Nicholas Tayengwa Chitsiga
Allegation / charges
Failures, Solicitors' Accounts Rules, Others
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Sole practitioner Nicholas Tayengwa Chitsiga, admitted 1991, ran a largely legal-aid practice in Birmingham. SCB investigations revealed a cash shortage on client account of £28,680.25, arising from improper round-sum transfers from client to office account, overpayments, retained Legal Aid Board disbursement funds and other improper retentions. He deliberately used clients' money to pay staff wages and to fund his own drawings (including a £6,000 transfer in December 1994), admitting "I took that money." Although partly rectified, a shortage of £6,522.09 remained. The Tribunal found all allegations substantiated (uncontested) and could not avoid finding the conduct dishonest. He was struck off and ordered to pay costs to be taxed if not agreed. His post-hearing request for a re-hearing was refused.
Duties found breached:
Aggravating factors:
- Breaches occurred over a substantial period of time
- Deliberate use of clients' money to fund his own drawings
- Gave assurances to the Law Society Monitoring Unit that accounts were improving while misconduct continued
- Failed to exercise adequate supervision of staff
Mitigating factors:
- No loss to any client
- Practice suffered cash flow difficulties due to delayed Legal Aid Board payments
- No capital or overdraft facility
- Well regarded in the community he served
- Hard-working, qualified later in life and served ethnic minority clients in need
- Applicant accepted he would have put the money back