Authorised Conveyancing Practitioners Board
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The Authorised Conveyancing Practitioners Board is the regulatory organisation and professional association for authorised conveyancers in the United Kingdom. Created in 1990 by the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990, the Practitioners Board oversees authorised conveyancers in the United Kingdom, advising the Lord Chancellor on conveyancing matters, regulating authorised conveyancers and preventing the creation of conveyancing monopolies like those that existed before the 1990 act.
As part of its duties, the Practitioners Board maintains several other regulatory bodies, such as the conveyancing appeal tribunals and the Conveyancing Ombudsman.
Before the passing of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990, solicitors had a near-complete monopoly on conveyancing work.[1] The introduction of licensed conveyancers with the passage of the Administration of Justice Act 1985 did little to change the situation,[1] with no great switch in conveyancing work from solicitors to licensed conveyancers.[2][3] In an attempt to disrupt this monopoly and act on the conclusions of the Civil Justice Review, the British Government passed the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990, one of the aims of which was to widen the field of who could become a conveyancer. As such, Section 34 of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 established the Authorised Conveyancing Practitioners Board as a statutory corporation.[4]
Remit
The Practitioners Board is tasked with developing competition in conveyancing services to avoid monopolies, supervising the actions of licensed conveyancers and developing a way of monitoring said conveyancers.[4] The Practitioners Board has the powers to both grand and refuse authorisation to conveyancing practitioners, establish a conveyancing ombudsman and a compensation scheme for parties that suffer as a result of a conveyancer's actions appoint investigators to look into the behaviour of an authorised conveyancer.[4]
In terms of who can become a conveyancer – Section 36 removes limits on who can act as a conveyancer, and allows any individual, corporation or employee of a corporation to act as a conveyancer if they or the corporation is suitably qualified.[5] Qualified people are defined as solicitors, barristers, licensed conveyancers and notaries, as well as any companies and incorporated bodies found in Section 9 of the Administration of Justice Act 1985.[5] These people can apply to become authorised conveyancers by applying to the Authorised Conveyancing Practitioners Board.[6] To allow an applicant to act as an authorised conveyancer, the Practitioners Board must be convinced that the applicant is a "fit and proper person" to carry out this business, and that the applicant will follow the rules and regulations established by the Practitioners Board.[6]
The board can refuse applications, although they must provide a reason, which the applicant is entitled to reply to in writing within 28 days of it being issued.[7] The Practitioners Board can also suspend a conveyancer or revoke his authorisation to provide conveyancing circumstances, which can be for a fixed or indefinite period.[7] The board also maintains a compensation scheme for compensating individuals who lose money as a result of dishonest behaviour by authorised practitioners or the employees of authorised practitioners, which is paid for out of the annual fees authorised conveyancers pay each year.[8]