Md. Code Regs. 09.24.01.06 - Code of Professional Conduct
A. Independence.
(1) A licensee who is performing an
engagement in which the licensee is to issue a written certificate or opinion,
other than one in which a lack of independence is disclosed, shall be
independent with respect to the client in fact and appearance.
(2) Independence is considered to be impaired
if, for example, during the period of a licensee's professional engagement, or
at the time of issuing the written certificate or opinion, the licensee:
(a) Had or was committed to acquire any
direct or material indirect financial interest in the client;
(b) Was a trustee of any trust, or personal
representative of any estate, if this trust or estate had or was committed to
acquire any direct or material indirect financial interest in the
client;
(c) Had any joint, closely
held business investment with the client or any officer, director, or principal
stockholder of the client which was material in relation to the net worth of
either the licensee or the client; or
(d) Had any loan to or from the client or any
officer, director, or principal stockholder of the client other than loans of
the following kinds made by a financial institution under normal lending
procedures, terms, and requirements:
(i)
Loans obtained by the licensee which are not material in relation to the net
worth of the licensee,
(ii) Home
mortgages, and
(iii) Other secured
loans, except those secured solely by a guarantee of the licensee.
(3) Independence is
also considered to be impaired if, during the period covered by the financial
statements, during the period of the professional engagement, or at the time of
issuing the written certificate or opinion, the licensee:
(a) Was connected with the client as a
promoter, underwriter, or voting trustee, a director, or officer or in any
capacity equivalent to that of a member of management or of an
employee;
(b) Was a trustee for any
pension or profit-sharing trust of the client; or
(c) Received other compensation from a third
party, or had a commitment to receive other compensation from the client or a
third party, with respect to services or products procured or to be procured by
the client.
(4) The
examples in §A(2) of this regulation are not intended to be
all-inclusive.
B. A
licensee may not in the performance of professional services knowingly
misrepresent facts, or subordinate judgement to others. In tax practice,
however, a licensee may resolve doubt in favor of the client as long as there
is reasonable support for the licensee's position.
C. A licensee may not, during the period in
which the licensee is engaged to perform any of the following services, and
during the period covered by any historical financial statements involved in
the listed services:
(1) Perform for a
contingent fee any professional services for, or receive a contingent fee from
a client for whom the licensee or the licensee's firm performs:
(a) An audit or review of a financial
statement;
(b) A compilation of a
financial statement, when the licensee expects, or reasonably might expect,
that a third party will use the financial statement and the licensee's
compilation report does not disclose a lack of independence; or
(c) An examination of prospective financial
information; or
(2)
Prepare an original or amended tax return or claim for a tax refund for a
contingent fee for any client.
D. A licensee may not concurrently engage in
the practice of certified public accountancy and in any other business or
occupation which impairs independence or objectivity in rendering professional
services.
E. With respect to other
compensation:
(1) A licensee who receives or
agrees to receive other compensation with respect to services or products
recommended, referred, or sold by the licensee to another person shall make,
not later than the making of the recommendation, referral, or sale, the
following disclosures to the other person in writing:
(a) If the other person is a client, the
nature, source, and amount of the other compensation, or
(b) If the other person is not a client, the
nature and source only of any other compensation received from a third
party;
(2) The
disclosure required by this regulation shall be made regardless of the amount,
as defined by Regulation .01A(4) of this chapter, of the other compensation
involved;
(3) This regulation does
not apply to payments received from the sale of all or a material part of an
accounting practice, or to retirement payments to persons formerly engaged in
the practice of public accountancy;
(4) Compliance with the requirements of this
section does not constitute a defense to a charge of impaired independence
under §A(3)(c) of this regulation.
F. A licensee may not pay a commission to a
third party to obtain a client unless, before being engaged by the client, the
licensee discloses to the client in writing the fact and the amount of the
commission. This regulation does not apply to payments made by a licensee for
the purchase of all or a material part of an accounting practice, or to
retirement payments to persons formerly engaged in the practice of public
accountancy.
G. Competence and
Technical Standards.
(1) A licensee may not
undertake any engagement for the performance of professional services which the
licensee cannot reasonably expect to complete with due professional competence,
including compliance, where applicable, with §G(2)-(4) of this
regulation.
(2) A licensee may not
permit the licensee's name to be associated with financial statements in such a
manner as to imply that the licensee is acting as an independent certified
public accountant with respect to these financial statements unless the
licensee has complied with applicable generally accepted auditing standards, as
such standards may be amended, modified, issued, or reissued. Statements on
auditing standards issued, reissued, amended, or modified, from time to time,
by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, and other
pronouncements having similar generally recognized authority, are considered to
be interpretations of generally accepted auditing standards, and departures
therefrom shall be justified by those who do not follow them.
(3) A licensee may not issue a report
asserting that financial statements are presented in conformity with generally
accepted at that time accounting principles if these financial statements
contain any departure from those accounting principles which have a material
effect on the financial statements taken as a whole, unless the licensee can
demonstrate that by reason of unusual circumstances the financial statements
would otherwise have been misleading. In this case, the licensee's report shall
describe the departure, the approximate effects thereof, if practicable, and
the reasons why compliance with the principle would result in a misleading
statement. For purposes of this regulation, generally accepted accounting
principles are considered to be defined by pronouncements issued, reissued,
amended, or modified, from time to time, by the Financial Accounting Standards
Board and its predecessor and successor entities and similar pronouncements
issued by other entities having similar generally recognized
authority.
(4) A licensee in the
performance of accounting and review services or management advisory services,
consulting, financial planning, or tax services shall conform to the
professional standards applicable to these services at the time the services
are performed.
H.
Responsibilities to Clients.
(1) Except by
permission of the client or the heirs, successors, or personal representatives
of the client, a licensee or any partner, officer, shareholder, or employee of
a licensee may not voluntarily disclose information communicated by the client
relating to and in connection with professional services rendered to the client
by the licensee. This regulation does not:
(a)
Relieve a licensee of any obligations under §G of this
regulation;
(b) Affect in any way a
licensee's obligation to comply with a validly issued subpoena or summons in a
criminal or bankruptcy case;
(c)
Prohibit disclosures in the course of a quality review of a licensee's
professional services; or
(d)
Preclude a licensee from responding to any inquiry made by the Board or any
investigative or disciplinary body established by law or formally recognized by
the Board.
(2) Members
and agents of the Board and professional practice reviewers may not disclose
any client information which comes to their attention from licensees in
disciplinary proceedings or otherwise in carrying out their responsibilities,
except that they may furnish this information to an investigative or
disciplinary body of the kind referred to above.
(3) A licensee shall furnish to the
licensee's client or former client, upon request and reasonable notice made
within a reasonable time after original issuance of the document in question:
(a) A copy of a tax return of the
client;
(b) A copy of any report,
or other document, issued by the licensee to or for this client;
(c) Any accounting or other records belonging
to, or obtained from or on behalf of, the client which the licensee removed
from the client's premises or received from the client's account, but the
licensee may make and retain copies of these documents when they form the basis
for work done by the licensee; and
(d) A copy of the licensee's working papers,
to the extent that these working papers include records which would ordinarily
constitute part of the client's records and are not otherwise available to the
client.
I.
Other Responsibilities and Practices.
(1) A
licensee may not commit any act that reflects adversely on the licensee's
fitness to engage in the practice of public accountancy.
(2) A licensee may not permit others to carry
out on the licensee's behalf, either with or without compensation, acts which,
if carried out by the licensee, would place the licensee in violation of the
Code of Professional Conduct.
(3) A
licensee may practice public accountancy only in a proprietorship, a
partnership, or a professional corporation, organized in accordance with
Business Occupations and Professions Article, Title 2, Annotated Code of
Maryland.
(4) A licensee may not
engage in the practice of public accountancy using a professional or firm name
or designation which is misleading in any way, about the legal form of the
firm, or about those who are partners, members, directors, or shareholders of
the firm, or about any other matter. However, names of one or more former
partners, members, directors, or shareholders may be included in the name of a
firm or its successor, with the written consent of the former partner, member,
director, or shareholder. A partner, member, director, or shareholder surviving
the death of all other partners, members, directors, or shareholders may
continue to practice under a firm name for 1 year after becoming a sole
practitioner. An accounting firm may not use in its name terms such as "Group",
"and Company", "and Associates", or similar terms which imply the presence in
the firm of more licensees than those identified by name in the firm name
unless the number of licensees associated with the firm, whether as partners,
shareholders, members, directors, or full-time employees, exceeds the number of
licensees named in the firm name.
(5)
A licensee
shall respond in writing to any communications from the Board requesting a
response, within 30 days of the mailing of these communications, by registered
or certified mail, to the last address furnished to the Board by the
licensee. Failure to Respond.
(a) If
an applicant or licensee receives from the Board a written communication
requesting a response, the applicant or licensee shall respond in writing
within 30 days of the date of the mailing.
(b) The Board shall send a written
communication by first-class mail to the last address furnished to the Board by
the applicant or licensee.
(c) It
is the responsibility of the applicant or licensee to notify the Board in
writing if there has been a change in the applicant's or licensee's
address.
(d) Failure to respond as
required by the regulation may be considered by the Board to be a violation of
Business Occupations and Professions Article, §2-315(a)(l)(xii),
Annotated Code of Maryland.
(6) Advertising and Solicitation.
(a) A licensee may not use or participate in
the use of any form of communication, written or oral, having reference to the
licensee's professional services, which contains a false, fraudulent,
misleading, deceptive, or unfair statement or claim.
(b) A licensee may not solicit clients by the
use of coercion, duress, compulsion, intimidation, threats, overreaching, or
vexatious or harassing conduct.
(c)
A false, fraudulent, misleading, deceptive, or unfair statement or claim
includes but is not limited to a statement or claim which:
(i) Contains a misrepresentation of
fact;
(ii) Is likely to mislead or
deceive because it fails to make full disclosure of relevant facts;
(iii) Is intended or likely to create false
or unjustified expectations of favorable results;
(iv) Implies educational or professional
attainments or licensing recognition not supported in fact;
(v) Represents that professional services can
or will be competently performed for a stated fee when this is not the case, or
makes representations with respect to fees for professional services that do
not disclose all variables that reasonably may be expected to affect the fees
that will in fact be charged; or
(vi) Contains other representations or
implications that in reasonable probability will cause those of ordinary
prudence to misunderstand or be deceived.
(d) A licensee or CPA firm offering or
performing public accounting services on an Internet webpage or website shall
include the following information on the webpage or website:
(i) Name of the licensee or firm;
(ii) Principal place of business of the
licensee or firm;
(iii) Business
phone of the licensee or firm; and
(iv) The Maryland license or permit number
issued by the Board accompanied by the language "Maryland license number" or
"Maryland permit number", as appropriate.
(e) A CPA firm webpage or website need not
include the individual registration number of each CPA firm member.
J. Requirement to
Disclose Conviction or Sanction to Board.
(1)
A licensee or permit holder shall disclose to the Board that the licensee or
permit holder has been:
(a) Convicted of a
felony under the laws of the United States or any state;
(b) Convicted of a misdemeanor under the laws
of the United States or any state; or
(c) Sanctioned by a unit of federal or state
government, or any regulatory entity established by law.
(2) The disclosure under §J(1) of this
regulation shall be made:
(a) In writing;
and
(b) Within 30 days of the date
of the conviction or sanction.
(3) The fact that a licensee or permit holder
has appealed a conviction or sanction does not relieve the licensee or permit
holder of the obligation to comply with §J of this regulation.
Notes
Regulation .06A amended effective January 26, 1987 (14:2 Md. R. 128)
Regulation .06C amended effective March 20, 2000 (27:5 Md. R. 583); December 31, 2007 (34:26 Md. R. 2261)
Regulation .06G amended effective October 19, 1998 (25:21 Md. R. 1573)
Regulation .06I amended effective October 10, 1994 (21:20 Md. R. 1732); December 28, 1998 (25:26 Md. R. 1921)
Regulation .06J adopted effective 41:8 Md. R. 470, eff.
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