Case Study: Missed Limitation Date
Case Study: Missed Limitation Date: anonymised composite example showing how a solicitor complaint can be structured for evidence, remedy and route choice.
Start your complaintAsk ChuteAIThe situation
A possible negligence issue is separated from a service complaint and SRA concern.
The first task is to turn the concern into a clear timeline. The complainant should identify what was promised, what happened, what evidence proves it and what practical impact followed. That stops the complaint becoming a general expression of frustration and makes it easier to route.
Likely routes
The firm complaint records the facts, asks for a remedy and, for service issues, starts the Legal Ombudsman pathway.
If the issue is poor service, delay, communication, cost information or impact, the Legal Ombudsman may be the compensation route.
If the evidence suggests dishonesty, client money risk, conflict, misleading conduct or serious breach, an SRA report may also be needed.
How OmbudSRA would structure it
- One-page chronology with dates and documents.
- Separate service failures from possible conduct breaches.
- Use direct evidence rather than speculation.
- State the remedy sought: refund, compensation, explanation, file return, correction or regulatory review.
- Prepare the correct document for the firm, Legal Ombudsman or SRA rather than sending the same narrative everywhere.
Lessons from this example
The strongest solicitor complaints are precise. They show the decision-maker what went wrong, why the evidence supports it and what outcome is being requested. Even where the conduct feels obvious to the client, regulators need the complaint to be framed in their language.