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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 >> Abbas v Solicitors' Regulatory Authority [2024] EWHC 2775 (Admin) (06 November 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/2775.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 2775 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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FARRUKH ABBAS | Appellant |
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- and - |
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SOLICITORS' REGULATORY AUTHORITY | Respondent |
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Matthew Edwards (instructed by Capsticks) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 28 February 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice McGowan DBE:
Introduction
Preliminary Application
i) The Appellant was initially advised within the 21 day time limit against appealing to the High Court which he says he accepted given "his fragile state of mind",
ii) The Appellant was "exhausted emotionally and mentally" and "unable to think clearly and straight" after the Tribunal hearing,
iii) The Appellant has no prior experience of regulatory matters and it was therefore not possible for him to pursue the appeal himself,
iv) He found it difficult to obtain pro bono advice/representation given his limited financial means. Contacted those whom he knew in the legal profession, nobody could help and,
v) His financial well-being and professional career depend on the outcome of the appeal.
i) Firstly, to assess the seriousness or significance of the failure to comply,
ii) Secondly, to consider why the breach occurred, and
iii) Thirdly, to consider all the circumstances, in order that the application can be dealt with fairly.
APPEAL
HISTORY
Allegation 1
i) A Claim Notification dated 28 July 2017 naming the Appellant as the claimant in respect of the accident on 27 July 2017. This form stated, amongst other things, that that the value of the claim was up to £10,000, that the Appellant had suffered whiplash and soft tissue injuries as a result of the accident and that the Appellant had been the driver of the vehicle at the time of the accident,
ii) An email dated 3 August 2017 enclosing a vehicle engineer report dated 3 August 2017 for damage to the Appellant's car. This was subsequently resent on 25 August 2017,
iii) On 18 August 2017 and again on 13 September 2017, A's insurers wrote to the Firm stating that they did not accept that their insured was responsible for the collision. Due to the discrepancies between both parties' accounts, they requested a copy of the Appellant's statement and any plans or diagrams and any other evidence, as well as an update on the Appellant's injuries,
iv) The Firm responded by email dated 4 October 2017 referring to the letter of 13 September 2017 and enclosing the Appellant's witness statement of 27 September 2017. That email stated that the Appellant rejected A's version of events and maintained that it was A who caused the accident. It urged the insurers to settle the matter,
v) The Firm sent an email dated 5 March 2018 enclosing the medical report of Mr Habib Qazi and an invoice for physiotherapy treatment,
vi) An email was sent from the Firm dated 7 March 2018 rejecting A's version of the facts of the accident and enclosing references to photographs of the scene. It enclosed another invoice for physiotherapy sessions,
vii) A's insurers wrote to the Firm on 3 April 2018 requesting a further witness statement from the Appellant, which was accompanied by a statement of truth covering further outstanding questions about the incident and,
viii) On 5 April 2018, the Firm wrote to the Appellant stating, "Having considered all of the available evidence in this matter and as a result of your lack of cooperation, we have come to the conclusion that we are unable to proceed with your claim… We can confirm that we have now closed your file."
i) Who was driving the vehicle registration SE07 NRV on 27 July 2017 at the time of the accident;
ii) What time did the accident take place;
iii) To whom did the telephone number given to A at the scene of the accident belong;
iv) What was the relationship between the Appellant and Mr Sohail;
i) The driver at the time of the accident was Mr Sohail;
ii) He had been told that the accident took place around 15:00 hours;
iii) The telephone number belonged to Mr Sohail;
iv) Mr Sohail "is a work colleague and was a friend";
i) He became aware of the road accident on the same day as it happened;
ii) He was told that it was A's fault and that he was joining the road from the street and hit Mr Sohail;
iii) His, (the Appellant's) last contact with Mr Sohail was as a friend, towards the end of January 2020;
iv) They had stopped speaking on a personal level since then;
v) Mr Sohail had been working for the Firm as a paralegal and;
vi) Mr Sohail proposed that the Appellant state that he (the Appellant) had been the driver. He had agreed to do this and said it was an error of judgement. He stated "The sole motivation was that it was borne out of stupidity. As far as I am aware, he was insured at that time as he had two vehicles at home which he was also driving regularly".
i) After the accident he came out of his vehicle and exchanged details with the third party;
ii) He informed the Appellant about the accident on the same date it happened, 27 July 2017, and forwarded the details of the third party;
iii) He has seen the Client Care Letter addressed to the Appellant which appears to have been drafted by him;
iv) He has never seen this letter until it was disclosed to him; he did not draft this letter and;
v) As far as his memory is concerned (sic), he did not discuss the accident with the Appellant once he had reported the fact of it to him.
Allegation 2
"At the time of the accident I was driving my Volkswagen Golf registration SE07NRV. …The [other] driver was [A] which I became aware of when we exchanged details; …I was wearing [a] seatbelt at the time…I was correctly proceeding along the… A118 … "
Allegation 3
i) He was involved in a road traffic accident on 27 July 2017;
ii) He was the driver of one of the cars involved and;
iii) He suffered injuries as a result of the accident.
Breach of Principles and Dishonesty
TRIBUNAL'S DECISION
"5. Mr Abbas involved himself in making a false insurance claim for personal injury following a road traffic accident.
6. The vehicle involved in the accident belonged to Mr Abbas, but was being driven by his colleague, Mr Anjum, when the accident took place. Mr Abbas was not present in the vehicle. Mr Anjum was not insured to drive the vehicle.
7. Mr Abbas subsequently allowed an insurance claim to be submitted in which he stated he had been the driver of the vehicle and had suffered personal injuries in it. In furtherance of the dishonest claim Mr Abbas presented for medical examination and physiotherapy sessions. After a period of 9 months Mr Abbas discontinued his involvement in the claim.
8. Whilst, ultimately no damages were ever paid out, Mr Abbas admitted to wanting to gain financially from the dishonest claim.
9. Subject to some factual disputes Mr Abbas admitted all the allegations made against him and he was struck off the roll of solicitors. There was no order for costs."
"21.1 The Tribunal found the allegations proved in full to the requisite standard, namely on the balance of probabilities, and it was satisfied to the same standard that Mr Abbas' admissions to all the allegations and breaches of the Principles, including dishonesty, were properly made.
21.2 The Tribunal therefore found proved breaches of:
• Principle 2 of the Principles on allegations 1, 2 and 3;
• Principle 6 of the Principles on allegations 1, 2 and 3; and
• Dishonesty on allegations 1, 2 and 3.
21.3 Applying the test in Ivey with respect to dishonesty, the Tribunal found that Mr Abbas had known the claim was fraudulent from its inception and he had made a false statement to the third party's insurers. He had also attended medical appointments and feigned injuries in furtherance of the false claim. In the circumstances known to Mr Abbas, ordinary decent members of the public would consider this conduct to have been dishonest.
21.4 As to the matters in dispute, the Tribunal found that there was some evidence of Mr Anjum's involvement from which an element of joint venture between Mr Abbas and Mr Anjum could be inferred.
21.5 In reaching this view the Tribunal had regard to the evidence relating to Mr Anjum's insurance not being operative on the day of the accident, and his reluctance to identify that fact, which may have given him a reason to propose the plan to Mr Abbas. It may also have been the case that, in going along with this suggestion, Mr Abbas placed store on Mr Anjum's greater knowledge of personal injury claims in which he was the more experienced of the two. Further, Mr Anjum's evidence relating his access to the info@primelaw e-mail account was not persuasive. Both Mr Abbas' and Mr Anjum's fee earner initials appeared on some, but not all, of the correspondence generated by the Firm. But so did the initials of other fee earners who appeared to have had nothing to do with the matter. It seemed that the creator of the correspondence was trying to disguise who was actually dealing with the matter. It was not possible to determine exactly the extent to which either Mr Anjum or Mr Abbas were the creators of the correspondence on Mr Abbas' file. Despite Mr Abbas producing a schedule in which he identified the creator of each document, neither witness struck the Tribunal as honest in giving their evidence.
21.6 Having made a finding regarding the element of joint venture the Tribunal would go on to assess the weight it should give this finding when it came to determining sanction."
"23. Mr Malik said that Mr Abbas apologised unreservedly to the Tribunal, the Applicant and the profession for his short comings, mistakes and failings which caused the allegations raised against him by the Applicant.
24. His behaviour had been foolish, and it had put him in a position where his ability to practise as a solicitor could be ended either for a significant period or permanently. He was deeply remorseful and devastated about his past behaviour, and the prospect of losing his professional status and livelihood.
25. Mr Malik referred to the personal difficulties experienced by Mr Abbas at the material time (set out in his evidence).
26. As the Tribunal had accepted that Mr Anjum was involved in some part in the fraud, then the Tribunal should accept Mr Abbas' account of what had taken place.
27. At a time when Mr Abbas' decision making was impaired by his personal problems, he had been 'led by the nose' by Mr Anjum into the misconduct which, objectively viewed, had been a 'ham fisted', ill thought out, and unsophisticated fraud which had been bound to unravel under critical scrutiny.
28. Mr Malik referred the Tribunal to the latest edition of its Sanctions Guidance and he went through the relevant issues which required attention to determine seriousness, culpability, and harm.
29. Mr Malik said that the motivation for the misconduct had been a financial one. There had been an element of spontaneity in the making of the initial decision to go along with the fraud, however, thereafter Mr Abbas had been involved in pursuing the claim for 9 months.
30. Whilst there had been no breach of trust per se, Mr Abbas had abused the trust placed in him by the Firm which he had used as a vehicle to carry out the fraud.
31. With regard to control and responsibility, Mr Malik said Mr Abbas shared this with Mr Anjum. However, he accepted that this did not exonerate Mr Abbas, who ought to have known better, and he should not have succumbed to another's influence. Mr Malik submitted, nevertheless, that the involvement of Mr Anjum reduced Mr Abbas' culpability in circumstances where Mr Anjum had greater experience than Mr Abbas.
32. Mr Malik questioned why no action had been taken by the Applicant against Mr Anjum (an indirectly regulated individual) and/or the Firm and its principals who, at the least, supervised Mr Abbas and Mr Anjum poorly, and therefore they too shared some culpability by having inadequate systems in place to spot and prevent such mischief.
33. Mr Abbas had not misled the Regulator in its investigation, and he had made early admissions, albeit he could have been more expansive in his explanations.
34. It was accepted that there was harm to the profession, as the public would take a dim view of Mr Abbas' actions albeit, he received no financial gain, and there was no loss to the insurer, save for its costs and time in investigating the matter.
35.With respect to aggravating factors, although Mr Abbas' actions had been capable of amounting to a criminal offence, he had not been charged with one. He had not taken advantage of a vulnerable person, and the misconduct had not been generated by hostility or accompanied by violence or bullying. There had been no concealment of wrongdoing on Mr Abbas' part.
36. The misconduct, however, had not been of short or fleeting duration as it had lasted 9 months. That said, it had not been repeated and it should be seen as one continuing episode.
37. Mr Abbas had not sought to blame anyone save for Mr Anjum, who he maintained had been the persuasive force throughout. Mr Malik accepted that Mr Abbas knew or ought reasonably to have known that the conduct complained of was in material breach of his obligations to protect the public and the reputation of the legal profession.
38. With respect to mitigating factors Mr Malik asked the Tribunal to bear in mind Mr Abbas' hitherto unblemished disciplinary record, and for the Tribunal to recognise that, while he may not have been coerced by Mr Anjum into the misconduct, he had been subject to an unhealthy influence exerted upon him by Mr Anjum. However, Mr Abbas had stopped the misconduct of his own accord, and he had had 'a moral awakening' at the point when he was asked to provide photographic identification.
39. Mr Malik said that, while this was no doubt a serious case, the matters identified in mitigation amounted in totality to exceptional circumstances such as would enable the Tribunal to consider a lesser sanction than strike off in a case where dishonesty and lack of integrity had been admitted.
40. Mr Malik asked the Tribunal to consider the impact upon Mr Abbas of the loss of his profession and livelihood, and the consequences this would have upon Mr Abbas' family.
41. Mr Malik asked the Tribunal for clemency on Mr Abbas' behalf. He accepted that if the Tribunal decided not to strike him off then that decision would have been made by 'a razor thin margin' and he urged the Tribunal to suspend Mr Abbas instead. He recognised that a suspension was, realistically, the minimum sanction that the Tribunal would impose for misconduct including lack of integrity and dishonesty.
42. In conclusion Mr Malik accepted that Mr Abbas' behaviour had been completely unacceptable, and he asked the Tribunal to give weight to his unblemished record, his remorse, and his mitigation which warranted a suspension as opposed to a strike-off."
"43. The Tribunal considered the Guidance Note on Sanction (10th Edition June 2022) ("the Sanctions Guidance"). The Tribunal noted the full exposition by Mr Malik of seriousness, culpability, and harm together with the aggravating and mitigating factors which had been put in a fair and balanced way.
44. The Tribunal adopted much of Mr Malik's reasoning, but it did not accept his submissions on exceptional circumstances and sanction in a case where the level of seriousness was high. It could not be viewed in any other way given the admitted allegations of lack of integrity and dishonesty, financial motivation and the duration of the misconduct, to name but some of the factors. Nor did the Tribunal accept the entirety of the submissions as to Mr Abbas' insight. Whilst he had made early, albeit guarded, admissions as to his misconduct when first challenged by the Applicant, he had sought to play down the seriousness of his misconduct, including advocating that no disciplinary action against him was warranted. This suggested that he did not recognise the seriousness of what he had done.
45. The involvement of Mr Anjum in the enterprise did not displace Mr Abbas' high culpability, as he had taken a knowing and full role in the matters giving rise to the misconduct.
46. In assessing harm, the Tribunal noted that, while there had been no serious harm to any individual, save for Mr Javidan Ahmad, the damage to the reputation of the profession was very high as Mr Abbas' conduct would inevitably discredit the profession in the eyes of the public.
47. The public would expect a solicitor to act honestly, with integrity and to uphold public trust in the profession. The trust the public placed in the profession was shattered when a solicitor engaged in such behaviour, and in the pursuit of personal and unwarranted gain.
48. The misconduct was so serious that a Reprimand, Fine or Restriction Order would not be a sufficient sanction to protect the public or the reputation of the profession from harm.
49. Mr Abbas was found to have been dishonest. The element of dishonesty was therefore an aggravating factor. Coulson J in Solicitors Regulation Authority v Sharma [2010] EWHC 2022 Admin observed: "there is harm to the public every time a solicitor behaves dishonestly. It is in the public interest to ensure that, as it was put in Bolton, a solicitor can be "trusted to the ends of the earth"."
50. Also: "A finding that an allegation of dishonesty has been proved will almost invariably lead to striking off, save in exceptional circumstances …." confined to "...a small residual category where striking off will be a disproportionate sentence in all the circumstances ...".
51. The Tribunal did not consider there were exceptional circumstances present in Mr Abbas' case such that a lesser sanction was warranted.
52. The nature, scope and extent of the dishonesty was such that the matters raised by Mr Malik in mitigation did nothing to lessen these factors. This had not been a momentary lapse, and Mr Abbas had not acted in blind panic. The dishonest misconduct had taken place over a 9-month period and was pursued actively by Mr Abbas, wherein he attended a medical examination and physiotherapy sessions in which he feigned symptoms of whiplash and other problems he contended had been suffered in the accident.
53. Other than the fact of the accident, nothing subsequently said by Mr Abbas in pursuit of the claim was true. The claim had been submitted in the expectation of personal and unmerited financial reward, without any concern for the effect of this on Mr Javidan Ahmad or his insurers.
54. Following the guidance given in SRA v James et al [2018] EWHC 3058 (Admin) the Tribunal considered that where dishonesty has been found, mental health issues, specifically stress and depression suffered by the solicitor because of work conditions or other matters, were unlikely without more to amount to exceptional circumstances.
55. The Tribunal noted that Mr Malik referred to Mr Abbas experiencing difficult family circumstances at the material time. However, the Tribunal had not been directed to any medical evidence to substantiate the impact this would have had had upon his work and upon his decision-making capability, other than assertion as to its supposed impact.
56. The protection of the public and public confidence in the profession and the reputation of the profession required no lesser sanction than that Mr Abbas be removed from the Roll."
GROUNDS OF APPEAL
(1) The Tribunal erred in concluding that there were no exceptional circumstances by failing to have proper and sufficient regard to all the relevant facts and circumstances of this case. These facts included the initial influence and the subsequent pressure of Mr Anjum on the A; the personal and family circumstances of the A; his early full and frank admissions; his subsequent cooperation with the R; and the insight and remorse that he had shown.
(2) The Tribunal found that there may have been a 'joint venture' between the A and Mr Anjum [21.4 – 21.6], but it arguably then erred by failing to properly consider and make specific findings in respect of whether it was Mr Anjum's idea to issue the false claim; whether Mr Anjum had drafted and sent the client care letter and other documents; and whether Mr Anjum later pressured the A to continue with the deception when the A did not wish to do so. These issues were of some relevance to the issue of the extent of the dishonesty and, potentially, to the issue of exceptional circumstances.
(3) The Tribunal may have potentially erred in finding that there has been 'serious harm' to Mr Javidan Ahmad without setting out (it so appears) as to what that harm may in fact have been. In addition, it is arguable that the Tribunal did not provide adequate reasons in respect of all of its findings and it did not consider all aspects of the evidence that was before it. Finally, it appears that it may not have considered the good character evidence that was provided to it.
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
"It would require a very strong case to interfere with sentence because the disciplinary committee are the best possible people for weighing the seriousness of the professional misconduct."
"In his careful submissions, Mr Tam urged that a broad and not a technical approach should be taken to an adjudicator's decision and to the reasons that he or she sets out. I respectfully agree. That restraint on the part of the appellate court is especially important when, as is now the case, an appeal to the Immigration Appeal Tribunal is on a point of law only. Where, as in this case, complaint is made of the reasoning of an adjudicator in respect of a question of fact (that is to say credibility), particular care is necessary to ensure that the criticism is as to the fundamental approach of the adjudicator, and does not merely reflect a feeling on the part of the appellate tribunal that it might itself have taken a different view of the matter from that that appealed to the adjudicator."
In that case the tribunal heard expert medical evidence about the Appellant's injuries in support of his case that he had been the victim of torture. The Court of Appeal found that the adjudicator's reasoning was flawed in that she separated the expert medical evidence from the rest of the evidence and reached her decisions on the credibility of the Appellant's account of torture without any reference to the medical evidence.
"Any solicitor who is shown to have discharged his professional duties with anything less than complete integrity, probity and trustworthiness must expect severe sanctions to be imposed upon him by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal. Lapses from the required high standard may of course take different forms and be of varying degrees. The most serious involves proven dishonesty, whether or not leading to criminal proceedings or penalties. In such cases the Tribunal has almost invariably, no matter how strong the mitigation advanced by the solicitor, order that he be struck off the role of solicitors. Only infrequently, particularly in recent years, has it been willing to order the restoration to the role of a solicitor against whom serious dishonesty has been established, even after a passage of years and even where the solicitor had made every effort to reestablish himself and redeem his reputation."
SUBMISSIONS
Discussion