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Several legal commentators predicted that because SOX did not contain a severability clause, the Supreme Court would rule that SOX was unconstitutional. As such, Congress would be forced to re-enact SOX with amended provisions to address the severability and power to appointment concerns raised in Free Enterprise Fund v. PCAOB . In the alternative, Congress could simply return to the law, as it was before SOX was adopted. Professor Donna Nagy, C. Ben Dutton Professor of Law at the Indiana University Maurer School of Law, most recent scholarship on the PCAOB published in the PITTSBURGH LAW REVIEW entitled, "Is the PCAOB a 'Heavily Controlled Component' of the SEC?: An Essential Question in the Constitutional Controversy" raised interesting arguments regarding the PCAOB’s constitutionality. Professor Nagy’s article is available here. Additionally, Professor Nagy in collaboration with several law professors, submitted an amici brief to the Supreme Court in support of Free Enterprise Fund. The amici brief is available here. Despite legal commentators’ well argued positions, the Supreme Court disagreed. On Monday, the justices unanimously ruled that PCAOB has been legally established and appointed. There was a 5-to-4 split, but it concerned only the manner in which members of the PCAOB can be removed from office. As a result of the ruling, the SEC can remove PCAOB members at will, rather than being able to do so only if there were good cause that warranted removal. Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., writing the majority opinion stated that “the Sarbanes-Oxley Act remains ‘fully operative as a law’ with these tenure restrictions excised.”
With the issue settled, the SEC, under the direction of its chairwoman, Mary L. Schapiro, is expected to promptly act to fill three of the five seats on the PCAOB. SOX only authorized two of the five members could be certified public accountants — and both those jobs went to former SEC officials — Mr. Goelzer and Mr. Niemeier. Mr. Goelzer stated that the PCAOB was “pleased it would be able to carry out its important mission of overseeing public company audits in order to protect investors and promote the public interest.” Although, the PCAOB was established by Congress, it is not formally a federal government agency. As such it does not have to comply with federal pay schedules. PCAOB members are paid more than $500,000 a year. Not bad for an honest day’s work at the PCAOB.
Lydie Nadia Cabrera Pierre-Louis