½ñÈÕÈÈÃÅʼþhas disqualified John Evennett of New South Wales from being an approved self-managed superannuation fund (SMSF) auditor. ½ñÈÕÈÈÃÅʼþdetermined that Mr Evennett had breached fundamental independence and audit requirements. Given the nature of these breaches, it was considered appropriate to disqualify Mr Evennett.
½ñÈÕÈÈÃÅʼþfound that Mr Evennett had breached:
- auditor independence requirements of APES 110 Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants, where he audited the fund of his immediate family member; and
- audit evidence requirements of Australian auditing standards. 
½ñÈÕÈÈÃÅʼþCommissioner John Price said, 'SMSF auditors are fundamentally important in promoting confidence in the SMSF sector. It is crucial that auditors adhere to ethical and professional standards. ½ñÈÕÈÈÃÅʼþwill continue to take action where the conduct of SMSF auditors is inadequate.'
SMSF trustees and members can check whether their auditor is registered, or whether a person has been disqualified, by searching ASIC's SMSF auditor register at .
Background
Information about Mr Evennett was referred to ½ñÈÕÈÈÃÅʼþby the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) under section 128P of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993 (the SIS Act).
From 1 July 2013, the SIS Act required all auditors of SMSFs to be registered with ASIC. This was to ensure that all SMSF auditors meet the base standards of competency and expertise.
½ñÈÕÈÈÃÅʼþand the ATO work closely together as co-regulators of SMSF auditors. The ATO monitors SMSF auditor conduct and may refer matters to ½ñÈÕÈÈÃÅʼþfor possible action such as disqualification or suspension of their registration.