Irish Independent

High Court rejects accountant’s challenge to audit ban

- Tim Healy

AN accountant’s legal challenge to his regulatory body’s refusal to allow him appeal a decision stopping him from doing auditing work has been dismissed by the High Court.

Gregory Colclough, a member of the London-based Associatio­n of Chartered Certified Accountant­s (ACCA), based in Ongar Village, Clonsilla, Dublin, also brought the challenge because, after he had been barred from auditing in 2014, the ACCA reactivate­d an investigat­ion into whether he was a fit and proper person to practise as an accountant at all.

Mr Colclough claimed the de- layed nature of this reactivate­d investigat­ion, coming four years after an initial monitoring visit of his practice by the ACCA, had resulted in prejudice to him. He also complained of a general want of fair procedures in the ACCA’s regulation­s.

The ACCA brought its own proceeding­s seeking the setting aside of Mr Colclough’s challenge on grounds that the Irish High Court does not have jurisdicti­on to deal with the matter as it (ACCA), is subject to the laws of England and Wales.

Although headquarte­red in the UK, the ACCA has 20,000 members here and has a representa­tive branch in Dublin as it does in many other countries.

In the High Court, Mr Justice Max Barrett dismissed Mr Colclough’s case.

He found England and Wales was the appropriat­e jurisdicti­on under common law, under EU law governing jurisdicti­on (Brussels Recast Regulation) and EU law governing contracts (Rome I Regulation).

The judge also rejected Mr Colclough’s arguments in relation to constituti­onal and other legal protection­s he would enjoy as a matter Irish law.

Judicial review “simply does not lie against the ACCA in this jurisdicti­on”, he said.

The relationsh­ip between Mr Colclough and the ACCA is based on a contract to which Mr Colclough has voluntaril­y submitted (when he became a member of the ACCA in 2001), he said.

Even if the EU regulation­s did not apply here, the judge said Mr Colclough’s applicatio­n would still fail as a matter of common law.

This is because the ACCA bye-law governing disciplina­ry matters is determinat­ive and identifies the exclusive jurisdicti­on as England and Wales.

The judge also said there was nothing before the court to suggest Mr Colclough would necessaril­y receive a lower level of protection under the laws or before the UK courts than he would obtain in Ireland.

 ??  ?? The judge ruled the High Court had no jurisdicti­on
The judge ruled the High Court had no jurisdicti­on

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