Solicitors
Suspension for solicitor whose firm pursued PI claims without instructions and paid referral fees
The owner of a Manchester law firm which pursued personal injury cases without the consent of clients and also paid prohibited referral fees has been suspended for three years. His misconduct was “shocking and outrageous and had a significant adverse impact on the reputation of the profession”, according to the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal.
Compensation fund hit again by solicitor who “failed to recognise significance of being a partner”
A solicitor who “completely failed to recognise the significance of being a partner” in a law firm and the responsibility that involved has been struck off by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal. It said the Compensation Fund had received claims of £1.8m against his firm and “paid out in excess of £1.2m”.
Solicitor, paralegal and others face contempt of court trial over “inflated” PI claim
A solicitor, paralegal, GP and claims management company owner are all set to face committal proceedings for contempt of court shortly over an alleged fraudulent personal injury claim. The High Court this week approved further grounds for the committal, taking the total to 40.
Partners fined for not noticing that finance co-ordinator took £1.7m from client account “to keep firm running”
Partners in a former Stratford-upon-Avon law firm have been fined by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal after the finance co-ordinator in the accounts department took nearly £1.7m from client account. He eventually confessed in a resignation letter that said he had “gone above and beyond the remit of my role” by using client money to keep the firm going.
Rebuke for law firm that paid £215,000 for referrals from unauthorised CMC
A north-west law firm has been rebuked after paying more than £200,000 to an unauthorised claims management company for personal injury referrals. The Solicitors Regulation Authority has been dogged by questions over the effectiveness of its response to the ban on PI referral fees since it became law in 2013.
Solicitor’s dishonesty could cost compensation fund £600,000
A sole practitioner who admitted dishonesty misappropriating £100,000 of client money could end up costing the compensation fund over £600,000, the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal has said. Her motive was funding her business, and she tried to conceal what she was doing by false accounting.
Conveyancing fee-earner and two trainee solicitors banned from profession
An unqualified fee-earner who stole £569,000 from one of the country’s biggest conveyancing firms, and worked at other firms under different names before being sent to prison, has been banned from working in the profession. Meanwhile, two trainee solicitors have been banned, both for dishonest conduct.
SRA report 1: Firms “very wary” about costs transparency, fearing price baiting
There is concern among solicitors that forcing firms to publish their costs will lead to ‘price baiting’, with some firms using artificially low prices to get clients through the door before increasing the costs later. The Solicitors Regulation Authority survey found widespread wariness about the idea of price publication.
SRA report 2: Recommendation drives conveyancer choice but call for clearer price information
Consumers select conveyancing solicitors mainly on recommendation, but clearer online information about price would help them make better choices, research commissioned by the Solicitors Regulation Authority has found. It also showed that 82% of consumers were very or fairly satisfied with the service they received.
Solicitor plundered £1m from clients to keep firm afloat – with cost to be borne by profession
A solicitor who took £1m from his client account to keep his firm afloat has been struck off by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal. It said that once Ian James Douglas had decided to embark on this strategy, the “downward spiral was rapid and devastating”.












