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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 1284
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## Molapo v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others (083780/2023)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1284;
2025 (3) SA 557 (GP) (2 December 2024)
Molapo v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others (083780/2023)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1284;
2025 (3) SA 557 (GP) (2 December 2024)
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sino date 2 December 2024
FLYNOTES:
PROFESSION – Admission –
Foreign advocate –
No regulations promulgated for
admission of legal practitioners who have not previously qualified
to do so – Applicant
had not been admitted as an advocate
prior to commencement of Legal Practice Act – Does not
qualify to be admitted
to practice law in South Africa –
Contentions that section 24(3) of Act is unconstitutional rejected
– Alternative
relief rejected – Crossing line
separating powers of different arms of government –
Application refused –
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
,
s
24(3).
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 083780/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
2 DECEMBER 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
LIHAELO
BRIDGETT MOLAPO
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND
CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
First
Respondent
MINISTER
OF TRADE, INDUSTRY
AND
COMPETITION
Second
respondent
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN LEGAL
PRACTICE
COUNCIL
Third
Respondent
Summary:
Admission of legal practitioners and in particular, foreign
advocates, to practice in South Africa – in terms of the (now
repealed) Admission of Advocates Act, foreign practitioners from
designated countries may have applied to be admitted to practice
law
in South African – since the coming into operation of the
Legal
Practice Act, no regulations
have been promulgated for the admission
of legal practitioners who have not previously qualified to do so.
The applicant
had not been admitted as an advocate prior to the
commencement of the
Legal Practice Act – the
applicant
accordingly does not qualify to be admitted to practice law in South
Africa. Her contentions that
section 24(3)
the
Legal Practice
Act is
unconstitutional were rejected. The alternate relief
sought to order the Minister of Justice to regulate the admission of
foreign legal practitioners and to designate the Kingdom of Lesotho
as a qualifying country was rejected as doing so would be crossing
the line separating the powers of the different arms of Government.
Application refused. The Biowatch principle applied
in respect
of costs.
ORDER
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
Each party is ordered to pay its own costs.
JUDGMENT
The
matter was heard in open court and the judgment was prepared and
authored by the judge whose name is reflected herein and was
handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic
file
of this matter on Caselines. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 2 December 2024
.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant is a
foreign legal practitioner and in terms of existing law does not
qualify to be admitted as a legal practitioner
to practice law in
South Africa. She contended that the law as it stands is
unconstitutional and that the previous dispensation
regarding the
admission of advocates should be “revived”. In the
alternative, she contended that the Minster
of Justice (the Minister)
should regulate the admission of foreign practitioners in such a
fashion that she (and others in her
position) be allowed to practice
law in South Africa.
The
parties
[2]
The applicant is a
foreign female legal practitioner. She has been admitted as an
advocate in Lesotho on 20 March 2023.
She is a citizen of the
Kingdom of Lesotho and is domiciled there. She currently
however, resides in Pretoria.
[3]
The applicant has
cited the Minister as the first respondent and the Minister of Trade,
Industry and Competition as the second respondent.
The Legal
Practice Council (the LPC) has been cited as the third respondent.
The Minister and the LPC has opposed the applicant’s
application. The second respondent merely delivered an
“explanatory affidavit”, abiding the decision of this
court.
The
application before this court
[4]
In
June 2023 the applicant launched an application in this court
[1]
for her admission as a legal practitioner in terms of the Legal
Practice Act
[2]
(the LPA).
In that application she relied on Section 24(3) of the LPA which she
claimed, when read with section 119(2), allowed
her to invoke section
5 of the Admission of Advocates Act
[3]
(the AAA).
[5]
After objection to
her application for admission by the LPC, the applicant withdrew that
application on 3 August 2023.
[6]
In August 2024, the
applicant launched the present application, in which she claimed the
following rather extensive relief:
“
2.
Declaring
section 24(3)
of the
Legal Practice Act, 2014
as amended,
(LPA) as unconstitutional and invalid to the extent that it does not
allow foreigners who have been admitted to practice
as advocates in
other jurisdictions to be admitted and authorised to be enrolled as
legal practitioners in Republic of South Africa.
3.
Declaring the conduct of the First,
Second and Third Respondents as unconstitutional and invalid
to the
extent that
3.1.
the First Respondent has failed to make
regulations in respect of the admission and enrolment of foreign
legal practitioners in the Republic of South Africa in that the First
Respondent has failed to determine the right of foreign legal
practitioners to appear in courts in the Republic and to practice as
legal practitioners in the Republic and/or give effect to
any mutual
recognition agreement to which the Republic is party, regulating the
provision of legal services by foreign legal practitioners
or the
admission and enrolment of foreign legal practitioners as required by
section 24(3)
of the LPA.
3.2.
the second and third respondents have failed to
ensure that the first respondent make regulations in respect
of the
admission and enrolment of foreign legal practitioners through
determining the right of foreign legal practitioners to appear
in
courts in the Republic and to practice as legal practitioners in the
Republic and/or give effect to any mutual recognition agreement
to
which the Republic is party, regulating the provision of legal
services by foreign legal practitioners or the admission and
enrolment of foreign legal practitioners as required by
section 24(3)
of the LPA.
3.3.
Alternatively to 3.2, the second and third
respondents have failed to consult with the first respondent
with the
view that the first respondent make regulations as contemplated in
section 24(3)
of the LPA.
3.
Further alternative to 3.2 and 3.3,
declaring that the second and third respondents were required, in
terms of
section 24(3)
of the LPA, to ensure that they consult with
the first respondent and the failure to ensure the said consultation
and resultant
failure of the first respondent to make regulations
contemplated in
section 24(3)
of the LPA is unconstitutional and
invalid.
5.
Directing that the Legislature amend
section 24(3)
of the LPA to create a right for foreign legal
practitioners who are admitted as advocates in other jurisdictions,
as recognised
by the Republic of South Africa in terms of
section119(2) of the LPA, to be admitted and enrolled as foreign
legal practitioners
in the Republic of South Africa.
6.
Pending amendment of
section 24(3)
of
the LPA, a declaration that section 5 of the Admission of Advocates
Act as read with section 119(2) of the LPA shall be a transitional
arrangement and all foreign legal practitioners who are admitted and
enrolled in other jurisdictions be eligible and entitled to
be
admitted and enrolled as foreign legal practitioners in the Republic
of South Africa.
7.
Alternative to 5, directing that the
first respondent and in consultation with the second and
third
respondents give effect to the provisions of section 24(3) of the
LPA, and the first respondent make regulations as contemplated
in
section 24(3) within 18 months from the date of the Court's order.
8.
Pending the making of regulations by
the first respondent (in consultation with the second and
third
respondents), a declaration that section 5 of the Admission of
Advocates Act as read with section 119(2) of the LPA shall
be a
transitional arrangement and all foreign legal practitioners who are
admitted and enrolled in other jurisdictions be eligible
and entitled
to be admitted and enrolled as foreign legal practitioners in the
Republic of South Africa.
9.
Directing that the first respondent
submits a progress report on the status of the regulatory
making
process within 12 months from the date of this Court's order.
10.
Ordering that failure by the first respondent to
make regulations within 18 months as ordered constitutes
contempt of
court and the first respondent be ordered to provide a list of names
of all the relevant officials who would have failed
to ensure that
the regulations are made as ordered and for a steps to be taken to
enforce compliance with this Order.
11.
Directing that should the first respondent not be
able to meet the deadline set out in prayer 7, above, that
the first
respondent seek an extension of the time periods on application fully
motivated and served all the parties in this process,
including such
parties joined as amicus curiae.
12.
Declaring that, pending the promulgation of the
regulations contemplated in section 24(3) of the LPA, that
section 5
of the
Admission of Advocates Act, 1964
is revived.
alternatively
to 12 above
13.
Declaring that the provisions of
section 5
of the
Admission of Advocates Act, 1964
are read into the provisions of
section 24(3)
pending the making of regulations by the First
Respondent as contemplated in
section 24(3).
3.81cm; text-indent: -1.27cm; margin-bottom: 0cm; line-height: 150%">
14.
Declaring that prayers 12 and 13 (as the context
shall require) shall apply in respect of all foreign legal
practitioners whether qualified before or after the commencement of
the
Legal Practice Act, 2014
as amended.
15.
The Third Respondent be authorised to enrol
foreign legal practitioners as advocate.
16.
Granting such just and equitable remedy, including
such appropriate relief as the Africa contemplated in
section 38 of
the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa 1996 as amended, as
the Honourable Court shall deem meet under the
circumstances.
17.
That the first, second and third respondent be
ordered to pay the costs of this application, including the
costs
occasioned by the employment of three counsel, jointly and severally
with the one paying and the others being absolved
”.
The
law
[7]
Section 5 of the AAA provided as follows: “
5.
Admission to practise in the
Republic of Advocates practising elsewhere
(1)
Notwithstanding anything
to the contrary in this Act contained but subject to the provisions
of any other law, any division may
admit to practise and authorise to
be enrolled as an advocate any person who upon application made by
him satisfies the court –
(a) that he has been admitted as an
advocate of the Supreme or High Court of any country or territory
outside the Republic which
the Minister has for the purpose of this
section designated by notice in the Gazette (in this Act referred to
as a designated country
or territory); … (b) … (c) …
(d) … (2) Any person who is admitted and authorised to
practise and to
be enrolled as an advocate in terms of subsection
(1), shall be enrolled as an advocate on the roll of advocates
”.
[8]
Prior to the repeal
of the AAA, the Kingdom of Lesotho had been a designated country.
[9]
The
whole of the AAA was repealed by the LPA
[4]
.
[10]
Practitioners who had
been entitled to avail themselves of the provisions of section 5 of
the AAA, had however been thrown a lifeline
after the repeal of that
Act by way of section 115 of the LPA. This provides as follows:
“
Any
person who, immediately before the date referred to in section 120(4)
was entitled to be admitted and enrolled as an advocate
… is,
after that date, entitled to be admitted and enrolled as such in
terms of this Act
”
.
[11]
The
commencement date of the applicable provisions of the LPA
contemplated in section 120(4) thereof, was 1 November 2018.
The implications of such commencement on applications for admission
had been fully explained by a full court, constituted in terms
of
section 14(1) of the Superior Courts Act
[5]
in
Ex
pate: Goosen and Others
[6]
(
Goosen
).
[12]
The “expanded”
order granted in
Goosen
clarified
the position of applicants wishing to avail themselves of section 115
of the LPA: It reads:
“
(1)
Any person who applied for admission to practice, whose application
was pending on 1 November 2018 is
entitled to invoke the provisions
of
section 115
of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
, in order,
thereby, to rely on the provisions of the
Admission of Advocates Act
74 of 1964
to be admitted in terms of
section 24
of the
Legal
Practice Act.
(2
)
Any person who applied for admission to practice, whose application
was pending on 1 November 2018
is entitled to invoke the provisions
of
section 115
of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
, in order,
thereby, to rely on the provisions of the Attorneys Act 53 of 1979 to
be admitted in terms of section 24 of the Legal
Practice Act.
(3)
Any person, who applies for admission to practice, on or after 1
November 2018, who wishes to
rely upon the requirements as set out in
section 3
of the
Admission of Advocates Act 74 of 1964
or section 15
of the Attorneys Act 53 of 1979, is entitled to invoke the provisions
of
section 115
of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
, in order,
thereby, to rely on the provisions of the
Admission of Advocates Act
or
the Attorneys Act to be admitted in terms of
section 24
of the
Legal Practice Act.
>
(4)
The appropriate formulation of an order admitting an applicant for
admission as a legal practitioner
in any of the categories mentioned
in (1), (2) and (3) is thus:
“
The
applicant is admitted to practice as a Legal Practitioner and the
Legal Practice Council is authorised to enrol the applicant
as an
[Attorney]/[Advocate]”.
[13]
In terms of the
section 24(2)
the LPA, admission to practice as a legal practitioner
(which includes those wishing to be enrolled as advocates), is
restricted
to South African citizens or permanent residents of the
Republic.
[14]
The
above restriction has been found to be Constitutionally compliant
[7]
.
[15]
In terms of
section
24(3)
of the LPA, the Minister “…
may,
in consultation with the Minister of Trade and Industry and after
consultation with the Council, and having regard to any relevant
international commitments of the Government of the Republic, make
regulations in respect of admission and enrolled to – (a)
determine the right of foreign legal practitioners to appear in
courts in the Republic and to practice as legal practitioners in
the
Republic or (b) give effect to any mutual recognition agreement to
which the Republic is a party, regulating (i) the provision
of legal
services by foreign legal practitioners or (ii) the admission and
enrolment of foreign legal practitioner
”
.
[16]
It is common cause
that the Minister has not made any regulations as contemplated.
The
applicants’ contentions
[17]
The
applicant concedes that, as the law currently stands and as
interpreted by the respondents, she is not entitled to be admitted
to
practice law in the Republic
[8]
.
Her suggestion is that “…
one
would have to read into
section 24(3)
the provisions of
section 5
…
”
of
the AAA
[9]
.
[18]
The applicant’s
further contentions are that she had a right (to be admitted to
practice law in the Republic) under the AAA,
which had been “taken
away” by its repeal. She argued that such a right could
be “revived” in terms
of
section 119(2)
of the LPA.
For this purpose, she alleged that the reasoning in
Goosen
“
cannot be used
to limit my rights”.
[19]
As
an alternative, the applicant contended that the Minister is under a
Constitutional duty to make regulations which would provide
for the
applicant’s admission and that the Minister of Trade and
Industry is equally so obliged. In addition, She accused
the
LPC to be “…
complicit
in the obstruction and deprivation of my rights …
”
.
[10]
[20]
Pursuant
to these contentions, the applicant averred that this “…
Court
should thus order that
section 5
of the
Admission of Advocates Act
continues
to exist until such time as the rights of foreign legal
practitioners are given effect to by the LPA. In making such an
order,
this Court would not be unduly trammelling and tramping upon
the terrain of the Legislature nor the Executive …
”
.
[11]
[21]
Lastly, the applicant
contended that
section 24(3)
of the LPA was unconstitutional as it
infringed upon her rights of equality, freedom of association and
dignity.
The
right to be admitted
[22]
The principal
argument of the applicant is that the “rights” which she
had in terms of the AAA had been “taken
away” from her.
[23]
The full court in
Goosen
explained that all
those who had acquired rights in terms of the AAA prior to its
repeal, retained those rights and were, in terms
of
section 115
of
the LPA, entitled to enforce or exercise them, despite the repeal of
that Act.
[24]
In simple terms, this
means that, had the applicant been admitted as an advocate in the
Kingdom of Lesotho before 1 November 2018,
she would, in the same
manner as those South Africans who had obtained LLB degrees before
that date, have been entitled to apply
to be enrolled after that
date, in terms of the LPA (on condition of course, that all the other
requirements, such as being a fit
and proper person without
convictions or pending proceedings, have been met).
[25]
The simple fact of
the matter is further that the applicant had not acquired such
rights. She was only admitted as an advocate
on 20 March 2023,
after having completed her practical vocational training from April
2019 to January 2020 (in the intervening
years she sought to do the
same in South Africa).
[26]
The retention
provision and the transitional or continued right created by section
115 of the LPA did not extend to rights which
had not yet been in
existence on 1 November 2018. Any rights which a prospective
legal practitioner might acquire after that
date, can only be
exercised in terms of the LPA and not the repealed AAA.
[27]
The applicant’s
argument that the LPA had “taken away” some of her
rights, is therefore unsustainable. At
the time the LPA had
come into operation, the applicant had no accrued rights.
[28]
The applicant’s
alternative argument, namely that the AAA, insofar as it provided for
the admission of foreign advocates from
designated countries, be kept
“alive” so that persons in the position of the applicant,
may at some future date after
1 November 2018, rely on the terms of a
repealed act of parliament, flies directly in the face of
parliamentary sovereignty. To
demand from a court that it deems the
provisions of an act of parliament still applicable when parliament
has expressly repealed
those provisions, would amount to law-making
way beyond the separation of powers principle.
[29]
On both these
principal assertions of an alleged right, the application should
fail.
The
Constitutional attacks
[30]
As an alternate line
of attack, the applicant averred that the repeal of the AAA, without
any equal replacement of the provision
for the admission of foreign
advocates as legal practitioners, infringed her Constitutional
rights. For this argument, she
sought to assert three rights,
namely that of freedom of association, that of equality and that of
dignity.
[31]
The right to freedom
of association has a deeply significant place in South Africa’s
previously legislated fractured past,
but to claim that a foreign
advocate is denied this right simply because she cannot practice law
in South Africa, is stretching
the right of association too far.
The applicant is still free to associate with whomsoever she wishes,
but the exclusion
placed on her association with other members of the
South African legal profession due to the fact that she is not a
South African
legal practitioner, cannot be cured by invoking section
18 of the Constitution.
[32]
The
reason for this is situated in the nature of the right of association
guaranteed by Section 18. This generally encompasses
the right
to associate with others in political, cultural or religious
associations. This association with others does not
encompass
the freedom to choose one’s profession. That is
separately provided for in section 22 of the Constitution,
which also
provides that the practice of a profession, in this case law, may be
regulated by law. This regulation is currently
the LPA.
Such regulation often occurs in respect of commercial or professional
associations.
[12]
[33]
As already stated,
the LPA restricts admission of legal practitioners to those who are
either citizens of the Republic or permanently
resident therein.
The Constitutional Court has in
Rafoneke
above, found that
this limitation is constitutionally justifiable on the basis of
rationality.
[34]
The
Constitutional Court found in this regard that, once it is accepted
that the State may regulate entry into the legal profession
in terms
of Section 22 of the Constitution, the limitation placed on such
entry to citizens and permanent residents, is in itself
Constitutionally justifiable. The Court put it as follows: “
In
order to assess the rationality of the decision, the provisions of
section 24(2) cannot be considered without due regard to section
22
of the Constitution, which, as already stated, empowers the state to
regulate the profession … There is no issue
that the LPA
does so. The legislature is therefore at liberty to decide how
far to extend the admission into the legal profession
to non-citizens
and it has chosen to draw the line at permanent residents …
once it is accepted, as stated in Final Certification
[13]
,
that the country has no duty to extend the right of freedom of trade,
occupation and profession to non-citizens, it cannot be
gainsaid that
it may be rational for the state to adopt legislation which has, its
legitimate object, the restriction of access
to the profession.
And section 24(2) is such legislation
”
.
[14]
[35]
By parity of
reasoning, the exclusion of foreign advocates to practice law in the
Republic, save in some regulated instances, should
also pass
Constitutional muster. The wish to exercise a right to
associate with a professional body cannot trump this regulation
and
neither can the right to associate therefore equate to a right to be
admitted beyond the regulatory limitations imposed by
the LPA.
The
right to equality
[36]
The applicant argued
that she is, as a Mosotho, not treated as other Basotho advocates who
had previously been admitted to practice
in the Republic under the
AAA. She is correct. The law has changed by the time she
was admitted as an advocate in the
Kingdom of Lesotho.
[37]
A similar change
befell those who only obtained their LLB degrees after 1 November
2018. They could also no longer be admitted
as advocates under
the AAA as it had been repealed, and they now would have to qualify
to be admitted as legal practitioners in
terms of the LPA.
[38]
In
Goosen
,
the court held that: “
The
objective and the effect of the LPA is deliberately to revolutionise
the regulation of the South African Legal Profession.
The LPA
regime is in stark contrast from the two former regimes which were
distinctly asymmetrical. [the court then referred
to the
different “pathways” to the professions of advocates and
attorneys which had previously existed]. The
LPA unambiguously
prescribes vocational training as a sine qua non for admission to
practice and unequivocally repudiates the anomaly
that has existed in
respect of advocates under the repealed AAA regime, in terms of which
advocates unlike attorneys, could be
unleashed on the litigating
public, bereft of any vocational training whatsoever. Thus, an
unpalatable anachronism has been
extinguished
”
.
Of course, this declaration only applied to those advocates who had
been admitted solely on the basis of having possessed
an LLB degree
and not those advocates who had, in addition thereto, undergone
pupillage and passed the rigorous bar exams of the
organized
advocates profession.
[39]
Nevertheless, the
differentiation imposed by the LPA is between those who had
previously qualified under a repealed regime and those
who would now
qualify under a “new” regime. This differentiation
is something quite distinct from the differentiation
complained of by
the applicant. She is, in fact, treated on equal footing as all
other prospective legal practitioners who
only qualified after 1
November 2018. All such prospective practitioners can only pass
the “gateway” to the profession
upon satisfaction of the
provisions of the LPA.
[40]
The differentiation
imposed by the two acts in question is therefore not on any of the
prohibited grounds mentioned in section 9(3)
of the Constitution,
being race, gender, sex, pregnancy, marital status, ethnic or social
origin, colour, sexual orientation, age,
disability, religion,
conscience, belief, culture, language or even birth. I
therefore find that the applicant’s right
to equality is not
being infringed upon by section 24(3) of the LPA.
[41]
Similar arguments had
unsuccessfully featured in
Rafoneke
and the justification
of any infringement upon a right to equality by differentiating
between citizens and non-citizens, should
apply to the
differentiation between those citizens and permanent residents who
qualify to be admitted and foreign practitioners
who had been
admitted outside the Republic.
Right
to dignity
[42]
The third
Constitutional right which the applicant seeks to assert, is her
right to dignity.
[43]
She
claims that the provisions of the LPA “…
tramples
on my self-worth, recognition and fulfillment as a legal practitioner
as I do not have any recourse to get admitted and
enrolled as a
foreign practitioner. The result is that, despite spending the
better part of my life in South Africa, I am
destined to be unable to
make a living … with the limited opportunities and
participating (sic?) South Africans within its
territory, young
practitioners as myself are left to fend for the scraps that remain,
and which scraps are not sufficient for a
sustainable livelihood.
One, notwithstanding the sacrifices, would be compelled to resile
oneself to abject poverty and which
poverty would be alleviated by
being afforded an opportunity to practice within the Republic of
South Africa
”
.
[15]
[44]
The emotive nature of
these averments aside, they are not a model of clarity. It
appears that the applicant claims that she
is admitted to practice
law in the Kingdom of Lesotho, but cannot make a living there and
that, if she is not allowed to practice
law and make a living in
South Africa, her dignity is thereby infringed.
[45]
Firstly, as also
pointed out in
Rafoneke
,
South Africa as a sovereign country is not under any obligation to
treat foreign prospective legal practitioners on the same footing
as
South African citizens and permanent residents. Secondly, the
fact that the applicant may experience financial hardship
in
practicing law in her own country, does not as of right entitle her
to demand to do so in South Africa. This is also the
point made
in the Minister’s answering affidavit.
[46]
Moreover,
the applicant’s averments are gainsaid by her own evidence: she
has completed vocational training in South Africa
and had already
been studying for the completion of her LLD in South Africa. In
this regard she conceded: “…
having
a doctorate in law is regarded as a critical skill. Only
upon obtaining the LLD, will I be eligible to apply
for a work permit
and then the possibility [exists] that I may sometime in the future
qualify for a permanent residence permit
”
.
[16]
[47]
It can hardly be
argued that the Constitutionally permissible regulation of entry to
the legal profession, infringes on a person’s
dignity,
including that of the applicant.
Designation
of the Kingdom of Lesotho
[48]
The
applicant started off her attack on the LPA under this rubric by
pointing out that South African advocates have historically
been
admitted and allowed to practice law in the Kingdom of Lesotho upon
proof that they had continuously been practicing as such
for five
years and remained admitted in South Africa.
[17]
[49]
The applicant also
referred to the fact that the Kingdom of Lesotho had historically
been designated by the then Minister as a designated
country for
purposes of the AAA, on 19 November 2004.
[50]
Apart from the above
two aspects, she could not produce any other reciprocal covenant or
agreement, committing the two countries
to bilateral recognition of
legal practitioners admitted in the respective countries.
[51]
The applicant also
referred to legislation in other neighbouring countries such as
Zimbabwe, Botswana and eSwatini. Prudently
though, she stated:
“
While
I have enclosed the Acts of various countries, these are attached for
illustrative purposes and for context. I pass
no comments
thereon and the first respondent is best placed to comment [thereon]
and/or such other person that has relationship
with those countries
and the relevant laws
”
.
[52]
I also do not find it
necessary to analyse the foreign legislation referred to, save to
point out that the permissive allowance
of foreign legal
practitioners (including advocates) to practice in these countries,
either in general or on an ad hoc basis only,
are neither uniform,
nor unqualified in all instances.
[53]
The point which the
applicant does make, however, is that section 24(3) of the LPA
envisages the promulgation of regulations in
terms of which foreign
legal practitioners may either appear in South African courts or be
admitted and enrolled to practice law
in South Africa. Her
point is further that, since no such regulations have been
promulgated, her “rights” are
thereby denied her.
[54]
Firstly, the section
is couched in the permissive form. The Minister “may”,
but is not obliged to make the regulations
in question. This is
a point heavily relied on by the Minister.
[55]
In answer to the
question as to why, despite the permissive wording of the section, no
regulations have been made in the six years
since 1 November 2018,
the Minister replied that primarily, the right to be admitted as a
legal practitioner in South Africa, is
located in section 24(1) and
24(2) of the LPA and not in section 24(3). Sections 24(1) and
24(2) read with section 115 give
effect to section 22 of the
Constitution and provide for three categories of persons who may be
admitted to practice, namely citizens,
permanent residents and those
who, before the LPA came into operation, were entitled to be admitted
and enrolled as legal practitioners.
[56]
The Minister further
contended that the legal profession (including the practice as an
advocate) is not a scarce or critical skill.
The government
policy decision underlying the differentiation contained in the LPA,
seeks to ensure that the rights of citizens
and permanent residents
to practice law are preserved. The Law society of South Africa
(the LSSA) has previously highlighted,
in documents filed in
Rafoneke
,
that a blanket provision allowing non-citizens to qualify for
admission as legal practitioners would have a negative impact on
South African graduates who already find it difficult to secure entry
into the profession. The differentiation contained
in the
permissive regulation of the legal profession therefore serves a
lawful and rational purpose.
[57]
The Minister further
contended that the differentiation is also not unfair insofar as it
does not preclude the applicant from working
in South Africa or from
rendering legal services in other capacities than that which only
admitted legal practitioners may provide.
[58]
Against this
background, it was stated on behalf of the Minister, that the fact
that no regulations had been made, was not as a
result of a failure,
but as a result of an ongoing evaluative and consultative process.
This much is also clear from the
wording of section 24(3) which
envisages input from the LPC and the third respondent.
[59]
It cannot be
overemphasized that the making of regulations allowing foreign
practitioners admission in South Africa remain permissive
and not
obligatory. The permissive wording of the section, mirrors the
finding in
Rafoneke
that there is no
obligation on the state or the Minister to extend the right to
practice law in South Africa beyond the three categories
mentioned in
par [53] above.
[60]
In a last-ditch
attempt to establish such an obligation, the applicant relied on the
General Agreement of Trade in Services (the
GATS). South Africa
is a member of the World Trade Organisation (the WTO). The GATS
is an international multilateral
treaty of the WTO concerned with the
liberalization of trade in services among member states. It is,
however not a mutual
recognition agreement (MRA) as contemplated in
section 24(3). The applicant has also not identified any
provisions in the
GATS which could have been elevated beyond its
general tenor to constitute a MRA between South African and any other
specified
country, in particular the Kingdom of Lesotho, which would
have provided for reciprocal admission or recognition of legal
practitioners.
[61]
Even the
sector-specific commitments made by member states of the WTO in the
Schedule of Specific Commitments to the GATS, do not
assist the
applicant. While South Africa has made commitments under Mode 3
(commercial presence) and Mode 4 (movement of
natural persons) of the
GATS, no commitment had been made in respect of cross-border supply
of legal services. This again,
reflects the exercise of
sovereign policy referred to in
Rafoneke
.
[62]
There is therefore,
no obligation, statutory or otherwise, on the Minister to have made
regulations which would have entitled the
applicant to apply for
admission. It follows from this that where the Minister has no
such obligation, the accusation by
the applicant of collusion on the
part of the LPC is not only misplaced, but scurrilous. On the
same basis, the applicant
cannot claim that the third respondent be
compelled to consult with the Minister who is not in the process of
promulgating regulations.
This point was expressly made by the
third respondent, whilst otherwise abiding the decision of the court.
Legislative
powers
[63]
The applicant sought
an alternative way around the obstacle of the absence of regulations
by arguing that section 24(3) of the LPA
impermissively delegated
legislative powers to the Minister.
[64]
This
argument was formulated as follows in the Heads of Argument filed on
behalf of the applicant: “
the
right [to be admitted] is created in section 24(1) as constructively
read with sections 24(3), sections 94(1)(f) through the
provisions of
section 233
[18]
of
the Constitution together with the GATS … to the extent it may
be suggested that Parliament and/or the legislature delegated
its
powers of primary law-making to the First Respondent (working
together with the Second and Third Respondents), we submit that
such
a delegation would, in law, be impermissible and ergo, unlawful.
That is, if the LPA does not create the right, then
the LPA would
have delegated primary law-making responsibility to the Executive and
this is not permissible. The First Respondent
can only make
subordinate legislation
”
.
[65]
Firstly, as already
explained above, the applicant has no right to be admitted to
practice law in South Africa. That right
is, in terms of the
LPA limited to the three categories already mentioned above. In
South Africa, this right may be extended
to practitioners from
foreign jurisdictions to permit them to be admitted and/or enrolled
to practice in the Republic. These
permissions are provided for
by way of sub-ordinated legislation by way of regulations which the
Minister may make after consultation
with the profession (represented
by the LPC) and taking into account economic realities, provided for
by consultation with the
Minister of Trade and Industry.
[66]
In making the
regulations, the Minister would therefore not “create”
rights, but merely extend the rights afforded existing
categories of
practitioners, to practitioners who enjoy similar rights in their own
countries.
[67]
In
my view, these permissive regulations do not constitute primary
law-making functions and are similar to those of the Minister
of
Finance under the Customs and Excise Act
[19]
recently considered by the Constitutional Court in
Nu
Africa Duty Free Shops (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Finance and
Others
[20]
.
Therein the Court reaffirmed that the delegating of authority to make
sub-ordinate legislation within the framework of a
statute which
permits delegation, is permissible.
[68]
In the present
instance, the LPA permits such delegation. It does so in
section 94(1) which provides that “
The
Minister may, and where required in the circumstances, must …
make regulations relating to – … (f) the admission
and
enrollment of foreign legal practitioners as contemplated in section
24(3)
”
.
Section 24(3) as already indicated, only contains use of the
permissive “may” and not the obligatory “must”
as, for example in section 6(1)(b) (the obligation of the LPC to
develop norms and standards for the legal profession); section
14(1)(a) (the obligation of the Minister to take certain steps if he
or she does loses confidence in the LPC to perform its functions),
or
section 29(1) (the obligation of the Minister to prescribe the
requirements for community services).
Conclusion
[69]
I conclude that the
applicant has not made out a case for the relief sought and that the
application must fail. Apart from
the debates already set out
above, the most succinct way to summarise the basis for this
conclusion is to do so with reference
to the relief claimed, which is
where this judgment commenced.
Prayer
2: declaring section 24(3) of the LPA unconstitutional “…
to
the extent that it does not allow foreigners who have been admitted
to practice as advocates in other jurisdictions to be admitted
and
authorised to be enrolled as legal practitioners in the Republic
”
.
[70]
The impugned section
is not unconstitutional. It reflects the sovereign policy
choice of the Legislature and does not unfairly
discriminate against
the applicant (or any other person in a similar position) on any of
the impermissible grounds set out in section
9(3) of the
Constitution. Section 24(3) of the LPA also does not infringe
the applicant’s rights to human dignity nor
her right of
association. It simply regulates access to the legal profession
as contemplated in section 22 of the Constitution.
Prayer
3 and its sub-prayers and alternatives: Declaring the conduct of the
Minister and other respondents as constitutionally invalid
to the
extent that regulations have not been made which would have allowed
the applicant to be admitted and enrolled as an advocate
in South
Africa
.
[71]
Neither the Minister
nor the State has any obligation to extend the right to practice law
in South Africa to persons other than
qualifying citizens and
permanent residents and those persons who had previously qualified to
be so admitted and to whom section
115 of the LPA applies. The
delegated authority to, by regulation, extend these rights to persons
such as the applicant,
is permissive and not obligatory and has not
(yet), been exercised.
Prayer
5: Directing the legislature to amend section 24(3) of the LPA to
create a right for foreign practitioners
.
[72]
A court cannot grant
this relief as it would, in doing so, impermissibly cross the line
separating the powers between the judiciary
and the legislative arm
of government.
Prayer
6 – 11: Transitional provisions, providing for the enactment of
legislative changes, the promulgation of regulations
progress reports
and contempt of court proceedings and the like
.
[73]
In view of the fact
that the relief sought in prayers 2, 3, 4 and 5 cannot be granted,
these “subsidiary” prayers can
also not be granted.
Prayers
12, 13 and 14: Declaring that section 5 of the Admission of the
Advocates Act be “revived”
.
[74]
Not
only does the applicant not have a right to this relief, such a
declaration of “revival” of a repealed Act would
be a
direct and impermissible encroachment on Parliament’s
legislative prerogative. The applicant’s reliance
on
section 119(2)
[21]
of the LPA
is misplaced as any retention of the AAA rights would be inconsistent
with the repeal thereof. The only retentions
provided for, are
those contemplated in section 115, as already explained.
Prayer
15: Directing the LPC “to enroll foreign legal practitioners as
advocates”
.
[75]
Apart from the sheer
overbroad formulation of this relief, the LPC can only enroll
practitioners when authorised to do so in terms
of the LPA. The
claim for this relief is therefore, both in general and in the
circumstances of this case, incompetent.
Prayer
16: Granting a just and equitable remedy as contemplated in section
38 of the Constitution
.
[76]
Appropriate relief
may only be granted by a court in terms of section 38 of the
Constitution in circumstances where a right contained
in the Bill of
Rights has been infringed or threatened. The claim of a foreign
advocate to practice law in South Africa without
otherwise satisfying
the provisions of the LPA, is not such a right. As already
indicated, no other right contemplated in
Chapter 2 of the
Constitution is being infringed upon or is under threat by the LPA.
Costs
[77]
In
the event that this court declined to grant the applicant the relief
that she sought, she contended that the Biowatch-principle
[22]
should apply. The respondents, in particular the LPC, contended
that costs should follow the event. Even if the applicant’s
reliance on purported breaches of her Constitutional rights were
tenuous from the start, in similar fashion as in
Rafoneke
,
I determined that each party should pay its own costs. In
exercising my discretion in this fashion, I have not lost sight
of
the nature of the LPC, but find that even it is subject to the
Biowatch-principle.
Order
[78]
In the circumstances, the following order is made.
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
Each party is ordered to pay its own costs.
N DAVIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 30 July 2024
Judgment
delivered: 2 December 2024
APPEARANCES:
For the Applicant:
Adv M Ramaili SC
together with
Adv K Mvubu and Adv
K Maponya
Attorney for the
Applicant:
Mphahlele and
Masipa Attorneys
Inc., Pretoria.
For the 1
st
& 2
nd
Respondent:
Adv K Moroka SC
together with
Adv M Lekoane
Attorney for the
Respondent:
State Attorney,
Pretoria
For the 3
rd
Respondent:
Mr R Stocker
Attorney for the
Respondent:
Rooth & Wessels
Inc, Pretoria
[1]
Case No 066092/2023.
[2]
28 of 2014.
[3]
74 of 1964.
[4]
See the Schedule to the LPA read with section 119 thereof.
[5]
10 of 2013.
[6]
2019 (3) SA 489 (GJ).
[7]
Rafoneke
and Ano v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others
2022 (6) SA 27 (CC).
[8]
Par 15 and 17 of the Founding Affidavit.
[9]
Par 13 of the Found Affidavit.
[10]
Par 29.6 of the Founding Affidavit.
[11]
Par 74 of the Founding Affidavit.
[12]
See, for example:
Law
Society of the Transvaal v Tloubatla
1999
(11) BCLR 1275 (T).
[13]
Ex
parte Chairperson of the Constitutional Assembly
:
In re
Certification of the Amended Text of the Constitution of South
Africa
1996
1997
(2) SA 97 (CC)
.
[14]
Rafoneke
paras
[77] to [79].
[15]
Paras 81 and 86 of the founding affidavit.
[16]
Par 25.7 of the founding affidavit.
[17]
This was, and possibly still is, the position in terms of section
6(1)(c)(ii) of the Legal Practitioners Act 11 of 1983 (Lesotho)
[18]
This section provides that, when interpreting legislation, a court
should prefer an interpretation which is consistent with
international law.
[19]
91 of 1964.
[20]
2024 (1) SA 567 (CC).
[21]
Section 119(2) of the LPA merely provides that prior notices,
regulations, promulgations made under the AAA remain in force,
but
“…
except
insofar as it is inconsistent with any of the provisions of this
Act
”
.
[22]
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar, Genetic Resources
2009
(6) SA 232
(CC).
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