Ashton Lloyd Doherty
Allegation / charges
Breaches, Failures
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal found Ashton Lloyd Doherty had breached numerous conduct rules in relation to loans and transactions involving an elderly, semi-literate client (Client A). Allegations 1.1-1.5 (acting in conflict situations, failing to advise adequately on a prioritised second charge, the creation of and assignment to a Panamanian company, and distribution of sale proceeds to three companies he controlled) were proved, including findings of lack of integrity. Allegation 1.6 (own-interest conflict on the Swindon loan) was NOT proved because the Tribunal was not satisfied he was 'acting' for a current client. However, allegation 1.7 (taking unfair advantage of Client A via a loan greatly to his benefit) was proved, and the Tribunal found this conduct dishonest under the Ivey test. Given the dishonesty and other serious findings, with no exceptional circumstances, the Respondent was struck off the Roll and ordered to pay agreed costs of £25,000.
Duties found breached:
- Honesty
- Integrity
- No taking unfair advantage
- Uphold public trust in the profession
- Act in the client's best interests
- No conflict between current clients
Aggravating factors:
- Finding of dishonesty in taking advantage of Client A for the Respondent's own significant financial benefit
- Misconduct extended over a significant period of years and required planning
- Client A's vulnerabilities arising from very limited literacy and heightened reliance on her advisers
- Respondent was in a position of trust and was an experienced solicitor
- Respondent subordinated client's interests to his own
Mitigating factors:
- Otherwise unblemished record / no previous disciplinary findings
- Positive character testimonials regarding professionalism and integrity
- Long career with good service to others