Paul F S Brooks and David Richardson
Allegation / charges
Client Money, Failures, Solicitors' Accounts Rules, Others
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Two partners of Standish and Co faced disciplinary proceedings following an OSS inspection revealing serious Solicitors Accounts Rules breaches, a minimum cash shortage of £126,172.88 and approximately £1 million owed to debt recovery clients that was unaccounted for. The First Respondent (Brooks), the senior partner in control of the accounts, was found to have dishonestly misappropriated/improperly used clients' money (applying the Twinsectra test) and to have dishonestly produced misleading information to the investigator. He was struck off and ordered to pay £15,000 costs. The Second Respondent (Richardson), found not to have been involved in any dishonesty but to have neglected his partnership accounting responsibilities over 30 years (with a prior 1976 finding), admitted the accounts breaches; he was suspended for one year, fined £10,000, restricted to approved employment after suspension, and ordered to pay £5,000 costs.
Duties found breached:
- Proper basis for allegations
- No improper use of client money
- Prompt accounting and return of money
- Accounting records, reconciliation and reports
Aggravating factors:
- Minimum cash shortage of £126,172.88 identified, with very large sums (approx £1 million) due to debt recovery clients unaccounted for
- Dishonest misleading of the OSS investigator regarding scale of debt recovery work
- Use of clients' money to pay firm's staff salaries
- Second Respondent had a prior 1976 Tribunal finding relating to failure to supervise debt collection work
- Second Respondent took no interest in firm's accounts over 30 years, abrogating partnership responsibilities
Mitigating factors:
- First Respondent had no previous appearance before the Tribunal
- Second Respondent had no knowledge of or involvement in dishonest conduct and was the junior partner remote from the main practice
- First Respondent accepted responsibility for the Accounts Rules breaches and spoke in support of the Second Respondent
- Second Respondent's only accounts involvement was transfers regarding his own conveyancing matters