Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 939South Africa
Bekker v De Agrela and Others (A5096/2019; 42125/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 939 (25 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 November 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Section 2(1)(a) of the Contingency Fees Act 66 of 1997 and section 92 of the Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014 (“the LPA”) discussed and distinguished – Section 92 of the LPA applies where there was an arrangement that counsel would only recover fees equal to the amount taxed and recovered from other party – Section 92 of the LPA is an exception to the indemnification principle in the field of costs – Breach of a Bar rule does not invalidate the fee arrangement.
Judgment
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## Bekker v De Agrela and Others (A5096/2019; 42125/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 939 (25 November 2022)
Bekker v De Agrela and Others (A5096/2019; 42125/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 939 (25 November 2022)
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FLYNOTES:
COUNSEL FEES AND CONTINGENCY FEES
ACT
Costs
– Counsel fees – Arrangement that counsel fees
recovered by successful conduct – Equal to the amount
taxed
and recovered from other party – Not a “no win, no
fee” arrangement – Breach of a Bar rule
does not
invalidate the fee arrangement –
Contingency Fees Act 66 of
1997
,
s 2(1)(a)
–
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
,
s 92.
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NUMBER :
42125/2018
A5096/2019
REPORTABLE
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES NO
REVISED
In
the matter between:
JURGENS
STEPHANUS BEKKER
Applicant
and
ALEXA
DE
AGRELA
1
st
Respondent
CARIEN
VAN GREUNEN
2
nd
Respondent
SHERALYN
PIETERSE
3
rd
Respondent
SHANNE
DE KLERK
4
th
Respondent
GERT
ABRAHAM VORSTER
5
th
Respondent
Summary
:
Section 2(1)(a)
of the
Contingency Fees Act 66 of 1997
and section 92
of the Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014 (“the LPA”)
discussed and distinguished – Section 92 of the
LPA applies
where there was an arrangement that counsel would only recover fees
equal to the amount taxed and recovered from other
party –
Section 92 of the LPA is an exception to the indemnification
principle in the field of costs – Breach of a
Bar rule does not
invalidate the fee arrangement.
JUDGMENT
VAN
DER BERG AJ
[1]
The applicant and the five respondents are all attorneys. The
applicant
previously brought an application (“
the first
application
”) against the five respondents which was
dismissed with costs in December 2018. The applicant thereafter
lodged an appeal,
but shortly before the appeal was heard he withdrew
the appeal and tendered costs. In the bill of costs presented for
taxation,
the first and fourth respondents included the invoices of
their counsel who was on brief in the first application and in the
appeal.
[2]
This is an application to strike out those invoices from the bill of
costs,
and to declare the agreement which first and fourth
respondents concluded with counsel as an invalid contingency fees
agreement
which does not comply with the provisions of the
Contingency Fees Act 66 of 1997 (“
the CFA
”).
[3]
The first and fourth respondents (collectively “
the
respondents”
) raise two defences (styled points
in
limine
in the answering affidavit): Firstly, they deny that the
agreement constitutes a contingency fees agreement as defined in the
CFA
and aver that the fee arrangement falls within the ambit of
section 92 of the Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014 (“
the LPA”
).
Secondly, the respondents contend that counsel is in any event
entitled to charge a reasonable fee (even if it is found that
the
agreement was an unlawful or invalid contingency fees agreement).
[4]
Counsel only acted for the first, third and fourth respondents in the
first application. The second and fifth respondents were represented
by other counsel instructed by a different set of attorneys.
Approximately two weeks prior to the appeal the second and third
respondents settled with the applicant and abandoned their cost
order
against the applicant. This application is only against the first
respondent and the fourth respondent.
[5]
The counsel whose invoices are in dispute in this application was a
member
of the Johannesburg Bar. He passed away during 2021. The
executrix of his estate was not joined as a party, but she is aware
of
the application. She deposed to an affidavit that she intends to
recover fees due to the estate, and that it has been agreed that
the
attorneys for first and fourth respondents would recover the fees on
behalf of the estate. No point of non-joinder was taken.
EVIDENCE
AND AFFIDAVITS
Founding
affidavit
[6]
On 16 November 2021 the respondents delivered their notices of
intention to tax two
bill of costs, one in respect of the first
application and one in respect of the appeal. In respect of the first
application, the
respondents submitted two of counsel’s
invoices, and in respect of the appeal they submitted one of
counsel’s invoices.
[7]
On 29 November 2021 the applicant’s cost consultant queried the
accounts as
no proof of payment accompanied the account. He was then
advised by the respondents’ cost consultant that counsel was
briefed
through a “
contingency fee agreement”
and
on request the applicant’s cost consultant was provided with
counsel’s brief cover which included the following
endorsement:
“
MEMORANDUM:
Special Fee Arrangement In Place – Fees to be recovered by
successful conduct of matter and shall equal the amount
taxed and
allowed and bill of costs for counsel’s accounts, as submitted
to taxation, and as subsequently recovered from
the opposing party.”
[8]
The applicant then filed notices to oppose both bill of costs and
certain correspondence
was exchanged between the applicant and the
first and fourth respondents’ attorney. The applicant
inter
alia
averred that the fee agreement concluded with counsel was
not compliant with the CFA and demanded that counsel’s invoices
be withdrawn.
[9]
The respondents’ attorneys responded by suggesting that the
matter be
argued before a senior taxing master and should the
applicant remain dissatisfied with the outcome, he was invited “
to
approach the motion court for relief”
.
[10]
On 7 March 2022 the applicant
inter alia
informed the
respondents’ attorney that he intended to proceed to apply for
a declaratory order.
[11]
On 17 March 2022 the respondents’ attorney responded and denied
that there was an invalid
contingency fee agreement and referred to
the provisions of
section 92
of the
Legal Practice Act “
>under
which section the work was clearly rendered”
.
Answering
affidavit
[12]
In the answering affidavit the respondents raise the two points
in
limine
referred to above.
[13]
The respondents state that the terms on which counsel accepted
the brief was that he “would
accept the instruction and would
not raise fees, subject however to his right to recover fees on
taxation.” They further
state that the brief cover was merely
an attempt to record’s counsel’s right to recover taxed
fees in appropriate circumstances.
The respondents say that it was
never the intention to enter into a contingency fee agreement.
Replying
affidavit
[14]
In the replying affidavit the applicant states that he (as attorney)
briefed the same counsel
during the same period as when the first
application was heard (in 2018) on unrelated maters. The applicant
attaches certain of
counsel’s invoices for those unrelated
briefs. A comparison of the invoices shows that the invoices
submitted in this matter
are based on a substantially higher fee rate
(some 50% higher) than that was charged by counsel in the other
(unrelated) matters.
APPLICATION
TO STRIKE
[15]
The applicant has brought an application in terms of
rule 6(15)
to
strike out large portions of the respondents’ answering
affidavit as being irrelevant, scandalous and vexatious.
[16]
In paragraphs 43 and 44 of the answering affidavit it is explained
that the second and
third respondents settled the cost order with the
applicant. This is clearly relevant to explain why they are not
before court,
and ought to have been dealt with in the founding
affidavit. These paragraphs are not irrelevant.
[17]
In the remaining parts of the answering affidavit sought to be struck
out the second and
fourth respondents:
1.
make allegations of alleged threats made to the respondents by the
applicant
prior to the institution of the first application;
2.
revisit the first application;
3.
deal with the events between the first application and the withdrawal
of the
appeal;
4.
make numerous defamatory statements of the applicant;
5.
even allege that applicant’s conduct constitutes criminal
extortion;
6.
allege that counsel agreed to assist the first, third and fourth
respondents
because he considered the applicant to be a bully who
conducted himself in a manner unbecoming of an attorney
[18]
As appears
below in this judgment, none of these allegations are relevant to any
of the issues in this application. Many of these
statements are
clearly vexatious and scandalous.
[1]
[19]
Rule 6(15)
provides that the court “
shall
not grant the application unless it is satisfied that the applicant
will be prejudiced in its case if it be not granted”
.
However, it has been held that the word “
case”
in
rule 6(15)
should not be narrowly interpreted so as to enable a
party freely to make irrelevant allegations. Scandalous, vexatious or
irrelevant
matter may be defamatory of the other party, and the
retention in such matter will therefore be prejudicial to such
party.
[2]
[20]
Apart from paragraphs 43 and 44 of the answering affidavit the
application to strike out
must succeed. The applicant is also
entitled to the costs of the striking-out application.
# CONTINGENCY FEES ACT
CONTINGENCY FEES ACT
Provisions
of
Contingency Fees Act
[21
]
Section 1
of the CFA defines a “
contingency fees agreement”
as any agreement referred to in
section 2(1).
Section 2(1)
in turn
provides:
2 Contingency fees
agreements
(1)
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in any law or the common
law, a legal practitioner may, if in his
or her opinion there are
reasonable prospects that his or her client may be successful in any
proceedings, enter into an agreement
with such client in which it is
agreed-
(a) that the legal
practitioner shall not be entitled to any fees for services rendered
in respect of such proceedings unless such
client is successful in
such proceedings to the extent set out in such agreement;
(b) that the legal
practitioner shall be entitled to fees equal to or, subject to
subsection (2), higher than his or her normal
fees, set out in such
agreement, for any such services rendered, if such client is
successful in such proceedings to the extent
set out in such
agreement.”
[22]
Section
3(1)
of the CFA provides that the contingency fees agreement shall be
in writing and in the form prescribed.
Section 3(2)
provides that the
contingency fees agreement “shall” be signed by the
client, and
section 3(3)
sets out what the agreement must contain. It
is common cause that in this instance client (i.e. first and fourth
respondents) did
not sign any agreement, and there is no allegation
that
section 3(3)
was complied with.
[3]
Practitioner
entitled to reasonable fee
[23]
It is now
trite that if there is not compliance with
section 3
in respect of a
contingency fees agreement, the agreement is invalid.
[4]
[24]
However, a
legal
practitioner,
even
in
circumstances
of
an
unlawful
contingency
fee
agreement is entitled to his or her reasonable fee.
[5]
Who
may challenge contingency fee agreement
[25]
In
Theodosiou
[6]
the court dealt with a challenge to the validity of a contingency
fees agreement and held (reference to authorities omitted):
“
[36]
There is no legal principle in which third parties have a more
substantial right than the contracting parties to enforce
the
cancellation of an effective agreement. A third party cannot
challenge an agreement implemented and persisted in by the
parties…So,
the excipients had no right to inquire into the
validity of the contingency fee agreement when the settlements were
concluded.
and
“
[56]
Excipients had no locus standi to enquire into the validity of
contingency fee agreement when the settlements were concluded.”
ALLEGED INVALID
CONTINGENCY AGREEMENT: NO CAUSE OF ACTION
[26]
I understand the applicant’s cause of action to be that
counsel’s invoices
are to be struck out as they were issued in
terms of an invalid contingency fees agreement. If so, the
application is misguided:
1.
A third party (the applicant) will not be affected by the terms of
any contingency
fees agreement, as the legal practitioner is in any
event able to charge a reasonable fee. On taxation, the client can
only have
a reasonable fee taxed, regardless of the terms of any
alleged contingency fees agreement.
2.
Even assuming that the agreement with counsel was an agreement as
contemplated
in
section 2(1)(a)
of the CFA, the applicant does not
have standing to have the agreement set aside.
[27]
The applicant’s remedy was to challenge the reasonableness of
counsel’s invoices
on taxation. It is for the taxing master to
decide whether the fact that counsel raised other invoices during the
same period based
on a substantially lower rate is a factor to take
into account in determining whether the invoices were reasonable.
[28]
The applicant has therefore not proved his cause of action as
pleaded.
SECTION
92
OF THE LPA
[29]
It is therefore not strictly necessary for the adjudication of
this application to
determine whether
section 92
applies or not. I
shall however do so for reasons referred to below.
[30]
Section 92
of the LPA reads:
92 Recovery of
costs by legal practitioners rendering free legal services
(1) Whenever in any
legal proceedings or any dispute in respect of which legal services
are rendered for free to a litigant or other
person by a legal
practitioner or law clinic, and costs become payable to that litigant
or other person in terms of a judgment
of the court or a settlement,
or otherwise, that litigant or other person must be deemed to have
ceded his or her rights to the
costs to that legal practitioner, law
clinic or practice.
(2) (a) A
litigant or person referred to in subsection (1) or the legal
practitioner or law clinic concerned may, at any
time before payment
of the costs referred to in subsection (1), give notice in writing
to-
(i) the person liable
for those costs; and
(ii) the registrar or
clerk of the court concerned,
that the legal
services are being or have been rendered for free by that legal
practitioner, law clinic or practice.
(b) Where notice
has been given as provided for in paragraph (a), the legal
practitioner, law clinic or practice concerned
may proceed in his or
her or its own name, or the name of his or her practice, to have
those costs taxed, where appropriate, and
to recover them, without
being formally substituted for the litigant or person referred to in
subsection (1).
(3) The costs referred
to in subsection (1) must be calculated and the bill of costs, if
any, must be taxed as if the litigant or
person to whom the legal
services were rendered by the legal practitioner, law clinic or
practice actually incurred the costs of
obtaining the services of the
legal practitioner, law clinic or practice acting on his or her or
its behalf in the proceedings
or dispute concerned.
SECTION 2(1)
OF CFA
AND
SECTION 92
OF LPA DISTINGUISHED
[31]
In
Masango
[7]
Mojapelo
DJP explained the two different contingency fees agreements in
section 2(1)
of the CFA as follows:
[8]
“
The
section provides for two kinds of contingency fees agreement. The
first is a 'no win, no fee' agreement, and the second
is an
agreement whereby the legal practitioner may charge fees higher than
the normal fee if the client is successful. The higher
fee is also
referred to as the success fee. Only the second type of agreement is
subject to the statutory caps
.”
[32]
The
applicant’s case is that the agreement which counsel concluded
is a contingency agreement as contemplated in
section 2(1)(a)
of the
CFA.
[9]
[33]
So what is the difference between an agreement referred to in
section
2(1)(a)
of the CFA (i.e. a “no win, no fee agreement”)
and an arrangement in terms of
section 92
of the LPA?
[34]
Before
analysing the difference, the following should be borne in mind:
Subject
to certain specified exceptions, rule 70(3) of the Uniform Rules of
Court
[10]
is intended to give
to the successful party a full indemnity for all costs reasonably
incurred in relation to any legal proceedings.
However, owing to the
operation of taxation such an award of costs is seldom a complete
indemnity.
[11]
In practice
(where a court has ordered that party-party costs are to be paid by
the losing party) it invariably means that the
successful party would
receive less on taxation than his or her actual legal fees
expenditure.
[35]
Applying
the principles applicable to contingency fee agreements in terms of
the CFA referred to above, the following applies
to a “
no
win, no fee” agreement in terms of section 2(1)(a) of the CFA:
1.
The legal practitioner becomes entitled to legal fees if the
litigation is “successful”,
which is determined with
reference to the contingency fees agreement. It is conceivable that
“success” as defined in
the agreement is achieved without
a cost order in favour client having been made.
2.
Should the client achieve success in the litigation:
(a)The
legal practitioner will be able to charge the client his or her
“normal” fee. (If the agreement entails that
the legal
practitioner will be able to charge more than his or her normal fee,
the agreement will fall within the ambit of section
2(1)(b) of the
CFA).
(b)The
client will be liable for legal fees towards his or her legal
representative, regardless of whether anything is recovered
from the
other party to the litigation. It is possible that nothing or less
than the legal practitioner’s normal fee is recovered
from the
other party to the litigation. The client will remain liable to his
legal representative for the whole of his or her “normal
fee”.
3.
The agreement will have to comply with the requirements of section 3
of the CFA
in order for it to be valid.
[36]
Section 92 contemplates something very different:
1.
The legal practitioner’s entitlement to legal fees is triggered
when “
costs become payable to that litigant or other person
in terms of a judgment
of
the
court
or
a
settlement
”.
Cost orders are sometimes granted in circumstance where litigation
may not be considered by the client to have been otherwise
“successful.”
2.
If “costs become payable”:
(a)
The cost order is ceded to the legal practitioner who will only be
paid
such amount which is allowed on taxation and which is actually
recovered from the other party.
(b)
The amount taxed could well be considerably less than his or her
“normal”
fee.
(c)
If nothing can be recovered from the opposing party (i.e. because of
its
insolvency), the legal practitioner will receive no payment.
(d)
Client will never be liable for any costs of his or her legal
representative.
3.
The agreement between client and his or legal representative does not
have to
comply with any statutory formalities in order to be valid.
[37]
In other
words: In a section 2(1)(a) “no win, no fee” agreement
the legal practitioner says to his or her client: “If
you lose,
you will owe me nothing. If you win, you will have to pay me my
normal fee. You can tax your costs, but you may get nothing
or get
less than you pay me.” In a section 92 arrangement the legal
practitioner says to his or her client: “Win or
lose, the
litigation will cost you nothing. If you get a cost order in your
favour, it will be ceded to me, and I will receive
any money which
can be recovered from the other side”.
[38]
In
Thusi
v
Minister of Home Affairs and Another and 71 Other Cases
(“
Thusi
”)
[12]
the fee arrangement between the attorneys and their clients was
described as follows:
“
The
bringing by such an Applicant of an application against the
Respondents in the High Court is only made possible by the fact
that
Goodway & Buck are prepared, entirely at their own risk to:
without the
expectation or requirement of payment by the indigent applicant,
prepare and bring the application;
accept the fact that
if the application is unsuccessful, not only will they forfeit any
costs, but will also forfeit any and/or
all disbursements incurred by
them in pursuance of the unsuccessful matter;
accept
as their payment for the bringing of such applications, only those
fees which are recovered by way of taxation or agreement
which
fees…bears no resemblance whatsoever to the substantially
increased fees which would in normal circumstances be charged
by
Goodway & Buck…for the rendering of such services…
”
[39]
Wallis J (as he then was) said of this
arrangement (own emphasis):
“
[103]
It is perfectly clear that Goodway & Buck undertook this work in
the hope (and the reasonable expectation) that costs
orders would be
obtained in sufficient cases to make the venture worthwhile. In that
sense they are acting on a speculative or
contingency basis although
it is not one sanctioned by the
Contingency Fees Act.
>”
and
“
[106]
Whilst the
Contingency Fees Act contemplates
non-monetary litigation,
its provisions are directed at the arrangements between the legal
practitioner and the litigant, rather
than recovery from the other
party. They deal with 'no win, no fee' arrangements and the recovery
of success fees. The underlying
assumption is that when success is
achieved a liability to pay fees attaches to the successful litigant.
That is not the case here.
”
[40]
The
arrangement in
Thusi
is
for all intents and purposes the same as the arrangement made by
counsel in this matter as described by the respondents. Accordingly,
it is not a “no win, no fee” arrangement which is subject
to the CFA. Counsel looked to the other party for payment,
not to his
clients.
Section 92
of the LPA applies. (Judgment in
Thusi
was
handed down before the LPA was passed and
section 92
was therefore
not considered.
[13]
)
[41]
The
Plascon-Evans
rule
applies. The respondents’ version as to the arrangement with
counsel should therefore be accepted. The fact that the
respondents’
cost consultant referred to it as a “
contingency
fee agreement”
in is not relevant. As appears from
Thusi
an arrangement such as this or the arrangement that was in place in
Thusi
is also referred to as a “
contingency
fee agreement”
,
even though it does not fall within the ambit of the CFA.
[14]
[42]
Whether counsel or his executrix is obliged to give the notice in
terms of
section 92(2)
in the light of the deemed cession in
section
92
, and whether the respondents or their attorneys can submit
counsel’s fees on his behalf on taxation where a
section 92
arrangement is in place, are not matters which I have to decide on.
The fact that the respondents may up to now have followed an
incorrect procedure on taxation is not relevant to the question as to
what the fee arrangement was.
INDEMNIFICATION
PRINCIPLE
[43]
It
is trite that the purpose of a costs order is to indemnify a party
who has incurred expenses in instituting or defending legal
proceedings.
In
principle, a litigant who is not liable to his/her attorney for legal
costs, is not entitled to tax legal costs. This is known
as the
indemnification principle.
[15]
[44]
It is common cause that counsel (or his
executrix) has not been paid by the respondents. To my mind the
applicant has not raised
this as part of his cause of action.
Reference is made to this fact in the founding affidavit, but it is
not mentioned as a basis
for seeking the relief in the notice of
motion, and no reliance was placed in argument on the indemnification
principle. I shall
however deal with the indemnification principle in
case I have interpreted the applicant’s case too narrowly.
[45]
In
Thusi
Wallis J explained the indemnity principle as
follows:
“
[99]
The indemnity principle is of general application in the field of
costs.
It has not become
outdated. In Price Waterhouse Meyernel v Thoroughbred Breeders'
Association of South Africa
Howie
JA said:
'A costs order - it is
trite to say - is intended to indemnify the winner (subject to the
limitation of the party and party costs
scale) to the extent that it
is out of pocket as a result of pursuing the litigation to a
successful conclusion. It follows that
what the winner has to show —
and the Taxing Master has to be satisfied about – is that the
items in the bill are costs
in the true sense, that is to say,
expenses which actually leave the winner out of pocket.'
If
the applicants are not out of pocket or at risk of being out of
pocket as a consequence of bringing these applications, it would
appear that, unless the indemnity principle can be circumvented, it
operates to preclude them from obtaining a costs order in their
favour.
…
[103] ... Applying the
general rule in regard to the purpose of a costs order set out in the
cases I have cited, the fact that the
applicants incur no liability
for costs disentitles them to orders for costs. As they have incurred
no expenses in relation to
the litigation and no liability for costs,
there is no need for an indemnity and nothing to which a costs order
could apply."
[46]
Wallis J then identified three exceptions
to the indemnity principle in the High Court rules and in statutes:
(1) rule 40(7) of
the Uniform Rules of Court which deals with
in
forma pauperis
proceedings; (2) section
8A of the Legal Aid Act 22 of 1969, and (3) section 79A of the
Attorneys Act, 53 of 1979 (“
the
Attorneys Act
”). The learned
judge crafted out a further exception, which is not applicable in
this case.
[47]
Section 79A
was inserted into the Attorneys Act in 2000.
[16]
The Attorneys Act was repealed by the LPA. Section 92 of the LPA is
the successor to section 79A of the Attorneys Act. Section
92 and 79A
are essentially the same, with one important difference: Section 79A
was only available to law clinics, whilst section
92 applies to legal
services rendered by a “
legal
practitioner or
a law clinic.” Section 79A of the Attorneys Act therefore did
not apply in
Thusi
.
[48]
Section 92 of the LPA should now instead of section 79A of the
Attorneys Act be accepted
as a statutory exception to the
indemnification principle. The wording of section 92 clearly allows a
bill to be taxed without
client having made payment to the legal
practitioner.
[49]
Accordingly, counsel’s arrangement is covered by section 92 of
the LPA, and the indemnification
principle does not apply.
CODE OF CONDUCT AND
BAR RULES
[50]
I
was referred to section 32 of the Code of Conduct issued in terms
section 36 of the LPA
[17]
which provides:
“
32
Prohibited fee agreements
32.1 Counsel shall not
agree to charge on results or agree to reduce or waive fees if a
positive result is not achieved, except
in a matter taken on
contingency in terms of the
Contingency Fees Act 66 of 1997
and/or
save as contemplated in section 92 of the Act.
32.2
Counsel shall not agree to charge a fee as allowed on taxation except
in a matter undertaken on contingency, or as permitted
in terms of
section 92 of the Act
.”
[51]
In light of my finding above that section 92 applies, the fee
arrangement in this case
is not prohibited by section 32 of the Code
of Conduct.
[52]
I was also
referred to rule 7 of the Uniform Rules of Professional Conduct of
the General Council of the Bar of South Africa (“
the
GCB Rules
”).
The
General Council of the Bar of South Africa is an umbrella
organisation of various constituent bars in South Africa, including
the Johannesburg Bar.
[18]
Rule
7.2.4 of the GCB Rules reads:
[19]
“
7.2.4
A brief may not be marked ‘at such fee as may be allowed on
taxation.
’”
[53]
This rule has
obviously been breached.
[54]
On the face
of it, a member of one of the constituent bars cannot conclude a
section 92 arrangement, whilst other legal practitioners
(including
advocates) may do so. The question is whether a member’s breach
of GCB rule 7.2.4 renders the section 92 arrangement
or contract
unenforceable and/or disentitles the member to his or her fee.
[55]
Bar
rules are recognised by the courts and are enforced by the
courts.
[20]
The court,
however, is not bound by these rules.
[21]
In
none of the cases which I could find was it held that a fee agreement
was void or invalid or unenforceable because of a breach
of bar
rules. In some cases the courts have relied on bar rules in dealing
with allegations of overreaching or professional misconduct,
but
other considerations apply in such cases.
[56]
GCB
rule 7.2.4 reflects the traditional view that an advocate should not
have a financial interest in the outcome of litigation
as it may
cause the advocate to lose his or her independence
.
[22]
Such
contracts were treated as contracts contrary to public policy and
void, but it is now appreciated that they may promote access
to
justice.
[23]
(A contract of
this nature is called a
pactum
de
quota
litis
or champerty agreement.)
[57]
A
contract which contravenes some provision of a statute is not
necessarily void or unenforceable.
[24]
The breach of a bar rule cannot
per
se
render a contract concluded by the member/advocate unenforceable.
Public policy also does not require that the breach of this
particular bar rule be visited with invalidity or
unenforceability.
[25]
[58]
Section 92 of
the LPA is therefore applicable in this case, in spite of the breach
of GCB rule 7.2.4.
# COSTS
COSTS
[59]
Costs
should follow the result. The respondents sought costs on the
attorney and client scale, but the facts of this matter do not
warrant such an order. The applicant is entitled to the costs of the
striking-out application.
[26]
ORDER
[60]
The following order is made:
1.
Paragraphs 19 to 43, 46 to 61 and 68.3 of
the first and fourth respondents’ answering affidavit are
struck out.
2.
First and second respondents are ordered to
pay the costs of the striking-out application.
3.
The main application is dismissed.
4.
The applicant is ordered to pay the costs
of the main application.
VAN
DER BERG AJ
APPEARANCES
For
the applicant
:
Adv B D Stevens
Instructed by:
Jurgens
Bekker Attorneys
For
the first and fourth respondents
:
Adv L C M Morland
Instructed by:
Warrener
De Agrela & Associates
Date
of hearing: 20 October 2022
Date
of judgment: 25 November 2022
[1]
Erasmus,
Superior
Court Practice
,
D1-90 (and cases referred to therein)
[2]
Erasmus,
Superior
Court Practice
,
D1-92 (and cases referred to therein)
[3]
Counsel must sign any contingency fee agreement which is subject to
the CFA. It is common cause that in this case counsel did
not do so.
In light of the view I take of this case, it is not necessary to
determine whether he concluded an agreement with
the respondents or
the instructing attorneys, and whether the instructing attorneys
were the agents of either the respondents
or counsel.
[4]
Masango
v Road Accident Fund
2016
(6) SA 508 (GJ)
[5]
Theodosiou
and Other v Schindlers Attorneys and Others
2022
(4) SA 617
(GJ), paragraphs 9-11
[6]
Theodosiou
(supra)
[7]
Masango
v Road Accident Fund
2016
(6) 508 (GJ) at paragraph 10
[8]
See also:
Price
Waterhouse Coopers Inc and Others v National Potato Co-Operative
Ltd
2004
(6) SA 66 (SCA)
[9]
It was not submitted by the applicant that the fact that counsel may
have charged higher rates indicates that the agreement was
an
agreement as contemplated in section 2(1)(b). The fact that these
invoices were only raised in reply is but one reason why
the
applicant would not have been able to raise such an argument.
[10]
Rule 70(3) provides in part:
“
(3)
With a view to affording the party who has been awarded an order for
costs a full indemnity for all costs reasonably incurred
by him in
relation to his claim or defence and to ensure that all such costs
shall be borne by the party against whom such order
has been
awarded, the taxing master shall, on every taxation, allow all such
costs, charges and expenses as appear to him to
have been necessary
or proper for the attainment of justice…
”
[11]
Texas
Co (SA) Ltd v Cape Town Municipality
1926
AD 467
at 488;
Bowman
NO v Avraamides
1991
(1) SA 92
(W) at 94G
[12]
Thusi v
Minister of Home Affairs and Another and 71 Other Cases
2011 (2) SA 561
(KZP), paragraph 95
[13]
Judgment
was handed down on 23 December 2010. The LPA was published in the
Government Gazette on 22 September 2014 and its commencement
date
was 1 November 2018.
[14]
See
for examples paragraphs 193, 105, 106 and 110 of the judgment in
Thusi
.
[15]
Texas
Co (SA) Ltd v Cape Town Municipality
1926
AD 467
, at 488-489 (per Innes CJ);
Botes
v Road Accident Fund
2020
JDR 2586, paragraphs 35 and 40.
[16]
Section 79A reads:
“
79A
Recovery of costs by law clinics
(1)
Notwithstanding the provisions of section 83 (6) of this Act and
section 9 (2) of the Admission of Advocates Act, 1964 (Act
74 of
1964), whenever in any legal proceedings or any dispute in respect
of which legal services are rendered to a litigant or
other person
by a law clinic, costs become payable to such litigant or other
person in terms of a judgment of the court or a
settlement, or
otherwise, it shall be deemed that such litigant or other person has
ceded his or her rights to such costs to
the law clinic.
(2)
(a)
A
litigant or person referred to in subsection (1) or the law clinic
rendering legal services to such litigant or person
may, at any time
before payment of the costs referred to in subsection (1), give
notice in writing to-
(i)
the person liable for such costs; and
(ii)
the registrar or clerk of the court concerned,
that
the legal services concerned are being or have been rendered by that
law clinic.
(b)
Where
notice has been given as contemplated in paragraph
(a)
,
the law clinic concerned may proceed in its own name to have such
costs taxed, where appropriate, and to recover them, without
being
substituted on the record of the legal proceedings concerned, if
any, for the litigant or person referred to in subsection
(1).
(3)
The costs referred to in subsection (1) shall be calculated and the
bill of costs concerned, if any, shall be taxed as if
the litigant
or person to whom legal services were rendered by the law clinic,
actually incurred the costs of obtaining the services
of the
attorney or advocate acting on his or her behalf in the proceedings
or dispute concerned.”
[17]
Code
of Conduct for All Legal Practitioners, Candidate Legal
Practitioners and Juristic Entities
Published
under GenN 168 in GG 42337 of 29 March 2019
[18]
Solomon
v Junkeeparsad
2022
(3) SA 526 (GJ)
[19]
I refer to the rules as published on the GCB website at
https://gcbsa.co.za/
[20]
Society
of Advocates of SA (Witwatersrand Division) v Cigler
1976
(4) SA 350
(T) at 354A-G;
Fluxmans
Incorporated v Lithos Corporation of South Africa (Pty) Ltd and
Another (No 1)
2015
(2) SA 295
(GJ), paragraph 79
[21]
G
eneral
Council of the Bar of South Africa v Van der Spuy
1999
(1) SA 577
(T) at 593F
[22]
See:
GB
Bradfield
Christie's
Law of Contract in South Africa
7
ed (“Christie”) p 411 paragraph 10.3.2(c)
[23]
Ibid;
Van
Huyssteen, Lubbe & Reinecke
Contract
General Principles
6
ed p 218 paragraph 7.22
[24]
Christie, p 393ff
[25]
A contract which is against public policy may be void or
unenforceable. See in general: Christie, p 392ff; Van Huyssteen,
Lubbe
& Reinecke (
supra
),
chapter 7
[26]
If the parties cannot come to an agreement, the taxing master will
have two conflicting cost orders to deal with. At the hearing
the
argument took some two hours in total, of which only a few minutes
were spent on the application to strike out.
sino noindex
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