Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 836South Africa
South African Legal Practice Council v Berkowitz and Another (35116/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 836 (15 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
15 August 2024
Headnotes
– Failed to pay membership fees – Failure to cooperate with LPC and court – Non-compliance with court orders – Not fit and proper to practice – Struck from roll of attorneys – Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014, s 44.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## South African Legal Practice Council v Berkowitz and Another (35116/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 836 (15 August 2024)
South African Legal Practice Council v Berkowitz and Another (35116/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 836 (15 August 2024)
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sino date 15 August 2024
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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FLYNOTES:
PROFESSION
– Legal Practice Council –
Disciplinary
process
–
LPC
approaching court before disciplinary hearing concluded –
LPC had ample grounds to conclude within its common law
authority
that respondent’s case should be referred to court before
disciplinary hearing held – Failed to pay
membership fees –
Failure to cooperate with LPC and court – Non-compliance
with court orders – Not fit
and proper to practice –
Struck from roll of attorneys –
Legal Practice Act 28 of
2014
,
s 44.
IN
THE
HIGH
COURT
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: 35116/2022
Date:
15 August
2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
In
the matter between:
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
APPLICANT
and
JONATHAN
MEIR
BERKOWITZ
1
ST
RESPONDENT
BERKOWITZ
(JM) INCORPORATED ATTORNEYS
2
ND
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
BRAND
AJ (WITH MBONGWE J:
Introduction
[1]
On 2 May 2023, this
court suspended the first respondent, Jonathan Meir Berkowitz
(
'
Berkowitz
'
)
,
from
practicing as an attorney for own account
,
pending
finalisation of an application for him to be struck from the roll of
attorneys. This court then also ordered Berkowitz to
show cause on 3
August 2023 why his name should not be struck from the roll of legal
practitioners.
[2]
On 4 August 2023,
this court suspended Berkowitz from all forms of practice as
attorney. It also extended the rule nisi granted
on 2 May 2023 and
ordered Berkowitz to show cause on 8 February 2024 why he should not
be struck from the roll. Accordingly
,
when this
matter came before us on the extended return date of 8 February,
it
was in effect
an application for a final order striking Berkowitz' name from the
roll of legal practitioners.
[3]
However, at the
hearing on 8 February, a preliminary issue arose concerning the
manner in which this matter reached this court that
requires
consideration before the merits of the main application.
The
preliminary issue
[3]
The
applicant is the South African Legal Practice Council (
'
the
LPC
'
)
,
a
body created in terms of the Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014 ('the
LPA
'),
inter
alia to
'regulate
all
legal practitioners and all candidate legal practitioners',
'
enhance
and maintain the integrity and status of the legal profession', and
'determine,
enhance
and maintain appropriate standards of professional practice and
ethical conduct of all legal practitioners and all candidate
legal
practitioners
'.
[1]
[4]
The first respondent
- Berkowitz - is a member of the LPC who has been practicing as
attorney since February 1995, for much of that
time for his own
account
through
the second
respondent
,
Berkowitz (JM)
Incorporated ('Berkowitz Inc').
[5]
The LPC brings this
application in exercise of its disciplinary mandate referred to
above
,
through
the processes and structures described in sections 36 to 44 of the
LPA. The structure for disciplinary proceedings concerning
a member
of the LPC described there is in broad outline the following:
[5.1]
When the LPC receives a complaint concerning a member, it appoints a
committee to
investigate the complaint. The committee investigates, and when done
either, where there is
prima
facie
evidence
of guilt, refers the matter to the LPC for a disciplinary hearing;
or
dismisses the
complaint out of hand.
[5.2]
If the matter is referred for a hearing, the LPC appoints a
disciplinary
committee,
which
conducts
a hearing.
Upon its conclusion
,
the
disciplinary
committee
decides
whether
the
member
concerned
is guilty and,
if so,
imposes
a sanction.
[5.3]
A
disciplinary
committee may impose a
range
of
sanctions
on a
practitioner found guilty
of
misconduct.
However
,
only
this court
may
strike a
practitioner from the
roll.
Accordingly,
when a disciplinary committee
concludes
that a
practitioner should be struck from the roll for misconduct, it
can't
do so itself.
Instead, it
recommends
to the
LPC
that an application be brought to this court for
that
purpose.
[5.4]
In such a
case,
this court
decides the application for striking on the evidence placed before it
by the LPC and any response from the practitioner
concerned
,
and
after
a
hearing.
[6]
In this light, in the
ordinary course of events, a disciplinary matter concerning
a
member of the
LPC
will reach
this court
only
once a full disciplinary hearing before the LPC has been
concluded.
The LPA allows
two deviations from this usual sequence:
[6.1]
Section
43 authorises
any
'disciplinary
body'
of the LPC, if
'
satisfied
that a legal practitioner has misappropriated trust monies or is
guilty of
other
serious
misconduct' to refer the matter to the LPC to approach
this
court
urgently for the practitioner to be
temporarily
suspended
or
for
other
interim
relief.
It is
settled
that
an approach to court in terms
of
section
43 may occur before a disciplinary hearing has been held by the
LPC
.
[2]
In
such
cases,
the
practice is for the
ensuing
process
before
this
court then to replace the LPC
'
s
disciplinary process and for any application for striking the
practitioner from the roll to be decided by this court without a
prior disciplinary hearing
or
decision
of a disciplinary committee of the LPC.
[6.2]
Section
44
of
the
LPA determines that:
(1)
The
provisions
of this Act [the LPA] do not
derogate
in
any
way
from
the power of
the
High
Court
to adjudicate
upon
and make
orders in respect of matters concerning the conduct of
a
legal
practitioner, candidate legal practitioner or a
juristic
entity.
(2)
Nothing
contained
in
this
Act precludes
a
complainant
or
a
legal
prac
titione
r
,
candidate
legal practitioner or
juristic
entity from
applying
to
the
High
Court
for
appropriate
relief
in
connection
with any complaint or charge of misconduct
against
a
legal
practitioner
,
candidate
legal
practitioner or
juristic
entity or
in
connection
with any decision of a disciplinary
body,
the
Ombud or
the Council in connection
with
such complaint
or charge
.
Section
44(1) makes it
clear
that
the
inherent power of this court to decide disciplinary matters
concerning a legal practitioner
,
which
derives from
its
position
as ultimate
custos
morum
of
the
legal
profession
persists in full, despite enactment of
the
disciplinary
powers of the LPC in the LPA. It also confirms that the concomitant
common law right
of
anyone
involved with a disciplinary matter concerning a legal practitioner
to approach this
court
for
relief, likewise, remains in place. Although probably
less
often,
section 44 has also, like section 43, been relied on by the LPC to
approach this court with applications for suspension and
striking
from the roll, where no disciplinary hearing of the LPC has as yet
taken place. In those cases, this
court
has
accepted the LPC's approach and decided the applications
.
[3]
[7]
In this matter
the
LPC, although
it had
conducted
a disciplinary
investigation into Berkowitz
'
affairs, had
not
yet
proceeded with
a disciplinary hearing
before
a
disciplinary
committee. Instead, it relied on its residual
common
law authority
to approach this court directly concerning misconduct of a legal
practitioner, recognised in section 44 of the LPA,
before any such
disciplinary hearing had been
conducted.
[8]
In
the only affidavit
concerning
this
matter that Berkowitz has placed before this
court
(more
about
this below) - a founding affidavit for his application for an
extension
of
the
return date of
3
August
2023 - he questioned the LPC's decision to approach this court rather
than proceed with the matter
'in-house'.
The
general gist of his
concern
was
that all the allegations of misconduct levelled against him were of
such a nature that they
could
easily
be
resolved
inter
se,
and
that there was no need to burden this court with
them.
[4]
In
his
submissions
before
us during the hearing
of
this
matter
(he
was
not
represented by
counsel
and
appeared in person) Berkowitz persisted
with
this
line
of
reasoning
.
[9]
Accordingly
,
we
probed
counsel for the LPC on the question of what the grounds
were
for the LPC's
decision to approach this court
with
an application
for suspension and striking
,
rather than to
proceed with further
'
in-house
'
investigation
and a disciplinary hearing. At the conclusion of the hearing, we
reserved judgment, but directed both the LPC and
Berkowitz to file
supplementary heads of argument on
two
issues
:
[9.1]
The authority in law, other than section 43 of the LPA, in exercise
of which the LPC approached this
court for the relief it sought,
without first having
conc
luded
a disciplinary
hearing
.
[9.2]
Regardless
of
what
the
source
of its
authority to
do so is, the grounds upon which the LPC
in
this matter
decided to proceed with an application to this
court
before having
conducted
a
disciplinary hearing.
[10]
Both the LPC and Berkowitz duly filed such heads
,
on which I
rely in addressing these
two
questions
below.
[11]
Concerning
the
first question
,
it is clear
that the LPC, even absent reliance
on
section
43,
which
explicitly
confers
on
it such, has further authority to proceed against a legal
practitioner in this court in a misconduct matter where it has
neither
commenced nor concluded a formal disciplinary hearing of its
own.
[12]
As submitted
on
behalf of the
LPC both at the hearing of this matter and in supplementary
heads
of
argument,
this authority derives from the LPC's common
law
right to do
so,
which
in
turn is sourced in this
court's
inherent power
to hear and decide misconduct matters
concerning
legal
practitioners, as its officers.
[13]
This
inherent power and
concomitant
right
are
left
intact
in broad and unqualified terms by
section
44
of
the
LPA.
It reads that the provisions of the LPA do not derogate
'in
any
way'
from
this court
'
s
inherent power; and that
'nothing'
in
the LPA precludes any natural or
juristic
person
with an interest in
a
disciplinary
matter
concerning
a
legal practitioner from approaching this court for
relief.
The
effect of this
was
described
thus
by
a full bench of this Division in
Wild
v
Legal
Practice
Council
and
Others
:
[5]
[79]
...
There
is
...
no
indication that the common law
powers
of the Courts
to regulate their own process and to recognise who may
br
i
ng
d
i
sciplinary
proceedings before
them
,
have been
altered.
One
does not find a single provision in the
LPA
that clearly
and
unequivocally
indicates
an
intention to alter the common law or to affect the existing status of
any of the voluntary associations in the legal profession.
[80]
On the contrary,
there is a clear and
explicit
indication in
the LPA that it assumes the continuance or retention of the common
law
in
this regard
.
Section 44(1)
provides that
"the
provisions
of this Act do not derogate in any way"
from
the power of the
H
i
gh
Court to adjudicate
upon
and make
orders in respect of matters concerning the conduct of
a
legal
practitioner
.
Subsection (2)
makes it clear that
"
nothing
contained in this Act"
precludes
a juristic
entity
...
from applying
to the High Court for
appropriate
relief
in
connection with any complaint
or
charge of
misconduct
against
a legal
practitioner [S]ection 44 properly analysed
,
appear[s] to
be a ranking clause
,
and not merely
a linking clause. It ranks above
all
the other
provisions
in
the Act. I
find it impossible
to
reconcile
section 44(1)
and
(2) with
an
intention to
interfere
with
the common law powers of the
High
Court
The
common
law in this
regard
seems to be
acknowledged by statute, rather [than] to alter it.
[14]
Wild
was
of
course
decided in a different context than applies in this matter
(the
question whether
the
different
constituent
bar
councils,
voluntary
association rather than statutory bodies like the LPC
,
retained their
common law powers of discipline and authority to
approach
this court
with
disciplinary matters
,
despite the
creation of
the
LPC through
the LPA). Nonetheless, the general approach to
understanding
the
scope
and
import
of
section 44
established
there
- that it
insulates the
common
law
disciplinary powers and rights
of
the different
associations involved in the legal profession from any limitation
by
provisions
of
the LPA - must
in my
view
also
apply to
the question here
,
concerning
the
LPC's power to approach this court.
[15]
Within
the
context of this
case,
what
were the
common
law
powers of the LPC's predecessor before enactment of the LPA
,
which
are now so insulated
by
section
44? This question
was
settled
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Appeal in
The
Law
Society
of
the
Northern
Provinces
v
Morobadi
,
where,
prior
to
enactment
of
the
LPA
,
it
held
,
concerning
the LPC
'
s
predecessor,
the
Law Society
,
that:
'[i]n
general
it
is
correct
that
the Council may proceed
with
the
application for the striking off
of
the
practitioner or for his or her suspension
from
practice
without pursuing a formal
charge
before
a disciplinary
committee
if
in its
opinion,
having
regard to the nature of
the
charges,
a
practitioner
is
no
longer
considered
to
be a fit and proper person.'
[6]
[16]
It
is
this authority
that
persists
also post the enactment of
the
LPA:
the
LPC may,
where
it
is
of
the
(prima
facie)
view
that
a practitioner
is
no longer fit
and proper, apply to this court for that practitioner to be suspended
from practice or struck from the roll without
having held a
disciplinary hearing of its own. That is, it may
in
such
cases
bypass
its
own
disciplinary process and place the matter before this
court
directly.
[17]
Berkowitz'
valiant
reliance
on the administrative law principle of exhaustion of internal
remedies does not
come
to
his aid. In
short,
in
his heads
of
argument
he submitted that as applies in administrative law
review
cases
to
the reviewing party
,
the
LPC has a duty to exhaust its own internal disciplinary processes
before approaching this court for a resolution of a misconduct
case
against a legal practitioner
.
The
rationale
for
this duty is to avoid burdening this court
with
matters
that can be disposed of internally.
[7]
[18]
This administrative law principle is inapposite in this context
for
two
reasons
.
First
,
as
has often been held,
[8]
the LPC
in disciplinary matters
concerning
legal
practitioners is not like an ordinary litigant, seeking to vindicate
its own interests in a dispute
with
the
legal practitioner concerned, with this
court
simply
an arbiter of that dispute
;
nor
is its right to approach this court
'a
right
to exert discipline
,
vesting
in
an
organisation,
operating
as
an ordinary litigant'.
[9]
Instead
,
the
LPC
'
claims
nothing
for itself
...
It
merely brings the attorney before the Court ...
,
informs
the Court what the
attorney
has
done
and
asks the Court to exercise its disciplinary powers
over
him
...
The
[LPC]
protects
the interests of the public in its dealings
with
attorneys
.
It
does
not
institute
any action or
civil
suit
against
the attorney. It merely submits to
the
Court
facts
which
it
contends
constitutes
unprofessional
conduct
and
then leaves
the
Court
to
determine
how it
will
deal
with
this
officer
.'
[10]
[19]
Second,
those
cases
that
would,
in
terms of
Morobadi,
qualify to
be brought to this
court
prior
to
any
disciplinary
hearing
by
the LPC
(ie
where
the
charges
are
such that
they
would,
if
proven
,
render
the practitioner unfit and improper and therefore liable to be
struck)
will
in any event end up before this court
,
even
were
a disciplinary
hearing to be held. As
set
out above
,
the LPC is not
authorised itself to
strike
a practitioner
from the roll. That
is
the preserve
of this
court,
of which all
legal
practitioners
are officers and to which they all, in the final instance answer. If
a disciplinary committee of the LPC finds misconduct
of that nature
and severity
,
it recommends
to the Council that
an
application to
strike be brought to this court.
[20]
On the second question,
Morobadi
also
provides the answer. There the Supreme
Court
of
Appeal
was
clear
that the Council
(of
the
LPC
'
s
predecessor,
the
Law Society) was entitled to approach this court prior to having
conducted
a
disciplinary hearing,
'if
in
its opinion, having regard to the nature of the
charges,
a
practitioner
is
no longer
considered
to
be a fit and proper person
.'
[11]
[21]
The question is in
other
words
whether
the charges against Berkowitz that existed at the time the decision
was taken to approach this
court
are such that
they would justify an opinion of the LPC's then that
,
if
proven
,
they would
render him unfit and improper
(and
as such liable
to be suspended from practice or struck from the roll).
[22]
To this
,
the
answer must be
yes.
The
main charge initially against Berkowitz was that he had for several
periods practiced for own account
without
a
Fidelity Fund certificate. To do
so,
it
has often been held
,
constitutes
serious misconduct that could
certainly
lead
to a finding that the offending practitioner is not fit and proper
,
and
often leads to practitioners being struck from the roll.
[12]
[23]
Accordingly
,
I
conclude
that
the LPC had
ample grounds upon
which
to
conclude,
within
its
common law authority to do so
,
that
Berkowitz'
case
should be
referred to
court
before a
disciplinary hearing had been held
.
Merits
[24]
In matters such as these - in effect an application for striking
Berkowitz from the roll of legal
practitioners, alternatively his
suspension from practice - the
inquiry
is
three-fold:
first, I must determine, on the facts, whether Berkowitz
is
guilty
of the
charges
levelled
against him; if so, second, I must determine whether that renders him
unfit
and
improper;
and
if so in turn, third, I must determine
what
order
that warrants
,
ie
whether he should be struck from the roll or further suspended.
[13]
The
charges
[25]
Berkowitz faces a
range of charges of misconduct. Some of these concern his conduct
prior to charges initially being levelled against
him; others concern
his conduct since he has been charged. In sum
,
the charges
before us are that he
:
[25
.
1]
practiced for own account without a Fidelity Fund certificate for
several periods
;
[25.2]
failed to submit his auditor
'
s
reports for several financial years
,
or failed to
do so timeously
;
[25.3]
failed to pay his LPC membership fees for several years
;
[25
.
4]
failed to cooperate with the LPC and with this court as expected of a
legal practitioner during the course of the ongoing disciplinary
process
;
[25.5]
failed to comply with orders of this court in several respects; and
[25
.
6]
was untruthful in several instances in his communication with the LPC
and
,
indeed
,
before this
court
.
[26]
Deciding these
charges is complicated by the peculiar fact that Berkowitz
,
despite noting
opposition to this application at first refused and since then has
simply failed to file an answering affidavit placing
his version
before this court
.
To date he has
filed only one affidavit: a founding affidavit for his application to
extend the return date of the rule
nisi
of 3
August 2024
.
This is the
entirety of his version before this court.
[27]
At the hearing of
this matter counsel for the LPC, responding to Berkowitz
'
submission
that the rule
nisi
be further
extended, urged us that the hearing should proceed despite the
absence of a proper answer from Berkowitz
.
We decided to
do so
,
for
the following reasons:
[27.1]
Berkowitz had brought no formal application for further postponement
or further extension of the rule
nisi,
either in
advance of the hearing or from the bar (he appeared in person) and
offered no formal or substantive retort to the LPC
'
s
urging that the matter should proceed
.
[27.2]
Berkowitz had formally noted opposition to the application already on
22 July 2022 and so had ample time - one year and almost
seven months
- within which to formulate and file an answer.
[27
.
3]
The failure to file an answering affidavit is wilful. Berkowitz
initially
,
after noting
opposition, explicitly refused to file an answer
,
on the
argument that the matter could easily be
'
sorted
out' between the LPC and him and didn't require an answer
.
[27.4]
In between noting opposition and the hearing before us on 8 February
2024
,
Berkowitz
twice attended at hearings of this court concerning this application
.
Not once did
he apply for a postponement to allow him to file an answering
affidavit. Instead
,
his
correspondence with the LPC before both the May and August 2023
hearings
,
and
his application for an extension of the return date of 3 August 2023
(which was supported by an affidavit) refer only to his
need for
additional time to resolve his disciplinary matter with the LPC out
of court
.
[28]
Accordingly
,
I
proceed to address each of the charges in turn below
,
relying
on such answer from Berkowitz as is at our disposal for his version,
and further on the facts placed before us by the LPC
.
I
do so, mindful of the fact that the ordinary approach to
determination of the factual basis for deciding an application does
not apply in matters such as these
,
which
are
sui
generis
and
not adversarial.
[14]
Fidelity
Fund Certificates
[29]
The LPC alleges that
Berkowitz practiced for own account for the following periods
,
without a
Fidelity Fund Certificate
:
1 January 2012
to 3 July 2012
(three
months)
;
1 January 2013
to 18 June 2013 (three and a half months)
;
1 January 2014
to 7 February 2014 (one month); 1 January 2018 to 14 February 2018
(one and a half months)
;
and 1 January
2019 to 25 October 2019 (almost 10 months)
;
and from 1
January 2021 at least until 2 May 2023
,
when he was
suspended from practice by this court (two years and four months
;
there is also
evidence that he persisted practicing without a certificate after the
2 May 2023 hearing - more on this below)
.
[30]
This means that on
the LPC's version Berkowitz practiced without a certificate for a
total of four years and one month
,
spread out
over a period of 11 years
.
If proven,
this would amount to a contravention of section 84(3) of the LPA
,
which
peremptorily
requires
practitioners in practice for own account to have a
certificate.
[31]
The
main answer that Berkowitz offers to this is that, for the period
1
January
2021 to 2 May 2023
,
his
practice was essentially dormant in that he held no money in
trust,
so
that a certificate was not required:
'I
have
not held money in trust on behalf of any third-party through all
relevant time relating hereto'
.
[15]
He
makes this allegation baldly and vaguely, without proof. And it seems
a half-truth
.
[32]
As
is more fully set out below, shortly before he filed his application
to extend the rule
nisi
,
during
July 2023, despite then already being suspended from practicing for
own account, Berkowitz filed notices and deposed to an
affidavit
as
attorney
of
record
for
a client
,
one
M13 Consortium
('M13').
By
that time
,
he
had been acting for M13 for a
considerable
time,
since
at least the second half of 2021. On 10 May 2022
[16]
Berkowitz
wrote
a
letter of demand on behalf of M13, to the defendant in the matter
.
In
it, he demands
payment
of
the sum
of
R7
,
543,214.35
and then
states
that
payment may be made into his trust account (Standard Bank account
number 0[...]
,
in
Berkowitz' name)
.
In
at least this
one
instance
then
,
Berkowitz
held out
to
be
competent to receive money into his trust account on behalf of a
client
,
despite
that he had at that time already been
without
a
Fidelity Fund certificate for one year and four months
.
[33]
In any event
,
even were it
so that his practice was effectively dormant during this time, he
was
still
registered with the LPG as practicing for own account
,
and practicing
through his own practice
,
so that he was
required to have a certificate - that
is,
his response
concerning
this
period does
not amount to a denial. And
,
of course
,
he does not
respond at all to the allegations concerning the
other,
earlier
periods of practicing without a
certificate.
[34]
In this light, I must
conclude on what is before me that Berkowitz indeed for all the
periods alleged by the LPG practiced for own
account
without
a Fidelity
Fund certificate, in contravention of section 84(1) of the LPA.
Auditor
'
s
reports
[34]
The LPG alleges that
Berkowitz
,
in
contravention of several provisions
of
Rule 54 of the
LPC
Rules,
has
failed to
submit
auditor's
reports
for his
practice
to
the LPC for
the financial periods ending 29 February 2020 and 28 February 2021.
This failure persists to date.
[35]
The
LPC
further
alleges that Berkowitz submitted
the
auditor's
report
for
the financial period ending 28 February 2019, seven months late, also
in contravention of Rule 54
.
[36]
In
sum
,
the charge
is
that Berkowitz
has
since
18 March 2020
(when
he submitted
the report for the period ending 28 February 2019)
,
not submitted
any auditor's reports as required
,
while the
last
report he did
submit was itself seven months late.
[37]
Berkowitz' answer to
this charge is twofold.
First,
he alleges
that
his
failure to
submit the required reports was
caused
by a
lack
of funds to
pay auditors, which in turn was caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.
Second
,
he
alleges
that
his failure
since to provide the required reports was caused by him being
locked
out of his
office by his landlord due to
non-payment
of
rental
,
so that he
could not access
the
records and
information required to bring his reporting up to date
.
[38]
These attempted
explanations take the matter no further. Apart from the fact that
they are offered baldly
,
without any
proof, they amount to an implicit admission of the charges concerning
auditors
'
reports -they
are attempted justifications
rather
than denials.
Also, they provide no answer to the charge of
late
submission of
the 2018/19
report.
And their
truthfulness is in doubt. As the LPC points out, while claiming not
to have had
access
to any of his
records at the time due to being
locked
out
of
his offices
,
Berkowitz
evidently had access to and
worked
extensively
with the M13 file. Moreover
,
during June
2023, shortly before him making these statements under oath, in all
the notices filed
in
the M13 matter
Berkowitz provides his office address as the address
where
papers can be
served.
[39]
Accordingly, I
conclude that Berkowitz
indeed,
in
contravention of Rule 54
,
submitted
his
2018/19 auditors
'
report
seven
months late and has since 18 March 2020 not
submitted
any auditors'
reports as required.
Membership
fees
[40]
The LPC alleges that
Berkowitz has failed
to
pay his LPC
membership fees for 2020, 2021
,
and 2022, in
breach of the LPC
'
s
Rules 4,
3.16,
21.1, and
21.2.
[41]
Apart
from
his
general
assertions
that all of the charges against him involve
only
'administrative
issues' that
do not warrant disciplinary
charges,
which
presumably also refer to this
,
Berkowitz
gives no answer to this charge. Accordingly, also
it
must
be
upheld against
him.
Failure
to
cooperate
with the LPC
and this court
[42]
When
legal practitioners are presented by the LPC with disciplinary
charges and a disciplinary
investigation
and
in particular an application to this court for
suspension
or
striking from the roll ensues
,
they
must not act as though involved in an adversarial process, or a
dispute with the LPC
concerning
their
personal rights and interests
.
Instead,
because legal practitioners are always officers of this court and
bear a duty at all times to assist and be open with this
court
and
to serve the public
,
they
must
cooperate
fully
,
openly
and with diligence
.
[17]
[43]
This
means such practitioners must make the full facts
concerning
any
charges
against
them available to the LPC and, where relevant, this court. They must
avoid bare denials and evasiveness and should act in
such ways as to
facilitate rather than obstruct
the
proceedings
.
[18]
Even
if this requires disclosure of information adverse to their
interests, legal practitioners facing discipline must be fully
honest
and act in
the
utmost
good faith
.
[19]
Allegations,
evidence and complaints must be responded to meaningfully
,
with
the intention to provide a full and proper explanation.
[20]
In
sum
,
when
responding
to disciplinary charges before the LPC and before this Court, legal
practitioners must display exactly those characteristics
of
scrupulous honesty and integrity, awareness of public duty, diligence
and skill that are always required of them by virtue of
the nature of
their profession and their position as officers of this court
.
[21]
[44]
Both in his
engagements
with
the LPC
concerning the
charges
against him
and before this
court,
facing the
application for his suspension and
removal
from the roll,
Berkowitz falls short of these exacting requirements.
[45]
This manifests
in
two ways: his
general attitude and
approach
to the
charges; and specific instances of failure or refusal to
cooperate
and resulting
obstructionism and evasiveness.
[46]
From the outset, Berkowitz
'
attitude and
resultant approach to responding to the charges against him has been
that the charges are not serious. Instead, they
represent only
administrative difficulties that could easily be resolved and cleared
up. Accordingly, to him there was need neither
for internal
disciplinary steps to be taken against him nor
,
more
importantly
,
for the LPC
'
s
approach to this court
.
[47]
This attitude is problematic first because it is based on a mistake -
an assessment that the
charges against him are not serious. Of
course, they are. Practicing without a Fidelity Fund certificate is a
criminal offence
in terms of the LPA. It has on its own repeatedly
been held by this court to be grounds for a finding that a legal
practitioner
is not fit and proper and should be struck from the
roll. Berkowitz' contrary assessment indicates a serious lack of
insight into
the nature and import of his duties toward the public
and his clients and the risk where he fails to comply with them
.
[48]
This attitude is problematic second because it has caused Berkowitz
to participate in the disciplinary
process in the opposite manner
than is required of him. Instead of
cooperating
fully
,
openly and
with diligence and responding meaningfully and comprehensively to the
charges as he is required
,
he has failed
and indeed at times refused to cooperate and respond at all.
[49]
The most egregious example of this
(although
there are also
several others) is his failure to date to file an answering affidavit
before this court
.
This is
inexplicable
.
The most basic
practical duty of a practitioner facing discipline before this court
is to place all the relevant facts before court
in the only form that
they can be considered: in an answering affidavit. If indeed all of
the charges against him can easily be
'
sorted
out' as he claims
,
the only way
to persuade this court of this is to place the facts relevant to that
explanation before it in an answering affidavit.
[50]
In practical terms there is nothing that could have prevent
Berkowitz
,
by
his own description an experienced attorney for whom drafting
affidavits must be almost second nature
,
from deposing
to and filing such an answering affidavit. He was served with the
application on 6 July 2022 and noted his opposition
on 13 July 2022.
He has now failed to file an answering affidavit for a period of
almost two years since becoming aware of the
application. He has
appeared in court three times concerning this application.
[51]
His failure to answer
properly is clearly deliberate. After being prompted several times by
the attorneys for the LPC on the absence
of an answering affidavit,
Berkowitz, just before the first hearing on this matter in May 2023
communicated to the LPC that he
does not believe the charges against
him warrant an answer in the form of an affidavit and that he would
not file an affidavit
unless specifically instructed to do so. Even
absent this explicit refusal, the duration of his failure to answer
on its own would
have justified an inference that it was deliberate.
He has, in other words, chosen not to answer fully, openly, and
comprehensively
to the charges against him and to this court and
still persists in doing so. In this way, he has breached his duty as
its officer
,
to cooperate
fully with this court
.
Non-compliance
with court orders
[52]
The LPC alleges that
Berkowitz has failed to comply with orders of this court in that he
has not handed over documents and records
to the court appointed
curator as required and practiced as an attorney, despite being
suspended from practice for own account.
[53]
On 2 May 2023 this
court ordered, among several other things, that Berkowitz is
suspended from practicing as legal practitioner
for his own account;
that a curator
bonis
be
appointed to manage his affairs in the interim; and that Berkowitz
hand over all his accounting records and all his client files
to the
curator
bonis.
[54]
Since then to date,
Berkowitz has failed to hand over his accounting records and client
files to the curator as required by this
court. He has also failed to
cooperate with the curator
,
thus making it
impossible for the curator to comply with this court's order as far
as it applies to him.
[55]
Berkowitz does not
deny that he has failed to hand over his records and files, so that
it is established that he is
in
this manner in
breach of the order of this court. But he does offer an explanation:
that he was locked out of his practice's offices
by his landlord due
to non-payment of rental and so had access to neither records nor
files. Ac
c
ordingly
,
the question
becomes whether he is wilfully in breach of the order, so that the
breach constitutes contempt of court.
[56]
I find that on a balance of
probabilities, this is indeed so. To
counter
Berkowitz'
averment that he did not have physical access to his files because he
was locked out of his offices, the LPC points out
that he must have
had access to his files
,
because,
despite being
suspended at the time, he acted as attorney for at least one of his
clients in a High Court matter (more on this below)
and had access to
that file. Moreover, as I point out above, in the notices that he
filed on behalf of his client M13 during July
2023, directly
preceding him averring under oath that he was locked out of his
office, he repeatedly puts up his office address
as the address for
service of documents.
[57]
It is also so that
Berkowitz offered his excuse of being locked out of his office in
August 2023, indicating at the time that his
dispute with his
landlord that resulted in him being locked out, was on the point of
being resolved, so that he was then about
to gain access to his files
and records. By the time we heard this matter
,
six months had
passed, and the client files and accounting records had still not
been handed over. This raises the probability that
his
'excuse'
of August 2023
no longer pertains. Indeed, at the hearing of this matter before us
on 8 February, a different excuse was offered:
that the records for
his trust bank account could not be furnished to the curator, as his
account had been frozen by his bank.
However, as counsel for the LPC
correctly retorted
,
this new
explanation was irrelevant
,
as this
court's order required the handing over of accounting records and not
the bank statements.
[58]
Nonetheless, I need
not make a finding here that Berkowitz was untruthful when he claimed
that he couldn't access his records and
files because he was locked
out of his office. Even were it true that he was locked out of his
offices and didn't have access to
his records, there are any number
of ways that he could have engaged the curator
bonis
on this,
so that the curator may have made arrangement through his landlord to
access the offices to obtain records and files. He
did not, instead
doing nothing at all to cooperate with the curator, and then, in a
flurry of emails and attempted telephone calls
trying to make contact
and negotiate with the LPC through one of its officials, in the days
directly preceding the hearing before
us.
[59]
Accordingly, I find
that, on a balance of probabilities, Berkowitz is in breach of that
part of the order that he should hand over
his records and files, and
that his breach is wilful.
[60]
The second manner in which
the LPC alleges that Berkowitz is in breach of this court's order of
2 May 2023 is that during June 2023,
after he was already suspended
from practicing as attorney for own account, he acted as attorney of
record in High Court litigation,
in the M13 matter referred to above.
More specifically, he signed and filed a discovery notice and an
application to compel discovery,
with a notice of set
down
and date application
,
and deposed to
the founding affidavit of the application to compel discovery on
behalf of M13
,
as its
attorney of record
,
on 5 June
2023
.
[61]
Berkowitz responds
to
this
allegation (here not under oath
,
but in
correspondence with the LPC and again at the hearing before us) that
he admits acting as attorney of record for M13 after
he was suspended
but denies that in doing so
,
he was
practicing for own account. This is on his version because he has an
interest in M13 and for that reason would not charge
any fee for his
appearance. He does not disclose the nature of the interest he refers
to
.
[62]
To this the LPC responds that it had done a CIPC
search
on the M13
Consortium
which
showed that
Berkowitz was not and had never been a director of M13
.
On this basis
it disputes that he has any personal interest in M13.
[63]
Although Berkowitz
'
claim that he
has an interest in M13 is not completely
convincing,
the mere fact
that he is not a director of M13 consortium - the
only
fact the LPC
holds forth as indicating that his claim is false - does not prove
that he has no interest in M13. His interest may
be of another kind
(he
could
be an investor or
silent
partner, for
example)
.
In
this light
,
I
cannot on a balance of probabilities find that Berkowitz had
wilfully
disobeyed that
portion of the 2 May 2023 order that suspended him from practicing
for own account. He seems to have genuinely believed
that he
was
not practicing
for own account and the LPC cold not show
on
the facts that
his version of the matter was false.
[64]
However
,
here I must
add the following. On 4 August 2024 this court
issued
a
second
order against
Berkowitz, this time suspending him from all forms of practice as
attorney. It did so having been appraised of the
fact that Berkowitz
had acted
as
attorney of
record for M13 after he was suspended from practicing for own
account. Nonetheless, perusal
of
the M13 matter
shows that Berkowitz was substituted as attorney of record
only
five months
after the 4 August order
,
on
12
December 2023. It seems that he
remained
on record for
M13 for these five months
,
despite now
having been suspended from all forms of practice. At best for
Berkowitz
(and
this is how I
shall
take
it for purposes of this judgment) this means that he exhibited a
decidedly laissez faire attitude to
compliance
with the order
- an attitude not appropriate for
a
legal
practitioner.
At
worst
(and
I do not find
that it is so) this delay
verges
on wilful
non-compliance
with
a court order.
Dishonesty
[65]
The LPC
claims
that Berkowitz was untruthful in three respects. The first is in his
claim that he was
prevented
from handing
over his files and accounting records as he couldn't access his
office because his
landlord
had
locked
him out. The
LPC
points
out that he had access to the M13 file
,
from
which
he
was
clearly
working
during the
time that he says he was locked out. They say this shows he is
dishonest
in
his claim of
not having access to his files. I
cannot
agree
.
There can be
any number of
reasons
why Berkowitz
had
the
M13 file while
not
having
access
to
any
of his other files
.
He
could
simply
,
for example,
have taken it home with him to work on
it
from there.
[66]
The second
is
in holding
forth that
he
was entitled
to
practice
as attorney, at a time that he was prohibited by order of this court
from practicing as attorney for own account
,
which the LPC
describes as
'
inherently
dishonest'
;
and it is
related to the third, being his claim that he has
an
interest
in
M13. As set
out above
,
it
remains an
open question whether Berkowitz was indeed
practicing
for own
account
in
the
M13 matter. The
LPC
has
not
disproven his claim that
he
has an
interest in in M13; it has only excluded one possible interest (that
he
is
a director of M13). Accordingly
,
Berkowitz
'
claim that he
did not practice for own account in the M13 matter remains plausible,
as does his subjective belief
that
this
was so;
and so too the claim upon which both these rest, that he has an
interest in M13. Accordingly, also here I cannot find that
he was
dishonest.
[67]
However
,
although
I do not find that Berkowitz was dishonest
,
in
the sense of telling outright lies as alleged by the LPC
,
I
cannot
conclude that
he
was
fully honest, in the way required of
legal
practitioners
facing
discipline.
As
submitted by the LPC, a legal practitioner facing discipline must
from the outset declare the relevant facts fully and openly
and must
not allow the truth to emerge only gradually
.
[22]
Berkowitz
has not been forthcoming with the facts to sustain
his
claims
,
explanations,
and justifications. He has indeed
'presented
as
narrow
a
front
as possible, for fear of detection or contradiction
'
instead
of
the
detailed
version
required
of
him.
[23]
This
does
place a question mark over his integrity, despite
my
finding
above
that
he
did not commit the outright falsehoods the LPC alleges
.
Fit
and
proper
[68]
In sum, I have found
that Berkowitz is indeed guilty of a) practicing for own
account
without a Fidelity Fund certificate
,
for several
periods
;
b)
submitting auditor's reports late or not at all; c) failing to pay
his LPC fees for several years; d) acting improperly in several
ways
in response to the disciplinary proceedings against him; and e)
failing to comply with an order of this court that he hand
over his
client files and auditing records to the curator
bonis
.
Do these
transgressions render him unfit and improper for legal practice?
[70]
To be fit and proper
,
legal
practitioners must exhibit the skill and knowledge required to
perform their professional duty. This skill and knowledge must
be
applied with diligence
,
care
,
wisdom
,
and
independence. Legal practice is also a profession and not a job. This
means that legal practitioners
work
not in their
own
interest
but in the public
interest.
They do so by
employing their skill and knowledge to protect and advance the
interests
of
their clients
and not their own, but always as officers of this court. That is,
they pursue the interests of their clients in such
ways that serve
this
court
and
the law
,
and
through that
,
the public
interest. Finally
,
the
'capstone'
virtue
that
ties all this together
,
is integrity
.
Above all
,
legal
practitioners must perform their duties honestly
,
with
the
highest good faith, and must be trustworthy and dependable
.
[71]
In his various
transgressions, Berkowitz falls short of these high standards
.
I focus below
only on the most serious of the transgressions
:
practicing
without
a
Fidelity Fund
certificate; failure properly to cooperate with the LPC and this
court
in
the disciplinary process
;
and
non-compliance with a court order.
[72]
To
practice for own account without a fidelity fund certificate is
manifestly a
serious
transgression
and
not
simply
the
'
administrative
issue
'
that
Berkowitz describes it
as.
Section
84(1) of the LPA requires
that
an
attorney practicing for own account have a
valid
Fidelity
Fund certificate. The
requirement
is
peremptory
.
Attorneys
practicing for own account without a Fidelity Fund certificate commit
a criminal offence punishable by fine or imprisonment
- they break
the law
.
[24]
More
importantly
,
they
place their trust creditors
(chiefly
their
clients) and the public at risk. Practicing without a certificate has
repeatedly been held by this court to be serious misconduct
on
the
sole basis of which an attorney is marked
as
unfit
and
improper
and may be struck from the roll.
[25]
[73]
As detailed above
,
Berkowitz has
practiced without a certificate repeatedly, for several periods
totalling more than four years
,
over a span of
11 years
.
The
continual and repeated disregard for his clients
'
and the public
interest that this shows, and the disdain for the law
,
render him
unfit and improper for legal practice
.
[74]
Berkowitz
'
attitude to
the charges against him and the manner in which he has participated
in the disciplinary process instituted against him
are outlined
above. In short it amounts to
this:
his attitude
has been that the charges against him are not serious but only relate
to
'
administrative
difficulties' that can be
'
sorted
out' easily with the LPC;
accordingly,
he has failed
at all to cooperate in the investigations against him, going so far
as to refuse and then wilfully fail to date to
file an answering
affidavit
in
which he can
place his
version
and the full
facts at his disposal
,
before this
court.
This
attitude and resultant
conduct
show
him to be
lacking several of the most important
characteristics
required of a
legal practitioner
.
[75]
His misdescription
of
the
charges
as simply
'
administrative
difficulties
',
with
which
he persists to date
,
evinces a
serious lack of understanding
of
the scope and
nature of his duty toward his clients and the public and the risk at
which his conduct places them. His failure to
cooperate
with
the LPC by
handing over documents
and
records
required of him and with this
court
by doing such
a simple thing as filing an answering affidavit shows him to not be
open
,
forthright and
ultimately honest
,
as he is
required to be with this
court.
Instead
,
he presents as
cagey, withholding
,
and evasive
.
As
found
above, in several instances, although not directly dishonest
,
he is not
fully truthful in that he withholds or elides crucial information
.
[76]
Importantly
,
this
attitude
and resultant conduct is not that of a deer caught in the headlights,
paralysed by apprehension. Berkowitz has had ample
opportunity and
much time to
'
sort
things out
'
with the LPC
as he continues to say he would do; but to date he has not done so
,
remaining
supine. He persists in his attitude that he is not charged with
serious misconduct despite often having been disabused
of that notion
by
the
LPC. He
initially
refused and
thereafter wilfully failed to file an
answering
affidavit. His
improper approach and resultant improper conduct
are
deliberate
.
This also
shows him not to be fit and proper for
legal
practice
.
[77]
Finally
on this issue, I turn
to
Berkowitz'
non-compliance with this
court's
order
of
2 May
2023.
All
people must comply
with
orders
of
this court. However, because they are officers of this court, legal
practitioners bear an enhanced duty to do so. They must comply
fully
and with alacrity and make every effort available to them to do so
.
They
should not take refuge in technicalities or surrender to practical
difficulties in their efforts to comply. This is especially
so in the
context of disciplinary proceedings against a practitioner before
this court
.
In
such proceedings
,
practitioners
do not operate as if or as if onbehalf of an ordinary litigant,
involved
in
an adversarial process. They must cooperate. Wilful failure to comply
with any aspect of a court order committed by a legal practitioner
facing discipline before this court
,
is
most egregious misconduct.
[26]
It is exactly what it says it is: instead of working as an officer of
the court
,
ion
service
of the court and the public, such a legal practitioner
is
in
contempt
of
the court
;
and
is
as
a result not fit and proper to practice.
[78]
I find above that,
despite his excuse that he was locked out of his office and so could
not access his files and accounting records,
Berkowitz' failure to
hand over his files and records to the
curator,
as required by
the 2 May court order
,
was wilful
non compliance and
so
contempt of
court.
I
do so
,
not
in the first place because his excuse is not truthful
(although
it certainly
skirts the edges of truthfulness
,
I could not
reach
the
conclusion
that it was false) but because he made no effort to overcome this
practical difficulty so as to comply with the court
order. Instead,
he surrendered to it and so chose to forego
compliance
with the court
order
.
This
choice clearly also marks him as unfit and improper for practice.
[79]
I find above that his
practicing in the M13 matter subsequent to being suspended from
practicing for own account by this court does
not constitute
contempt
of
court
,
as on the
papers I could not clearly reject his explanation that he had an
interest in M13 and so didn
'
t
practice for own account. Nonetheless, his conduct concerning the M13
matter deserves scrutiny concerning the question whether
he
is
fit and
proper.
[80]
The proper response to the 2
May 2023 order of this court concerning the M13 matter would have
been for Berkowitz to inform M13
that he had been suspended from
practicing for own account
,
and that
,
although
his
acting for it
was
not strictly
speaking
practicing
for own account
,
it would be
improper to continue as attorney of record
,
and then to
withdraw
.
Instead, he
sought refuge in the slight technical distinction between practicing
at all and practicing for own account
,
on the tenuous
basis that he has an interest in M13, to justify continuing. This is
not the approach to a court order expected of
a legal practitioner.
This failing is accentuated by the lackadaisical manner in which he
responded to this court's 4 August 2023
order suspending him from all
forms of practice
,
where he took
almost five months to substitute himself as attorney of record.
[80]
In sum, on all these
grounds I conclude that Berkowitz is no longer fit and proper to
practice
as
an
attorney
.
The
order
[81]
In
Malan
&
another
v
Law
Society of the Northern Provinces
[27]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held that it
'is
...
a matter for the discretion of the court' which sanction to impose
upon a legal practitioner who is no longer fit and proper
to
practice. Exercise
of
this
discretion
'
depends
upon such factors as the nature of the
conduct
complained
of
,
the
extent to
which
it
reflects upon the person's character or shows him to be unworthy to
remain in the ranks of an honourable profession
,
the
likelihood
or otherwise of a repetition of such
conduct
and
the need to protect the public
.'
'Ultimately'
,
the
court
concluded
'it is
question
of degree'.
[82]
The
purpose
with
which
the
court makes its choice on sanction is two-fold
.
First,
the aim is to discipline and punish the errant practitioner, and
second
,
to
protect the public
.
[28]
The
primary aim is not to penalise, but to protect the public.
[29]
[82]
What
is
clear,
is
that
a practitioner who has been found unfit and improper for practice
will not be allowed to continue practicing - to protect the
public,
such practitioners must either be struck from the roll or suspended
from practice
.
[30]
[83]
An
order
for
removal
from
the roll has serious and far-reaching consequences for the
practitioner
concerned,
probably
permanent in nature
.
Although
the
option
exists
for such practitioner later to apply for readmission
,
such
applications for readmission
rarely
succeed.
Nonetheless, this court will seldom order the suspension
instead
of removal of a practitioner who has been found to be unfit and
improper.
[31]
[84]
The
choice between suspension and removal is determined by the question
whether the cause of the practitioner
'
s
unfitness and impropriety can be removed - whether, that is
,
the
practitioner can be rehabilitated. The practitioner concerned must
assist the court to formulate conditions that can be imposed
to
ensure such rehabilitation
.
[32]
[85]
Where
a practitioner's integrity is in question and where dishonesty is
involved, courts require exceptional circumstances to exist
to choose
suspension instead of removal.
[33]
[86]
Every single count of
Berkowitz
'
misconduct is
serious
.
They
are of such a nature that it is unclear to me how their cause can be
removed. Berkowitz did not practice without a Fidelity
Fund
certificate for four years spread over 11 years or fail to provide
the LPC with his audited accounts because of some remediable
gap in
his knowledge, skill, or experience. He is on his own version an
experienced and seasoned practitioner
.
He did not
wilfully ignore this court
'
s
order to hand over files and records and display a generally laissez
faire attitude to orders of this court because of a gap in
understanding that can be corrected
.
It is
difficult to see how his attitude of negating the seriousness of the
charges against him and consequent refusal to cooperate
properly in
the disciplinary process can be addressed
.
Significantly
,
although
continually stating that his disciplinary problems can easily be
'
sorted
out' with the LPC
,
he has not
taken any steps over two years to do so
;
and he has not
made any submissions to this court on conditions that could be
imposed on any further suspension that would aid his
rehabilitation.
[87]
Moreover
,
although I
have not found him to have been directly dishonest in the sense of
telling outright lies
,
in
various
respects
,
his
integrity is in question
.
Instead of
being forthright, open and cooperative in his interactions with the
LPC and this court concerning the disciplinary process
,
he has been
cagey
,
evasive
and uncooperative. It is unclear how this can be addressed; and
Berkowitz has pleaded no exceptional circumstances to warrant
suspension rather than removal
,
despite his
integrity being in question
.
[88]
Accordingly
,
I conclude
that the only appropriate order in his case is that he be removed
from the roll of legal practitioners, and order as
follows:
1.
That
JONATHAN
MEIR BERKOWITZ
(first
respondent) be struck from the roll of attorneys (legal
practitioners) of this Honourable Court.
2.
That the first
respondent immediately surrenders and delivers to the Registrar of
this Honourable Court his certificate of enrolment
as an attorney of
this honourable Court.
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 this order
,
the sheriff of
the district in which the certificate is, be authorised and directed
to take possession of the certificate and hand
it to the Registrar of
this Honourable Court
.
4.
That paragraphs 3 to
10 of the order of 02 May 2023 and paragraph 4 of the order of 3
August 2023 shall remain in force.
5.
That the first
respondent be and is hereby directed to pay the costs of this
appl
i
cation
.
JFD
Brand
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
M Mbongwe
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the applicant:
Mr
R Stocker
Instructed
by:
Rooth
& Wessels Inc
Counsel
for the first
respondent:
In
person
Instructed
by
:
In
person
Date
of the Hearing:
8
February 2024
Date
of Judgment:
15
August 2024
[1]
Section
5 of the LPA.
[2]
Law
Society of the Northern Provinces v Morobadi
(1151/2017)
[2018] ZASCA 185
(11 December 2018) at para [25];
South
African Legal Practice Council v Masingi
(2023/077988)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1158 (13 September 2023) at para [15];
South
African Legal Practice Council v Molati and Another
[2023]
ZAGPPHC 2207; 2023-038247 (9 June 2023) at paras [7)-(15); and
Langa
v South African Legal Practice Council
(79330/2018)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 734 (1 September 2023) at para [8].
[3]
South
African Legal Practice Council v Setati
(570/2022)
(2024] ZAGPPHC 207 (13 March 2024) at para [36];
South
African Legal Practice Council v Mphanama
(9875/2022)
[2022] ZALMPPHC 70 (13 December 2022) at para [5].
[4]
Founding
Affidavit, Application to extend rule
nisi,
Bundle
p 10-3 to 10-10.
[5]
(31130/2019)
[2023] ZAGPPHC
1762; 2023 (5) SA 612
(GP) (24 April 2023) at para
[79] to [80].
[6]
(1151/2017)
[2018] ZASCA 185
(11 December 2018) at
para
[25].
[7]
See
eg
Gavric
v
Refugee
Status Determination Officer, Cape
Town
and
Others
(CCT217/16)
[2018]
ZACC 38
;
2019
(1) SA 21
(CC);
2019
(1) BCLR 1
(CC) (28
September
2018)
.
[8]
Solomon
v Law Society of the Cape of Good Hope
1934
AD
401
at
408-409
as
cited in
Morobadi
(above)
at
para
[4].
[9]
Wild
(above)
at
para
[61].
[10]
Solomon
(above)
at
408-409 as cited in
Morobadi
(a
bove
)
at
para [4]
.
[11]
(1151/2017)
[2018]
ZASCA 185
(11 December 2018) at para [25].
[12]
See
for recent examples in this Division,
South
African Legal
Practice
Council
v
Kokoloane Cyril Pitjeng
(422/2021)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 973 (6
December
2022)
at
para
[15];
South
African Legal Practice Council v
Langa
and
Others
(2023]
ZAGPPHC 1728;
79330/2018
(31
March
2023)
at
paras
[19] and [25];
South
African Legal Practice Council v Masingi
(2023/077988)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1158 (13 September 2023) at para [48]; and
South
African Legal
Practice
Council
v Setati
(570/2022)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 207 (13
March
2024)
at para (36].
[13]
Morobadi
(above)
at
para
(5];
Malan
&
another
v
Law
Society
of
the
Northern
Provinces
(2008]
ZASCA
90;
2009 (1)
SA
2
16
(
SCA
)
at
pa
ra
[4].
[14]
Van
den Berg v
The
General
Council
of
the
Bar
of
South
Africa
(2007]
ZASCA 16
;
[2007]
2
A
ll
SA
499
(
SCA
)
at
para
[2].
[15]
Founding
Affidavit,
Application
to
extend rule
nisi
,
at
para [21
.
1]
,
Bundle
p
10-7
.
[16]
The
letter
is in
fact
dated
10
May
2021
,
but
from the
context
it
is
clear
that this
is
an
error, and
it
should
instead
be
10
May
2022:
in the body of the letter it is
stated
that
it is in
response
to
a letter of the defendant
in
the
matter dated 3 May 2022;
and
there
is
reference
to
earlier correspondence from the plaintiff
,
of
29 November 2021.
[17]
Prokureursorde
van
Transvaal
v
Kleynhans
1995
(1)
SA
839
(T)
at
853G-H;
Law
Society
of
the
Northern Provinces
v
Mogami
&
Others
2010
(1) SA 186
(SCA)
at
195-196
par
[26].
[18]
Prokureursorde
van
Transvaal v Kleynhans
1995
(1)
SA
839 (T) at 853G-H
.
[19]
Hewetson
v Law Society of the Free State
2020
(5) SA 86
(SCA) at
para
[49].
[20]
Hepple
v Law Society of the Northern Provinces
2014
JDR
1078
at
para
[9].
[21]
Law
Society of the Northern
Provinces
v
Sonntag
2012
(1)
SA
372
(SCA)
at
380 C-1.
[22]
Law
Society
of the Northern
Provinces
v
Sonntag
2012
(2) SA 372
(SCA)
at
para
[18].
[23]
South
African
Legal
Practice Council v
Bobotyana
(2020]
4
All
SA
827
(ECG)
at
para
[71].
[24]
See
section 93(8)(a) of the
LPA.
[25]
See
for recent
examp
l
es
in
this
Division
,
South
African Legal Practice Council v Kokoloane Cyril Pitjeng
(
422
/202
1)
(2022]
ZAGPPHC 973 (6
December
2022)
at para (15];
South
African Legal
Pract
ice
Council
v Langa
and
Others
[2023)
ZAGPPHC 1728; 79330/2018 (31
March
2023)
at
paras
[19]
and
[25];
South
African Legal Practice Council v Masingi
(2023/077988)
[2023] ZAGPPHC
1158
(13
September 2023) at para [48]; and
South
African
Legal
Practice
Council
v Setati
(570/2022)
[2024]
ZAGPPHC 207
(13
March
2024) at para
[36]
.
[26]
South
African Legal Practice Council v Molati and
Another
(2023-038247)
(2023] ZAGPPHC 578 (9
June
2023)
at
para
(46];
Grund/er
NO and
Another
v
Zulu
and
Others
(08029/2021)
(2023] ZAKZDHC 7 at paras
(37]
,
(52)
& [54]
.
[27]
Malan
&
another
v
Law
Society
of the Northern Provinces
[2008]
ZASCA
90
[2008] ZASCA 90
; ;
2009
(1)
SA
216
(SCA)
at
para
[6]
.
[28]
Summer/ey
v Law Society, Northern Provinces
2006
(5)
SA
613 (SCA) at para [19].
[29]
Malan
(
above)
at
para
[7].
[30]
Incorporated
Law Society, Transvaal v Visse and Others; Incorporated Law Society
Transvaal
v
Viljoen
1958
(
4
)
SA
115 (T)
at
131D-G.
[31]
Malan
(above)
at
para
[8].
[32]
Malan
(
abo
v
e
)
at
para
(8].
[33]
Malan
(
abov
e)
at
para
[10].
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