Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 168South Africa
Nonxuba v South African Legal Practice Council and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 168; 11897/22 (7 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
6 October 2022
Headnotes
albeit obiter, that the wording of the subsection raised the bar for the test that now has to be applied to any application for leave to appeal.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Nonxuba v South African Legal Practice Council and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 168; 11897/22 (7 March 2023)
Nonxuba v South African Legal Practice Council and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 168; 11897/22 (7 March 2023)
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sino date 7 March 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No:
11897/22
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: NO
REVISED
07
MARCH 2023
In
the matter between:
NONXUBA:
NOVELWANO ALICIA
APPLICANT
and
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN LEGAL
FIRST RESPONDENT
PRACTICE
COUNCIL
THE
LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL:
SECOND RESPONDENT
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL OFFICE
JUDGMENT
IN THE APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
NDLOKOVANE
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1.]
This is an
application for leave to appeal by
Applicant
to the Supreme Court Appeal against the whole judgment and cost order
that I delivered on 6 October 2022 in which judgment
the Applicant's
application for the review and set aside of the Respondents decision
to refuse issuance of a Fidelity Fund Certificate
in her own newly
established firm, N A Nonxuba Attorneys was dismissed with costs.
[2.]
The application for leave to appeal is
sought in terms of the provisions of Section 16(1)(a)(i) read with
Section 17(1)(a)(i)
and (ii) of the
Superior Courts Act, 2013
(‘the
Act”).
[3.]
The application for leave to appeal is opposed by the first and
second respondents (‘the
respondents’).
[4.]
For the sake of convenience, I will refer to the parties as they are
cited in the main
judgment. After delivery of the judgment on the 6
th
October 2022, the applicant filed a detailed notice of application
for leave to appeal dated 17 October 2022.In support of the
application for leave to appeal, the respondent relies on a number of
grounds and these can be summarised as follow:
“
4.1
The court failed to appreciate that the Applicant's previous
directorship in Nonxuba Inc. was in fact irrelevant for the purposes
of her review application.
4
.2 The court inexplicably, in arriving at its conclusion, ignored the
fact and/or failed to appreciate the significance of the
fact that
the Applicant had resigned from Nonxuba Inc. in September 2021.
4.3
The court failed to appreciate that the Applicant had applied for a
Fidelity Fund Certificate, not as a director of Nonxuba
Inc. but as
the sole practitioner in her own newly established firm, N A Nonxuba
Attorneys.
4.4
The court also failed to have sufficient regard to the fact that the
Second Respondent was fully appraised of the fact that
the Applicant
was no longer employed at Nonxuba Inc. and that they, in fact, had
assisted her in setting up her new firm.
4.5
The learned judge erred in finding that the case (with reference to
the Western Cape litigation) against the Applicant and her
husband
was serious, in circumstances where the only reason why the Applicant
was joined to her husband's application was to regulate
procedural
issues and not because there was any case against her or any case for
her to answer.
4.6
The order of Le Roux AJ contains only an undertaking by the
Applicant, as an employee of Nonxuba Inc., not to take steps to
enforce any judgment or orders granted in execution proceedings.
4.7
The Applicant was not joined to the Conditional Application. In terms
of the Le Roux AJ order, her husband and "any other
person
authorised to operate the trust accounts" was prohibited from
operating on the trust account. As an attorney in the
employ of
Nonxuba Inc. the Applicant was thus prohibited from operating on the
trust account.
4.8
The Le Roux AJ order is premised on the fact that the Applicant was
employed at Nonxuba Inc., which she was at the relevant
time.
4.9
The court failed to appreciate that upon the Applicant's resignation
from Nonxuba Inc, the Le Roux AJ order became redundant
in relation
to herself.
4.10
The court failed to appreciate that the Western Cape litigation
against her husband was in fact irrelevant for the purposes
of her
application.
4.11
The court erred in finding that the Le Roux AJ order "has the
effect of a suspension.
4.12
The court erred in not finding that the Applicant satisfied the
requirements for a Fidelity Fund Certificate to be issued to
her.
More specifically, the court erred in not finding that the Applicant
applied for a certificate to be issued to her as a sole
practitioner
of her own legal practice and such application for a certificate had
nothing to do with Nonxuba Inc.
4.13
The court erred in not finding that there are no objective facts
which support the contention that the Applicant has not complied
with
Chapter 7 of the Legal Practice Act, 2014 ("the LPA") other
than the Respondents ‘subjective "concern"
regarding
her previously employer's trust account.
4.14
The
court erred in not finding that the decision of the Second Respondent
in refusing to issue the Applicant with a Certificate
was
constitutionally unlawful, unreasonable, irrational and influenced by
an error of law and fact.
4.15
The court erred in not finding that the decision of Van Staden was
based on a consideration of irrelevant and immaterial information.
4.16
The court erred in not finding that the decision of Van Staden
constituted an unreasonable exercise of a power and/or function.
4.17
The court erred in not finding that there is no evidence to support a
decision that the Applicant did not comply with chapter
7 of the LPA.
The court erred in finding that the judgment of the
Supreme Court
of Appeal in Law Society of the Northern Provinces v Vijloen
(094/2010); Law Society of the Northern Provinces v Dykes
(648/2010)
(2010) ZASCA 176
(02 December 2010) ("the Vijloen judgment
")
was not applicable and reliance thereon was misconceived.
4.18
The court, with respect, confused and conflated the requirements for
the issuing of a Fidelity Fund Certificate with the requirements
for
being a fit and proper person to act as an attorney. The court erred
in assessing the fitness and properness of the Applicant
to act as an
attorney and failed to properly consider whether she had complied
with the requirements for a Fidelity Fund Certificate.(my
own
emphasis)”
The
test in an application for leave to appeal.
[5.]
Applications for leave to appeal are governed by ss 16 and 17 of the
Act. Section
17 makes provision for leave to appeal to be
granted where the presiding judge is of the opinion that either the
appeal would have
a reasonable prospect of success or there is some
other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard, including
whether there
are conflicting judgments on the matter under
consideration.
[6.]
Reasonable prospects of success has previously been defined to mean
that there is a reasonable
possibility that another court may come to
a different decision.
[7.]
With the enactment of s17 of the Act, the test has now obtained
statutory force and is
to be applied using the word ‘
would’
in
deciding whether to grant leave. In other words, the test is would
another court come to a different decision. In the unreported
decision of the
Mont
Chevaux Trust v
Goosen
&
18 others
[1]
,
the Land Claims Court held,
albeit
obiter
,
that the wording of the subsection raised the bar for the test that
now has to be applied to any application for leave to appeal.
[8.]
In the present matter, I would have to determine whether another
court
would
(my
emphasis) come to a different decision.
I
have considered the application for leave to appeal and the oral
submissions of the parties.
[9.]
A proper consideration of the applicants’ heads of arguments
and oral submissions
made during the course of argument , the
applicants’ counsel, as would be expected, submitted that
I
erred by assessing the fitness and properness of the Applicant to act
as an attorney and failed to properly consider whether she
had
complied with the requirements for a Fidelity Fund Certificate.
[10.]
In contrast, the respondent’s counsel submitted that in
paragraph 18 of the respondent’s
heads of arguments:
“
The
applicant’s liability for irregularities in the operations of
the trust account of Nonxuba Inc,despite her feigning ignorance,
is a
point of law and has been established. The Applicant’s
culpability is not different from that of her husband. Directors
of a
juristic entity through which a legal practice is conducted, cannot
contract themselves out of their legal obligations. The
Applicant’s
convoluted explanation of non-directorship that remains directorship,
is the evidence of the transgression”.
[11.]
Turning to the legal prescripts applicable in the present case and
also referred to in paragraph 7
of the main judgement,
Rule
54.29 of the LPC Rules in particular provides that:
“
in order to qualify
for the issue of a fidelity fund certificate, a trust account
practitioner must ensure that an unqualified audit
or inspector's
report is issued in respect of any firm or firms of which he is or
was a partner or director or sole practitioner
during the financial
period under review and is delivered timeously to the Council”.
[12.]
It is not denied that the Applicant
being an admitted attorney of this Court, commenced practicing as an
attorney in her husband's
(ZMM Nonxuba) law firm, Nonxuba Inc. in the
beginning of 2018. as a salaried Director and employee of Nonxuba
Inc. Due to the ongoing
litigation against her husband and his firm,
and her concern of the impact thereof on her as an attorney, the
Applicant resigned
from Nonxuba Inc. in September 2021.
[13.]
In October 2021, she established her own practice, NA Nonxuba
Attorneys. She also opened her own trust
account. For the first time,
as an attorney, the Applicant now operates, controls and is
responsible for her own trust account.
The Applicant applied for a
Fidelity Fund Certificate for the year 2022. This was done on the
on-line application platform. She
successfully completed all the
required parameters of the on-line application form. With regard to
the submission of the audit
certificate pertaining to her trust
account, she advised that this is for the future as she had only
commenced practice in October
2021 and her trust account was still to
be audited. On 8 February 2022, she was verbally advised that the
Second Respondent had
an issue with the audit of Nonxuba Inc, where
she used to hold a position of the Director.
[14.]
This was followed by the decision of the first and/or second
respondents made on or about 14 February
2022, in terms of which the
applicant's application for a Fidelity Fund Certificate was refused.
The letter that constitutes the
“decision” in refusing the applicant the certificate. It
becomes important to re-iterate
the relevant extracts from the said
letter as it sets out the respondents’ reasons for their
decision:
“
Your
client was admitted as an attorney on 6 February 2018, as has been
detailed in her letter, practised as a director of Nonxuba
Incorporated where she was required to be in possession of a Fidelity
Fund Certificate in terms of Section 84 (1) of the LPA. She
is as
such not for the first time required to have a Fidelity Fund
Certificate. The provisions of Section 47.7.2 are thus applicable
to
application for the Fidelity Fund Certificate.
The
South African Legal Practice Council (“the LPC”) has
noted concerns with the management of the trust account of
Nonxuba
incorporated which concerns are subject to ongoing litigation under
WCHC Case Nr. 10313-21 (to which Mrs Nonxuba is a party).
As has been
outlined by the LPC in its papers, this litigation is subject to a
confidentiality provision. As such the LPC is unable
to raise its
concerns relating to the audit certificate issued to Nonxuba Inc. for
the year 2021 with either the auditor responsible
or Independent
Regulatory Body for Auditors.
The
LPC will be unable to accept the 2021 audit certificate for Nonxuba
Inc, until its litigation is finalised.
As
such your client fails to meet the requirements for a Fidelity Fund
Certificate to be issued in her name...”
The
letter then continues:
“
According
to our records your client was a director of Nonxuba Incorporated
effective from 7 February 2018
As
outlined above, Nonxuba Inc administered its trust account in
accordance with the LPA and the Rules to subject to ongoing
litigation
under WCHC case number 10313/2021.
As
such and until the aforementioned litigation is finalised and the LPC
has satisfied itself that the relevant regulatory provisions
have
been complied with, the LPC does not regard your client as having
complied with Chapter 7 of the LPA.”
[19.]
Having considered the arguments presented by the both parties in the
leave to appeal, the authorities
applicable in this regard, the
reasons furnished in the main judgement against those reasons
furnished by the respondents for the
refusal, I am not satisfied that
reasonable prospects of a successful appeal exist. In fact, I am of
the view that there is no
reasonable prospect that another court
would differ with me.
ORDER
[20.]
In the result the following order is made:
1.
Leave to appeal is refused.
2.
The applicant is to pay the costs of the application for leave to
appeal.
N
NDLOKOVANE AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Delivered:
this judgment was prepared and authored by the judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically and by
circulation to the
parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on Caselines.
The date for handing
down is deemed to be 07 March 2023.
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPLICANT:
ADV. C. MCKELVEY
FOR
THE FIRST AND SECOND RESPONDENTS:
ADV C TSHAVHUNGWA
HEARD
ON:
25 NOVEMBER 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
07 MARCH 2023
[1]
2014
JDR 2325
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