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Charlotte Joy Platt

JurisdictionScotland
BodyScottish Solicitors' Discipline Tribunal (SSDT)
Professionsolicitor — Charlotte Joy Platt, c/o Inksters Solicitors, 10 Sinclair Street, Thurso
Date6th Sept 2023
AppealNo Appeal

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

SanctionConditions
Dishonesty foundYes

Charlotte Joy Platt, a solicitor employed at Drever & Heddle, was found guilty of professional misconduct. Singly, she signed as a witness to a Standard Security and Matrimonial Homes Act Declaration in July 2016 when she knew she had not witnessed the Secondary Complainer's signature - the Tribunal found this dishonest under the Ivey test, breaching Rule B1.2. In cumulo, she failed to ensure registration of the Disposition, failed to advise the client of the delay, failed to explain the true reason for the National Insurance number request, and permitted documents bearing a fraudulent signature to be submitted for registration (breaches of B1.4 and B1.9). The Tribunal found she did NOT know nor ought to have known the signatures were forged. Although dishonesty normally leads to strike off, the Tribunal found exceptional circumstances (chaotic under-resourced office, health impact, junior status, no premeditation, limited duration). Disposal: censure plus two-year restriction of practising certificate to qualified assistant status; expenses awarded to the Complainers; publicity to name the Respondent and firm partners.

Duties found breached:

Aggravating factors:

  • Finding of dishonesty - at top end of spectrum of gravity
  • Failures extended over a significant period of time
  • Conduct more than momentary as Respondent had the weekend to reflect before sending deeds to Kirkwall
  • Exposed both the Secondary Complainer and the lender to risk (Standard Security open to reduction)

Mitigating factors:

  • Difficult and unpleasant working atmosphere caused by partnership breakdown
  • Office greatly under-resourced
  • Effect on Respondent's mental and physical health
  • Respondent newly qualified but treated as senior, poorly supported
  • Cooperated fully from the outset, provided handwriting samples
  • Otherwise good character, unlikely to repeat
  • Expression of remorse
  • No premeditation; isolated incident relating to one transaction
  • No benefit to solicitor; LBTT penalty paid by firm; no application for compensation

Duties engaged

Documents

Source: https://www.ssdt.org.uk/findings/law-society-v-charlotte-joy-platt/