John Gray Lingen
Allegation / charges
Client Money, Solicitors' Accounts Rules
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
John Gray Lingen, a sole principal solicitor admitted in 1980, was found to have breached the Solicitors Accounts Rules by improperly drawing client monies and failing to prepare reconciliations since March 1995. An investigation revealed a minimum cash shortage of £18,544.44, with improper payments, transfers and lodgements totalling £17,830.84. He was convicted at Worcester Crown Court of two counts of theft (£30,000 and £14,000) and sentenced to two years' imprisonment on each count. The Tribunal expressly found he acted wholly improperly and dishonestly in handling clients' monies, noting the sentencing judge found a serious breach of trust and dishonesty. Despite mitigation (good prior character, cooperation, domination by a dishonest employee, testimonials), he was struck off the Roll and ordered to pay fixed costs of £4,393.10.
Duties found breached:
- No conflict between current clients
- No improper use of client money
- No improper solicitation or touting
Aggravating factors:
- Conviction for two counts of theft with custodial sentence
- Serious breach of trust reposed by clients
- Dishonest handling of clients' monies
- Major error of judgement in employing a person known to have a criminal record
- Failure to explain breaches and deficiencies
Mitigating factors:
- Previously of good character with no prior misconduct since admission in 1980
- Allowed himself to be pressurised/dominated by an unscrupulous and dishonest employee
- Fully cooperative throughout investigations
- Made appropriate admissions at early stages
- Numerous testimonials submitted in support
- No impropriety found in the Green Form Scheme advice