Lawsuit by planners could be last CFP Board faces

The last lawsuit that the CFP Board may ever face could either come to a rapid end or continue on appeal following a hearing today.

The case being heard at a Washington appeals court – brought by husband-and-wife CFPs who contend they were disciplined unfairly – is of heightened importance given that the public may never again have a similar window into the board's inner workings.

Jeffrey-and-Kimberly-Camarda

Both sides argued today about whether the appeal should continue. Another federal judge threw out the couple's case last year.

Read more: Camardas ask court to unseal documents in CFP Board case

Going forward, the board made it unlikely that any court will be able to scrutinize the way it investigates and punishes its planners after the board this summer imposed a mandatory arbitration clause on all CFPs.

The pending court case challenges the board's controversial disciplinary process, which is conducted in private, even though the CFP Board’s charter says it exists “to serve the public.” Several industry experts say moving arbitration cases out of the public eye undermines this purpose.

'CFPs SHOULD BE AFRAID'
"I think that CFPs should be afraid of unchecked disciplinary actions that could be taken against them, or unchecked policies and procedures that they didn't sign up for," says Sharron Ash, chief litigation officer at the Hamburger Law Firm in Englewood, New Jersey, who regularly represents planners against the board. "Advisers typically don't have any idea what it means to be a member of this club."

CFPs need to understand that holding the certification "carries with it a pretty dark underbelly," Ash adds. "You can end up fighting against the very flag you thought you were carrying."

In a break from past practice, the board did not seek input from CFPs regarding the new rule. In response to complaints, it later announced that it would allow advisers to talk publicly about their arbitration proceedings.

For its part, the board says in a statement: “The court’s decision to dismiss the lawsuit, and the decision to select arbitration as the forum for what amounts to a fourth level of review of a CFP professional’s conduct, are good decisions for CFP professionals, CFP certification and members of the public.” The board “enforces its standards of professional conduct through a peer-review disciplinary process that has served the public – and the CFP professional community – for decades.”

As the board has grown larger and more powerful, it has sought less input from CFPs, compared with its former practice of sending out national announcements seeking comment on proposed policy changes.

"It is a club. It's a fraternity," Ash says of the board. "And it's not accountable." In its court filings, the board likened itself to a sorority in one precedent cited in its case.

The CFP Board has spent $60 million over the past seven years advertising the CFP brand to the public. Hundreds of colleges and universities offer courses to prepare would-be planners to pass the board's test. As its influence has grown so have its numbers. As of this week, the board said there were 75,000 dues-paying CFPs.

WHO EXACTLY IS FEE-ONLY?
In the current court case, planners Jeffrey and Kimberly Camarda, of Fleming Island, Florida, sued the board three years ago to stop it from publicly sanctioning them for calling their practice fee-only when the couple also ran a small insurance agency. Among many clients and prospects, fee-only is seen as an advantageous term since it supposedly excludes advisers who earn commissions from putting clients into particular investments.

While the board targeted the Camardas, however, it was allowing more than 400 CFPs at wirehouses and other firms to call themselves fee-only in a listing on the board's website, in violation of its rules. The Camardas said they transacted a trivial amount of business through their insurance agency, yet wirehouses often push their planners to generate as much commission revenue as they can.

A federal judge threw out the Camardas case last year, saying that courts generally do not interfere in the affairs of private organizations. As a nonprofit 501(c)3, the board derives its tax-free status from its claim of serving the public. Several experts in nonprofit governance cited the judge's decision to throw out the case as an example of unchecked power common in nonprofits, especially 501(c)3s, which have no members – as do 501(c)6 nonprofits – that can vote out their leaders.

In its statement, the board argues: “It is wrong to suggest that the decision places [the] CFP Board above the law. Courts do not place private organizations above the law; rather, they recognize situations where it makes no sense for them to second-guess decisions made by an organization through a fair process. … There also is no reason to believe that a judge who is not a CFP professional is better able to interpret [the] CFP Board’s rules and evaluate the evidence than the several groups of CFP professionals, and members of the public, who do so as part of CFP Board’s disciplinary process. Furthermore, it would undermine the very purpose of private standards-setting organizations such as [the] CFP Board if every one of their disciplinary decisions were subject to costly and time-consuming do-overs in federal court.”

The board's investigation into the Camardas precipitated an unfolding scandal that ultimately forced the resignation of its chairman and investigations of numerous other officials.

"They sacrificed us," one of those former officials, Tina Florence, who served on the board's disciplinary and ethics commission, said at the time. Florence and other officials said they believed the board came after them to establish a disciplinary track record to help prevail in the coming legal battle with the Camardas. The board has disputed this claim.

Some CFPs, including Rick Kahler of Kahler Financial Group in Rapid City, South Dakota, who the board targeted with a fee-only investigation that was later resolved, have said mandatory arbitration rules might offer some benefits, by providing a more-efficient and cost-effective route to resolving conflicts than courts.
While that’s a common argument, Ash says most CFPs don't realize that arbitration can be just as expensive and as time-consuming.

In response, the board says, “While litigation may take years to conclude, the arbitration process is to be completed within nine months.”

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