Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 482South Africa
South African Legal Practice Council v Youngman and Another (112948/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 482 (10 May 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## South African Legal Practice Council v Youngman and Another (112948/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 482 (10 May 2024)
South African Legal Practice Council v Youngman and Another (112948/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 482 (10 May 2024)
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sino date 10 May 2024
FLYNOTES:
PROFESSION
– Legal Practice Council –
Misconduct
complaints
–
Large
number of complaints against attorney over multiple years –
Misappropriated trust funds – Failure to notice
obvious
trend – Response to complaints was perfunctory – Fell
short of what is expected of LPC as regulator of
profession –
Numerous claims against Fidelity Fund – Would have been far
fewer claims had LPC been diligent in
attending to multiple
complaints – Attorney to be removed from roll of legal
practitioners.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
(GAUTENG
DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case No: 112948/2023
Reportable: Yes
Of interest to other
Judges: Yes
Revised: No
Date: 10 May 2024
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
THE
SOUTH
AFRICAN
LEGAL
PRACTICE
COUNCIL
Applicant
and
ASHLEY
MICHAEL
YOUNGMAN
First Respondent
KHARIKHOBE
AND
PARTNERS
INC.
Second Respondent
JUDGEMENT
MOOKI
J
(MNCUBE
AJ
concurring):
1
The applicant seeks to have the first respondent
("the respondent") struck from the Roll of legal
practitioners.
The respondent was admitted
and enrolled as an attorney on 5 July 2013. He commenced practising
as a sole practitioner under the
name and style of "Youngman
Attorneys Incorporated" on 6 January 2014. The court suspended
the respondent from practising
as a legal practitioner on 5 December
2023, following an application by the applicant ("the LPC")
on 31 October 2023.
This application is to determine whether the
respondent is to be struck from the Roll of legal practitioners.
2
The
respondent
has
not
participated
in
the
proceedings.
He
was
served
with the application and the order suspending him from practice. He
was aware of the
hearing. He did not enter
a notice to oppose.
3
The LPC's primary case is that the respondent
misappropriated trust funds. The misappropriation occurred as
follows.
The respondent received
instructions in various transactions pertaining to the sale of
immovable property.
Clients deposited funds
in the respondent's trust account, for purposes of implementing the
property transactions.
4
The respondent's conduct essentially followed the
same approach.
He
would
receive
instructions
in a
property
related
transaction.
Funds would be deposited into his trust account.
He would not carry out the instruction. He would
also ignore queries in relation to the instruction. There is an
instance of the
respondent threatening a client after the client had
complained to the LPC.
5
The founding affidavit identifies more than twenty
complaints concerning the respondent.
The
following are illustrations of some of the complaints. Ms Mbatha
signed an offer to purchase immovable property.
She
instructed the respondent to attend to the transfer of the property
into her name. She paid transfer costs in the amount of
R12,862.55
into the respondent's trust account.
The
respondent never effected the transfer.
6
Ms Mbatha eventually lodged a complaint with the
LPC. The LPC requested the respondent to comment on the complaint.
The respondent
did not respond to the invitation. Ms Mbatha lodged a
claim with the Legal Practitioner's Fidelity Fund.
7
The LPC received a complaint from Mr Hinckley.
He had instructed the respondent to attend to the
transfer of registration of property into Mr Hinckley's name.
Mr Hinckley paid a total amount of R2 518
432.40 into the
respondent's
trust
account.
The
respondent
did
not
transfer
the property into Mr Hinckley's name.
8
Attorneys for the sellers in the Hinckley
transaction requested the respondent to provide proof that the funds
remained available
in his trust account. The respondent did not
provide the proof. He also did not effect transfer into the name of
the
complainant
He
refused to deliver files and funds in the trust account to the
complainant's new attorneys.
The LPC
notified
the
respondent
of this complaint.
The respondent did not
reply to the notification.
9
The respondent, in another property-related
transaction, refused to refund a client the amount of R1 600 000.00.
The payment was
for the respondent to effect transfer of immovable
property into the name of the
client.
The client complained to the LPC. The respondent
sent the complainant threatening messages on email and by text
messages after the
complainant started making enquiries with the
respondent
The respondent informed the
complainant that the transaction could not be proceeded with because
one of the respondent's companies
had been liquidated. The LPC
established that the respondent's company had not been liquidated,
and that the respondent had misrepresented
the facts.
10
The complaints against the respondent are not
limited to property transactions.
They
include instances where the respondent was appointed executor of
deceased estates.
More than two-thirds of
the complaints, however, pertain to property-related transactions.
11
The respondent is not admitted to practice as a
conveyancer.
The LPC contends that the
respondent contravened the LPA, the
Rules,
and the Code of Conduct in holding himself as a conveyancer and
purporting to practice as such.
12
The respondent wrote to the LPC on 6 June 2023
requesting a meeting to report his firm's trust deficit. He mentioned
that he wished
to work with the LPC to
ensure that his clients were paid or reimbursed. The meeting occurred
on 12 June 2023. The respondent informed
officials at the LPC that a
Mr Mario Grabler, who owned several estate agencies, approached the
respondent to acquire the respondent's
legal practice. The respondent
sold the practice to Grabler. Grabler paid the respondent a salary
once Grabler took over the firm.
13
Grabler was not an attorney.
The
respondent mentioned that Grabler appointed persons to attend to the
firm's conveyancing matters. One of those persons had been
struck
from the Roll. Grabler is said to have implemented controls on
purchasing the practice. One such control was that an independent
third party, appointed by Grabler, would audit the firm's trust
account.
14
The respondent also related that most of the
firm's work originated from Grobler's estate
agencies. The firm started receiving complaints 18
months
after Grabler took control of the
practice.
The respondent
made enquiries and resolved
matters with various clients.
15
The respondent stated that the trust account was
in deficit and
that Grabler was responsible
for the deficit. That was because Grabler controlled the account and
authorised all payments from the
trust
account.
16
The firm changed its name to Kharikhobe and
Partners. This followed an agreement with a Mr Gogome to become the
firm's BEE partner.
The change
in
name was
to secure
contracts
with
the
government
and other
entities.
The
respondent
indicated
that
the
contracts
did
not
materialise and the
firm is to revert to Youngman Attorneys.
17
Mr Reddy, an official at
the
LPC, attended the meeting referred to above. He also investigated the
respondent's firm. Mr Reddy, following his investigation,
opined that
the firm's continued operation posed a risk to clients. That was
because the
respondent had admitted that
the firm had a trust deficit. Mr Reddy determined, on information
available to him, that the firm had
a significant trust deficit.
18
Mr Reddy's investigation revealed that several of
the respondent's trust accounts had been closed.
The
trust banking account with FNB was closed on 14 August 2018. The
trust account with Standard
Bank was closed
on 16 February
2022. The
trust
account
with
Nedbank
had
a
credit
balance
of R14 931.29 on
31 May 2023.
19
Mr Reddy established that the respondent's
firm had a trust account deficit in the amount of R6 948 758.24. He
expressed the view
that the deficit was likely higher because he did
not investigate all trust
creditors.
20
The
LPC
also
contends
that the
respondent's
conduct
constituted
a
failure to account
faithfully, accurately and timeously for his clients' money; he
failed
to treat trust funds separately from
his own
money, and
to
retain funds for so long as
was
strictly
necessary;
he
failed
to
use
his
best efforts to
carry out work competently and timeously;
he
failed to furnish clients with
written
statements
of
account
setting
out,
amongst
others,
details
of all amounts received in connection with a
matter, including failing to indicate the amount due to or owed by a
client.
21
The respondent's conduct fell far short of what is
required of a legal practitioner. He was
not
authorised to hold himself as a conveyancer. He misled the public in
this regard. He threatened clients when those clients wanted
him to
account to them. He largely ignored the LPC when the LPC invited him
to respond to complaints against him. His failure to
oppose the
application is an admission that
the
case against him is unanswerable.
22
The
law on whether a person is fit and proper is well-established.
[1]
A court makes a finding with reference to the facts before court.
[2]
The
facts show that the respondent is not a fit and proper person as is
required of a legal practitioner. I find that his name ought
to be
struck from the
Roll
of legal practitioners. He abused a position of trust in relation to
his clients. His removal from the Roll will protect the
public.
[3]
23
There are
aspects
to
this application
that merit
remark
regarding the conduct of the
LPC
in complaints against the respondent.
24
The LPC, as
part of
making its case against the respondent, stated that the Legal
Practitioner's Fidelity Fund, which is used to reimburse persons
who
suffered
pecuniary loss because
of
theft by a legal practitioner, "is at
risk
due
to
the
apparent
failure
by
the
First
Respondent
to
account
for
trust
funds." The LPC is correct to raise this concern. The LPC,
however, contributed to the risk.
25
The LPC failed to take appropriate measures
concerning complaints about the respondent over multiple years. The
respondent's mischief
would have been arrested much earlier had the
LPC effected proper policing of the respondent.
26
Members of the public lodged complaints with the
LPC concerning the respondent
over
several
years. There
were
almost
monthly
complaints about
the respondent
There are
instances of multiple complaints on
the
same day. The LPC registered all these complaints. The LPC's response
to the complaints was perfunctory, and
fell
short of what is expected
of the LPC as
a regulator of the
profession.
27
The LPC, on receipt of a complaint, would
generally notify the respondent, seeking his comment on a complaint.
The notification
by the LPC was sometimes
made
many months after the lodging of a complaint. There is no evidence
that the LPC took measures between
the
lodging of a complaint and the LPC's notification of that complaint
to the respondent.
28
The respondent generally ignored notifications
sent to him by the
LPC. The LPC, in turn,
hardly made follow-ups when the respondent ignored the notifications.
The LPC, in the meanwhile, continued
receiving new complaints during
the LPC's inactivity before notifying the
respondent
of
the
next
complaint or whilst awaiting a response to its notification to the
respondent.
29
The table below is a summary of the chronology
pertaining to some of the complaints
associated
with
the
respondent
The
table shows
the date
when a complaint was lodged with the LPC, the
nature of the complaint, the date when the LPC
notified the respondent of a complaint, and whether the LPC took any
action in relation
to a complaint The table illustrates the LPC's
failure to properly police complaints against the respondent
Date
Nature
Notification
Steps by the LPC
11/11/2019
Property
related.
[4]
15/11/2019,16/01/2020
Replied
on 5/02/2020, saying the matter had
been
settled, and that withdrawal of the complaint was a term of the
settlement.
[5]
17/02/2020
Replied on 12/02/2020.
None
18/11/2019
Property related.
18/12/2019
Replied
on
16/01/2020.
Accused
complainant
of
breach.
[6]
Investigating
Committee called
for
a meeting.
[7]
7/10/2021
Property related.
14/10/2021;14/01/2022,
4/02/2022
[8]
None
Replied
on
11/12/2021.
Said paid third party.
[9]
18/11/2021
Refusal
to refund
client
24/11/2021
No
response.
[10]
None
28/01/2022
Appointment as
executor
1/07;2022
[11]
None
26/04/2022
Property related.
24/08/2022,31/01/2023,
27/02/2023
No
response
None
6/06/2022
Property related.
21/02/2023
[12]
No
response.
[13]
None
5/07/2022
Property related.
14/07/2022,19/08/2022,
and 3/11/2022
No
response
None
[14]
6/07/2022
Property related.
12/07/2022
None
[15]
18/11/2022
Property related
6/02/2023
[16]
Replied
on
11/04/2023
[17]
None
[18]
03/02/2023
Property related
20/02/2023,3/04/2023
No
response
None
2/03/2023
Property related.
10/03/2023
Replied
on
5/04/2023
[19]
None
Replied
on
8/05/2023
[20]
13/03/2023
Property related.
18/05/2023;10/07/2023
Replied on 21/07/2023
None
[21]
29/03/2023
Property related.
Practitioner not
notified of complaint
None
April 2023
Property related.
24/04/2023
No
response
None
April 2023
Property related.
Practitioner not
notified of complaint
None
April 2023
Property related.
28/07/2023
No
response
None
April 2023
Property related.
09/05/2023;12/07/2023
No response
None
4/05/2023
Property related.
28/07/2023
No response
None
23/05/2023
Property
related.
[22]
24/05/2023
[23]
None
23/05/2023
Property related.
29/05/2023
No
response
None
30
The court was informed
during
the hearing that each complaint
to
the
LPC is
identified
with
reference
to
a
law
firm
and
is
then
given
a
unique descriptor.
For
example,
complaints
regarding
the
respondent
would
be registered as
"Youngman/X", with "X" signifying the
unique complaint.
31
The court was also informed
that
the LPC has
some 23
officials
who deal with
complaints
lodged
against
legal
practitioners. It is
a
surprise
that
the
responsible officials at the
LPC failed to
notice an obvious trend given the large number of complaints against
the
respondent.
32
The following illustrates the LPC's failure to
effect proper policing of wayward practitioners, such as the
respondent The LPC called
the respondent to appear before the LPC's
disciplinary committee on 4 November
2021.
The hearing was later rescheduled
for 27
January 2022. The respondent wrote to the
LPC
on
27 January
2022,
saying the
dispute had been settled.
33
The respondent was absent at the hearing on 27
January 2022. The complainant
was in
attendance.
A plea of not
guilty
was entered on behalf of
the
respondent.
The
disciplinary
committee
was
informed
that
the parties
had
settled.
The
complainant
informed
the
sitting
that
he intended to withdraw the complaint on receipt
of payment by the respondent. The hearing was then postponed to 21
February 2022.
34
The respondent attended the hearing on 21 February
2022. He requested terms for when he would repay the complainant. The
hearing
did not proceed. The respondent did not make all payments
that he undertook to make. The LPC informed the respondent that the
hearing
would be re enrolled. The matter was not re-enrolled.
35
It is a concern that the LPC, given the many
complaints against the respondent at that time, was prepared to
indulge the respondent
by not subjecting him to a disciplinary
process only because a complainant had agreed
to
settle
with
the
respondent.
The
LPC
was
aware
of
other complaints
against the respondent at that time. The LPC brought this application
in 2023. The LPC had the opportunity to halt
the conduct of the
respondent at least in 2021.
36
The court was informed during the hearing that
there are 51 claims against the respondent with the Legal
Practitioners' Fidelity
Fund. All but one of the
claims
pertain to the respondent purporting to act as a conveyancer.
37
The Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund has
paid
R23 491
476.81 as a
result of
claims made against the respondent.
There
are several contingent claims valued in the
millions
of Rand. There would have been far fewer claims had the
LPC
been
diligent in
attending to
the
multiple
complaints
concerning the respondent.
38
I make the following order:
1.
That the name of
ASHLEY
MICHAEL YOUNGMAN
(the "First
Respondent") be removed from the Roll of legal practitioners.
2.
That
the
First
Respondent
immediately
surrenders
and delivers
to
the Registrar of this Court his certificate of
enrolment as a legal practitioner.
3.
That in
the event of the
First Respondent
failing to comply with the
terms of
this
order
detailed
in
the
previous
paragraph
within
two
(2)
weeks from
the
date of service of this order on the
First
Respondent, the sheriff of
the
district
in
which
the
certificate
is
located,
be
authorised
and directed
to
take
possession
of
the
certificate
and
to
hand
it
to
the Registrar of this
Court.
4.
That the Respondents be prohibited from handling
or operating on the trust accounts as detailed in paragraph 5 hereof.
5.
That Ignatius Wilhelm Briel, the
Director
of the Gauteng Provincial Office of the Applicant; or any other
person holding that office, be appointed as
curator
bonis
(curator) to administer and
control the trust accounts of the Respondents,
including
accounts
relating
to
insolvent
and
deceased estates
and
any
deceased
estate
and
any
estate
under
curatorship connected with the First Respondent's
practice as a legal practitioner and including, also, the separate
banking accounts
opened and kept by Respondents at a bank in the
Republic of South Africa in terms of section 86(1) & (2)
of Act No 28
of 2014
and/or any separate savings or interest bearing
accounts
as
contemplated
by
section
86(3)
and/or section
86(4) of
Act No. 28 of 2014, in which monies from such trust banking accounts
have been invested by virtue of the
provisions
of the
said sub-sections
or in which monies in any manner have been
deposited or credited (the said accounts being hereafter referred to
as the trust accounts),
with the following powers and duties:
5.1
immediately to take possession of the Respondents'
accounting records, records, files and
documents
as referred to in paragraph 6 and subject to the approval of the
Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund Board of Control (hereinafter
referred to as the fund) to sign all forms and generally to operate
upon the trust account(s), but only to such extent and for
such
purpose as
may
be
necessary
to
bring to completion
current
transactions in which
the
Respondents were acting at
the
date of this order;
5.2
subject to the approval and control of the Legal
Practitioners' Fidelity Fund Board of Control and where monies had
been paid incorrectly
and unlawfully from the undermentioned trust
accounts, to recover and receive and, if necessary in the interests
of persons having
lawful claims upon the trust account(s) and/or
against the Respondents in respect of monies held, received and/or
invested by the
Respondents in terms of section 86(1) & (2)
and/or section 86(3) and/or section 86(4) of Act
No
28
of
2014
(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 Respondents were and may still have been
concerned and to receive such monies and to pay the
same to the
credit of the
trust account(s);
5.3
to ascertain from the Respondents'
accounting records the names of all persons on whose account the
Respondents appear to hold or
to have received trust monies
(hereinafter referred to as trust creditors) and to call upon the
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;
5.4
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
Legal
Practitioners' Fidelity
Fund
Board of Control, to determine whether any such
trust creditor has a claim in respect of monies in the trust
account(s) of the Respondents
and, if so, the amount of such claim;
5.5
to admit or reject, in whole or in part, subject
to the approval of the Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund Board of
Control, 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;
5.6
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 Legal Practitioners'
Fidelity Fund Board of Control;
5.7
in the event of there being any surplus in the
trust account(s) of the Respondents 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 Act No
28 of 2014 in
respect
of
any
interest
therein
referred
to
and,
secondly,
without
prejudice
to the
rights
of the
creditors of
the
Respondents,
the
costs,
fees and expenses referred to in paragraph 10 of this order, or such
portion thereof as has not already been separately paid
by the
Respondents to the 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
Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund Board of Control, to the First
Respondent,
if
he is solvent, or, if the
First Respondent
is insolvent, to
the trustee(s) of the
First
Respondent's insolvent estate;
5.8
in the event of there being insufficient
trust monies in the trust banking account(s) of the Respondents, 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
trust
banking account(s)
amongst
the trust creditors alternatively
to
pay the
balance to the
Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund;
5.9
subject
to
the
approval
of
the
chairman
of
the
Legal Practitioners'
Fidelity
Fund Board of Control, to appoint nominees or representatives and/or
consult with and/or engage the services of legal practitioners,
counsel, accountants and/or any other persons, where considered
necessary, to assist him in carrying out
his
duties as curator; and
5.10
to render from time to time, as curator, returns
to the Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund Board of Control showing
how the trust
account(s) of the Respondents
has/have
been
dealt
with,
until
such
time
as
the
board
notifies him that he may regard his duties as curator as terminated.
6.
That the
Respondents
immediately
deliver
the
accounting
records, records, files and documents containing
particulars and information
relating to:
6.1
any monies received, held or paid by the
Respondents for or on account of any person while
practising as a legal practitioner;
6.2
any monies invested by the Respondents in terms of
section 86(3) and/or section 86(4) of Act No 28 of2014;
6.3
any interest on monies so invested which was paid
over or credited to the Respondents;
6.4
any estate of a deceased
person
or an insolvent estate or an estate under curatorship administered by
the Respondents, whether as executor or trustee or
curator or on
behalf of the
executor,
trustee
or curator;
6.5
any insolvent estate administered by the
Respondents as trustee or on behalf of the
trustee in terms of the
Insolvency Act, No 24 of
1936
;
6.6
any trust administered by the
Respondents
as trustee or on behalf of the trustee in terms of the
Trust
Properties Control Act, No 57
of 1988;
6.7
any company liquidated in terms of the
provisions of the Companies Act, No 61
of
1973 read
together with the provisions of
the
Companies Act, No 71
of
2008,
administered
by
the
Respondents
as
or
on
behalf
of
the
liquidator;
6.8
any close
corporation
liquidated
in
terms
of
the
Close
Corporations
Act, 69
of
1984
,
administered
by
the
Respondents
as
or
on
behalf
of
the
liquidator; and
6.9
the First Respondent's practice as a legal
practitioner of this Court, to the curator appointed in terms of
paragraph 5 hereof,
provided that, as far as such accounting records,
records, files and documents are concerned, the Respondents shall be
entitled
to have reasonable access to them but always subject to the
supervision of such curator or his nominee.
7.
That should the First Respondent fail to comply
with the provisions of the preceding paragraph of this order on
service thereof
upon him or after a return by the person entrusted
with the service thereof that he has been unable to effect service
thereof on
the First Respondent (as the case may be), the sheriff for
the district in which such accounting records, records, files and
documents are located, be empowered and directed
to search for and
to take possession
thereof
wherever
they may be and
to
deliver
them to such curator.
8.
That the curator
shall
be entitled to:
8.1
hand over to the persons entitled thereto all 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;
8.2
require from the
persons
referred to in paragraph 8.1 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 Respondents and/or the Respondents'
clients and/or fund
in respect of money and/or other property
entrusted to the Respondents
provided
that any
person
entitled
thereto
shall
be
granted
reasonable
access
thereto and shall be permitted to make copies
thereof;
8.3
publish this order or an abridged version thereof
in any newspaper he considers appropriate; and
8.4
wind-up of the
First
Respondent's
practice.
9.
That the
First
Respondent
be and is hereby removed from
office as:
9.1
executor
of any estate
of which
the
First
Respondent
has been
appointed
in terms of
section 54(1)(a)(v)
of the
Administration
of Estates Act, No 66 of 1965
or
the estate
of any other
person
referred
to in
section 72(1)
;
0in; line-height: 150%">
9.2
curator or guardian of any
minor
or other person's property in terms of
section 72(1)
read with
section 54(1)(a)(v)
and
section 85
of the
Administration of Estates
Act, No 66 of 1965
;
9.3
trustee of any insolvent estate in terms of
section 59
of the
Insolvency Act, No 24 of
1936
;
9.4
liquidator of any
company
in terms of
section 379(2)
read with 379(e) of the
Companies
Act, No 61
of 1973 and read
together
with the
provisions of the
Companies
Act, No 71
of 2008;
9.5
trustee of any trust in terms of section 20(1) of
the Trust Property Control Act, No 57 of 1988;
9.6
liquidator of any close corporation appointed in
terms of section 74 of the Close Corporation Act, No 69
of
1984; and
9.7
administrator appointed in terms of Section 74 of
the
Magistrates Court Act, No 32 of 1944.
9.8
That
the
Respondents
be
and
is
hereby
directed:
10.
to pay, in terms of section 87(2) of Act No. 28
of 2014, the
reasonable
costs of the
inspection of the
accounting records of the
Respondents;
10.1
to pay the
reasonable
fees of the
auditor engaged
by
Applicant;
10.2
to pay the
reasonable
fees and
expenses of
the
curator, including
travelling time;
10.3
to pay the reasonable fees and expenses of any
person(s) consulted and/or engaged by the curator as aforesaid;
10.4
to pay the expenses relating to the publication of
this order or an abbreviated version thereof; and
10.5
to pay the costs of this application
on
an
attorney-and-client scale.
11.
That if there are any trust funds available the
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 Respondent in respect of his
former practice, and should he fail to do so, he shall not be
entitled to recover such fees and disbursements from the curator
without prejudice, however, to such rights (if any) as he may have
against the trust creditor(s) concerned for payment or recovery
thereof;
12.
That a certificate issued by a director of the
Legal Practitioners' 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
MOOKI J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I agree:
MNCUBE AJ
JUDGE (ACTING) OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Appearance:
On
behalf of the Applicant:
J
M MooIman
Instructed
by:
Damons
Magardie Richardson Attorneys
On
behalf of the Respondent:
No
Appearance
Date
of
Hearing:
7
May 2024
Date
of Judgement:
10
May 2024
[1]
See,
for example: Incorporated Law Society, Transvaal v Mandela
1954 (3)
SA 102
(T) at 10; Jasat v Natal Law Society 2000(3) SA 44 (SCA) at
51C -H; Law Society, Cape v Peter
2009 (2)
SA
18
(SCA) at 26 B-C;
[2]
Summerley
v Law Society, Northern Provinces
2006 (5) SA 613
(SCA) at 620A.
[3]
Ndleve
v Pretoria Society of Advocates 2016 (12) BCLR1523 (CC) at para
[10].
[4]
Pertained
to the respondent having been appointed to attend to the transfer of
property into the name of the complaint. The complainant
purchased
properties in 2016.
[5]
Complainant
advised on 7 February 2020 that he was not withdrawing the complaint
The complainant advised the LPC on 10/02/2020
that the respondent
had been sending him threatening messages.
[6]
Complainant
settled with the sellers. The respondent refused to pay the
difference, unless the complaint was withdrawn.
[7]
The
respondent was called to attend a meeting with the Investigating
Committee on 8 June 2023. The respondent asked for a postponement.
The matter was postponed
sine
die.
[8]
No
response to the LPC's letters of 14/01/2022 and 4/02/2022.
[9]
Complainant
advised the LPC that he did not authorise payment or that the third
party was known to the complainant.
[10]
Complainant
advised the LPC on 13/12/2021 that the
respondent paid. The complainant requested
that the complaint
be withdrawn.
[11]
No
explanation why the respondent was only notified of the complaint
some 6 months after the complaint.
[12]
The
LPC does not say it was making enquiries pertaining to the
complaint. The LPC did nothing between 6 June 2022 and 21 February
2023, a period of some eight months.
[13]
Respondent
requested an extension on 27/03/2023 to respond.
[14]
LPC
wrote to the respondent on 25/10/2022, advising that the matter
would be referred to the LPC's investigating Committee. Respondent
later wrote that he had notified his insurer and there was a fraud.
The LPC
did
nothing
after the respondent's letter of 10/11/2022.
[15]
The
respondent wrote to the new attorneys on 7/11/2022, stating that the
complaint be withdrawn before he could pay. He then wrote
to the LPC
on 8/11/2022, saying he had settled with the complainant and that he
would pay the complainant within 24 hours of
the complainant
withdrawing the complaint. The LPC took no steps.
[16]
For a
complaint received in November 2022
[17]
Respondent
replied, stating that he had settled with the complainant.
[18]
The
complainant's attorneys wrote (20/04/2023) to say that the
respondent had not paid the full amount. The LPC took no further
steps.
[19]
Respondent
requested confirmation on 5/04/2023 that the complaint had been
withdrawn before the respondent would pay the complainant.
[20]
Respondent
advised the LPC that he settled with the complainant and that the
complainant withdrew the complaint. The LPC advised
respondent
on/06/2023 that the LPC decides whether or not to accept withdrawal
of a complaint.
[21]
The
LPC, in the founding affidavit, does not say that it was satisfied
with the response to the complaint.
[22]
Two
complaints.
[23]
Replied
on 21/06/2023. Complainant's response to the reply on 17/07/2023
sino noindex
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