Way back when, in my first-year contracts class in law school, a professor whose name I cannot recall uttered a sentence I will never forget.

 His topic was corporations, and the point he was trying to make was that, if you are operating your business in the form of a corporation, you need to pay very close attention to documenting things. (Similar concerns arise with a partnership, but the terms are a bit different.)

The professor said, “Corporations are paper animals, and they must leave paper tracks.” He was referring to the corporation’s formative documents — its charter and bylaws — but he was also focusing on the records of corporate actions, typically minutes of meetings of the board of directors and, if the corporation has one, the board’s executive ­committee.

What does this have to do with compliance, you ask? Keep on reading.

Minute by Minute

Assume that a state or federal regulator decides, for whatever reason, that two dealerships are misbehaving, violating state and federal compliance laws. The regulator wants to determine whether those suspicions are warranted, and subpoenas corporate records going back five years.

The first dealership, Sharp Motors, responds by providing copies of minutes of its board of directors for the period. Unfortunately, Sharp’s board has met only twice in that five-year period, and the minutes of its meetings deal with a few corporate matters, a couple of tax items, the golf resort selected for the next meeting and raises for the board members. The minutes make no mention of any compliance issues.

The other dealership, Buttondown Autos, turns over quarterly board minutes for each quarter of the period in question. The minutes follow an agenda established by Buttondown’s compliance officer, working with the dealership’s corporate lawyer.

A perusal of the minutes shows that, each quarter, the board hears a report from the compliance officer about any new state or federal compliance requirements imposed on the dealership during the period, customer compliance complaints and the resolution of those complaints, and any required review, updating and auditing of the dealership’s compliance management system (CMS), including its Red Flags, safeguarding and disposal policies.

Early in the five-year period, the minutes reflect the board’s appointment of the dealership’s Red Flags and privacy officer, and show a directive by the board to that officer to develop and maintain a CMS consisting of all compliance programs required by federal and state law, along with an undertaking by the board to adequately fund that effort. Each quarterly record contains a description of any unresolved action items that become part of the next quarterly meeting’s agenda.

Higher Standards

How do you suppose the regulator examining these records will react to them? If there’s an enforcement action underway and there is any room for the regulator to cut the dealer some slack, how much more leeway will Buttondown have because its records reflect a culture of compliance that is driven by attention from its top management?

Further, how successful will Sharp be in arguing that, despite the scarcity of any records to back up its claim, it takes care of its customers and really, really tries hard to comply with all those burdensome rules and regulations?

Now, go pull your dealership’s corporate records off the shelf and take a close look at them. Do they resemble Sharp’s, or are they more on the order of Buttondown’s? If it’s the former, it might be time to start working on the paper tracks of your corporation.

Thomas B. Hudson is a partner in the firm of Hudson Cook LLP, publisher of Spot Delivery, and the author of several widely read compliance manuals. Contact him at [email protected].

About the author
Tom Hudson

Tom Hudson

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Thomas B. Hudson Esq. was a founding partner of Hudson Cook LLP and is now of counsel in the firm’s Maryland office. He is the CEO of CounselorLibrary.com LLC and a frequent speaker and writer on a variety of consumer credit topics.

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