Learning Objective 24-3 1) Auditors will generally send a standard inquiry letter to: A) only those attorneys who have devoted substantial time to client matters during the year. B) every attorney that the client has been involved with in the current or preceding year, plus any attorney the client engages on occasion. C) those attorneys whom the client relies on for advice related to substantial legal matters. D) only the attorney who represents the client in proceeding where the client is defendant. 2) Who may identify matters to be included in a letter of inquiry sent to a client’s legal counsel? A) Auditors Company management Yes Yes B) Auditors Company management No No C) Auditors Company management Yes No D) Auditors Company management No Yes 3) Auditors, as part of completing the audit, will request the client to send a letter of inquiry to those attorneys the company has been consulting with during the year under audit regarding legal matters of concern to the company. The primary reason the auditor requests this information is to: A) determine the range of probable loss for asserted claims. B) corroborate of information supplied by management concerning litigation, claims, and assessments. C) outside opinion of probability of losses in determining accruals for contingencies. D) outside opinion of probability of losses in determining the proper footnote disclosure. 4) The standard letter of inquiry to the client’s legal counsel should be prepared on: A) plain paper (no letterhead) and be unsigned. B) lawyer’s stationery and signed by the lawyer. C) auditor’s stationery and signed by an audit partner. D) client’s stationery and signed by a company official. 5) When a client will not permit inquiry of outside legal counsel, the audit report will ordinarily contain a(n): A) disclaimer of opinion. B) qualified opinion. C) standard unqualified opinion. D) unqualified opinion with a separate explanatory paragraph. 6) A CPA has received an attorney’s letter in which no significant disagreements with the client’s assessments of contingent liabilities were noted. The resignation of the client’s lawyer shortly after receipt of the letter should alert the auditor that: A) an adverse opinion will be necessary. B) undisclosed unasserted claims may have arisen. C) the auditor must begin a completely new examination of contingent liabilities. D) the attorney was unable to form a conclusion with respect to the significance of litigation, claims, and assessments. 7) Management furnishes the independent auditor with information concerning litigation, claims, and assessments. Which of the following is the auditor’s primary means of initiating action to corroborate such information? A) Request that client lawyers undertake a reconsideration of matters of litigation, claims, and assessments with which they were consulted during the period under examination. B) Request that client management send a letter of inquiry to those lawyers with whom management consulted concerning litigation, claims, and assessments. C) Request that client lawyers provide a legal opinion concerning the policies and procedures adopted by management to identify, evaluate, and account for litigation, claims, and assessments. D) Request that client management engage outside attorneys to suggest wording for the text of a footnote explaining the nature and probable outcome of existing litigation, claims, and assessments. 8) An attorney is responding to an independent auditor as a result of the client’s letter of inquiry. The attorney may appropriately limit the response to: A) asserted claims and litigation. B) asserted, overtly threatened, or pending claims and litigation. C) items which have an extremely high probability of being resolved to the client’s detriment. D) matters to which the attorney has given substantive attention in the form of legal consultation or representation. 9) Contingent liability disclosure in the footnotes of the financial statements would normally be made when: A) the outcome of the accounting event is deemed probable, but a reasonable estimation as to the amount cannot be made by the client or auditor. B) a reasonable estimation of the loss can be made, but the outcome is not probable. C) the outcome of the accounting event is deemed probable, and a reasonable estimation as to the amount can be made. D) the outcome of the accounting event as well as a reasonable estimation of the loss cannot be made.