Central London Lawyer November 2021

Page 15

ARTICLE

“Rotten Culture” The myth and misinformation surrounding Junior Solicitors Paul Bennett

I

n a powerful speech widely reported the former President of this esteemed local Law Society, Westminster & Holborn, Paul Sharma denounced what the Law Society Gazette referred to as a “rotten legal culture” and suggested that “young solicitors are being hauled up before the SDT in disproportionate numbers for small mistakes and losing their careers”. The intention was clearly noble, the reality though is somewhat different. As a Practitioner before the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT) I have always acted for both law firms and individuals. The vast majority of those firms and individuals before the SDT are senior lawyers, statistically aged 40 to 60 with twice as many men appearing1. Those in a position of authority with the opportunity to abuse a privileged position either by dint of being a partner, a sole practitioner or in a position of significant influence over others. The role gives an opportunity. In reality few junior solicitors come before the SDT but when they do the profile of those cases tend to be high profile. In the 2017 case James, in which I acted, the SDT Judgment found she was working in a “toxic” environment. This case triggered a period of navel gazing into the defects within the culture across England and Wales, partly as we ran a PR campaign to try and support the position on appeal through awareness raising. When it was decided by the SDT James stood alone in an oasis away from numerous other decisions over the previous decade. Unfortunately within 6 weeks it had been followed by two other cases which were ultimately all conjoined together to be heard in the High Court when the SRA appealed. The unintended consequence of the Tribunal’s focus on the toxic culture was that it triggered a debate. It was a muchneeded debate. It has led to many good and subtle changes across law firms throughout England and Wales. The improved focus on mental health, in supporting young solicitors and a rising awareness both of the increased expectations of the younger cohort of the profession but also the evolving and necessary focus on thinking about the impact of mental health. I do though take issue with Mr Sharma’s portrayal of young solicitors being hauled before the SDT and disproportionate numbers for small mistakes. The cases before the SDT simply do not bear this out. They are as they always have been, dominated by cases of abuse of senior position. That is not junior lawyers. As for the suggestion that small mistakes lead to the losing of careers again any factual analysis shows this to be incorrect. Where junior lawyers have lost their careers, they have done so because of dishonesty and because of the cover up. I spoke to the Junior Lawyers’ Division of the Law Society of England and Wales Annual Conference in May of 2018, and what I said then I stand by all this time later, if you

make a mistake stick your hand up explain what has happened and ask for assistance in minimising the impact on the client. We all occasionally make mistakes. We therefore have to create a culture of openness, transparency and of accepting our errors. You can look to sport if you ever want to see numerous examples of outstanding performers who make errors, learn from the defeat or the mistake and come back stronger. We must, as part of our approach of trying to support of junior lawyers, encourage them to be resilient and encourage them to be open and transparent. The political cliché of it is the cover up that ends the political career is equally applicable to law. If you cover up a mistake, however minor that mistake in itself maybe, you will end your career because of the coverup and the fact that that contains an element of dishonesty. The SDT guidance on sanctions 8th edition which was published in December 2020, repeats trite law in relation to the purpose of sanctions. It refers specifically to the case of Bolton v The Law Society [1994] 1WLR 512 which sets out the fundamental principle including the purpose of imposing any sanction by the Tribunal as being: “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 … a penalty may be visited on a solicitor… in order to punish him for what he has done to deter any other solicitor tempted to behave in the same way…”. Whether 1 day qualified or 50 years qualified you must act with complete integrity. The purpose of sanction is not to punish, it is to deter others from behaving in the same way. In the case of the junior lawyers that have hit the headlines over the last 5 years or so the outcome has always been about that integrity, probity and trustworthiness and sending the message to others not to cover up the mistakes. In fairness to Mr Sharma, he makes one isolated point that I would love to see this Law Society explore further. There is an inequality of arms once cases reach the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal. The reality is the SRA has a experienced professional regulatory specialist team, they contract with a specialist firm of solicitors to provide external advice and they utilise external Counsel and Queen’s Counsel extensively. Continued on next page

CENTRAL LONDON LAWYER | 15


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Articles inside

Improper petitions: is it their fault?

4min
page 28

WHLS Forthcoming Events 2021-2022

1min
page 27

Westminster and Holborn Junior Lawyers

1min
page 27

“Rotten Culture” - The myth and misinformation surrounding Junior Solicitors

6min
pages 15-16

Report from WHLS International Committee

2min
page 12

Consultation on day one right to work flexibly

1min
page 12

Thank you

1min
page 9

Membership Committee vacancies

1min
page 8

Guerlain makes a good case

3min
pages 33-36

Fraser Whitehead talks to Amanda Lathia of TWM Solicitors

19min
pages 18-21

Forgetting Civil Law an interview with Alisha Liu

5min
pages 31-32

Stop & Search – will it protect or polarise?

5min
pages 22-26

Suzanna Eames elected as Chair of the JLD

1min
pages 27-30

Climate change and the legal profession

3min
page 17

WHLS Membership Renewal

2min
page 8

Jonathan Andrews

4min
pages 11-12

WHLS AGM 2021

3min
page 10

Annual Dinner and Gamlen Prize 2021

1min
page 9

President’s Foreword

2min
pages 5-6

Equality of Arms

4min
pages 14-16

Black History Month

3min
page 13
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