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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Law Society v Master of the Rolls & Anor [2005] EWHC 146 (Admin) (10 February 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2005/146.html Cite as: [2005] WLR 2033, [2005] EWHC 146 (Admin), [2005] 1 WLR 2033 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Mr Justice Richards
Mr Justice Fulford
____________________
The Law Society |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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The Master of the Rolls and Michael A Shuman |
Defendant Interested Party |
____________________
Andrew Hopper QC and Lee Evans (instructed by Quastel Avery Midgen) for Mr Shuman
Hearing date: 4 November 2004
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Thomas:
"Any registration may be made subject to such conditions as the Society sees fit to impose."
It was accepted before the Master of the Rolls and in this Court that the provision was ambiguous, as it could mean either (1) the making of the registration (the initial making of the entry in the register) could be subject to such conditions as the Law Society sought to impose or (2) the entry that had been made in the register might be made subject to such conditions as the Law Society sought fit at any time to impose. The Master of the Rolls held that the phrase had the first meaning and the Law Society had no general power to impose the conditions save on the initial making of an entry on the register. There is no right of appeal from that decision.
The factual background
i) Mr Shuman is an Attorney admitted to practise as an attorney in Texas.ii) In 1999, he was registered as a foreign lawyer under the CLSA by the Law Society for 1999/2000.
iii) He entered into a professional association with Mr Periasamy Mathialagan, a solicitor who practised in a firm called Mathis in London. Although there is an issue as to the precise nature of that association (as Mr Shuman denies he ever became a partner), he was held out by Mr Mathialagan as a partner. Mr Shuman contends his association with the firm was very limited. In June 2002, his association with the firm ceased.
iv) Mr Shuman's registration was renewed for 2000/01 and 2001/02.
v) On 30 September 2002, the Forensics Investigation Unit of the Office of the Supervision of Solicitors (OSS), following an investigation, issued a report relating to "investment schemes" at Mathis that gave rise to concern. The OSS decided to intervene in the practice and take proceedings against Mr Mathialagan and Mr Shuman, although by that time Mr Shuman was no longer playing an active part in the practice of Mathis.
vi) On 14 October 2002, Mr Shuman wrote to the Law Society stating that he would not be seeking renewal of his registration when it expired at the end of October 2002. The Law Society decided not to cancel the renewal because it was thought that if it did so, there might be a challenge to its jurisdiction over Mr Shuman for the disciplinary proceedings that were contemplated.
vii) On 1 November 2002, the adjudication panel of the Law Society referred the conduct of Mr Mathialagan and Mr Shuman to the Solicitors' Disciplinary Tribunal; it also directed that the matters raised in the report be referred to the Office of the Supervision of Solicitors to consider whether conditions should immediately be imposed on Mr Shuman's registration as a Registered Foreign Lawyer.
viii) Mr Shuman made clear to the Law Society he did not wish to be registered or practise as a Registered Foreign Lawyer.
ix) On 25 July 2003, an adjudication panel of the Law Society decided to impose the following conditions on Mr Shuman's registration:
"2.1 That he shall not practise as a partner in or be employed by a Multi-national Partnership (MNP) or practise as an office holder and/or shareowner and/or employee and/or member of a company or Limited Liability Partnership (LLP) which is a recognised body without having first of all obtained the written approval of the Office for the Supervision of Solicitors to do so; and2.2 That he shall not fulfil the role of a person qualified to supervise for the purposes of Practice Rule 13 of the Solicitors Practice Rules 1990 (as amended); and2.3 That he shall not hold, receive, or have responsibility for client's money; and2.4 He shall not be a signatory to any client or office account cheque; and2.5 He shall not be involved, directly or indirectly, in any transaction or purported transaction of a nature similar to those High Yield Investment Schemes/Capital Enhancement Schemes identified in the Forensic Investigations Report dated 30 September 2002 which bore certain of the hallmarks of fraud as set out in the Law Society's guidance on banking instrument fraud and raised issues referred to in the Law Society's guidance on money laundering, nor in any litigation, arbitration or other legal work directly or indirectly related to such transactions; and2.6 That any employer or prospective employer who is a principal in a MNP or in a company or a LLP which is a recognised body will be informed of those conditions."x) Its reasons for doing so were expressed to be for the protection of the public and ensuring public confidence pending the resolution of disciplinary proceedings; it was satisfied that the issues raised by the report were such that it was in the interests of the public and for the good repute of the solicitors' profession that Mr Shuman should only practise subject to a degree of supervision and in an environment that could provide a high level of support.
xi) Although the Law Society sought to impose the conditions in July 2003, it did not commence the disciplinary proceedings against Mr Shuman until 21 September 2004. The allegations made are vigorously disputed by Mr Shuman.
The Courts and Legal Services Act 1990
"(1) The Law Society shall maintain a register of foreign lawyers for the purposes of this section.
(2) A foreign lawyer who wishes to be registered under this section must apply to the Society in accordance with the requirements of Part I of Schedule 14.
(3) The power to make rules under-
(a) the following provisions of the Solicitors Act 1974-
(i) section 31 (professional practice, conduct and discipline);
(ii) section 32 (accounts and trust accounts);
(iii) section 34 (accountants' reports);
(iv) section 36 (Compensation Fund); and
(v) section 37 (professional indemnity); and
(b) section 9 of the Administration of Justice Act 1985 (incorporated practices),
shall also be exercisable in relation to registered foreign lawyers."
7. Schedule 14 to the CLSA contains the detailed provisions for registration:
"PART I: REGISTRATION.
General
"1. In this schedule –
"the register" means the register maintained by the Society under section 89;
"registration" means registration in that register."
Application for registration
2 (1) An application for registration or for renewal of registration-
(a) shall be made to the Society in such form as the Council may prescribe; and
(b) shall be accompanied by such fee as the Council may, with the concurrence of the Master of the Rolls, prescribe.
(2) Where such an application is duly made by a foreign lawyer, the Law Society may register the applicant if it is satisfied that the legal profession of which the applicant is a member is one which is so regulated as to make it appropriate—
(a ) for solicitors to enter into multi-national partnerships with members of that profession; and
(b) for members of that profession to be officers of recognised bodies.
(3) Any registration may be made subject to such conditions as the Society sees fit to impose.
(4) The Council may make regulations, with the concurrence of the Master of the Rolls, with respect to—
(a) the keeping of the register (including the manner in which entries are to be made, altered or removed); and
(b) applications for registration or renewal of registration.
(5) The register may be kept by means of a computer."
Duration of registration
"3. (1) Every registration shall have effect from the beginning of the day on which it is entered in the register.
.....
(4) Where a foreign lawyer is registered, the Society may cancel his registration if—
(a) the renewal date for his registration has passed but he has not applied for it to be renewed; or
(b) he has applied to the Society for it to be cancelled."
"(1) The registration of any foreign lawyer against whom a bankruptcy order is made shall be suspended on the making of that order
(2) The suspension of any registration by reason of a bankruptcy shall terminate if the order is annulled …"
"Effect of disciplinary action
11 (1) Where a foreign registered lawyer is struck off, or suspended, his registration shall be suspended
(2) …..
Reinstatement of disciplined foreign lawyer
12 (1) Where a person's registration has been suspended by virtue of paragraph 11, it shall be revived –
(a) if his right to practise in the jurisdiction in question is restored; and
(b) a copy of the instrument restoring his right, certified to be a true copy by an officer of the appropriate court in the jurisdiction in question, or the professional body concerned, is served on the Society.
(2) Where a person whose registration is suspended by virtue of paragraph 11 applies to the Society for the suspension to be terminated, the Society may terminate it subject to such conditions, if any, as it thinks fit to impose.
Effective date of revived registration
13. Where a foreign lawyer's registration is revived (whether as the result of the termination of its suspension, restoration by order of the Tribunal or for any other reason), that revival shall take effect on such date, and subject to such conditions, as the Society may direct."
"Appeal against conditions or refusals
14(1) Any foreign lawyer may appeal to the Master of the Rolls against—
(a) the refusal of the Society to register him or to renew his registration;
(b) the refusal of the Society to terminate the suspension of his registration on an application made by him under paragraph 12;
(c) the failure of the Society to deal with any application by him for registration, renewal of registration or the termination (under paragraph 12(2)) of a suspension within a reasonable time; or
(d) any condition imposed by the Society under paragraph 2(3), 12(2) or 13.
(2) An appeal under sub-paragraph (1)(a), (b) or (d) must be brought within the period of one month beginning with the date on which the Society notifies the applicant of its decision on his application.
(3) On an appeal to him under this paragraph, the Master of the Rolls may make such order as he thinks fit."
Submissions
i) Although it is accepted that the word could bear either of the two meanings and there were instances of uses in both senses in Schedule 14, as a matter of language paragraph 2(3) reads more naturally as referring to the entry. If the draftsman had intended to refer to the process of entry, he would not have used the term "may be made subject to" as that was an unnatural and stilted use of language; he would have said "the making of any registration may be subject to conditions" or "the registration may be subject to any conditions". Furthermore the phrase would be tautologous if it meant the process of registration because the process included the making.
ii) It was in any event necessary to give the paragraph a purposive construction. If there was no power to impose conditions after the making of the entry where there was cause for concern about the conduct of the registered foreign lawyer, then there would be a lacuna in the regulatory scheme. The Law Society would not normally be in a position to enter into an informed consideration of whether conditions were needed when registration was first made; the power was needed later, particularly upon renewal. Without the power, the Law Society might on renewal be driven to refuse renewal when the right answer might be to renew on conditions, though it was accepted that this was a theoretical difficulty rather than a real one, as the entry could always be cancelled and a new entry made with conditions. Nor could the Society relax conditions which it had imposed, even if they had become burdensome, though again, for the same reasons, it was accepted that this was theoretical rather than real.
The meaning of paragraph 2(3)
"Where an Act confers a power or imposes a duty it is implied, unless the contrary intention appears, that the power may be exercised, or the duty is to be performed, from time to time as occasion requires "
I do not consider that this helps; if the power is stated to exist at a specific time, this provision does not have the effect of making it exercisable at other times. It therefore does not assist in the construction of the phrase where the point at issue is whether the power is exercisable at a specific time.
i) Under s. 12 on the first occasion when a certificate is issued or certain other similar occasions such as when a certificate is reissued following a period when it has not been in force.ii) In certain other circumstances specified in s. 12 (d) – (l) and 13A of the Solicitors Act 1974; these include the situation where the solicitor is asked to give an explanation of a matter relating to his conduct and fails to give one which is considered satisfactory.
"It is in those circumstances that the imposition of conditions can have, and usually in my experience does have, a draconian effect in that it precludes a solicitor continuing with the practice he was carrying on prior to the imposition of those conditions
The same is true in relation to a registered foreign lawyer. The effect of subjecting that lawyer to conditions, once he has begun to practise in this country without restriction, is more draconian than simply requiring him to observe conditions ab initio "
Conclusion
Mr Justice Richards:
Mr Justice Fulford: