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ATE, the STaRs and the importance of judgement

Matthew Pascall

Matthew Pascall

Posted by Matthew Pascall, senior underwriting manager at Legal Futures Associate Temple Legal Protection [1] and Paul Bennett, a solicitor and partner at Bennett Briegal

On 25 November 2019, the SRA Standards and Regulations 2019 [2] (STaRs) come into force to replace the SRA Code of Conduct 2011. These changes are the most significant regulatory changes in a generation. The professional obligations for solicitors are subtly altered by the changes.

What’s the issue?

Historically, law firms and insurance brokers could form a relationship and the law firm’s obligation to advise clients on the availability and suitability of after-the-event (ATE) insurance was assumed to be complete. Under the STaRs regime, the onus moves from the law firm to the individual solicitor.

Why? The Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) is now promoting the issue of personal professional responsibility and moving away from entity-based regulation, which has been the focus of SRA regulation of the profession over the last decade or so.

The SRA has reduced the 10 core principles to seven. Under the STaRs regime, these should be read as ethical obligations and signposts.

The opening line of these (and therefore the whole STaRs regime) reads: “The SRA Principles comprise the fundamental tenets of ethical behaviour that we expect all those that we regulate to uphold. This includes all individuals we authorise to provide legal services (solicitors, RELs and RFLs), as well as authorised firms and their managers and employees. For licensed bodies, these apply to those individuals, and the part of the body (where applicable), involved in delivering the services we regulate in accordance with the terms of your licence.”

The renewed focus on individual obligations, conduct and on looking behind the veneer of the law firm and client relationship, is reflective of the recent emphasis in professional disciplinary cases in which the SRA has, over the last three or four years, focused on the individual’s professional obligations rather than those of the firm itself, as was expected when the compliance officer regime was introduced.

The Legal Services Act 2007 established the concept of ‘entity’ or firm regulation, but these changes reset the regulator focus on the individual professional.

Your personal obligations

Think of the revised SRA Principles as placing your judgement of your ethical obligations centre stage. In the context of funding and insurance in litigation matters, this means: have you explored the full range of funding and insurance options with your clients? Have you acted in the clients’ best interests?

Principle 2 now requires that you act “in a way that upholds public trust and confidence in the solicitors’ profession and in legal services provided by authorised persons”.

The SRA is expecting the solicitor to think about the wider trust and confidence of the public. The subtle difference from the 2011 version is that this is about the individual solicitor and not the firm or entity.

The new Principle 7 requires you to act in the best interests of each client. If you do not consider a conditional fee agreement (CFA) with your client, are you acting in their best interests if others would? If a CFA would actually cost the client more in the long run, it may not be right. If you do not consider this with your client, then are you acting in the client’s best interest? No.

Paul Bennett

Paul Bennett

The individual code

The STaRs separates out the solicitor’s obligations into the individual solicitor’s own obligations and those of the firm. There are now therefore two codes.

The individual code for solicitors states:

“8.6 You give clients information in a way they can understand. You ensure they are in a position to make informed decisions about the services they need, how their matter will be handled and the options available to them.

“8.7 You ensure that clients receive the best possible information about how their matter will be priced and, both at the time of engagement and when appropriate as their matter progresses, about the likely overall cost of the matter and any costs incurred.”

The impact of these two personal, professional obligations is to remind individual solicitors it is their responsibility to advise in a manner that clients can understand and make decisions on. The solicitor can therefore no longer assert that “the only way my firm acts is on the following basis” and rely on the firm having dealt with funding advice. Solicitors need to satisfy themselves and record why the approach adopted is appropriate.

As the preamble states: “You are personally accountable for compliance with this code – and our other regulatory requirements that apply to you – and must always be prepared to justify your decisions and actions.”

Note the use of the word “You”. It is a recurring theme in personalising the obligations on individuals. Neither “you” or the term “firm” are defined terms in the glossary to their rules, meaning the exact biting point of any rule is open to interpretation or, as the SRA may see it, to be interpreted in the context of the particular circumstances in which the solicitor’s conduct might be examined.

In either case, each and every solicitor is now personally responsible in a regulatory sense for their own individual compliance with a wider set of obligations.

SRA Financial Services (Conduct of Business) Rules

Under the 2011 code, the financial services obligations in these rules were expressly focused on the firm. Rule 3.2 read: “If a firm informs a client that it gives a personal recommendation on the basis of a fair and personal analysis [of any ATE or other such product]…”

By contrast the STaRs version of the same titled rules states at Standard 11.2 [3] states: “If you inform a client that you give a personal recommendation on the basis of a fair and personal analysis [of any ATE and other such product]…”

The expectation is now focused on you personally – not in terms of liability for negligence but certainly in terms of your own professional duties towards a client. Each solicitor must therefore be in the position to justify their choice of advice, advisory options and any product choices.

We suspect many solicitors simply leave such matters to their law firm, something which now needs to change to be able to justify the choices and advice offered to the client.

How does this impact on solicitors and advice to clients in practice?

Each and every solicitor involved in litigation needs to ensure they have advised on all potential and appropriate insurance and funding options. This will include, in suitable cases, ATE insurance. Solicitors in larger law firms can no longer think “we do not offer that” because of the shift of the SRA Financial Services (Conduct of Business) Rules to personal obligations.

This, coupled with the introduction of the individual code, brings these personal, professional obligations into being for a generation of solicitors unused to such a personal approach.

When recommending an ATE insurance product, two criteria from Standard 11.2 will bite:

“(a) you must give that personal recommendation on the basis of an analysis of a sufficiently large number of insurance contracts available on the market to enable it to make that recommendation; and

(b) that personal recommendation must be in accordance with professional criteria regarding which contract of insurance would be adequate to meet the client’s needs.”

For most busy practitioners, the obligations are too onerous to make a personal recommendation and to conduct a market search for each and every client (unless the caseload is very small and bespoke insurance is the only option).

What is the alternative?

You can tell your clients that you do not want to provide a personal recommendation because you are not in position to do so and then refer clients direct to a broker or insurer for matters. This will feel like poor service and a failure to advise to many law firm clients, particularly commercial clients who think instructing a specialist means they get full advice.

If you chose not to make a personal recommendation, you can tell your clients: “In cases such as yours, a review of the ATE market as a whole is not either realistic nor cost effective. As a result I am not going to make a personal recommendation that you should use a particular ATE insurer. However, we work with Temple Legal Protection and Temple Funding, partners who are well recognised and respected in the ATE insurance and funding sectors. I am going to give you their details and some information about them.

“I know Temple and I can explain how their ATE and disbursement funding works, but you remain free to choose any other insurer of your choice. We simply recommend in cases like yours that ATE insurance is a sensible precaution against the risks faced.”

Next steps for your future approach to advising on ATE insurance

Each individual solicitor will want to make sure they can exercise their personal professional obligations effectively. As a minimum, therefore, you should be considering:

Working with us

Getting to know Temple and its products and services is straightforward. Temple Legal Protection have developed a product which can be explained easily and is recognised as a market leader.

Meeting Temple’s underwriters will enable you to fully appreciate what lies behind the name. They can offer training to you and your colleagues so you will be better informed about what Temple can offer.

They have a clear and easy-to-read client guide along with a product guide and a solicitor’s guide that you can give clients. These guides will enable your client to make a well-informed decision in a situation where you do not want to make a personal recommendation.

Paul Bennett’s book on the new SRA regime can be purchased here [4].