PAUL JOHN O'HALLORAN
Allegation / charges
Professional Misconduct
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Paul John O'Halloran, a WA legal practitioner, admitted professional misconduct concerning fees in four motor vehicle personal injury matters, including grossly excessive charging (39.7%-130.1%/138.4% over reasonable fees), charging contrary to costs agreements and disclosures, contraventions of ss 260/267, misleading clients, and seeking excess costs from the Insurance Commission. Viewed in the context of a prior six-month suspension for similar conduct (O'Halloran No 1), the Tribunal found a sustained course of conduct, vulnerable clients and a lack of genuine insight. It held he was not a fit and proper person and transmitted a report to the Supreme Court (full bench) recommending removal from the Roll. No express finding of dishonesty was made. He was ordered to pay costs of $27,861.20 within four weeks; the Tribunal noted it lacked power to make the compensation orders it otherwise would have made.
Duties found breached:
- Not mislead third parties or opponents
- Costs and fee transparency to client
- Fair, reasonable and lawful fees
- Handle inadvertently received material
- Prompt accounting and return of money
- Report serious misconduct of others
- Truthful, non-misleading advertising
Aggravating factors:
- Sustained course of conduct of gross overcharging across four clients over close to six years (Sept 2005-July 2011), part of broader ~12-year pattern
- Prior finding of professional misconduct for gross overcharging in O'Halloran No 1 (six-month suspension)
- Clients were vulnerable personal injury plaintiffs with unequal knowledge and bargaining position
- Demonstrated lack of insight and ignorance of Pt 10 LP Act obligations
- Misleading conduct toward clients and the Insurance Commission
- Failure to pay compensation previously agreed and unpaid costs from O'Halloran No 1
- Broadened field of misconduct beyond overcharging
Mitigating factors:
- Ultimately admitted the professional misconduct (promptly in VR 30 of 2013)
- Changed billing method to charge by the minute and reduced minimum-unit charges
- Reduced frequency of interim billing
- Only one prior disciplinary finding in over 32 years of practice
- Personal circumstances (deaths of both parents in 2005)
- Adverse publicity (given little weight)
Duties engaged
- Not mislead third parties or opponents
- Personal probity and fitness to practise
- Protect capacity and vulnerable clients
- Costs and fee transparency to client
- Fair, reasonable and lawful fees
- Handle inadvertently received material
- Prompt accounting and return of money
- Report serious misconduct of others
- Truthful, non-misleading advertising
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