Why would a business man / elder sign a blank document?

by LogCon 2 Replies latest watchtower scandals

  • LogCon
    LogCon

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    Why would an elder, who is a businessman, sign an incomplete or blank document ?

    Sound shady?

    FINANCIAL SERVICES TRIBUNAL

    IN THE MATTER OF THE FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS ACT,

    RSBC 1996, c. 141 as amended (the "Act")

    BETWEEN:

    THE SUPERINTENDENT OF FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS

    APPELLANT

    AND :

    INSURANCE COUNCIL OF BRITISH COLUMBIA

    And

    RICHARD JONES

    RESPONDENTS

    DECISION

    BEFORE:

    APPREARANCES:

    DATE OF LAST SUBMISSION:

    DATE OF DECISION:

    DALE R. DOAN, Presiding Member

    RICHARD FERNYHOUGH, for the

    Appellant

    DAVID T. McKNIGHT, for the

    Respondent, Insurance Council of

    British Columbia

    WILLIAM KNUTSON, for the

    Respondent, Richard Jones

    (Decision based upon written

    submissions)

    May 25,2006

    June 29,2006

    Page 2

    INTRODUCTION

    This appeal (the "Appeal") to the Financial Services Tribunal (the "FST") arose as a result of

    the Notice Of Appeal dated February 16, 2006 and filed with the FST by the solicitor for the

    Appellant, the Superintendent of Financial Institutions. The decision under appeal is that of the

    Respondent, Insurance Council of British Columbia (the "Council") dated January 17, 2006,

    which decision found that the Respondent, Richard Jones (the "Licensee") committed multiple

    breaches of sections 23 1 (l)(a) and one breach of section 23 1 (l)(e) of the Act. The Appellant

    appeals the decision of Council basically on the grounds that the penalty imposed by Council on

    Mr. Jones should be increased in terms of the period of suspension and that the educational

    requirement ordered by Council should be varied to require the completion of educational

    element prior to the Licensee reapplying for his registration as a Certified Financial Planner. The

    Appeal is submitted pursuant to section 242(3)(b) of the Act.

    COUNCIL'S ORDER

    Council issued its Order on January 17, 2006. In its Order, Council made reference to the fact

    that the Licensee accepted Council's intended decision dated April 22, 2005, as amended on

    December 22,2005 (collectively, the "Intended Decision") and did not wish to exercise his right

    to a hearing. Thus, under the authority granted in sections 231, 236 and 241.1 of the Act,

    Council ordered as follows (please note that Council refers to Mr. Jones as the "Licensee" as will

    this Appeal decision):

    1. the Licensee be suspended for nine months. If the Licensee, before he completes his

    first four months of the suspension, reimburses the clients Council deemed to have

    incurred unnecessary deferred sales charges totalling $25,155.21, the remaining five

    months of the suspension will be waived;

    2. the Licensee be fined $10,000;

    3. the Licensee, as a condition of his license, be required in each of the four years

    following the reinstatement of his license from the suspension, to successfully

    complete a different course comprising Advocis' Certified Financial Planner Program

    ('CFP") or a program with an equivalent curriculum;

    4. the Licensee, as a condition of his license until successful completion the

    aforementioned financial planning courses, be supervised by a life insurance agent

    who meets Council's approval. The supervising life insurance agent must agree to

    have a condition placed on hisker insurance license making hidher accountable for

    the insurance business conduct of the Licensee;

    5. the Licensee pay the costs of Council's investigation totalling $15,700; and

    6. as a condition of any order, the Licensee will be required to pay the above mentioned

    costs and fines by making seven equal payments, with the first payment required at

    the beginning of the fifth month after the commencement of his suspension. If the

    Licensee does not pay the ordered costs and fines in accordance with this payment

    schedule, this licence will be suspended until such time as the outstanding fine and

    costs are paid.

    Page 3

    It should be noted that the record for this Appeal (the "Record") includes the December 22,2005

    confirmation letter which sets out the results of an investigation by Council undertaken pursuant

    to section 232 of the Act, which investigation resulted in the Respondent Licensee confirming his

    agreement with all of the findings set out in Council's Intended Decision. Those findings, as

    confirmed, form part of the Record. The December 22,2005 confirmation letter of Council then

    dealt with the two remaining matters of contention, being the amount of the fine imposed and the

    length of the suspension to be ordered.

    The investigation conducted by Council pursuant to section 232 of the Act involved serious

    allegations described in Council's letter of April 22, 2005, addressed to the solicitor for the

    Licensee, as follows:

    "Contrary to section 231(1) of the Act, the Licensee no longer meets a licensing

    requirement under Council Rule 3(2) or did not meet that requirement at the time his

    licence was issued, or at a later time. In particular, the Licensee is not trustworthy and

    competent, and does not intend to carry on the business of insurance in good faith and in

    accordance with the usual practice."

    Council then lists eight specific allegations which formed the subject matter of the investigation

    in the April 22, 2005 letter of Council to the lawyer representing the Licensee and outlined in

    detail the findings of the investigation, which findings comprise most of the fifteen page letter

    itself and which findings establish the legitimacy of the eight listed allegations. I will list the

    eight allegations accepted and confirmed by the Licensee:

    The Licensee had clients named George Barrington and Jehovah’s Witness Elder sign

    incomplete (andlor blank) insurance related documents.

    The Licensee fabricated George Barrington's signature on two insurance related

    documents.

    The Licensee misled George Barrington to believe that a transfer of his segregated

    fund investments from one insurer to another had taken place when in fact if had not

    occurred.

    The Licensee gave four clients (Janet Savage, Diane Medley, Margo Larson and Edna

    Laffey) inaccurate tax advice in relation to insurance matters.

    Contrary to the interests of three clients (George Barrington, Diane Medley, and

    Margo Larson), the Licensee unnecessarily recommended and facilitated the transfer

    of their segregated fund investments to generate commissions.

    In recommending and facilitating an insurance transaction for a client named Edna

    Laffey, the Licensee did not act in her best interests. In particular:

    - He failed to conduct sufficient fact-finding and needs analysis to properly assess

    her circumstances, goals and needs;

    - He did not make full and fair disclosure to all material facts about the proposed

    insurance to enable her to make an informed decision; and

    - His insurance recommendation was not reasonable in the circumstances and it

    was done for personal gain.

    In recommending and facilitating several insurance transactions for Jehovah’s Witness Elder,

    the Licensee did not act in his best interest. In particular, the Licensee's insurance

    Page 4

    recommendations were not reasonable in the circumstances and they were done for

    personal gain.

    8) The Licensee willfklly disregarded a requirement under the Act that he not rebate an

    insurance premium. In particular, he recommended and facilitated the transfer of a

    segregated fund held by Janet Savage in order to generate a commission, a portion of

    which he returned to her contrary to section 79 of the Act.

    Council considered each of the eight findings in the context of the requirements defined in

    Council's Code of Conduct of competence, good faith and usual practice. These requirements

    are set out later in this Appeal decision, however, I mention them here due to the fact that the

    overriding duty of good faith to insurers and clients with whom licensees transact business is

    emphasized through the descriptions of the required level of competence, good faith and usual

    practice set out in the Code of Conduct. As Council described each of the allegations and the

    finding that resulted from the investigation under the Act, it was unequivocally clear that the

    Licensee did not meet the requirements of competence, good faith and usual practice to either the

    insurers with whom he transacted business or the clients whom he represented in the insurance

    policy placement process.

    Further, the seriousness of the acts of the Licensee and the deliberate disregard for required

    procedures over a period of time are clearly set out in the findings of Council. The same can be

    said respecting those acts which were undertaken by the Licensee for personal gain and which

    were contrary to the interests of his clients. Forgery, misrepresentation, incompetence and

    inaccurate advice on tax matters and manipulation of clients' interests often for personal

    financial gain, all are serious matters that must be dealt with by Council in an effective and

    decisive manner if the interests of the public are to be met and if the integrity of the insurance

    industry in British Columbia is to be maintained. A close review of the April 22, 2005 letter

    containing the allegations and findings of Council must cause any reviewing body, and in

    particular the FST, to be on special alert in ensuring that the penalty imposed by Council

    properly addresses those legal and public policy principles that are inherent in the important task

    of determining the appropriate penalty in the circumstances created by the actions of the

    Licensee.

    ISSUES ON APPEAL

    The Appellant, Superintendent of Financial Institutions, describes the central issue on Appeal, to

    paraphrase, as follows:

    Council erred in exercising its discretion in unreasonably concluding that a period of

    suspension of only 9 months (reduced to 4 months if some restitution is made), and

    completing a financial planning course over a four year period after reinstatement, in

    addition to a $1 0,000 fine, was appropriate discipline of the licensee of engaging in

    the following conduct:

    a) forging a client's signature twice on insurance documents;

    Page 5

    b) having a general practice of making clients sign blank insurance forms throughout

    his relationship with them, including authorizations to transfer funds, specifically

    with regard to the case of six clients who complained during the investigation;

    c) misleading one of the clients to believe that a transfer of his segregated fund

    insurance contract had taken place when in fact it had not;

    d) giving 4 of the same clients inaccurate tax advice in relation to insurance matters;

    e) contrary to the interests of 3 of the clients, unnecessarily recommending and

    facilitating the transfer of segregated fund insurance contracts to generate

    commissions;

    f) with respect to one of the clients, failing to conduct a sufficient fact-finding and

    needs analysis, failing to make full and fair disclosure of all material facts about

    the proposed insurance to enable her to make an informed decision, making an

    unreasonable recommendation which was done for personal gain;

    g) not acting in the best interests of one of the clients by recommending and

    facilitating several insurance transactions, and in particular making

    recommendations that were not reasonable and done for personal gain; and

    h) by willfully disregarding the statutory prohibition that he not rebate insurance

    premiums with respect to one of the clients for whom he recommended and

    facilitated a transfer of a segregated fund in order to generate a commission,

    $6,000 of which he returned to her.

    The Respondent Council submits that the period of suspension must be viewed in conjunction

    with the imposition of the fine, costs of the investigation and the public reporting of the penalties

    and reprimand, all of which form part of the penalty imposed. Council also submits that the

    period of suspension itself was appropriate in the circumstances and that the decision is not

    ambiguous and is therefore enforceable in law.

    The Respondent Council is of the view that the FST should not vary Council's decision as the

    standard of review governing the FST in the appeal process could hold that the FST is not in a

    position to vary Council's decision in the circumstances of the Appeal in this case. In addition,

    the Respondent submits that the penalty is substantial and appropriate in this case. It

    accomplishes, in the view of legal counsel for the Licensee, a balance between a significant

    penalty but not so punitive as to end the Licensee's career and thus his ability to earn a livelihood

    in a career he has pursued for almost 20 years. In addition numerous mitigating factors are

    reviewed by the Licensee that on their face lessen the severity of the acts of the Licensee.

    The Respondent Licensee submits that Council had all of the requisite information before it

    when it made its decision, acted in accordance with the correct test, being reasonableness, and

    made the correct and reasonable determinations in the circumstances.

    It must be kept in mind that the penalty imposed by Council arose in the context of its

    negotiations with the Licensee. A formal hearing was waived by the Licensee, the

    determinations of fact and the decisions of Council were confirmed by the Licensee and the

    penalty was imposed, all in the context of a negotiated settlement. To vary that penalty

    significantly at this time calls into question the context in which the settlement was reached as

    Page 6

    well as the fairness of the process in question. In other words, if I determined that a material

    change in the penalty was mandated as a result of this Appeal, may I impose that penalty without

    also considering the fact that the Licensee waived his right to a hearing, confirmed facts and

    decisions and agreed to a penalty through a negotiated procedures and would now find that

    penalty changed unilaterally by an appeal authority? This, in my view, is a further issue on this

    Appeal that must be considered.

    PRELIMINARY MATTERS

    Counsel for the Appellant made an application pursuant to section 242.2(8)(b) of the Act for the

    introduction of new evidence by way of letter dated April 25,2006 to the FST. This application

    related to segments of the submissions of each of the Respondents that Crown Counsel had

    reviewed the investigation materials of Council and had determined not to proceed against the

    Licensee with criminal charges. The submissions, in the view of the Appellant, were incomplete

    or improper in two respects. First, the segments of the submissions referred to evidence not in

    the Record. Second, the submissions failed to mention that Crown Counsel was prepared to

    proceed with criminal charges in one instance but decided not to proceed when the client of the

    Licensee died.

    Counsel for the Respondent Council did not oppose the admission of new evidence by the

    Appellant, however, numerous submissions were made with respect to the admission of new

    evidence. By way of letter dated May 16, 2006, counsel for the Appellant withdrew the

    application for the submission of new evidence as a result of reflection upon the submissions of

    the Respondent Council.

    Although it is not necessary for me to deal with this preliminary issue other than pointing out

    that the application for the admission of new evidence was withdrawn, I do believe that it is

    appropriate for me to comment that issues surrounding the laying of criminal charges are

    significantly different than issues surrounding penalties imposed by the Insurance Council of

    British Columbia in instances where Council's Code of Conduct have been breached. Each

    proceeding has its own investigative procedures, standard of proof, policy considerations and

    other critera that are applied. Neither is necessarily relevant to the other. For the purposes of

    this Appeal, matters concerning Crown Counsel determinations are not relevant.

    BACKGROUNDANDCHRONOLOGY

    Earlier in this Appeal decision, a summary of the eight findings of Council as a result of its

    investigation are set out. In addition, the Record contains the full letter of Council dated April

    22,2005 addressed to counsel for the Licensee as well as the "Full Council Investigation Report

    Re: Richard Jones" dated March 30,2005 and considered at the meeting of Council on April 12,

    2005. As the findings of Council set out in the said letter and report are confirmed by the

    Licensee, it is not necessary to repeat them here. Rather, certain findings that are specifically

    relevant to this Appeal will be referred to below.

    FACTS AND EVIDENCE

    Page 7

    The Licensee has accepted and confirmed the findings of fact of Council summarized in the

    listing of the eight findings of Council set out above. The Licensee's confirmation extends to the

    March 30, 2005 Full Council Investigation Report Re: Richard Jones. A full reading of the said

    Report illustrates the gravity of the Licensee's breaches of the insurance industry's Code of

    Conduct. The resulting specific findings of Council adequately summarized these breaches for

    the purposes of this Appeal decision as well as for the purposes of addressing the issues on

    Appeal.

    At the risk of some repetition, the allegations which form the subject matter of the investigation

    conducted by Council as set out in Council's letter to the solicitor for the Licensee dated April

    22,2005 are as follows:

    "Contrary to section 231(1) of the Act, the Licensee no longer meets a licensing

    requirement under Council Rule 3(2) or did not meet that requirement at the time his

    licence was issued, or at a later time. In particular, the Licensee is not trustworthy and

    competent, and does not intend to carry on the business of insurance in good faith and in

    accordance with the usual practice.

    Specifically:

    1) The Licensee had clients named George Barrington and Jehovah’s Witness Elder sign incomplete

    (andlor blank) insurance related documents.

    2) The Licensee fabricated George Barrington's signature on two insurance related

    documents.

    3) The Licensee misled George Barrington to believe that a transfer of his segregated fund

    investments from one insurer to another had taken place when in fact if had not occurred.

    4) The Licensee gave four clients (Janet Savage, Diane Medley, Margo Larson and Edna

    Laffey) inaccurate tax advice in relation to insurance matters.

    5) Contrary to the interests of three clients (George Barrington, Diane Medley, and Margo

    Larson), the Licensee unnecessarily recommended and facilitated the transfer of their

    segregated fund investments to generate commissions.

    6) In recommending and facilitating an insurance transaction for a client named Edna

    Laffey, the Licensee did not act in her best interests. In particular:

    a. He failed to conduct sufficient fact-finding and needs analysis to properly assess

    her circumstances, goals and needs;

    b. He did not make full and fair disclosure to all material facts about the proposed

    insurance to enable her to make an informed decision; and

    c. His insurance recommendation was not reasonable in the circumstances and it

    was done for personal gain.

    7) In recommending and facilitating several insurance transactions for Jehovah’s Witness Elder, the

    Licensee did not act in his best interest. In particular, the Licensee's insurance

    recommendations were not reasonable in the circumstances and they were done for

    personal gain.

    8) The Licensee willfully disregarded a requirement under the Act that he not rebate an

    insurance premium. In particular, he recommended and facilitated the transfer of a

    Page 8

    segregated fund held by Janet Savage in order to generate a commission, a portion of

    which he returned to her contrary to section 79 of the Act."

    In the letter dated April 22, 2005, Council then reviewed in considerable detail the evidence.

    This resulted in the findings and reasons of Council, again set out in the said letter. The findings

    have been accepted and confirmed by the Licensee.

    The findings clearly establish breaches of Council's Code of Conduct on all three requirements,

    being competence, good faith and usual practice. The Licensee intentionally:

    (vi)

    (vii)

    (viii)

    arranged for clients to sign incomplete or blank insurance documentation;

    forged signatures on insurance documentation;

    mislead a client respecting a transfer of investments from one insurer to another;

    provided inaccurate tax advice on insurance matters to four clients;

    disregarded an express requirement under the Act that he not rebate an insurance

    premium generating a commission which was shared with the client contrary to

    the Act;

    acted contrary to the interests of three clients by unnecessarily recommending and

    facilitating the transfer of investments to generate commissions;

    specifically acted contrary to a client's best interests through improper

    assessments and analysis;

    failed to make full and fair disclosure of material facts and make an insurance

    recommendation that was not reasonable in the circumstances and was done for

    personal gain; and

    failed to act in a client's best interests which were again unreasonable in the

    circumstances and were done for personal gain.

    ANALYSIS

    These finding and the supporting evidence considered by Council indicate improper, fraudulent

    and incompetent conduct of the insurance business by the Licensee over a considerable period of

    time. These actions by the Licensee took place in an environment where the insurance business

    is highly regulated and is the subject matter of a clear Code of Conduct that prohibits acts of this

    sort. Faced with that environment, the Licensee chose to perform a series of unethical, improper,

    and in some cases fraudulent activities for his person gain and with blatant disregard for the best

    interests of the clients involved and the reputation of the insurance industry in general. The fact

    that in certain instances his clients made profits as a result of his actions does not lessen the

    improper nature of the motivation for his acts. The Licensee accepts that certain actions were

    also incompetent in terms of the standards of competence required of licensees.

    A full hearing before Council did not take place as a result of the penalty negotiations and

    settlement having been reached between Council and the Licensee. Council imposed the

    following penalties as a result of that agreement:

    1. the Licensee be suspended for nine months. If the Licensee, before he completes his first

    four months of the suspension, reimburses the clients Council deemed to have incurred

    Page 9

    unnecessary deferred sales charges totalling $25,155.21, the remaining five months of

    the suspension will be waived;

    the Licensee be fined $10,000;

    the Licensee, as a condition of his license, be required in each of the four years following

    the reinstatement of his license from the suspension, to successfully complete a different

    course comprising Advocis' Certified Financial Planner Program ('CFP") or a program

    with an equivalent curriculum;

    the Licensee, as a condition of his license until successful completion the aforementioned

    financial planning courses, be supervised by a life insurance agent who meets Council's

    approval. The supervising life insurance agent must agree to have a condition placed on

    hislher insurance license making himlher accountable for the insurance business conduct

    of the Licensee;

    the Licensee pay the costs of Council's investigation totalling $15,700; and

    as a condition of any order, the Licensee will be required to pay the above mentioned

    costs and fines by making seven equal payments, with the first payment required at the

    beginning of the fifth month after the commencement of his suspension. If the Licensee

    does not pay the ordered costs and fines in accordance with this payment schedule, this

    licence will be suspended until such time as the outstanding fine and costs are paid.

    Council summarized the conduct of the Licensee as follows:

    "Overall, Council identified a pattern of behaviour whereby the Licensee consistently

    eschewed his duties and obligations as an insurance agent for personal benefit. This

    included showing no apprehension in having clients sign incomplete documents, in

    fabricating clients signatures and in rebating an insurance premium to a client, all of

    which he knew to be inappropriate conduct at the time. His actions also left Council to

    conclude he placed his interests before his clients in recommending and facilitating

    insurance transactions that were not in their best interests and from which he stood to

    derive personal gain through commissions. Further, he provided erroneous advice to

    clients on a subject matter which was beyond his level of expertise, resulting in decisions

    which prejudiced clients."

    The Full Council Investigation Report re: Richard Jones comprises 25 pages of analysis coupled

    with 40 exhibits, all of which reviews in detail the allegations and the supporting facts as

    determined by the investigators. An overview of this investigative report establishes that the

    comments of the Appellant regarding the nature, severity and continuous nature of the impugned

    activities of the Licensee is accurate. However, it also illustrates that the mitigating

    circumstances described in the submissions of the Respondent Council are critically important to

    Council's decisions on penalty. Council submits that in virtually every instance of improper

    activity for personal gain, the Licensee provided background information and in some case

    excuses that reduced significantly either the seriousness of the activity itself or the consequences,

    financial or otherwise, to the client's of the Licensee in the end result. It would be improper in

    my view if the overall summary of the impugned activities were reviewed in this Appeal in

    isolation from the remainder of the investigative report which sets out certain mitigating features.

    Counsel for the Respondent Licensee is of the view that a balanced approach to the evidence is

    necessary given the investigative report's contents and I accept that position.

    Page 10

    Examples of those mitigating features as described in the Respondent's submissions include the

    following:

    The Licensee has confirmed that certain improper activities were "for personal gain".

    Council points out that the findings showed that certain of the activities "for personal

    gain" related to the Licensee's failure to discuss with his clients the choice between

    purchasing a product with upfiont costs where the insurance agent gets less

    commission, and deferred sales charges where the insurance agent makes more

    income and the client is penalized if the investment is not held for a minimum

    number of years. Essentially, it was the lack of communication that caused the

    activity that was prejudicial, or potentially prejudicial, to the client of the Licensee;

    The Investigative report shows that most of the Licensee's clients benefited from his

    actions and recommendations even in cases where penalties were experienced;

    The improper activity of allowing insurance documentation to be signed in blank

    appear, in most if not all instances, to have resulted in the Licensee completing the

    documentation in the manner intended by both he and his clients based on

    information provided to him by his clients. Thus, although improper and not in

    accordance with usual practice for a licensed insurance agent, the information

    actually placed in the documentation was not inaccurate, incorrect or fraudulent;

    Where the Licensee fabricated the signature on two insurance-related documents by

    cutting and pasting a client's signature on two documents, the Investigative Report

    indicates that the purposes behind the documents were a segregated fund redemption

    and the addition of co-annuitants, both on the client's instructions and in a situation

    where the Licensee did not gain in a financial manner;

    The cutting and pasting incidents also appear in the Investigative Report to have been

    isolated activities with respect to this one client only. The Licensee acknowledged

    the impropriety of what he had done;

    Although the redemption procedure with respect to the segregated fund was handled

    inappropriately by the Licensee, the client in that incident gained a significant

    advantage financially as a result of the redemption process itself causing Council to

    consider this as evidence that the Licensee was attempting in that situation to act in

    the client's interests;

    In a separate instance where the Licensee inappropriately allowed clients to sign

    insurance related documentation in blank to be later filled in, the clients were

    neighbours and very good friends of the Licensee, were always approached by the

    Licensee and advised with respect to the movement of money and the activities of the

    Licensee appear, according to the Investigative Report, to have been conducted in

    accordance with the desires and instructions of the clients. Council found that the

    transactions were made with the express consent of the clients even though the

    recommendations of the Licensee were motivated to general commissions for the

    Licensee;

    The Licensee was found to have provided incorrect tax advice to four clients. The

    investigation determined that the Licensee misinterpreted a memorandum provided

    by an insurance company which discussed the tax deductibility of deferred sales

    charges within an RRSP. In effect, the tax advice provided by the Licensee to these

    Page 11

    clients consisted exclusively of information set out in the life insurance company

    memorandum, albeit misinterpreted by the Licensee thus resulting in incorrect advice

    being provided to these clients. No harmful intent was found to exist on the part of

    the Licensee;

    i) Other transactions are described in the Investigative Report where Council found that

    the transactions were motivated to generate commission income for the Licensee but

    in the end resulted in significant financial benefits to the clients compared to the

    financial situation they would have faced had they remained with the prior

    investments; and

    j) In the incidents were the Licensee breached section 79 of the Act permitting a rebate

    on an insurance premium to be paid partly to a client, Council determined that this

    action constituted a willful disregard of the requirements under the Act but the

    Legislature has recently determined that the practice is now permissible. In addition,

    although the activity was improper, the Licensee had in effect created a means of

    satisfying the client's needs without expense to the client in that situation.

    I wish it to be clear that although the mitigating circumstances described in the investigative

    report and in the submissions of Council on this Appeal are compelling, they do not minimize

    the essential fact that the Licensee knowingly and willfully undertook activities over a period of

    time that were contrary to usual practice and in some instances constituted activities that fit the

    technical descriptions at least of fiaud and forgery. Nor do they lessen the emphasis that Council

    placed upon the fact that some of the recommendations were unreasonable, some advice given

    was not competently provided and some of the transactions were motivated so as to generate

    commission income for the Licensee. In addition, I accept for the most part the reply

    submissions of the Appellant that point out that the mitigating factors as submitted by the

    Respondents must be read in the context of the whole investigative report which point to some

    inconsistencies in the interpretation of the mitigating circumstances. However, the investigative

    report does establish that mitigating circumstances did exist which address some of the serious

    allegations and inappropriate activities of the Licensee, and that these mitigating circumstances

    were considered by Council when rendering its decision. Much of the submissions of both

    Respondents, Council and the Licensee, focus on these mitigating factors.

    This brings us to the penalty provided and the ability of the FST to review the same.

    Sections 242.2(5) and 242.2(11) of the Act established that the FST, when determining an appeal

    on the record, may confirm, reverse or vary a decision under appeal or it may send the matter

    back for reconsideration with or without directions to the person or body whose decision is under

    appeal. An appeal to the FST is not intended to be a rehearing nor is the FST expected to retry

    the matter. Legislation in British Columbia established tribunals such as the Insurance Council

    of British Columbia in order to create bodies with special expertise in certain professional or

    administrative areas. Those bodies are also expected to use their unique expertise as well as the

    guidance of the legislation that created them to conduct proper investigations, hearings where

    appropriate and to make decisions of an administrative and regulatory nature, all as provided for

    in the legislation and regulations establishing the said administrative bodies. Thus, deference is

    shown by the FST with respect to the findings of fact and determination of the tribunal whose

    decision is under appeal.

    Page 12

    Case law and scholarly works in the area of administrative law, as well as the decisions of the

    FST establish that the test for review is one of reasonableness; namely, following its review of

    the clear and cogent evidence presented to it, could Council reasonably have made the

    determinations that it made including the imposition of the penalty that it imposed. This test is

    effected in the context of the reviewability set out in the Act that allows the FST to confirm,

    reverse or vary a decision under appeal or send the matter back for reconsideration, as stated

    above. As a result, in appeals to the FST, latitude exists for variations of decisions, and the case

    law and previous decisions of the FST endeavor to make it clear that variations or reversals may

    only be considered by the FST in cases where a manifestly unreasonable determination or

    decision has arisen. In this regard, I have relied upon a number of decisions including the

    following: Financial Institutions Commission v. Insurance Council of British Columbia and

    Branislav Novko, FST - 05-008; Financial Institutions Commission v. Insurance Council of

    British Columbia and Maria Pavicic, FST - 05-009; and Jagiit Singh Cheena v. Insurance

    Council of British Columbia, FST - 05-010.

    As Mr. Hall points out in the Cheema decision, the Supreme Court of Canada in Dr. Q. v.

    College of Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia, 2003 SCC 19 show us that the

    pragmatic and functional approach to judicial review is inapplicable to appeals under section 242

    of the Act. He also points out that the requirement for clear and cogent evidence in the first

    instance is separate from whatever standard is applied on review. I accept this analysis and

    application of the test of reasonableness to the review procedure involving professional bodies.

    The question become, therefore, whether or not there is a reasonable analysis within the accepted

    evidence and determinations by Council that would enable it to have made the decisions that it

    made regarding the Licensee's conduct and in imposing the penalties that were determined

    appropriate by Council through the negotiation process with the Licensee.

    I would like to comment that on my reading of the Record, the variety, severity and ongoing

    nature of the impugned activities of the Licensee would have caused me to conclude that a

    significant period of suspension of the Licensee's license would be appropriate, even a period

    that greatly exceeds that determined appropriate by Council and the Respondent Licensee

    through negotiation in this case. I have carefully reviewed the submissions of Council, the

    Licensee and the Appellant regarding the length of the suspension as well as the numerous cases

    cited in their books of authorities. I feel that the cases imposing lengthier suspensions as well as

    those imposing outright license terminations have certain application to the facts in this Appeal.

    Having said, however, I recognize that Council had before it a detailed investigative report which

    clearly described the improper activities of the Licensee as well as detailed explanations as to

    mitigating factors. Council made its penalty determinations. However, a complicating factor

    exists in that a negotiated settlement on the penalty took place in this case as well.

    In the Supreme Court of Canada decision Law Society ofNew Brunswick v. Ryan, 2003 SCC 20,

    at paragraph 47, our highest Court stated:

    "The standard of reasonableness basically involves asking "After a somewhat probing

    examination, can the reasons given, when taken as a whole, support the

    Page 13

    decision?" ..... Deference is built into the question since it requires that the reviewing

    court assess whether a decision is basically supported by the reasoning of the tribunal or

    decision-maker, rather than inviting the court to engage de novo in its own reasoning on

    the matter."

    The Supreme Court of Canada stated that when a court reviews a decision under the

    reasonableness standard, it must stay close to the reasons given by the tribunal and "look to see"

    whether any of those reasons adequately support the decision.

    In this Appeal, I am satisfied that when it comes to the question of every element of the penalty,

    excepting the length of suspension and its abbreviation if clients were paid back early, Council

    had reasons that adequately supported its decisions. I also have two collateral concerns

    respecting the educational requirement imposed upon the Licensee as well as the payment

    method to be used by the Licensee in paying the victim clients as well as the fine and costs

    award which will be discussed below. However, with respect to the question of the penalty

    imposed and its possible abbreviation, I am unequivocally of the view that Council acted

    unreasonably in the circumstances. In the face of fiaudulent activities over time, and in particular

    the eight confirmed allegations, a suspension of nine months which could be reduced to four

    months if restitution is made amounts to nothing more than a "slap on the wrist". Further, it

    amounts to a message to those parties dealing with British Columbia's insurance agents that

    activities of the sort undertaken by the Licensee will be met with disapproval by Council but will

    not be punished in a manner that adequately takes into consideration the interests of insurance

    companies with whom insurance agents deal or the best interests of the public.

    The Licensee was responsible over a period of time for fiaudulent activities, forging of

    documents and churning client investments for personal gain. The mitigating circumstances set

    out in the investigative report are compelling, however, so are the submissions of the Appellant

    which point out: (i) that even in the face of these mitigating circumstances, the Licensee acted

    for personal gain in a pattern of regularly recommending investments to clients in a matter

    establishing that "the Licensee's motivation in recommending and facilitating the fund transfers

    was to generate commissions," (ii) that Council concluded that the Licensee "placed his interest

    before his clients in recommending and facilitating insurance transactions that were not in their

    best interests and from which he stood to derive personal gain through commissions," (iii) that

    Council itself found that fund performance should not be indicative of whether an agent has

    acted in the client's best interests, thus, the fact that certain that the Licensee's clients had not

    lost funds as a result of the activities of the Licensee was not relevant to the determination of

    whether the Licensee had performed those activities nor as a mitigating factor on the penalty to

    be imposed, (iv) that Council made findings that were contrary to the proposed mitigating factors

    where for example, it stated "Council found in some cases, the transactional fact pattern

    contradicted the Licensee's rationale for the fund transfers.. . This demonstrated to Council that

    the Licensee's fund transfer recommendations were arbitrary in nature rather than for the reasons

    he submits," (v) that even in the case of the Barrington investments, which grew as a result of

    the transfers and which the Respondent argues is evidence that the Licensee was attempting to

    act in his client's interests, Council found this view to be flawed as fund performance should not

    be indicative of whether an agent has acted in a client's best interests.

    Page 14

    Numerous of the mitigating factors were not adequately supported by independent evidence of

    third parties. In some cases, the Licensee had not provide direct evidence, either of his own or

    third party evidence, supporting the mitigating factors. A mitigating factor cannot be solely

    supported by the Licensee's own submissionsin a situation where Council has found the

    Licensee to be an incredible witness.

    Other seeming contradictions or at least anomalies appear in the investigative report, all of which

    lead me to the view that Council clearly and correctly reached its determinations regarding the

    improper and illegal activities of the Licensee but, in the face of those determinations, could not

    reasonably have determined that a nine month suspension, reduced to four months if certain

    restitution was made, would be an adequate penalty. It simply does not reflect the seriousness

    and continuing nature of the offences. It does not reflect an adequate consideration of

    deterrence, an importance factor mentioned in those cases dealing with penalties and

    suspensions. And, it does not reflect the necessity of a regulated industry such as the insurance

    industry in British Columbia to protect contracting parties who deal with insurance agents as

    well as the insurance public who rely on insurance agents to live up to the insurance Code of

    Conduct.

    CONCLUSION

    Reaching a negotiated settlement on penalties in situations where a hearing has been waived by

    a licensee causes grave concerns when the decision of the regulatory body is later subject to an

    appeal. The FST may not retry the matter. However, even after applying the tests of curial

    deference, the decision of Council must in this case be overturned or varied. It is my view that it

    is improper for the FST to simply impose a new penalty when the Licensee confirmed the facts

    in the investigative report, confirmed the findings of Council, agreed to the penalties imposed by

    Council and waived his right to hearing based upon the same, all in a negotiations context. In

    these circumstances, I see no alternative but for the FST to return the matter to Council. In

    addition, in cases where negotiated settlements of this sort are reached without the benefit of a

    hearing having successfully completed, I believe that we may expect many Council decisions

    and penalty determinations to be sent back to Council for a formal hearing, further consideration

    or variation.

    In this Appeal, I have determined that:

    1. The requirement of the Licensee to reimburse clients that Council deemed to have

    incurred unnecessary deferred sales charges totalling $25,155.21 is confirmed;

    2. The fine of $10,000 is confirmed;

    3. The condition that the Licensee be required in each of the four years following the

    reinstatement, if any, of his license from the suspension or termination imposed by

    Council after its hearing to successfully complete a different course comprising

    Advocis' Certified Financial Planner Program or a program with an equivalent

    curriculum, shall be varied to include, in addition, the requirement that the Licensee,

    as a condition of his license, be required to complete a course or courses approved by

    Council that include insurance business and ethical components prior to any

    reinstatement of his license from suspension or termination as the case may be;

    Page 15

    4. The condition that the Licensee, as a condition of his license until successful

    completion of the last of the aforementioned financial planning courses, be supervised

    by a life insurance agent who meets Council's approval, which supervising life

    insurance agent must agree to have a condition placed on hisher insurance license

    making himlher accountable for the insurance business conduct of the Licensee is

    confirmed;

    5. The determination that the Licensee pay the costs of Council's investigation totalling

    $15,700 is confirmed;

    6. The condition dealing with the payment of the costs and fines is varied as follows: as

    a condition of his license, the Licensee shall be required to pay the above mentioned

    payments to the clients, fine and costs of Council's investigation by way of seven

    equal monthly payments, the first of which monthly payments shall be made on the

    lSt day of the fifth month following the completion of the hearing before Council

    described below. If the Licensee does not make the payments described herein, or

    misses any payment, his license will be suspended until such time as the entire

    outstanding balance of the payments for clients, fine and investigation costs has been

    paid in full;

    7. The matter of the length of suspension or the termination of the Licensee's license

    shall be remitted to Council for reconsideration with the following directions: a) a

    hearing shall be held by Council as soon as reasonably possible and at any rate

    within 60 days of the date of this Appeal decision, with the Licensee invited to attend

    to make submissions with legal counsel should the Licensee so choose and with

    Council hearing any submissions that the Appellant may wish to submit on behalf of

    the Superintendent of Financial Institutions, b) the Appeal orders described in

    numbers 1 through 6 inclusive above not be varied by Council and that Council deal

    with the matters of suspension or termination of the Licensee's license as its primary

    considerations, c) Council shall be entitled to rely upon the Record in this Appeal as

    part of its materials to be considered at the hearing together with those other

    documents, materials, reports and submissions as it deems appropriate, and (d)

    Council shall be entitled to make rulings and orders in addition to those dealing with

    suspension or termination of the Licensee's license should it see fit.

    Council shall pay the Appellant's costs of this Appeal set in the amount of $1,000. No costs

    shall be awarded against or in favour of the Respondent Licensee in relation to this Appeal

    decision.

    Dated at White Rock, British Columbia this 29'" day of June, 2006.

    FOR THE FINANCIAL SERVICES TRIBUNAL

    DALE R. DOAN

    Presiding Member

  • Band on the Run
    Band on the Run

    aI don't know why you posted the document. It might help to have a summary section. I am presented with forms that state that I received and read another document. The administrator is always shocked that I refuse to sign such a statement. I can't add language to the original document stating that I refused to sign b/c I did not receive the second document. No one should be signing these forms.

    There may be legitimate reasons. I fail to see what evil the JW elder did.

  • JWdaughter
    JWdaughter

    My husband sells insurance. IN his case, an acquaintance of his who is woefully ignorant of the insurance industry, thought that my husband could just lend his name, licence and signature to his new business venture (he wants to open a chain of insurance companies in the Houston area and my hubby has a great reputation) so that he will be able to get in quick with the various companies (be signed up with them) and basically, avoid the hard part of starting. He offered my husband a big chunk of money (signing bonus and ongoing commissions/residuals) for his participation. My husband would basically have nothing to do with it and this guy would hire brand new agents of various licensures to run things. My hubby would have no financial stake in it going into it other than GETTING money.

    He refused. Why? Totally unethical (which the other guy didn't even realize, he is THAT ignorant, but he is offering enough money that many would have said yes). He would really have no input into anything and they really just wanted his signature when they need it. He gave up a lot of money, but he is keeping his reputation (so many people have no clue as to how much an ethical business man give up $ to keep his ethics and honor). Having your name being used to facilitate deals that you are clueless about is a really really bad idea if you want to stay in business.

    Insurance and annuity work is sometimes very detailed and involved and deals with a great deal of money-ensuring that you are dealing with the right people, the right documents and the right accounts and that the customer understands what they are signing-it's critical stuff and a lot of hanky panky could go on. . .but it won't go on with my husbands' name affixed to it.

    Only an idiot signs a blank piece of paper.

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