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Investment
Business & Investor Compensation
Regulations,
1998
To the Managing
Partner
25th November 1998
Dear Colleague,
As you may be aware, recent legislation
has sought to clarify the rights and obligations of those who provide services
in the area of investments.
Investment
Intermediaries Act
The Investment Intermediaries Act,
1995 (IIA) introduced certain obligations for those providing investment
services to clients, including solicitors, although there was a degree
of uncertainty as to the exact extent of those obligations.
Investor Compensation
Act
The Investor Compensation Act, 1998
(ICA), which came into effect on 1st August 1998, has clarified
the position and has altered the requirements applying to solicitors who
wish to provide investment business services, investment advice or insurance
intermediary services to clients.
The purpose of this letter is to summarise
the current statutory position and the options open to you as a practising
solicitor in providing investment services to clients and earning commission
therefrom, as follows:
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If you wish to provide investment business
services, investment advice or insurance intermediary services to clients
not incidental to the provision of legal
services to those clients, you must first become authorised by the
Central Bank as an "authorised investment business firm" or, in the case
of insurance intermediary services, meet the relevant requirements of the
Insurance Act, 1989 and the ICA. This may involve compliance with some
detailed and (some may find) onerous obligations and, accordingly, may
not be seen as practical or appropriate by most practising solicitors.
Letter of
Appointment
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Alternatively, you may provide investment
business services, investment advice or insurance intermediary services
to clients to whom you are providing legal services, if such services or
advice are provided incidental to the provision of legal
services to those clients. In relation to the incidental provision
of investment business services, you must obtain a letter of appointment
as an
investment product intermediary from the
relevant financial institution which must, itself, be authorised by the
Central Bank. It is important to note that you cannot advertise that you
provide such investment business services or investment advice, as to do
so would amount to holding yourself out as an "authorised investment business
firm" and would require prior authorisation by the Central Bank.
Irish Pensions
Trust Ltd
As it may prove difficult in the future
for solicitors to obtain letters of appointment directly from financial
institutions, the Society has entered into an arrangement with Irish Pensions
Trust Ltd, trading as Solicitors Financial Services, whereby Irish Pensions
Trust will issue letters of appointment to practising solicitors. You can
direct your investment business services, obtain investment advice and
invest your clients’ funds via this arrangement. Advice and information
on the new service can be obtained from Solicitors Financial Services at
1800-300-900.
For your information, I attach two
Memoranda. The first Memorandum outlines in greater detail the recent statutory
changes as they apply to practising solicitors and the consequential Regulations
recently made by the Society (S.I. No. 439 of 1998), which come into operation
on 1st December next. The second Memorandum outlines the arrangement
put in place by the Society with Irish Pensions Trust Ltd, trading as Solicitors
Financial Services, to facilitate the provision of investment business
services by solicitors to their clients. Obviously, if you are considering
registering as an "authorised investment business firm" you should carefully
consider the provisions of the IIA and the ICA, as well as the requirements
of the Central Bank in that regard.
Yours sincerely,
Patrick O’Connor
President
Memorandum
on the
Application
of the Investment Intermediaries Act, 1995 ("IIA") and the
Investor
Compensation Act, 1998 ("ICA") to Solicitors
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Under the IIA, a solicitor holding a practising
certificate was excluded from the definition of an "investment business
firm" (and thereby from most of the obligations under the IIA) where the
solicitor provided investment business services or investment advice in
an incidental manner (i.e. incidental to the provision of legal services).
Although not clear from doubt, it seemed that, under the IIA, a solicitor
who was an intermediary in the investment of clients’ funds (with the client’s
consent) with a financial institution in return for a "fee, commission
or other reward" was an "investment product intermediary" and therefore
was required to –
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hold a letter of appointment from each
financial institution with whom clients’ funds were placed for investment;
and
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comply with certain obligations concerning
the issuing of receipts for clients’ funds received for investment.
Other obligations under the IIA dealing
with professional indemnity insurance were not brought into effect and
the bonding requirements provided for in the IIA did not appear to apply
to a solicitor holding a practising certificate.
However, due to uncertainty as to what
obligations under the IIA did in fact apply to practising solicitors, solicitors
earning commission from placing clients’ funds with financial institutions
for investment often did not in fact hold letters of appointment from those
institutions.
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The ICA has now clarified the regulatory
position. A solicitor holding a practising certificate will not be regarded
as an investment business firm within the meaning of the IIA where –
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the solicitor does not hold himself out
as providing investment business services (which is defined as including
the activities of an insurance intermediary) and/or investment advice;
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the provision of investment business services
or investment advice by the solicitor is only done incidentally to the
provision of legal services; and
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when acting as an investment product intermediary
(e.g. placing deposits with a financial institution), the solicitor holds
a letter of appointment from the financial institution concerned, whether
that institution be an investment business firm, a stockbroker, a credit
institution or a collective scheme manager (in each instance) situate in
the State, which is authorised as such by the Central Bank.
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(a) The ICA made certain amendments to
the Solicitors (Amendment) Act 1994 and has provided that the definition
of "legal services" now includes the provision of investment business services
and investment advice unless the solicitor providing such services or advice
is an authorised investment business firm. Therefore, unless such a solicitor
is authorised by the Central Bank as an "authorised investment business
firm", any claims by clients for loss in consequence of the dishonesty
or negligence of that solicitor (or any "clerk or servant" of that solicitor)
in providing such services or advice will fall to be dealt with either
by the Society’s Compensation Fund (where dishonesty) or under the mandatory
professional indemnity cover of the solicitor (where negligence) and not
by the compensation fund established under the ICA.
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(b) The maximum compensation per claim
payable by the compensation fund established under the ICA is limited to
20,000 ECU (approx. IR£16,000) in contrast to the IR£350,000
present upper limit per claim in respect of both the Society’s Compensation
Fund and the minimum level of cover under the Society’s Professional Indemnity
Insurance Regulations 1995. (The minimum level of Professional Indemnity
Insurance cover will increase to £1,000,000 with effect from 1st
January, 1999.) Therefore, to avoid potentially serious exposure of, in
particular, the Compensation Fund to the detriment of the profession as
a whole whose annual contributions maintain it, the ICA has provided (by
means of the insertion of an new section, Section 30A, in the Solicitors
(Amendment) Act, 1994) that solicitors holding practising certificates,
who choose to become authorised investment business firms or who choose
to hold themselves out as insurance intermediaries (and so notify the Central
Bank of that fact), should provide additional forms of indemnity so that
the level of protection provided for their investment business services
clients in the event of loss to such clients caused by the dishonest or
negligent default of such solicitors acting in that capacity is the equivalent
of what it would be if such clients were clients in receipt of "legal services"
as now defined.
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(c) Regulations have now been made to
that end by the Society (S I No. 439 of 1998, effective from 1st
December 1998), and a copy of same is attached. In consequence, the practising
certificate application form for 1999 and for subsequent years will be
amended to incorporate the questions and undertakings provided for in these
Regulations.
25th November
1998
Memorandum
on
Solicitors
Financial Services
(operated by
Irish Pensions Trust Ltd ("IPT"), an authorised investment business firm)
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A solicitor holding a practising certificate
who wishes to earn commission as an intermediary in referring clients’
funds to financial institutions for investment can do so in compliance
with the Investment Intermediaries Act, 1995 ("IIA") and the Investor Compensation
Act, 1998 ("ICA"), provided that the solicitor –
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does not hold himself/herself out as providing
investment business services and/or investment advice,
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only provides such services or advice
in a manner incidental to the provision of legal services, and,
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channels the investment of clients’ funds
(with the client’s consent) through Solicitors Financial Services or through
another Central Bank-authorised financial institution, from whom the solicitor
holds a letter of appointment that makes the solicitor an "investment product
intermediary" for the institution concerned.
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For the period ending 1st October
1999, the Law Society of Ireland has licensed to IPT (an authorised investment
business firm) the use of the company and business name "Solicitors Financial
Services", formerly used by the Society itself.
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Solicitors Financial Services will, on
acceptance of an application, issue a solicitor or a firm of solicitors
with a letter of appointment as an investment product intermediary for
Solicitors Financial Services.
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Solicitors Financial Services can provide
the legal services’ client of a practising solicitor (to whom Solicitors
Financial Services has issued a letter of appointment) with investment
advice and can invest the client’s funds in accordance with that advice
or in accordance with the client’s wishes in that regard as conveyed directly
by the client or through the solicitor.
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The arrangement with Solicitors Financial
Services means that, where a solicitor previously placed (with the client’s
consent) clients’ funds for investment directly with a financial institution
and earned commission for doing so, the solicitor can now, in effect, continue
to do so via Solicitors Financial Services, albeit on a commission-sharing
basis.
The commission-sharing arrangement
agreed by IPT operating as Solicitors Financial Services will mean that,
after payment of a 5% licence fee to the Law Society of Ireland for use
of the name "Solicitors Financial Services", IPT will share commission
received 50/50 with the solicitor concerned.
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Whilst the level of the commission receivable
by a solicitor from Solicitors Financial Services would be less than might
previously have been received by the solicitor, the legal position now
is that, unless the solicitor can obtain a letter of appointment directly
from one or more other Central Bank-authorised financial institutions,
the solicitor cannot lawfully continue acting as an investment product
intermediary in return for a "commission, fee or other reward" without
first obtaining a Central Bank-authorisation as an "authorised investment
business firm". Because of the more strict regulatory responsibilities
imposed on financial institutions who issue letters of appointment, it
seems likely that the obtaining by practising solicitors of letters of
appointment (or practising solicitors being able to continue to hold such
letters of appointment, if previously issued) may prove more difficult
that heretofore; recent indications being that there has been and will
continue to be a reduction in the number of intermediaries appointed by
such institutions.
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Further information on Solicitors Financial
Services will be sent by IPT to all members of the Society in due course.
In the meantime, advice and information on the new service being offered
by IPT can be obtained from Solicitors Financial Services at 1800 300 900.
25th November
1998
THE SOLICITORS
ACTS, 1954 TO 1994
(INVESTMENT
BUSINESS AND INVESTOR COMPENSATION) REGULATIONS, 1998
The Law Society of Ireland, in exercise
of the powers conferred on them by section 71 of the Solicitors Act, 1954
(as amended by section 69 of the Solicitors (Amendment) Act, 1994) and
section 30A of the Solicitors (Amendment) Act, 1994 (as inserted by section
46 of the Investor Compensation Act, 1998) HEREBY MAKE the following Regulations:-
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These Regulations may be cited as The
Solicitors Acts, 1954 to 1994 (Investment Business and Investor Compensation)
Regulations, 1998.
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These Regulations shall come into operation
on 1st December, 1998.
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In these Regulations –
"the Act of 1954" means the
Solicitors Act, 1954 (No. 36 of 1954);
"the Act of 1960" means the
Solicitors (Amendment) Act, 1960 (No. 37 of 1960);
"the Act of 1994" means the
Solicitors (Amendment) Act, 1994 (No. 27 of 1994);
"the Act of 1995" means the
Investment Intermediaries Act, 1995 (No. 11 of 1995);
"the Act of 1998" means the
Investor Compensation Act, 1998 (No. 37 of 1998);
"the Bank" means the Central
Bank of Ireland;
"the Company" means The Investor
Compensation Company Limited formed and registered pursuant to section
10 of the Act of 1998;
"the Compensation Fund" means
the fund maintained by the Society pursuant to sections 21 and 22 of the
Act of 1960 (as substituted by sections 29 and 30 of the Act of 1994);
"authorised investment business
firm" has the meaning assigned to it in section 2(4) of the Act of
1998;
"certified person" has the meaning
assigned to it in section 2 of the Act of 1998;
"he" and other cognate words
denoting the masculine include "she" and other cognate words denoting
the feminine;
"insurance intermediary" has
the meaning assigned to it in section 2 of the Act of 1998;
"investment advice" has the
meaning assigned to it in section 2 of the Act of 1995;
"investment business firm" has
the meaning assigned to it in section 2 of the Act of 1995;
"investment business services"
has the meaning assigned to it in section 2 of the Act of 1998;
"investment firm" has the meaning
assigned to it in section 2 of the Act of 1998;
"investment product intermediary"
has the meaning assigned to it in section 25 of the Act of 1995;
"legal services" has the meaning
assigned to it in section 2 of the Act of 1994, as substituted by section
45 (b) of the Act of 1998;
"Minister" means the Minister
for Justice, Equality and Law Reform;
"Regulation" means a regulation
in these Regulations;
"restricted activity investment
product intermediary" has the meaning assigned to it in section 2 of
the Act of 1998;
"the Society" means the Law
Society of Ireland.
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Other words and phrases in these Regulations
shall have the meanings assigned to them by the Solicitors Acts, 1954 to
1994, or by the Act of 1995 or the Act of 1998.
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The Interpretation Act, 1937 shall apply
for the purpose of the interpretation of these Regulations as it applies
for the purpose of the interpretation of an Act of the Oireachtas, except
insofar as it may be inconsistent with the Solicitors Acts, 1954 to 1994
or the Act of 1995 or the Act of 1998 or these Regulations.
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A solicitor, who is not an authorised
investment business firm, who applies to the Society for a practising certificate
in respect of a practice year commencing after the 31st day
of December, 1998, shall, as a condition precedent to being issued by the
Society with a practising certificate, undertake to the Society that:
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he will only provide investment business
services or investment advice to clients incidental to the provision of
legal services to such clients,
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he will not hold himself out as being
an investment business firm, and
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in providing investment business services
or investment advice to clients in a manner incidental to the provision
of legal services to such clients and when acting as an investment product
intermediary, he will not hold an appointment in writing other than from
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an investment firm authorised in accordance
with Directive 93/22/EEC of 10 May 1993 by a competent authority of another
Member State, or an authorised investment business firm (not being a restricted
activity investment product intermediary or a certified person), or a member
firm within the meaning of the Stock Exchange Act, 1995, or
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a credit institution authorised in accordance
with Directives 77/780/EEC of 12 December, 1977 and 89/646/EEC of 15 December,
1989, or
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a manager of a collective investment undertaking
authorised to market units in collective investments to the public
which is situate in the State or the relevant
branch of which is situate in the State.
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A solicitor, who is not an authorised
investment business firm, who applies to the Society for a practising certificate
in respect of a practice year commencing after the 31st day
of December, 1999 and who is or last was the holder of a practising certificate
in respect of all or any part of a preceding practice year which commenced
after the 31st day of December, 1998 shall, as a condition precedent
to being issued by the Society with the practising certificate so applied
for, warrant to the Society that he has complied with the undertakings
to the Society provided for in clauses (a), (b) and (c) of Regulation
3 during that preceding practice year.
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A solicitor in respect of whom a practising
certificate is in force, who is not an authorised investment business firm,
who provides investment business services or investment advice to a client
incidental to the provision of legal services within the terms of his undertakings
given to the Society pursuant to the requirements of clauses (a), (b) and
(c) of Regulation 3 and who receives a fee, commission or other reward
therefor other than from that client which is in excess of the amount or
value of £75 (seventy-five pounds) shall, as soon as practicable
after such receipt, disclose that fact in writing to such client.
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A solicitor, who is an investment business
firm or who is an insurance intermediary in one or more of the circumstances
set forth in section 47(1)(a) or (b) of the Act of 1998 and who applies
to the Society for a practising certificate in respect of a practice year
commencing after the 31st day of December, 1998, shall not be
issued with such practising certificate unless the solicitor provides to
the Society due evidence in writing of –
(i) having been authorised by the
Bank, in accordance with section 10 of the Act of 1995, as an authorised
investment business firm, or
(ii) having informed the Bank and the
Company that he is an investment firm for the purposes of section 47(1)(b)
of the Act of 1998;
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payment by him of such contribution to
the fund established and maintained pursuant to section 19 of the Act of
1998 as may be required by the Company under section 21 of the Act of 1998;
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having in place, valid and irrevocable
for at least the duration of the practice year in question, a bond or bank
guarantee and a policy of insurance, each acceptable to the Society, by
way of providing indemnity against losses that may be suffered by a client
in respect of default (whether arising from dishonesty or from breach of
contract, negligence or other civil wrong) on the part of the solicitor,
or any employee, agent or independent contractor of the solicitor, as shall,
in the opinion of the Society (taking into account the maximum amount of
compensation for default that would be payable to a client secured by reason
of the payment made by the solicitor referred to in clause (b) of this
Regulation), be equivalent to the indemnity against losses that would be
provided to a client of a solicitor in the provision of legal services
by means of –
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the Compensation Fund as provided for
in accordance with section 21 (as substituted by section 29 of the Act
of 1994) of the Act of 1960, and
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the minimum level of cover as provided
for in accordance with The Solicitors Acts, 1954 to 1994 (Professional
Indemnity Insurance) Regulations, 1995 (S.I. No. 312 of 1995) made by the
Society under section 26 of the Act of 1994.
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Where, in the course of a practice year,
a solicitor, in respect of whom a practising certificate is in force, proposes
to become an investment business firm or an investment firm in one or more
of the circumstances set forth in section 47(1)(a) or (b) of the Act of
1998, the solicitor shall notify the Society in writing of that fact at
least seven days before such proposed event and shall, within fourteen
days of such notification, comply with the provisions of Regulation 6 as
if he was then applying to the Society to be issued with a practising certificate
for that practice year.
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Where the Society are of opinion that
a solicitor to whom clause (a) of this Regulation applies has failed to
comply with the requirements of that clause, the Society shall deem such
failure as serious and as warranting the making of an application by the
Society to the President of the High Court for an order pursuant to section
58 of the Act of 1994.
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Where an authorised person attends at
a place of business of a solicitor pursuant to section 66 of the Act of
1954 (as substituted by section 76 of the Act of 1994), the authorised
person may require the solicitor to make available to him such accounting
records as the authorised person deems reasonable and appropriate to show
that there has been compliance by the solicitor with the requirements of
these Regulations.
Dated this fourth day of November,
1998
Signed on behalf of the Law Society
of Ireland pursuant to section 79 of the Solicitors Act, 1954:
___________________________
LAURENCE K SHIELDS
PRESIDENT OF THE LAW SOCIETY OF
IRELAND
I hereby consent, as required by section
30A(1) of the Solicitors (Amendment) Act, 1994 (as inserted by section
46 of the Investor Compensation Act, 1998), to the making of the above
Regulations.
Dated this day of November,
1998
____________________________
JOHN O’DONOGHUE, T.D.
MINISTER FOR JUSTICE, EQUALITY AND
LAW REFORM
EXPLANATORY
NOTE
(This note is not part of the Instrument
and does not purport to be a legal interpretation)
The principal purpose of the Instrument
is to provide that -
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a solicitor, who is not an authorised
investment business firm or who does not hold himself out as a provider
of investment business services or investment advice, who applies to the
Law Society of Ireland for an annual practising certificate will undertake:
(a) only to provide investment business services (which include the activities
of an insurance intermediary) or investment advice to clients incidental
to the provision of legal services to such clients; (b) not to hold himself
out as being an investment business firm; and, (c) when providing such
incidental services and acting as an investment product intermediary, not
to hold an appointment in writing other than from Central Bank of Ireland-authorised
financial firms, institutions or persons situate in the State;
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a solicitor, in respect of whom a practising
certificate is in force who also chooses to operate as an authorised investment
business firm providing investment business services (which includes the
activities of an insurance intermediary) or investment advice not incidental
to the provision of legal services, or who holds himself out as providing
such services or advice, will be required to provide forms of indemnity
against losses due to his default, that may be suffered by clients to whom
he provides such non-legal services, of an equivalent level to that provided
(under the Solicitors Acts, 1954 to 1994) by law to clients who are in
receipt of legal services from a solicitor in respect of whom a practising
certificate is in force but who is not so operating;
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other incidental matters.
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