Court orders Cork solicitor John Moylan to pay compensation to family of dead man

The court heard it was very upsetting and distressing for the deceased man’s family when the funeral directors said they still had not been paid out of the father’s estate two years after the funeral
Court orders Cork solicitor John Moylan to pay compensation to family of dead man

John Moylan was ordered by a judge to hand over the file relating to the man’s late father and his estate to another solicitor. File photo: Gareth Chaney/ Collins Photos

A man who asked a Cork solicitor to administer his dead father’s estate found out two years later that the funeral expenses had not been paid, the High Court has heard.

Counsel for the Legal Services Regulatory Authority, James Daly BL, told the court it was very upsetting and distressing for the deceased man’s family when the funeral directors told him they still had not been paid out of the father’s estate and asked for payment directly.

In the High Court this week, Cork solicitor John Moylan of Richard Moylan and Co, Mallow, Co Cork, was ordered by a judge to hand over the file relating to the man’s late father and his estate to another solicitor. 

He was also ordered to pay €1,500 in compensation for time loss incurred as a result of legal services of an inadequate standard.

The case against John Moylan

Counsel told the court that the man’s father had died in early 2023 and solicitor John Moylan was instructed to make the necessary application and to do the necessary acts to administer the estate.

It was claimed that the solicitor had repeatedly ignored emails and phone calls from the man and another family member and the last contact between the solicitor and the son had been in March 2023. 

Another family member had contact with the solicitor in June of last year and it was claimed Mr Moylan had promised to revert back with an update the following week, but it is claimed he failed to do so.

It was also claimed that the solicitor had not provided a value break down of the deceased’s estate. The son made a complaint to the Legal Services Regulatory Authority (LSRA) in September last year and the complaint was later categorised as one of inadequate service.

Counsel said Mr Moylan was invited to resolve the matter informally but there was no response and there was no response to further correspondence.

Inadequate service

In April of this year, the LSRA determined that the legal services provided were of inadequate standard and Mr Moylan was directed to within 35 days transfer the file and all original documents to another named solicitor and pay the €1,500 in compensation.

The solicitor in September this year had sent a copy of the deceased’s will to the new solicitor, it was claimed, but not the rest of the file, and the court heard the compensation directed by the LSRA to be given was not paid.

Mr Justice Micheal P O Higgins ordered that the solicitor comply with the directions of the LSRA.

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