Solicitors


Solicitor leaves profession after acting for both sides in property deal, another rebuked for “abusive language”

25 August 2016

A solicitor who acted on both sides of a conveyancing transaction without written consent has agreed to leave the profession. Meanwhile, a solicitor who abused a potential client and sent a “threatening” e-mail to another practitioner has been rebuked and fined £750.


SRA allows suspended solicitor to work for law firm as unadmitted member of staff

24 August 2016

A recently suspended solicitor has been allowed to work for a law firm as an unadmitted member of staff under very strict conditions, the Solicitors Regulation Authority announced yesterday. Meanwhile, a solicitor who acted for disgraced former MEP Ashley Mote has been referred to a disciplinary tribunal.


From assault to fake parking permits – SRA hands out series of rebukes

23 August 2016

The range of wrongdoing at law firms has been demonstrated by a series of rebukes handed out by the Solicitors Regulation Authority in the past month. The most recent was that of a non-solicitor who was found while working as a conveyancing clerk to have created two e-mails which were purportedly from a client.


Law Society calls for “innovation sandbox”

22 August 2016

The Law Society has called for a ‘sandbox’ approach to regulatory reform that would allow changes to promote innovation to be tested safely. It also came out strongly against the idea of making it compulsory for law firms to publish ‘average’ prices of their services.


Solicitor stripped of judicial posts after disciplinary findings

22 August 2016

A solicitor has been removed from his posts as a deputy district judge and assistant coroner after the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal found him guilty of misconduct. Andrew Pascoe was fined £20,000 earlier this year after being found guilty of 20 allegations about his management of a firm in which he was a partner.


D-Day for firms covered by insolvent Enterprise Insurance

22 August 2016

Law firms that were insured by the now insolvent Enterprise Insurance have until today to arrange alternative cover. The Solicitors Regulation Authority said on Friday that around two-thirds of the 43 firms that were with the Gibraltar-based insurer have already secured alternative cover.


How to make a solicitor “insanely jealous”? Offer his competitor free run-off cover

18 August 2016

“Many of my solicitor friends are insanely jealous” that the new arrangements for licensed conveyancers’ professional indemnity insurance include free run-off cover, one practitioner said in a survey that showed widespread satisfaction with the regime.


Law firms urged to lead fight against modern slavery

16 August 2016

Law firms should be at the forefront of the fight against modern slavery, both in terms of their own impact as businesses and advising clients on meeting their human rights obligations, the Law Society has urged.


Partner who falsified divorce client’s decree absolute struck off

15 August 2016

A partner has been struck off after forging a divorce client’s decree absolute, and misappropriating more than £200,000 from clients to hide his inactivity on other matters. The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal said his motivation was “to conceal his professional failings in respect of other clients”.


QASA: a four-year delay and still we wait

12 August 2016

More than four years after it was meant to happen, implementation of the much-delayed Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates (QASA) is still stuck, while the profession awaits the government’s decision on whether it will set up an overlapping panel of defence advocates, Legal Futures can report.


New ABS rules will smooth path for group structures and private equity, says SRA

11 August 2016

Freeing up the rules on licensing alternative business structures will help the Solicitors Regulation Authority deal with more complex applications, such as those from businesses that form part of a group or have private equity investment, it has told the government.


Tribunal clears two solicitors of unwittingly enabling mortgage fraud

9 August 2016

The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal has cleared two solicitors of being unwitting parties to a mortgage fraud, saying that once the mortgagor’s solicitor had been sanctioned in 2015, the Solicitors Regulation Authority should not have continued its case against them as the purchaser’s advisers.


Are solicitors obliged to question ethics of clients’ conduct? Leading academic suggests they may be

8 August 2016

Solicitors may have a regulatory obligation to question the ethics of what their clients are doing or proposing to do, a leading academic has suggested. Dr Steven Vaughan said the new SRA Competence Statement required solicitors to be alive to ethical issues “which are far wider than their own professional responsibility obligations”.


Law firm caught up in dubious US oil wells sales

8 August 2016

A firm of solicitors has been caught up in the activities of two companies that have been wound up by the High Court after it ruled that they showed a “lack of commercial probity” in their sale of interests in American oil wells.


Fine for solicitor who accepted £400,000 in loans from clients

5 August 2016

A solicitor who provided two longstanding clients with banking facilities, and also accepted more than £400,000 in loans from them without insisting that they take independent legal advice, has been fined by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal.

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