Wiz Technology, Inc. v. COOPERS & LYBRAND LLP

130 Cal. Rptr. 2d 263, 106 Cal. App. 4th 1
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 6, 2003
DocketB152602
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 130 Cal. Rptr. 2d 263 (Wiz Technology, Inc. v. COOPERS & LYBRAND LLP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiz Technology, Inc. v. COOPERS & LYBRAND LLP, 130 Cal. Rptr. 2d 263, 106 Cal. App. 4th 1 (Cal. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Opinion

BOREN, P. J.

Appellant Wiz Technology, Inc. (Wiz), alleged various tort and contract causes' of action against its auditor, respondent Coopers & Lybrand LLP (Coopers), for Coopers’s purported improper resignation prior to completion of the 1996 audit and Coopers’s refusal to permit Wiz to use the 1995 audit report to support its planned secondary securities offering. We find that summary judgment was properly granted in favor of Coopers for the following reasons: Coopers’s resignation was justified by Wiz’s breach of a material condition that required it to hire different counsel for securities matters; all claims relating to the 1995 audit report were time-barred; and, in any event, Wiz failed to produce any competent, nonspeculative evidence of proximate causation and damages. Moreover, the trial court did not err in denying Wiz’s motion for reconsideration.

Factual and Procedural Summary

Wiz was a publicly traded company that developed and marketed inexpensive computer software games and educational programs for sale at various shops and discount stores. Wiz first offered its securities on public stock markets in February of 1994.

*5 Coopers’s 1995 audit report for Wiz

The accounting firm of Corbin & Wertz (Corbin) audited Wiz in the 1994 fiscal year. When Corbin resigned as Wiz’s auditor after a disagreement over some accounting practices, Coopers agreed to perform Wiz’s 1995 audit. In an engagement letter, described as a “letter of arrangement,” Coopers agreed to “audit the financial statements of [Wiz] as of and for the [fiscal year] ending July 31, 1995, in accordance with generally accepted accounting standards,” and to issue an audit report thereon.

Coopers also agreed to inform Wiz if any matters came to its attention representing “significant deficiencies in the design or operations of [Wiz’s] internal control structure.” The engagement letter did not commit to any future audits, but acknowledged that additional unforeseen “consultation or audit work” could require negotiation or an additional fee.

Coopers’s 1995 audit report was completed and was included in Wiz’s form 10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The form 10-K related solely to the existing approximately 8,000,000 shares of Wiz common stock then registered for trading on public securities markets.

Discussions and conditions regarding a possible 1996 audit report for Wiz

Approximately four months later, in March of 1996, Coopers’s partner Hal Hurwitz met for several hours with Arthur and Mar-Jeanne Tendler, husband and wife and respectively Wiz’s president and chief executive officer. They discussed the conditions under which Coopers might continue its auditor relationship with Wiz and might audit Wiz’s financial statements for the fiscal year ending July 31, 1996 (i.e., the 1996 audit). As indicated in a declaration by Hurwitz, he advised the Tendlers of the following three conditions to continue as auditor: Wiz had to replace its chief financial officer, Billie Jolson; Wiz had to pay Coopers’s outstanding invoices (consistent with SEC auditor independence rules); and Wiz had to replace its existing securities attorney, Jehu Hand, with competent legal counsel because Hurwitz had concerns about Hand’s understanding of various securities laws and regulations.

On behalf of Wiz, the Tendlers agreed to Coopers’s three conditions. Regarding the attorney condition, Hurwitz also declared that he “learned” later that month that Wiz hired David Krinsky of O’Melveny & Myers as Wiz’s securities counsel. And Hurwitz understood that Hand would no longer be involved in Wiz’s securities matters or financial reporting. Wiz also satisfied the other two conditions by replacing Jolson with a new acting *6 chief financial officer, Melanie McCaffery, and it paid down its debt to Coopers.

Hurwitz documented Wiz’s initial compliance with the three conditions in a contemporaneous report to Coopers’s internal file on Wiz. In a statement to the SEC, the Tendlers also corroborated the existence of the three conditions, describing them as “three basic points,” and the Tendlers admitted that Wiz “put in place the changes that Coopers requested.” In verified discovery responses, Wiz again acknowledged that Hurwitz had informed the Tendlers of the three conditions, and that these conditions were “required.” Wiz asserted in response to interrogatories that Hand could remain as counsel because of his long-standing relationship with and knowledge of the company, but that Wiz would also have to retain a large law firm. For several months, according to Wiz, it used the legal services of both Hand and O’Melveny & Myers.

Meanwhile, Wiz planned to register additional securities for trading on public markets. But in April of 1996, the SEC commenced an investigation of Wiz before those plans could be implemented. Upon discovering the SEC investigation, Coopers advised Wiz that until the investigation was resolved, Coopers did not consent to Wiz’s using Coopers’s 1995 audit report in connection with any further SEC filings. Wiz did not complete the securities offering planned for the spring of 1996, and was sued for, among other things, its failure to complete the offering. Ultimately an SEC investigation resulted in a consent judgment against the Tendlers, prohibiting them from engaging in securities fraud in the future and from acting as directors or officers of any public company, and requiring disgorgement of some financial gains.

Regarding the possibility of a 1996 audit by Coopers, Wiz and Coopers never signed any explicit agreement that Coopers perform a 1996 audit. As explained by Arthur Tendler, Hurwitz repeatedly promised to send a 1996 engagement letter and Coopers estimated the fee for the engagement at $85,000. But no engagement letter was ever prepared. And Wiz points to nothing in the record suggesting that it at any time agreed to pay the amount Coopers proposed. Hurwitz testified, “There were a lot of steps that would have had to be undertaken” before an engagement letter could have been prepared. Hurwitz emphasized that there could not have been an agreement to perform the 1996 audit without a signed engagement letter detailing all the terms of the engagement, just as there had been for the 1995 audit.

In August of 1996, Wiz employees counted Wiz’s inventory. Coopers observed the inventory count. Coopers later was paid separately for this observation and for providing its paperwork to Wiz’s successor auditor.

*7 Coopers’s discovery that Wiz breached the attorney condition by using Hand as counsel for securities matters

As Hurwitz declared in support of Coopers’s subsequent motion for summary judgment, Hurwitz learned in August of 1996 that Wiz had resumed using Hand for securities matters because Hand was less expensive than Krinsky at O’Melveny & Myers. As Hurwitz testified during his deposition in response to questioning by Wiz’s counsel, Hurwitz learned that Hand was again involved in securities matters during a telephone conversation with either Hand or McCaffery (Wiz’s acting chief financial officer). Coopers filed and served this deposition evidence with its summary judgment moving papers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 Cal. Rptr. 2d 263, 106 Cal. App. 4th 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiz-technology-inc-v-coopers-lybrand-llp-calctapp-2003.