§ discipline

Segregate client money money

The lawyer must keep client money separate from the firm's own money in a properly designated client account and use each client's money only for that client's matter.

75 cases 68% strike-off avg suspension 7.8 mo avg fine 20,000 34 with dishonesty finding

How the codes express this duty

E&W Solicitors SRA Principles & Code SAR Rule 4.1; SAR Rule 3.2; SAR Rule 5.3 strong 67 cases
4.1 You keep client money separate from money belonging to the authorised body. 3.2 You ensure that the name of any client account includes: (a) the name of the authorised body; and (b) the word "client" to distinguish it from any other type of account held or operated by the authorised body. 5.3 You only withdraw client money from a client account if sufficient funds are held on behalf of that specific client or third party to make the payment.
E&W Barristers BSB Handbook no clear equivalent
Cayman Islands Legal Services Code 2026 P.7; R.9.2; R.9.3 partial
Attorneys-at-law shall protect client money and assets... An attorney-at-law and a recognised law entity shall safeguard money and assets entrusted to them by clients and others. An attorney-at-law is not permitted to personally hold client money.
AU Solicitors Solicitors' Conduct Rules no clear equivalent
AU Barristers Uniform Barristers Rules no clear equivalent
IE Solicitors Law Society Guide Ch9 — Accounts regulations: General strong
To keep clients' money separate from money belonging to the solicitor or the practice monies... To use each client's money for that client's matter only, To use trust money only for the purpose of that trust.
IE Barristers Bar Code of Conduct no clear equivalent
JM Attorneys Canons of Professional Ethics Canon VII(a) strong 3 cases
An Attorney shall comply with rules as may from time to time be prescribed by the General Legal Council relating to the keeping in separate accounts- (i) the funds of himself or any firm with which he is associated; and (ii) those of his clients.
JE Lawyers Law Society of Jersey Code P.7; R.7.4 c)-d) partial
Members must protect client money and assets... Members must: ... c) ensure compliance with the Accounts Rules; d) maintain appropriate financial records including good file management/ accounting practices to demonstrate compliance with this R.7.4.
ON Lawyers LSO Rules of Prof. Conduct r 3.5-4; r 3.2-7.3 partial
3.5-4 A lawyer shall clearly label and identify the client's property and place it in safekeeping distinguishable from the lawyer's own property. [3.2-7.3 A lawyer shall not use their trust account for purposes not related to the provision of legal services. Detailed client-account segregation is delegated to the by-laws under the Law Society Act.]
BC Lawyers BC Code r 2.1-3(h) partial 2 cases
A lawyer must record, and should report promptly to a client the receipt of any moneys or other trust property. The lawyer must use the client's moneys and trust property only as authorized by the client, and not commingle it with that of the lawyer.
NZ Lawyers Conduct & Client Care Rules r 10.5.2 partial
A lawyer who receives funds on terms requiring the lawyer to hold the funds in a trust account as a stakeholder must adhere strictly to those terms and disburse the funds only in accordance with them.
SCO Solicitors LSS Standards of Conduct no clear equivalent
SG Lawyers Professional Conduct Rules 2015 r 16 (Client money) partial
16 Client money
HK Solicitors Solicitors' Guide Principle 2.03 Commentary 3 partial
Every principal is personally responsible for complying with the Solicitors' Accounts Rules (Cap. 159 sub. leg. F) and the Accountant's Report Rules (Cap. 159 sub. leg. A). All the principals will be liable to disciplinary action if there is a failure to comply with these Rules.
HK Barristers Bar Code of Conduct no clear equivalent

Cases dealing with this duty

Clear

75 decisions · link basis: found breached = a tribunal finding; rule cited = the mapped provision is cited in the decision; text match = high-precision text pattern

Duty classification does not yet cover every jurisdiction (Ontario, New Zealand and Singapore decisions are indexed but not yet duty-classified), so counts here understate those corpora.