Philip William Holliday
Allegation / charges
Client Money, Failures, Solicitors' Accounts Rules
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Sole practitioner Philip William Holliday admitted breaches of the Solicitors Accounts Rules, failing to pay counsel's fees, failing to comply with a committee decision and failing to reply to OSS correspondence. He made unallocated round sum transfers (£9,000 and £12,000) from client to office account to meet firm liabilities including VAT. The Tribunal found, applying the Twinsectra test, that these transfers amounted to conscious impropriety and dishonest misappropriation of clients' funds, rejecting his explanation of muddle and his ex post facto justification schedules. Although he repaid the sums and had no intention permanently to deprive, the Tribunal struck him off the Roll and ordered costs of £9,000.
Duties found breached:
- Advise on alternatives, settlement and outcome
- Handle inadvertently received material
- No improper use of client money
- Pay instructed practitioners and agents
Aggravating factors:
- Made improper round sum transfers while simultaneously making proper allocated transfers, undermining the muddle/confusion explanation
- Transfers made knowingly to boost office account to meet firm liabilities, including a large VAT bill
- Produced ex post facto schedules to justify transfers, including items already billed and trivial amounts to inflate totals
- Flagrant disregard of the Rules and a requirement made by his own professional body
Mitigating factors:
- No permanent intention to deprive clients of their money
- Repaid the shortages, partly before the inspection and before knowing of an impending inspection
- No loss to clients or members of the public and no claim on the Compensation Fund
- Personal/matrimonial difficulties and severe work pressure at the relevant time
- Previously good record, community involvement and success as a solicitor
- Offered unreserved apologies