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Avril Rosemary Munson

JurisdictionEngland & Wales
BodySolicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT)
Professionsolicitor
Case number7201/1996
Date01/01/1996
OutcomeStrike off

Allegation / charges

Failures, Others

Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision

SanctionStrike Off
Suspension60 months
Dishonesty foundNo

Two respondents practising as 'Stevensons' faced allegations arising from their involvement in investment schemes run by an in-house 'client' (Mrs Newmarch), an experienced fraudster, including misleading third parties, unfulfilled and forged undertakings, and (against Mrs Munson) taking a £130,000 loan from clients without separate representation. The Tribunal found the substantiated allegations (i - misleading third parties, and iv - failure to comply with undertakings) proven; allegations of fraudulent/deceitful conduct (ii) and (v) were withdrawn. The Tribunal expressly found the second respondent had no intention of being complicit in the fraud and made no finding of dishonesty against either respondent (criticising Mrs Munson for lack of integrity, propriety and probity and the second respondent for crass stupidity). Mrs Munson was struck off and ordered to pay two thirds of costs; the second respondent was suspended for five years and ordered to pay one third of costs.

Duties found breached:

Aggravating factors:

  • Mrs Munson created an environment in which fraud could flourish
  • Allowing a non-firm person (Mrs Newmarch) free access to office premises, equipment and staff without regard to client confidentiality
  • Circumventing the Law Society's refusal to permit employment of a struck-off solicitor
  • Failure to supervise the second respondent's work
  • Numerous unfulfilled undertakings, some forged, in connection with a major investment fraud

Mitigating factors:

  • Second respondent was duped by an experienced fraudster (Mrs Newmarch)
  • Second respondent had no intention of becoming complicit in the fraud and made/anticipated no real personal gain
  • Second respondent was dominated by an eccentric and dogmatic senior principal
  • Second respondent acted foolishly/stupidly rather than dishonestly, apologised and accepted responsibility
  • Second respondent's personal financial difficulties and young family

Duties engaged

Documents

Source: https://solicitorstribunal.org.uk/case/7201/