James Beresford Loel
Allegation / charges
On each of Charges 11, 13, 14, 15 and 17, there is a finding that the respondent engaged in professional misconduct. On each of Charges 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 10, there is a finding that the respondent engaged in unsatisfactory professional conduct.
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
The Legal Services Commissioner brought 13 charges against solicitor James Beresford Loel for conduct over eight years (2007-2015), including failures of competence and diligence, conflict of interest, breaches of undertakings, costs-disclosure failures and unauthorised/dishonest dealings with trust money. The Tribunal found professional misconduct on Charges 11, 13, 14, 15 and 17 (including an express finding of dishonesty on Charge 17 where he transferred $55,000 from trust to pay a former client's invoices) and unsatisfactory professional conduct on Charges 1-7 and 10. Given significant rehabilitation, remorse and the role of alcohol dependence (now in remission), the applicant conceded removal from the Roll was not warranted. The Tribunal publicly reprimanded him, imposed a $10,000 penalty, barred him from a principal practising certificate for one year after obtaining an employee certificate, imposed three years of supervision/psychiatric conditions, required remedial courses, and ordered him to pay costs on the standard basis.
Duties found breached:
- Act only on proper, lawful instructions
- Costs and fee transparency to client
- No conflict between current clients
- No improper use of client money
- Competence
- Honour professional undertakings
Aggravating factors:
- Conduct tainted by dishonesty (Charge 17) from which the law practice benefitted
- Reckless attitude to the proper handling of trust money
- Offending occurred over a protracted eight-year period
- Significant loss caused - default on loan and claim made on the fidelity fund; consent judgment of $800,000
Mitigating factors:
- Frank admissions of all facts and full acceptance of responsibility
- Genuine remorse and shame; personal apologies to former clients
- Significant rehabilitation - abstinence from alcohol since December 2015 and ongoing psychiatric treatment
- Conduct occurred in context of chronic alcohol dependence (now in remission) and significant personal trauma
- Substantial lapse of time since offending (last conduct July 2015)
- Positive psychiatric prognosis and favourable references from two Queen's Counsel
- Personal tragedy - death of his son; heavy personal and professional stresses at the time
Duties engaged
Documents
Source: https://www.lsc.qld.gov.au/queensland-discipline-register