William John Owen
Allegation / charges
Breaches, Client Money, Criminal Convictions, Failures, Solicitors' Accounts Rules
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
William John Owen, an experienced solicitor and sole principal, was convicted at Cardiff Crown Court of nine counts of theft and eight of false accounting relating to the estate of JW, admitting stealing over £1.15 million to prop up his failing firm, and was sentenced to five years imprisonment with a £125,868.36 confiscation order. The SDT found all allegations proved including improper/unauthorised withdrawals from client account across three estates (JW, SG, EJ), failure to adhere to the will, failure to remedy the withdrawals, and breach arising from his criminal conviction. The Tribunal made an express finding of dishonesty applying the Twinsectra test. Given the planned, systematic theft over eight years and abuse of trust, with no exceptional circumstances, he was struck off the Roll and ordered to pay costs of £20,689.61.
Duties found breached:
- Proper basis for allegations
- Act only on proper, lawful instructions
- No improper use of client money
Aggravating factors:
- Dishonesty including commission of criminal offences
- Conduct deliberate, calculated and repeated over eight years
- Creation of false invoices/documents to hide misconduct
- Took advantage of a vulnerable position on a grand scale - depriving charitable beneficiaries
- Misappropriation exceeding £1 million; £125,000 per year
- Abuse of position of trust as trustee/executor and held two judicial positions (coroner, Agricultural Land Tribunal chairman)
- Severe harm to reputation of profession
Mitigating factors:
- Health problems and serious illness during offending period
- Sad family background and own failing health
- Pleaded guilty/confessed to criminal charges
- Satisfied confiscation/compensation order of £125,868.36
- Previous good standing and judicial service
- Numerous testimonials
- No previous disciplinary matters
Duties engaged
- Overriding duty to the court
- Proper basis for allegations
- Honesty
- No bribery or improper gifts
- Personal probity and fitness to practise
- Uphold public trust in the profession
- No unlawful discrimination or harassment
- Act only on proper, lawful instructions
- Fair, reasonable and lawful fees
- No improper use of client money
- Account for interest on client money
- Serve justice and improve the law