Michael Thomas Cahill
Allegation / charges
Breaches, Failures
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Michael Cahill, a solicitor admitted in 2002, was found to have submitted to a loan broker and finance company numerous forged and misleading documents in support of a £30,000 loan application secured on the matrimonial home, including documents bearing forged signatures of his estranged wife AB, two solicitors (Mr PS and Mr DO), and a consultant (Ms ST), as well as forged payslips, a P60, and a falsely certified passport copy. The £29,875 loan was paid into his sole account and he defaulted on the first repayment. He also gave false information to the SRA about the purpose of the loan. The Tribunal found all seven allegations proved, including dishonesty under the Ivey test, breaching Principles 2, 6 and 7. He did not engage with the proceedings and the hearing proceeded in his absence. Finding no exceptional circumstances, the Tribunal struck him off the Roll and ordered costs of £20,700.
Duties found breached:
Aggravating factors:
- Seven findings of dishonest conduct
- Repeated conduct extended over several months
- Advanced a false explanation to the SRA to conceal wrongdoing
- Estranged wife regarded as vulnerable to the misconduct
- Misconduct so blatantly unacceptable he must have known it breached his obligations
- High culpability; motivation was personal financial gain
- Premeditated, elaborate and sophisticated conduct
- Experienced solicitor in a position of trust
Mitigating factors:
- No prior disciplinary findings; previous good character
- Practised since 2002 with unblemished record
- Misconduct took place outside his practice as a solicitor
- Cooperated to the extent of accepting service of proceedings
- Did not hold a current practising certificate