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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Taylor v The Law Society [2005] EWCA Civ 1473 (01 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1473.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 1473 |
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NEIL HARDING TAYLOR
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE SOLICITORS ACT 1974
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE MASTER OF THE ROLLS (APPEALS AND APPLICATIONS) REGULATIONS 1991
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sir Anthony Clarke)
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NEIL HARDING TAYLOR | Petitioner | |
-v- | ||
THE LAW SOCIETY | Cross-Petitioner |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
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MR GEOFFREY WILLIAMS QC (instructed by Law Society) appeared on behalf of the Cross-Petitioner
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Crown Copyright ©
"The Tribunal ORDERS that the application of Neil Hardy Taylor ... for the determination of the indefinite suspension be GRANTED. The Tribunal further orders that any Practising certificate granted to Mr Taylor in the future shall be Subject to conditions that he may practise only in employment or partnership approved by The Law Society and on the basis that he shall not be permitted to handle clients' money and the Tribunal further Orders that he pay the costs of the response of the Law Society to this application fixed in the sum of £565.00."
"(i) If a tribunal considers that a period of complete suspension followed by a period of restricted practice is the appropriate sanction to protect the public, then, as it is accepted that the tribunal has power to impose such conditions or restrictions, it is the tribunal which should impose that penalty and not leave it to others. A body entrusted by Parliament to exercise disciplinary powers and protect the public should not, unless there are compelling reasons, delegate part of that task to others; there are no compelling reasons which apply to the jurisdiction of the tribunal. It is well able to decide the appropriate terms and it should impose those terms as part of the penalty in the public interest.
(ii) It was urged upon us, and we accept, that the Law Society in the exercise of its regulatory powers cannot bind itself to accept a recommendation from the tribunal, exercising disciplinary functions, to impose a condition on a practising certificate. The jurisdiction of the Law Society to impose conditions on practising certificates is derived from its regulatory powers under sections 9-18 of the Act which are quite distinct from the disciplinary powers under sections 46-54. The Law Society has to consider the application for a practising certificate on the materials available to it when the application is made. There is also a separate appeal procedure in respect of the imposition of terms - first to an adjudication panel and then to the Master of the Rolls.
(iii) Thus, although we accept that the Law Society will accord our views or those of a tribunal the utmost respect, the Law Society does not have to follow any recommendation made by us or the tribunal. Neither we nor the tribunal has any means of being certain that the penalty that is determined to be in the public interest will be imposed. As the tribunal is an independent body, separate and apart from the Law Society (with its combined duties of regulation and representation of the profession), we consider that in each case the tribunal must address the question as to whether the public interest is best served by it imposing a condition which it can be certain will be put into effect or leaving the matter entirely to the Law Society. Unless there are exceptional reasons, we consider that the tribunal should impose itself the conditions it considers appropriate, as that is part of the decision it has made: if the defendant considers the conditions too harsh or wrong in principle, then as the imposition of the conditions is part of the penalty, the route of appeal should be that route that has been provided in respect of the penalty and not that provided in respect of the regulatory powers.
(iv) In this case, we have no doubt that the public interest demands that the conditions which we consider are necessary to protect the public must have the necessary certainty of imposition; we were of the view that the penalty of indefinite suspension was far too harsh and the justice of the case and the protection of the public would be met by a period of complete suspension followed by a return to practice on conditions. As we considered that the just penalty, it would have been an abdication of our responsibility not to have imposed that penalty, as it is now accepted we had power to do so.
(v) We see no reason whatsoever why the Law Society cannot police orders made by the tribunal; it may entail some cost, but that is the cost of self-regulation that the Law Society must bear. We trust therefore that the Law Society will ensure that the orders of the tribunal will be vigilantly policed by the Law Society and any breach made the subject of disciplinary proceedings. Any breach of an order of the tribunal restricting the terms on which a solicitor can practice would be a disciplinary offence which would generally merit a separate penalty and not merely intervention in practice; that penalty would be required because the solicitor would have breached an order of the tribunal which it had imposed as a penalty; there is no reason why a solicitor should be treated any differently or more leniently than any other person who breaches the terms of an order imposed by a court or disciplinary tribunal and which has been imposed as part of the penalty to protect the public.
For these principal reasons, we reject the contentions advanced by the Law Society and the tribunal and make it clear that it is the duty of the tribunal in each case where it considers that restrictions are required to consider imposing those restrictions itself."
SIR ANTHONY PETER CLARKE
THE MASTER OF THE ROLLS