defendants had acted in good faith, in what they
believed to have been the best interests of the plaintiff, their actions could not excuse their ultimate
failure to follow clear instructions set out in the initial contract between the parties. The situation was
further aggravated by the defendants' continued lack of response to the request by the client to rectify the
situation.
Damages assessed in this case were the amount of losses suffered in the juniors
companies in which the client was over-invested, along with reimbursement of the excess fees. An appeal is
pending.
Mindy Paskell-Mede, BCL, LLB, is a partner with the Montreal law firm of
Nicholl Paskell-Mede, where she specializes in professional liability insurance. She is also
CAmagazine's Technical Editor for Law.
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