Mark I Bronzite & Another
Allegation / charges
Breaches, Client Money, Failures, Solicitors' Accounts Rules, Others
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Two solicitors in the firm Windsor Bronzite faced disciplinary proceedings. The First Respondent (Mark Ian Bronzite) was found to have committed numerous breaches of accounts and practice rules and, critically, was found dishonest in misusing client monies - appropriating client H's damages (including altering a cheque payable to the client into his own name) and 'borrowing' client R's funds without proper authority. The Tribunal applied the Twinsectra test and was satisfied of dishonesty beyond reasonable doubt. He was struck off the Roll and ordered to pay £84,000 costs. The Second Respondent, found far less culpable with no dishonesty, was suspended for six months and ordered to pay £7,500 costs. Total costs fixed at £91,500.
Duties found breached:
- Accounting records, reconciliation and reports
- Act in the client's best interests
- Disclose referrals, commissions and benefits
- No conflict between current clients
- No improper use of client money
- No own-interest conflict
- Not misrepresent regulated status
- Prompt accounting and return of money
Aggravating factors:
- Dishonest appropriation of client H's damages including altering a cheque payable to client into his own name and paying into his personal account
- Borrowing/misusing client R's monies without authority, independent advice or repayment of interest
- Continued use of unjustified suspense accounts despite earlier SRA warnings
- Blamed unadmitted staff members for breaches
- Made payments to himself from overdrawn office account while client monies misappropriated
- Provided a questionable retrospective loan letter as evidence
Mitigating factors:
- For Second Respondent: limited involvement, far less culpable than First Respondent, treated as office junior, attempts to introduce systems blocked by First Respondent, overwhelmed by work, no dishonesty
- First Respondent claimed ill health and stress, said he had abdicated his position