The SRA Handbook is no longer in effect. It was replaced by the SRA Standards and Regulations on 25 November 2019.
SRA Handbook
General
Back to version 21Version 6 of the Handbook was published on 01/01/2013. For more information, please click 'History' Above
Part 2: General
Rule 1: Application
- 1.1
-
Subject to Rule 1.2 below:
- (a)
-
the definitions set out at Rule 2 below shall apply to the corresponding term where this appears in italics in the SRA Handbook; and
- (b)
-
the interpretation provisions set out at Rule 3 below shall apply to the SRA Handbook.
- 1.2
-
This Rule shall not apply to the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules 2011, the SRA Indemnity (Enactment) Rules 2011 and the SRA Indemnity Rules 2011 until 1 October 2012.
Rule 2: Definitions
- academic stage of training
-
means that stage of the training of an entrant to the solicitors' profession which is completed by satisfying regulation 3 of the SRA Training Regulations Part 1 - Qualification Regulations, and "academic stage" should be construed accordingly.
- accounting period
-
has the meaning given in Rule 33 of the SRA Accounts Rules.
- actively participate in
-
means, in relation to a separate business, having any active involvement in the separate business, and includes:
- (i)
-
any direct control over the business, and any indirect control through another person such as a spouse; and
- (ii)
-
any active participation in the business or the provision of its services to customers.
- adequate training
-
under a training contract means:
- (i)
-
gaining at least three months' experience in each of at least three different areas of English law;
- (ii)
-
developing skills in both contentious and non-contentious areas; and
- (iii)
-
being given the opportunity to practise and/or observe the activities set out in the Practice Skills Standards.
- adjudicator
-
- (i)
-
in the SRA Cost of Investigations Regulations means a person not involved in the investigation or preparation of a case who is authorised by the SRA to make an SRA finding; and
- (ii)
-
in the SRA Disciplinary Procedure Rules means a person not involved in the investigation or preparation of a case who is authorised by the SRA to take disciplinary decisions.
- agreed fee
-
has the meaning given in Rule 17.5 of the SRA Accounts Rules.
- agreement provider
-
has the meaning given by article 63J(3) of the Regulated Activities Order read with paragraphs (6) and (7) of that article.
- agreement seller
-
has the meaning given by article 63J(3) of the Regulated Activities Order.
- AJA
-
means the Administration of Justice Act 1985.
- appellate body
-
means the body with the power, by virtue of an order under section 80(1) of the LSA, to hear and determine appeals against decisions made by the SRA acting as a licensing authority.
- applicant
-
means a person or persons applying for a grant out of the Compensation Fund under Rule 3 of the SRA Compensation Fund Rules.
- applicant body
-
means a licensable body or a legal services body which makes an application to the SRA for authorisation in accordance with the SRA Authorisation Rules.
- application for admission
-
means application to us for a certificate of satisfaction under section 3(1) of the SA and for admission as a solicitor under section 3(2) of the SA.
- appointed person
-
in the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules, means any person who is designated as a fee-earner in accordance with any arrangements made from time to time between the firm and the Legal Services Commission pursuant to the provisions of the Access to Justice Act 1999, regardless of whether the services performed for the firm by that person in accordance with Rule 4.1 of those Rules are performed pursuant to such arrangements or otherwise, and who is engaged by the firm under a contract for services in the course of the private practice of the firm.
- appointed representative
-
has the meaning given in FSMA.
- 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.
- ARP
-
means the Assigned Risks Pool, namely, the arrangements by which an eligible firm may obtain professional indemnity insurance against civil liability by means of an ARP policy on the terms set out in Part 3 of the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules.
-
means the premium calculated in accordance with Part 2 of Appendix 2 to the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules.
- ARP manager
-
means the manager of the ARP being any person from time to time appointed by the SRA to carry out all or any particular functions of the manager of the ARP or the SRA and any such person.
- ARP policy
-
means a contract of professional indemnity insurance issued by the ARP manager on behalf of qualifying insurers to an eligible firm in the ARP including where the context permits a policy provided to a firm in default.
-
means the premium calculated in accordance with Part 1 of Appendix 2 to the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules.
- ARP run-off policy
-
means a contract of professional indemnity insurance issued by the ARP manager on behalf of qualifying insurers to a run-off firm in the ARP.
-
means the premium calculated in accordance with Part 3 of Appendix 2 to the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules.
- arrangement
-
in relation to financial services, fee sharing and referrals in Chapters 1, 6 and 9 of the SRA Code of Conduct, means any express or tacit agreement between you and another person, whether contractually binding or not.
- assessment organisation
-
in the QLTSR means the organisation awarded the initial three year contract to provide the QLTS assessments, together with any other organisations subsequently authorised to provide the QLTS assessments after the initial three year period has expired.
- assets
-
includes money, documents, wills, deeds, investments and other property.
- associate
-
has the meaning given in paragraph 5 to Schedule 13 of the LSA, namely:
- (i)
-
"associate", in relation to a person ("A") and:
- (A)
-
a shareholding in a body ("S"); or
- (B)
-
an entitlement to exercise or control the exercise of voting power in a body ("V");
means a person listed in sub-paragraph (ii).
- (ii)
-
The persons are:
- (A)
-
the spouse or civil partner of A;
- (B)
-
a child or stepchild of A (if under 18);
- (C)
-
the trustee of any settlement under which A has a life interest in possession (in Scotland a life interest);
- (D)
-
an undertaking of which A is a director;
- (E)
-
an employee of A;
- (F)
-
a partner of A (except, where S or V is a partnership in which A is a partner, another partner in S or V);
- (G)
-
if A is an undertaking:
- (H)
-
if A has with any other person an agreement or arrangement with respect to the acquisition, holding or disposal of shares or other interests in S or V (whether or not they are interests within the meaning of section 72(3) of the LSA), that other person; or
- (I)
-
if A has with any other person an agreement or arrangement under which they undertake to act together in exercising their voting power in relation to S or V, that person.
- associated firm
-
means:
- authorisation
-
granted to a body under Rule 6 of the SRA Authorisation Rules means:
- (i)
-
recognition under section 9 of the AJA, if it is granted to a legal services body; and
- (ii)
-
a licence under Part 5 of the LSA, if it is granted to a licensable body;
and the term "certificate of authorisation" shall be construed accordingly.
- authorised activities
-
means:
- (i)
-
any reserved legal activity in respect of which the body is authorised;
- (ii)
-
any other legal activity;
- (iii)
-
any other activity in respect of which a licensed body is regulated pursuant to Part 5 of the LSA; and
- (iv)
-
any other activity a recognised body carries out in connection with its practice.
- authorised body
-
means a body that has been authorised by the SRA to practise as a licensed body or a recognised body.
- authorised CPD course providers
-
means those providers authorised by us to provide training that attracts CPD hours as a result of attendance.
- authorised distance learning providers
-
means those providers authorised by us to provide distance learning courses delivered by methods including correspondence, webinar, webcast, podcast, DVD, video and audio cassettes, television or radio broadcasts and computer based learning programmes.
- authorised insurer
-
means:
- (i)
-
a person who has permission under Part IV of FSMA to effect or carry out contracts of insurance of a relevant class;
- (ii)
-
a person who carries on an insurance market activity, within the meaning of section 316(3) of FSMA;
- (iii)
-
an EEA firm of the kind mentioned in paragraph 5(d) of Schedule 3 to FSMA, which has permission under paragraph 15 of that Schedule (as a result of qualifying for authorisation under paragraph 12 of that Schedule) to effect or carry out contracts of insurance of a relevant class; or
- (iv)
-
a person who does not fall within paragraph (i), (ii) or (iii) and who may lawfully effect or carry out contracts of insurance of a relevant class in a member state other than the UK,
where "relevant class" has the meaning set out in section 87(1B) of the SA provided that this definition must be read with section 22 of FSMA, any relevant order under that section, and Schedule 2 to FSMA.
- authorised non-SRA firm
-
means a firm which is authorised to carry on legal activities by an approved regulator other than the SRA.
- authorised person
-
- (i)
-
subject to sub-paragraph (ii) below, means a person who is authorised by the SRA or another approved regulator to carry on a legal activity and for the purposes of the SRA Authorisation Rules and the SRA Practice Framework Rules includes a solicitor, a sole practitioner, an REL, an EEL, an RFL, an authorised body, an authorised non-SRA firm and a European corporate practice and the terms "authorised individual" and "non-authorised person" shall be construed accordingly; and
- (ii)
-
in the SRA Financial Services (Scope) Rules, has the meaning given in section 31 of FSMA.
- authorised role holder
-
means COLP, COFA, owner or manager under Rules 8.5 and 8.6 of the SRA Authorisation Rules or COLP or COFA under Regulation 4.8 of the SRA Practising Regulations, and "authorised role" should be construed accordingly.
- bank
-
has the meaning given in section 87(1) of the SA.
- barrister
-
means a person called to the Bar by one of the Inns of Court and who has completed pupillage and is authorised by the General Council of the Bar to practise as a barrister.
- beneficiary
-
means a person with a beneficial entitlement to funds held by the Society on statutory trust.
- best list
-
means a list of potential beneficial entitlements to statutory trust monies which, in cases where it is not possible to create a reconciled list, is, in the view of the SRA, the most reliable that can be achieved with a reasonable and proportionate level of work taking into account the circumstances of the intervention and the nature of the evidence available.
- body corporate
-
means a company, an LLP or a partnership which is a legal person in its own right.
- broker funds arrangement
-
means an arrangement between a firm and a life office (or operator of a regulated collective investment scheme) under which the life office (or operator of the regulated collective investment scheme) agrees to establish a separate fund whose composition may be determined by instructions from the firm and in which it is possible for more than one client to invest.
- BSB
-
means the Bar Standards Board.
- building society
-
means a building society within the meaning of the Building Societies Act 1986.
- buyer
-
includes a prospective buyer.
- candidate
-
means a person who is assessed by the SRA for approval as an owner, manager or compliance officer under Part 4 of the SRA Authorisation Rules.
- CCBE
-
means the Council of the Bars and Law Societies of Europe.
- CCBE Code
-
means the CCBE's Code of Conduct for European lawyers.
- CCBE state
-
means any state whose legal profession is a full member, an associate member or an observer member of the CCBE.
- certificate of eligibility
-
means a certificate issued by us confirming eligibility to take assessments under QLTSR, or the QLTT under QLTR, or an authorisation under those regulations to apply for admission as a solicitor without taking any test or assessment.
- certificate of enrolment
-
should be construed as evidence of student enrolment within the SRA Training Regulations Part 1 - Qualifying Regulations.
- certificate of satisfaction
-
means a certificate or a certifying letter from us confirming that you have satisfied the SRA Training Regulations and are of the proper character and suitability to be admitted as a solicitor.
- certificate of training
-
means the certification by a training principal that a trainee has received training in accordance with the SRA Training Regulations Part 2 - Training Providers Regulations.
- cessation
-
means where the insured firm's practice ceases during or on expiry of the period of insurance and the insured firm has not obtained succeeding insurance in compliance with the MTC.
- cessation period
-
means, in respect of a firm and its policy of qualifying insurance, the period commencing on the expiry of the extended indemnity period in circumstances where the relevant firm has not ceased practice or obtained a policy of qualifying insurance for a period of insurance or, if prior to 30 September 2013, the remainder of the indemnity period (as the case may be) that immediately follows the period of insurance to which the relevant policy relates, and ending on the date which is the earlier to occur of:
- (i)
-
the date, if any, on which the firm obtains a policy of qualifying insurance incepting with effect on and from the commencement of the extended indemnity period;
- (ii)
-
the date which is 90 days after the commencement of that extended indemnity period; or
- (iii)
-
the date on which the insured firm's practice ceases.
- character and suitability
-
satisfies the requirement of section 3 of the SA in order that an individual shall be admitted as a solicitor.
- charity
-
has the meaning given in section 96(1) of the Charities Act 1993.
- circumstances
-
means an incident, occurrence, fact, matter, act or omission which may give rise to a claim in respect of civil liability.
- claim
-
means a demand for, or an assertion of a right to, civil compensation or civil damages or an intimation of an intention to seek such compensation or damages. For these purposes, an obligation on an insured firm and/or any insured to remedy a breach of the Solicitors' Accounts Rules 1998 (as amended from time to time), or any rules (including, without limitation, the SRA Accounts Rules) which replace the Solicitors' Accounts Rules 1998 in whole or in part, shall be treated as a claim, and the obligation to remedy such breach shall be treated as a civil liability for the purposes of clause 1 of the MTC, whether or not any person makes a demand for, or an assertion of a right to, civil compensation or civil damages or an intimation of an intention to seek such compensation or damages as a result of such breach, except where any such obligation may arise as a result of the insolvency of a bank (as defined in section 87 of the SA) or a building society which holds client money in a client account of the insured firm or the failure of such bank or building society generally to repay monies on demand.
- claim for redress
-
has the meaning given in section 158 of the LSA.
- claimant
-
means:
- (i)
-
in the SRA Statutory Trust Rules, a person making a claim to statutory trust monies; and
- (ii)
-
in the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules, a person or entity which has made or may make a claim including a claim for contribution or indemnity.
- client
-
means:
- (i)
-
the person for whom you act and, where the context permits, includes prospective and former clients;
- (ii)
-
in Parts 1-6 of the SRA Accounts Rules, the person for whom you act; and
- (iii)
-
in the SRA Financial Services (Scope) Rules, in relation to any regulated activities carried on by a firm for a trust or the estate of a deceased person (including a controlled trust), the trustees or personal representatives in their capacity as such and not any person who is a beneficiary under the trust or interested in the estate.
- client account
-
has the meaning given in Rule 13.2 of the SRA Accounts Rules.
- 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 conflict
-
for the purposes of Chapter 3 of the SRA Code of Conduct, means any situation where you owe separate duties to act in the best interests of two or more clients in relation to the same or related matters, and those duties conflict, or there is a significant risk that those duties may conflict.
- client money
-
has the meaning given in Rule 12 of the SRA Accounts Rules.
- 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).
- COFA
-
means a compliance officer for finance and administration in accordance with Rule 8.5 of the SRA Authorisation Rules, or Regulation 4.8 of the SRA Practising Regulations, and in relation to a licensable body is a reference to its HOFA.
- collective investment scheme
-
means (in accordance with section 235 of FSMA (Collective Investment Schemes)) any arrangements with respect to property of any description, including money, the purpose or effect of which is to enable persons taking part in the arrangements (whether by becoming owners of the property or any part of it or otherwise) to participate in or receive profits or income arising from the acquisition, holding, management or disposal of the property or sums paid out of such profits or income, which are not excluded by the Financial Services and Markets Act (Collective Investment Schemes) Order 2001 (SI 2001/1062).
- COLP
-
means compliance officer for legal practice in accordance with Rule 8.5 of the SRA Authorisation Rules or Regulation 4.8 of the SRA Practising Regulations, and in relation to a licensable body is a reference to its HOLP.
- Companies Acts
-
means the Companies Act 1985 and the Companies Act 2006.
- company
-
means a company incorporated in an Establishment Directive state and registered under the Companies Acts or a societas Europaea.
- competing for the same objective
-
for the purposes of Chapter 3 of the SRA Code of Conduct means any situation in which two or more clients are competing for an "objective" which, if attained by one client, will make that "objective" unattainable to the other client or clients, and "objective" means, for the purposes of Chapter 3, an asset, contract or business opportunity which two or more clients are seeking to acquire or recover through a liquidation (or some other form of insolvency process) or by means of an auction or tender process or a bid or offer which is not public.
- complaint
-
means an oral or written expression of dissatisfaction which alleges that the complainant has suffered (or may suffer) financial loss, distress, inconvenience or other detriment.
- compliance officer
- compulsory professional indemnity insurance
-
means the insurance you are required to have in place under the SIIR.
- conflict of interests
-
means any situation where:
- (i)
-
you owe separate duties to act in the best interests of two or more clients in relation to the same or related matters, and those duties conflict, or there is a significant risk that those duties may conflict (a "client conflict"); or
- (ii)
-
your duty to act in the best interests of any client in relation to a matter conflicts, or there is a significant risk that it may conflict, with your own interests in relation to that or a related matter (an "own interest conflict").
- connected person
-
means:
- (i)
-
any associated firm;
- (ii)
-
anyone with whom you are related by blood, marriage or adoption, or with whom you are living together in a civil or domestic partnership;
- (iii)
-
any owner or employee of your firm or of an associated firm, or anyone with whom that owner or employee is related by blood, marriage or adoption, or with whom they are living together in a civil or domestic partnership;
- (iv)
-
any company of which you are a director or employee, or any LLP of which you are a member or employee, or any company in which you, either alone or with any other connected person or persons, are entitled to exercise, or control the exercise of, one-third or more of the voting power at any general meeting;
- (v)
-
any company of which any of the persons mentioned in (i) and (ii) above is a director or employee, or any LLP of which any of them is a member or employee, or any company in which any of them, either alone or with any other connected person or persons, is entitled to exercise, or control the exercise of, one-third or more of the voting power at any general meeting; and
- (vi)
-
any other "associate" as defined in section 32 of the Estate Agents Act 1979.
- connected with
-
means in relation to a separate business for the purpose of Chapter 12 of the SRA Code of Conduct:
- (i)
-
having one or more partner(s), owner(s), director(s) or member(s) in common with the separate business;
- (ii)
-
being a subsidiary company of the same holding company as the separate business; or
- (iii)
-
being a subsidiary company of the separate business.
- contract of insurance
-
means (in accordance with article 3(1) of the Regulated Activities Order) any contract of insurance which is a long-term insurance contract or a general insurance contract.
- contractually based investment
-
has the meaning given by article 3(1) of the Regulated Activities Order but does not include an investment which falls within the definition of a packaged product.
- contributions
-
means contributions previously made to the fund in accordance with Part III of the Solicitors' Indemnity Rules 2007 (or any earlier corresponding provisions), and any additional sums paid in accordance with Rule 16 of the SRA Indemnity Rules.
- controller
-
has the meaning given in section 422 of FSMA.
- costs
-
means your fees and disbursements.
- Council
-
has the meaning given in section 87 of the SA.
- court
-
means any court, tribunal or inquiry of England and Wales, or a British court martial, or any court of another jurisdiction.
- Court of Protection deputy
-
- (i)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Accounts Rules 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; and
- (ii)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Authorisation Rules also includes equivalents in other Establishment Directive states.
- CPD
-
means continuing professional development, namely, the training requirement(s) set by us to ensure solicitors and RELs maintain competence.
- CPD training record
-
means a record of all CPD undertaken to comply with the SRA Training Regulations Part 3 - CPD Regulations.
- CPD year
-
means each year commencing 1 November to 31 October.
- CPE
-
means the Common Professional Examination, namely, a course, including assessments and examinations, approved by the JASB for the purposes of completing the academic stage of training for those who have not satisfactorily completed a QLD.
- criminal advocacy
-
means advocacy in all hearings arising out of a police or Serious Fraud Office investigation, prosecuted in the criminal courts by the Crown Prosecution Service or the Serious Fraud Office.
- date of notification
-
the date of any notification or notice given is deemed to be:
- (i)
-
the date on which the communication is sent electronically to the recipient's e-mail or fax address;
- (ii)
-
the date on which the communication is delivered to or left at the recipient's last notified practising address if the recipient is practising, or to the recipient's last notified contact address if the recipient is not practising; or
- (iii)
-
seven days after the communication has been sent by post or document exchange to the recipient's last notified practising address if the recipient is practising, or to the recipient's last notified contact address if the recipient is not practising.
- defaulting practitioner
-
means:
- (i)
-
a solicitor in respect of whose act or default, or in respect of whose employee's act or default, an application for a grant is made;
- (ii)
-
an REL in respect of whose act or default, or in respect of whose employee's act or default, an application for a grant is made;
- (iii)
-
a recognised body in respect of whose act or default, or in respect of whose manager's or employee's act or default, an application for a grant is made;
- (iv)
-
an RFL who is a manager of a partnership, LLP or company together with a solicitor, an REL or a recognised body, and in respect of whose act or default or in respect of whose employee's act or default, an application for a grant is made; or
- (v)
-
a licensed body in respect of whose act or default, or in respect of whose owner's, or manager's or employee's act or default, an application for a grant is made;
and the expressions "defaulting solicitor", "defaulting REL", "defaulting recognised body", "defaulting RFL" and "defaulting licensed body" shall be construed accordingly.
- decision period
-
is the period specified in Rule 5 of the SRA Authorisation Rules.
- defence costs
-
means legal costs and disbursements and investigative and related expenses reasonably and necessarily incurred with the consent of the insurer in:
- (i)
-
defending any proceedings relating to a claim; or
- (ii)
-
conducting any proceedings for indemnity, contribution or recovery relating to a claim; or
- (iii)
-
investigating, reducing, avoiding or compromising any actual or potential claim; or
- (iv)
-
acting for any insured in connection with any investigation, inquiry or disciplinary proceeding (save in respect of any disciplinary proceeding under the authority of the Society (including, without limitation, the SRA and the Tribunal));
and does not include any internal or overhead expenses of the insured firm or the insurer or the cost of any insured's time.
- difference in conditions policy
-
means a contract of professional indemnity insurance, made between one or more qualifying insurers and a firm, which provides cover including the MTC as modified in accordance with paragraph 2 of Appendix 3 to the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules.
- Diploma in Law
-
means a graduate or postgraduate diploma in law or second degree awarded by a body authorised by the JASB for the purposes of completing the academic stage of training for those who have not satisfactorily completed a QLD.
- 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).
- disciplinary decision
-
means a decision, following an SRA finding, to exercise one or more of the powers provided by:
- (i)
-
section 44D(2) and (3) of the SA;
- (ii)
-
paragraph 14B(2) and (3) of Schedule 2 to the AJA; or
- (iii)
-
section 95 or section 99 of the LSA;
or otherwise to give a regulated person a written rebuke or to publish details of a written rebuke or a direction to pay a penalty in accordance with the SRA Disciplinary Procedure Rules.
- discipline investigation
-
means:
- (i)
-
subject to sub-paragraph (ii), an investigation by the SRA to determine whether a person should be subject to an SRA finding, a disciplinary decision or an application to the Tribunal under Rule 10 of the SRA Disciplinary Procedure Rules; and
- (ii)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Cost of Investigations Regulations, an investigation by the SRA to determine whether a regulated person should be subject to an SRA finding or an application to the Tribunal.
- discrimination
-
has the meaning set out in the Equality Act 2010, namely if, because of a protected characteristic as set out in that Act, person A treats person B less favourably than A treats or would treat others.
- disqualified
-
refers to a person who has been disqualified under section 99 of the LSA by the SRA or by any other approved regulator.
- document
-
in Chapter 10 of the SRA Code of Conduct, includes documents, whether written or electronic, relating to the firm's client accounts and office accounts.
- EEA
-
means European Economic Area.
- EEL
-
means exempt European lawyer, namely, a member of an Establishment Directive profession:
- (i)
-
registered with the BSB; or
- (ii)
-
based entirely at an office or offices outside England and Wales,
who is not a lawyer of England and Wales (whether entitled to practise as such or not).
- eligible firm
-
in the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules means any firm which is eligible to be in the ARP, being any firm other than:
- (i)
-
a firm that has been in the ARP or, in respect of a licensed body, any similar arrangement for the provision of professional indemnity insurance for six months or more in the four indemnity periods immediately prior to the date from which cover is sought, without the prior written approval of the Council unless:
- (A)
-
subject to sub-paragraph (B), immediately prior to 1 October 2011 the firm was in the ARP and had been in the ARP, without the prior written approval of the Council, for less than twelve months in the four indemnity periods immediately prior to that date, in which case the firm is eligible to be in the ARP only for any unexpired part of the twelve month period; or
- (B)
-
immediately prior to 1 October 2010 the firm was in the ARP and had been in the ARP, without the prior written approval of the Council, for less than twenty four months (or twenty five months in the case of a firm which was in the ARP for the whole of the indemnity period from 1 September 2003 to 30 September 2004) in the four indemnity periods immediately prior to that date, in which case the firm is eligible to be in the ARP only for any unexpired part of the twenty four or twenty five month period (as the case may be);
- (ii)
-
a firm determined by the Council not to be an eligible firm by reason of its being treated as one single firm with one or more other firms already in the ARP for the purposes of Rule 12.6 or 12.7; or
- (iii)
-
subject to Rule 12.4, a firm that at the end of any policy period to which those Rules apply is in policy default; or
- (iv)
-
a firm which, at the time it applies to enter the ARP already has in place qualifying insurance outside the ARP for the indemnity period in which that firm requests cover through the ARP to commence; or
- (v)
-
a firm that has never had in place qualifying insurance except through the ARP, unless:
- (A)
-
subject to sub-paragraph (B), immediately prior to 1 October 2011 the firm was in the ARP and had been in the ARP, without the prior written approval of the Council, for less than twelve months in the four indemnity periods immediately prior to that date; or
- (B)
-
immediately prior to 1 October 2010 the firm was in the ARP and had been in the ARP, without the prior written approval of the Council, for less than twenty four months (or twenty five months in the case of a firm which was in the ARP for the whole of the indemnity period from 1 September 2003 to 30 September 2004) in the four indemnity periods immediately prior to that date,
in which case the firm is eligible to be in the ARP only for any unexpired part of the twelve, twenty four or twenty five month period (as the case may be).
- eligible former principal
-
means a principal of a previous practice where:
- (i)
-
that previous practice ceased on or before 31 August 2000; and
- (ii)
-
a relevant claim is made in respect of any matter which would have given rise to an entitlement of the principal to indemnity out of the fund under the Solicitors' Indemnity Rules 1999 had the claim been notified to Solicitors Indemnity Fund Limited on 31 August 2000; and
- (iii)
-
the principal has not at any time been a "principal" of the relevant successor practice ("principal" having the meaning applicable to the SIIR); and
- (iv)
-
at the time that the relevant claim is made the principal is not a "principal" in "private practice" ("principal" and "private practice" having the meanings applicable to the SIIR).
- employee
-
means an individual who is:
- (i)
-
engaged under a contract of service by a firm or its wholly owned service company;
- (ii)
-
engaged under a contract for services, made between a firm or organisation and:
- (A)
-
that individual;
- (B)
-
an employment agency; or
- (C)
-
a company which is not held out to the public as providing legal services and is wholly owned and directed by that individual; or
- (iii)
-
a solicitor, REL or RFL engaged under a contract of service or a contract for services by an authorised non-SRA firm;
- (iv)
-
a solicitor, REL or RFL engaged under a contract of service or a contract for services by a person, business or organisation,
under which the firm, authorised non-SRA firm, person, business, or organisation has exclusive control over the individual's time for all or part of the individual's working week; or in relation to which the firm or organisation has designated the individual as a fee earner in accordance with arrangements between the firm or organisation and the Legal Services Commission pursuant to the Access to Justice Act 1999 save that:
- (A)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Financial Services (Scope) Rules, means an individual who is employed in connection with the firm's regulated activities under a contract of service or under a contract for services such that he or she is held out as an employee or consultant of the firm; and
- (B)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules, means any person other than a principal:
- (I)
-
employed or otherwise engaged in the insured firm's practice (including under a contract for services) including, without limitation, as a solicitor, lawyer, trainee solicitor or trainee lawyer, consultant, associate, locum tenens, agent, appointed person, office or clerical staff member or otherwise;
- (II)
-
seconded to work in the insured firm's practice; or
- (III)
-
seconded by the insured firm to work elsewhere;
but does not include any person who is engaged by the insured firm under a contract for services in respect of any work where that person is required, whether under the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules or under the rules of any other professional body, to take out or to be insured under separate professional indemnity insurance in respect of that work.
- employer
-
means a:
- (i)
-
firm which engages an individual under a contract of service either on its own behalf or through its wholly-owned service company;
- (ii)
-
firm or organisation which has engaged an individual under a contract for services made between the firm or organisation and:
- (A)
-
that individual;
- (B)
-
an employment agency; or
- (C)
-
a company which is not held out to the public as providing legal services and is wholly owned and directed by that individual; or
- (iii)
-
an authorised non-SRA firm which engages a solicitor, REL or RFL under a contract of service or a contract for services;
- (iv)
-
a person, business or organisation which engages a solicitor, REL or RFL under a contract of service or a contract for services,
under which the firm, authorised non-SRA firm, person, business or organisation has exclusive control over the individual's time for all or part of the individual's working week; or in relation to which the firm or organisation has designated the individual as a fee earner in accordance with arrangements between the firm or organisation and the Legal Services Commission pursuant to the Access to Justice Act 1999.
- entitled to practise
-
for the purposes of the QLTSR means having the right to practise without restrictions or conditions as a qualified lawyer of the recognised jurisdiction.
- 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.
- European corporate practice
-
means a lawyers' practice which is a body incorporated in an Establishment Directive state, or a partnership with separate legal identity formed under the law of an Establishment Directive state and which is regulated as a lawyers' practice:
- (i)
-
which has an office in an Establishment Directive state but does not have an office in England and Wales;
- (ii)
-
whose ultimate beneficial owners include at least one individual who is not a lawyer of England and Wales but is, and is entitled to practise as, a lawyer of an Establishment Directive profession;
- (iii)
-
whose managers include at least one such individual, or at least one body corporate whose managers include at least one such individual; and
- (iv)
-
of which lawyers are entitled to exercise, or control the exercise of, more than 90% of the voting rights.
- European cross-border practice
-
has the meaning set out in Rule 2.1 of the SRA European Cross-border Practice Rules.
- excess
-
means the first amount of a claim which is not covered by the insurance.
- execution-only
-
means a transaction which is effected by a firm for a client where the firm assumes on reasonable grounds that the client is not relying on the firm as to the merits or suitability of that transaction.
- exempt person
-
in the SRA Financial Services (Scope) Rules means a person who is exempt from the general prohibition as a result of an exemption order made under section 38(1) or as a result of section 39(1) or 285(2) or (3) of FSMA and who, in engaging in the activity in question, is acting in the course of business in respect of which that person is exempt.
- Exempting Law Degree
- existing instructions
-
means instructions to carry out legal activities received by a firm from a client, which the firm has accepted, on terms that have been agreed by the client, prior to the firm becoming subject to cover under the cessation period.
- expired run-off claim
-
means any claim made against the fund for indemnity under the SRA Indemnity Rules in respect of which no preceding qualifying insurance remains in force to cover such claim, by reason only of:
- (i)
-
the run-off cover provided or required to be provided under the policy having been activated; and
- (ii)
-
the sixth anniversary of the date on which cover under such qualifying insurance would have ended but for the activation of such run-off cover having passed; or
- (iii)
-
(in the case of a firm in default or a run-off firm) the period of run-off cover provided or required to be provided under arrangements made to cover such claim through the ARP having expired.
- expired run-off cover
-
means either:
- (i)
-
(unless (ii) below applies) the terms of the ARP policy in force at the time immediately prior to the date on which run-off cover was triggered under the preceding qualifying insurance, excluding clause 5 (Run-off cover) of the MTC, as if it were a contract between Solicitors Indemnity Fund Limited and the firm or person making an expired run-off claim; or
- (ii)
-
where they are provided to Solicitors Indemnity Fund Limited prior to payment of the claim, the terms of the preceding qualifying insurance, provided that:
- (A)
-
references in the preceding qualifying insurance to the qualifying insurer that issued such insurance shall be read as references to Solicitors Indemnity Fund Limited;
- (B)
-
any obligation owed by any insured under the preceding qualifying insurance to the qualifying insurer which issued such insurance shall be deemed to be owed to Solicitors Indemnity Fund Limited in place of such qualifying insurer, unless and to the extent that Solicitors Indemnity Fund Limited in its absolute discretion otherwise agrees;
- (C)
-
the obligations of the fund and/or any insured in respect of an expired run-off claim shall neither exceed nor be less than the requirements of the MTC which, in accordance with the applicable SIIR, such preceding qualifying insurance included or was required to include.
Solicitors Indemnity Fund Limited shall be under no obligation to take any steps to obtain the terms of any such preceding qualifying insurance, which for these purposes includes the terms on which it was written in respect of the insured firm or person in question, and not merely a standard policy wording.
- extended indemnity period
-
means the period commencing at the end of the last indemnity period to which the policy relates and ending on the date which is the earlier to occur of:
- (i)
-
the date which is 30 days after the end of the last indemnity period to which the policy relates;
- (ii)
-
the date on which a policy of qualifying insurance in respect of the relevant firm incepts that is applicable to the indemnity period or the remainder of the indemnity period (as the case may be) which immediately follows the last indemnity period to which the relevant policy relates; or
- (iii)
-
the date on which the insured firm's practice ceases.
- fees
-
means your own charges or profit costs (including any VAT element).
-
means another person or business who or which shares your fees.
- FILEX
-
means a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Legal Executives and a Chartered Legal Executive.
- financial benefit
-
includes any commission, discount or rebate, but does not include your fees or interest earned on any client account.
- financial institution
-
means any undertaking or unincorporated association which carries on a business of lending money (which may include mortgage lending) or otherwise providing or issuing credit including, without limitation, any bank or building society.
- firm
-
means:
- (i)
-
save as provided in paragraphs (ii) and (iii) below, 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); and for the purposes of the SRA Code of Conduct and the SRA Accounts Rules can also include in-house practice;
- (ii)
-
in the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules:
- (A)
-
any recognised body (as constituted from time to time); or
- (B)
-
any solicitor or REL who is a sole practitioner, unless that sole practitioner is a non-SRA firm; or
- (C)
-
any partnership (as constituted from time to time) which is eligible to become a recognised body and which meets the requirements applicable to recognised bodies set out in the SRA Practice Framework Rules and the SRA Authorisation Rules, unless that partnership is a non-SRA firm; or
- (D)
-
any licensed body in respect of its regulated activities;
whether before or during any relevant indemnity period;
- (iii)
-
in the SRA European Cross-border Practice Rules, means any business through which a solicitor or REL carries on practice other than in-house practice.
- firm (overseas practice)
-
means any business through which a solicitor or REL carries on practice other than in-house practice.
- firm in default
-
means a firm that has failed to obtain qualifying insurance outside the ARP and which:
- (i)
-
in the case of an eligible firm, has failed to apply in accordance with the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules to be admitted into the ARP before either the start of any indemnity period to which the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules apply or the start of its practice, whichever is the later; or
- (ii)
-
in the case of a firm which is not an eligible firm, is a firm which is carrying on or continuing to carry on a practice without qualifying insurance outside the ARP; or
- (iii)
-
in the case of a run-off firm, is a run-off firm which has failed to make an application in the manner prescribed by the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules to be issued with an ARP run-off policy; or
- (iv)
-
is a firm which is a "firm in default" by virtue of Rule 10.4 of the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules;
or a firm which, having previously obtained qualifying insurance, has failed to obtain alternative qualifying insurance when required to do so in accordance with Rule 6 of the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules.
- foreign lawyer
-
means an individual who is not a solicitor or barrister of England and Wales, but who is a member, and entitled to practise as such, of a legal profession regulated within a jurisdiction outside England and Wales.
- foundations of legal knowledge
-
means those foundations of law the study of which is prescribed by us and the BSB through the JASB for the purpose of completing the academic stage of training by undertaking a QLD or CPE and passing the assessments and examinations set during that course.
- FSA
-
means the Financial Services Authority.
- FSA Register
-
means the record maintained by the FSA as required by section 347 of FSMA and including those persons who carry on, or are proposing to carry on, insurance mediation activities.
- FSMA
-
means the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000.
- full route to qualification
-
means that the applicant has not completed a shortened or fast-track route to qualification, which would be evidenced if non-domestic lawyers are not assessed on all the same outcomes/subjects/practices in the law of that jurisdiction as domestic candidates, prior to qualification.
- fund
-
means the fund maintained in accordance with the SRA Indemnity Rules.
- funeral plan contract
-
has the meaning given in article 59 of the Regulated Activities Order.
- general client account
-
has the meaning given in Rule 13.5 (b) of the SRA Accounts Rules.
- general insurance contract
-
means any contract of insurance within Part I of Schedule 1 to the Regulated Activities Order.
- general prohibition
-
has the meaning given in section 19(2) of FSMA.
- higher courts
-
means the Crown Court, High Court, Court of Appeal and Supreme Court in England and Wales.
- higher courts advocacy qualification
-
means, subject to regulation 6 of the SRA Higher Rights of Audience Regulations, one of the qualifications referred to in regulation 3 of those regulations to exercise extended rights of audience in the higher courts.
- HOFA
-
means a Head of Finance and Administration within the meaning of paragraph 13(2) of Schedule 11 to the LSA.
- holding company
-
has the meaning given in the Companies Act 2006.
- HOLP
-
means a Head of Legal Practice within the meaning of paragraph 11(2) of Schedule 11 to the LSA.
- home purchaser
-
has the meaning given by article 63F(3) of the Regulated Activities Order.
- immigration work
-
means the provision of immigration advice and immigration services, as defined in section 82 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999.
- indemnity period
-
means:
- (i)
-
in the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules, the period of one year starting on 1 September 2000, 2001 or 2002, the period of 13 calendar months starting on 1 September 2003, or the period of one year starting on 1 October in any subsequent calendar year; and
- (ii)
-
in the SRA Indemnity Rules, the period of one year commencing on 1 September in any calendar year from 1987 to 2002 inclusive, the period of 13 calendar months commencing on 1 September 2003, and the period of one year commencing on 1 October in any subsequent calendar year.
- independent financial adviser
-
means an adviser who provides unbiased and unrestricted advice based on a comprehensive and fair analysis of the relevant market and discloses this in writing to the client.
- individual pension contract
-
means a pension policy or pension contract under which contributions are paid to:
- (i)
-
a personal pension scheme approved under section 630 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988, whose sole purpose is the provision of annuities or lump sums under arrangements made by individuals in accordance with the scheme; or
- (ii)
-
a retirement benefits scheme approved under section 591(2)(g) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988, for the provision of relevant benefits by means of an annuity contract made with an insurance company of the employee's choice.
- in-house practice
-
means practice as a solicitor, REL or RFL (as appropriate) in accordance with Rules 1.1(c)(ii), 1.1(d)(ii), 1.1(e), 1.2(f), 2.1(c)(ii), 2.1(d)(ii), 2.1(e), 2.2(f), 3.1(b)(ii) or 3.1(c)(ii) of the SRA Practice Framework Rules and "in-house" shall be construed accordingly.
- Insolvency Code of Ethics
-
means the Code of Ethics produced by the Joint Insolvency Committee and adopted by the SRA.
- insolvency event
-
means in relation to a qualifying insurer:
- (i)
-
the appointment of a provisional liquidator, administrator, receiver or an administrative receiver; or
- (ii)
-
the approval of a voluntary arrangement under Part I of the Insolvency Act 1986 or the making of any other form of arrangement, composition or compounding with its creditors generally; or
- (iii)
-
the passing of a resolution for voluntary winding up where the winding up is or becomes a creditors' voluntary winding up under Part IV of the Insolvency Act 1986; or
- (iv)
-
the making of a winding up order by the court; or
- (v)
-
the making of an order by the court reducing the value of one or more of the qualifying insurer's contracts under section 377 of FSMA; or
- (vi)
-
the occurrence of any event analogous to any of the foregoing insolvency events in any jurisdiction outside England and Wales.
- insolvency practice
-
means accepting an appointment or acting as an appointment holder as an insolvency practitioner within the terms of the Insolvency Act 1986 and other related legislation.
- insurance mediation activity
-
means any of the following activities specified in the Regulated Activities Order which is carried on in relation to a contract of insurance or rights to or interests in a life policy:
- (i)
-
dealing in investments as agent;
- (ii)
-
arranging (bringing about) deals in investments;
- (iii)
-
making arrangements with a view to transactions in investments;
- (iv)
-
assisting in the administration and performance of a contract of insurance;
- (v)
-
advising on investments;
- (vi)
-
agreeing to carry on a regulated activity in (i) to (v) above.
- insurance mediation officer
-
means the individual within the management structure of the firm who is responsible for an insurance mediation activity.
- insurance undertaking
-
means an undertaking, whether or not an insurer, which carries on insurance business.
- insured
-
in the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules means each person and entity named or described as a person to whom the insurance extends and includes, without limitation, those referred to in clause 1.3 in the MTC and, in relation to prior practices and successor practices respectively, those referred to in clauses 1.5 and 1.7 of the MTC.
- insured firm
-
means the firm (as defined for the purposes of the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules) which contracted with the insurer to provide the insurance.
- insured firm's practice
-
means:
- (i)
-
the legal practice carried on by the insured firm as at the commencement of the period of insurance; and
- (ii)
-
the continuous legal practice preceding and succeeding the practice referred to in paragraph (i) (irrespective of changes in ownership of the practice or in the composition of any partnership which owns or owned the practice).
- insurer
-
means:
- (i)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Financial Services (Conduct of Business) Rules 2001 a firm with permission to effect or carry out contracts of insurance (other than a bank); and
- (ii)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules the underwriter(s) of the insurance.
- integrated course
-
means a Diploma in Law/CPE incorporating an LPC, approved by us.
- interest
-
includes a sum in lieu of interest.
- interest holder
-
means a person who has an interest or an indirect interest, or holds a material interest, in a body (and "indirect interest" and "interest" have the same meaning as in the LSA), and references to "holds an interest" shall be construed accordingly.
- international lawyers
-
means lawyers who are not basing their application on a professional qualification as a qualified lawyer gained within the UK or within the EEA or Switzerland.
- intervened practitioner
-
means the solicitor, recognised body, licensed body, REL or RFL whose practice or practices are the subject of an intervention.
- intervention
-
means the exercise of the powers specified in section 35 of and Schedule 1 to the SA, or section 9 of and paragraphs 32 to 35 of Schedule 2 to the AJA, or section 89 of and paragraph 5 of Schedule 14 to the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990, or section 102 of and Schedule 14 to the LSA.
- introducer
-
means any person, business or organisation who or that introduces or refers clients to your business, or recommends your business to clients or otherwise puts you and clients in touch with each other.
- investment
-
means any of the investments specified in Part III of the Regulated Activities Order.
- investment trust
-
means a closed-ended company which is listed in the UK or another member state and:
- (i)
-
is approved by HM Revenue and Customs under section 842 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 (or, in the case of a newly formed company, has declared its intention to conduct its affairs so as to obtain approval); or
- (ii)
-
is resident in another member state and would qualify for approval if resident and listed in the UK.
- investment trust savings scheme
-
means a dedicated service for investment in the securities of one or more investment trusts within a particular marketing group (and references to an "investment trust savings scheme" include references to securities to be acquired through that scheme).
- ISA
-
means an Individual Savings Account, namely, an account which is a scheme of investment satisfying the conditions prescribed in the Individual Savings Account Regulations 1998 (S.I. 1998/1870).
- JASB
-
means the Joint Academic Stage Board, namely, the joint committee of the BSB and the SRA responsible for the setting and implementation of policies in respect of the academic stage of training, and validation and review of QLDs and CPEs.
- Joint Insolvency Committee
-
means the Committee formed by the Insolvency Service, the recognised professional bodies under the Insolvency Act 1986 and other related legislation, and appointed lay representatives.
- Justices' Clerks Assistant
-
has the meaning given in the Assistants to Justices' Clerks Regulations 2006.
- knowledge
-
of any matter, includes any matter of which you may reasonably be expected to have knowledge.
- 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.
- lawyer-controlled body
-
means:
- (i)
-
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 or by their share in the control of bodies which are managers;
- (ii)
-
for the purposes of Part 7 (Overseas practice) of the SRA Accounts Rules the definition at sub-paragraph (i) above applies save that the second reference to "lawyers" is to be given its natural meaning and the references to managers are to be read as managers (overseas practice).
- lawyer of England and Wales
-
means:
- (i)
-
a solicitor; or
- (ii)
-
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.
- lead insurer
-
means the insurer named as such in the contract of insurance, or, if no lead insurer is named as such, the first-named insurer on the relevant certificate of insurance.
- 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.
- Legal Ombudsman
-
means the scheme administered by the Office for Legal Complaints under Part 6 of the LSA.
- legally qualified body
-
means any of the following:
- (i)
- (ii)
-
a licensed body of which lawyers are entitled to exercise, or control the exercise of, 90% or more of the voting rights of that licensed body;
- (iii)
-
an authorised non-SRA firm of which lawyers are entitled to exercise, or control the exercise of, 90% or more of the voting rights of that authorised non-SRA firm; or
- (iv)
and for the purposes of section 9A(6)(h) and (6C) of the AJA means a body which would meet the requirement in Rule 13.2 of the SRA Practice Framework Rules.
- legal services body
-
means a body which meets the criteria in Rule 13 (Eligibility criteria and fundamental requirements for recognised bodies) of the SRA Practice Framework Rules.
- 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
- 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.
- life office
-
means a person with permission to effect or carry out long-term insurance contracts.
- life policy
-
means a long-term insurance contract other than a pure protection contract or a reinsurance contract, but including a pension policy.
- 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.
- long-term care insurance contract
-
has the meaning given in Part II of Schedule 1 to the Regulated Activities Order.
- long-term insurance contract
-
has the meaning given in Part II of Schedule 1 to the Regulated Activities Order.
- LPC
-
means a Legal Practice Course, namely, a course, the satisfactory completion of which is recognised by us as satisfying, in part, the vocational stage of training.
- LPC Outcomes
-
means our minimum educational standards that LPC students must meet in order to satisfactorily complete the course.
- LSA
-
means the Legal Services Act 2007.
- manager
-
means:
- 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.
- market making
-
means where a firm holds itself out as willing, as principal, to buy, sell or subscribe for investments of the kind to which the transaction relates at prices determined by the firm generally and continuously rather than in respect of each particular transaction.
- master policy
-
means a policy referred to in Rule 5 of the SRA Indemnity Rules.
- master policy insurer
-
means an insurer under a master policy.
- material interest
-
has the meaning given to it in Schedule 13 to the LSA; and a person holds a "material interest" in a body ("B"), if that person:
- (i)
-
holds at least 10% of the shares in B;
- (ii)
-
is able to exercise significant influence over the management of B by virtue of the person's shareholding in B;
- (iii)
-
holds at least 10% of the shares in a parent undertaking ("P") of B;
- (iv)
-
is able to exercise significant influence over the management of P by virtue of the person's shareholding in P;
- (v)
-
is entitled to exercise, or control the exercise of, voting power in B which, if it consists of voting rights, constitutes at least 10% of the voting rights in B;
- (vi)
-
is able to exercise significant influence over the management of B by virtue of the person's entitlement to exercise, or control the exercise of, voting rights in B;
- (vii)
-
is entitled to exercise, or control the exercise of, voting power in P which, if it consists of voting rights, constitutes at least 10% of the voting rights in P; or
- (viii)
-
is able to exercise significant influence over the management of P by virtue of the person's entitlement to exercise, or control the exercise of, voting rights in P;
and for the purpose of this definition, "person" means:
- (i)
-
the person,
- (ii)
-
any of the person's associates, or
- (iii)
-
the person and any of the person's associates taken together;
and "parent undertaking" and "voting power" are to be construed in accordance with paragraphs 3 and 5 of Schedule 13 to the LSA.
- mature student
-
means someone who intends to undertake the Diploma in Law or CPE and who has:
- (i)
-
considerable experience or shown exceptional ability in an academic, professional, business or administrative field; and
- (ii)
-
attained such standard of general education as we may consider sufficient.
- MDP
-
means a licensed body which is a multi-disciplinary practice providing a range of different services, only some of which are regulated by the SRA.
- member
-
- (i)
-
means:
- (ii)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Indemnity Rules, means a member of a practice, being:
- (A)
-
any principal (including any principal) therein;
- (B)
-
any director or officer thereof, in the case of a recognised body or a licensed body which is a company;
- (C)
-
any member thereof in the case of a recognised body or a licensed body which is an LLP;
- (D)
-
any recognised body or a licensed body which is a partner or held out to be a partner therein and any officer of such recognised body or a licensed body which is a company, or any member of such recognised body or a licensed body which is an LLP;
- (E)
-
any person employed in connection therewith (including any trainee solicitor);
- (F)
-
any solicitor or REL who is a consultant to or associate in the practice;
- (G)
-
any foreign lawyer who is not an REL and who is a consultant or associate in the practice; and
- (H)
-
any solicitor or foreign lawyer who is working in the practice as an agent or locum tenens, whether he or she is so working under a contract of service or contract for services;
and includes the estate and/or personal representative(s) of any such persons.
- members of the public
-
for the purposes of Chapter 8 of the SRA Code of Conduct, does not include:
- MILEX
-
means a Member of the Chartered Institute of Legal Executives.
- mixed payment
-
has the meaning given in Rule 18.1 of the SRA Accounts Rules.
- modular training contract
-
means a training contract in which employment and training is provided by a training contract consortium, each member of which has a defined contribution to training process and content.
- MTC
-
means the minimum terms and conditions with which a policy of qualifying insurance is required by the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules to comply, a copy of which is annexed as Appendix 1 to those Rules.
- non-lawyer
-
means:
- (i)
-
an individual who is not a lawyer practising as such; or
- (ii)
-
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;
save in Part 7 (Overseas practice) of the SRA Accounts Rules where the term "lawyer" is to be given its natural meaning.
- non-mainstream regulated activity
-
means a regulated activity of a firm regulated by the FSA in relation to which the conditions in the Professional Firms Sourcebook (5.2.1R) are satisfied.
- non-registered European lawyer
-
means:
- (i)
-
in the SRA Indemnity Rules, a member of a legal profession which is covered by the Establishment Directive, but who is not:
- (ii)
-
in the SRA Financial Services (Scope) Rules, a member of a profession covered by the Establishment Directive who is based entirely at an office or offices outside England and Wales and who is not a solicitor, REL or RFL.
- non-solicitor employer
-
means any employer other than a recognised body, recognised sole practitioner, licensed body or authorised non-SRA firm.
- non-SRA firm
-
means a sole practitioner, partnership, LLP or company which is not authorised to practise by the SRA, and which is either:
- (i)
-
authorised or capable of being authorised to practise by another approved regulator; or
- (ii)
-
not capable of being authorised to practise by any approved regulator.
- occupational pension scheme
-
means any scheme or arrangement which is comprised in one or more documents or agreements and which has, or is capable of having, effect in relation to one or more descriptions or categories of employment so as to provide benefits, in the form of pensions or otherwise, payable on termination of service, or on death or retirement, to or in respect of earners with qualifying service in an employment of any such description or category.
- 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 of the SRA Accounts Rules.
- opt-out
-
means a transaction resulting from a decision by an individual to opt-out of or decline to join a final salary or money-purchase occupational pension scheme of which he or she is a current member, or which he or she is, or at the end of a waiting period will become, eligible to join, in favour of an individual pension contract or contracts.
- 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.
- overseas practice
-
means:
- (i)
-
subject to sub-paragraph (ii), practice from an office outside England and Wales, except in the case of an REL, where it means practice from an office in Scotland or Northern Ireland; and
- (ii)
-
in the SRA Indemnity Rules means a practice carried on wholly from an overseas office or offices, including a practice deemed to be a separate practice by virtue of paragraph (ii) of the definition of separate practice.
- own interest conflict
-
for the purpose of Chapter 3 of the SRA Code of Conduct, means any situation where your duty to act in the best interests of any client in relation to a matter conflicts, or there is a significant risk that it may conflict, with your own interests in relation to that or a related matter.
- owner
-
means, in relation to a body, a person with any interest in the body, save that:
- (i)
-
in the SRA Authorisation Rules, the SRA Practice Framework Rules and the SRA Practising Regulations owner means any person who holds a material interest in an authorised body, and in the case of a partnership, any partner regardless of whether they hold a material interest in the partnership; and
- (ii)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Principles and the SRA Code of Conduct means a person who holds a material interest in the body; and
- (iii)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Suitability Test includes owners who have no active role in the running of the business as well as owners who do,
and "own" and "owned by" shall be construed accordingly.
- panel solicitors
-
means any solicitors appointed by the Solicitors Indemnity Fund in accordance with Rule 14.15 of the SRA Indemnity Rules.
- parent training establishment
-
means one member of a training contract consortium which is authorised to take trainees and which has appointed a training principal who is responsible for the training of the training contract consortium's trainees.
- partner
-
means a person who is or is held out as a partner in a partnership.
- partnership
-
means a body that is not a body corporate in which persons are, or are held out as, partners, save that in the MTC means an unincorporated insured firm in which persons are or are held out as partners and does not include an insured firm incorporated as an LLP.
- participation
-
for the purposes of regulation 8 of the SRA Training Regulations Part 3 - CPD Regulations includes preparing, delivering and/or attending accredited courses and "participating" should be construed accordingly.
- part-time
-
means working fewer than 32 hours per week.
- pension contract
-
means a right to benefits obtained by the making of contributions to an occupational pension scheme or to a personal pension scheme, where the contributions are paid to a regulated collective investment scheme.
- pension policy
-
means a right to benefits obtained by the making of contributions to an occupational pension scheme or to a personal pension scheme, where the contributions are paid to a life office.
- pension transfer
-
means a transaction resulting from a decision by an individual to transfer deferred benefits from a final salary occupational pension scheme, or from a money-purchase occupational pension scheme, in favour of an individual pension contract or contracts.
- PEP
-
means a personal equity plan within the Personal Equity Plan Regulations1989.
- period of default
-
means in relation to a firm in default the period starting with the date when such firm first became a firm in default and ending with the date when it ceased to be a firm in default.
- period of insurance
-
means the period for which the insurance operates.
- permitted exemptions
-
applies only to individuals who have successfully completed the Bar Vocational Course or Bar Professional Training Course not more than 5 years prior to his or her enrolment on the LPC and means exemption from attendance and assessment of the LPC Outcomes as specified by us and agreed by the authorised provider.
- permitted separate business
-
means for the purpose of Chapter 12 of the SRA Code of Conduct, a separate business offering any of the following services:
- (i)
-
alternative dispute resolution;
- (ii)
-
financial services;
- (iii)
-
estate agency;
- (iv)
-
management consultancy;
- (v)
-
company secretarial services;
- (vi)
-
acting as a parliamentary agent;
- (vii)
-
practising as a lawyer of another jurisdiction;
- (viii)
-
acting as a bailiff;
- (ix)
-
acting as nominee, trustee or executor outside England and Wales;
- (x)
-
the services of a wholly owned nominee company in England and Wales, which is operated as a subsidiary but necessary part of the work of a separate business providing financial services;
- (xi)
-
providing legal advice or drafting legal documents not included in (i) to (x) above, where such activity is provided as a subsidiary but necessary part of some other service which is one of the main services of the separate business; and
- (xii)
-
providing any other business, advisory or agency service which could be provided through a firm or in-house practice but is not a prohibited separate business activity.
- person
-
includes a body of persons (corporate or unincorporated).
- person under investigation
-
means a person subject to a discipline investigation.
- person who has an interest in a licensed body
-
means a person who has an interest or an indirect interest in a licensed body as defined by sections 72(3) and (5) of the LSA.
- person who lacks capacity under Part 1 of the Mental Capacity Act 2005
-
includes a "patient" as defined by section 94 of the Mental Health Act 1983 and a person made the subject of emergency powers under that Act, and equivalents in other Establishment Directive states.
- personal pension scheme
-
means any scheme or arrangement which is not an occupational pension scheme or a stakeholder pension scheme and which is comprised in one or more instruments or agreements, having or capable of having effect so as to provide benefits to or in respect of people on retirement, or on having reached a particular age, or on termination of service in an employment.
- plan provider
-
has the meaning given by article 63B(3) of the Regulated Activities Order read with paragraphs (7) and (8) of that article.
- policy
-
means a contract of professional indemnity insurance made between one or more persons, each of which is a qualifying insurer, and a firm, including where the context permits an ARP policy and an ARP run-off policy.
- policy default
-
- (i)
-
means in the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules a failure on the part of a firm or any principal of that firm:
- (A)
-
to pay for more than two months after the due date for payment all or any part of the premium or any other sum due in respect of a policy (including without limitation any payment due under Rule 15.1 of those Rules); or
- (B)
-
to pay for more than two months after the due date for payment all or any part of any ARP premium, any ARP default premium, or any ARP run-off premium, or any instalment payable in relation thereto whether payable to the ARP manager or otherwise; or
- (C)
-
to reimburse within two months a qualifying insurer (including the ARP manager on behalf of qualifying insurers) in respect of any amount falling within a firm's policy excess which has been paid on an insured's behalf to a claimant by a qualifying insurer or by the ARP manager;
- (ii)
-
for the purposes of this definition, the due date for payment means, in respect of any policy or any payment to be made under any policy:
- (A)
-
the date on which such payment fell due under the terms of the policy or any related agreement or arrangement; or
- (B)
-
if a firm was first required under the SIIR to effect such a policy prior to the date on which it did so, the date if earlier on which such payment would have fallen due had such policy been effected by the firm when it was first required to do so under the SIIR.
- policy period
-
means the period of insurance in respect of which risks may attach under a policy of qualifying insurance.
- practice
-
means the activities, in that capacity, of:
- (i)
-
a solicitor;
- (ii)
- (iii)
-
a member of an Establishment Directive profession registered with the BSB under the Establishment Directive, carried out from an office or offices in England and Wales;
- (iv)
-
an RFL, from an office or offices within England and Wales, as:
- (A)
-
an employee of a recognised sole practitioner; or
- (B)
-
a manager, employee, member or interest holder of an authorised body or a manager, employee or owner of an authorised non-SRA firm;
- (v)
-
an authorised body;
- (vi)
-
a manager of an authorised body;
- (vii)
-
a person employed in England and Wales by an authorised body or recognised sole practitioner;
- (viii)
- (ix)
and "practise" and "practising" should be construed accordingly; save for in:
- (i)
-
the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules where "practice" means the whole or such part of the private practice of a firm as is carried on from one or more offices in England and Wales; and
- (ii)
-
the SRA Indemnity Rules where it means a practice to the extent that:
- (A)
-
in relation to a licensed body, it carries on regulated activities; and
- (B)
-
in all other cases, it carries on private practice providing professional services as a sole solicitor or REL or as a partnership of a type referred to in Rule 6.1(d) to 6.1(f) and consisting of or including one or more solicitors and/or RELs, and shall include the business or practice carried on by a recognised body in the providing of professional services such as are provided by individuals practising in private practice as solicitors and/or RELs or by such individuals in partnership with RFLs, whether such practice is carried on by the recognised body alone or in partnership with one or more solicitors, RELs and/or other recognised bodies.
- 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 in which you are the sole practitioner, or a manager, or in which you have an ownership interest, even if you are not based there,
save that for the purposes of Part 7 (Overseas practice) of the SRA Accounts Rules the term "practice" is to be given its natural meaning, and references to "firm" and "manager" are to be read as references to "firm (overseas practice)" and to "manager (overseas practice)";
and "practising from an office" and "practises from an office" should be construed accordingly.
- practice of a lawyer of a CCBE state
-
means the activities of a lawyer of a CCBE state in that capacity.
- Practice Skills Standards
-
means the standards published by us which set out the practice skills trainees will develop during the training contract and use when qualified.
- practising address
-
means, in relation to an authorised body, an address from which the body provides services consisting of or including the carrying on of activities which it is authorised to carry on.
- preceding qualifying insurance
-
means, in the case of any firm or person who makes an expired run-off claim, the policy of qualifying insurance which previously provided run-off cover in respect of that firm or person, or which was required to provide such cover, or (in the case of a firm in default or a run-off firm) arrangements to provide such run-off cover through the ARP.
- pre-contract deposit
-
means the aggregate of all payments which constitute pre-contract deposits from a buyer in relation to the proposed sale of a property.
- prescribed
-
means prescribed by the SRA from time to time.
- previous practice
-
means any practice which shall have ceased to exist as such for whatever reason, including by reason of:
- (i)
-
any death, retirement or addition of principals; or
- (ii)
-
any split or cession of the whole or part of its practice to another without any change of principals.
- previous regulations
-
in the SRA Higher Rights of Audience Regulations means either the Higher Courts Qualification Regulations 1992, the Higher Courts Qualification Regulations 1998, or the Higher Courts Qualification Regulations 2000, or the Solicitors Higher Rights of Audience Regulations 2010.
- principal
-
- (i)
-
subject to paragraphs (ii) to (iv) means:
- (A)
- (B)
-
a partner in a partnership;
- (C)
-
in the case of a recognised body which is an LLP or company, the recognised body itself;
- (D)
-
in the case of a licensed body which is an LLP or company, the licensed body itself;
- (E)
-
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
- (F)
-
in relation to any other body, a member of its governing body;
- (ii)
-
in the SRA Authorisation Rules, SRA Practice Framework Rules and SRA Practising Regulations, means a sole practitioner or a partner in a partnership;
- (iii)
-
in the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules means:
- (A)
-
where the firm is or was:
- (I)
-
a sole practitioner - that practitioner;
- (II)
-
a partnership - each partner;
- (III)
-
a company with a share capital - each director of that company and any person who:
- (IV)
-
a company without a share capital - each director of that company and any person who:
- (V)
-
an LLP - each member of that LLP, and any person who is the ultimate owner of the whole or any part of a body corporate or other legal person which is a member of the LLP;
- (B)
-
where a body corporate or other legal person is a partner in the firm, any person who is within paragraph (A)(III) of this definition (including sub-paragraphs (01) and (03) thereof), paragraph (A)(IV) of this definition (including sub-paragraphs (01) and (03) thereof), or paragraph (A)(V) of this definition;
- (iv)
-
in the SRA Indemnity Rules, means:
- (A)
-
a solicitor who is a partner or a sole solicitor within the meaning of section 87 of the SA, or an REL who is a partner, a recognised body or who on or before 31 March 2012 or the date on which an order made pursuant to section 69 of the LSA relating to the status of sole practitioners coming into force, whichever was the latter, was a sole practitioner, or an RFL or non-registered European lawyer who is a partner, and includes any solicitor, REL, RFL or non-registered European lawyer held out as a principal; and
- (B)
-
additionally in relation to a practice carried on by a recognised body or a licensed body alone, or a practice in which a recognised body or a licensed body is or is held out to be a partner:
- (I)
-
a solicitor, REL, RFL or non-registered European lawyer (and in the case of a licensed body any other person) who:
- (01)
-
beneficially owns the whole or any part of a share in such recognised body or licensed body (in each case, where it is a company with a share capital); or
- (02)
-
is a member of such recognised body or licensed body (in each case, where it is a company without a share capital or an LLP or a partnership with legal personality); or
- (II)
-
a solicitor, REL, RFL or non-registered European lawyer (and in the case of a licensed body any other person) who is:
- (01)
-
the ultimate beneficial owner of the whole or any part of a share in such recognised body or licensed body (in each case, where the recognised body or licensed body is a company with a share capital); or
- (02)
-
the ultimate owner of a member or any part of a member of such recognised body or licensed body (in each case, where the recognised body or licensed body is a company without a share capital or an LLP or a partnership with legal personality).
- prior practice
-
means each practice to which the insured firm's practice is ultimately a successor practice by way of one or more mergers, acquisitions, absorptions or other transitions, but does not include any such practice which has elected to be insured under run-off cover in accordance with clause 5.6(a) of the MTC.
- private legal practice
-
means the provision of services in private practice as a solicitor or REL including, without limitation:
- (i)
-
providing such services in England, Wales or anywhere in the world, whether alone or with other lawyers in a partnership permitted to practise in England and Wales by Rule 12 of the Solicitors' Code of Conduct 2007 or by the SRA Practice Framework Rules, a recognised body or a licensed body (in respect of its regulated activities); and
- (ii)
-
the provision of such services as a secondee of the insured firm; and
- (iii)
-
any insured acting as a personal representative, trustee, attorney, notary, insolvency practitioner or in any other role in conjunction with a practice; and
- (iv)
-
the provision of such services by any employee; and
- (v)
-
the provision of such services pro bono publico;
but does not include:
- (vi)
-
practising as an employee of an employer other than a solicitor, an REL, a partnership permitted to practise in England and Wales by Rule 12 of the Solicitors' Code of Conduct 2007 or by the SRA Practice Framework Rules, a recognised body or a licensed body (in respect of its regulated activities); or
- (vii)
-
discharging the functions of any of the following offices or appointments:
- (A)
-
judicial office;
- (B)
-
Under Sheriffs;
- (C)
-
members and clerks of such tribunals, committees, panels and boards as the Council may from time to time designate but including those subject to the Tribunals and Inquiries Act 1992, the Competition Commission, Legal Services Commission Review Panels and Parole Boards;
- (D)
-
Justices' Clerks; or
- (E)
-
Superintendent Registrars and Deputy Superintendent Registrars of Births, Marriages and Deaths and Registrars of Local Crematoria.
- 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.
- private practice
-
- (i)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules:
- (A)
-
in relation to a firm which is a licensed body means its regulated activities; and
- (B)
-
subject to paragraph (A) of this definition, in relation to all firms includes without limitation all the professional services provided by the firm including acting as a personal representative, trustee, attorney, notary, insolvency practitioner or in any other role in conjunction with a practice, and includes services provided pro bono publico,
but does not include:
- (C)
-
practice carried on by a solicitor or REL in the course of employment with an employer other than a firm; or
- (D)
-
practice carried on through a non-SRA firm; or
- (E)
-
discharging the functions of any of the following offices or appointments:
- (I)
-
judicial office;
- (II)
-
Under Sheriffs;
- (III)
-
members and clerks of such tribunals, committees, panels and boards as the Council may from time to time designate but including those subject to the Tribunals and Inquiries Act 1992, the Competition Commission, Legal Services Commission Review Panels and Parole Boards;
- (IV)
-
Justices' Clerks;
- (V)
-
Superintendent Registrars and Deputy Superintendent Registrars of Births, Marriages and Deaths and Registrars of Local Crematoria; or
- (VI)
-
such other offices as the Council may from time to time designate;
- (F)
-
practice consisting only of providing professional services without remuneration for friends, relatives, or to companies wholly owned by the solicitor or REL's family, or registered charities; or
- (G)
-
in respect of a sole solicitor or a sole REL, practice consisting only of:
- (I)
-
providing professional services without remuneration for friends, relatives, or to companies wholly owned by the solicitor or REL's family, or registered charities; and/or
- (II)
-
administering oaths and statutory declarations; and/or
- (III)
-
activities which could constitute practice but are done in the course of discharging the functions of any of the offices or appointments listed in paragraphs (E)(I) to (VI) above.
- (ii)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Indemnity Rules "private practice" shall be deemed to include:
- (A)
-
the acceptance and performance of obligations as trustees; and
- (B)
-
notarial practice where a solicitor notary operates such notarial practice in conjunction with a solicitor's practice, whether or not the notarial fees accrue to the benefit of the solicitor's practice;
but does not include:
- (C)
-
practice to the extent that any fees or other income accruing do not accrue to the benefit of the practice carrying on such practice (except as provided by paragraph (B) in this definition);
- (D)
-
practice by a solicitor or REL in the course of his or her employment with an employer other than a solicitor, REL, recognised body, licensed body or partnership such as is referred to in Rule 6.1(d) to 6.1(f); in which connection and for the avoidance of doubt:
- (I)
-
any such solicitor or REL does not carry on private practice when he or she acts in the course of his or her employment for persons other than his or her employer;
- (II)
-
any such solicitor or REL does not carry on private practice merely because he or she uses in the course of his or her employment a style of stationery or description which appears to hold him or her out as a principal or solicitor or foreign lawyer in private practice; or
- (III)
-
any practice carried on by such a solicitor outside the course of his or her employment will constitute private practice;
- (E)
-
discharging the functions of the following offices:
- (I)
-
judicial office;
- (II)
-
Under Sheriffs;
- (III)
-
members and clerks of such tribunals, committees, panels and boards as the Council may from time to time designate but including those subject to the Tribunals and Inquiries Act 1992, the Competition Commission, Legal Services Commission Review Panels and Parole Boards;
- (IV)
-
Justices' Clerks;
- (V)
-
Superintendent Registrars and Deputy Superintendent Registrars of Births, Marriages and Deaths and Registrars of Local Crematoria;
- (VI)
-
such other offices as the Council may from time to time designate.
- professional activity
-
means a professional activity which is regulated by the SRA.
- professional contact
-
means professional contact which is regulated by the SRA.
- 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.
- professional principles
-
are as set out in section 1(3) of the LSA:
- (i)
-
that authorised persons should act with independence and integrity;
- (ii)
-
that authorised persons should maintain proper standards of work;
- (iii)
-
that authorised persons should act in the best interests of their clients;
- (iv)
-
that persons who exercise before any court a right of audience, or conduct litigation in relation to proceedings in any court, by virtue of being authorised persons should comply with their duty to the court to act with independence in the interests of justice; and
- (v)
-
that the affairs of clients should be kept confidential,
and in this definition "authorised persons" has the meaning set out in section 18 of the LSA.
- professional services
-
means, for the purposes of the SRA Financial Services (Scope) Rules, services provided by a firm in the course of its practice and which do not constitute carrying on a regulated activity.
- prohibited separate business activities
-
means, for the purpose of Chapter 12 of the SRA Code of Conduct:
- (i)
-
the conduct of any matter which could come before a court, whether or not proceedings are started;
- (ii)
-
advocacy before a court;
- (iii)
-
instructing counsel in any part of the UK;
- (iv)
- (v)
-
any activity in relation to conveyancing, applications for probate or letters of administration, or drawing trust deeds or court documents, which is reserved to solicitors and others under the LSA;
- (vi)
-
drafting wills;
- (vii)
-
acting as a nominee, trustee or executor in England and Wales, except for the services of a wholly owned nominee company where such services are provided as a subsidiary but necessary part of the work of a separate business providing financial services; and
- (viii)
-
providing legal advice or drafting legal documents not included in (i) to (vii) above where such activity is not provided as a subsidiary but necessary part of some other service which is one of the main services of the separate business.
- property
-
includes an interest in property.
- property selling
-
means things done by any person in the course of a business (including a business in which they are employed) pursuant to instructions received from another person (in this definition referred to as the "client") who wishes to dispose of or acquire an interest in land:
- (i)
-
for the purpose of, or with a view to, effecting the introduction to the client of a third person who wishes to acquire or, as the case may be, dispose of such an interest; and
- (ii)
-
after such an introduction has been effected in the course of that business, for the purpose of securing the disposal or, as the case may be, the acquisition of that interest.
- PSC
-
means the Professional Skills Course, namely, a course normally completed during the training contract, building upon the LPC, providing training in Financial and Business Skills, Advocacy and Communication Skills, and Client Care and Professional Standards. Satisfactory completion of the PSC is recognised by us as satisfying, in part, the vocational stage of training.
- PSC provider
-
means an organisation authorised by us to provide the PSC under the SRA Training Regulations Part 2 - Training Provider Regulations.
- PSC Standards
-
means the standards which set out the content of, and level of achievement required from individuals studying, the PSC.
- publicity
-
includes all promotional material and activity, including the name or description of your firm, stationery, advertisements, brochures, websites, directory entries, media appearances, promotional press releases, and direct approaches to potential clients and other persons, whether conducted in person, in writing, or in electronic form, but does not include press releases prepared on behalf of a client.
- pure protection contract
-
means:
- (i)
-
a long-term insurance contract:
- (A)
-
under which the benefits are payable only in respect of death or of incapacity due to injury, sickness or infirmity;
- (B)
-
which has no surrender value or the consideration consists of a single premium and the surrender value does not exceed that premium; and
- (C)
-
which makes no provision for its conversion or extension in a manner which would result in its ceasing to comply with (A) or (B); or
- (ii)
-
a reinsurance contract covering all or part of a risk to which a person is exposed under a long-term insurance contract.
- QLD
-
means a qualifying law degree, namely, a degree or qualification awarded by a body approved by the JASB for the purposes of completing the academic stage of training, following a course of study which includes:
- (i)
-
the study of the foundations of legal knowledge; and
- (ii)
-
the passing of appropriate assessments set in those foundations.
- QLTR
-
means the Qualified Lawyers Transfer Regulations 1990 and 2009.
- QLTR certificate of eligibility
-
means a certificate issued under the QLTR.
- QLTSR
-
means the SRA Qualified Lawyers Transfer Scheme Regulations 2010 and 2011.
- QLTT
-
means the Qualified Lawyers Transfer Test, namely, the test which some lawyers are required to pass under the QLTR.
- QLTS assessments
-
means the suite of assessments approved by us and provided by the assessment organisation.
- QLTS certificate of eligibility
-
means a certificate of eligibility to take the QLTS assessments under the QLTSR, or an authorisation under the QLTSR to apply for admission as a solicitor without taking any of the QLTS assessments.
- qualified lawyer
-
means either:
- (i)
-
a lawyer whose qualification we have determined:
- (A)
-
gives the lawyer rights of audience;
- (B)
-
makes the lawyer an officer of the court in the recognised jurisdiction; and
- (C)
-
has been awarded as a result of a generalist (non-specialist) legal education and training; or
- (ii)
-
any other lawyer to whom we determine Directive 2005/36/EC on the recognition of professional qualifications applies.
- qualified to supervise
-
means a person complying with the requirements of Rule 12.2 of the SRA Practice Framework Rules.
- qualifying employment
-
in the SRA Training Regulations Part 1 - Qualification Regulations means employment to do legal duties under the supervision of a solicitor.
- qualifying insurance
-
means a single policy which includes the MTC, or more than one policy which, taken together, include the MTC, and each of which includes the MTC except only in relation to the sum insured.
- qualifying insurer
-
means an authorised insurer which has entered into a qualifying insurer's agreement with the Society which remains in force for the purposes of underwriting new business at the date on which the relevant contract of qualifying insurance is made.
- qualifying insurer's agreement
-
means an agreement in such terms as the Society may prescribe setting out the terms and conditions on which a qualifying insurer may provide professional indemnity insurance to solicitors and others in private practice in England and Wales.
- recognised body
-
means a body recognised by the SRA under section 9 of the AJA.
- recognised jurisdiction
-
means a jurisdiction where we have determined that:
- (i)
-
to become a qualified lawyer applicants have completed specific education and training at a level that is at least equivalent to that of an English/Welsh H-Level (e.g. Bachelor's) degree;
- (ii)
-
members of the qualified lawyer's profession are bound by an ethical code that requires them to act without conflicts of interest and to respect their client's interests and confidentiality; and
- (iii)
-
members of the qualified lawyer's profession are subject to disciplinary sanctions for breach of their ethical code, including the removal of the right to practise, and
all European jurisdictions to which Directive 2005/36/EC on the recognition of professional qualifications apply are "recognised jurisdictions" for the purposes of the QLTSR.
- recognised sole practitioner
-
means a solicitor or REL authorised by the SRA under section 1B of the SA to practise as a sole practitioner.
- reconciled accounts
-
means that all elements of the accounting records of an intervened practitioner's practice are consistent with each other.
- reconciled list
-
means a list of beneficial entitlements to statutory trust monies created from a set of reconciled accounts.
- referral
-
includes any situation in which another person, business or organisation introduces or refers a client to your business, recommends your business to a client or otherwise puts you and a client in touch with each other.
- register of European lawyers
-
means the register of European lawyers maintained by the SRA under regulation 15 of the European Communities (Lawyer's Practice) Regulations 2000 (SI 2000/1119).
- register of foreign lawyers
-
means the register of foreign lawyers maintained by the SRA under the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990.
- regular payment
-
has the meaning given in Rule 19 of the SRA Accounts Rules.
- Regulated Activities Order
-
means the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Regulated Activities) Order 2001.
- regulated activity
-
means:
- (i)
-
subject to sub-paragraph (ii) below:
- (A)
- (B)
-
any other legal activity; and
- (C)
-
any other activity in respect of which a licensed body is regulated pursuant to Part 5 of the LSA; and
- (ii)
-
in the SRA Financial Services (Scope) Rules, an activity which is specified in the Regulated Activities Order.
- regulated collective investment scheme
-
means:
- regulated home purchase plan
-
has the meaning given by article 63F(3) of the Regulated Activities Order.
- regulated home reversion plan
-
has the meaning given by article 63B(3) of the Regulated Activities Order.
- regulated mortgage contract
-
has the meaning given by article 61(3) of the Regulated Activities Order.
- regulated person
-
- (i)
-
in the SRA Indemnity Rules has the meaning given in section 21 of the LSA;
- (ii)
-
means, in the SRA Disciplinary Procedure Rules:
- (A)
-
a solicitor;
- (B)
-
an REL;
- (C)
-
an RFL;
- (D)
- (E)
-
a manager of a recognised body;
- (F)
- (G)
-
a manager of a licensed body;
- (H)
-
an employee of a recognised body, a licensed body, a solicitor, or an REL; or
- (I)
-
to the extent permitted by law, any person who has previously held a position or role described in (A) to (H) above;
- (iii)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Cost of Investigations Regulations means the persons at paragraph (ii) (A) to (I) above and also includes a person who has an interest in a licensed body and, to the extent permitted by law, any person who has previously held an interest in a licensed body.
- regulated sale and rent back agreement
-
has the meaning given by article 63J(3) of the Regulated Activities Order.
- regulatory arrangements
-
has the meaning given to it by section 21 of the LSA, and includes all rules and regulations of the SRA in relation to the authorisation, practice, conduct, discipline and qualification of persons carrying on legal activities and the accounts rules and indemnification and compensation arrangements in relation to their practice.
- regulatory objectives
-
has the meaning given to it by section 1 of the LSA and includes the objectives of protecting and promoting the public interest, supporting the constitutional principle of the rule of law, improving access to justice, protecting and promoting the interests of consumers, promoting competition in the provision of legal activities by authorised persons, encouraging an independent, strong, diverse and effective legal profession, increasing public understanding of the citizen's legal rights and duties, and promoting and maintaining adherence to the professional principles.
- reinsurance contract
-
means a contract of insurance covering all or part of a risk to which a person is exposed under a contract of insurance.
- REL
-
means registered European lawyer, namely, an individual registered with the SRA under regulation 17 of the European Communities (Lawyer's Practice) Regulations 2000 (SI 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.
-
in relation to in-house practice means a body standing in relation to your employer as specified in Rule 4.7(a) to (d) or 4.15(c) of the SRA Practice Framework Rules.
- relevant claim
-
means a claim made on or after 1 September 2000 against a relevant successor practice.
- relevant indemnity period
-
in relation to contributions or indemnity means that indemnity period in respect of which such contributions are payable or such indemnity is to be provided in accordance with the SRA Indemnity Rules.
- relevant insolvency event
-
occurs in relation to a body if:
- (i)
-
a resolution for a voluntary winding up of the body is passed without a declaration of solvency under section 89 of the Insolvency Act 1986;
- (ii)
-
the body enters administration within the meaning of paragraph 1(2)(b) of Schedule B1 to that Act;
- (iii)
-
an administrative receiver within the meaning of section 251 of that Act is appointed;
- (iv)
-
a meeting of creditors is held in relation to the body under section 95 of that Act (creditors' meeting which has the effect of converting a members' voluntary winding up into a creditors' voluntary winding up);
- (v)
-
an order for the winding up of the body is made;
- (vi)
-
all of the managers in a body which is unincorporated have been adjudicated bankrupt; or
- (vii)
-
the body is an overseas company or a societas Europaea registered outside England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland and the body is subject to an event in its country of incorporation analogous to an event as set out in paragraphs (i) to (vi) above.
- relevant licensed body
-
means a licensed body other than:
- (i)
-
an unlimited company, or an overseas company whose members' liability for the company's debts is not limited by its constitution or by the law of its country of incorporation; or
- (ii)
-
a nominee company only, holding assets for clients of another practice; and
- (A)
-
it can act only as agent for the other practice; and
- (B)
-
all the individuals who are principals of the licensed body are also principals of the other practice; and
- (C)
-
any fee or other income arising out of the licensed body accrues to the benefit of the other practice; or
- (iii)
-
a partnership in which none of the partners is a limited company, an LLP or a legal person whose members have limited liability.
- relevant recognised body
-
means a recognised body other than:
- (i)
-
an unlimited company, or an overseas company whose members' liability for the company's debts is not limited by its constitution or by the law of its country of incorporation; or
- (ii)
-
a nominee company only, holding assets for clients of another practice; and
- (A)
-
it can act only as agent for the other practice; and
- (B)
-
all the individuals who are principals of the recognised body are also principals of the other practice; and
- (C)
-
any fee or other income arising out of the recognised body accrues to the benefit of the other practice; or
- (iii)
-
a partnership in which none of the partners is a limited company, an LLP or a legal person whose members have limited liability; or
- (iv)
-
a sole practitioner that is a recognised body.
- relevant successor practice
-
means in respect of a previous practice, a successor practice or a "successor practice" (as defined in Appendix 1 to the SIIR) (as may be applicable) against which a relevant claim is made.
- representative
-
in the SRA Compensation Fund Rules, means the personal representative of a deceased defaulting practitioner; the trustee of a bankrupt defaulting practitioner; the administrator of an insolvent defaulting practitioner, or other duly appointed representative of a defaulting practitioner.
- 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.
- reserved work
-
means activities which persons are authorised by the SRA to carry out, or prohibited from carrying out, under the SRA Practice Framework Rules.
- retail investment product
-
has the meaning given in the Financial Services Authority Handbook.
- reversion seller
-
has the meaning given by article 63B(3) of the Regulated Activities Order.
- revocation
-
in relation to a practising certificate or registration under the SRA Practising Regulations includes withdrawal of a practising certificate or registration for the purposes of the SA and cancellation of registration for the purposes of Schedule 14 to the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990.
- RFL
-
means registered foreign lawyer, namely, an individual registered with the SRA under section 89 of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990.
- run-off firm
-
means a firm or former firm which has ceased to practise in circumstances where, in accordance with paragraph 5.1 of the MTC, run-off cover is not required to be provided by any qualifying insurer.
- SA
-
means the Solicitors Act 1974.
- satisfactory completion
-
of a course or courses means:
- (i)
-
passing all the examinations and assessments required; and/or
- (ii)
-
where appropriate having part or parts awarded through condonation, deemed pass, or exemption;
in order to graduate from or pass an assessable course of study, and being awarded a certificate from the course provider confirming this; and "satisfactorily completed" should be construed accordingly.
- seats
-
means an arrangement where a trainee works in different departments of, or in different roles within, a training establishment in order to gain exposure to different areas of law.
- secondment
-
means an arrangement between a training establishment and another employer, or an overseas branch office, for a part of the period of a training contract.
- section 43 investigation
-
means an investigation by the SRA as to whether there are grounds for the SRA:
- security
-
has the meaning given by article 3(1) of the Regulated Activities Order but does not include an investment which falls within the definition of a packaged product.
- separate business
-
means a business which is not an authorised body, a recognised sole practitioner, an authorised non-SRA firm or an in-house practice or an overseas practice permitted by the SRA Practice Framework Rules and includes businesses situated overseas.
- separate designated client account
-
has the meaning given in Rule 13.5(a) of the SRA Accounts Rules.
- separate practice
-
means:
- (i)
-
a practice in which the number and identity of the principals is not the same as the number and identity of the principals in any other practice. When the same principals in number and identity carry on practice under more than one name or style, there is only one practice;
- (ii)
-
in the case of a practice of which more than 25% of the principals are foreign lawyers, any overseas offices shall be deemed to form a separate practice from the offices in England and Wales;
- (iii)
-
in the case of an overseas office of a practice, the fact that a principal or a limited number of principals represent all the principals in the practice on a local basis shall not of itself cause that overseas office to be a separate practice provided that any fee or other income arising out of that office accrues to the benefit of the practice; and
- (iv)
-
in the case of a recognised body or licensed body the fact that all of the shares in the recognised body or licensed body (as the case may be) are beneficially owned by only some of the principals in another practice, shall not, of itself, cause such a recognised body or licensed body (as the case may be) to be a separate practice provided that any fee or other income arising out of the recognised body or licensed body accrues to the benefit of that other practice.
-
means:
- SIF
-
means the Solicitors Indemnity Fund.
- SIIR
-
means the Solicitors' Indemnity Insurance Rules 2000 to 2010, the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules 2011 or the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules or any rules subsequent thereto.
- 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 an REL practising as a sole principal and does not include a solicitor or an REL practising in-house, save for the purposes of the SRA Accounts Rules, the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules where references to "practising" are to be given their natural meaning.
- 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, save that in the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules includes a person who practises as a solicitor whether or not he or she has in force a practising certificate, and also includes practice under home title of a former REL who has become a solicitor.
- special measures
-
means such measures as the Council may from time to time require with a view to reducing the risk of claims being made against a firm in the future or with a view to enabling a firm in the future to obtain qualifying insurance outside the ARP including, without limitation, requiring a firm to establish, agree with the SRA and implement either:
- (i)
-
a rehabilitation plan; or
- (ii)
-
a plan for the orderly closure of the firm in a manner which fully protects its clients' interests,
in either case on such terms, in such format and with such content as the SRA may require.
- 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 Accounts Rules
-
means the SRA Accounts Rules 2011.
- SRA Admission Regulations
-
means the SRA Admission Regulations 2011.
- 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 Compensation Fund Rules
-
means the SRA Compensation Fund Rules 2011.
- SRA Cost of Investigations Regulations
-
means the SRA Cost of Investigations Regulations 2011.
- SRA Disciplinary Procedure Rules
-
means the SRA Disciplinary Procedure Rules 2011.
- SRA European Cross-border Practice Rules
-
means the SRA European Cross-border Practice Rules 2011.
- SRA Financial Services (Scope) Rules
-
means the SRA Financial Services (Scope) Rules 2001.
- SRA finding
-
means:
- (i)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Disciplinary Procedure Rules, a decision that the SRA is satisfied:
- (A)
-
that a regulated person (which for the avoidance of doubt, shall include a solicitor) has failed to comply with a requirement imposed by or made under the SA, the AJA or the LSA;
- (B)
-
in relation to a solicitor, that there has been professional misconduct; or
- (C)
-
that a HOLP, HOFA, manager, employee, person who has an interest in a licensed body, or any other person has (intentionally or through neglect) caused or substantially contributed to a significant breach of the terms of the licensed body's licence, or has failed to comply with duties imposed by section 90, 91, 92 or 176 of the LSA as appropriate,
and for the avoidance of doubt does not include:
- (D)
-
investigatory decisions such as to require the production of information or documents;
- (E)
-
directions as to the provision or obtaining of further information or explanation;
- (F)
-
decisions to stay or adjourn;
- (G)
-
authorisation of the making of an application to the Tribunal;
- (H)
-
authorisation of an intervention pursuant to the SA, the AJA, the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 or Schedule 14 to the LSA;
- (I)
-
a letter of advice from the SRA;
and
- (ii)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Cost of Investigations Regulations, a decision that the SRA is satisfied:
- (A)
-
that a regulated person has failed to comply with a requirement imposed by or made under the SA, the AJA or the LSA;
- (B)
-
in relation to a solicitor, that there has been professional misconduct.
- SRA Handbook
-
means the handbook published from time to time by the SRA and containing its regulatory arrangements.
- SRA Handbook Glossary
-
means the SRA Handbook Glossary 2012, and references to the "Glossary" shall be interpreted accordingly.
- SRA Higher Rights of Audience Regulations
-
means the SRA Higher Rights of Audience Regulations 2011.
- SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules
-
means the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules 2012.
- SRA Indemnity Rules
-
means the SRA Indemnity Rules 2012.
- SRA Insolvency Practice Rules
-
means the SRA Insolvency Practice Rules 2012.
- SRA Practice Framework Rules
-
means the SRA Practice Framework Rules 2011.
- SRA Practising Regulations
-
means the SRA Practising Regulations 2011.
- SRA Principles
-
means the SRA Principles in the SRA Handbook and "Principles" shall be interpreted accordingly.
- SRA Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates (Crime) Notification Regulations
-
means the SRA Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates (Crime) Notification Regulations 2012.
- SRA Statutory Trust Rules
-
means the SRA Intervention Powers (Statutory Trust) Rules 2011.
- SRA Suitability Test
-
means the SRA Suitability Test 2011.
- SRA Training Regulations
-
means the SRA Training Regulations 2011.
- stakeholder pension scheme
-
means a scheme established in accordance with Part I of the Welfare and Pensions Reform Act 1999 and the Stakeholder Pension Scheme Regulations 2000.
- statement of standards
-
means the "statement of standards for solicitor higher court advocates" issued by us.
- statutory trust
-
means the trust created by Schedule 1 of the SA, or Schedule 14 of the LSA, over monies vesting in the Society following an intervention.
- statutory trust account
-
means an account in which statutory trust monies are held by the Society.
- statutory trust monies
-
means the monies vested in the Society under the statutory trust.
- 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.
- student enrolment
-
means the process where we satisfy ourselves that a student who intends to proceed to the vocational stage of training has satisfactorily completed the academic stage of training and is of the appropriate character and suitability; and "enrolment" should be construed accordingly.
- subsidiary company
-
has the meaning given in the Companies Act 2006.
- substantially common interest
-
for the purposes of Chapter 3 of the SRA Code of Conduct, means a situation where there is a clear common purpose in relation to any matter or a particular aspect of it between the clients and a strong consensus on how it is to be achieved and the client conflict is peripheral to this common purpose.
- successor firm
-
means for the purpose of Rule 12 of the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules any firm or firms resulting from:
- successor practice
-
- (i)
-
means a practice identified in this definition as 'B', where:
- (A)
-
'A' is the practice to which B succeeds; and
- (B)
-
'A's owner' is the owner of A immediately prior to transition; and
- (C)
-
'B's owner' is the owner of B immediately following transition; and
- (D)
-
'transition' means merger, acquisition, absorption or other transition which results in A no longer being carried on as a discrete legal practice.
- (ii)
-
B is a successor practice to A where:
- (A)
-
B is or was held out, expressly or by implication, by B's owner as being the successor of A or as incorporating A, whether such holding out is contained in notepaper, business cards, form of electronic communications, publications, promotional material or otherwise, or is contained in any statement or declaration by B's owner to any regulatory or taxation authority; and/or
- (B)
-
(where A's owner was a sole practitioner and the transition occurred on or before 31 August 2000) - the sole practitioner is a principal of B's owner; and/or
- (C)
-
(where A's owner was a sole practitioner and the transition occurred on or after 1 September 2000) - the sole practitioner is a principal or employee of B's owner; and/or
- (D)
-
(where A's owner was a recognised body or a licensed body (in respect of its regulated activities)) - that body is a principal of B's owner; and/or
- (E)
-
(where A's owner was a partnership) - the majority of the principals of A's owner have become principals of B's owner; and/or
- (F)
-
(where A's owner was a partnership and the majority of principals of A's owner did not become principals of the owner of another legal practice as a result of the transition) - one or more of the principals of A's owner have become principals of B's owner and:
- (I)
-
B is carried on under the same name as A or a name which substantially incorporates the name of A (or a substantial part of the name of A); and/or
- (II)
-
B is carried on from the same premises as A; and/or
- (III)
-
the owner of B acquired the goodwill and/or assets of A; and/or
- (IV)
-
the owner of B assumed the liabilities of A; and/or
- (V)
-
the majority of staff employed by A's owner became employees of B's owner.
- (iii)
-
Notwithstanding the foregoing, B is not a successor practice to A under paragraph (ii) (B), (C), (D), (E) or (F) if another practice is or was held out by the owner of that other practice as the successor of A or as incorporating A, provided that there is insurance complying with the MTC in relation to that other practice.
- sum insured
-
means the aggregate limit of liability of each insurer under the insurance.
- supplementary run-off cover
-
means run-off cover provided by the Solicitors Indemnity Fund following the expiry of run-off cover provided to a firm in accordance with the SRA Indemnity Insurance Rules or otherwise under a policy (but subject to compliance with the MTC).
- take a trainee
-
means the entering into a training contract with an individual by a training establishment, and "take trainees" and "taking trainees" should be construed accordingly.
- trainee solicitor
-
means any person receiving workplace training with the express purpose of qualification as a solicitor, at an authorised training establishment, under a training contract, and "trainee" should be construed accordingly.
- training contract
-
means a written contract, complying with the SRA Training Regulations, between one or more training establishment and a trainee solicitor, setting out the terms and conditions of the workplace training that the trainee solicitor will receive.
- training contract consortium
-
means an arrangement between more than one employer, one of which is authorised to take trainees, to provide a training contract (referred to in the SRA Training Regulations Part 2 - Training Provider Regulations as a modular training contract).
- training contract record
-
means an adequate record maintained by a trainee recording the experience that the trainee is getting and the skills that the trainee is developing within a training contract.
- training establishment
-
means an organisation, body, firm, company, in-house practice or individual authorised by us under the SRA Training Regulations Part 2 - Trainer Provider Regulations to take and train a trainee solicitor.
- training principal
-
means any solicitor who:
- (i)
-
holds a current practising certificate;
- (ii)
-
has held immediately prior to a current practising certificate four consecutive practising certificates;
- (iii)
-
is nominated by a training establishment as such;
- (iv)
-
is a partner, manager, director, owner, or has equivalent seniority and/or managerial status; and
- (v)
-
has undertaken such training as we may prescribe;
and for the purposes of (ii) above a solicitor who has been an REL for a continuous period before their admission as a solicitor can use each complete year of registration as the equivalent of having held one practising certificate. A Government Legal Service solicitor with appropriate seniority, experience and training will be exempt from the practising certificate requirements for training principals.
- transaction
-
in the SRA Financial Services (Scope) Rules means the purchase, sale, subscription or underwriting of a particular investment.
- Tribunal
-
means the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal which is an independent statutory tribunal constituted under section 46 of the SA but references to the Tribunal do not include the Tribunal when it is performing any function as an appellate body.
- trustee
-
includes a personal representative, and "trust" includes the duties of a personal representative.
- UK
-
means United Kingdom.
- UK qualified lawyer
-
in the QLTSR, means solicitors and barristers qualified in Northern Ireland, solicitors and advocates qualified in Scotland and barristers qualified in England and Wales.
- unadmitted person
-
means a person who:
- (i)
-
holds a current certificate of enrolment;
- (ii)
-
is serving under a training contract; or
- (iii)
-
has completed any part or all of the vocational stage of training, in accordance with regulations 16 to 32 of the SRA Training Regulations Part 1 - Qualification Regulations but does not hold a current certificate of enrolment,
but who has not been admitted as a solicitor.
- undertaking
-
means a statement, given orally or in writing, whether or not it includes the word "undertake" or "undertaking", made by or on behalf of you or your firm, in the course of practice, or by you outside the course of practice but as a solicitor or REL, to someone who reasonably places reliance on it, that you or your firm will do something or cause something to be done, or refrain from doing something.
- us
-
means the SRA, and "our" and "ourselves" should be construed accordingly.
- vocational stage of training
-
means that stage of the training of an entrant to the solicitors' profession which is completed by:
- (i)
-
satisfactory completion of an LPC, an exempting law degree or integrated course; and
- (ii)
-
subject to regulations 31, 32 and 33 of the SRA Training Regulations Part 1 - Qualification Regulations, serving under a training contract; and
- (iii)
-
satisfactory completion of a PSC and such other course or courses as we may from time to time prescribe.
- Voluntary Code of Good Practice
-
means a code agreed by the Association of Graduate Careers Advisory Services, the Association of Graduate Recruiters, the Junior Lawyers Division and us to assist all concerned with the recruitment of law degree students and non-law degree students as trainee solicitors.
- voting rights
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in a body includes the right to vote in a partners', members', directors' or shareholders' meeting, or otherwise in relation to the body, and "control the exercise of voting rights" shall be interpreted as including de facto as well as legal control over such rights.
- we
-
means the SRA, and "our" and "ourselves" should be construed accordingly.
- without delay
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means, in normal circumstances, either on the day of receipt or on the next working day.
- you
-
means:
- (i)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Training Regulations Part 1 any person intending to be a solicitor, other than those seeking admission under the QLTSR;
- (ii)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Training Regulations Part 3 a solicitor or an REL;
- (iii)
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for the purposes of the SRA Admission Regulations any person intending to be a solicitor;
- (iv)
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for the purpose of the QLTSR a person seeking admission as a solicitor via transfer in accordance with those regulations;
- (v)
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for the purpose of the SRA Suitability Test any individual intending to be a solicitor, and any person seeking authorisation as an authorised role holder under the SRA Authorisation Rules;
- (vi)
-
for the purposes of the SRA Accounts Rules (save for Part 7 (Overseas practice)):
in either case who is:
-
- (I)
- (II)
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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;
- (III)
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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;
- (IV)
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employed as an in-house lawyer by a non-solicitor employer (for example, in a law centre or in commerce and industry);
- (V)
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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;
- (VI)
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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
- (VII)
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a partner in a partnership with separate legal personality which is a manager of a recognised body, licensed body or authorised non-SRA firm;
- (C)
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an RFL practising:
- (I)
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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;
- (II)
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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;
- (III)
-
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;
- (IV)
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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;
- (V)
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as an employee of a recognised body, licensed body or recognised sole practitioner; or
- (VI)
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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;
- (D)
- (E)
- (F)
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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
- (G)
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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;
-
- (vii)
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for the purposes of the SRA Higher Rights of Audience Regulations means a solicitor or an REL;
- (viii)
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for the purposes of the SRA Insolvency Practice Rules means a solicitor or an REL; and
- (ix)
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for the purposes of the SRA Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates (Crime) Notification Regulations means a solicitor or an REL,
and references to "your" and "yourself" should be construed accordingly.
Rule 3: General Interpretation
- 3.1
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Unless the context otherwise requires:
- (a)
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the singular includes the plural and vice versa;
- (b)
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words importing the masculine gender include the feminine and vice versa and references to the masculine or feminine include the neuter;
- (c)
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the word "body" includes a sole practitioner, and a special body within the meaning of section 106 of the LSA;
- (d)
-
any explanatory notes, guidance notes and/or commentary are for the purposes of guidance only;
- (e)
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any headings are for ease of reference only;
- (f)
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any appendices to the provisions within the SRA Handbook will form part of the SRA Handbook;
- (g)
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"in writing" includes any form of written electronic communication normally used for business purposes, such as emails;
- (h)
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references to certificates, letters or other forms of written communication include references to those in both electronic and hard copy format; and
- (i)
-
a reference to any statute, statutory provision, code or regulation includes any subordinate legislation (as defined by section 21(1) of the Interpretation Act 1978) made under it.