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Can a non-solicitor Deputy charge solicitor fees?

In the recent case of Riddle v Public Guardian [2021] EWCOP 38, an application was made for Permission to Appeal from two judgments of HHJ Hilder, dated 11 August 2020 and 4 September 2020, which are reported as The Public Guardian v Andrew Riddle (No1 and No2) [2020] EWCOP 41.

By way of background, Mr Riddle is Managing Director of Professional Deputies, offering services in acting as appointee, Deputy, or Attorney, and assisting applicants in making applications to the Court. However, he is not a qualified solicitor. The prior hearings concerned, amongst other factors, whether the professional Deputy should be authorised to charge fees at a solicitors’ rate, or whether their charges could fall somewhere in between the public authority and solicitor rates. In addition, whether a professional Deputy could be remunerated at a higher rate than public authority Deputies was also considered, and the conclusion of the Court was that they could not.

The application for permission to appeal was originally rejected on the papers, however a renewed oral application was allowed. There were three grounds of appeal (with Ground 1 being split into two parts):

On consideration of the grounds and the submissions made by both parties, it was decided that the arguments presented had no reasonable prospect of success and were bound to fail. As a result of the above, permission to appeal on the presented grounds was refused, affirmed as per an Order dated 19 March 2021.

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