Norman Luper
Allegation / charges
Breaches, Failures
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Norman Luper, an associate solicitor, amended a Report on Lease two years after originally sending it to his client to make it appear he had given advice about a restrictive alienation covenant that he had in fact omitted, then sent the altered copy to the client. The Tribunal found all alleged breaches proved (Principles 2, 4, 6 and Outcome O(1.2)) and made an express finding of dishonesty under the Twinsectra combined test, which the Respondent admitted. The Tribunal found exceptional circumstances within the Sharma/Imran small residual category given the spontaneous, unpremeditated nature of the act (occurring within 1.5 hours), the lack of real benefit and the fact the harm flowed from the original negligence, the Respondent's depression, prompt self-report and full admissions. Strike-off was therefore disproportionate; instead the Tribunal imposed an indefinite suspension and ordered costs of £4,948.80.
Duties found breached:
- Integrity
- Act in the client's best interests
- Non-discriminatory acceptance and cab-rank
- No conflict between current clients
Aggravating factors:
- Conduct was dishonest
- Initially denied amending the report and blamed 'computers' when first questioned
- Significant experience as a solicitor of nearly 40 years
Mitigating factors:
- Self-reported to the SRA within three days of the misconduct
- Full and frank admissions maintained throughout, including admission of dishonesty
- Genuine remorse and complete insight
- Cooperation with the Applicant
- Spur of the moment, unpremeditated act over less than 1.5 hours with no prolonged misconduct
- No prospect of concealment as client held the original report
- Suffering from depression and stress, undergoing difficult divorce proceedings
- Positive testimonials reflecting 36 years' credit to the profession
- No previous disciplinary matters