James Bradbury
Allegation / charges
Client Money, Failures, Solicitors' Accounts Rules, Others
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Solicitor James Bradbury, admitted 1981, took clients' funds purportedly for investment but instead treated them as loans to himself, placing money in building society accounts in his own name or transferring to his overdrawn office account, paying 'interest' from office account. Clients (Mrs S, Mrs I, Mr F, and Mr & Mrs L) lost substantial sums never repaid (£15,000, £20,000, £10,000 plus a £6,020 interest shortfall). The Tribunal proceeded in his absence after repeated adjournments on medical grounds, found all allegations of conduct unbefitting a solicitor substantiated, and struck him off. He was ordered to pay costs of £5,135.84. No express finding of dishonesty was recorded.
Duties found breached:
- Uphold public trust in the profession
- Disclose material information to client
- No conflict between current clients
- No improper use of client money
- Prompt accounting and return of money
- No improper solicitation or touting
Aggravating factors:
- Serious misuse of clients' money to bolster overdrawn office account
- Fundamental breach of trust implicit in solicitor-client relationship
- Multiple clients affected over several years
- Substantial sums never repaid or accounted for
Mitigating factors:
- Respondent had been admitted to psychiatric hospital on multiple occasions