Excess charges of €340,000 in solicitors’ work on €14m estate

High Court hears of excessive fees in administering money left to St Vincent de Paul

Gerard Williams Sandys and Bryan C Brophy, of Sandys and Brophy, Galway, failed in their challenge to a decision by the Law Society to refer a complaint about the alleged overcharging to the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal
Gerard Williams Sandys and Bryan C Brophy, of Sandys and Brophy, Galway, failed in their challenge to a decision by the Law Society to refer a complaint about the alleged overcharging to the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal

Two solicitors overcharged by €340,000 for their work on administering the estate of a woman who left €14 million to the St Vincent de Paul charitable society, the High Court has been told.

Gerard Williams Sandys and Bryan C Brophy, of Sandys and Brophy, Sea Road, Galway, failed in their challenge to a decision by the Law Society to refer a complaint about the alleged overcharging to the society's Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT).

The President of the High Court, Mr Justice Nicholas Kearns, dismissed their challenge. He affirmed a July 2013 decision of the Law Society's Complaints and Client Relations Committee (CCRC) to refer to the tribunal a complaint about the two solicitors' alleged failure to send to the Vincent de Paul an estimate of their costs for administering the estate.

The judge said Sandys and Brophy acted as solicitor for the late Maureen O’Connell who died in May 1998 and left an estate, of which the principal asset was O’Connells Bar in Eyre Square, Galway.

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The solicitors had to institute legal proceedings to prove the will and condemn a subsequent will. The case was settled in 2013. A separate case also had to be taken to get possession of the pub. This was settled in 2006 with the premises eventually sold for €14 million.

In 2011, a solicitor for the St Vincent de Paul complained to the Law Society that the two solicitors had charged excessive fees for their work on the estate and had also failed to furnish an estimate of fees.

The society’s CCRC asked the solicitors for detailed schedules of their fees charged and, over a number of months, there were various proposals about how the matter might be resolved.

However, by July 2012 the CCRC decided to bring in its own legal costs accountant to look at the complaint. That accountant delivered a report which found an overcharge of €340,000.

Just before the CCRC was due to meet to discuss the matter in February 2013, Mr Sandys and Mr Brophy said they wanted to submit their own cost accountant’s report.

The CCRC later replied the solicitors had ample opportunity over the previous two years to do this (get a cost accountant) and it went ahead with determining the complaint and referring it to the SDT.

The CCRC also determined there was overcharging.

The solicitors then brought a High Court challenge seeking to quash those decisions.

They claimed they had not been afforded fair procedures by the CCRC which, they said, elevated its own accountant’s report to the status of accepted fact.

They also claimed the CCRC unlawfully delegated a decision making function to its own cost accountant and had failed to give reasons for its decision to refer the complaint to the SDT. The Law Society disputed their claims and opposed their challenge.

Mr Justice Kearns found, while the solicitors had a right to bring judicial review proceedings, they had, after the matter had “dragged on for over two years”, sought to submit their own accountant’s report on the eve of a CCRC meeting to deal with the complaint.

He was satisfied the CCRC afforded them fair procedures by commissioning, at its own expense, an accountant’s report which the solicitors could have made submissions on.

He did not accept their claim the CCRC had delegated its decision-making function to that accountant or that it had failed to provide adequate reasons for its determination.