Robert John Bradfield Giles
Allegation / charges
Client Money, Failures, Solicitors' Accounts Rules
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Robert John Bradfield Giles, a sole practitioner admitted in 1978, faced disciplinary proceedings following a Law Society investigation that found a minimum cash shortage of £23,675.95 on client account as at 30 September 1994, caused by personal payments, improper transfers from client to office account, overpayments, and clients' funds withheld. The Tribunal found all allegations substantiated and expressly found that the respondent's use of ready cash passed to him by clients to pay office expenses was dishonest, and that his failure to supervise his cashier and keep proper books verged upon/amounted to a form of dishonesty. He was struck off the Roll and ordered to pay costs to be taxed if not agreed. Note the High Court (Carnwath J) had earlier declined to make a dishonesty finding on the intervention appeal, leaving that to the Tribunal.
Duties found breached:
- Handle inadvertently received material
- No improper use of client money
- Accounting records, reconciliation and reports
- No improper solicitation or touting
Aggravating factors:
- Use of clients' cash to pay office expenses
- Failure to supervise elderly cashier / abrogation of responsibility as sole practitioner
- Turned a blind eye to what was happening with client money
Mitigating factors:
- No attempt to conceal - payments recorded on cheque stubs/backs
- Made honest admissions and cooperated, providing all evidence to the Investigation Accountant
- No particular financial pressure and expected funds to rectify shortfall
- Books described as muddled/chaotic rather than deliberately falsified
- Sufficient funds appeared available to meet most Compensation Fund claims