- The SRA shall establish and maintain a fund for making grants in respect of claims made in accordance with these rules.
- Solicitors, RELs, RFLs, recognised bodies and licensed bodies must make contributions to the Fund in such amounts and at such times as may be prescribed.
- Any unpaid contributions may be recovered as a debt due to the SRA.
- The SRA may at any time:
SRA Compensation Fund Rules (Archived)
No longer in effect
The SRA Compensation Fund Rules were superseded on 5 July 2021 by the SRA Compensation Fund Rules 2021. The SRA Compensation Fund Rules still apply in respect of applications before 5 July 2021.
Introduction
These rules govern the way that we operate the SRA Compensation Fund. This is a discretionary fund of last resort for making grants to people whose money has been stolen, or has not been accounted for, as a result of the acts or omissions of those regulated by us, and to relieve losses for which firms authorised by us should have had, but did not have, insurance.
It is funded by contributions from individuals and firms authorised by us.
We have provided guidance on the way we operate the fund.
Part 1: The Fund
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- The Fund is a discretionary fund of last resort and no person has a right to a grant enforceable at law.
- The primary objects of the Fund are:
- to replace money which a defaulting practitioner or a defaulting practitioner's employee or manager has misappropriated or otherwise failed to account for; and
- to relieve losses arising from the civil liability on the part of a defaulting practitioner or a defaulting practitioner's employee or manager who in accordance with the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules should have had, but did not have, in place a policy of qualifying insurance.
Part 2: Payment of grants from the Fund
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- For any grant to be made out of the Fund, an applicant must satisfy the SRA that the applicant is eligible in accordance with rule 4 and (save in respect of a grant made under rule 3.4) has suffered or is likely to suffer:
- loss in consequence of the dishonesty of a defaulting practitioner or the employee or manager or owner of a defaulting practitioner; or
- loss and hardship in consequence of a failure to account for money which has come into the hands of a defaulting practitioner or the employee or manager or owner of a defaulting practitioner, which may include the failure by a defaulting practitioner to complete work for which the defaulting practitioner was paid,
- For the purposes of rule 3.1(b):
- an individual whose dealings have been in a personal capacity with the defaulting practitioner and who has suffered or is likely to suffer loss due to a failure to account shall be deemed to have suffered hardship; and
- a body corporate, or an individual whose dealings have been in a business capacity with the defaulting practitioner and who has suffered or is likely to suffer loss due to a failure to account must provide evidence to satisfy the SRA that it, he or she (the body or individual) has suffered or is likely to suffer hardship.
- The SRA may make a grant as an interim measure.
- The SRA may make a grant to alleviate direct losses suffered as a result of the civil liability of a defaulting practitioner (other than a solicitor or REL who falls within rule 5.2(b)) or a defaulting practitioner's employee, manager or owner in circumstances where:
- the defaulting practitioner in accordance with the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules should have had, but did not have, in place a policy of qualifying insurance;
- the liability of the defaulting practitioner or the defaulting practitioner's employee or manager would have been covered by a policy of qualifying insurance; and
- the loss is not covered by the SIF.
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- A person is eligible under this rule to apply for a grant out of the Fund where the person:
- is an individual; or
- at the time the application is made, is a sole trader, partnership, body corporate, unincorporated association or mutual association with an annual turnover of less than £2 million,
- A person is eligible under this rule to apply for a grant in the circumstances set out in rule 3.1(a) if at the time the application is made the person falls within one or more of the following categories:
- A person is eligible under this rule to apply for a grant in the circumstances set out in rule 3.1(b) if the person:
- at the time the application is made falls within one or more of the following categories:
- has satisfied the SRA that its beneficiaries have suffered, or are likely to suffer, hardship if a grant is not made.
- A person is eligible under this rule to apply for a grant in the circumstances set out in rule 3.1(a) or (b) if the person:
- at the time the application is made falls within one or more of the following categories:
- has satisfied the SRA that its beneficiaries have suffered, or are likely to suffer, hardship if a grant is not made.
- The SRA may take into account such evidence as it sees fit when determining eligibility under rules 4.1 to 4.4 and may make a broad estimate of any relevant amount.
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- The SRA may only make a grant in respect of acts or omissions of a defaulting practitioner, or of a defaulting practitioner's employee, owner or manager as appropriate, which fall within rule 3.
- A defaulting practitioner means:
- a solicitor or an REL who at the date of the relevant act or omission was:
- practising in an authorised body; or
- practising in a non-commercial body;
- a solicitor or an REL who at the date of the relevant act or omission:
- was self-employed and practising in their own name, and not through a trading name or service company;
- did not employ anyone in connection with the services they provided; and
- was engaged directly by their clients with their fees payable directly to them;
- an RFL who is a manager or owner of an authorised body;
- a recognised body; or
- a licensed body,
- a solicitor or an REL who at the date of the relevant act or omission was:
- A grant may be made where, at the date of the relevant act or omission:
- a defaulting solicitor had no practising certificate in force;
- the registration of a defaulting REL or defaulting RFL had expired or been revoked;
- the authorisation of a defaulting recognised body or defaulting licensed body had been suspended or revoked;
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- The SRA may make a grant to a defaulting practitioner who or which has suffered or is likely to suffer loss by reason of their liability to any client in direct consequence of an act or omission of:
- in the case of a defaulting solicitor, defaulting REL or defaulting RFL, any of their employees or any fellow manager;
- in the case of a defaulting recognised body, any of its employees or managers or owners;
- in the case of a defaulting licensed body, any of its employees or managers or owners, provided that such act or omission arose in the course of performance of an activity regulated by the SRA in accordance with the terms of the body's licence,
- The SRA may make a grant under this rule by way of a loan upon such terms as the SRA specifies.
- In the case of a defaulting recognised body or a defaulting licensed body, the SRA may make such grant payable to one or more of the managers or owners of the defaulting recognised body or defaulting licensed body. If a loan is made to more than one person, they shall be jointly and severally liable for the repayment of the loan.