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Roberts, Taylor and Excell-Thomas

JurisdictionEngland & Wales
BodySolicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT)
Professionsolicitor
Case number8775/2003
Date01/01/2003
OutcomeProhibition Order, Strike off, Suspend - Indefinite

Allegation / charges

Breaches, Client Money, Failures, Solicitors' Accounts Rules, Others

Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision

SanctionStrike Off
Dishonesty foundYes

Disciplinary proceedings against three solicitors at Roberts & Co. The First Respondent (Roberts) was found to have been dishonest: he falsified client account entries, kept chaotic accounts that prevented calculation of client liabilities, misused client funds, misled client Mr B, acted in conflicts of interest, breached an undertaking, ran a sham partnership (admittedly to access lending panels) and breached Section 41. He was struck off and ordered to pay £5,325.95 legal costs plus £1,788.10 investigation accountant costs. The Second Respondent (Taylor) was found to have breached an undertaking he signed as a 'partner' and to have allowed himself to be held out as a partner in a sham partnership; the Tribunal made NO finding of dishonesty but found him careless to the point of recklessness. He was prohibited from restoration to the Roll and ordered to pay £2,662.98 costs. The Third Respondent (Excell-Thomas) was found to have practised uncertificated after his bankruptcy suspended his practising certificate; he was indefinitely suspended and ordered to pay £887.66 costs.

Duties found breached:

Aggravating factors:

  • First Respondent provided no explanation or mitigation and failed to respond to allegations
  • Conduct at the most serious end of the scale with Compensation Fund claims
  • Sham partnership created to obtain bank/building society panel membership
  • Second Respondent had previous appearances before the Tribunal (1993 and 1996)
  • Third Respondent's third appearance before the Tribunal (1979, 1998)

Mitigating factors:

  • Second Respondent cooperated and made representations
  • Second Respondent paid £30,000 in reparation for the breach of undertaking
  • Second Respondent's name no longer on the Roll and he did not intend to practise again
  • Clients less prejudiced by Second Respondent than by First Respondent

⚠ figures not found verbatim in the source were dropped: ["unverified_costs_amount=10664.69"]

Duties engaged

Documents

Source: https://solicitorstribunal.org.uk/case/8775/