SDT Appeals to the Administrative Court
Appeals from the SDT to the Administrative Court
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What is the time limit to appeal an SDT order?
Both you and the SRA have 21 days from SDT’s detailed Judgment to issue an appeal setting out Grounds of Appeal. The Respondent may cross-appeal, or seek to have the SDT’s decision upheld on alternative grounds.
Where are SDT Appeals heard?
Appeals against decisions of the SDT are heard at the Royal Courts of Justice in the Administrative Court. Typically, the hearing is listed before a single, or two High Court judges.
Will the Appeal be successful?
The Administrative Court will be 'slow to interfere' with the SDT’s decision as an informed expert tribunal unless there has been a procedural error, or the decision is plainly wrong. In practice, individual judges interpret the test differently.
When will the Appeal be heard?
The appeal will enter the Warned List before being listed to be heard. The hearing could take place as soon as three months from issue, but could be delayed significantly, where the case addresses an important legal principle, or where otherwise the court has availability issues.
What range of decisions can the appeal court make?
The court will decide whether to quash the decision of the SDT. If it does so, it may then dismiss the SRA’s case, substitute its own sanction, or remit the case back to the SDT on any number of points.
Unlike in the SDT, usually the losing party is ordered to pay all or a proportion of the winning party’s costs.
Why choose us?
Considering whether to appeal, and how to respond to an SRA appeal involves fine decisions. If the SDT’s order is quashed, whether you seek to have the case remitted back to the SDT or ask the court to make an order also involves a fine balancing exercise.
We have the specialist experience to guide you on these important decisions.
Examples of Appeals that we have acted in:
Solicitors Regulation Authority v James & Ors [2018] EWHC 3058 (Admin) - Clarifying the 'exceptional circumstances' test
In this appeal against three decisions of the SDT, we acted for two of the Respondent solicitors. Acting at the SDT, and conducting advocacy for them in-house, the solicitors were permitted to continue in immediate practice, notwithstanding findings of dishonesty. The SRA appealed against the orders of the SDT, whereupon the Administrative Court clarified when the SDT may be permitted to find that 'exceptional circumstances' arise and thus depart from the usual order of 'striking off' following a finding of dishonesty.
Solicitors Regulation Authority v Kadurugamuwa [2017] EWHC 2245 (Admin) – Successfully defended appeal against an SDT order
This solicitor had been fined £2,000 by the SDT following a criminal conviction and suspended custodial sentence for a money laundering offence. The SRA appealed on the ground that the sanction was unduly lenient. We were recommended to the solicitor by another firm, and she instructed us to act. We advised her to resist the appeal. The Administrative Court upheld the SDT’s decision and ordered the SRA to pay her costs as summarily assessed.
The SRA applied for permission to appeal to the Court of Appeal. After hearing from us, the court refused the SRA permission.
Kiani v Solicitors Regulation Authority [2015] EWHC 1981 (Admin) (QBD (Admin)) – Successful appeal against SDT decision to strike off a solicitor
This solicitor instructed another firm to act for her at the SDT where she was struck from the Roll. She came to us asking whether she had grounds for appeal. We immediately spotted that the Tribunal had erred procedurally and she instructed us to act in her appeal. The Administrative Court agreed that the SDT had erred, quashed the decision, and upon being persuaded to do so, remitted the case back to the SDT before a freshly constituted tribunal.
Upon remission, the fresh tribunal imposed a backdated period of suspension, expiring well before the hearing, such that she was able to practise again with immediate effect.
The Administrative Court ordered the SRA to pay almost 100% of the Respondent’s solicitor’s costs and the SDT made no order as to costs.
If you want us on your team, e-mail or speak to Andrew Blatt on 07973 752498, Robert Forman on 07976 562236 or Nick Trevette on 07976 795014.
National Recognition
'Murdochs Solicitors has a niche team specialising in defence of solicitors' professional discipline proceedings. The firm has particular expertise in SDT matters, SRA forensic investigations and voluntary practice closures. It is experienced in providing advice on interventions and appeals."This firm has a unique ability to handle complex matters quickly and well.""The team shows in-depth knowledge of various SRA regulations and although matters are complex the advice given is clear, concise and practical.""The team is aware of regulatory trends impacting the industry and can respond accordingly." Chambers UK 2024
Predominantly focused on defending solicitors (and other legal professionals) facing regulatory investigations and disciplinary proceedings, Murdochs Solicitors' 'specialist knowledge and extensive experience are exceptional'. The practice of senior partner Andrew Blatt, whose 'advice is very sound and to the point', covers SRA investigations, SDT proceedings, and complex partnership disputes featuring misconduct issues; and senior consultant Robert Forman is 'a leader in his field of Solicitors Professional Standards and Regulations'. At director level, Nicholas Trevette also has significant experience in handling SRA investigations.' Legal 500 UK 2024
If you want us on your team, e-mail or speak to Andrew Blatt on 07973 752498, Robert Forman on 0333 9962 743 or Nick Trevette on 07976 795014.