Stephen Patrick Hogan
Allegation / charges
Client Money, Solicitors' Accounts Rules
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Hogan, admitted 1991, practised as Hogan-Boyd. A Law Society investigation found a minimum client account cash shortage of £119,374.51, comprising personal payments (£20,500), improper payments (£44,787.01) and improper transfers to office account (£54,087.50). He took client monies into his own/his wife's accounts, falsified ledger entries and file documents to conceal the misuse, and used one client's funds to benefit unconnected clients. A £50,000 rectification cheque was dishonoured. The respondent admitted the allegations and did not attend, submitting psychiatric/psychological evidence of stress and anxiety. He had a prior 1984 Section 43 order (later revoked in 1991). The Tribunal found all allegations substantiated, expressly found dishonesty and incapacity to act honestly, and struck him off the Roll, ordering costs of £5,816.78.
Duties found breached:
Aggravating factors:
- Prior 1984 Section 43 order for similar conduct (altering documents, breaches of Accounts Rules, misleading a client)
- Falsified records and file documents on many occasions to deceive
- Large losses falling on the Solicitors' Indemnity Fund
- £50,000 rectification cheque dishonoured
- Subject of police investigation
- Had been trusted and supported by the Tribunal when his earlier order was revoked
Mitigating factors:
- Admitted the allegations
- Apologised and expressed regret
- Psychiatric/psychological evidence of acute anxiety, stress and inability to cope
- Report indicated apparent absence of intention to permanently steal, with intention to repay