AABD Files Amicus Briefs in the "Whistleblower" Cardinal Bankshares Case
From its inception, AABD has striven to help assure that bank directors are given
reasonable protections against personal liability and the tools with which to meet their
duties and responsibilities.
The Cardinal Bankshares Corporation case pending in the Fourth Circuit Federal Court of
Appeals and at the Department of Labor has the potential of eroding these protections and
therefore the AABD has filed amicus briefs in the case.
Cardinal, an SEC reporting company, fired its CFO. The CFO claims that he was
fired because he threatened to not sign off on Sarbanes-Oxley financial certifications,
allegedly because of concerns about accounting irregularities. Cardinal asserts that
he was fired because he refused to meet the investigators retained by Cardinal's board
looking into his allegations under procedures established by the board.
The CFO filed an action with the Department of Labor under Section 806 of
Sarbanes-Oxley. Section 806 states that no public company may discharge or in any
manner discriminate against an employee because of a lawful act done by the employee to
provide information regarding any conduct which the employee reasonably believes
constitutes a violation of any SEC rule or regulation.
A Department of Labor investigator found that there was no reasonable cause to believe
that Cardinal had discharged the CFO for a legitimate non-retaliatory reason. The
CFO then appealed to an administrative law judge, who made an initial determination that
the CFO was fired because he was a whistleblower and recommended reinstatement. The
Department of Labor has not made a final determination but has asked the Fourth Circuit
Court of Appeals to order the CFO's reinstatement.
The Department of Labor tried to force the CFO's reinstatement in the Federal District
Court for the Western District of Virginia last Fall, but the Court dismissed the case.
AABD filed an amicus brief before that court in support of dismissal.
Cardinal's Board of Directors does not believe that it can reasonably rely of the CFO
to perform his duties or on his work product. If the Board cannot reasonably rely on
a senior officer but accepts the numbers prepared by the CFO and if the numbers turn out
to be wrong, the Board can be held personally liable for the injury suffered as a result
of accepting the CFO's numbers.
Virginia statutes, like virtually all state statutes, provides a "safe
harbor" to directors who rely reasonably on officers and others. But directors
lose that safe harbor if they rely on those of whom they have knowledge or information
that makes reliance unwarranted. Given the key role of a CFO, losing this safe
harbor is of immense consequences to bank directors.
AABD is concerned that Cardinal's board may be faced with the prospect of being ordered
to rehire a CFO in whom they have no confidence. It is exacerbated by the fact that
the order may be based on an interim decision of an administrative law judge.
AABD is also concerned with the fact that Section 806 grants the Department of Labor
the administrative power, subject to only limited review by a court of law, to order
reinstatement of an officer in whom the board has no confidence. AABD believes that
the Board of Directors (and its Audit Committee) of a public company should only hire
those in whom they can reasonably rely, and to force a public company to hire someone in
whom the board has no confidence violates a fundamental fiduciary standard that is
accepted by all or virtually all of the 50 states. Therefore, AABD will work toward
having Congress amend Section 806 to remove jurisdiction from the Department of Labor, and
to eliminate the possibility that a company will be forced to rehire a person in whom they
cannot reasonably rely.
Documents related to the case:
AABD Amicus
Brief filed October 2006 with the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Virginia
Opinion of U.S. District Court for the Western District of
Virginia, October 5, 2006, dismissing the case against Cardinal Bankshares Corporation
Motion to Permit AABD to file Amicus Brief
AABD Amicus Brief filed April 2007 with the United
States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit Court in support of dismissal of the case
against Cardinal Bankshares Corporation
AABD Amicus Brief filed April 2007 with the Department
of Labor in support of Cardinal Bankshares Corporation
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