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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Van Der Westhuizen v Road Accident Fund (21947/2022)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 742 (29 July 2024)
Van Der Westhuizen v Road Accident Fund (21947/2022)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 742 (29 July 2024)
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sino date 29 July 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 21947/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 29 July 2024
E van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
MARTIN
EDDIE VAN DER WESTHUIZEN
PLAINTIFF
and
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
The
matter was set down for trial on 27 May 2024. The trial proceeded in
the absence of the defendant as it was properly set down.
After
having heard the plaintiff’s
viva
voce
evidence, and considered the expert witnesses' reports that were
confirmed under oath,
[1]
the
merits and quantum were resolved.
[2]
The question arose of whether or not the
plaintiff’s attorney may charge Value Added Tax (VAT) on the
contingency fee as provided
for in the contingency fee agreement.
This issue was reserved for the filing of Heads of Argument. The
defendant’s representative
declined an invitation to the online
platform. An affidavit was filed wherein the plaintiff stated that he
is aware that charging
VAT ‘on a contingency fee agreement’
is a contentious issue and that the issue will be argued for clarity.
He confirmed
that the possible outcomes have been explained to him,
that he abides the court’s decision, and that the matter may be
determined
without further input from his side. The matter was
subsequently argued.
Legal question
[3]
Counsel essentially seeks a declarator and
phrased the question to be considered as whether a plaintiff’s
attorney is entitled
to charge VAT over and above the contingency fee
charged to the plaintiff.
[4]
I am of the view that the question is more
nuanced. No issue arises if the payment, including the VAT charged on
fees, remains within
the 25% cap provided for in section 2(2) of the
Contingency Fee Act 66 of 1997 (the CFA). The actual question is
whether the levying
of VAT that renders payment by a client in terms
of a contingency fee agreement to exceed the statutorily decreed 25%
of the total
amount awarded or any amount obtained by the client in
consequence of the proceedings concerned is in line with the
provisions
of the CFA.
Stare decisis
[5]
The
question under consideration was considered in
Masango
v Road Accident Fund and Others.
[2]
Counsel argued that Mojapelo DJP
obiter
stated that VAT could not be charged over and above the contingency
fee. Counsel submitted that the court’s view in
Masango
that:
‘
VAT
output is therefore not a cost to the practitioner which the legal
practitioner is entitled to recover from the client over
and above
his maximum fees. It is included in the maximum fees that the
practitioner is entitled to recover from the client.’
is
wrong.
[6]
It is trite that
obiter
dictum
refers to a judge’s
comments or observations made in passing on a matter arising in a
case before the court, which does not
require a decision.
Obiter
remarks are not essential to a decision and do not create binding
precedent. Courts are not bound to follow comments made
obiter
in earlier rulings, but these comments are very useful when judges
are considering cases.
[7]
The question before Mojapelo DJP in
Masango
,
as phrased in the first paragraph of the judgment was –
‘
Is
a legal practitioner entitled to charge as his or her fees 25% of the
capital amount recovered for his client plus 14% Value-Added
Tax
(VAT) in terms of a contingency fees agreement concluded with the
client under the Contingency Fees Act 66 of 1997 (the CFA)?”
[8]
The question was considered to have ‘two
questions rolled into one’, the first whether a legal
practitioner may charge
25% of the capital award as fees and
secondly, whether 14% VAT may be added to the 25% capital amount,
‘assuming that the
first question is positive.
[9]
Although
Mojapelo DJP found that the contingency fee agreement was invalid on
other basis as well, he explicitly held that VAT is
not recoverable
above the 25% cap imposed by the Act:
[3]
‘
VAT
is therefore not recoverable above the 25% cap imposed by section
2(2) of the CFA. As the contingency fee agreement
in
casu
seeks to authorise the plaintiff’s
attorney to recover VAT above the 25% imposed by section 2(2) of the
CFA, it is for that
reason invalid.’
[10]
The issue regarding the ability to recover
VAT above the 25% cap imposed by section 2(2) of the CFA was
extensively argued before
Mojapelo DJP and is one of the reasons
underpinning the order. Mojapelo DJP did not only deal with this
issue in passing. The principle
set out in
Masango
is not merely
obiter dictum.
[11]
Counsel submitted that the judgment in
Masango
does not bind this court because the judgment was handed down in the
local division while this court sits as the provincial division.
This
view, however, does not account for the fact that the
Constitution
Seventeenth Amendment Act
, 2012,
amended the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, to
provide for a single High Court in South Africa. The
Superior Courts
Act 10 of 2013
, subsequently abolished the local divisions and
constituted the High Court in its nine Divisions. Each Division has a
main seat,
and the Minister was authorised to establish one or more
local seats for a Division. There are two seats of the High Court in
the
Gauteng province. The main seat is in Pretoria and the local seat
is in Johannesburg. The local seat has concurrent jurisdiction
with
the main seat. In accordance with the
stare
decisis
principle, I am bound to follow
the principle set out in
Masango
unless
I am of the view that it is wrong, since the judgment was handed down
by a court of the Gauteng Division.
Counsel’s
submissions
[12]
Counsel submitted that Mojapelo DJP
correctly held in
Masango
that (i) the relationship between the legal practitioner (the vendor)
and SARS was not one of agency but that of debtor and creditor,
and
(ii) that the vendor owes the VAT to SARS, not to the client.
[13]
Therefore, counsel challenged the findings
that ‘VAT output is therefore not a a cost to the practitioner
which the legal
practitioner is entitled to recover from the client
over and above his maximum fees’, and the conclusion that the
output
tax is included in the maximum fees that the practitioner is
entitled to recover from the client’. Counsel submitted that
these findings could not be correct for the following reasons: (i) A
vendor has a statutory duty to impose VAT on fees in terms
of section
7(1) of the VAT Act; (ii) The value of the supply of goods or
services must be established in accordance with section
10 of the VAT
Act based on the amount of consideration for such supply less the
amount that represents tax. Having regard to section
10(3) of the VAT
Act, counsel submitted that VAT must be imposed on the amount of
money agreed upon, in
casu
,
the success fee that the parties agreed on; (iii) A vendor has a
statutory duty to account and pay the VAT liability to SARS.
VAT is
an indirect tax on the consumption of goods and services in the
economy. It is a tax imposed by SARS on the end user of
legal
services. The client consumes the services and is consequently liable
for the VAT; (iv)There is no reference to VAT in the
CFA. The parties
to the CFA may, therefore negotiate whether the amount of the success
fee should include VAT or not – where
parties do not agree that
the success fee is exclusive of Vat the provisions of section 64(1)
of the VAT Act applies whereby the
success fee will be inclusive of
VAT; (v) If the 25% maximum fee that may be charged is the amount
exclusive of VAT a practitioner
who is not a VAT vendor would be in a
better position than a practitioner who is a VAT vendor ‘ a
result which would disturb
the tranquility of even the most
phlegmatic interpreter of legislation’; (vi) The limitation
imposed by section 2(2) of the
CFA refers to ‘fees’. VAT
is a tax that does not constitute a ‘fee’, and thus, on a
normal interpretation
of the section, the limitation can never be
interpreted as including VAT.
Discussion
[14]
Section 2 of the CFA provides as follows:
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.
(2) Any fees
referred to in subsection (1) (
b
) which are
higher than the normal fees of the legal practitioner concerned
(hereinafter referred to as the ‘success
fee’), shall not
exceed such normal fees by more than 100 per cent: Provided that, in
the case of claims sounding in money,
the total of any such success
fee payable by the client to the legal practitioner, shall not exceed
25 per cent of the total amount
awarded or any amount obtained by the
client in consequence of the proceedings concerned, which amount
shall not, for purposes
of calculating such excess, include any
costs.
[15]
It
is trite that section 2 limits the contingency fee that an attorney
may recover from his client. In the event of success, the
attorney
will either be able to charge his normal fee or the higher fee, also
referred to as the success fee. Whether the attorney
will be entitled
to charge his normal fees or a higher fee depends on the agreement
concluded between the parties. The success
fee, in turn, is firstly
limited by confining it to an amount that represents an increase in
the attorney’s normal fee.
[4]
The percentage increase must be negotiated between the practitioner
and the client. The second limitation placed on the success
fee is
that the increase may not exceed the normal fee by more than 100%.
The third and last limitation is that the success fee
may not exceed
the client’s capital award by more than 25%.
[16]
A vendor’s duty to pay VAT is
statutorily entrenched. In determining the question before the court,
the VAT Act needs to be
considered as a whole. Section 64(1) of the
VAT Act provides that:
‘
Any
price charged by any vendor in respect of any taxable supply of goods
or services shall for the purposes of this Act be deemed
to include
any tax payable in terms of
section 7(1)(
a
)
in
respect of such supply; whether or not the vendor has included tax in
such price.’
[17]
It
is a well-established presumption in statutory interpretation that
the Legislature is consistent with itself. The Legislature
knows and
has in mind existing laws when it passes new legislation, and frames
new legislation with reference to the existing law.
[5]
The VAT Act was assented to on 5 June 1991, and commenced on 30
September 1991. The CFA was assented to on 13 November 1997, and
commenced on 23 April 1999. It can thus be presumed that the
Legislature was well aware of the statutory imposition of VAT on the
supply of goods and services by a vendor after the commencement of
the VAT Act, and based on the presumption, it can be presumed
that
the Legislature regarded the VAT to be included in the maximum fee,
or the Legislature would have indicated that the maximum
25%
percentage excludes VAT. The legal practitioner contracts with his or
her client regarding the fees, but that agreement must
be concluded
within the parameters set by the Legislature in the CFA.
[18]
Counsel is indeed correct in submitting
that if VAT is included in the 25% maximum success fee, practitioners
registered as vendors
would be disadvantaged compared to
practitioners not so registered. The converse is also true regarding
clients. If VAT is charged
in addition to the maximum 25% success
fee, a client who utilises the services of an attorney registered as
a vendor will effectively
pay more than a client who utilises the
services of an attorney who is not so registered.
[19]
The
purpose of the CFA is to enhance access to justice. It was
principally enacted ‘to provide the largely uneducated and
poor
third-world South African population with an opportunity to litigate
in circumstances where they do not have funds to pay
for legal
services upfront, and to provide litigants of having the fees of
legal representatives limited and regulated within reason.’
[6]
Revenue and Tax Laws notoriously differentiate between individuals.
In this context, there will always be parties who are affected
adversely in comparison with their counterparts. An interpretation
that would lead to a differentiation between clients, the parties
the
CFA was promulgated to benefit, would be inconsistent with the
purpose of the CFA. Finding that the maximum 25% success fee
includes
VAT is consistent with the CFA’s purpose.
[20]
Counsel submitted that if the
statements in the
Masango
case are taken to their logical conclusion, it would mean that in a
case:
‘
where
the 100% above the normal fees is applicable, and it is less than the
25% limitation, the attorney would be able to charge
VAT, and the
client would be liable for same, but where the
normal
fee and success fee
reach the 25%
limit, the client would not be liable for the VAT and the attorney
would be. The aforesaid would make it impossible
to determine if a
contingency fee is valid, until after the taxation of the fees bill,
and would fly in the face of the court determining
whether the
contingency fee is valid, at the time of the resolution of the trial
itself.’
[21]
This submission necessitates a few remarks.
As stated above, section 2 of the CFA determines the remuneration
model that may be
incorporated in a contingency fee agreement
regarding the attorney’s fees. The parties can either agree
that, in the event
that the litigation is successful, the legal
practitioner is entitled to fees equal to his or her normal fees, or
they can agree
that the legal practitioner is entitled to fees higher
than his or her normal fees. It is the fees higher than the normal
fees
that are referred to as success fees. It is thus a fallacy to
refer to ‘normal fee and success fee’ as if both will
be
paid where the parties opted in the agreement for a success fee to be
charged. It is also a fallacy to say that the term ‘success
fee’ is not defined in the CFA. It might not be defined in the
definition section of the Act, but section 2(2) clearly defines
the
term– ‘
Any
fees referred to in subsection (1) (
b
) which
are higher than the normal fees of the legal practitioner concerned
(hereinafter referred to as the ‘success
fee’)’.
[22]
Although
the normal fee is used as the basis for calculating the higher fee,
the success fee, the success fee is not charged over
and above the
normal fees. Where the parties agree to a higher fee, the higher fee
is fenced in from two sides; it might not exceed
the normal fee by
more than 100%, in other words, it may not be higher than double the
normal fee, and it is capped to 25% of the
award, excluding costs.
[23]
Counsel is correct in the submission that
the limitation to charge VAT only arises where the added VAT would
render the total fees
payable by the client to exceed 25% of the
award. A reading of the contingency fee agreement will determine its
validity. If the
success fee is capped to a maximum of 25% of the
award, the agreement meets the statutory requirement in this regard.
[24]
I agree with the principle laid down by
Mojapelo DJP in
Masango v Road Accident
Fund and Others.
The levying of VAT
that renders payment by a client in terms of a contingency fee
agreement to exceed the statutorily decreed 25%
of the total amount
awarded or any amount obtained by the client in consequence of the
proceedings contravenes the provisions of
the CFA.
ORDER
In
the result, the following declarator is granted:
1.
Value Added Tax is included in the maximum fees
that a practitioner is entitled to recover from a client
in
terms of section 2 of the Contingency Fee Act 66 of 1997.
2.
No order as to costs.
E van der Schyff
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
It will be emailed to
the parties/their legal representatives as a courtesy gesture.
For the applicant:
Adv. C. Dredge
Instructed by:
Ehlers Attorneys
Date of the
hearing:
27 May 2024
Date of judgment:
29 July 2024
[1]
A
Rule 38 application was granted.
[2]
2016
(6) SA 508 (GJ).
[3]
At
paragraph [52].
[4]
Mkuyana
v RAF
2020
(6) SA 405
(ECG) par [17].
[5]
Independent
Institute of Education (Pty) Limited v Kwazulu-Natal Law Society and
Others
[2019]
ZACC 47
at para
[38]
.
[6]
G
W Austin
Contingency
fees in the South African Law
(Unpublished LLM thesis ,University of Pretoria, 2017) 5, and the
sources referred to.
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