Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 445South Africa
Matlhwana v South African Legal Practice Council and Others (051162/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 445 (15 May 2024)
Headnotes
“What is at stake is more than one’s right to earn a living, important though that is. Freedom to choose a vocation is
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Matlhwana v South African Legal Practice Council and Others (051162/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 445 (15 May 2024)
Matlhwana v South African Legal Practice Council and Others (051162/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 445 (15 May 2024)
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FLYNOTES:
PROFESSION – Candidate attorney –
Practical
vocational training
–
Lodged
cession agreement with LPC which was duly signed and completed –
LPC’s failure to notify applicant of its
refusal to register
cession or to notify him of any concern – No explanation for
omissions – Urgency arises in
direct consequence of conduct
of LPC – Action was procedurally unfair – Decision was
materially influenced by
an error of law – Decision declared
unlawful – Reviewed and set aside.
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case No. 051162/2024
(1) REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3) REVISED
DATE: 15 May
2024
SIGNATURE:.
In the matter
between:
MATLHWANA, MATSOBANE
SHAUN
Applicant
And
THE SOUTH AFRICAN
LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
First Respondent
THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE
OFFICER OF THE SOUTH
AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE
COUNCIL
Second Respondent
GAUTENG PROVINCIAL
DIRECTOR: SOUTH
Third Respondent
AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE
COUNCIL
NAICKER, SHIVANI N.O
Fourth Respondent
LAW SOCIETY OF SOUTH
AFRICA
Fifth Respondent
BLACK LAWYERS
ASSOCIATION
Sixth Respondent
Coram:
Millar
J
Heard
on:
14 May 2024
Delivered:
15 May 2024 - This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, by being uploaded
to the CaseLines system of the GD and by
release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
15h30 on 15 May
2024.
ORDER
It is Ordered:
[1]
The applicant’s non-compliance with the Uniform Rules of Court
is hereby condoned
and the matter is heard on an urgent basis in
terms of rule 6(12)(a) of the Uniform Rules.
[2]
The First and/or Third Respondents’ decision not to register
the applicant’s
Cession of the PVT Contract is declared
unlawful and reviewed and set aside.
[3]
The Applicant’s cession of his PVT contract is deemed to have
been duly registered
on 18 January 2024.
[4]
The First Respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the application
on an attorney
and client scale, which costs include the costs of two
counsel.
JUDGMENT
MILLAR J
[1]
The
applicant is a candidate legal practitioner who has brought an urgent
application seeking
inter
alia
to
review and set aside the failure of the Gauteng Provincial Office of
the Legal Practice Council
[1]
to
register a cession of his Practical Vocational Training Contract
(PVT) on 17 January 2024. The applicant also seeks an order
for the
registration of such cession.
[2]
The
facts underpinning this application are common cause between the
parties. On 1 February 2022, the applicant entered into
a PVT
Contract with Mr. Mkhabela in which he undertook to serve Mr.
Mkhabela as a Candidate Attorney for a period of 24 months
[2]
.
This period would be completed on 31 January 2024.
[3]
On 20 December 2023, some 22 months and 19 days
into his PVT Contract, the applicant resigned from Mr. Mkhabela’s
employment.
On 17 January 2024, he entered into a Cession
Agreement in respect of his PVT Contract with Mr. Diaho. On 18
January 2024, the
applicant lodged a Cession Agreement duly signed
and completed in all respects with the Gauteng Provincial Office of
the Legal
Practice Council (LPC). The Cession was lodged
for the purpose of registration so that the applicant could continue
his practical vocational training as a candidate attorney and
complete the 24-month period of such training for which he had
originally
contracted.
[4]
The applicant heard nothing from the LPC. It
did not acknowledge receipt of the Cession and it also did not
communicate whether
the Cession had indeed been registered or not.
[5]
On 3 April 2024, the applicant having by now
completed in the aggregate 24 months of practical vocational training
with Mr. Mkhabela
and Mr. Diaho respectively, made application for
his admission as a legal practitioner.
[6]
The application was served on the LPC that day and
enrolled for hearing, taking into account that it was required to lie
for inspection
before the LPC for a period of 30 days, on 16 May
2024.
[7]
On 30 April 2024, when the applicant had heard
nothing from the LPC, he contacted them to enquire whether they
intended to take
issue with any aspect of his application. They
then for the first time responded and requested that he withdraw the
admission
application.
[8]
The reason proferred for making this request was
that:
“
The
cession agreement that was entered into during January 2024 was not
registered by the Legal Practice Council as there was a
14 day gap
between the date you left Mr. Mkhabela and the date you commenced
with Mr. Diaho resulting in interrupted service therefore
you cannot
rely on the period served under Mr. Diaho as the cession agreement
was not registered.”
[9]
The next step taken by the LPC was the delivery on
7 May 2024, of a notice of intention to oppose the application for
admission.
The present application was launched 2 days
thereafter.
[10]
The LPC somewhat surprisingly and in view of its
failure to notify the applicant of its refusal to register the
Cession or to notify
him of any concern it had with his application
for admission until 30 April 2024, took issue with the fact that the
present application
was brought as one of urgency. It was
argued for the LPC, that if there was urgency, then this was entirely
self-created
as the applicant “
did
nothing, after lodging the purported cession agreement three months
ago, to follow up on and procure registration of the purported
cession agreement, until last week.”
The
LPC also took issue with the fact that the applicant had proceeded to
bring an application for admission in circumstances where
he was not
in possession of all the necessary documentation.
[11]
There is no explanation by the LPC for why it
neither acknowledged receipt of the Cession Agreement when it was
lodged with them
on 17 January 2024, or any notification to the
applicant that it did not intend to register the Cession together
with the reasons
for this. Furthermore, there is no explanation
why only on 30 April 2024, some 3 days before the expiry of the 30
day period
for which the application had to lie for inspection, that
it was only after enquiry by the applicant that he was notified of
the
decision of the LPC and the reasons for the decision.
[12]
It is self-evident that if the LPC had
communicated its decision to the applicant within a reasonable period
of time, after he had
lodged the Cession for registration, the
present urgent application may have been avoided. The urgency
in the present matter
arises in direct consequence of the conduct of
the LPC. It is the Regulator of the Legal Profession and the
party to whom
the applicant looks for guidance for professional
conduct. For the applicant, the present matter is no mere legal
skirmish.
The outcome of this application informs whether or
not he is even able to approach the Court for admission.
[13]
In
Affordable
Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of Health of RSA and
Another
[3]
,
it was held:
“
What
is at stake is more than one’s right to earn a living,
important though that is. Freedom to choose a vocation is
intrinsic to the nature of a society based on human dignity as
contemplated by the Constitution. One’s work is part
of
one’s identity and is constitutive of one’s dignity.
Every individual has a right to take up any activity
which he or she
believes himself or herself prepared to undertake as a profession and
to make that activity the very basis of his
or her life. And
there is a relationship between work and the human personality as a
whole. ‘it is a relationship that
shapes and completes the
individual over a lifetime of devoted activity; it is the foundation
of a person’s existence’”.
[14]
The applicant finds himself before the Court in
direct consequence of the conduct of the LPC and given what is at
stake for him,
I find that the matter is indeed urgent.
[15]
The crisp issue to be decided in this application
is whether or not the LPC was entitled to refuse to register the
Cession of the
applicant’s PVT Contract from Mr. Mkhabela to
Mr. Diaho and following on from this, whether or not, having regard
to the
evident “
break in service”
of 2 weeks it was entitled to do so.
[16]
Rule
22.1.6
[4]
,
the rule provides:
[16.1]
In terms of rule 22.1.6.1 that a practical vocational training
contract may with the consent of the principal
and the candidate
attorney concerned be ceded to any other principal willing to accept
such cession;
[16.2]
In terms of rule 22.1.6.2, that in the event of the death, mental
illness, insolvency, conviction of a
crime, suspension from practice,
striking off the roll or discontinuation of practice of the principal
under whom the candidate
attorney is serving, or the debarring of
that principal from engaging or continuing to engage a candidate
attorney,
or any other cause
, direct that the practical
vocational training contract concerned be ceded to any other
principal willing to accept such cession,
and all service completed
under the ceded contract shall be effective for purposes of the Act
and the rules.
[16.3]
In terms of rule 22.1.6.4, that an agreement for the cession of a
practical vocational training contract
shall be registered within 2
months from the date on which the service of the candidate attorney
concerned
may have terminated
with the cedent, or within such
further period as a court on good cause would allow.
[16.4]
In terms of rule 22.1.6.4, besides providing for the time period
within which the cession is to be lodged,
provides further:
[16.4.1]
in terms of rule 22.1.6.4.1 that an affidavit be lodged by the cedent
stating whether the
provisions of the Act and rules relating to the
service of the candidate attorney with him were complied with and the
date of on
which such candidate’s services were terminated and;
[16.4.2]
in terms of rule 22.1.6.4.2 an affidavit by the cessionary stating
the date on which the
candidate attorney assumed duty with the
cessionary.
[17]
Insofar as the obligations of the LPC are
concerned once they have received the cession agreement and
affidavit, rule 22.1.6.5.1
requires it to examine the agreement and
affidavits (referred to in rule 22.1.6.4) and; in terms of rule
22.1.6.5.2. if it is satisfied
that the cession is in order and it
has no objection thereto, to register the cession and notify both the
cessionary attorney and
the candidate attorney concerned in writing
of such registration.
[18]
Insofar as the requirements set out in rule
22.1.6.4 and 5 are concerned, rule 22.1.6.6 provides that in the
circumstances referred
to in rule 22.1.6.2 – where, for the
reasons set out in that rule, there is no cedent, provision is made
for a third party
to sign the affidavit in order to effect the
cession.
[19]
What is readily apparent from the scheme of the
rules is that what is required of the LPC in registering the cession
of a PVT Contract
is to make sure that the requirements of the rules
insofar as the submission of requisite documents referred to in rules
are submitted
and properly completed. Insofar as rule 22.1.6.5
and its sub rules are concerned, the obligation upon the LPC is to
ensure
that there has been compliance with the rules.
[20]
It does not behoove the LPC to argue, as it has
done in the present matter, that the consequence of a break in
service of 2 weeks
is tantamount to a termination or abandonment of
the PVT Contract by the applicant. The rules themselves provide
that there
may be circumstances in which there would be an
interruption in service such as for example the death of a principal
as provided
for in rule 22.1.6.2. The rules themselves provide
for a Cession in such circumstances, rule 22.1.6.6 enabling the LPC
to
accept a Cession signed by a third party.
[21]
The rule cannot be interpreted in the manner that
the LPC contends it must be. To do so would create the
anomalous situation
where a Candidate Attorney whose Principal has
suffered a misfortune is in a better position and can be assisted by
the LPC to
register a Cession of the PVT Contract but where the
Principal has suffered no misfortune, the Candidate Attorney is in a
more
onerous position.
[22]
In the circumstances of the present matter,
notwithstanding that the applicant left the service of Mr. Mkhabela
on 20 December 2023,
the fact that he signed a cession and the
required affidavit in order to effect cession of the applicant’s
contract to Mr.
Diaho, demonstrates clearly that it was never within
the contemplation of either the applicant or Mr. Mkhabela for that
matter,
that the applicant’s PVT training was terminated or
abandoned by him as provided for in rule 22.1.7. If it had been
within the contemplation of Mr. Mkhabela, he would in terms of the
rule, have been required to notify the LPC in writing of that
fact.
It is common cause that he did not.
[23]
Additionally, it was argued, that insofar as a
cession provided for in rule 22.1.6.1 clearly and unequivocally
related to a “transfer
of rights and obligations” whereas
termination as provided for in rule 22.1.7.2 relates to “cancellation
or abandonment”.
Two separate and distinct concepts and
in respect of which on the facts in the present application, there is
no suggestion that
it was ever within the contemplation of either Mr.
Mkhabela or the applicant that there was to be any cancellation or
abandonment
of the PVT Contract.
[24]
It was argued for the LPC that the present
application was in any event a
brutum
fulmen
in that the applicant would not
in any event be entitled to admission in consequence of the break in
service. The basis of this
argument was that regulation 6(1)(a)
requires that in order to be admitted, the applicant was required to
serve a “
uninterrupted period of
24 months.”
This regulation
however must be read subject to the provisions of rule 22.1.6 and the
objects of the LPA. The regulation properly
interpreted does
not mean uninterrupted in the sense of the period being continuous
and contiguous – if that were so, it
would render the
provisions of rule 22.1.6.2 superfluous and would mean that any
applicant in respect of whom there was any broken
service for
whatever reason would be disqualified.
[25]
The
applicant does not seek credit for the period of the break in service
in order to claim the completion of 24 months of PVT but
relies on
the subsequent service with Mr. Diaho which should have been
considered had the LPC registered the Cession timeously.
[5]
[26]
In the present application, although it did not
form the basis for the initial decision communicated on 30 April
2024, the LPC also
took issue with the fact that the applicant had
entered into a secondment agreement with Mr. Diaho in terms of which
he would be
seconded to another firm of attorneys in order to gain
experience in the field of competition law. The applicant,
quite rightly
in my view, argued that any concern which the LPC may
have had with the secondment of the applicant could only arise if his
Cession
to Mr. Diaho had in fact been registered.
[27]
If his Contract had been abandoned or terminated
as the LPC argued, and for that reason a Cession could not be
registered, then
on that basis, the LPC had no authority to
interrogate the reason for the secondment and whether or not it was
permissible under
a PVT Contract. This issue relates to whether
or not the applicant complied with his obligations in terms of the
Act with
regards to completion of his PVT training and was on that
basis an issue more properly to be raised before the Court hearing
his
application for admission that this Court.
[28]
Of course, even on the applicant’s version,
without the Cession being registered, he is unable to proceed with
his application
for admission and the issue relating to the
secondment and for that matter also whether or not the common cause,
two week break
in service, also ventilated as an issue before the
Court for decision.
[29]
For this reason, I decline to make any finding on
the issue of the secondment, save to state that it is not uncommon
that Candidate
Legal Practitioners, whether as Candidate Attorneys or
Pupil Advocates, are often seconded to other firms of attorneys /
advocates
so that they may gain exposure to areas of practice which
their principal may not be engaged in for their benefit. This in no
way
detracts from the training they receive or their respective
obligations.
[30]
Turning
now to the grounds of review, the applicant argues that the failure
and refusal of the LPC to register the Cession of his
PVT Contract,
is an administrative decision falling within the ambit of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act (PAJA).
[6]
It was
argued for the applicant that the decision to refuse registration of
the Cession falls squarely within s 1
[7]
of
PAJA.
[31]
It was
argued by the LPC that its failure to register the Cession is not
administrative action and that there was no decision-making
function
exercised by it. It was argued that the acts of the LPC in this
regard were purely clerical.
[8]
This
is precisely the point that was argued for the applicant – that
the LPC was required to register the Cession but that
any
determination of its validity insofar as meeting the requirements of
regulation 6 (1)(a) is concerned is something that more
properly was
to be dealt with by the Court from whom the applicant would seek
admission.
[32]
The decision to refuse registration on substantive
grounds as it did on 30 April 2024, means that a decision was taken
which falls
squarely within the ambit of PAJA. It is on that
basis that I find the decision to be reviewable under PAJA.
[33]
It was argued that the decision of the LPC was
reviewable on the following basis:
[31.1]
That the action was procedurally unfair.
[9]
[31.2]
The decision was materially influenced by an error of law
[10]
and
[31.3]
the action was not taken
[11]
rationally
to the purpose for which it was taken and or the purpose of the
empowering provision.”
[12]
[34]
I propose dealing with each of these in turn.
[32.1]
That the action was procedurally unfair.
[32.1.1]
In the present matter, the LPC neither notified the applicant of its
decision, furnished
him with any reason for the decision until 30
April 2024. This was 3,5 months after the cession had been
submitted for registration
and only 16 days before the hearing of his
application for admission. Notwithstanding the obligation on
the LPC to furnish
reasons for the decision, the only reason given
was that communicated on 30 April 2024, as set out in para 8 above.
[32.1.2]
It was argued by the applicant that in conducting itself in this way
by withholding alternatively
the registration of the cession or the
decision not to register the cession and the reasons therefore to the
proverbial eleventh
hour of his application for admission was
prejudicial and tantamount to an ambush and patently procedurally
unfair.
[32.1.3]
The LPC has placed nothing before the Court which in any way disturbs
the submission being
as it is, founded upon what is common cause
between the parties.
[32.2]
The decision was materially influenced by an error of law.
[32.2.1]
It was argued by the applicant that the LPC in failing to register
the Cession has misconstrued
the provisions of rule 22.1.6. For
the reasons that have been set out above, I find that the LPC’s
interpretation of
the rule and application of it to exclude persons
such as the applicant, who may have had broken service, from
registering a cession
of their contract when the rule itself
specifically provides for the registration of cessions in certain
circumstances were broken
service is permitted and that a Cession of
the PVT Contract notwithstanding such broken service can be
registered.
[32.2.2]
In
Genesis
Medical Scheme v Registrar of Medical Schemes and Another
[13]
it was
held by the Constitutional Court that an error of law must be so
material that the proper application of the law would render
the
decision so taken as being reviewable. To my mind, this is
apposite to the present case.
[32.3]
The action was not taken rationally to the purpose for which it was
taken
and/or the purpose of the empowering provision.
[32.3.1]
The main purpose of rule 22.1.6 is to fairly and practically cater
for instances Candidate
Attorneys such as the applicant find
themselves for whatever reason, in a position where they are no
longer able or willing to
continue with their PVT training with their
initial principal and seek to complete that training with another
principal.
[32.3.2]
It was argued on the part of the LPC that broken service was not
permitted because once a
PVC Contract had terminated (
ipso facto
a break in service so it was argued) meant that there was no extant
Contract that could be ceded and that for that reason alone,
there
was no obligation upon the LPC to register the Cession.
[32.3.3]
The LPC sought to rely on
De
Kock & Others v Legal Practice Council Gauteng, Provincial
Office
[14]
as
authority for this proposition. The present matter is however
distinguishable. In
De
Kock & Others
,
the applicants sought an order compelling the registration of
cessions of contract outside of the 2-month period referred to in
rule 22.1.6.4. In the present instance, the applicant had
within a few weeks commenced employment and submitted his Cession
to
the LPC for registration.
[32.3.4]
In
De Kock & Others
it was found that: “
A
cession can only take place if the contract that is ceded is still in
existence at the time of the cession and a cession has the
affect of
transferring the ceded rights immediately from the cedent to the
cessionary.”
The PVT Contract is not an ordinary
commercial contract, for the reasons I have set out above.
[32.3.5]
It is a special type of contract which finds like in the LPA and
which must of necessity
be interpreted consonant with the purpose for
which the LPA was promulgated. To do otherwise as I have said,
would result
in the absurd situation where broken service would be
condoned if the principal suffered a misfortune but would not be
condoned
if he did not.
[32.3.6]
Whether or not there has indeed been proper and satisfactory service
under the PVT Contract
whether continuously or broken, is more
properly a matter to be decided by the Court hearing an application
for admission.
Such a Court would be in a position to review
the entirety of the period for which the Candidate Attorney had
served and all the
circumstances relating thereto and to then decide
whether or not that Candidate Attorney has met the requirement for
admission.
[32.3.7]
It is simply not open to the LPC to adopt an interpretation of the
rules which has as its
consequence the arbitrary exclusion of certain
persons from pursuing entry into the legal profession.
[32.3.8]
It is not possible to enumerate all the reasons why this may occur.
The reasons for this
may be benign in that the Candidate Attorney
wishes to obtain experience in areas of law in which the principal
does not practice
or less benign where for example, the work
environment and the relationship between the Candidate Attorney and
the Principal have
irretrievably been broken down.
[32.3.9]
Circumstances in which the maintenance of an ongoing working
relationship is to be preserved
while a Candidate Attorney is then
required to secure an alternative Principal and to then start working
for that principal the
day after he or she leaves the employ of the
first Principal is wholly impractical and may well, dependent upon
the circumstances,
be prejudicial.
[32.3.10]
Having regard to the scheme of the LPA and the purpose for which the
LPC is established – to “
promote
access to the legal profession
[15]
”
and to
“
ensure
accessible and sustainable training of law graduates aspiring to be
admitted and enrolled as legal practitioners”
[16]
and to
“achieve the purpose”
[17]
of the
LPA as set out in section 3(b)(iii) which enjoins the LPC to “
broaden
access to justice by putting in place – measures that provide
equal opportunities for all aspirant legal practitioners
in order to
have a legal profession that broadly reflects the demographics of the
Republic
.”
[32.3.11]
It was argued on behalf of the applicant that properly construed, the
two month period referred to in
rule 22.1.6.4 in considering the
purpose for which the rule was made must mean that a Candidate
Attorney is afforded an opportunity,
if the circumstances require it,
to find a new Principal who would accept Cession of the PVT Contract.
[35]
For
the reasons that I have set out above, I find that the applicant has
made out a case for the order sought.
Since
his application for admission is enrolled for hearing tomorrow and to
obviate any prejudice with further delays on the part
of the LPC I
intend to make an order deeming
[18]
the
Cession to have been registered on 18 January 2024 when it was
delivered to the LPC.
[36]
In
regard to costs, these ordinarily follow the result. It was
argued on behalf of the applicant that given the nature and
importance of the matter, that it was a wise and reasonable
precaution for him to have engaged the services of two counsel in
this matter. The applicant further argued that given the
particular circumstances under which the LPC had conducted itself,
that the Court as a mark of its displeasure make a punitive order for
costs against the LPC. The LPC for its part argued
that there
is a general rule that the LPC is entitled to its costs even if
unsuccessful and usually on an attorney and client scale.
[19]
[37]
Having regard to the particular facts and
circumstances in this matter, I am not persuaded that the applicant,
a Candidate Attorney,
ought to be deprived of his costs in view of
the fact that he has been successful in the application. The
approach adopted
by the LPC is not in keeping with its statutory
obligations and is to be deprecated. It is for this reason that
I make the
costs order that I do.
[38]
In the circumstances, it is ordered:
[36.1]
The applicant’s non-compliance with the Uniform Rules of Court
is hereby condoned and the matter
is heard on an urgent basis in
terms of rule 6(12)(a) of the Uniform Rules.
[36.2]
The First and/or Third Respondents’ decision not to register
the applicant’s Cession of the
PVT Contract is declared
unlawful and is reviewed and set aside.
[36.5]
The Applicant’s cession of his PVT contract is deemed to have
been duly registered on 18 January
2024.
[36.6]
The First Respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the application
on an attorney and client scale, which
costs include the costs of two
counsel.
A MILLAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
HEARD ON:
14 MAY 2024
JUDGMENT DELIVERED
ON:
15 MAY 2024
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPLICANT:
ADV. L MOELA
ADV
.
M KIANGI
INSTRUCTED BY:
DIAHO ATTORNEYS INC
REFERENCE:
MR E DIAHO
COUNSEL
FOR THE 1
st
to 4
th
RESPONDENTS
:
MR.
R STOCKER
INSTRUCTED BY:
ROOTH & WESSELS
INC
REFERENCE:
MR. GROOME
NO
APPEARANCE FOR THE 5
th
or 6
th
RESPONDENTS
[1]
Established
in terms of the Legal Practice Act (LPA) 28 of 2014 which came into
operation on 1 November 2018. The Gauteng Provincial
Council of
which the third respondent is the director perform the functions it
does by virtue of authority to do so delegated
to it by in terms of
section 21(1)(d) read together with section 23.
[2]
Regulation
6(1)(a) of the Regulations promulgated under the LPA provide that :
“
any
person intending to be admitted and enrolled as an attorney must,
after that person has satisfied all the requirements for
a degree
referred to in Sections 26(1)(a) or (b) of the Act serve under a
practical vocational training contract with a person
referred to in
sub-regulation (5) – (a) for an uninterrupted period of 24
months”.
[3]
[2005] ZACC 3
;
2006
(3) SA 247
(CC) at para [59].
[4]
Of
the rules promulgated in terms of the LPA, deals with the cession of
a practical vocational training contract.
[5]
Law
Society of the Northern Provinces v Mahon
(2011)
2 SA 441
(SCA) at para [13].
[6]
No.
3 of 2000.
[7]
Minister
of Defence and Military Veterans v Motau &
Others
(2014) 5 SA 69
(CC) at para 33.
[8]
Nedbank
Ltd v Mendelow N.O and Another
2013 (6) SA 130
(SCA) at para [25].
[9]
Section
6(2)(c) of PAJA.
[10]
Section
6(2)(d) of PAJA.
[11]
Section
6(2)(f)(ii) (aa).
[12]
Section
6(2)(f)(ii) (bb).
[13]
2017
(6) SA 1
(CC) at para [96] – [101].
[14]
[2020]
JOL 47771(GP).
[15]
Section
5(i) of the LPA.
[16]
Section
5(j) of the LPA.
[17]
Section
5(l) of the LPA.
[18]
In
terms of section 8(1)(c)(ii)(bb) of PAJA.
[19]
Law
Society of the Northern Provinces v Dube [2012] 4 (SA) 351 (SCA)
para [33].
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