Kevin Michael Quigley
Allegation / charges
Client Money, Failures, Solicitors' Accounts Rules
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Kevin Michael Quigley, a sole practitioner whose practice was intervened in November 1996, was found guilty of conduct unbefitting a solicitor. Investigation Accountant reports revealed cash shortages and breaches of the Solicitors Accounts Rules: 202 amounts received for professional disbursements (mainly ENT specialists' fees in industrial deafness claims) were credited to office account and not paid, and improper round-sum client-to-office transfers (£5,000, £3,000) and unallocated payments were made under pressure from his bank. A minimum cash shortage of £12,822.03 was identified. The Tribunal concluded his utilisation of client funds amounted to dishonest misappropriation. He did not appear; an adjournment request on health grounds was refused for lack of medical evidence. He was struck off the Roll and ordered to pay costs of £5,076.89.
Duties found breached:
- No improper use of client money
- Accounting records, reconciliation and reports
- No improper solicitation or touting
Aggravating factors:
- Dishonest misappropriation of clients' funds
- Repeated improper round-sum transfers from client to office account
- Large number of unpaid professional disbursements (202 amounts) credited to office account
- Failure to rectify shortages despite assurances
Mitigating factors:
- Respondent was under financial pressure from his bankers and mortgagee
- Partial rectification by repaying some client amounts
- Apparent admission of misappropriation in correspondence