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8877-2003 - Margarita Juliet Carter-Woods (Miller)

JurisdictionEngland & Wales
BodySolicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT)
Professionsolicitor
Case number8877/2003
Date01/01/2003
OutcomeStrike off

Allegation / charges

Breaches, Client Money, Failures, Solicitors' Accounts Rules, Others

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

SanctionStrike Off
Dishonesty foundYes

Margarita Juliet Carter-Woods (Miller), a sole practitioner admitted 1990, faced 13 allegations following an FIU inspection that revealed a client account shortage. The Tribunal dismissed the allegation that she accepted a power of attorney from a mentally incapacitated donor (ii), and declined to make a finding on the general Rule 1 allegation (i). It found the remaining allegations substantiated, including accounts rule breaches, transfers from client to office account without bills, utilisation of client funds for her own purpose, and a misleading representation to the IO. Applying the Twinsectra test, the Tribunal found she acted dishonestly by authorising transfers without verifying their propriety (turning a blind eye), though it stressed this was not the worst kind of dishonesty. She was struck off the Roll and ordered to pay costs subject to detailed assessment; the Adjudicator directions were made enforceable as High Court orders.

Duties found breached:

Aggravating factors:

  • Sole practitioner with absolute responsibility for client money stewardship
  • Improper transfers from client to office account across 103 client matters totalling over £95,000
  • Minimum cash shortage of £46,848.06 at inspection date
  • Misrepresented to the Investigation Officer that clients were aware their damages had been used for costs when they were not

Mitigating factors:

  • Admissions to several allegations
  • Oral witnesses and written testimonials spoke highly of her integrity and competence
  • Personal difficulties including severe depression, alcohol dependency and a sick child with cerebral palsy
  • Introduced £70,000 into client account to rectify shortfall once aware
  • Tribunal found the dishonesty was not of the worst kind (blind-eye rather than flagrant theft)
  • Misplaced reliance on an inexperienced cashier
  • Subsequently adjudicated bankrupt and faced civil litigation

Duties engaged

Documents

Source: https://solicitorstribunal.org.uk/case/8877/