Part III Remuneration of Solicitors
Non–contentious business
C1P1C756 Orders as to remuneration for non–contentious business.
1
For the purposes of this section there shall be a committee consisting of the following persons—
C2b
the Lord Chief Justice;
C2c
the Master of the Rolls;
C2d
the President of the Society;
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The committee, or any three members of the committee (the F5(the Lord Chancellor being one), may make general orders prescribing the general principles to be applied when determining the remuneration of solicitors in respect of non–contentious business.
3
The F6Lord Chancellor, before any order under this section is made, shall cause a draft of the order to be sent to the F7Society; and the committee shall consider any observations of the F7Society submitted to them in writing within one month of the sending of the draft, and may then make the order, either in the form of the draft or with such alterations or additions as they may think fit.
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F8The principles prescribed by an order under this section may provide that solicitors should be remunerated—
b
by a gross sum; or
c
by a fixed sum for each document prepared or perused, without regard to length; or
d
in any other mode; or
e
partly in one mode and partly in another.
C55
F9 The general principles prescribed by an order under this section may provide that the amount of such remuneration is to be determined by having regard to all or any of the following, among other, considerations, that is to say—
C6a
the position of the party for whom the solicitor is concerned in the business, that is, whether he is vendor or purchaser, lessor or lessee, mortgagor or mortgagee, or the like;
b
the place where, and the circumstances in which, the business or any part of it is transacted;
c
the amount of the capital money or rent to which the business relates;
C6d
the skill, labour and responsibility on the part of the solicitor F10, or any employee of his who is an authorised person, which the business involves;
e
the number and importance of the documents prepared or perused, without regard to length.
F11C55A
In subsection (5) “authorised person” means a person who is an authorised person in relation to an activity which is a reserved legal activity, within the meaning of the Legal Services Act 2007 (see section 18 of that Act).
C56
An order under this section may authorise and regulate—
a
the taking by a solicitor from his client of security for payment of any remuneration, to be ascertained by F12assessment or otherwise, which may become due to him under any such order; and
b
the allowance of interest.
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8
Any order made under this section may be varied or revoked by a subsequent order so made.
9
The power to make orders under this section shall be exercisable by statutory instrument which shall be subject to annulment in pursuance of a resolution of either House of Parliament; and the M1Statutory Instruments Act 1946 shall apply to a statutory instrument containing such an order in like manner as if the order had been made by a Minister of the Crown.