Legal Profession Uniform Law Application Act 2014(NSW)
Cases Cited: Council of the Law Society of New South Wales v Bouzanis) [2017] NSWCA 330
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Legal Profession Act 2004 (Repealed)Legal Profession Uniform Law (2015)Legal Profession Uniform Law Application Act 2014(NSW)Cases Cited: Council of the Law Society of New South Wales v Bouzanis) [2017] NSWCA 330Council of the Law Society of NSW v Gallego [2017] NSWCATOD 29Council of the Law Society v Gallego (No. 2) [2017] NSWCATOD 61Law Society of New South Wales v Bouzanis [2017] NSWCATOD 84Law Society of New South Wales v Jones [Unreported Court of Appeal] NSW 37 July 1978Law Society of New South Wales v Leonard [2017] NSWCATOD 58Law Society of NSW v Autore [2017] NSWCATOD 168Law Society of NSW v Marando [2013] NSWADT 267
Law Society of NSW v Mattila [2017] NSWCATOD 166Law Society v Beazley [2017] NSWCATOD 35Law Society v Truong [2016] NSWCATOD 137Prothonotary of the Supreme Court of NSW v McCaffery [2004] NSWCA 470Re Mayes and the Legal Practitioners Act [1974] NSWLR 19Re Mayes v Legal Practitioners Act, (1974) NSWLR 19Re Robb & Anor (1996) 134 FLR 294Russo v Legal Services Commission [2016] NSWCA 306
The Prothonotary of the Supreme Court of NSW v Dimitrious [2015] NSWCA 258
Judgment (18 paragraphs)
[1]
Introduction
In the period from 1 January 2010 to 28 February 2013 Brent Hedges and his brother Stephen Hedges were the directors of a company, Hedges Legal Pty Limited, which traded as a law practice under the name "Walker Hedges & Co". During that period the brothers were the solicitor directors and only principals of the Law Practice. They had offices in the Sydney City and in Forestville. Brent worked at the City Office and Stephen worked at the Forestville office.
By the operation of s 140(2) of the Legal Profession Act 2004 ("the Act") the brothers were each responsible for the management of the legal services provided in New South Wales by the Law Practice and by virtue of s 143(2)(a) of the Act each was responsible as though he were a partner of the Law Practice.
From 1 March 2013 the brothers were the only principals of an unincorporated Law Practice which continued to be known as "Walker Hedges & Co". On and after 1 March 2013 each brother, as a principal of the Law Practice was responsible to ensure that there existed a system in relation to entrusted funds; and he had access to that system for the purpose of checking compliance with statutory obligations.
The trust account records of the practice and its office account records were located at the Forestville office under the supervision of Stephen Hedges. The Law Practice employed a bookkeeper, who worked on a part time basis and was located at the Forestville office.
In about 2012 the brothers adopted a change in their billing practice. Until then they had in each matter rendered a separate bill for disbursements not yet paid. If that bill was for a single unpaid disbursement, such as a barrister's fees or an expert witness' fees, they would ask the client to pay that fee direct to the person entitled to it, or if the client paid the amount to the law practice, the payment was deposited into the general trust account of the law practice and the person entitled to the money was paid by a trust account cheque. A different bill would issue for disbursements already paid and the professional legal fees. The payment or payments for that bill would be deposited to an "office" account.
The change was to issue a single bill which included costs, disbursements already paid and unpaid disbursements, and to deposit the payment(s) for that bill into the office account. The brothers testified that they agreed that upon payment of a bill that included an unpaid disbursement, "immediately" payment would be made of the unpaid disbursements (subject to clearance of the cheque if the bill had been paid by cheque).
Brent Hedges instigated the change. His brother Stephen agreed to it. Brent Hedges testified that the reason for the change was that one of his clients, an insurance company, complained about the practice of separating costs from disbursements and fees payable to other providers, because of difficulty for the client in calculating a GST input credit.
Section 243 of the Act defined "trust money" as:
Money entrusted to a law practice in the course of or in connection with the provision of legal services by the practice, and includes:
1. Money received by the practice on account of legal costs in advance of providing the services, and
2. Controlled money received by the practice, and
3. Transit money received by the practice, and
4. Money received by the practice, that is the subject of a power, exercisable by the practice or an associate of the practice, to deal with the money for or on behalf of another person.
Where a client paid a bill that included an unpaid disbursement, to the extent of that amount it was entrusted to the law practice in the course of or in connection with the provision of legal services by the practice. It was money received by the practice to deal with it on behalf of the client to pay that unpaid disbursement. It was trust money.
Money received for unpaid disbursements is trust money, even if it is included in a bill or in an amount paid to the Law Practice which is otherwise for legal fees to which the Law Practice is entitled and for disbursements already paid by the Law Practice. (Council of the Law Society of New South Wales v Bouzanis) [2017] NSWCA 330 per Basten JA & McColl JA , Simpson JA dissenting).
At the time the brothers adopted the new procedure Brent Hedges had been practising as a solicitor for 28 Years and Stephen Hedges had been practising for 32 years. But the brothers did not treat the relevant amounts as trust money.
As a result of a complaint by another Law Practice, a trust account inspector, Mr R F Dunlop, carried out an investigation of the Law Practice in 2013.
As a result of that investigation, the Council of the Law Society of New South Wales resolved to commence these disciplinary proceedings against the brothers and an application was filed against each of them on 16 September 2016. It was agreed that the two applications would be heard together.
The hearing was subsequently delayed because of the issue raised by the decision of the Tribunal in Council of the Law Society of New South Wales v Bouzanis [2017] NSWCATOD 84, where the Tribunal held that amounts for unpaid disbursements included in a bill were not trust money. These proceedings were adjourned twice awaiting the result of the appeal from that decision to the Court of Appeal, which was released on 15 December 2017 (Council of the Law Society of New South Wales v Bouzanis [2017] NSWCA 330).
The hearing proceeded on 12 July 2018. Almost all of the allegations were admitted. There was extensive evidence in the applicant's case that provided proof of all the grounds. None of the witnesses was cross examined. There was no oral evidence.
The relevant provisions of the Legal Profession Act 2004 ("the Act") apply in these proceedings, notwithstanding the repeal of that Act in 2015, because of the Legal Profession Uniform Law Application Act 2014(NSW) and the transitional provisions of the Legal Profession Uniform Law (2015) (see Griffin v The Council of the Law Society of New South Wales [2016] NSWCA 364).
[2]
The Evidence
The evidence comprises:-
1. Application of 16 September 2016.
2. Affidavit of Ronald Frederick Dunlop and report exhibit "RD1".
3. Reply of Brent Hedges.
4. Affidavit of Anne-Marie Foord of 13 September 2016 and exhibit "AMF1".
5. Affidavit of Brent Hedges of 17 March 2017.
6. Affidavit of Brent Hedges of 19 May 2017.
7. Affidavit of Brent Hedges of 14 June 2018.
8. Affidavit of Brent Hedges of 9 July 2018.
9. Affidavit of Paul Stockley of 6 June 2017.
10. Affidavit of Paul Stockley of 10 May 2018.
11. Affidavit of Peter John Deakin of 9 July 2017.
[3]
Relevant Provisions of the Act
Unsatisfactory Professional Conduct / Professional Misconduct . Section 254 of the Act provides: -
"254 Certain trust money to be deposited in general trust account
(1) Subject to section 258A, as soon as practicable after receiving trust money, a Law Practice must deposit the money in a general trust account of the practice unless:
(a) the practice has a written direction by an appropriate person to deal with it otherwise than by depositing it in the account, or
(b) the money is controlled money, or
(c) the money is transit money, or
(d) the money is the subject of a power given to the practice or an associate of the practice to deal with the money for or on behalf of another person.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty units.
(2) Subject to section 258A, a Law Practice that has received money that is the subject of a written direction mentioned in subsection (1)(a) must deal with the money in accordance with the direction:
(a) within the period (if any) specified in the direction, or
(b) subject to paragraph (a), as soon as practicable after it is received.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty units.
(3) the Law Practice must keep a written direction mentioned in subjection (1)(a) for the period prescribed by the regulations.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units.
(4) (Repealed)
(5) A person is an appropriate person for the purposes of this section if the person is legally entitled to give the law practice directions in respect of dealings with the trust money."
Section 255 of the Act provides:-
"255 Holding, disbursing and accounting for trust money
(1) A law practice must:
(a) hold trust money deposited in a general trust account of the practice exclusively for the person on whose behalf it is received, and
(b) disburse the trust money only in accordance with a direction given by the person.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units.
(2) Subsection (1) applies subject to an order of a court of competent jurisdiction or as authorised by law.
(3) The law practice must account for the trust money as required by the regulations.
Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units."
Section 496 provides:-
"496 Unsatisfactory profession conduct
For the purpose of this Act:
"unsatisfactory professional conduct" includes conduct of an Australian legal practitioner occurring in connection with the practice of law that falls short of the standard of competence and diligence that a member of the public is entitled to expect of a reasonably competent Australian legal practitioner."
[4]
Grounds 1 & 2 of the Complaint- Breaches of Section 254 and Section 255 of the Act
[5]
A. Matter no. 209471 Sovereign Grange Pty Ltd v Bridgestone Australia Ltd & Gwynfor Pty Ltd
The following facts are proved on the evidence and are admitted by the practitioner:
The Law Practice acted for the plaintiff Sovereign Grange Pty Ltd in litigation conducted in Western Australian. IRDI Legal was a law firm in Western Australia which acted as the agent for the Law Practice in the litigation.
On 24 October 2012 the Law Practice rendered a bill to the client for $7,260.10, which included a sum of $4,390.10 for a disbursement dated 17 July 2012 payable to IRDI Legal. The client's cheque for the amount of the bill was received and banked on 1 November 2012 into an office account of the Law Practice with the ANZ Bank. The following day the Law Practice drew a cheque in favour of IRDI Legal for $4,030.10 and paid that to IRDI Legal.
In relation to the remaining $360.00 of trust money that had been deposited to the ANZ office account, the brothers failed to:
(a) refund that amount to the client; or
(b) transfer that amount to the trust account and credit the sum to the client's ledger.
On 11 February 2013, $270.00 of the $360.00 was used by the Law Practice to pay a filing fee in a matter in which the same client was involved in the District Court of New South Wales. In the circumstances of the preceding two paragraphs, the respondent breached ss 254 & s 255 of the Act. The response of the practitioner is that he was unaware of the breaches at the time.
On 14 June 2013 the remaining $90.00 of the excess of $360.00 was drawn by cheque from the ANZ office account, nearly eight months after the client's payment was deposited into the office account, and paid to the trust account in the name of the client and credited to the client's trust ledger.
[6]
B. Matter No. 211229: M & K Kaartage Pty Ltd v Westline Transport Pty Ltd
The Law Practice acted for M & K Kaartage Pty Limited in litigation. The Law Practice billed the client on 11 January 2012 in the sum of $5,773.34, which included $3,163.60 for disbursements for unpaid agent's fees payable to Pynt.
The client paid the bill by cheque on 7 February 2012. It was banked by the Law Practice into its office account with CBA Bank. When the cheque was cleared the respondent failed to:-
1. Pay the sum of $3,163.60 to Pynt; or
2. Transfer the sum of $3,163.60 to the trust account and credit the sum to the client's ledger.
About 73 days later on 20 April 2012 the Law Practice paid the sum of $3,160.60 to Pynt.
The practitioner breached ss 254 & 255 of the Act.
[7]
C. Matter 209010 Global Transport - Munnerley's Bulk Haulage Pty Ltd v Hankook Tyre Australia Pty Ltd
The Law Practice acted for the plaintiff in this litigation. The Law Practice billed the client for $4,001.80 on 22 December 2011. The bill included an unpaid disbursement of counsel's fees of $495.00 payable to Ms S King. The client paid the bill in full on 23 February 2012. The Law Practice deposited the cheque in its CBA office account.
When the cheque was cleared, the respondent failed to either:-
1. Pay the sum of $495.00 to Ms King; or
2. Transfer the $495.00 to the trust account and credit the sum to the client's trust ledger.
The Law Practice did not pay the $495.00 to Ms King until 4 May 2012.
In the circumstances the practitioner breached ss 254 & 255 of the Act. The practitioner's evidence was that this was not intentional, and he does not know why it happened.
[8]
D. Matter 209010 Global Transport - Munnerley's Bulk Haulage Pty Ltd v Hankook Tyre Australia Pty Ltd
The Law Practice acted for Global Transport in another (earlier) matter. It billed the client on 18 October 2010 in an amount of $88,499.95, which included $891.00 for unpaid expert's fees payable to UNSW Global. The client paid the bill in full on 27 October 2010 and the Law Practice deposited the cheque into its CBA office account.
The cheque in payment of $891.00 was drawn on the CBA office account on the same day payable to UNSW Global.
The cheque was not subsequently presented. It was reversed by the Law Practice in June 2012.
Following reversal of the cheque in June 2012, the Law Practice failed to either:-
1. Pay the sum of $891.00 to UNSW Global by issuing a further cheque in its favour; or
2. Transfer the sum of $891.00 to the trust account and credit the sum to the client's ledger.
On 23 August 2013, about 34 months after the original payment was drawn, the Law Practice drew the sum from its ANZ office account and paid the amount into its trust account. It credited the sum to the client's trust ledger.
The practitioner breached ss 254 & 255 of the Act. The practitioner's response was to say that "if there was a breach, it was not intentional" and he did not know the reason why it happened. He said that the cheque had been drawn on the day the funds were received and he did not know that it had not been presented.
[9]
E. Matter 211217 NTI Limited & Ors ats Inter Capital Express Australia Pty Ltd
The Law Practice acted for Inter Capital Express Australia Pty Limited, a defendant in the litigation. On 27 February 2012 the Law Practice billed the client an amount of $5,071.00, which included unpaid disbursements of $1,980.00 for mediation fees payable to Mr S Walsh QC.
The client paid the sum of the bill ($5,071.00) on 12 March 2012. The Law Practice deposited the cheque that day into its CBA office account.
On clearance of the cheque, the respondent failed to either:-
1. Pay the sum of $1,980.00 to Mr Walsh; or
2. Transfer the sum of $1,980.00 to the trust account and credit the sum to the client's ledger.
More than 3 months after the Law Practice received the $1,980.00 and deposited it in its CBA office account, on 28 June 2013 it drew a cheque on the ANZ office account in that amount, deposited it into the trust account, and credited the sum to the client's ledger.
The practitioner under this ground breached ss 254 & 255 of the Act. His response to the ground was that if it was a breach, it was unintentional and not as a result of any direction by him.
[10]
F. Matter 209207 JUA Underwriting Agency Pty Ltd v GW & DF Parsons Pty Ltd
The Law Practice acted for JUA Underwriting Agency Pty Limited which was the plaintiff in the litigation.
The Law Practice billed the client an amount of $22,052.16 on 9 January 2012. That bill included an unpaid disbursement of $10,450.00 for counsel's fees payable to Mr Paul Stockley.
The client on 20 April 2012 transferred by EFT into the office account of the Law Practice a sum of $19,500.30 in part payment of the invoice.
The Law Practice wrote off the shortfall of $2,551.86 on 13 June 2012.
After the client's EFT into the office account, the respondent failed to either:-
1. Pay the sum of $10,450.00 to Mr Stockley; or, if the shortfall applied to his fees the sum of $7,898.14 to Mr Stockley; or
2. Transfer the sum of $10,450.00 or $7,898.14, as applicable, to the trust account and credit the sum to the client's ledger.
On 1 February 2013 by cheque No. 2271 drawn on the CBA office account the Law Practice paid Mr Stockley the sum of $2,000.00.
On 30 August 2013 by cheque No. 1663 drawn on the ANZ office account the Law Practice paid Mr Stockley the sum of $6,392.00.
Of the original amount invoiced by Mr Stockley, the sum of $1,518.00 was not paid to him.
In the circumstances set out, the respondent breached ss 254 & s 255 of the Act.
The practitioner's response is that if there was a breach, he was not aware of it and it did not result from any direction from him.
[11]
Trust Money - Breaches of ss 254 and 255 of the Act - Discussion
Most of these alleged breaches were admitted by the brothers. All of them were proved. Implied by those admissions is the admission that the relevant amounts were trust money. In the reply of Brent Hedges to the application against him, he did not allege in respect of any of the contraventions of s 254 or s 255 that he did not know the money was trust money. In his reply to these breaches said he "was unaware at the time", gave no instructions or directions to do what was done, and the breaches were unintentional.
Nor did Stephen Hedges in his reply to the same grounds in the application against him say that he did not know the money was trust money. His replies were that the matters were all his brother's matters, he was "wholly based in the practice at Forestville", he was unaware of breaches, he gave no direction or instruction in that regard, it was not an intentional breach by him, he does not know the reasons for the breach, and it was "not intentional or wilful on his part".
Brent Hedges testified in his affidavit of 31 January 2017 that the procedure they introduced was that when a bill was paid that included an unpaid disbursement and the funds were deposited to an office account, the part time bookkeeper, Ms Cooper, would draw a cheque on that account to pay the unpaid disbursement, it would be signed by one of the brothers and sent with a covering letter to pay the unpaid disbursement.
Stephen Hedges also said, "When the new practice was instituted, directions were given to Ms Cooper that upon receipt of any payment of costs and disbursements, if the disbursements had not been paid prior to payment, payment of the disbursements must be made immediately upon receipt of the funds from the client." This level of urgency suggests that money from a client for payment of unpaid disbursements was recognised by the brothers as trust monies.
However, in the same affidavit Stephen Hedges stated, "As it had not been my practice before, I was not aware that any such disbursements comprised trust money." But given that at the time of these breaches (2010 -2013), he had been practising as a solicitor for 30 years or more and Brent Hedges had been practising as a solicitor for 26 years or more, it is not credible that they did not know that money paid to a solicitor by a client for payment of a debt to a third party is trust money.
[12]
N.B. For item B the relevant page of the statements for the overdraft is not in evidence and the nearest balance in evidence is 20 February 2012.
In relation to these five of the 6 subject deposits, clearly in so far as they reduced the outstanding balance of the CBA overdraft account they benefitted the practitioners for their own purposes, being part payment of their overdraft debt.
In Council of the Law Society of NSW v Gallego [2017] NSWCATOD 29 the Tribunal quoted the definition of unsatisfactory professional conduct in s 496 of the Act. It then said :-
"The common law test of professional misconduct is explained in the often cited decision of Allinson v General Council of Medical Education and Registration (1894) 1QB 750 …. We accept the common law principle as being adopted in the Supreme Court of NSW and the Tribunal as applicable in relevant circumstances (see re Hodgekiss [1962] SR NSW) 340 at [351]; Council of the Law Society of NSW v Greenstein [2015] NSWCATOD 122)."
The Tribunal continued:-
"We have found that the practitioner placed funds into an interest-bearing account in his name as trustee for the client without written authority to do so. We have also found that the practitioner on a number of occasions withdrew funds from the account without authority to do so. We have also found that the practitioner failed to ensure proper costs disclosure was made."
The Tribunal then referred to various conduct of the practitioner the subject of the complaint, including placing funds in an interest-bearing account in his name as trustee for the client without authority to do so and in breach of s 254.
The Tribunal then continued:-
"In each instance, the practitioner's conduct disclosed repeated carelessness by reason of his failure to know and comply with the Act and regulations. This occurred in circumstances where he was entrusted with significant funds by his client …"
The Tribunal then later said:-
"A lack of awareness by the practitioner of the requirements of the Act and regulations does not provide an excuse for his conduct. A solicitor having the responsibility and privilege to be entrusted with a client's funds has a duty to ensure that he or she is fully cognizant of the relevant provisions of the Act, regulations and now rules governing the holding and disbursal of such funds."
[13]
Ground 3 of the Complaint - Delayed in Paying Fees to Third Parties
Both brothers admit, and the evidence establishes, the following delays by them in payment of fees due to third parties:
1. The respondent delayed by over three months the payment of monies to Pynt, a third party;
2. The respondent delayed by over two months the payment of monies to Ms King, a third party;
3. The respondent delayed by over 17 months the payment of monies to Mr Walsh QC, a third party;
4. The respondent delayed by:-
1. Over 10 months the part-payment of $2,000.00 to Mr Stockley, a third party; and
2. 16 months, the final payment to Mr Stockley, a third party.
In Re Robb & Anor (1996) 134 FLR 294 The Full Federal Court held that where a solicitor holds a client's funds for the purpose of paying counsel and other persons, and transfers those funds to an office account, any delay in so paying the money amounts to professional misconduct, for during the period of delay the solicitor is treating what is essentially client's funds as the solicitor's own money. The Court held that wilful or persistent failure to pay counsel's fees could amount to professional misconduct and said (at 310):
The point is that the delay in paying counsel to be attributed to the solicitors in the present case stems from their assumption that moneys in their office account, received on trust for the client and transferred to the office account for the very purpose of paying counsel, were not affected by their fiduciary duties to the client and were their moneys to pay counsel fees when they chose and that any delay was simply a matter between counsel and themselves.
That assumption was totally unjustified. On the contrary, every day of delay in paying counsel from the time of transferring the moneys from the trust account to the office account, was a day in which the solicitors were in breach of their fiduciary duty to the client.
In Russo v Legal Services Commission [2016] NSWCA 306 the New South Wales Court of Appeal in a re-hearing on appeal from the Occupational Division of the Tribunal dealt with a situation where a client had paid the solicitor for counsel's fees for a brief to advise. The amount involved was in excess of $10,131.00. The solicitor received the money but did not pay the barrister. The barrister sued the client and obtained a verdict. It was 4½ years after the solicitor received the money when he finally ascertained that he had received it and paid the barrister.
[14]
Ground 4 of the Complaint -Failure to Communicate
The particulars of this ground are:
"56 In or about April 2012 the Law Practice engaged Riverlord Holdings Pty Ltd as trustee for the Trinity Trust trading as Irdi Legal [Irdi Legal] to act as solicitors for the plaintiffs in three Western Australian District Court actions [Case nos 2712 of 2010; 4008 of 2010 and 3282 of 2011] and one Western Australian Magistrates Court action [Case no 16321 of 2011][Services]. [Ref Ex AMF1 at 6]
57 In July and August 2012 Irdi Legal rendered the following invoices for the Services to the Law Practice:
i 109846 dated 17 July 2012
ii 109851 dated 17 July 2012
iii 109852 dated 17 July 2012
iv 109892 dated 20 July 2012
v 109894 dated 20 July 2012
vi 110532 dated 31 August 2012
vii 110533 dated 31 August 2012
[Ref Ex AMF1 at 44ff]
58 Copies of the invoices were sent to the Law Practice by Irdi Legal on 13 September 2012. [Ref Ex AMF1 at 42].
59 Irdi Legal received no response form the Solicitor in relation to the unpaid invoices.
60 By letter dated 28 September 2012 emailed and posted to the Solicitor, Irdi Legal noted its prior unsuccessful attempts to communicate with the Solicitor and demanded payment of the outstanding invoices. [Ref Ex AMF1 p41]
61 Irdi legal received from the Solicitor no response to its letter.
62 On 4 October 2012 Ms Anne Lloyd of Irdi Legal telephoned the Solicitor and left a message for him to call her as soon as possible. [Ref Ex AMF1 at 40]
63 Irdi Legal received no response from the Solicitor.
64 on 22 January 2013 Irdi Legal obtained judgment on the unpaid invoices in the Magistrates Court of western Australia in the sum of $9,971.75 plus interest.
65 The Solicitor failed to communicate with Irdi Legal."
This Ground was raised against Brent Hedges only. He admitted all but paras 59, 62, and 65. He had no knowledge of the matters alleged in paras 59 and 62. His reply to para 65 was "Admitted in part and not admitted as to part." The evidence proved the Ground on the balance of probabilities.
In or about April 2012 the Law Practice engaged Riverlord Holdings Pty Limited as trustee for the Trinity Trust trading as IRDI Legal to act as solicitors for the plaintiffs in three Western Australian District Court actions [Case Nos. 2712 of 2010, 4008 of 2010 and 3282 of 2011] and one Western Australian Magistrates Court action [Case No. 16321 of 2011].
In the law practice Brent Hedges had the conduct of all of these matters. After IRDI commenced doing work for the Law Practice, it wrote to the Law Practice on 10 July 2012 enclosing a costs agreement. That document included the usual clause which provided that if the client (Walker Hedges & Co) did not return the signed agreement, it would still be taken to have accepted the contract by continuing to instruct IRDI Legal after receipt of the costs agreement. The letter enclosing the costs agreement is attached to a supplementary submission of the practitioner and includes the following:
"Please read the document carefully. You have the right to negotiate a costs agreement with us.
You may accept this offer in writing by completing the acceptance at the end of the Costs Agreement but if you do not, your continued instructions to us will constitute your acceptance of our offer."
[15]
The Outcome
The practitioner relied upon affidavits of a barrister, Paul Stockley, who has known the practitioner for more than 25 years. They worked together in a law practice and since Mr Stockey became a barrister in 1990 he has been briefed regularly by the practitioner. They are friends. Mr Stockey had read the application and one affidavit of the practitioner. Mr Stockey's evidence is that he has found the practitioner to be a person of "directness and candour", of "prompt and detailed communications to his colleagues in the law". He says he has observed the practitioner to "maintain complete and punctilious compliance with rules of courts and standards of professional conduct. His experience is that the practitioner is "of the utmost good character".
The practitioner also relies upon an affidavit of Mr PJ Deakin of Queens Counsel who had known the practitioner for more than 30 years. They have worked together on many cases throughout that period and sometimes on opposite sides. Mr Deakin was not aware of any of the allegations raised by the law Society in these proceedings. He said his experience of the practitioner is that he has "at all times displayed impeccable standards of professional and ethical conduct in every aspect of his life and work un practice as a solicitor." He said he would be "astonished if the practitioner ever engaged in any conduct that was even questionable, let alone in any way reprehensible or unprofessional". He said he had never heard a complaint about the practitioner.
The subject conduct of the practitioner in these proceedings is inconsistent with Mr Deakin's experience.
The Law Society in its submission referred to five fines imposed by the Disciplinary Tribunal in situations where the practitioner In Council of the Law Society v Gallego (No. 2) [2017] NSWCATOD 61 a fine of $1,000.00 was imposed where there was a finding of professional misconduct because of breaches of s 254 and other trust account sections and also breaches of several clauses of the regulations and the general rules.
In Council of the Law Society of NSW v Beazley [2017] NSWCATOD 35 there was a fine of $6,000.00 where there was a finding of professional misconduct and unsatisfactory professional conduct. The professional misconduct included a breach of s 254 of the Act. There was also a finding of professional misconduct in relation to a breach of s 260, a breach of s 67 and a breach of rule 26 of the Rules.
[16]
Costs
Because the Tribunal has made findings that the practitioner is guilty of unsatisfactory professional conduct and professional misconduct, section 566 of the Act requires that unless there are exceptional circumstances, the Tribunal make an order for the practitioner to pay the costs of the Law Society, There is a similar provision in Clause 23(1) of Schedule 5 of the Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2013.
[17]
Orders
Accordingly the orders are:
1. The Respondent is guilty of unsatisfactory professional conduct and professional misconduct;
2. The Respondent must pay a fine of $6,000.00 and
3. The Respondent must pay the costs of the Applicant of or incidental to the proceedings as agreed or as assessed.
[18]
I hereby certify that this is a true and accurate record of the reasons for decision of the Civil and Administrative Tribunal of New South Wales.
Registrar
DISCLAIMER - Every effort has been made to comply with suppression orders or statutory provisions prohibiting publication that may apply to this judgment or decision. The onus remains on any person using material in the judgment or decision to ensure that the intended use of that material does not breach any such order or provision. Further enquiries may be directed to the Registry of the Court or Tribunal in which it was generated.
Decision last updated: 03 September 2018
Section 497 provides:-
"497 Professional misconduct
(1) for the purposes of this Act:
"professional misconduct" includes"
(a) unsatisfactory professional conduct of an Australian legal practitioner, where the conduct involves a substantial or consistent failure to reach or maintain a reasonable standard of competence and diligence, and
(b) conduct of an Australian legal practitioner whether occurring in connection with the practice of law or occurring otherwise than in connection with the practice of law that would, if established, justify a finding that the practitioner is not a fit and proper person to engage in legal practice.
(2) For finding that an Australian legal practitioner is not a fit and proper person to engage in legal practice as mentioned in subjection (1), regard may be had to the matters that would be considered under section 25 or 42 if the practitioner were an applicant for admission to the legal profession under this Act or for the grant or renewal of a local practising certificate and any other relevant matters."
Section 498 provides:-
"498 Conduct capable of being unsatisfactory professional conduct or professional misconduct
(1) Without limiting section 496 or 497, the following conduct is capable of being unsatisfactory professional conduct or professional misconduct:
(a) conduct consisting of a contravention of this Act, the regulations or the legal profession rules,
(b) charging of excessive legal costs in connection with the practice of law,
(c) conduct in respect of which there is a conviction for:
(i) a serious offence, or
(ii) a tax offence, or
(iii) an offence involving dishonesty,
(d) conduct of an Australian legal practitioner as or in becoming an insolvent under administration,
(e) conduct of an Australian legal practitioner in becoming disqualified from managing or being involved in the management of any corporation under the Corporations Act 2001 of the Commonwealth,
(f) conduct consisting of a failure to comply with the requirements of a notice under this Act or the regulations (other than an information notice),
(g) conduct of an Australian legal practitioner in failing to comply with an order of the Disciplinary Tribunal made under this Act or an order of a corresponding disciplinary body made under a corresponding law (including but not limited to a failure to pay wholly or partly a fine imposed under this Act or a corresponding law),
(h) conduct of an Australian legal practitioner in failing to comply with a compensation order made under this Act or a corresponding law.
(2) Conduct of a person consisting of a contravention referred to in subsection (1) (a) is capable of being unsatisfactory professional conduct or professional misconduct whether or not the person is convicted of an offence in relation to the contravention."
The conclusion of the Tribunal is that when the brothers introduced the new procedure and at all material times subsequently, they knew that money paid by a client for payment to a third party for an unpaid disbursement, including barrister's fees and expert's fees, was trust money.
In paragraph 7 of his affidavit of 14 June 2018 Brent Hedges stated:-
"To my knowledge, at no stage during the period when the alleged breaches occurred, were there ever insufficient funds in the office bank account, the office bank account was never overdrawn and I am not aware of any cheques not being met. To my knowledge there was always a surplus and sufficient freeboard in the firm's office account so that there was no possibility that the delay in paying third parties meant that the monies paid by the clients were wrongly used or misappropriated by the firm and no allegation of misappropriation was made by Mr Dunlop in his report."
But in the subsequent affidavit sworn 9 July 2018 three days before the hearing he referred to this paragraph and stated in paragraphs 3 and 4:-
"(3) At the time of affirming that affidavit I had no cause to nor did I review the affidavit of Ronald Frederick Dunlop sworn 2 September 2016 and my affidavit therefore reflected my recollection of the situation regarding the firm's bank account in 2013 as at the date of affirming that affidavit.
(4) My attention has now been drawn to pages 293 and 405 of Exhibit "RD-1" to the affidavit of Mr Dunlop sworn 2 September 2016. I acknowledge that these papers (being copies of pages from the ANZ Bank statements for the office account) show:-
(a) A deficit in the office account from Monday 17 June 2013 to Thursday 20 June 2013 the quantum of which varied between $429.13 and $1,313.52; and
(b) A deficiency from Wednesday 23 October 2013 to Thursday 24 October 2013 the quantum of which varied between $622.02 and $832.11."
He also said in that affidavit that he had no recollection of ever being informed in 2013 that the ANZ office account had become overdrawn.
It is also relevant that five of the six deposits to an office account were in fact deposited to the CBA Account, which was an office account, but it was an overdraft account. The following are particulars of those payments to the overdraft account:-
Date of Deposit Amount of Trust Money Overdrawn Balance of Overdraft
B. 07/02/2012 $3,163.60 $185,881.52 (20/ 2/12)
C. 23/02/2012 $ 495.00 $179,709.22
D. 27/10/2010 $ 891.00 $ 87,338.84
E. 12/03/2012 $1,980.00 $171,738.04
F. 20/04/2012 $10,450.00 $160,529.66
The Tribunal then referred to the Law Society of New South Wales v Jones [Unreported Court of Appeal] NSW 37 July 1978 where Street CJ held:-
"The reliability and integrity in the handling of trust funds are fundamental pre-requisites in determining whether an individual is a fit and proper person to be entrusted with the responsibilities belonging to a solicitor …"
"Members of the public, many of them wholly inexperienced and unskilled in matters of business or of law, inevitably must put great faith and trust in the honesty of solicitors in the handling of monies on their behalf. The courts must ensure that this trust is not misplaced."
As regards the breaches of s255 of the Act, in Re Mayes v Legal Practitioners Act, (1974) NSWLR 19 the New South Wales Court of Appeal held that negligence amounting to a deliberate failure to exercise control over trust money can amount to professional misconduct at common law (per Reynolds and Hutley JJ.A). The Court held that wilful misconduct can be established by evidence that a person acts "with reckless carelessness, not caring what the results of such carelessness may be."
The court held that the appellant's failure was wilful, despite his personal "innocence", and had committed a breach of his statutory duties in relation to trust money. A finding of professional misconduct was upheld.
In The Prothonotary of the Supreme Court of NSW v Dimitrious [2015] NSWCA 258, Meagher JA said at [21]:-
"Legal practitioners are expected to act and must act with scrupulous honesty when discharging their obligations generally, and specifically with respect to the receipt and payment of monies on behalf of clients. There is an unqualified expectation that they adhere to those standards. The position was stated plainly by Ipp JA in Barwick v Council of the Law Society of NSW [2004] NSWCA 32:
"The trust and confidence which clients place in their solicitors are a basic element of the administration of justice in this country. Violations by legal practitioners of trust accounts betray that trust and harm public confidence in the legal system. This explains the sacrosanct nature of trust accounts and the acute concern that courts have when practitioners, in breach of their tight fiduciary obligations, misuse trust accounts for their own benefit.""
In Law Society of NSW v Mattila [2017] NSWCATOD 166 the practitioner had received $200,000.00 on behalf of a client and it was deposited into the trust account. When the solicitor rendered a bill for $44,000.00 to the client, that amount was transferred from the trust account to the office account but the Tribunal found that only $34,000.00 of that was an authorised transfer. The balance of $10,000.00 was not an authorised transfer.
In addition, there was another $18,000.00 transferred by the practitioner from the trust account without authorisation from the client. The Tribunal found that the conduct of the practitioner in dealing with the additional $10,000.00 transferred in respect of the bill for $44,000.00 and also the $18,000.00 transferred subsequently constituted breaches of s 255 of the Act. The Tribunal found that the conduct constituted common law professional misconduct by application of the Allinson test.
The Tribunal in Council of the Law Society of NSW v Gallego [2017] NSWCATOD 29 found at [72] the conduct of the practitioner of breaching the requirement of s 254, although ignorant of the requirement, was professional misconduct. The practitioner was reprimanded, fined $1,000.00, prohibited from using a trust account for three years, ordered to attend a trust accounts course and a continuing professional development seminar dealing with costs disclosures and costs agreements, and ordered to pay the costs of the Law Society.
In Law Society v Beazley [2017] NSWCATOD 35 the practitioner faced five separate complaints. Two were in relation to professional etiquette, one was failure to notify a show cause event, and the other two were in relation to breaches of s 254 of the Act by depositing trust money paid in advance for costs into an office account instead of a general trust account. The Tribunal found that each of those two breaches of s 254 was professional misconduct. The practitioner was reprimanded and in respect of all five grounds was fined $6,000.00 and ordered to pay the costs of the Law Society.
In Law Society v Truong [2016] NSWCATOD 137 the Tribunal at [54] found that a practitioner who had breached s 255 on four occasions had in that respect committed professional misconduct.
In these proceedings the breaches of ss 254 and 255 of the Act the subject of Grounds 1 & 2 were all committed in complying with the procedure the practitioners agreed upon and implemented, knowing the procedure would involve deposits of trust money into an office account. In that sense they were wilful and intentional breaches. In terms of s255 what happened was wilful because the practitioners were recklessly careless about their obligations with respect to handling of trust money.
Depositing trust money into an office account was at the time of the 6 deposits was prohibited by s 254 of the Act. So was use of the subject amounts of trust money without authority of the person who entrusted prohibited by s 255. The breaches of ss 254 and 255 were each also conduct of a solicitor practitioner in the pursuit of his or her professional activities that would reasonably be regarded as dishonourable by professional colleagues of good repute and competency and therefore professional misconduct under the common law Allinson test for professional misconduct. (See Prothonotary of the Supreme Court of NSW v McCaffery [2004] NSWCA 470). In addition each was professional misconduct under Para 497(1)(a) of the Act.
The Court of Appeal found that the solicitor was guilty of unsatisfactory professional conduct and professional misconduct. He was fined $20,000.00 and ordered to pay the costs of the Legal Services Commissioner of the appeal.
In the decision of Law Society of New South Wales v Leonard [2017] NSWCATOD 58, the practitioner had deposited trust monies for unpaid disbursements into his office account and delayed payment of the disbursements. There were disbursements for process server's fees for which the bills were mostly over 400 days old before he paid them. He reached an agreement to pay by instalments. There was also about $5,000.00 involved in three bills from counsel and he delayed payment for 63 days to 199 days.
The Tribunal found the practitioner guilty of professional misconduct, suspended his registration for six months, ordered that he then be subject to supervision for one year in practice and also ordered that he complete a trust account course and undergo regular audits for one year. He was also ordered to pay the costs of the Law Society.
In Law Society of NSW v Autore [2017] NSWCATOD 168 the solicitor had not paid barrister's fees owing where the barrister had appeared for the solicitor personally in an appeal from a Local Court decision. At the time of the hearing he had still not paid the fees, four years after the barrister had appeared. It was held to be professional misconduct.
Having found the practitioner guilty of professional misconduct in failing to comply with an undertaking given to the barrister regarding payment, failing to pay the barrister's fees, and failing to communicate, the Tribunal reprimanded the practitioner, ordered him to pay a fine of $5,000.00, ordered him to successfully complete within six months the legal practitioner's course in legal practice - sole practitioner's course, modified to include specific modules that address legal ethics and in particular a solicitor's obligation when dealing with other legal practitioners and the giving and receiving of undertakings in legal practice and their effect. He was also ordered to pay the Law Society's costs.
In Re Mayes and the Legal Practitioners Act [1974] NSWLR 19, a decision of the New South Wales Court of Appeal, two solicitors had been in partnership; one at a suburban office handling all the accounting procedures and signing all cheques, and the second at a city office trusting the first partner implicitly. The first partner was guilty of misappropriation of trust funds. The second solicitor was held by the Court of Appeal to be guilty of professional misconduct at common law and breach of statutory duty under the Legal Practitioners Act 1898.
In these proceedings both the brothers were responsible to ensure that trust monies received were promptly used for the purposes they were paid. Brent Hedges was handling the matters in respect of which the particular payments of trust money were received by the partners. Stephen Hedges supervised the Accounts and financial records of the partnership. The Tribunal is satisfied that both the brothers failed in their obligations in this regard were and responsible for the delays.
The brothers set up the system whereby the trust money was deposited to an office account. Their neglect of their obligation to promptly pay third parties was because of reckless carelessness and was therefore wilful (Re Mayes v Legal Practitioners Act, (1974) NSWLR 19).
Given that the incidents include delays of over 3 months, 17 months, 10 months and 16 months, Ground 3 constitutes conduct of a solicitor practitioner in the pursuit of his or her professional activities that would reasonably be regarded as disgraceful by professional colleagues of good repute and competency and therefore professional misconduct under the common law Allinson test for professional misconduct. It is also professional misconduct under S497(1) (a) of the Act as a consistent failure to maintain a reasonable standard of competence and diligence.
The evidence of the brothers is that they did not sign any costs agreement. Clearly, though, they continued to instruct IRDI Legal.
Indeed, in Exhibit RD1, there are copies of four costs agreements and accompanying letters that were sent to the Law Practice on 10 July 2012 by IRDI Legal. One cost agreement was for each of the matters in which the Law Practice required IRDI Legal to be its Western Australian agents. It appears the brothers did not sign any of those costs agreements. There is no evidence that they wrote to IRDI Legal and rejected any of them.
In July and August 2012 IRDI Legal rendered the following invoices for the services to the Law Practice:-
1. $1,098.46 dated 17 July 2012;
2. $1,098.51 dated 17 July 2012;
3. $1,098.52 dated 17 July 2012;
4. $1,098.92 dated 20 July 2012;
5. $1,098.94 dated 20 July 2012;
6. $1,105.32 dated 31 August 2012;
7. $1,053.33 dated 31 August 2012;
When the invoices were still unpaid and there had been no response by the Law Practice to them, copies of the invoices were sent to the Law Practice by IRDI Legal on 13 September 2012. The Law Practice did not make any response or payment to IRDI Legal before 2 November 2012 in respect of any of the bills.
In his reply Brent Hedges denies this proposition. He says in his affidavit of 17 March 2017 that in relation to one of the invoices from IRDI "I challenged the amount charged and directed that only the amount that I was willing to accept as correct should be paid". However, he did not say how, where or to whom he did this and did not provide evidence of a single email or letter or any other communication by him to IRDI disputing any of the bills. From other evidence he gave it appears he may be referring to an issue he had about a charge rate in a costs agreement much earlier which he may have resolved through Mr Sonter.
There is also evidence in Exhibit RD1 to the Affidavit of Mr Dunlop where the practitioner admits that by letter of 28 September 2012 emailed and posted to him, IRDI Legal noted its prior unsuccessful attempts to communicate with him and demanded payment of the outstanding invoices. The practitioner admits also that IRDI Legal received no response from him.
On 4 October 2012 Anne Lloyd of IRDI Legal telephoned the practitioner to confirm that, as indicated in their letter of 28 September 2012, if payment in full of the invoices was not received by 8 October 2012, they would commence legal proceedings. She telephoned the practitioner in the Sydney office. She was told that he was in a meeting. She left a message for him to call her back as soon as possible. He did not respond. He says he did not get the message.
On 22 January 2013 IRDI Legal obtained judgment on the unpaid invoices in the Magistrates Court in Western Australian in the sum of $9,971.75 plus interest.
The brothers have not applied to set aside that judgment, although in these proceedings the practitioner denies having been served with any summons or statement of claim.
The practitioner admits that he did not return the call or communicate with Ms Lloyd. He says that if she called and left a message, then he wasn't informed of it. In his reply he admits that IRDI Legal obtained a default judgment, but says that such judgment was "obtained in circumstances where no statement of claim or other process had ever been served on the respondent or the respondent's firm and neither the respondent nor his partner had any knowledge of the proceedings having been commenced".
In his reply, the practitioner states in paragraphs 66, 67 and 68 that none of the costs agreements submitted by IRDI Legal were ever signed. It appears that he overlooks the provision in the agreements that if his firm did not sign the agreement but continued to provide instructions to IRDI Legal, as it did, then his firm was deemed to have accepted the costs agreement.
He purports, that "the arrangements for the retainer of IRDI Legal were made with Mr Michael Sonter, a solicitor employed by that firm". He sets out in paragraph 67 of the reply the terms that he alleges were agreed to by Mr Sonter on behalf of IRDI. It is not alleged that these "agreements" with Mr Sonter were in writing. Nor is there any evidence that Mr Sonter had any authority from IRDI Legal to negotiate such an oral agreement by his employer with the Law Practice. The tribunal finds on the balance of probabilities that Mr Sonter had no such authority and there was no agreement with IRDI on any issues of the type alleged by Brent Hedges in para 67 of his Reply.
Costs agreements, even when not signed by the Law Practice, but accepted by the Law Practice giving subsequent instructions, would in any event prevail over any oral agreement with Mr Sonter.
The practitioner alleges in paragraph 72 of his reply, but not in his affidavit evidence, that "payment was made to IRDI as to the amounts for which they were properly entitled for the work undertaken progressively commencing with a payment under cover of a letter dated 2 November 2012". The alleged letter of 2 November 2012 is not in evidence. The invoice dates of the 7 IRDI bills are admitted and they are dated 17 July 2012 (3), 20 July 2012(2), and 31 August 2012 (2). It is also admitted that copies were sent to the law practice on 13 September 2012.
In his letter of 4 June 2013 to Mr Dunlop, Brent Hedges alleges he paid part of invoice 109852 dated 17 July 2012 on 2 November 2013 and in May 2013 he paid invoice 109894 dated 20 July 2012. There is no evidence of payment or part payment of the other 5 invoices.
In Law Society of NSW v Autore [2017] NSWCATOD 168 in relation to the finding that the practitioner had failed to communicate, the evidence was that the barrister had sent three emails to the practitioner reminding him of his outstanding fees and the solicitor did not respond to any of these until the last of those emails. He then responded and said: "I have a settlement next week and expect your fees paid". But he did not pay the fees. Eight months later, when the solicitor had made an application for his fees to be assessed and they had been approved in full, the solicitor sent an email to the barrister telling him: "I am organising your fees, should be no more than 3-4 days" and telephoned him a month later and told him he would be able to pay him the following week. More than two years after that telephone call in November 2017, the practitioner had still not paid the barrister. Then there was no further communication from the solicitor about the costs between that telephone call in June 2015 and the hearing in August 2017.
In these proceedings the allegation is that the practitioner's failures to communicate with IRDI Law were unsatisfactory professional conduct. The Tribunal so finds because that conduct fell short of the standards of "competence and diligence that a member of the public is entitled to expect of a reasonably competent Australian Legal Practitioner" per s496 of the Act.
In Russo v the Legal Services Commissioner [2016] NSWCA 306, the fine was $20,000.00. The breach of s 255 was found to be unsatisfactory professional conduct, the failure to pay counsel was professional misconduct, and failure to account to the client was professional misconduct.
In Council of the Law Society of NSW v McHugh [2014] NSWCATOD 37 there was a finding of professional misconduct for breaches of ss 255, 260, 262 and 264 and for failure to remit GST and PAYG to the Australian Taxation Office and failure to make compulsory superannuation contributions in respect of employees. A fine of $10,000.00 was imposed by the Tribunal .
In Law Society of NSW v Marando [2013] NSWADT 267 the Tribunal found that a single breach of s 255 (an amount of $41,200.00) was professional misconduct and imposed a fine of $4,000.00.
The applicant Law Society submits and the Tribunal accepts that there should be a finding of professional misconduct in relation to each of Grounds 1, 2 and 3 and unsatisfactory professional conduct in Ground 4. It seeks orders that the respondent be reprimanded, a fine and an order for the practitioner to pay the costs of the Law Society. The practitioner submitted that there should be no fine.
In its written submissions the Law Society concedes that taking into account the range of fines that have recently been imposed in similar, but different situations, the fine for each practitioner should be at the lower end of a range of $1,000.00 - $20,000.00.
The Tribunal finds that in the absence of any fraudulent intent and taking into account that some of the amounts the subject of the breaches of sections 254 and 255 were relatively small, the appropriate fine is $6,000.00.