Practising Certificate 2023: Notice to all practising solicitors

Registrar of Solicitors 15/12/2022

Why you need a practising certificate

It is the statutory responsibility of each solicitor to ensure that they have a practising certificate in force before providing legal services of any kind whatsoever, either restricted or non-restricted.

It is professional misconduct and a criminal offence for a solicitor (other than a solicitor in the full-time service of the State, or a solicitor solely engaging in conveyancing services for a non-solicitor employer) to practise without a practising certificate. A solicitor shall be deemed to practise as a solicitor if they engage in the provision of legal services of any kind, either restricted or non-restricted. ‘Legal services’ are services of a legal or financial nature provided by a solicitor arising from that solicitor’s practice as a solicitor.

It should be noted that, as set out in the practice note “Prohibition on practising as a solicitor without a practising certificate; solicitors cannot be ‘legal executives’ or ‘paralegals’” as published in the Gazette in July 2009, and again in February 2012, it is not permissible for a firm to classify a solicitor employed by a firm as a ‘legal executive’ or ‘paralegal’ with a view to avoiding the requirement to hold a practising certificate, if the solicitor is engaged in the provision of legal services.

It should also be noted that, as set out in practice note “In-house solicitors – requirement to hold a practising certificate” as published in the Gazette in July 2014 and again in December 2021, in-house solicitors (solicitors practising as a solicitor by providing legal services as an employee of a non-solicitor) are required to hold a practising certificate regardless of the areas of law in which they practise.

The actions that can be taken against a solicitor found to be practising without a practising certificate include a referral to the Legal Practitioners Disciplinary Tribunal, an application to the High Court and a report to An Garda Síochána.

Practising certificate application forms and fees

Application forms for solicitors are only available online in 2023 and no paper forms will issue. Please note that practising certificate application forms and the practising certificate fees will not be available until after 9 December 2022 as both must be approved by Council at its December meeting.

When you must apply

A practising certificate must be applied for on or before 1 February in each year in order to be dated 1 January of that year and thereby operate as a qualification to practise from the commencement of the year.

It is therefore a legal requirement for a practising solicitor to deliver, or cause to be delivered, to the Registrar of Solicitors, on or before 1 February 2023, an online application in the prescribed form correctly completed and signed by the applicant solicitor personally, together with the full appropriate fee. The onus is on each solicitor to ensure that their application form and fee is delivered on or before 1 February 2023.

It is the responsibility of each solicitor to ensure that they login to the Society’s website, make an application for a practising certificate and pay the full fees on or before 1 February 2023 to ensure they receive a practising certificate dated 1 January 2023. 

A valid practising certificate application consists of a properly completed application form together with full payment of fees. It should be noted that any incorrectly completed application form, or applications without full payment attached (or properly completed EFT form attached), will be considered to be an incomplete application, cannot be processed and will be returned. Practising certificates received after 1 February 2023 will be dated the date that the Society actually receives a properly completed application with full payment.

What happens if you apply late?

Any applications for practising certificates that are received after 1 February 2023 will result in the practising certificate being dated the date of actual receipt by the Registrar of Solicitors, rather than 1 January 2023. There is no legal power to allow any period of grace under any circumstances whatsoever.

Please note that, as mentioned above, you cannot provide legal services as a solicitor without a practising certificate in force. Therefore, solicitors whose practising certificate applications are received after 1 February 2023 and whose practising certificates are therefore dated after 1 February 2023, who have provided legal services before that date, are required to make an application to the President of the High Court to have their practising certificates backdated to 1 January 2023. Further information on backdating practising certificates can be obtained by emailing backdate@lawsociety.ie. It should be noted that the Society will seek its costs of €350 per practising certificate backdated in all cases.

The Regulation of Practice Committee is the regulatory committee of the Society that has responsibility for supervising compliance with practising certificate requirements. A special meeting of the committee will be held on a date after 1 February 2023, to be decided at a later date, to consider any late or unresolved applications for practising certificates. At this meeting, any practising solicitors who have not applied by the date of the meeting for a practising certificate will be considered for referral forthwith to the Legal Practitioners Disciplinary Tribunal and will be informed that the Society reserves the right to take proceedings in the High Court seeking an order under section 18 of the Solicitors (Amendment) Act 2002 to prohibit them from practising illegally.

If you are an employed solicitor

Solicitors who are employed should note that it is the statutory obligation of every solicitor who requires a practising certificate to ensure that they have a practising certificate in force from the commencement of the year, or from the date at which they commenced providing legal services in that year. Employed solicitors cannot absolve themselves from this responsibility by relying on their employers to procure their practising certificates. However, it is the Society’s recommendation that all employers should pay for the practising certificate of solicitors employed by them. It should be noted that the practising certificate remains the property of the solicitor, regardless of who has paid for the practising certificate.

Some of your details are already on the online application form

The online practising certificate application form will contain information relating to each solicitor’s practice already completed. Such information will include the relevant fees due by each solicitor, including allowance for solicitors of 70 years or over, as they will not be covered under the provisions of the Solicitors’ Group Life Assurance Scheme.

Payment by electronic funds transfer (“EFT”)

Details of payment method options are specified below and in the Practising Certificate Application Form. In all cases, payment must be accompanied by the solicitor's name and registration number.

For all applications for the practice year commencing on 1 January 2023, payment methods are limited to debit/credit card or EFT, with physical methods of payment (cheque, bank draft, postal order or cash) not accepted.

The online Practising Certificate Application Form will include an electronic funds transfer (“EFT”) payment form for bank transfers.

Each EFT payment must have an easily identifiable specific reference, such as the firm or company name, the solicitor’s name, the firm number or the solicitor’s number. General references such as “Law Society” or “practising certificate” will not be accepted and may result in a significant delay in the issuing of the practising certificate as the Society may not be able to identify your specific payment without an easily identifiable specific reference. The payment reference used must be included in the EFT form. Failure to include this information will result in the application form being deemed incomplete, notwithstanding that the fees due may actually have been received by the Society.

The Society's bank account details are included in the EFT payment form. The Society cannot be held responsible for any delay which occurs in processing applications to obtain a practising certificate where payment has been forwarded to another Law Society account which does not deal with practising certificate/membership fees. You are required to ensure that the monies have been sent to the correct account as listed in the EFT payment form regardless of which account you sent the fees to in previous years. 

Law Directory 2023

It is intended that the hard copy of the Law Directory will record all solicitors who are issued with a digital practising certificate by 16 February 2023. This deadline does not apply to the Law Directory app, which is updated on an ongoing basis. Practising certificates can only be issued following receipt of a properly completed application together with full payment, with no outstanding queries raised thereon.

It should be noted that only those solicitors with practising certificates issued by 16 February 2023 will be included in the hard copy of the Law Directory. Solicitors who have only submitted an application by 16 February 2023 will not be included.

The details of any solicitor whose practising certificate issues after 16 February will not be included in the hard copy Law Directory but will be included in the Law Directory app and the ‘Find a Solicitor' search facility on the Law Society's website.

However, the new Digital Law Directory for members’ updates in real time throughout the year once changes/amendments have been approved by the Society. Therefore, in order to ensure that your practising certificate issues by 16 February 2023 to enable you to be included in the hard copy Law Directory, you should ensure that the application form you return to the Society is completed correctly and includes full payment of fees due. If the form is not completed correctly, or fees have not been paid in full or the EFT form has not been included in the case of EFT payments (notwithstanding that the fees due may actually have been received by the Society), this may result in delaying the issue of your practising certificate, despite the fact that you had applied for the practising certificate prior to 1 February 2023.

The details of any solicitor whose practising certificate issues after 16 February 2023 will not be included in the hard copy Law Directory, but will be included in the Digital Law Directory and the 'Find a Solicitor' search facility on the Society's website, provided the solicitor is a practising solicitor. A practising solicitor is a solicitor with a current practising certificate and either holds a qualifying policy of professional indemnity insurance in place or has an exemption from holding professional indemnity insurance as a solicitor employee of a non-solicitor employer or a solicitor in the full-time service of the State.

What can you access on the website (www.lawsociety.ie)?

Your individual application form will also be available on the members' area of the Law Society website after 9 December 2022, which you can complete online for returning to the Society with the full appropriate fee. This area is accessible by using your username and password. If you require assistance, please contact webmaster@lawsociety.ie.

If you did not hold a practising certificate for 2022

If you did not hold a practising certificate for 2022 (with the exception of solicitors in the full-time service of the State in 2022 and solicitors solely engaging in conveyancing services for a non-solicitor employer), and apply for a practising certificate in 2023, you may be required to make a "section 61" application, in accordance with section 49 of the Solicitors Act 1954 as substituted by section 61 of the Solicitors (Amendment) Act 1994, setting out in writing how you kept up to date with legal matters since you were last issued with a practising certificate. The Section 61 application form should form part of your application if you are required to submit same. 

Change of practising status

If you held a practising certificate in 2022, and do not intend to practise for some or all of 2023, including the following situations, you should notify the Society in writing with the relevant details before 1 February 2023:

  • you recently ceased to practise, or are intending to cease to practise in the coming year;

  • you will not be practising in 2023 for any reason, including unemployment, career break, change of career, emigration, sick leave or maternity leave; or

  • you will not be providing legal services, and will therefore not be applying for a practising certificate until after 1 February 2023 for any reason, including unemployment, career break, sick leave and maternity leave.

You should provide the Society with a current correspondence address and email address to allow the Society to communicate with you if you are not practising. If there is any change in your practising status during the year, you should immediately notify the Society in writing with the relevant information to ensure that your practising status is up to date.

Change of practice

If you have changed firms during the year, and have not previously notified the Society in writing of this change, you must do so immediately, in accordance with the provisions of section 81 of the Solicitors Act 1954. You should include the date you left your former firm, and the date you joined your new firm, together with the name and address of the new firm as well as your new email address. The same requirement applies for any solicitor who has changed non-solicitor employer.

You can check the current contact information for you held by the Society through the 'Find a Solicitor' search facility on the Society's website, provided you are a practising solicitor.

Acknowledgment of application forms

Please note that it is not the Society's policy to acknowledge receipt of applications or fee payments.

Issuing a practising certificate

Please note that acceptance of an application form and fees by the Society does not constitute a guarantee or agreement that a practising certificate will be issued. There are a number of factors that may result in the Society deciding not to issue a solicitor with a practising certificate, including matters arising under section 49 of the Solicitors Act 1954, as substituted by section 61 of the Solicitors (Amendment) Act 1994, as amended by section 2 of the Solicitors (Amendment) Act 2002. If a practising certificate is not issued to a solicitor, the relevant fees will be refunded.

 

Niall Connors

Director of Regulation and Registrar of Solicitors