![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Solicitor, Re A [2007] EWCA Civ 597 (15 May 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/597.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 597 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
Strand London, WC2 |
||
B e f o r e :
(THE MASTER OF THE ROLLS)
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF THE SOLICITORS ACT 1974 | ||
RE A SOLICITOR | ||
No. 2 of 2007 | ||
DR SABINE PITTROF |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Miss D Rhee (instructed by The Law Society) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Anthony Clarke, MR:
"The applications for exemption from the Property and Litigation Heads are refused. The exemption requires between 2 - 3 years practical experience of each subject in this country. Miss Pittrof has no such experience. These subjects are particular, rather than general in content, as indicated by the much longer period of experience needed to warrant exemption than that required for the Common Law Head. It is not possible to rely on experience in another jurisdiction."
"On 22 August Miss Pittrof requested a review of the June 2006 decision. She acknowledges that she has not been admitted in Australia as she has not completed the practical requirements although she has completed all the academic requirements and has completed a PhD thesis on comparative constitutional law (which was part of the reason for the exemption from the common law head being granted). Miss Pittrof suggests that she is being subjected to a different requirement from qualified lawyers applying to Transfer from Australia and from non-qualified European Lawyers. She also submits that she has considerable academic background in both property and litigation and her practical experience in Germany at Wilkie Farr and Gallaghar and Haarmaan Hemmelrath included property and litigation issues.
"Miss Pittrof is not admitted in Australia and therefore applies under the QLTR relying on her German qualification. She is therefore subject to the usual requirements in relation to granting an exemption from any Head of the QLTT. I accept that she has extensive academic experience and considerable practical experience in Germany but she has no relative experience in England and Wales, nor has she a relevant English legal qualification which would warrant a reduction to the usual length of practical experience required. I therefore confirm the decision of the previous Adjudicator and the application for exemption from the Property and Litigation Heads is refused."
i) Her application for an exemption is based on Regulation 12(a) of the QLTR as it was based on her German qualification as a Rechtanswaltin. The application for an exemption from the three heads of the QLTT is based on her Australian qualification, that is to say her LLB.
ii) As her reliance on Australian qualification, whilst being a lawyer qualified in Germany, is unusual her application for exemption ought to be considered on the same basis as applications for exemption made by either Australian qualified lawyers or lawyers applying under Directive 98/5 EC.
iii) In carrying out the assessment as to whether an exemption should be granted, her extensive practical experience in Germany should be taken properly into account.
i) She has completed all the relevant academic requirements for admission as an Australian lawyer. Australian lawyers are required to have a period of only six to nine months practical experience before they are formally admitted in Australia. [She tells me that that is at the College of Law]. Australian lawyers are exempt from the property and litigation heads of the QLTT. There is thus no necessity, or in many cases likelihood, that an Australian lawyer applying under the QLTR will have completed the two to three years practical experience of property or litigation law in England and Wales which the First Adjudicator stated in her decision was required for exemption from those heads generally and, more particularly, in her case.
ii) Lawyers from EU member states applying under Regulation 12(b) of the QLTR are not required to demonstrate any practical experience of property or litigation and automatically receive exemption from the QLTT. Lawyers under this rule simply need to demonstrate that they have been working in the United Kingdom for three years prior to the application and working in the field of EU law.
iii) There is no justifiable reason why her application should be treated less favourably than an application by either an Australian lawyer or an EU lawyer, neither of whom is required to demonstrate the necessary academic or practical knowledge of English property or litigation law.
iv) Furthermore, she admits that she has, through her German practise, worked for clients advising them on cross-border litigation and property matters. She has also been asked to teach a course, which is to focus on property law in common law jurisdictions' at the University of Applied Sciences in Friedburg.
"i) Dr Pittrof cannot rely on exemptions granted to Australian lawyers, under Regulation 11(a) of the QLTR because she is not admitted as a practising lawyer in Australia. She has simply completed the academic stage necessary for Australian qualification.
"ii) Nor can she rely on the exemptions granted to EU qualified lawyers under Regulation 12(b) of the QLTR because she has not, as is required, practised law in the UK."
"Any lawyer applying for admission pursuant to European Communities Directive No 89/48 EEC or any legislation implementing the Directive in the UK, who in accordance with that legislation is required by the Society to pass an aptitude test, shall be required to pass the Test in such subjects as the Society shall determine."
Discussion
"(2) Whereas, pursuant to Council Directive 89/48/EEC of 21 December 1998 on a general system of the recognition of higher-education diplomas awarded on completion of professional education and training of at least three years' duration ($), a lawyer who is fully qualified in one Member State may already ask to have his diploma recognised with a view to establishing himself in another Member State in order to practise the profession of lawyer there under the professional title used in that State; whereas the objective of Directive 89/48/EEC is to ensure that a lawyer is integrated into the profession in the host Member State, and the Directive seeks neither to modify the rules regulating the profession in that State nor to remove such a lawyer from the ambit of those rules;
"(3) Whereas while some lawyers may become quickly integrated into the profession in the host Member State, inter alia by passing an aptitude test as provided for in Directive 89/48/EEC, other fully qualified lawyers should be able to achieve such integration after a certain period of professional practice in the host Member State under their home-country professional titles or else continue to practise under their home-country profession titles.
"(4) Whereas at the end of that period the lawyer should be able to integrate into the profession in the host Member States after verification that the possesses professional experience in the that Member State;
"(5) Whereas action along these lines is justified at Community level not only because, compared with the general system for the recognition of diplomas, it provides lawyers with an easier means whereby they can integrate into the profession in a host Member State, but also because, by enabling lawyers to practise under their home-country professional titles on a permanent basis in a host Member State, it meets the need of consumers of legal services, who owing to the increasing trade flows resulting, in particular, from the internal market, seek advice when carrying out cross-border transactions in which international law, Community law and domestic laws often overlap;".
"In making any determination under Regulation 6-15 … to have regard to the nature and extent of the applicant's practical experience in the law of England and Wales and any other qualification."
As I see it, the Law Society has an obligation in the exercise of its discretion under Regulation 12(a) to take account of all the relevant circumstances of the case, as indeed it would if it were exercising a discretion under Regulation 11(3).
Order: Application refused.