BSB expect to be able to licence ABSs in April 2017

The Bar Standards Board expects to begin licensing alternative business structures imminently, saying long-awaited approval could be granted in the next few weeks.

In its business plan for 2017/2018 – due to be published this week – the regulator will state: ‘We expect to be able to licence ABSs that are jointly owned and managed by both lawyers and non-lawyers in April 2017.’

The BSB is awaiting final parliamentary sign off under the Legal Services Act and the Gazette understands this is imminent.

However, the regulator has struggled to meet its predictions before. In March last year, the Gazette reported that the BSB expected to be licensing ABSs in October that year. It had previously predicted dates as early as 2014.

Also revealed in the business plan is a slight reduction in the BSB’s 2017/2018 budget. For 2017/2018 the budget is £7.8m – down from £8.04m in 2016/17.

The regulator attributed the fall to an expected drop in income from BCAT and BPTC training courses on the assumption that a new training regime, approved last week, will lead to students deferring enrolment.

In addition, the BSB said it is seeking approval under Section 69 of the Legal Services Act that would allow it to intervene into legal practices.

The BSB said: ‘We are also seeking additional powers in relation to those we regulate already. If approved the order will grant us new powers to intervene into legal practices where it is necessary for us to do so in order to protect clients.’

However, it said this would be a ‘rare occurrence’ and used as a ‘last resort’.

The regulator will also seek to warn the public of the differences between barristers and paid McKenzie friends – and to work closely with solicitors on the issue. ‘We will seek to encourage the profession to cooperate more closely with solicitors and other legal professionals where that may offer advantages for the public,’ the business plan states.

LSB to have new chair

Exclusive: LSB to have new chair after Pitt decides against applying for reappointment

15 March 2017

Pitt: 70 days’ work for the LSB a year

The Legal Services Board (LSB) is to have a new chair in the coming months, after incumbent Sir Michael Pitt took himself out of the running for a second three-year term, Legal Futures can reveal.

When Sir Michael’s predecessor, David Edmonds, was appointed for a second term, it was done without the position being advertised, but the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) has this time decided to hold an open competition.

Sir Michael’s term comes to an end on 31 April 2017, and the LSB has confirmed to us that he has decided not to apply for reappointment.

The process will be conducted under the new Cabinet Office governance code on public appointments and the main board of the LSB was told recently that an appointment will not be made until late June/early July.

As a result, the MoJ appears to have breached the code. This says that departments should build sufficient time into their planning for ministers to decide against making a reappointment or extension and holding a process to appoint a successor.

It adds: “There is no automatic presumption of reappointment; each case should be considered on its own merits, taking in to account a number of factors including, but not restricted to, the diversity of the current board and its balance of skills and experience.”

No reappointment or extension can be made without a satisfactory performance appraisal.

The MoJ did not say why it has decided on an open competition rather than reappointment. A spokesman said: “The process of appointing a new chair to the Legal Services Board is underway. The post will be advertised this month and the government encourages applications from those keen to ensure greater diversity in the legal profession.”

Sir Michael receives a non-pensionable remuneration of £63,000 per annum for a commitment of at least 70 days a year.

He has cut a far less controversial figure in his tenure than Mr Edmonds, but effectively came to the same conclusion as his predecessor that radical reform of legal regulation was needed, with publication last year of the LSB’s “vision for legislative reform of the regulatory framework”.

The Compliance Office

Audit Compliance Ltd are now resellers of The Compliance Office which is an online database customised to allow for user friendly recording, reporting and automated email chasing in the context of risk, CPD’s and compliance logs maintained by Solicitors’ firms;

The Compliance Office allows users to keep a record and monitor specific events in the context of regulatory risk including:

  • complaints;
  • undertakings;
  • SRA rule breaches;
  • CPD activity;
  • file reviews;
  • negligence claims;
  • high-risk cases;
  • key dates (e.g. limitation dates)
  • gifts and events;

The CPD functionality includes tools which help solicitors comply with the Solicitors Regulation Authority’s Continuing Competence regime.

By default staff chasing by email is automated in terms of both creating a CPD plan towards the start of the practising year and making the internal CPD declaration also towards the end of it;

  • Whilst some firms choose to keep all data entry going through a single resource in the business the application is designed to ease that administrative burden by allowing registered users to upload data to the registers more simply and robustly than would be the case with a centrally saved spreadsheet;
  • if firms (the Customers) wish to roll out the use of the system throughout the firm however then there are by default three user levels:
  • ‘general users’ (typically fee earners) – by default users can add to the complaints, undertakings, rule breaches, negligence claims, key dates, file reviews, high-risk matters, gifts and entertainment, experts / counsel and legal aid referral logs only.
  • The other logs are reserved to compliance managers and system administrators who are able to update their own entries as regards complaints, undertakings, key dates, high-risk matters and CPD. This is because typically we find that these are the areas where the matter holder is best placed;
  •  ‘compliance managers’ (typically COLPs, COFAs, MLRO, Senior Partners, Information Officers etc) – those with a need to monitor the compliance data are able to be given a compliance manager role within the system. This allows them to review and amend much of the data held on the system (see ‘administrator access’ below for the only exceptions to this);
  • ‘administrator’ – these individuals have all of the rights of a general user and a compliance manager but in addition can add users to the system, alter the user status (i.e. the rights) of an individual and remove individuals from the system. It is recommended that within each law firm there is only one administrator;
  • the system sends out email notifications to matter holder supervisors when new entries are made to certain higher risk registers, namely: complaints, rule breaches, negligence claims, high-risk matters, key dates falling within the next 40 days and gifts and entertainment. Similarly, emails are sent to matter holders and their supervisors where key dates which are due to expire in the next 5 weeks or undertakings due to expire in the next 40 days. If you would like these notifications to also go to other individuals such as the COLP or COFA etc then such individuals need to be entered onto the system as additional ‘escalation contacts’
  • Please note that in addition supervisors are emailed chasers when file review forms are out of date and by default such emails would be copied to the Customer’s system administrator.
  • Users ACL Price List excl VAT Price excl VAT
     The Compliance Office Annual Price Per Month
    Sole Practitioner £900.00 £75.00
    2 to 10 £1,495.00 £125.00
    11 to 25 £1,595.00 £145.00
    26 to 50 £1,795.00 £160.00
    51 + £1,995.00 £170.00

Dreamvar (UK) Ltd v Mishcon de Reya

I think that it is fair to say that many conveyancers have been shocked by the decision in Dreamvar (UK) Ltd v Mishcon de Reya (see Today’s Conveyancer January 30th 2017). But it is consistent with previous court decisions and follows basic principles. The buyer’s solicitors were held liable to a buyer client for breach of trust in paying the purchase price over to solicitors acting for a seller who was not the owner of the property but a fraudster.

But it is not new law to hold that a buyer’s conveyancer holds the purchase money on trust; it is not the conveyancer’s money after all. It is not new law to say that the terms of that trust are that it can only be used for the purchase of the property; why else was it given to the conveyancers other than to fund the purchase? It is not new law to hold that if a trustee uses trust funds for an unauthorised purpose, that trustee is liable for the loss irrespective of fault.

But there is protection; the Trustee Act 1925, section 61, states: If it appears to the court that a trustee, … is or may be personally liable for any breach of trust, … but has acted honestly and reasonably, and ought fairly to be excused for the breach of trust …, then the court may relieve him either wholly or partly from personal liability for the same.

Note the three conditions for relief. Yes, the trustee must have acted honestly and reasonably, but that is not enough; it is also necessary to show that he/she ‘ought fairly to be excused.’ That was the issue in this case.

To quote the Judge:

… it is common ground that it is insured for events such as this, and that its insurance cover is sufficient to cover in full the loss suffered, should it not be excused from liability. In terms of balancing the relative effects or consequences of the breach of trust, it is apparent that MdR (with or without insurance) is far better able to meet or absorb it than Dreamvar. While, as I have held, it was not unreasonable for MdR not to have advised Dreamvar about the risk of fraud, or to have sought greater protection for Dreamvar against that risk (such as further undertakings), it is also not irrelevant that MdR was necessarily far better placed to consider, and as far as possible achieve (a matter not in the event tested), greater protection for Dreamvar against the risk which in fact occurred….. 

For these reasons, I conclude that MdR ought not fairly to be excused for the breach of trust 

This has been the most controversial aspect of the case – the conveyancer is insured, therefore they should carry the can.

But the question has to be asked, who should fairly bear the loss? How would YOU have decided that very difficult question? In most cases there are four innocent parties: the real owner of the property; the seller’s conveyancers; the buyer’s conveyancers; the buyer himself/herself (and sometimes the buyer’s lender as well). Which of these innocents should carry the loss?

Do we wish to accept the view that it should be the buyer personally who accepts the risk? If not the buyer, it either has to be the buyer’s or the seller’s conveyancers. But in the case, all claims against the seller’s solicitors failed.

Note that the judge held that it was not unreasonable for Mishcon’s not to ask for confirmation from the seller’s solicitors as to the identity of their client but should we all, when acting for a buyer, start asking for confirmation that the person purporting to sell a property really is the seller?

But if you were so asked, what would your reply be? If you do so certify then you will be the one that foots the bill if it all goes wrong. And of course, we all act for both buyers and sellers anyway.

Insurance against fraud is also available to buyers. One international title insurer has told me that they could sell an insurance policy to protect a buyer against fraud for about £100 plus tax. Not a lot for a client to pay for freedom from worry – but we all know clients are reluctant to buy any kind of policy. But we could we limit our retainer to disclaim liability for fraud to encourage use of the policy. But unless recommended by the Law Society and the Council for Licensed Conveyancers, it would be commercially difficult.

But unless we start using dedicated policies like this it seems likely that either seller or buyer’s conveyancers will continue to bear the risk of fraud.

As to which, I can do no better than set out the view of another judge. In Patel v Freddy’s Limited [2017] EWHC 73 (Ch ) Tribunal Judge Elizabeth Cooke, sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge set out her view of the position with regard to fraudsters. Her view was:

… it is the task of the vendor’s solicitor in a conveyancing transaction to check the identity of his or her client, establishing not only that the vendor’s name is what the vendor says it is but also that the vendor really is the owner of the property. So it was for Mr Cuthbert first to carry out the “Know Your Client” procedure required by the money-laundering legislation; hence the obtaining of the passport and a utility bill to ascertain that this client really was an Ashok Patel who lived in Barnet. But it was also for Mr Cuthbert to ascertain that this was the Ashok Patel who was the registered proprietor of Sai Villa. …The important point is that this is the vendor’s solicitor’s duty, because he is the one with access to the client and to his client’s documents… but it is not for the purchaser’s solicitor to duplicate the actual checking of the vendor’s identity, nor to check that the vendor’s solicitor has done so.

In the writer’s opinion, there is much force in such views. Note that both judges state that there is no obligation on a buyer’s conveyancer to check that the seller’s conveyancer has carried out such steps.

But we are badly in need of advice from the Law Society with regard to all of this. Time to stand up Law Society and say something.

Finland and Sweden report on fourth anti-money laundering directive (2015/849) impact

The implementation of the fourth anti-money laundering directive (2015/849) is one of the common themes this year, and how it impacts each bar. Both Finland and Sweden report, for instance, that the proposed sanctions regime of their governments under the national implementing provisions will take away the sanctioning of lawyers in some respects from the bar’s own disciplinary process, and that they have intervened strongly to try to maintain their bar’s independence.

The refugee crisis is another common topic. A number of the bars have been participating in the ‘European Lawyers in Lesvos’ project run by the Council of Bars and Law Societies of Europe (CCBE) and the German Bar Association (DAV). The project’s main aim is to send European lawyers to the island of Lesvos to support Greek lawyers in the provision of legal assistance to migrants requiring international protection.

Respecting Legal Professional Privilege

The Law Society has urged the government to ensure that the application of powers to snoop on communications respects legal professional privilege.

Commenting on a consultation on codes of practice under the Investigatory Powers Act 2016, Society president Robert Bourns said: ‘Legal professional privilege is the cornerstone of the trusting relationship between a solicitor and their client and intrinsic to the administration of justice, which is why we have fought and will continue to fight to ensure that the law provides appropriate protections.’

Chancery Lane has also published a practice note to ensure solicitors understand legal professional privilege – increasingly being seen as an ‘inconvenience’, the Society said. While LPP is vigorously protected by the courts and reflected in a range of legal provisions, proposals to combat crime, increase consumer choice and improve regulation all threaten to undermine its protections.

Bourns said: ‘This growing trend to see LPP as something of an “inconvenience” to be surrendered is a critical threat to the ability of clients to work openly and honestly with their solicitor, which is why the Law Society has responded so firmly in each case.

‘While we have had considerable success working with government to find ways to meet its public policy objectives while protecting LPP, such as with amendments to the Investigatory Powers Bill, we cannot do this alone.’

Legal professional privilege protects all communications between a solicitor or barrister and their clients from being revealed without the client’s permission.

The practice note states that the fact that LPP is a right can be overlooked. ‘It is a right, not of lawyers or the legal profession, but of our clients – whether individuals or corporates,’ it says.

Applying LPP to communications made in connection with internal investigations by corporations and regulated firms ‘requires care’.

LPP does not arise in relation to assistance with a crime, fraud or equivalent conduct (the ‘iniquity exception’).

Bourns said: ‘The whole solicitor profession must make sure it understands LPP, that clients understand LPP and the rights it gives them, that solicitors uphold it in their work and must be beyond reproach in their application of it if the justice system is to function properly.’

New discount rate for personal injury claims announced

New discount rate for personal injury claims announced

From: Ministry of Justice 27 February 2017

The Lord Chancellor has today announced changes to personal injury compensation payments.

When victims of life-changing injuries accept lump sum compensation payments, the actual amount they receive is adjusted according to the interest they can expect to earn by investing it.

In finalising the compensation amount, courts apply a calculation called the Discount Rate – with the percentage linked in law to returns on the lowest risk investments, typically Index Linked Gilts.

Today’s decision by Elizabeth Truss to lower the Discount Rate from 2.5% to minus 0.75% was made in accordance with the law and in her capacity as independent Lord Chancellor.

The law makes clear that claimants must be treated as risk averse investors, reflecting the fact that they are financially dependent on this lump sum, often for long periods or the duration of their life.

Compensation awards using the rate should put the claimant in the same financial position had they not been injured, including loss of future earnings and care costs.

Lord Chancellor and Justice Secretary Elizabeth Truss said:

The law is absolutely clear – as Lord Chancellor, I must make sure the right rate is set to compensate claimants.

I am clear that this is the only legally acceptable rate I can set.

The Discount Rate has been unchanged since 2001.

Today’s decision, as well as seeing compensation payments rise, is also likely to have a significant impact on the insurance industry and a knock-on effect on public services with large personal injury liabilities – particularly the NHS.

But in the announcement to the London Stock Exchange this morning, four key pledges were made:

  • the government has committed to ensuring that the NHS Litigation Authority has appropriate funding to cover changes to hospitals’ clinical negligence costs
  • the Department of Health will work closely with GPs and Medical Defence Organisations to ensure that appropriate funding is available to meet additional costs to GPs, recognising the crucial role they play in the delivery of NHS
  • the government will launch a consultation in the coming weeks to consider whether there is a better or fairer framework for claimants and defendants, with the government bringing forward any necessary legislation at an early stage
  • Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond will meet representatives of the insurance industry to assess the impact of the rate adjustment

The consultation, which will be launched before Easter, will consider options for reform – including whether the rate should in future be set by an independent body; whether more frequent reviews would improve predictability and certainty for all parties; and whether the methodology is appropriate for the future.

The new discount rate will come into effect on 20 March 2017, following amendments to current legislation.

Electronic signatures for LR forms

Solicitors could no longer be asked to witness signatures on Land Registry forms if proposals for electronic signatures are adopted.

In a long-awaited step towards electronic conveyancing, the registry has opened a consultation on amending rules to allow documents to be signed online by the government’s Gov.UK.Verify process. Law Society president Robert Bourns described the move as a ‘positive step’, saying the Society had backed the use of electronic signatures last year with the publication of a practice note for commercial transactions.

‘We are considering the proposals in the rules consultation, and awaiting further important details on exactly how the proposed system will work,’ he said. ‘Our focus will be to ensure that they are practical and effective, and most importantly provide appropriate identity and security measures.’

LSB revises its diversity guidance

Wednesday, 15 February 2017

LSB revises its diversity guidance

The Legal Services Board (LSB) today issues its revised statutory guidance for regulators on diversity. The changes introduced place a focus on improved outcomes, ensuring all regulators take their work in this area beyond data collection.

The revised guidance allows regulators freedom to deliver their own, targeted approaches to improve diversity in their respective professions, whilst also making sure that much needed progress will be made across the sector.

Legal Services Board Chief Executive, Neil Buckley, said:

“Diversity is a key issue on which the LSB places great significance. We believe that a more diverse profession will support the delivery of legal services and encourage innovation in the sector.

Our new guidance gives regulators greater flexibility and will help the sector find new ways of developing the diversity of the workforce and assist in collecting and using the valuable data gathered in the last five years. The guidance will support the excellent work some regulators are already doing in this area, and encourage those still developing their approach to continue to work towards a more diverse profession.

We will be reviewing the progress made by regulators in August 2017 and expect the regulators to have started to use the greater flexibility offered by this guidance to make positive strides to address this issue.”

LSB to examine SRA governance and TLS

Legal Services Board  to examine SRA governance and The Law Society see letter to Paul Tenant OBE Interim CEO from LSB

LSB letter to TLS 17 Feb 2017