PAUL ERNEST MASTEN
Allegation / charges
Professional Misconduct
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Paul Ernest Masten, sole principal of an incorporated legal practice, authorised the withdrawal of $11,115 from the firm's trust account to pay stamp duty on a land purchase by a company he controlled (Noble House), knowing there were no funds to which he or the company was entitled. On 26 April 2009 a false entry was made debiting a deceased estate's trust ledger for the stamp duty, which the Tribunal found the practitioner deliberately made, knowing the estate had no such liability. He failed to report the irregularity until a day after the Committee's investigation began. The Tribunal expressly found dishonest conduct, illegal conduct (stealing and fraudulent falsification of records), contraventions of ss 216(1), 226(1)(a), 228(3)(b) and 227(1) of the LP Act, and an intentional breach of trust, rejecting his 'mistake' explanations as improbable. In the supplementary penalty decision the Tribunal ordered a report be transmitted to the Supreme Court (Full Bench) recommending removal from the roll, suspended his practising certificate pending that determination, and ordered him to pay the Committee's costs of $38,502.25 within three months.
Duties found breached:
- Honesty
- No conflict between current clients
- Accounting records, reconciliation and reports
- Report serious misconduct of others
Aggravating factors:
- Practitioner knew the trust account held no money to which he/Noble House was entitled and withdrew funds for his own personal benefit
- Deliberately made false entry debiting the estate's trust ledger for a stamp duty liability the estate did not owe
- Conduct continued over a period (10 April to 12 May 2009) with multiple opportunities to rectify
- Only repaid the trust account after the Committee commenced its investigation
- Misuse of trust funds strikes at the core of a practitioner's fitness and trustworthiness
- Practitioner was evasive and argumentative as a witness; his account was rejected as improbable
Mitigating factors:
- Estate ultimately suffered no financial loss (money repaid)
- Practitioner was under considerable personal and professional stress (relationship breakdown, business/partner disputes) - accepted mild adjustment disorder
- No prior disciplinary findings in over five years of practice
- Cooperated with the Committee's investigation and did not obstruct or actively conceal
- Positive character references attesting to good reputation and community contribution
Duties engaged
Other decisions involving this respondent
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