Jeremy Charles Barley
Allegation / charges
Failures, Solicitors' Accounts Rules
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Jeremy Charles Barley, a sole practitioner admitted in 1974, was found to have breached the Solicitors Accounts Rules by failing to deal properly with funds received from the Legal Services Commission for unpaid professional disbursements (a cash shortage of £47,889.06), and failing to remedy the breaches promptly. He also failed to account to Edward Fail solicitors for £4,953.23 in costs due to them, retaining the money in his office account where it was lost in his bankruptcy. The Tribunal found that his "not knowing or caring" whether money was wrongly held in office account, despite being put on notice by two FIO inspections, amounted to dishonesty (applying Bultitude). Despite mitigation (difficult circumstances, badly let down by colleagues/bookkeeper, ill health, esteem of profession), he was struck off the Roll and ordered to pay agreed costs of £9,523.73.
Duties found breached:
- No improper communication with the court
- No taking unfair advantage
- Prompt accounting and return of money
- Accounting records, reconciliation and reports
- No improper solicitation or touting
Aggravating factors:
- Put on notice of bookkeeper's incompetence by two prior FIO inspections (2004 and 2005) yet failed to grasp the nettle
- Failed to take immediate steps to account to Edward Fail even after Law Society sought an explanation
- Cash shortage of £47,889.06 / 37 unpaid disbursements over a lengthy period (2001-2005)