Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 621South Africa
Dlamini Incorporated and Another v Legal Practice Council of South Africa and Another (2025-064733) [2025] ZAGPPHC 621 (23 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
23 June 2025
Headnotes
by the firm in respect of existing and/or future clients and/or to hand over any or all files to such LPC appointed third parties; and/or
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Dlamini Incorporated and Another v Legal Practice Council of South Africa and Another (2025-064733) [2025] ZAGPPHC 621 (23 June 2025)
Dlamini Incorporated and Another v Legal Practice Council of South Africa and Another (2025-064733) [2025] ZAGPPHC 621 (23 June 2025)
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sino date 23 June 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: 2025-064733
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE
23 June 2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
DLAMINI
INCORPORATED
First Applicant
JOHANNA
DAVIDS
N.O
Second Applicant
and
THE
LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL OF SOUTH AFRICA
First Respondent
THE
OFFICES OF THE LEGAL SERVICES OMBUDSMAN
Second Respondent
And
In
the counter-application between:
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
Applicant
and
DLAMINI
INCORPORATED
First Respondent
JOHANNA
DAVIDS N.O
Second Respondent
FALLON
MALISSA LETSOALO
Third
Respondent
PAULA
SINDISO ZIKHALI
Fourth
Responden
JUDGMENT
RAJAB-BUDLENDER AJ
Background to this
application
[1]
This application was brought on an urgent
basis and came before me on the urgent roll with the Applicants
seeking the confirmation
of a rule nisi made by Khumalo J on 21 May
2025.
[2]
In summary, Ms Dlamini, the sole director
and shareholder of the First Applicant (“the deceased
director”) passed away
on 10 October 2024. On 3 February
2025 the Applicants allege that the directorship was “changed”
to that of Paula
Sindiso Zikhali and Fallon Malissa Letsoalo (“the
new directors”). No details are provided on the
papers
of how these directors were appointed or who appointed them.
The Second Applicant was appointed by the Master as the
Executrix of
the estate of the deceased on 15 November 2024.
[3]
The Applicants allege that upon notifying
the LPC of the death of the sole director and shareholder of the
First Applicant (“the
firm”), the LPC treated the firm as
though it had ceased to exist, instructing its representatives to
stop trading and notifying
the firm’s bank that its accounts
should be frozen. There was some confusion on the part of the
Applicants as to whether
the LPC had deregistered the firm which
naturally had consequences for the firm’s ability to conduct
business.
[4]
Although the matter was placed on the
urgent court roll before Khumalo J as well as before me, urgency was
not at issue between
the parties. I accept that given the
interests of clients and creditors of the firm, the matter is
sufficiently urgent to
be heard in this Court.
The Relief Sought
[5]
The Applicants seek declaratory relief that
the firm did not cease to exist because of the passing of its sole
director and shareholder,
the late Nthabiseng Eunice Dlamini and that
it instead continues to constitute a separate legal entity and a firm
of attorneys
as defined in terms of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
and
the Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014 (“the LPA”).
[6]
It also seeks further relief related to the
setting aside of any and all steps taken and instructions issued by
the Legal Practice
Council (“the LPC”) as a consequence
of Dlamini’s passing. These steps relate to the
deregistration of
the firm, and instructions issued to the firm to
cease all trading activities.
[7]
Finally, the Applicants seek an order that
the LPC is directed to re-register the firm in terms of section 34 of
the LPA.
[8]
On 21 May 2025, Khumalo J issued a
rule nisi for the relief set out above and in addition interdicted
the LPC from:
a.
Insisting and dealing with the firm as an
attorneys firm that has ceased to exist;
b.
Taking any decisions and/or steps,
including the appointment of third parties to terminate any and all
mandates held by the firm
in respect of existing and/or future
clients and/or to hand over any or all files to such LPC appointed
third parties; and/or
c.
Generally taking any steps that interfere
with the operations and business of the firm.
[9]
Khumalo J further directed the LPC to
investigate and report in writing to this Court in respect of the
status of the firm within
the LPC’s records and the status of
the newly appointed directors of the firm with specific reference to
whether or not they
are fit and proper persons and with respect to
fidelity fund certificates issued or to be issued to them.
[10]
The LPC duly filed such report. I
return to the contents thereof below.
[11]
The LPC opposed confirmation of the rule
nisi and launched an urgent counter-application, citing the new
directors in addition to
the firm and seeking an order that the new
directors should be prohibited from handling and/or operating the
firm’s trust
account. It also seeks an order that the
Office of the Director or Acting Director of the Gauteng Provincial
Office of the
LPC be appointed as
curator
bonis
to administer and control the
trust account/s of the deceased including accounts relating to
insolvent and deceased estates and
any deceased estate under
curatorship connected with the firm and deceased director’s
practice as an attorney and including
the separate bank accounts
opened and kept by the firm and the deceased director and/or any
separate savings or interest bearing
accounts as contemplated by
sections 86(3) and 86(4) of the LPA in which monies from such trust
banking accounts have been invested
(“the trust accounts”).
[12]
The counter application further seeks an
order setting out the powers of the curator which are extensive and
essentially deal with
meeting claims of trust creditors. It
also includes an order permitting the curator to wind up the firm and
deceased director’s
practice.
[13]
The Applicants objected strongly to the
relief sought in the counter application and indeed to the
consideration of the counter
application by this Court due to the
lateness of its submission. During argument Counsel for the
Applicants indicated that they
no longer objected to the citing of
the new directors in the counter application. Given the
importance of the matter to creditors
and clients of the firm, I
admitted the counter-application and heard argument on both the
application and counter-application.
The Rule Nisi
[14]
I am called upon to decide whether to
confirm or discharge the rule nisi issued on 21 May 2025 by Khumalo
J.
[15]
That involves a consideration of the relief
sought by the Applicants in their notice of motion.
[16]
The declaratory relief sought is that the
first applicant did not cease to exist as a separate legal entity
after the deceased death,
and that any steps taken or instructions
issued by the LPC as a consequence of her passing are unlawful and
set aside.
[17]
The Applicant is a personal liability
company as contemplated in
section 8(2)(c)
of the
Companies Act 71 of
2008
. A personal liability company is distinct from a private
company and the rules which follow the death of the sole director
and
shareholder of a personal liability company are therefore different
from a private company. Under our law, it is
permitted
for a company to conduct a legal practice. This was
initially contemplated in
section 23(1)
of the now repealed Attorneys
Act and is currently provided for in section 34(9)(a)(i) of the LPA
which provides that a commercial
juristic entity may be established
to conduct a legal practice provided that in its founding documents
its shareholding, partnership
or membership as the case may be is
comprised exclusively of attorneys and all present and past
shareholders, partners or members
are liable jointly and severally
together with the commercial juristic entity for the debts and
liabilities of the entity during
their period of office.
[18]
The LPC argues that in the case of a firm
such as the First Applicant, the effect of the death of the sole
director and shareholder
is that the firm may no longer continue to
operate without a director. It seems common cause on the
papers that Ms
Dlamini died without a will at least in respect to her
shareholding and directorship of the firm. The Articles of
Association
of the firm do not permit the executor to elect a
director or exercise any of the rights of director other than to
receive dividends
in relation to the deceased director’s
shares. Therefore when the deceased passed away there was
effectively no one
in control of the firm requiring the LPC to take
over in a caretaker function pending either the appointment of new
directors or
the appointment of a curator.
[19]
I therefore find no basis to confirm the
rule nisi in relation to the first declaratory order sought.
[20]
The second component of the declaratory
relief is equally stillborn. The LPC have denied in the papers
before me that they
deregistered the firm, instructed the firm to
cease trading activities and/or transferred any files to third party
attorneys.
[21]
The LPC states that it is not empowered to
and does not keep a roll relating to juristic entities and therefore
cannot register
or deregister a firm of attorneys. The only
time the LPC could conceivably be considered to have caused the
deregistration
of an entity would be when it brings an application to
court to wind up a juristic entity in terms of section 40(3)(b)(iv)
of the
LPA – but that has not happened in this case, and that
is a decision of a court and not of the LPC.
[22]
The Applicants answer to the LPC is that
the LPA makes provision for the recognition of a juristic entity from
which attorneys practice
in section 34(5) of the Act. But that
section does no more than set out the forms of legal practice and
provides that attorneys
may practice as part of a commercial juristic
entity. Moreover, the Applicants refer to a document from the
LPC setting out
new practice requirements in which it is stated that
some banks may request a letter from the LPC to confirm that
the
person is registered as an attorney
and
that in that case practitioners may request such a letter from the
LPC. Again, the Applicants miss the mark because
the
notice specifically addresses itself to individual practitioners who
require confirmation that they are registered as an attorney
–
and not that a firm is registered as a firm of attorneys with the
LPC. This is reinforced by the fact that in the
very next
section of the document under “FICA Registration” it
states that
all attorneys’ firms
must register with the Financial Intelligence Centre. Clearly a
distinction is drawn between registration of individual practitioners
– which falls within the LPC’s remit and that of the FIC
which requires registration by attorneys’ firms –
something the LPC does not have the power to do.
[23]
The papers before this Court indicate that
the LPC did request that Standard Bank should freeze the firm’s
trust account as
a result of the death of the sole director and
shareholder. This took place after the firm informed the
LPC of the
death of the deceased. In argument counsel for
the Applicants indicated that the unfreezing of the bank account was
in fact the primary relief sought by the applicant – but
accepted that this was not relief actually sought on the papers.
He attempted to amend the relief sought during argument, but the
papers do not make out a case for the unfreezing of the Bank accounts
and I am unable to grant such relief.
[24]
The final aspect of the declaratory relief
sought is to direct the LPC to retrospectively register the firm –
but as pointed
out above the LPC has no power to do so and the relief
is therefore not competent.
[25]
For all these reasons there is no basis for
the declaratory relief sought.
[26]
The remainder of the relief sought by the
Applicant seeks to interdict the LPC from interfering in the
operation and business of
the firm.
[27]
In relation to the interdictory relief the
LPC contended that it has not sought to interfere in the operation
and business of the
firm. It has not taken control of or
directed the reallocation of client files nor has it taken any other
steps to interfere
in the running of the firm. The
interdictory relief is not appropriate in light of my findings in
relation to
the powers of the LPC and in relation to the counter
application, to which I now turn.
The Report of the LPC
[28]
The Report filed by the LPC raises the
following concerns its investigation into the firm has revealed:
a.
The manner in which the new directors were
appointed is mysterious and cause for concern. In this regard,
I note that the
papers are vague in the extreme as to precisely how
the new directors were appointed after the deceased’s death.
The
founding affidavit states in this regard that “
on
3 February 2025, the directorship was changed to that of Paula
Sindiso Zikhali and I
.”
The Report citing the firms Articles of Association points out that
the Executor did not have the power to
elect new directors –
therefore how the new directors were appointed remains a mystery.
As pointed out above, the Executor
did not have the power under the
Articles of Association to appoint new directors. The notable
absence of any proper explanation
of how new directors were appointed
on the papers is cause for concern and suggests that their
appointment may have been improper.
However, I make no finding on
this as I do not have sufficient evidence before me to do so.
Related to this is
the question of the whether the new directors are
fit and proper.
b.
The Report raises concerns with the conduct
of Ms Zikhali and concludes that she may have committed criminal
offences on numerous
occasions over extended periods of time.
In relation to Ms Letsoalo, the report raises questions around her
practice during
various periods without a fidelity fund certificate
and as a director of a company which failed to lodge its annual
returns while
she was a sole director of the company.
c.
Of particular concern are payments made
from the trust account after the deceased’s death. A
total amount of R457,088.77
was transferred out of the trust account
by way of 15 transactions after the deceased’s passing.
The Applicants
state that these are of no concern. They refer
in this regard to an email from the firm’s accountant
explaining what
transpired. According to the accountant, the
deceased had a savings account and the funds for her funeral and
other costs
were paid out of the trust account instead of the savings
account in error. The accountant says “all transactions
are
accounted for”. This is simply not a sufficient
answer in my view and the flippant manner in which the Applicants
have
addressed these transactions itself suggests that supervision of
the Trust account is required. An amount of R310 534.17
has been repaid into the trust account and the Applicants have
tendered to repay the balance once the trust account has been
unfrozen.
The LPC has not received any formal communication to
this effect before this matter was heard.
d.
The LPC has also raised concerns about the
manner in which the second applicant, the executor, has dealt with
the trust account
suggesting that in her view the trust account is an
asset in the estate rather than separate to the estate and which has
to be
managed in the best interest of trust creditors.
Relevant provisions of
the LPA
[29]
Section 89 of the LPA provides that the
Court may on application by the Council prohibit a legal practitioner
from operating in
any way on his/her trust account and that the Court
may appoint a curator bonis to control and administer the legal
practitioner’s
trust account with any rights, powers and
functions in relation thereto as the Court may deem fit.
[30]
Section 90(1) of the LPA provides that if a
legal practitioner dies the Court may on application made by the
Council appoint a curator
bonis to control and administer the
deceased legal practitioner’s trust account, with any rights
powers and functions as
the court may deem fit.
[31]
The LPC applies in its counter application
for the appointment of a curator bonis. In her answering
affidavit to the counter
application, Ms Zikhali, one of the new
directors of the firm states that the Applicants are not opposed to
the appointment of
a curator bonis - “
No
one has ever opposed or challenged the appointment of a curator bonis
by the LPC
.” This is at
odds with the Applicants’ position in the main application in
which Counsel indicated that the Applicants
require the unfreezing of
the trust account for the firm to operate and that the LPC’s
failure to do so is hindering its
ability to operate. Indeed
the entire premise of the relief sought in the main application is to
resist any control by the
LPC. It is difficult therefore to
reconcile these two stated positions on behalf of the firm.
Findings
[32]
Having considered all the papers and
submissions made, I am of the view that of importance here is the
protection of the interests
of trust creditors. There are, in
my view, sufficient reasons set out in the counter application to
warrant the appointment
of a curator bonis as sought in the counter
application.
[33]
It would appear that the manner in
which the LPC engaged with the Applicants leaves much to be desired.
It is unfortunate
that this has caused extended uncertainty and
distress to the family of the deceased and to those employed by the
firm.
However, the shortcomings of the LPC are not
sufficient to permit me to overlook the genuine concerns raised by
the LPC report
into the management of the firm and of the Trust
account.
Order
[34]
The matter is urgent.
[35]
The rule nisi is discharged.
[36]
The Applicants are to pay the costs of the
main application on Scale C.
[37]
The third and fourth respondents in the
counter-application and any other person who may have access thereto,
are prohibited from
handling or operating the trust account(s) of the
first respondent in the counter application, the late Nthabiseng
Eunice Dlamini
(“the deceased director”).
[38]
Ignatius Wilhelm Briel or the person who
holds the office of the Director or Acting Director of the Gauteng
Provincial Office of
the Legal Practice Council, is appointed as the
curator bonis (curator) to administer and control the trust
account(s) of the deceased
director including accounts relating to
insolvent and deceased estates and any deceased estate and any estate
under curatorship
connected with the first respondent’s and the
deceased director’s practice as an attorney and including also,
the separate
banking accounts opened and kept by the first respondent
and the deceased director at a bank in the Republic of South Africa
in
terms of
section 86(1)
and
86
(2) of the
Legal Practice Act
(“LPA”)
and/or any separate savings or interest bearing accounts as
contemplated by
sections 86(3)
and
86
(4) of the LPA, in which monies
from such trust banking accounts have been invested by virtue of the
said provisions of the said
sub-sections or in which monies in any
manner have been deposited or credited (“the trust accounts”)
with the following
powers and duties:
a.
immediately to take possession of the first
respondent’s and the deceased director’s accounting
records, records, files
and documents as referred to in paragraph 4
and subject to the approval of the board of control of the Legal
Practitioners Fidelity
Fund (hereinafter referred to as the Fund) to
sign all forms and generally to operate upon the accounts, but only
to such extent
and for such purpose as may be necessary to bring to
completion current transactions in which the first respondent and the
deceased
director was acting at the date of this order;
b.
subject to the approval and control of the
board of control of the Fund and where monies had been paid
incorrectly and unlawfully
from the undermentioned accounts, to
recover and receive and, if necessary in the interests of persons
having lawful claims upon
the accounts and/or against the first
respondent and the deceased director in respect of monies held,
received and/or invested
by the first respondent and the deceased
director in terms of
section 86(3)
or
86
(
4
) of the LPA (hereinafter
referred to as trust monies), to take any legal proceedings which may
be necessary for the recovery of
money which may be due to such
persons in respect of incomplete transactions, if any, in which the
first respondent and the deceased
director was and may still have
been concerned and to receive such monies and to pay the same to the
credit of the accounts;
c.
to ascertain from the first respondent’s
and the deceased director’s accounting records the names of all
persons on
whose account the first respondent and the deceased
director appears to hold or to have received monies (hereinafter
referred to
as trust creditors); to call upon the second to fourth
respondents to furnish him, within 30 (thirty) days of the date of
service
of this order or such further period as he may agree to in
writing, with the names, addresses and amounts due to all trust
creditors;
d.
to call upon such trust creditors to
furnish such proof, information and/or affidavits as he may require
to enable him, acting in
consultation with, and subject to the
requirements of, the board of control of the Fund, to determine
whether any such trust creditor
has a claim in respect of monies in
these accounts of the first respondent and the deceased director and,
if so, the amount of
such claim;
e.
to admit or reject, in whole or in part,
subject to the approval of the board of control of the Fund, the
claims of any such trust
creditor or creditors, without prejudice to
such trust creditor's or creditors' right of access to the civil
courts;
f.
having determined the amounts which he
considers are lawfully due to trust creditors, to pay such claims in
full but subject always
to the approval of the board of control of
the Fund;
g.
in the event of there being any surplus in
the accounts of the first respondent and the deceased director after
payment of the admitted
claims of all trust creditors in full, to
utilise such surplus to settle or reduce (as the case may be),
firstly, any claim of
the Fund in terms of
section 86(5)
of the LPA
in respect of any interest therein referred to and, secondly, without
prejudice to the rights of the creditors of the
first respondent and
the deceased director the costs, fees and expenses referred to in
paragraphs 9 and 10 of this order, or such
portion thereof as has not
already been separately paid by the first respondent and the deceased
director to applicant, and, if
there is any balance left after
payment in full of all such claims, costs, fees and expenses, to pay
such balance, subject to the
approval of the board of control of the
Fund, to the first respondent or the deceased director, if they are
solvent, or, if the
first respondent or the deceased director is
insolvent, to the trustee(s) of their insolvent estate;
h.
in the event of there being insufficient
monies in the banking accounts of the first respondent and the
deceased director in accordance
with the available documentation and
information, to pay in full the claims of trust creditors who have
lodged claims for repayment
and whose claims have been approved, to
distribute the credit balance(s) which may be available in the
banking accounts amongst
the trust creditors alternatively to pay the
balance to the Fund;
i.
subject to the approval of the chairman of
the board of control of the Fund, to appoint nominees or
representatives and/or consult
with and/or engage the services of
attorneys, counsel, accountants and/or any other persons, where
considered necessary, to assist
him in carrying out his duties as
curator; and
j.
to render from time to time, as curator,
returns to the board of control of the Fund showing how the accounts
of the first respondent
and the deceased director has/have been dealt
with, until such time as the board notifies him that she may regard
her duties as
curator as terminated.
[39]
That the first to fourth respondents
immediately deliver the first respondent’s and the deceased
director’s accounting
records, records, files and documents
containing particulars and information relating to:
a.
any monies received, held or paid by the
first respondent and the deceased director for or on account of any
person while practising
as an attorney or purporting to practise as
an attorney;
b.
any monies invested by the first respondent
and the deceased director in terms of
section 86(3)
or
86
(4) of the
LPA;
c.
any interest on monies so invested which
was paid over or credited to the first respondent and the deceased
director;
d.
any estate of a deceased person or an
insolvent estate or an estate under curatorship administered by the
first respondent and the
deceased director, whether as executor or
trustee or curator or on behalf of the executor, trustee or curator;
e.
any insolvent estate administered by the
first respondent and the deceased director as trustee or on behalf of
the trustee in terms
of the
Insolvency Act, No 24 of 1936
;
f.
any trust administered by the first
respondent and the deceased director as trustee or on behalf of the
trustee in terms of the
Trust Properties Control Act, No 57 of 1988;
g.
any company liquidated in terms of the
Companies Act, No 61 of 1973, administered by the first respondent
and the deceased director
as or on behalf of the liquidator;
h.
any close corporation liquidated in terms
of the
Close Corporations Act, 69
of
1984,
administered
by
the
first
respondent
and
the
deceased
director as or on behalf of the liquidator; and
i.
the first respondent's and the deceased
director’s practice as an attorney of this Honourable Court,
to the curator appointed
in terms of paragraph 1 hereof, provided that, as far as such
accounting records, records, files and documents
are concerned, the
first to fourth respondents shall be entitled to have reasonable
access to them but always subject to the supervision
of such curator
or her nominee
[40]
That should the first to fourth respondents
fail to comply with the provisions of the preceding paragraph of this
order on service
thereof upon them either personally or by way of
email or after a return by the person entrusted with the service
thereof that
he/she has been unable to effect service thereof on the
respondents, the sheriff for the district in which such accounting
records,
records, files and documents are, be empowered and directed
to search for and to take possession thereof wherever they may be and
to deliver them to such curator.
[41]
That the curator shall be entitled to:
a.
hand over to the persons entitled thereto
alt such records, files and documents provided that a satisfactory
written undertaking
has been received from such persons to pay any
amount, either determined on taxation or by agreement, in respect of
fees and disbursements
due to the firm;
b.
require from the persons referred to in
paragraph 6.1 to provide any such documentation or information which
he may consider relevant
in respect of a claim or possible or
anticipated ·claim, against him and/or the first respondent
and/or the first respondent's
clients and/or Fund in respect of money
and/or other property entrusted to the first respondent provided that
any person entitled
thereto shall be granted reasonable access
thereto and shall be permitted to make copies thereof;
c.
publish this order or an abridged version
thereof in any newspaper he considers appropriate;
d.
wind-up of the first respondent's and the
deceased director’s practice; and
e.
instruct auditors to inspect the first
respondent's and the deceased director’s accounting records and
to, inter alia, ascertain
the true status thereof.
[42]
That if there are any trust funds available
the first and second respondents shall within 6 (six) months after
having been requested
to do so by the curator, or within such longer
period as the curator may agree to in writing, shall satisfy the
curator, by means
of the submission of taxed bills of costs or
otherwise, of the amount of the fees and disbursements due to the
first or second
respondent
in
respect of first respondent’s and deceased director’s
practice, and should they fail to do so,
they shall not be entitled to recover such fees and disbursements
from the curator without
prejudice, however, to such rights (if any)
as they may have against the trust creditor(s) concerned for payment
or recovery thereof.
[43]
That a certificate issued by a director of
the Attorneys Fidelity Fund shall constitute
prima
facie
proof of the curator's costs and
that the Registrar be authorised to issue a writ of execution on the
strength of such certificate
in order to collect the curator's costs.
[44]
The first and second respondents are
ordered:
a.
to pay, in terms of
section 87(2)
of the
LPA, the reasonable costs of the inspection of the accounting records
of the first respondent and the deceased director;
b.
to pay the reasonable fees of the auditor
engaged by applicant;
c.
to pay the reasonable
fees
and expenses of the curator, including travelling time;
d.
to pay the reasonable fees and expenses of
any person(s) consulted and/or engaged by the curator as aforesaid;
and
e.
to pay the expenses relating to the
publication of this order or an abbreviated version thereof.
[45]
The respondents in the counter application
are ordered to pay the costs of the counter application jointly and
severally on the
attorney and client scale.
N. RAJAB-BUDLENDER AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For
the Applicant:
For
the Respondent:
Adv
S Aucamp and Adv E Nhutsve instructed by Ngudle Attorneys
Incorporated.
Adv
Collet instructed by Rooth & Wessels Incorporated.
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