Authority: made by the Solicitors Regulation Authority Board under sections 32, 33A, 34, 37, 79 and 80 of the Solicitors Act 1974, section 9 of the Administration of Justice Act 1985, sections 83(5)(h) and 93 of, and paragraph 20 of Schedule 11 to, the Legal Services Act 2007 with the approval of the Legal Services Board;
regulating: the accounts of solicitors and their employees, registered European lawyers and their employees, registered foreign lawyers, recognised bodies and their managers and employees, and licensed bodies and their managers and employees, in respect of practice in England and Wales; and
regulating: the accounts of solicitors, lawyer-controlled bodies and their managers, lawyers of England and Wales who are managers of overseas law firms controlled by lawyers of England and Wales, solicitors who are named trustees, and managers of a lawyer-controlled body who are named trustees, in respect of practice outside the UK; and
regulating: the accounts of solicitors and registered European lawyers, lawyer-controlled and registered European lawyer-controlled bodies and their managers, lawyer of England and Wales and registered European lawyer managers of overseas law firms controlled by lawyers of England and Wales and/or registered European lawyers, solicitors and registered European lawyers who are named trustees, and managers of a lawyer-controlled body or a registered European lawyer-controlled body who are named trustees, in respect of practice from Scotland or Northern Ireland.
For the definition of words in italics in Parts 1-6 and 8, see rule 2 - Interpretation. For the definition of words in italics in Part 7 see rule 48 - Application and Interpretation (overseas provisions).
The Principles set out in the Handbook apply to all aspects of practice, including the handling of client money. Those which are particularly relevant to these rules are that you must:
Underlying principles which are specific to the accounts rules are set out in rule 1 below.
These rules apply to all those who carry on or work in a firm and to the firm itself (see rules 4 and 5). In relation to a multi-disciplinary practice, the rules apply only in respect of those activities for which the practice is regulated by the SRA, and are concerned only with money handled by the practice which relates to those regulated activities.
- accounting period
-
has the meaning given in rule 33;
- agreed fee
-
has the meaning given in rule 17.5;
-
AJA
-
means the Administration of Justice Act 1985;
- approved regulator
-
means any body listed as an approved regulator in paragraph 1 of Schedule 4 to the LSA, or designated as an approved regulator by an order under paragraph 17 of that Schedule;
- authorised body
-
means a body that has been authorised by the SRA to practise as a licensed body or a recognised body;
- authorised non-SRA firm
-
means a firm which is authorised to carry on legal activities by an approved regulator other than the SRA;
- bank
-
has the meaning given in section 87(1) of the SA;
- building society
-
means a building society within the meaning of the Building Societies Act 1986;
- client
-
means the person for whom you act;
- client account
-
has the meaning given in rule 13.2;
- client money
-
has the meaning given in rule 12;
-
COFA
-
means the compliance officer for finance and administration in accordance with rule 8.5 of the SRA Authorisation Rules, and in relation to a licensable body is a reference to its Head of Finance and Administration within the meaning of the LSA;
- Companies Acts
-
means the Companies Act 1985 and the Companies Act 2006;
- company
-
means a company registered under the Companies Acts, an overseas company incorporated in an Establishment Directive state and registered under the Companies Act 1985 and/or the Companies Act 2006 or a societas Europaea;
- costs
-
means your fees and disbursements;
- Court of Protection deputy
-
includes a deputy who was appointed by the Court of Protection as a receiver under the Mental Health Act 1983 before the commencement date of the Mental Capacity Act 2005;
- director
-
means a director of a company; and in relation to a societas Europaea includes:
- (i)
-
in a two-tier system, a member of the management organ and a member of the supervisory organ; and
- (ii)
-
in a one-tier system, a member of the administrative organ;
- disbursement
-
means, in respect of those activities for which the practice is regulated by the SRA, any sum spent or to be spent on behalf of the client or trust (including any VAT element);
- Establishment Directive
-
means the Establishment of Lawyers Directive 98/5/EC;
- Establishment Directive profession
-
means any profession listed in Article 1.2(a) of the Establishment Directive, including a solicitor, barrister or advocate of the UK;
- Establishment Directive state
-
means a state to which the Establishment Directive applies;
- fees
-
means your own charges or profit costs (including any VAT element);
- firm
-
means an authorised body, a recognised sole practitioner or a body or person which should be authorised by the SRA as a recognised body or recognised sole practitioner (but which could not be authorised by another approved regulator), but can also include in-house practice;
- general client account
-
has the meaning given in rule 13.5(b);
- interest
-
includes a sum in lieu of interest;
- lawyer
-
means a member of one of the following professions, entitled to practise as such:
- (i)
-
the profession of solicitor, barrister, or advocate of the UK;
- (ii)
-
a profession whose members are authorised to carry on legal activities by an approved regulator other than the SRA;
- (iii)
-
an Establishment Directive profession other than a UK profession;
- (iv)
-
a legal profession which has been approved by the SRA for the purpose of recognised bodies in England and Wales; and
- (v)
-
any other regulated legal profession specified by the SRA for the purpose of this definition;
- legal activity
-
has the meaning given in section 12 of the LSA and includes any reserved legal activity and any other activity which consists of the provision of legal advice or assistance, or representation in connection with the application of the law or resolution of legal disputes;
- licensable body
-
means a body which meets the criteria in rule 14 (Eligibility criteria and fundamental requirements for licensed bodies) of the SRA Practice Framework Rules;
- licensed body
-
means a body licensed by the SRA under Part 5 of the LSA;
- licensing authority
-
means an approved regulator which is designated as a licensing authority under Part 1 of Schedule 10 to the LSA, and whose licensing rules have been approved for the purposes of the LSA;
-
LLP
-
means a limited liability partnership incorporated under the Limited Liability Partnerships Act 2000;
- local authority
-
means any of those bodies which are listed in section 270 of the Local Government Act 1972 or in section 21(1) of the Local Government and Housing Act 1989;
-
LSA
-
means the Legal Services Act 2007;
- manager
-
means:
- (i)
-
a member of an LLP;
- (ii)
-
a director of a company;
- (iii)
-
a partner in a partnership; or
- (iv)
-
in relation to any other body, a member of its governing body;
-
MDP
-
means a licensed body which is a multi-disciplinary practice providing a range of different services, some only of which are regulated by the SRA;
- mixed payment
-
has the meaning given in rule 18.1;
- non-solicitor employer
-
means any employer other than a recognised body, recognised sole practitioner, licensed body or authorised non-SRA firm;
- office account
-
means an account of the firm for holding office money and/or out-of-scope money, or other means of holding office money or out-of-scope money (for example, the office cash box or an account holding money regulated by a regulator other than the SRA);
- office money
-
has the meaning given in rule 12;
- out-of-scope money
-
means money held or received by an MDP in relation to those activities for which it is not regulated by the SRA;
- overseas
-
means outside England and Wales;
- partner
-
means a person who is or is held out as a partner in a partnership;
- partnership
-
means an unincorporated body in which persons are or are held out as partners, and does not include a body incorporated as an LLP;
- principal
-
means:
- (i)
-
a sole practitioner;
- (ii)
-
a partner in a partnership;
- (iii)
-
in the case of a recognised body which is an LLP or company, the recognised body itself;
- (iv)
-
in the case of a licensed body which is an LLP or company, the licensed body itself;
- (v)
-
the principal solicitor or REL (or any one of them) employed by a non-solicitor employer (for example, in a law centre or in commerce and industry); or
- (vi)
-
in relation to any other body, a member of its governing body;
- private loan
-
means a loan other than one provided by an institution which provides loans on standard terms in the normal course of its activities;
- professional disbursement
-
means, in respect of those activities for which the practice is regulated by the SRA, the fees of counsel or other lawyer, or of a professional or other agent or expert instructed by you, including the fees of interpreters, translators, process servers, surveyors and estate agents but not travel agents' charges;
- recognised body
-
means a body recognised by the SRA under section 9 of the AJA;
- recognised sole practitioner
-
means a solicitor or REL authorised by the SRA under section 1B of the SA to practise as a sole practitioner;
- regular payment
-
has the meaning given in rule 19;
-
REL
-
means registered European lawyer, namely, an individual registered with the SRA under regulation 17 of the European Communities (Lawyer's Practice) Regulations 2000 (S.I. 2000 no. 1119);
- reserved legal activity
-
has the meaning given in section 12 of the LSA, and includes the exercise of a right of audience, the conduct of litigation, reserved instrument activities, probate activities, notarial activities and the administration of oaths, as defined in Schedule 2 to the LSA;
-
RFL
-
means registered foreign lawyer, namely, an individual registered with the SRA under section 89 of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990;
-
SA
-
means the Solicitors Act 1974;
- separate designated client account
-
has the meaning given in rule 13.5(a);
- societas Europaea
-
means a European public limited liability company within the meaning of Article 1 of Council Regulation 2157/2001/EC;
- Society
-
means the Law Society, in accordance with section 87 of the SA;
- sole practitioner
-
means a solicitor or REL practising as a sole principal, and does not include a solicitor or REL practising in-house;
- solicitor
-
means a person who has been admitted as a solicitor of the Senior Courts of England and Wales and whose name is on the roll kept by the Society under section 6 of the SA;
-
SRA
-
means the Solicitors Regulation Authority, and reference to the SRA as an approved regulator or licensing authority means the SRA carrying out regulatory functions assigned to the Society as an approved regulator or licensing authority;
-
SRA Authorisation Rules
-
means the SRA Authorisation Rules for Legal Services Bodies and Licensable Bodies 2011;
-
SRA Code of Conduct
-
means the SRA Code of Conduct 2011;
-
SRA Practice Framework Rules
-
means the SRA Practice Framework Rules 2011;
- statutory undertakers
-
means:
- (i)
-
any persons authorised by any enactment to carry on any railway, light railway, tramway, road transport, water transport, canal, inland navigation, dock, harbour, pier or lighthouse undertaking or any undertaking for the supply of hydraulic power; and
- (ii)
-
any licence holder within the meaning of the Electricity Act 1989, any public gas supplier, any water or sewerage undertaker, the Environment Agency, any public telecommunications operator, the Post Office, the Civil Aviation Authority and any relevant airport operator within the meaning of Part V of the Airports Act 1986;
- trustee
-
includes a personal representative (i.e. an executor or an administrator), and "trust" includes the duties of a personal representative;
-
UK
-
means United Kingdom;
- without delay
-
means, in normal circumstances, either on the day of receipt or on the next working day; and
- you
-
means:
- (i)
-
a solicitor; or
- (ii)
-
an REL;
-
-
in either case who is:
- (A)
-
a sole practitioner;
- (B)
-
a partner in a partnership which is a recognised body, licensed body or authorised non-SRA firm or in a partnership which should be a recognised body but has not been recognised by the SRA;
- (C)
-
an assistant, associate, professional support lawyer, consultant, locum or person otherwise employed in the practice of a recognised body, licensed body, recognised sole practitioner or authorised non-SRA firm; or of a partnership which should be a recognised body but has not been recognised by the SRA, or of a sole practitioner who should be a recognised sole practitioner but has not been authorised by the SRA; and "employed" in this context shall be interpreted in accordance with the definition of "employee" for the purposes of the SRA Code of Conduct;
- (D)
-
employed as an in-house lawyer by a non-solicitor employer (for example, in a law centre or in commerce and industry);
- (E)
-
a director of a company which is a recognised body, licensed body or authorised non-SRA firm, or of a company which is a manager of a recognised body, licensed body or authorised non-SRA firm;
- (F)
-
a member of an LLP which is a recognised body, licensed body or authorised non-SRA firm, or of an LLP which is a manager of a recognised body, licensed body or authorised non-SRA firm; or
- (G)
-
a partner in a partnership with separate legal personality which is a manager of a recognised body, licensed body or authorised non-SRA firm;
- (iii)
-
an RFL practising:
- (A)
-
as a partner in a partnership which is a recognised body, licensed body or authorised non-SRA firm, or in a partnership which should be a recognised body but has not been recognised by the SRA;
- (B)
-
as the director of a company which is a recognised body, licensed body or authorised non-SRA firm, or as the director of a company which is a manager of a recognised body, licensed body or authorised non-SRA firm;
- (C)
-
as a member of an LLP which is a recognised body, licensed body or authorised non-SRA firm, or as a member of an LLP which is a manager of a recognised body, licensed body or authorised non-SRA firm;
- (D)
-
as a partner in a partnership with separate legal personality which is a manager of a recognised body, licensed body or authorised non-SRA firm;
- (E)
-
as an employee of a recognised body, licensed body or recognised sole practitioner; or
- (F)
-
as an employee of a partnership which should be a recognised body but has not been authorised by the SRA, or of a sole practitioner who should be a recognised sole practitioner but has not been authorised by the SRA;
- (iv)
-
a recognised body;
- (v)
-
a licensed body;
- (vi)
-
a manager or employee of a recognised body or licensed body, or of a partnership which should be a recognised body but has not been authorised by the SRA; or
- (vii)
-
an employee of a recognised sole practitioner, or of a sole practitioner who should be a recognised sole practitioner but has not been authorised by the SRA;
-
-
and "you" includes "your" as appropriate;
-
-
the singular includes the plural and vice versa, and references to the masculine or feminine include the neuter.
- 31.1
-
You must at the time and place fixed by the SRA produce to any person appointed by the SRA any records, papers, client and trust matter files, financial accounts and other documents, and any other information, necessary to enable preparation of a report on compliance with the rules.
- 31.2
-
A requirement for production under rule 31.1 above must be in writing, and left at or sent by post or document exchange to the most recent address held by the SRA's Information Directorate, or sent electronically to the firm's e-mail or fax address, or delivered by the SRA's appointee. A notice under this rule is deemed to be duly served:
- (a)
-
on the date on which it is delivered to or left at your address;
- (b)
-
on the date on which it is sent electronically to your e-mail or fax address; or
- (c)
-
48 hours (excluding Saturdays, Sundays and Bank Holidays) after it has been sent by post or document exchange.
- 31.3
-
Material kept electronically must be produced in the form required by the SRA's appointee.
- 31.4
-
The SRA's appointee is entitled to seek verification from clients and staff, and from the banks, building societies and other financial institutions used by you. You must, if necessary, provide written permission for the information to be given.
- 31.5
-
The SRA's appointee is not entitled to take original documents away but must be provided with photocopies on request.
- 31.6
-
You must be prepared to explain and justify any departures from the Guidelines for accounting procedures and systems published by the SRA (see rule 26).
- 31.7
-
Any report made by the SRA's appointee may, if appropriate, be sent to the Crown Prosecution Service or the Serious Fraud Office and/or used in proceedings before the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal. In the case of an REL or RFL, the report may also be sent to the competent authority in that lawyer's home state or states. In the case of a solicitor who is established in another state under the Establishment Directive, the report may also be sent to the competent authority in the host state. The report may also be sent to any of the accountancy bodies set out in rule 34.1(a) and/or taken into account by the SRA in relation to a possible disqualification of a reporting accountant under rule 34.3.
- 31.8
-
Without prejudice to rule 31.1 above, you must produce documents relating to any account kept by you at a bank or with a building society:
- (a)
-
in connection with your practice; or
- (b)
-
in connection with any trust of which you are or formerly were a trustee,
-
-
for inspection by a person appointed by the SRA for the purpose of preparing a report on compliance with the rules or on whether the account has been used for or in connection with a breach of any of the Principles or other SRA Handbook requirements made or issued by the SRA. Rules 31.2-31.7 above apply in relation to this paragraph in the same way as to rule 31.1.
-
AJA
-
means the Administration of Justice Act 1985;
- approved regulator
-
means any body listed as an approved regulator in paragraph 1 of Schedule 4 to the LSA, or designated as an approved regulator by an order under paragraph 17 of that Schedule;
- authorised body
-
means a body that has been authorised by the SRA to practise as a licensed body or a recognised body;
- authorised non-SRA firm
-
means a firm which is authorised to carry on legal activities by an approved regulator other than the SRA;
- body corporate
-
means a company, an LLP, or a partnership which is a legal person in its own right;
-
BSB
-
means the Bar Standards Board;
- client account (overseas practice)
-
means an account at a bank or similar institution, subject to supervision by a public authority, which is used only for the purpose of holding client money (overseas practice) and/or trust money, and the title or designation of which indicates that the funds in the account belong to the client or clients of a solicitor or REL or are held subject to a trust;
- client money (overseas practice)
-
means money received or held for or on behalf of a client or trust (but excluding money which is held or received by a multi-disciplinary practice - a licensed body providing a range of different services - in relation to those activities for which it is not regulated by the SRA);
- Establishment Directive
-
means the Establishment of Lawyers Directive 98/5/EC;
- Establishment Directive profession
-
means any profession listed in Article 1.2(a) of the Establishment Directive, including a solicitor, barrister or advocate of the UK;
- firm (overseas practice)
-
means any business through which a solicitor or REL carries on practice other than in-house practice;
- lawyer-controlled body
-
means an authorised body in which lawyers of England and Wales constitute the national group of lawyers with the largest (or equal largest) share of control of the body either as individual managers (overseas practice) or by their share in the control of bodies which are managers (overseas practice);
- lawyer of England and Wales
-
means a solicitor, or an individual who is authorised to carry on legal activities in England and Wales by an approved regulator other than the SRA, but excludes a member of an Establishment Directive profession registered with the BSB under the Establishment Directive;
- legal activity
-
has the meaning given in section 12 of the LSA and includes any reserved legal activity and any other activity which consists of the provision of legal advice or assistance, or representation in connection with the application of the law or resolution of legal disputes;
- licensed body
-
means a body licensed by the SRA under Part 5 of the LSA;
- licensing authority
-
means an approved regulator which is designated as a licensing authority under Part 1 of Schedule 10 to the LSA, and whose licensing rules have been approved for the purposes of the LSA;
-
LLP
-
means a limited liability partnership incorporated under the Limited Liability Partnerships Act 2000;
-
LSA
-
means the Legal Services Act 2007;
- manager (overseas practice)
-
means:
- (i)
-
a member of an LLP;
- (ii)
-
a director of a company;
- (iii)
-
a partner in a partnership; or
- (iv)
-
in relation to any other body, a member of its governing body;
- non-lawyer
-
means:
- (i)
-
an individual who is not a lawyer practising as such; or
- (i)
-
a body corporate or partnership which is not:
- (A)
-
an authorised body;
- (B)
-
an authorised non-SRA firm; or
- (C)
-
a business, carrying on the practice of lawyers from an office or offices outside England and Wales, in which a controlling majority of the owners and managers are lawyers;
- owner
-
in relation to a body, means a person with any ownership interest in the body;
- partner
-
means a person who is or is held out as a partner in a partnership;
- partnership
-
means an unincorporated body in which persons are or are held out as partners, and does not include a body incorporated as an LLP;
- practice from an office
-
includes practice carried on:
- (i)
-
from an office at which you are based; or
- (ii)
-
from an office of a firm (overseas practice) in which you are the sole practitioner or a manager (overseas practice), or in which you have an ownership interest, even if you are not based there,
-
-
and "practising from an office" should be construed accordingly;
- recognised body
-
means a body recognised by the SRA under section 9 of the AJA;
-
REL
-
means registered European lawyer, namely, an individual registered with the SRA under regulation 17 of the European Communities (Lawyer's Practice) Regulations 2000 (S.I. 2000 no. 1119);
-
REL-controlled body
-
means an authorised body in which RELs, or RELs together with lawyers of England and Wales and/or European lawyers registered with the BSB, constitute the national group of lawyers with the largest (or equal largest) share of control of the body, either as individual managers (overseas practice) or by their share in the control of bodies which are managers (overseas practice), and for this purpose RELs and European lawyers registered with the BSB belong to the national group of England and Wales;
- reserved legal activity
-
has the meaning given in section 12 of the LSA, and includes the exercise of a right of audience, the conduct of litigation, reserved instrument activities, probate activities, notarial activities and the administration of oaths, as defined in Schedule 2 to the LSA;
-
SA
-
means the Solicitors Act 1974;
- Society
-
means the Law Society, in accordance with section 87 of the SA;
- sole practitioner
-
means a solicitor or REL practising as a sole principal, and does not include a solicitor or REL practising in-house;
- solicitor
-
means a person who has been admitted as a solicitor of the Senior Courts of England and Wales and whose name is on the roll kept by the Society under section 6 of the SA;
-
SRA
-
means the Solicitors Regulation Authority, and reference to the SRA as an approved regulator or licensing authority means the SRA carrying out regulatory functions assigned to the Society as an approved regulator or licensing authority;
- trustee
-
includes a personal representative (i.e. an executor or an administrator), and "trust" includes the duties of a personal representative;
-
UK
-
means United Kingdom.