Richard William Hill
Allegation / charges
Client Money, Failures, Solicitors' Accounts Rules
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Richard William Hill, admitted 1979, was a sole practitioner (Hill & Co.) who briefly merged into Donovan Hill & Co. The Law Society intervened in his practice in May 1995. An Investigation Accountant found his books were not compliant from at least 1 July 1994 and revealed a client account cash shortage of £98,594.40, comprising a personal payment (£3,908.30), debit balances (£91,832.72) across 61 client ledger accounts, and a book difference (£2,853.38). Claims were made on the Compensation Fund. The respondent admitted the allegations but attributed the failures to book-keeping errors, a problematic merger, an unfamiliar computerised accounts system, financial strain and impaired judgement, and stated he had not been dishonest. The Tribunal found all allegations substantiated. Given large sums of unaccounted client money, substantial Compensation Fund claims, and that this was his second appearance within the same year (prior fine of £1,500 in April 1995; earlier reprimand in 1984), the Tribunal struck him off the Roll and ordered him to pay fixed costs plus the Investigation Accountant's costs to be taxed if not agreed. No express finding of dishonesty was made.
Duties found breached:
- No improper use of client money
- Accounting records, reconciliation and reports
- No improper solicitation or touting
Aggravating factors:
- Second disciplinary appearance within the same year (prior fine April 1995; reprimand 1984)
- Large sums of clients' money unaccounted for (£98,594.40 shortage)
- Substantial claims made on the Law Society's Compensation Fund
- Use of client funds for own purposes and for other clients
Mitigating factors:
- Admitted the allegations
- Difficulties caused by ill-conceived loss-making merger and change to computerised accounting
- Financial strain and impaired judgement/nervous strain
- Partial rectification of shortage (£4,700 recovered) and disclosure to Compensation Fund
- Belief that no dishonesty and no wilful risk to clients' money