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Commercial Damages: Assessing, Estimating, and Quantifying Losses

This chapter explores the various types of commercial damages, the legal framework for proving damages, and the economic considerations involved in quantifying losses. It covers methods for determining lost revenues and incremental costs, as well as the time value of money.

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Commercial Damages: Assessing, Estimating, and Quantifying Losses

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  1. Chapter 15 Consulting, Litigation Support and Expert Witnesses: Damages, Valuations and Other Engagements

  2. Critical Thinking Exercise How many outs are there in an inning?

  3. Professional Standards and Guidance • AICPA’s Forensic and Valuation Services Section • Litigation support and valuation engagements • “Practice aid” • Special reports • Other publications

  4. Engagement Issues and Professional Responsibility • Consider the implications • CPAs need to ensure they have or can obtain necessary skills, training, and experience • Engagement letter • Nature and extent of professional services to be provided • Outline degree of responsibility assumed • No opinion about guilt or innocence

  5. Types of Consulting and Litigation Support Activities • Assessing the risk of fraud and illegal acts’ • Evaluating the adequacy of internal control systems • Substantive testing of transactions during an attest or general consulting engagement • Designing and implementing internal control policies and procedures • Proactive fraud auditing when fraud is not suspected • Preparing company codes of business ethics and conduct • Consulting about employee bonding • Developing corporate compliance programs

  6. Tools and Techniques – General Discussion • AICPA Practice Aid 07-1 • Public Domain Reviews and Background Investigations • Interviews of Knowledgeable Persons • Confidential Sources of Information and Evidence • Laboratory Analysis of Physical and Electronic Evidence • Physical and Electronic Surveillance • Undercover Operations • Analysis of Financial Transactions

  7. Commercial Damages • Estimating damages on a case-by-case basis • Understanding and appropriate use of proper accounting methods • Understanding how accounting information is used to create the required components of the damages estimate • Accurate, timely, and professional advice will help attorney formulate effective strategies

  8. Legal Framework for Damages • To pursue legal damages, injured part must prove 2 points • Liability: That the other party was liable for all or part of the damages claimed • Damages: That the injured party suffered damages as the results of the actions or lack of actions of offending party • To prove damages were sustained, injured party must prove 3 additional elements • Accused party was the direct or proximate cause of the damages • Amount must be calculable to a reasonable degree of certainty • Accused parties should have been reasonably able to foresee that damages were likely to accrue

  9. Types of Commercial Damages • Compensatory • Economic loss or restitution • Lost wages • Incremental or incidental expenses • Lost profits • Lost Value • Reliance • Punitive • Special

  10. The Loss Period • One of the first steps to measuring commercial damages is to determine the loss period • For breach of contract, it is generally the remaining term of contract • If the contract term is very long, courts may be reluctant to enforce it because of issues of uncertainty • The damages may extend beyond the contract term because the parties have a history of extending or renewing prior contracts

  11. Economic Framework for Damages • Amount of loss may be affected by the economy or conditions of the industry • Give consideration to the appropriate economic conditions as a starting point • Next level of consideration is the industry • Performance of entity compared to competitors • Gather financial statement data, breakdowns, non-financial data, and tax returns • Consider historical performance • Assessment of cash flows

  12. Quantifying Lost Revenues and Increased Expenses • Decisions that need to be made • Base amount of revenues or expenses • Choose revenue or expense growth rates • Are historical rates of growth applicable to the damage period? • Use straightforward method or more sophisticated method • Methods used to develop estimates of lost sales and incremental expenses • The Before and After Method • The Benchmark (“Yardstick”) Method

  13. Determining Lost Profits • Consider impact on “bottom-line” net income • Incremental costs subtracted from incremental revenues • Damaged party must mitigate its damages • AICPA practice Aid No. 7 “Litigation Services” • Losses characterized as lost profits, lost value, lost cash flows, net revenue and incremental costs

  14. Determining Incremental Costs • Incurred as a result of plaintiff’s action or inaction that would otherwise not be incurred • Infrastructure requirements in order for the plaintiff to have the capacity necessary • Cost Behavior • Fixed • Variable • Relevant range • Allocated costs • Accounting estimates

  15. Determining Incremental Costs • Methods for determining cost behavior • Account analysis • High-low method • Graphics • Statistical (regression, survey and sampling) • Engineering

  16. The Time Value of Money • Lost incremental profits before the matter can be resolved between the parties • Pre-judgment interest • Amounts that would only be realized in future periods after the dispute has been resolved • AICPA Practice Aid 06-4 “Calculating Lost Profits” • Cost of equity

  17. Communicating and Defending the Results of Commercial Damage Estimates • “Tire-hits-the-road” • Venues to be evaluated, scrutinized or challenged • Periodic meetings with attorneys for whom you have been engaged • Pre-judgment testimony related to summary judgment • Meetings with counsel where they determine how to proceed with the case • The written report • Deposition testimony • Regulatory or administrative hearings • Alternate dispute resolution forums • Trial testimony • Critique opposing side expert • Neutral and objective position

  18. Valuations • Value business, business ownership interest, security, or intangible asset • Statement on Standards for Valuation Services No.1 • Overall engagement considerations • Development of the valuation • Valuation report and appendices • Organization certificates

  19. Overall Engagement Considerations • Assessment of economic and industry conditions • Ability to identify, gather and analyze relevant data • Simplified versus complex valuation methods • Limitations • Assumptions • Understand nature of client’s expectations and planned use for valuation services outcomes

  20. Type of Valuation Engagements • Two types of engagements • Valuation • Data and information are continually gathered, updated, incorporated and analyzed • Use most appropriate methods and approaches • Calculation • Outline assets, valuation methods and other aspects of the engagement • Service provider agrees in advance • Professional proceeds to apply agreed-upon procedures

  21. Measures of Value • Book value • Balance sheet value • Liquidation value • Cash likely received by owner under pressure to sell item quickly • Market value • Willing buyer and seller come to terms under normal market conditions

  22. Determining Market, Fair Market and Fair Value • Two considerations that determine market and fair market value of an asset • Future income stream • Difference between future income stream and alternative investment options • Three methods used to determine fair market values • Discounted earnings and cash flows • Market comparables valuation • Asset and liability market valuation

  23. Discounted Earnings and Cash Flows

  24. Estimating the Risk-adjusted Discount Rate Four methods to develop risk adjusted discount rate and its related cash flows • CAPM • Weighted average cost of capital (WACC) • Bond-equity additive method • Build-up method

  25. Forecasting Income and Cash Flows • Consider data in the following areas • Nature of the business • General economic and industry outlook • Book value of equity • Earnings capacity of the company • Dividend paying capacity • Goodwill and other intangible assets • Previous sales of company securities • Market prices of comparable companies • Number, type and age of organizational facilities • Classes of debt or equity and their associated rights • Industry markets and conditions • Business risks

  26. Forecasting Income and Cash Flows • Grounded in historical financial performance • Free cash flows • Related parties • “Arm’s length” • Attempt to gather the following • Forecasts of projected financial results • Articles on industry-related valuation issues • Relevant client information • Calculate applicable ratios and analyze trends

  27. Asset Valuation Models • Assumes balance sheet reasonably identifies company’s assets and liabilities • Appraisers value assets • Net present value techniques estimate liabilities • Two shortcomings • Does not account for benefits associated with asset synergy • Fails to account for significant intangible assets

  28. Market and Accounting-based Comparable Models • Benchmarks, guidelines and rules of thumb • Useful as a reasonableness check on results of other analyses • Should not be used as stand-alone method unless other method is not possible • Address shortcomings if used as stand-alone method

  29. Valuation Discounts and Premiums • Majority and minority owners with various control rights • Asset ownership interests have differing marketability or liquidity attributes

  30. Other Ownership Interests Subject to Valuation • Valuing debt • Preferred stock • Convertible debt • Stock • Warrants • Options • Intangible assets

  31. Conclusion of Value • Number or specific range • Reconcile and correlate results from more than one methodology or assumption • Consider reliability of the valuation outcome • Valuation professional has 2 choices • Primarily rely on 1 method using other methods as reasonableness checks • Rely on multiple methods to determine the value or specified range

  32. The Valuation Report Accredited Senior Appraiser’s (ASA’s) Principles of Appraisal Practice • Description of the property • Objectives of the appraisal work • Statement of contingent and limiting conditions • Description and explanation of appraisal method • Statement of appraiser’s disinterestedness • Appraiser’s responsibility to communicate each analysis, opinion and conclusion • Mandatory recertification statement • Signatures and inclusion of dissenting opinions

  33. The Valuation Report • Uniform Standards of the Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) • Identify and describe business enterprise, assets or equity • State purpose and intended use of appraisal • Define the value to be estimated • Set forth the effective date of the appraisal and report • Describe the extent of the appraisal process employed • All assumptions and limiting conditions that affect analyses opinions and conclusions • The information considered, appraisal procedures followed and reasoning that supports the analyses, opinions and conclusions • Any additional information that may be appropriate to show compliance • Rationale for the valuation methods and procedures used • A certification in accordance with Standards Rule 10-3

  34. Personal Injury, Wrongful Death and Survival Actions • Three types of damages that may ensue • Losses to the individual • Losses to survivors • Losses to the estates of decedents • More technical than analytical • Guidelines are relatively straight forward do to their common nature • Inflation is a major challenge

  35. Losses: Personal Injury • Injured person survived and subsequently lost income • Experts estimate reduced earnings and other forms of support as a result of the injury • May incur future costs or earnings capacity may be reduced as part of a permanent injury • Injured person may suffer 5 types of losses • Loss of earnings • Loss of employment benefits • Losses associated with ability to perform “non-market services” • Medical costs • Life care costs

  36. Losses: Wrongful Death and Survival Cases • Death of a person where another party may be held accountable can result in two types of cases • Wrongful death • Primary right of recovery resides with survivors • Survival actions • Estate of deceased has primary right of recovery • “What if” • No need for medical or life-care costs

  37. Analysis of Earnings Losses • Investigation of five areas • Determining the basis for earnings losses • Analysis of employment history and related past earnings • Projection of probable career paths • Determining the proper earnings for each projected career path • Consideration of other factors on earnings losses • Three methods for projecting earnings • Case-by-case method • Below-market discount method • Total offset method

  38. Analysis of Lost Employment Benefits Associated with Lost Earnings • Generally, not all employment benefits are lost when an injury occurs • Applicable standard are those benefits the injured party has lost • Value to employee not cost to employer • Additional analysis is required for benefits mandated by government laws and regulations

  39. Analysis of Lost “Non-Market Services” • Approaches used to estimate costs • Actual cost to develop and utilize substitute services • Accumulate hours associated with activities and multiply by reasonable rate • Issues with “non-market services” • Injured person may have provided services well into retirement • Injured party may not have provided services for remainder of life

  40. Analysis of Medical and Life Care Costs • Identify requirements in the following areas • Types of needs the injured person will have • How long those needs are likely to continue • Changes in those needs over time • How often those needs will require services • Special equipment required • Types of professionals who will need to provide services • Once listing is complete, estimates of costs can be developed • Seek out bids for a life care annuity

  41. Injured Children, Homemakers and Retired Persons • Generally have limited earnings and no W-2’s • Children • Have made few decisions that would determine his or her future • U.S. Bureau provides statistics based on educational assumptions • Homemakers • Estimate cost of home services that will need to be contracted with outside parties • Retired persons • Earning capacity • Will retiree ever enter work force again?

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