Legal Profession Board of Tasmania v W

Case

[2023] TASFC 1

17 March 2023

No judgment structure available for this case.

[2023] TASFC 1

COURT SUPREME COURT OF TASMANIA (FULL COURT)
CITATION Legal Profession Board of Tasmania v W [2023] TASFC 1
PARTIES LEGAL PROFESSION BOARD OF TASMANIA
v
W
FILE NO:  2261/2022
JUDGMENT 

 APPEALED FROM: 

Legal Profession Board of Tasmania v A Legal Practitioner [2022] TASSC 46

DELIVERED ON:  17 March 2023
DELIVERED AT:  Hobart
HEARING DATE:  8 March 2023
JUDGMENT OF:  Estcourt J, Jago J, Porter AJ
CATCHWORDS

Profession and Trades – Lawyers – Professional misconduct and unprofessional conduct – Construction of s 421(1) of the Legal Profession Act 2007 – Legal practitioner offering to settle dispute if client’s ex-wife withdrew complaints to police made by her against the client – Appeal against finding of mere unprofessional conduct allowed – Declaration of guilt of professional misconduct substituted.

Legal Profession Act 2007 (Tas), ss 420, 421 and 422.
Council of the Law Society of New South Wales v Webb [2013] NSWCA 423, considered.

Aust Dig Profession and Trades [1130].

REPRESENTATION:

Counsel:

Appellant K Cuthbertson SC
Respondent B McTaggart SC

Solicitors:

Appellant:  Tremayne Fay Rheinberger
Respondent:  Glynn Williams Legal
Judgment Number:  [2023] TASFC 1
Number of paragraphs:  33

Serial No 1/2023

File No 2261/2020

LEGAL PROFESSION BOARD OF TASMANIA v W

REASONS FOR JUDGMENT FULL COURT ESTCOURT J
JAGO J
PORTER AJ
17 March 2023
Orders of the Court: 

1            Appeal allowed.

2            Declaration of guilt of unprofessional conduct set aside.

3            Declaration of guilt of professional misconduct made.

Serial No 1/2023 File No 2261/202

LEGAL PROFESSION BOARD OF TASMANIA v W

REASONS FOR JUDGMENT FULL COURT ESTCOURT J 17 March 2023

1             I do not have the slightest doubt that it is professional misconduct for a lawyer to offer to settle a client's dispute with another person on the condition that the other person withdraw a criminal complaint that person has made against the client and which is pending before a court.

2            That is what occurred in the present case, however the learned primary judge, Geason J, found that the conduct amounted only to unsatisfactory professional conduct.

3            In this appeal the appellant challenges the finding and consequential declaration of unprofessional conduct but does not seek to disturb the other orders made by his Honour.

4             In February 2018, a client of the respondent was charged with two counts of common assault against his former wife after she had made complaints to Tasmania Police alleging that the respondent had assaulted her. She had taken out a police family violence order against the client for her protection.

5             On 9 March 2018 the client wrote to the complainant, through the respondent, offering to settle their matrimonial property dispute on terms which included that "all legal pursuits and accusations cease including Tas Police. All matters are then resolved, finalised".

6 On 19 March 2018 the client was charged with the crime of perverting justice in breach of s 105 of the Criminal Code Act 1924. The respondent appeared on behalf of his client in the Burnie Magistrates Court in respect of that matter.

7             All of that notwithstanding, subsequently, on 13 April 2018 and 31 May 2018, the respondent himself wrote to the lawyer acting for the client's former wife conveying an offer to settle the matrimonial property dispute between the parties on terms expressed to be conditional upon the withdrawal by the former wife of the complaints she had made to Tasmania Police against his client.

8 Relevantly, the terms "unsatisfactory professional conduct", and "professional misconduct" are defined in ss 420 and 421 of the Legal Profession Act 2007 (the Act) as follows:

"420 Unsatisfactory professional conduct

For the purposes of this Act –

unsatisfactory professional conduct includes conduct of an Australian legal practitioner occurring in connection with the practice of law that falls short of the standard of competence and diligence that a member of the public is entitled to expect of a reasonably competent Australian legal practitioner.

421        Professional misconduct

(1)         For the purposes of this Act –

professional misconduct includes –

(a)

unsatisfactory professional conduct of an Australian legal practitioner, where the conduct involves a substantial or consistent failure to reach or maintain a reasonable standard of competence and diligence; and

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(b) conduct of an Australian legal practitioner whether occurring in connection with the practice of law or occurring otherwise than in connection with the practice of law that would, if established, justify a finding that the practitioner is not a fit and proper person to engage in legal practice.

(2)         For finding that an Australian legal practitioner is not a fit and proper person to engage in legal practice as mentioned in subsection (1), regard may be had to the suitability matters that would be considered if the practitioner were an applicant for admission to the legal profession under this Act or for the grant or renewal of a local practising certificate."

Section 422 of the Act identifies types of conduct caught by these concepts:

"422 Conduct capable of constituting unsatisfactory professional conduct or
professional misconduct

(1)

Without limiting section 420 or 421, the following conduct is capable of constituting unsatisfactory professional conduct or professional misconduct:

(a) conduct consisting of a contravention of this Act, the regulations or the legal profession rules;…"

9            In essence, in response to an investigation into his conduct by the appellant, the respondent's explanation was that he was bound by his client's instructions and those instructions were that the accusations made by his former wife were false.

10          Such an explanation is no answer to the appellant's assertion of professional misconduct. In my view, in writing as he did, at the very least, the respondent was guilty of professional misconduct in the form of "unsatisfactory professional conduct …, where the conduct involves a substantial … failure to reach or maintain a reasonable standard of competence and diligence" (Emphasis added), within the meaning of s 421(a) of the Act. I reject the respondent's submission that his failure was not substantial.

11          Such a conclusion involves an evaluative exercise, however to my mind the gravity of the attempt to have charges pending before a court withdrawn or undermined justifies a conclusion that the conduct amounts to "substantial failure to reach or maintain a reasonable standard of competence". Whatever his client's instructions were and no matter what his belief in those instructions was, the respondent's conduct had a tendency to prevent or defeat the due course of justice or the administration of the law. I reject the respondent's submissions to the contrary, notwithstanding that the charge of perverting the course of justice against the respondent's client was not proceeded with, and the charges against him were dismissed or discontinued.

12 I also reject the submission made by the respondent that "[t]he Appeal submissions overlook the central element to the practitioners conduct which was that the practitioner failed to realise that there was a limit on the application of Section 131 of the Evidence Act 2001", (exclusion of evidence of settlement negotiations). Whether or not the respondent believed that evidence of his own or his client's offers of settlement conditioned upon the withdrawal of the complaints were inadmissible in evidence is hardly to the point. It was the making of those offers, so conditioned, that had a tendency to prevent or defeat the course of justice or the administration of the law.

13          Nor does it matter that the respondent's conduct would not have amounted to the commission of a crime because of the lack of the required intention to prevent or defeat justice or the administration of the law. The standard of competence and diligence required of a legal practitioner is to be evaluated on the basis of what a reasonable member of the public would be entitled to expect of the practitioner. The offers, conditioned as they were, fell substantially short of the required standard, whether or not they amounted to a crime.

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14          In reaching that evaluative conclusion I respectfully adopt the approach of Brett J in Legal Profession Board of Tasmania v Barclay [2022] TASSC 14, in which case his Honour said at [11]:

"Although the matter was not the subject of extensive argument before me, I think it is clear that these statutory definitions provide the relevant basis upon which the Court must characterise the practitioner's conduct. It is clear, in my view, that the definitions are intended to replace any notions of what amounts to unsatisfactory professional conduct or professional misconduct, formulated under the common law and statutory schemes which are no longer in effect. Under the legislative definitions, the first step is to determine whether the conduct amounts to unsatisfactory professional conduct. This involves an evaluative assessment of the conduct, measured against the standard of competence and diligence that a member of the public is entitled to expect of a reasonably competent Australian legal practitioner. The second step is to determine whether the unsatisfactory professional conduct amounts to professional misconduct. In making this determination, an assessment must be made as to whether the conduct involved a substantial or consistent failure to reach or maintain a reasonable standard of competence and diligence. It is the finding that the relevant failure has been substantial or consistent which is critical to this determination. A further observation which can be made about the legislative scheme incorporated into this legislation is that the standard of competence and diligence required of a legal practitioner is to be evaluated on the basis of what a reasonable member of the public would be entitled to expect of the practitioner. I think that this results in an important shift of emphasis away from the formulation which preceded this legislation, which depended upon what practitioners of good repute and competency would reasonably consider to be conduct which could be described as disgraceful or dishonourable. See for example, A Legal Practitioner v Law Society of Tasmania [2005] TASSC 28, 13 Tas R 448. This change of emphasis in favour of the expectation of a reasonable member of the public, as opposed to other practitioners, is, in my view, entirely consistent with the primary purpose of disciplinary proceedings, which is the 'protection of the public, the preservation of the reputation of the legal profession and the proper administration of justice'. See my comments at [41] of Legal Profession Board of Tasmania v Lester [2021] TASSC 41. Of course, conduct which falls within those earlier definitions may also inform this Court's exercise of its inherent jurisdiction, which is preserved by s 510 of the Act, but this is in addition to the statutory definitions, and not instead of them, see Legal Profession Board of Tasmania v Kitto [2019] TASSC 39, 31 Tas R 91, per Blow CJ at [12]."

15 The learned primary judge reached the view that s 421 was not engaged because "the second limb of s 421 is not satisfied". In so concluding his Honour accepted a submission made to him by senior counsel for the respondent, Mr McTaggart SC. That is to say that his Honour thought that ss 421(a) and (b) were to be read conjunctively and that professional misconduct could only be found if the conduct justified a finding that "the practitioner is not a fit and proper person to engage in legal practice". That is not so.

16           If it were so then there could never be a case in which conduct of a lawyer occurring otherwise than in connection with the practice of law could justify a finding of professional misconduct. If the two paragraphs "must be read conjunctively then personal misconduct not occurring in connection with the practice of law could not be professional misconduct" (Council of the Law Society of New South Wales v Parente [2019] NSWCA 33 per Basten and Meagher JJA at [8] (Emphasis added).

17   This point was conceded by the respondent on the hearing of the appeal through his counsel Mr

McTaggart.

18           I reject the submissions made by Mr McTaggart that the judgment of Meagher JA in Council of the Law Society of New South Wales v Webb [2013] NSWCA 423 at [22] should be taken as authority for the proposition that consideration of the concept of substantiality in s 421(a) of the Act requires consideration of the questions of the practitioner's diligence and competence and in those respects his fitness to continue in practice. Such considerations are squarely within the terms of the alternate route to professional misconduct in s 421(b).

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19           Even if the consideration contended for by Mr McTaggart was required, I am of the view that the practitioner's conduct was sufficiently serious as to in fact raise questions of his competence and diligence and in that respect his fitness to practice. Mr McTaggart did not go so far as to argue that a practitioner must be found to be unfit to continue in practice before a finding of professional misconduct may be made against him or her, only that the learned primary judge ought to have considered the question. Any failure by the learned primary judge to consider this issue was not a determinative error, in all of the circumstances of the respondent's conduct and his explanations for that conduct.

20           I would uphold the appeal and set aside the declaration that the respondent is guilty of unprofessional conduct and substitute a declaration that the respondent is guilty of professional misconduct.

21          To the extent that it might be necessary to now consider the appropriateness of the learned primary judges punitive orders, the Court is satisfied that there is no need to disturb them.

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File No: 2852/2020

LEGAL PROFESSION BOARD OF TASMANIA v W

REASONS FOR JUDGMENT JAGO J
17 March 2023

22           I have read the Reasons for Judgment of Estcourt J. I agree that the appeal should be allowed, the declaration made on 4 August 2022 be set aside and in its place there be a declaration that the appellant is guilty of professional misconduct for the reasons expressed by his Honour. I also agree the consequential orders made by Geason J should not be disturbed.

23   I agree with the additional Reasons of Porter AJ.

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File No: 2852/2020

LEGAL PROFESSION BOARD OF TASMANIA v W

REASONS FOR JUDGMENT PORTER AJ
17 March 2023

24 On the application of the appellant, the Legal Profession Board, Geason J declared the respondent guilty of unsatisfactory professional conduct within the meaning of s 420 of the Legal Profession Act 2007 (the Act). The respondent was reprimanded and ordered to undertake and complete a course in legal ethics and professional responsibilities.

25           The Board appeals to this Court against the declaration, seeking in its place a declaration that the respondent is guilty of professional misconduct. The Board did not appeal against the consequential orders and is content they remain the same in the event the appeal succeeds.

26           I have had the advantage of reading the reasons for judgment of Estcourt J in which his Honour sets out the facts and the relevant provisions of the Act. For the reasons his Honour gives, I agree that the appeal should be allowed, the declaration made on 4 August 2022 be set aside and in its place there be a declaration that the appellant is guilty of professional misconduct. Assuming it is necessary to revisit the consequential orders, I am also satisfied those made by Geason J should be left undisturbed.

27 The grounds of appeal are that the primary judge erred in holding that for a finding of professional misconduct to be made, both paragraphs (a) and (b) of s 421(1) need to be satisfied. The second ground alleges a failure on the part of the primary judge to make a declaration of professional misconduct, having found the respondent's conduct constituted a serious failure to reach a standard of competence and diligence.

28           As Estcourt J has noted, at the hearing of the appeal senior counsel for the appellant conceded ground 1. The concession was one properly made: see Council of the Law Society of New South Wales v Parente [2019] NSWCA 33 and Tangsilat v Council of the Law Society of New South Wales [2019] NSWCA 144 which deal with the same provisions as in this State. Neither of those cases was cited to the primary judge although senior counsel for the Board, in reply to the respondent's first instance argument, referred to Legal Profession Board of Tasmania v Kitto [2019] TASSC 39, 31 Tas R 91 and what was implicit in the approach taken at [11] and [22].

29 In arguing ground 2, senior counsel for the respondent submitted that for there to be a finding under s 421(1)(a) of a substantial failure to reach or maintain a reasonable standard of competence and diligence, the conduct must also be "sufficiently serious to raise questions as to the practitioner's competence and in that respect his fitness to continue in practice."

30 I want to add a few remarks about the submission and the meaning of professional misconduct as it is defined in s 421(a) of the Act. For convenience I will set out the paragraph again:

"Unsatisfactory professional conduct of an Australian legal practitioner where the conduct involves a substantial or consistent failure to reach or maintain a reasonable standard of competence and diligence."

31           As Estcourt J has noted, the respondent's submission is squarely based on a statement made by Meagher JA (with whom Leeming JA and Simpson J agreed) in Council of the Law Society of New South Wales v Webb [2013] NSWCA 423 at [21]. Paragraphs [21] and [22] should be looked at as a whole. They read as follows:

"21 By the Legal Profession (Amendment) Act 1987, th[e] distinction between minor and serious professional misconduct [in the Legal Profession Act 1987 as originally

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enacted] was replaced with one between unsatisfactory professional conduct and professional misconduct; the latter including unsatisfactory professional conduct which involves a substantial or consistent failure to reach or maintain the required standard of competence and diligence. As defined … professional misconduct includes by paragraph (b) conduct which, if established, would justify a finding that the legal practitioner is not a fit and proper person to engage in legal practice. In this context, and having regard to the history of these provisions, particularly the distinction drawn in the 1987 Act as originally enacted, it is plain that paragraph (a) of the definition describes serious misconduct which calls into question the lawyer's competence and diligence and, in those respects, his or her fitness to continue in practice. [My emphasis]

22 The distinction made by that definition is between conduct which involves a 'substantial' failure to reach or maintain the required standard and conduct which involves a "consistent" failure to do so. The former directs attention to the nature and consequences of the failure, which may be sufficiently serious to raise questions as to the lawyer's competence and diligence and thereby warrant the description "substantial". The reference to a 'consistent failure' is to ongoing or persisting acts of failing on different occasions to reach or maintain the required standard. The same or similar failures which occur on a series of related occasions and are explained by an overarching error of judgment on the part of the lawyer (which is not itself the or a relevant failure which is the subject of complaint) do not involve a 'consistent failure' in the sense in which that expression is used in this definition."

32           I agree that the case is not authority for the respondent's proposition. I do not think the Court intended by the highlighted statement in par [21] to introduce into paragraph (a) of the definition, a requirement for the conduct to be of sufficient seriousness to call into question – whatever that may mean – the lawyer's competence and diligence "and in those respects fitness to continue in practice." With respect, if it were so intended, I would be satisfied that it is plainly wrong. In my view, particularly when put alongside par [22], the statement is a comment simply in the context of his Honour's summary of the operation of the former provisions which dealt with professional conduct.

33          In any event, as Estcourt J says, in this case the correctness or otherwise of the statement would have no bearing on the outcome given the facts of the matter.

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