The relationship between Capsticks Solicitors LLP and the Solicitors Regulation Authority raises a serious public-interest question: how independent can a regulator appear when it relies heavily on one external legal partner while facing criticism over its own regulatory failures? The concern is not simply that a regulator outsources legal work. It is whether repeated dependence, limited transparency and unresolved allegations about litigation culture risk weakening public confidence in the profession’s watchdog.
Publication snapshot
- This article examines the public-interest concern arising from the SRA’s continued reliance on Capsticks for regulatory and litigation work.
- It considers reported criticism of Capsticks’ litigation conduct, including allegations of late disclosure, bundle omissions and obstructive tactics in tribunal settings.
- It links that concern to wider criticism of the SRA’s regulatory performance following the Axiom Ince collapse.
- The article does not present disputed allegations about Capsticks or the SRA as findings of misconduct.
- The reform route is independent review, contract transparency, stronger oversight of external legal providers and clearer accountability where regulatory failures occur.
Why this relationship matters
Regulators depend on public confidence. The Solicitors Regulation Authority is responsible for setting standards, investigating misconduct and protecting the public interest in the solicitors’ profession. That role requires independence, transparency and visible accountability.
The SRA is entitled to instruct external lawyers. Complex disciplinary, litigation and intervention work requires specialist expertise. The issue is not outsourcing itself. The issue is what happens when one external legal provider becomes closely associated with the regulator’s most sensitive work.
Capsticks Solicitors LLP has long been known for public-sector work, including health, social care, housing and regulatory matters. It is also associated with litigation involving public bodies. That makes its relationship with the SRA a matter of public interest, particularly where critics argue that public-body litigation can sometimes prioritise institutional protection over open accountability.
Capsticks and public-sector litigation
Capsticks’ public profile is closely linked to work for public bodies and regulated sectors. That work can be legitimate and necessary. Public authorities, NHS bodies and regulators need representation in complex disputes, employment claims, professional discipline and governance matters.
The concern raised by critics is different. It is that repeat instruction by public bodies may encourage a litigation culture focused on institutional defence, reputation management and procedural pressure rather than early candour, correction and resolution.
The 2019 reporting of a Capsticks partner dismissal for inappropriate conduct is cited by critics as an example of limited transparency. The difficulty is not that a firm took internal disciplinary action. It is that the public learned little about the nature of the conduct, the safeguards triggered, or what cultural lessons were learned.
A firm responds to conduct concerns through employment, partnership or internal governance routes.
Where a firm performs sensitive public-sector work, the public may reasonably expect clarity about safeguards, culture and lessons learned.
Concerns about tribunal tactics
The draft article refers to Clive Rennie v NHS Norfolk and Waveney Integrated Care Board as an example of concern about Capsticks’ litigation conduct. The criticisms described include alleged withholding of documents, late service of material and omission of exhibits from hearing bundles.
Those allegations should be treated as allegations unless supported by tribunal orders, correspondence, bundle indexes, witness statements or judicial findings. Late disclosure and bundle failures can occur for many reasons, including ordinary error, poor case management or genuine dispute about relevance.
But where such patterns are repeated, especially against litigants in person or vulnerable claimants, the public-interest concern becomes stronger. Litigation should not become a test of whether an individual claimant can survive procedural attrition.
How procedural pressure can distort fairness
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A claimant seeks documents or relies on evidence said to support their case.
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Material is disputed, delayed, omitted or served late.
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The claimant must spend time correcting procedural defects rather than preparing the substance of the case.
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The hearing risks becoming a contest of resources and stamina rather than a fair test of the evidence.
That is why legal representatives acting for public bodies should be held to a high standard of procedural fairness. Winning is not the only measure of proper litigation conduct.
The SRA’s reliance problem
The most serious public-confidence issue is the SRA’s reported continued reliance on Capsticks as a key provider of disciplinary and litigation services. Even if that arrangement is lawful and commercially rational, it still raises a perception problem.
A regulator must be able to scrutinise the profession without appearing dependent on a single firm. Where the firm itself is the subject of public criticism, the question becomes sharper: what independent review does the regulator undertake before renewing, extending or maintaining such an arrangement?
The risk is not only actual conflict. It is regulatory capture by familiarity. Long relationships can create operational convenience, shared assumptions and reluctance to challenge a trusted provider’s methods.
A regulator contracts with external lawyers to provide specialist advice, advocacy and case support.
The regulator’s repeated reliance on one provider creates a perception that scrutiny, independence or value-for-money challenge may be weakened.
The Axiom Ince backdrop
The SRA’s relationship with external providers must also be viewed against the wider backdrop of criticism following the collapse of Axiom Ince. That episode raised fundamental questions about risk monitoring, intervention, client-money protection and regulatory foresight.
Public reporting records that former Axiom Ince figures were later charged by the Serious Fraud Office in connection with the collapse. Reporting on the Legal Services Board review also records criticism that the SRA did not act adequately, effectively and efficiently in its oversight of Axiom and the related acquisitions.
The point is not that Capsticks caused those regulatory failures. The point is that a regulator facing such serious criticism should be especially careful about the transparency and accountability of its own legal arrangements.
An accountability risk built on familiarity
The concern about Capsticks and the SRA is best understood as a systemic accountability issue. It is not necessary to prove improper motive to identify a governance problem. Public trust can be damaged by repeated opacity, weak explanation and the appearance of a closed professional loop.
Where a firm acts for public bodies and regulators, and is criticised for obstructive tactics in public-interest disputes, the answer should not be silence. The answer should be evidence: contract terms, performance standards, complaints handling, independent review and clear consequences for poor conduct.
The SRA’s position is particularly sensitive because it regulates the very profession from which it draws external legal support. That makes transparency more important, not less.
How a closed accountability loop can form
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A regulator repeatedly instructs a trusted external legal provider.
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The provider becomes embedded in sensitive enforcement and litigation work.
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Public criticism of the provider is met with limited transparency or no visible independent review.
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The regulator appears more focused on operational continuity than public accountability.
What reform should require
Reform does not require the SRA to stop instructing external lawyers. Nor does it require Capsticks to be excluded from public-sector work merely because critics disagree with its litigation approach.
The necessary reform is more precise: a regulator should be able to show that its external legal relationships are independently reviewed, competitively justified, performance-monitored and compatible with the public interest.
For the SRA
- Publish clearer information about external legal-provider selection, renewal and performance oversight.
- Commission independent review of long-running legal-provider relationships where public-confidence concerns arise.
- Separate operational convenience from public-interest governance when renewing sensitive contracts.
- Explain how complaints or concerns about provider conduct are handled and escalated.
- Ensure lessons from Axiom Ince inform internal governance, not only external enforcement messaging.
For Capsticks
- Set out public-facing commitments on fair litigation conduct in public-sector disputes.
- Strengthen internal review of cases involving litigants in person, whistleblowers or vulnerable claimants.
- Ensure disclosure, bundle preparation and late-evidence issues are audited in high-risk matters.
- Publish clear learning where internal conduct issues have raised public-confidence concerns.
- Distinguish robust defence from tactics that appear to exhaust or overwhelm claimants.
Selected references
SRA Standards and Regulations: SRA Standards and Regulations.
SRA Principles: SRA Principles.
SRA Code of Conduct: SRA Code of Conduct for Solicitors, RELs, RFLs and RSLs.
Serious Fraud Office and public reporting on Axiom Ince should be checked before publication.
Tribunal documents, correspondence and bundle records should be checked before publishing specific allegations about Capsticks’ conduct in named cases.
Practical conclusion
The relationship between Capsticks and the SRA should not be treated as a private procurement footnote. It sits at the intersection of legal regulation, public-sector litigation, professional discipline and institutional trust.
If Capsticks is to continue acting in sensitive regulatory and public-sector contexts, it should be able to demonstrate litigation standards that reflect fairness as well as effectiveness. If the SRA is to continue relying on Capsticks, it should be able to demonstrate independent oversight, value-for-money discipline and public-interest justification.
The public does not need slogans about confidence in regulation. It needs visible accountability. After Axiom Ince, that obligation is sharper than ever.

