Christopher Andrew Shaw
Allegation / charges
Client Money, Failures, Solicitors' Accounts Rules
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Christopher Andrew Shaw, a sole practitioner, faced four allegations of conduct unbefitting a solicitor: failure to deliver an Accountant's Report, failure to keep proper accounts, improper drawing from client account, and using clients' funds for his own purposes. An Investigation Accountant found no proper records had been kept since he began sole practice, with a minimum cash shortage of £35,414.19 (minimum client liability £216,450.75 against £181,036.56 available). Contributory factors included improper transfers to office account (£5,181.30), personal payments (£3,309.03) and debit balances (£3,020). The applicant did not put the case as one involving dishonesty, and the Tribunal expressly found he acted without dishonesty—foolishly and inadequately. He admitted all allegations. The Tribunal found the allegations substantiated, suspended him indefinitely and ordered him to pay costs of £2,152.80.
Duties found breached:
Aggravating factors:
- Set up in sole practice with no apparent intention of keeping proper books of account - total abdication of responsibilities
- Minimum cash shortage of £35,414.19 on client account not replaced at time of hearing
- Continuing breach regarding failure to file Accountant's Reports
- Improper transfers to office account, personal payments and debit balances
Mitigating factors:
- Accepted/admitted all the allegations
- Tribunal found he behaved foolishly and inadequately but without dishonesty
- Stated intention and endeavours to repay monies met out of the Compensation Fund
- No prior dishonest action found; shortage caused by error