James Borbor Allie
Allegation / charges
Breaches, Client Money, Failures, Solicitors' Accounts Rules
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
James Borbor Allie, a salaried partner at Spence and Horne, was found to have dishonestly misappropriated and misused estate funds of his deceased client A, of whom he was sole executor. He received at least £825,181.75 from the estate into his personal bank account, purchased a property (Property 2) with estate funds and lived there rent-free, transferred the client's property (Property 1) to himself, and failed to pay bequests to 5 of 6 charities and the residuary beneficiary. He also received £115,785.46 into personal accounts across 25 client matters (including diverting client damages), and issued 12 bills in the firm's name totalling £18,514.99 with VAT, directing payment to his personal account without the firm's knowledge. The Tribunal found dishonesty proved on all allegations (save allegation 1.1.2 regarding withholding from the firm's specific client account). He did not attend; the hearing proceeded in his absence. He was struck off the Roll and ordered to pay costs of £25,102.40.
Duties found breached:
- Act in the client's best interests
- Integrity
- No conflict between current clients
- No improper use of client money
- No taking unfair advantage
- Uphold public trust in the profession
Aggravating factors:
- Proven dishonesty
- Motivated by personal financial gain
- Conduct was planned, deliberate, calculated and repeated over 3-4 years
- Breach of trust placed by elderly client
- Significant and irreparable harm to beneficiaries by reducing estate value
- Experienced solicitor in control and solely responsible