Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 397South Africa
South African Legal Practice Council v Langa and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 397; 79330/2018 (31 March 2023)
Headnotes
the monies in trust and only took R40 000 for his own account as agreed. The rest of the miscommunication transpired because of the closure of his law firm.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## South African Legal Practice Council v Langa and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 397; 79330/2018 (31 March 2023)
South African Legal Practice Council v Langa and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 397; 79330/2018 (31 March 2023)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 79330/2018
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date:
31/3/2023
WJ
du Plessis
In
the matter between:
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
APPLICANT
and
THEMBA
BENEDICT LANGA
1ST RESPONDENT
THEMBA
LANGA INCORPORATED
2ND RESPONDENT
(REGISTRATION
NUMBER 2[...])
LANGA
INCORPORATED
3RD RESPONDENT
(REGISTRATION
NUMBER: 2[...])
JUDGMENT
DU
PLESSIS AJ
[1]
This is an application to remove Mr Themba Benedict Langa's name from
the roll of legal practitioners. Mr Langa (hereafter the Respondent)
was admitted and enrolled as an attorney of the court on 16
September
1997, and has been practising for his own account since 1 February
1999 under the name and style of Langa Attorneys.
He also practised
under the names of the Second and Third Respondent, albeit without
informing the secretary of the Applicant of
such a fact.
[2]
He was suspended by this court from practice as a legal practitioner
on
27 November 2018, pending this hearing of the application for the
removal of his name from the roll of legal practitioners. The
case
was postponed for various reasons after that, and eventually enrolled
and heard on 31 January 2023.
# The complaints
The complaints
[3]
The
application by the Legal Practice Council rests on various complaints
and allegations. They will be listed and discussed briefly,
including
the First Respondent's answers to them. I do not intend to deal with
each of them separately, as this court is tasked
with determining
whether the Respondent is a fit and proper person. This does not
depend on factual findings but lies in the court's
discretion.
[1]
However, this discretion is informed by what the complaints indicate
as to the personal qualities of the Respondent, concerning
the
prestige, status and dignity of the profession, the integrity and
standards of professional conduct, and the responsibility
of
practitioners.
[2]
i.
Complaint 1: The Respondent failed to lodge an unqualified audit
report for the period
ending 28 February 2018. He was also not issued
Fidelity Fund Certificates for the years commencing January 2016,
January 2017,
and January 2018 and is thus practised unlawfully.
The Respondent denies
that there are problems with his accounts and instead attributes it
to "bad debts particularly an outstanding
bill to advocates"
who raided his office, coupled with "the shadow of the economic
woes of the Republic"
that also affected the firm. Since
the practice was no longer operational, he states, there is no valid
complaint with regards
to the Fidelity Fund.
ii.
Complaint 2: Ms Mathuloe laid a complaint after she instructed the
Respondent to act
on her behalf in a Road Accident Fund matter, which
included securing the removal of her attorney of record. After this,
the Respondent
denied the complainant access to her RAF funds. He,
after that, could not be contacted and moved offices without
furnishing Ms
Mathuloe with new contact particulars.
The crux of the
Respondent's answer
[3]
to these
allegations is that he took on this matter
pro
bono
to
help out Ms Mathuloe, his neighbour and that he never had the mandate
to act on her behalf. He held the monies in trust and
only took
R40 000 for his own account as agreed. The rest of the
miscommunication transpired because of the closure of his
law firm.
iii.
Complaint 3: Billy Gundelfinger Attorneys laid a complaint in that
the Respondent
failed to respond to letters, was dishonest and
unprofessional towards his colleagues, gave irrational responses,
evaded the issues
raised and behaved in a racist manner. All this
brings the profession into disrepute.
The Respondent's answer
to this complaint
[4]
is that it
is a disagreement with a colleague and that in such disagreements,
there are always power relations such as seniority,
gender and racial
based disputes. He further alleges fraudulent transactions, rudeness
and a condescending attitude towards the
client. This prompted him to
"put him in his place", after which the complainant "ran
to his elder brother, the
Applicant".
[5]
The Respondent further
clarifies that the communication was not done in his capacity as an
attorney, as it was not on the firm's
letterhead, and he was not
practising as an attorney then. He did not receive the complaint as
his principal place of business
was closed, and "the Applicant
did not guide the Sheriff on how to properly serve the Respondent"
(at his home and not
at the address registered with them to be the
address of his practice). This, the Respondent avers, prejudiced him
as far as the
process is concerned, denying him his "constitutional
right to be treated fairly".
[6]
iv.
Complaint 4: Mr Setipa paid R1 000 0000 to the Respondent as a
deposit for immovable
property. Mr Setipa instructed the Respondent
to hold the money in trust until the deposit is payable to the seller
of the immovable
property. Two weeks later, Mr Setipa made a further
payment of R100 000 into the trust account. Three additional
payments
were made, totalling R300 000. The Respondent failed to
pay the deposit of R1 000 000 in favour of the seller.
This, the Respondent
stated, is because the monies were paid into a business account and,
due to an overdraft facility, were debited
by the bank. The
Respondent avers that the monies were paid into his business account
and not his trust account because he informed
the complainant that he
could not receive substantial amounts of cash into his trust account
if the source thereof is dubious.
He does not think it fair that the
Applicant holds him accountable for the complainant's action
(depositing the monies into his
business account).
Nevertheless, the
Respondent stated that he paid back an amount of R550 000 but
remains indebted to Mr Setipa in the amount
of R450 000. The
Respondent endeavoured to repay R350 000, and to retain the
amount of R100 000 until his fees for
work done were invoiced
and debited. The Respondent, however, failed to furnish the
complainant with an invoice regarding services
allegedly rendered,
which would explain holding back R100 000, which the Respondent
claims to hold in trust.
v.
Complaint 5: Yousha Tayob Attorneys' complaint relates to the
Respondent entering
an appearance to defend a matter on behalf of a
client but not providing a valid address where documents could be
served. This
halted the litigation. It transpired that the Respondent
no longer conducted business at the address as reflected on the
Applicant's
records, and the Respondent could also not be reached on
the telephone.
The Respondent attribute
this to the closing of his offices and views the Applicants' actions
in this regard as the Applicant "using
an innocuous enquiry for
its own ulterior motive to achieve its agenda".
[7]
vi.
Complaint 6: Ms Beeby paid R12 000 to the Respondent to
structure and register
a company. When Ms Beeby enquired with the
CIPC about the company, she was told that the company was already
registered but that
payment was due. Ms Beeby then realised that the
Respondent moved offices and did not respond to emails or phone
calls.
The Respondent states
that this complaint has been addressed and resolved and that the
Applicant throws in this complaint to mislead
the court. Every
inquiry should not be treated as a complaint.
[8]
This allegation is not in contravention of any Act.
vii.
Complaint 7: Prof Mosimege employed the Respondent to represent him
in a labour matter
following his dismissal from UNISA. He paid
R200 000 to the Respondent and requested various times for a
statement of account
for services rendered. Furthermore, the
Respondent's failure to update Prof Mosimege in his case against
UNISA caused unnecessary
and costly delays.
The Respondent states
that he provided the Applicant with an explanation and that the
matter has been attended to and finalised.
The missing court file was
the reason for the delays. Again, the difficulties with not having
access to documents and the information
infrastructure at the office
was raised as an issue in the denial of the allegations.
viii.
Complaint 8: Mr Rabie complained of the Respondent's questionable
professional conduct.
Mr Rabie was employed as a Chief Director in a
Government Department. The Respondent was instructed to assist in
amending a summons
issued, and an advocate was appointed to help with
the drafting. A deposit of R114 000 was paid for the fees of the
advocate
with the help of a friend. The Respondent did not pay the
fees and accused Mr Rabie of corrupt activities involving this
friend,
which Mr Rabie deems extortion of money for blackmail. The
invoices submitted for payment were paid in full. However, when
further
objections were raised against the summons and particulars of
claim, the Respondent withdrew as attorneys of record. When the
complainant
asked for a full statement of account, the Respondent did
not provide one. Mr Rabie then asked for the repayment of the
R114 000
holding fee for the advocate.
The LPC asserts that this
extortion of the complainant is criminal, and that the Respondent
failed to report the alleged criminal
activity of Mr Rabie to the
South African Police Service, while accepting the payment.
The Respondent states
that this complaint was also attended to and that there was no clear
indication from the Applicant whether
the response received was
adequate.
[9]
This process lacks
transparency and fairness, as it is only once there is an application
to be struck from the role that an attorney
knows the position of the
Applicant. Instead, the Applicant should be bound by the attorneys'
response unless it has notified the
attorneys otherwise.
[10]
The Respondent responded
further by stating that the client is vexatious,
[11]
and belligerent. Since he did not have access to his office files as
it was confiscated by his landlord, he thus did not have evidence
to
rebut the allegations. The Respondent denies the extortion, stating
that the mandate was terminated and that he struggled to
get the fees
from the client. Furthermore, the client reported him to the police,
which complaint was not entertained by the police.
Despite all this,
the Respondent "enjoyed working with Mr Rabie".
[12]
ix.
Complaint 9: Ms Mopeli instructed the Respondent to oppose a review
application brought
by her employer against a CCMA award granted in
her favour. She paid the Respondent R86 000 and requested
Respondent to furnish
her with a statement of account for the
services, which he failed to do. The Respondent did not execute his
mandate as Ms Mopeli
heard through her worker's union that the Labour
Court ordered that the award be set aside and the referral dismissed.
This with
Ms Mopeli not even knowing that the matter was enrolled for
a hearing and the Respondent failing to attend the court proceedings.
The Respondent states
that by the time the complainant went to the Labour Court, he was no
longer the attorney of record. The Labour
Court matter also happened
when the Sheriff attached and removed their IT infrastructure.
x.
Complaint 10: Mr Msibi instructed the Respondent to assist with a
matter pending
before the Companies Tribunal, specifically asking
Respondent to argue the matter before the tribunal on 26 October
2016. However,
when the parties arrived to attend the hearing, they
were informed the Respondent had asked for the matter to be postponed
at 19:00
the previous day. This was in contrast to Respondent
assuring Mr Msibi, just before the hearing, that he was on his way to
the
hearing. The hearing then proceeded without any legal
representation resulting in a cost order granted against Mr Msibi and
the
shareholders.
The Respondent cited this
as another pro bono matter, which only included the consultation, the
research and the drafting of documents.
The agreement was not that
there would be an appearance on their behalf. Even if there were such
an agreement, this would not be
possible as the Respondent was
evicted from the office and did not have access to the files.
xi.
Complaint 11: Stirk Yasbek Attorneys Notaries & Conveyancers
assisted the Respondent
with a matter in East London. The Respondent
failed to settle the statement of account, despite making various
undertakings to
pay or even stating that the account was paid.
The Respondent replies to
this stating the severe impact that the attachment of the files, the
IT infrastructure, and the eviction
from the offices had on its
ability to do business. Due to the lack of access to this
information, the Respondent believed the
invoices were paid. The
Respondent then suggests that the Applicant develop a protocol for
the Sheriff to preserve information
when attaching the assets of
practitioners hit by hard economic times.
xii.
Complaint 12: Mr Kganakga instructed the Respondent and senior
counsel to represent
him in a criminal trial. He paid an initial
deposit of R20 000, followed by various payments totalling
R998 402. The
Respondent never furnished him with a proper
statement of account, including the invoices of senior counsel. The
Respondent also
failed to pay senior counsel for three months in
2014, notwithstanding that he could do so, resulting in senior
counsel refusing
to proceed with the matter. Mr Kganakga had to
appoint new attorneys.
The Respondent indicated
that senior counsel was appointed and that the matter continued until
there was a dispute about the balance
that was held in the firm's
trust account. He also agreed to settle the complainant's claim even
though he had no records in his
firm's system of the amount that the
complainant claimed as the firm's software started to "misbehave"
in 2014. The Applicant's
Fee Assessment Committee calculated an
amount of R133 868 that he must refund the complainant. The
committee also found that
the Respondent failed to keep proper
accounting records.
The Respondent agrees
that there is disagreement with the client. The Respondent then
states that the Applicant's ad hoc committee
persuaded him to pay the
monies, even though the client "committed fraud of millions of
rands". He denies that the Fees
Assessment Committee sat and
determined the matter and that the Applicant's Disciplinary Committee
ever dealt with the matter.
xiii.
On top of
the complaints, the Respondent's estate was placed under final
sequestration by order of this Court on 31 May 2018. In
terms of
section 22(1)(e) of the Attorneys Act, the Respondent has to satisfy
this Court that he is still a fit and proper person
to continue to
practise as an attorney notwithstanding the fact that his estate was
sequestrated. The Respondent states that the
order for sequestration
was made on default as the attorney and the counsel who represented
him "simply dropped" him.
[13]
The attorney did not file the opposing affidavit, and the advocate
told the court that he was doing the Respondent a favour; he
was not
there to present him. His new attorneys are trying to lodge an appeal
against the default judgment.
The Respondent further
states that "[s]ince September 2016 I have not been practicing
as an attorney and I will not practice
until I pay all my creditors
and finalise the appeal on the sequestration matter".
[14]
The Applicant points out that if the Respondent indeed stopped
practicing as an attorney, he failed to submit his firm's closing
audit report, or to inform the Applicant that he is closing his
practice.
xiv.
Then there was also the report by Semelane, an auditor. Semelane
visited the firm's
offices on 17 January 2018 but found the office
vacant. The Respondent then informed Semelane that he no longer
practices at the
address on the Applicant's records since he
experienced financial difficulties. When asked for accounting
records, the Respondent
could not provide them. On 15 February 2018,
there was a balance of R0 in the firm's Nedbank trust account.
Additional as to what
was set out above, Ms Semelane further found:
a. As to the
complaint by Mr Setipa, the Respondent explained that R900 000
was made into his business account
and that due to his financial
difficulties, the overdraft was debited against the deposit made by
the complainant. The Respondent
denies the finding that Mr Setipa
deposited R900 000 into his account. It was R550 000 in his
trust account and R450 000
in cash in his business account. He
did repay the complainant an amount of R550 000, and he had
arranged to repay the balance
of R450 000 by 15 May 2018.
b.
As for Mr
Kganakga, the Respondent stated that he settled the matter in 2015,
repaying the complainant the amount due. The Respondent
repeated that
he paid Mr Kganakga even though he was unaware that they "were
dealing with someone who had committed fraud
of millions of rands
from the IDC".
[15]
There
is, however, no proof of payment.
c. Regarding
the complaint of Stirk Yasbek Attorneys, the Respondent admitted that
he engaged their services but that
due to his financial difficulties,
he could not pay the outstanding R34 685, 85. The Respondent
denies the allegations about
Stirk Yasbek Attorneys, saying they were
not paid because the Respondent was locked in a dispute over payment
with a municipality.
Still, the new attorneys attended to the
payment.
d.
As for the
trust account, there is a deficit of more than R2,4 million.
Regarding this trust deficit, the Respondent claims that
the
Applicant "developed a 'make believe scenario' methodology that
purports to create their desired outcome through the simulation
of
factors that they only have chosen".
[16]
This methodology is employed to "fake the numbers, and
thereafter attribute those bizarre and dirty outcome to the
Respondents".
[17]
The Respondent agrees
that the Semelane report was not compiled with his assistance or
consent.
# The law
The law
## (i)
Nature of the proceedings
(i)
Nature of the proceedings
[4]
During
argument the crux of the Respondent's answers to the allegations
centred around the situation he found himself in once he
was
sequestrated and evicted from his offices in 2016. In its heads of
argument, counsel for the Respondent argued that the removal
of the
infrastructure by the Sheriff, and the eviction from the premise, led
to procedural unfairness on the part of the Applicant's
processes and
its decision to refer the matter to the High Court. The Respondent
submits "there are no reasons provided for
in the Act for the
rational (sic) for the differentiation of the referral to the
disciplinary proceeding's (sic) vis-vis (sic)
the application to this
Honourable Court".
[18]
[5]
The
Respondent avers that reading the Attorneys Act
[19]
and the Legal Practice Act
[20]
only complaints that are serious ought to be referred to court,
citing various cases.
[21]
The
process thus embarked on by the Applicant is procedurally unfair, as
the referral of the matter to the High Court falls within
the
discretion of Council, which discretion was not rationally exercised
as they ought to have dealt with the matters themselves.
It seems
that the argument is that the complaints are not serious enough for
the court to consider. Rather, the sequestration and
the subsequent
removal of infrastructure and eviction from their offices made it
impossible for the Respondent to cooperate with
the investigation of
the Applicant and that, as such, the investigation was defective,
which invalidates the whole procedure followed
up to date, including
the referral to the High Court.
[6]
The
Attorneys Act
[22]
in s 71 sets
out a process to be followed when an inquiry is made into alleged
cases of unprofessional conduct, and in s 72(6)
states that [t]he
provisions in this section shall not affect the power of
(a) a society to apply in
terms of the provisions of this Act for the suspension from practice
or the striking from the roll of
any practitioner against whom an
enquiry is being or has been conducted in terms of this Act in
respect of the conduct which form
or formed part of the subject
matter of such enquiry;
(b) a competent court, at
the instance of the society concerned, to suspend any practitioner
from practice or to strike him from
the roll.
[7]
Likewise,
the Legal Practice Act
[23]
in
s 37 identifies three disciplinary bodies, and sets out the procedure
to be followed by the council during disciplinary proceedings
in
subsequent sections. However, s 44(1) of the Legal Practice Act
[24]
makes it clear that
"[t]he provisions of
this Act 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 […]"
[8]
It is
correct that the Acts themselves do not state when the Council must
or may refer a matter to Court. This is set out in case
law. From the
case law, specifically the paragraphs quoted by the Respondent, it is
clear that "a society may decide that
the evidence before a
partially completed inquiry is of such a conclusive or overwhelming
nature […]"
[25]
that it would be in the interest of justice that such an application
be made to the High Court. Likewise, in
Law
Society of the Northern Provinces v Morobadi
[26]
the court stated that the Council may proceed with the application
for the striking off of the practitioner's name from the roll
if,
after having regard to the charges, it is of the opinion that the
practitioner is no longer a fit and proper person. The Respondent's
argument thus only holds if he deems the transgressions not serious
enough to warrant suspension or removal. That is, however,
precisely
the argument that the Council makes in this application: that all
these complaints considered together are serious enough
to indicate
that the Respondent is not fit and proper to continue practising as
an attorney, which is the issue the court must
now decide.
## (ii)
Provisions contravened
(ii)
Provisions contravened
[9]
The Applicant avers all this contravenes the various provisions of
the
Attorneys Act and the Rules for the Attorneys Profession. A list
of the provisions contravened are that the Respondent:
i.
practised
without a Fidelity Fund Certificate;
[27]
ii.
failed to
submit unqualified audit reports;
[28]
iii.
failed to
work in a competent and professional manner;
[29]
iv.
failed to
notify the Applicant of a change of address;
[30]
v.
failed to
pay a client within a reasonable time;
[31]
vi.
failed to
engage and answer to questions and directives of the Applicant;
[32]
vii.
failed to
account to clients, in writing, of the work done and the fees
charged;
[33]
viii.
failed to
ensure that there is sufficient money in the firm's trust
account;
[34]
ix.
failed to
ensure that no account of any trust creditor is in debit;
[35]
x.
failed to
ensure that the accounting records were updated and balanced on a
monthly basis;
[36]
xi.
failed to
ensure that transfers to the firm's business account were made in
respect of fees and disbursements due to the firm;
[37]
xii.
failed to
retain the firm's accounting and other records for at least five
years at the main office;
[38]
xiii.
failed to
ensure that trust funds are not deposited into the business
account;
[39]
failed to keep
proper accounting records and failed to report the trust deficit to
the Applicant;
[40]
xiv.
and failed
to maintain accounting records as necessary to represent fully and
accurately in accordance with generally accepted accounting
practice,
the state of affairs and business of the firm, and to explain the
transaction and financial position of the firm.
[41]
[10]
This long list of provisions contravened is substantial and serious,
and it goes to the
core of being an attorney and how a practice
should be managed.
[11]
Applications
for removing an attorney's name from the roll of practitioners are
not ordinary civil proceedings. They are proceedings
of disciplinary
nature and
sui
generis
.
[42]
[12]
In
proceedings such as these, the Applicant is not litigating against
the attorney but instead performing its statutory duties of
presenting evidence and material relating to the allegations of
misconduct against the practitioner to the court. The court, not
the
Applicant, suspends practitioners from practicing as attorneys and
removes names from the roll of attorney.
[43]
## (iii) Three-stage
inquiry
(iii) Three-stage
inquiry
[13]
The inquiry
is a three-stage inquiry:
[44]
Firstly, whether the conduct has been established on a balance of
probabilities. Secondly, whether the person concerned is "fit
ad
proper" to continue to practice as an attorney, and thirdly,
whether, considering all circumstances, the name of the attorney
should be removed from the roll or if the attorney must be suspended
from practice.
[14]
A finding
that an attorney is not "fit and proper" does not
automatically mean that a practitioner’s name must be
struck of
the roll.
[45]
Malan
v Law Society of the Northern Provinces
[46]
states that in considering the sanction the court must consider the
nature and the seriousness of the misconduct in its totality
and how
it reflects on the practitioner's character as a member of the
profession, the probability of the conduct repeating and
the need to
protect the public. Removal is not the only sanction should a court
find the practitioner not fit and proper. Removing
a practitioner is
serious, with dire consequences for the individual practitioner. The
court also does not do so lightly, as there
are serious implications
for an attorney not being able to practice.
### Did the conduct happen on
a balance of probabilities?
Did the conduct happen on
a balance of probabilities?
[15]
There is nothing to suggest that the conduct complained of did not
happen. In fact, the
Respondent admits to many of them, in some
instances providing explanations, sometimes without proof, while in
other cases blaming
the clients for his conduct. In many of the
replies, he does not deny what is alleged but instead states that the
client has an
agenda or brings the complaint because they are
vexatious and criminal. Some of the other conduct, specifically the
complaint by
Guldenfinger, was also not denied but instead sought to
be justified.
[16]
The Respondent, in some instances, make off the complaints as not
serious enough to warrant
a court application and that it should be
seen as part of the Applicant’s agenda. He explains the adverse
impact of his sequestration
on his ability to practice and contact
clients is not denied, but is rather blamed on the Applicant’s
inefficient processes
dealing with sequestrated attorneys. This
despite not follow the rules of winding up a practice.
[17]
It is also clear from the facts that the Respondent continued to
practice without a fidelity
certificate in 2016. Various signatures
on emails and other correspondence sent by the Respondent from his
firm's email account
show that the Respondent still indicated his
firm's address as the address registered at the LPC. These emails
were sent during
2016, even though he did not have a fidelity
certificate to practice in 2016 and thereafter. Even in his reply to
Mr Msibi’s
complaint he admits that he did work in 2016.
[18]
Furthermore, if he indeed ceased to practice, he did not inform the
Applicant of the fact
and did not comply with the requirements of
winding up his practice. This all shows a propensity not to follow
the law and the
Rules governing the practice of the legal profession.
The mismanagement of his practice, the lack of proper accounting,
practising
without a Fidelity Fund Certificate, the substantial trust
deficit, and all the other things mentioned above are thus not
substantially
denied, but what the Respondent denies is that he is to
be held accountable for any of it.
### Is the Respondent fit and
proper?
Is the Respondent fit and
proper?
[19]
The facts
must not be considered in isolation but in their totality.
[47]
The failure to lodge unqualified audit reports and practising without
Fidelity Fund Certificates are on their own serious allegations.
The
accumulation of the complaints listed above, proven on a balance of
probabilities, shows persistent questionable conduct by
the
Respondent.
[20]
Trust money does not form part of the assets of a legal practitioner.
The concept of a
Trust Fund relies on the confidence and trust that
placing money in the fund is a low risk due to all the rules and
regulations
surrounding such a fund. This requires strict adherence
to the Legal Practice Act, the Attorneys Act, and the Rules for the
Attorneys
Profession. Failure to do so undermines the system on which
the trust is built. It is the court’s duty to maintain the
integrity,
dignity, and respect for officers of the court to deserve
the public's respect, by striking those off the roll who do not
adhere
to these standards.
[21]
The
Respondent must maintain the highest standard of honesty and
integrity. It is also bound by the ethical standards prescribed
by
the Code of Conduct and any ethical standards generally recognised by
the profession.
[48]
One of the
standards in the Code is to behave towards colleagues and members of
the public with integrity, fairness and respect,
and to avoid any
insulting or demeaning behaviour.
[49]
[22]
The Respondents correspondence to various complainants, but
specifically to the attorney
at Billy Guldefinger Attorneys, and his
description of his clients Mr Kganakga and Mr Rabie, lacks the
integrity expected from
legal practitioners. Furthermore, the
allegations levelled against the Applicant, without providing any
proof of the allegations,
is lamentable.
[23]
All this indicates that the Respondent is not fit and proper to be a
legal practitioner.
### Should his name be
removed?
Should his name be
removed?
[24]
The court
does not seek to punish the Respondent for his conduct but rather
must ensure that the Respondent as an officer of this
court does his
work in a manner that is above suspicion and with integrity.
[50]
The court can either do so by suspending the Respondent, or by
striking his name off the roll of legal practitioners.
[25]
The transgressions, as proven by the Applicant and not refuted by the
Respondent, is serious.
Considering the totality of the infractions,
I find that the Respondent’s conduct is not in line with the
standards of professional
conduct or what is expected of a
practitioner. It lacks the honesty, integrity, and professionalism
that is expected from a legal
practitioner practicing in this court.
The substantial trust deficit, the mismanagement of the practice, and
practicing without
a Fidelity Fund Certificate are serious
infringements that warrant the striking of his name off the roll.
# Order
Order
[26]
I, therefore, make the following order, in line with the Draft Order:
1. That
the name of Thembe Benedict Langa be removed from the roll of legal
practitioners of this Court.
2. The
Frist Respondent immediately surrenders and deliver to the registrar
of this Honourable Court his certificate
of enrolment as a legal
practitioner of this Court.
3. That
in the event of the Frist 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 to hand it to the Registrar of this Honourable Court.
4. That
the Respondents be prohibited from handling or operating the trust
accounts as detailed in paragraphs
5 hereof.
5. That
Johan van Staden, the Director of the Gauteng Provincial Office of
the Applicant or any person nominated
by him, be appointed as
curator
bonis
(curator) to administer and control the trust accounts of
the Respondents, including accounts relating to insolvent and
deceased
estates and any deceased estate and any estate under
curatorship connected with the Respondent's practice as a legal
practitioner
and including, also, the separate banking accounts
opened and kept by the Respondents at a bank in the Republic of South
Africa
in terms of section 86(1) & (2) of Act 28 of 2014 and/or
any separate savings or interest-bearing accounts as contemplated by
section 86(3) and/or section 86(4) of Act 28 of 2014, in which monies
from such trust banking accounts have been invested by virtue
of the
provisions of the said sub-sections or in which monies in any manner
have been deposited or credited (the said accounts
being hereafter
referred to as the trust accounts), with the following powers and
duties:
5.1. immediately to take
possession of the Respondents accounting records, records, files and
documents as referred to in paragraph
6 and subject to the approval
of the Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund board of Control
(hereinafter referred to as the fund)
to sign all forms and generally
to operate upon the trust account(s), but only to such extent and for
such purpose as may be necessary
to bring to completion current
transactions in which the Respondents were acting at the date of this
order;
5.2. subject to the
approval and control of the Legal Practitioner's Fidelity Fund Board
of Control and where monies have been paid
incorrectly and unlawfully
from the undermentioned trust accounts, to recover and receive and,
if necessary in the interests of
persons having lawful claims upon
the trust account(s) and/or against the Respondents in respect of
monies held, received and/or
invested by the Respondents in terms of
section 86(1) & (2) and/or section 86(3) and/or section 86(4) or
Act 28 of 2014 (hereinafter
referred to as trust monies), to take any
legal proceedings which may be necessary for the recovery of money
which may be due to
such persons in respect of incomplete
transactions, if any, in which the Respondents were and may still
have been concerned and
to receive such monies and to pay the same to
the credit of the trust account(s);
5.3. to ascertain from
the Respondents' accounting records the names of all persons on whose
account the Respondents appear to hold
or to have received trust
monies (hereinafter referred to as trust creditors) and to call upon
the First Respondent to furnish
him, within 30 (thirty) days of the
date of service of this order or such further period as he may agree
in writing, with the names,
addresses and amounts due to all trust
creditors;
5.4. to call upon such
trust creditors to furnish such proof, information and/or affidavits
as the may require to enable him, acting
in consultation with, and
subject to the requirements of the Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund
Board of Control, to determine
whether any such trust creditor has a
claim in respect of monies in the trust account(s) of the Respondents
and, if so, the amount
of such claim;
5.5. to admit or reject,
in whole or in part, subject to the approval of the Legal
Practitioners' Fidelity Fund Board of Control,
the claims of any such
trust creditor or creditors, without prejudice to such trust
creditor's or creditors' right of access to
the civil courts;
5.6. having determined
the amounts which he considers are lawfully due to trust creditors,
to pay such claims in full but subject
always to the approval of the
Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund Board of Control;
5.7. in the event of
there being any surplus in the trust account(s) of the Respondents
after payment of the admitted claims of
all trust creditors in full,
to utilise such surplus to settle or reduce (as the case may be),
firstly, any claim of the fund in
terms of section 86(5) of Act 28 of
2014 in respect of any interest therein referred to and, secondly,
without prejudice to the
rights of the creditors of the Respondents,
the costs, fees and expenses referred to in paragraph 10 of this
order, or such portion
thereof as has not already been separately
paid by the Respondents to the Applicant, and, if there is any
balance left after payment
in full of all such claims, costs, fees
and expenses, to pay such balance, subject to the approval of the
Legal Practitioners'
Fidelity Fund Board of Control, to the Frist
Respondent, if he is solvent, or, if the First Respondent is
insolvent, to the trustee(s)
of the First Respondent's insolvent
estate;
5.8. in the event of
there being insufficient trust monies in the trust banking account(s)
of the Respondents, in accordance with
the available documentation
and information, to pay in full the claims of trust creditors who
have lodged claims for repayment
and whose claims have been approved,
to distribute the credit balance(s) which may be available in the
trust banking account(s)
amongst the trust creditors, alternatively
to pay the balance to the Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund;
5.9. subject to the
approval of the chairman of the Legal Practitioners' Fidelity Fund
Board of Control, to appoint nominees or
representatives and/or
consult with and/or engage the services of legal practitioners,
counsel, accountants and/or any other persons,
where considered
necessary, to assist him in carrying out his duties as curator; and
5.10.
to render from time to time, as curator, returns to the Legal
Practitioners' Fidelity Fund Board of Control
showing how the trust
account(s) of the Respondents has/have been dealt with, until such
time as the board notifies him that he
may regard his duties as
curator as terminated.
6.
That the Respondents immediately deliver the accounting records,
records, files and documents containing particulars
and information
relating to:
6.1. any monies received,
held or paid by the Respondents for or on account of any person while
practicing as legal practitioner;
6.2. any monies invested
by the Respondent in terms of section 86(3) and/or section 86(4) of
Act 28 of 2014;
6.3. any interest on
monies so invested which was paid over or credited to the
Respondents;
6.4. any estate of a
deceased person or an insolvent estate or an estate under curatorship
administered by the Respondents, whether
as executor or trustee or
curator or on behalf of the executor, trustee or curator;
6.5. any insolvent estate
administered by the Respondents as trustee or on behalf of the
trustee in terms of the
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
;
6.6. any trust
administered by the Respondents as trustee or on behalf of the
trustee in terms of the Trust Properties Control Act
57 of 1988;
6.7. any company
liquidated in terms of the provisions of the Companies Act 61 of
1973, read together with the provisions of the
Companies Act 71 of
2008
, administered by the Respondents as or on behalf of the
liquidator;
6.8. any close
corporation liquidated in terms of the
Close Corporations Act 69 of
1984
, administered by the Respondents as or on behalf of the
liquidator; and
6.9. the First
Respondent's practice as a legal practitioner of this Honourable
Court, to the curator appointed in terms of paragraph
5 hereof,
provided that, as far as such accounting records, records, file and
documents are concerned, the Respondents shall be
entitled to have
reasonable access to them but always subject to the supervision of
such curator or his nominee.
7. That
should the Respondents fail to comply with the provisions of the
preceding paragraph of this order on
service thereof upon him or
after a return by the person entrusted with the service thereof that
he has been unable to effect service
thereof on the Respondents (as
the case may be), the Sheriff for the district in which such
accounting records, records, files
and documents are, be empowered
and directed to search for and to take possession thereof wherever
they may be an to deliver them
to such curator.
8.
That the curator shall be entitled to:
8.1. hand over to the
persons entitled thereto all such records, files and documents
provided that a satisfactory written undertaking
has been received
from such persons to pay any amount, either determined on taxation or
by agreement, in respect of fees and disbursements
due to the firm;
8.2. require from the
persons referred to in paragraph 8.1 to provide any such
documentation or information which hy may consider
relevant in
respect of a claim or possible or anticipated claim, against him
and/or the Respondents and/or the Respondents' clients
and/or the
fund in respect of money and/or other property entrusted to the
Respondents provided that any person entitled thereto
shall be
granted reasonable access thereto and shall be permitted to make
copies thereof.
8.3. publish this order
or an abridged version thereof in any newspaper he considers
appropriate; and
8.4. wind-up the
Respondents' practice.
9.
That the First Respondent be and is hereby removed from office as:
9.1. executor of any
estate of which the First Respondent has been appointed in terms of
section 54(1)(a)(v)
of the Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965
or the estate of any other person referred to in section 72(1);
9.2. curator or guardian
of any minor or other person's property in terms of section 72(1)
read with section 54(1)(a)(v) and
section 85
of the
Administration of
Estates Act 66 of 1965
;
9.3. trustee of any
insolvent estate in terms of
section 59
of the
Insolvency Act 24 of
1936
;
9.4. liquidator of any
company in terms of
section 379(2)
read with 379(e) of the Companies
Act 61 of 1973 and read together with the provisions of the
Companies
Act 71 of 2008
;
9.5. trustee of any trust
in terms of section 20(1) of the Trust Property Control Act 57 of
1988;
9.6. liquidator of any
close corporation appointed in terms of section 74 of the Close
Corporation Act 69 of 1984; and
9.7. administrator
appointed in terms of section 74 of the Magistrates Court Act, 32 of
1944.
10.
That the Respondents be and is hereby directed:
10.1.
to pay, in terms of section 87(2) of Act 28 of 2014, the reasonable
costs of the inspection of the accounting
records of the Respondents;
10.2.
the pay the reasonable fees of the auditor engaged by the Applicant;
10.3.
to pay the reasonable fees and expenses of the curator, including
travelling time;
10.4.
to pay the reasonable fees and expenses of any person(s) consulted
and/or engaged by the curator as aforesaid;
10.5.
to pay the expenses relating to the publication of this order or an
abbreviated version thereof; and
10.6.
to pay the cost of this application on an attorney-and-client scale.
11.
That if there are any trust funds available the Respondents shall
within 6 (six) months after having been requested to do so
by the
curator, or within such longer period as the curator may agree to in
writing, satisfy the curator, by means of the submission
of taxed
bills of costs or otherwise, of the amount of the fees and
disbursements due to the First Respondent in respect of his
former
practice, and shall he fail to do so, he shall not be entitled to
recover such fees and disbursements from the curator without
prejudice, however, to such rights (if any) as he may have against
the trust creditor(s) concerned for payment or recovery thereof;
12.
That the certificate issued by the director of the Legal
Practitioners' Fidelity Fund shall constitute
prima facie
proof of the curator's costs and that the Registrar be authorised to
issue a writ of execution on the strength of such certificate
in
order to collect the curator's costs.
WJ
DU PLESSIS
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
I
agree
D
MAKHOBA
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
It will be sent to the
parties/their legal representatives by email.
Appearances
For the Applicant:
Ms Magardie
(attorney)
Instructed by:
DAMONS MAGARDIE
RICHARDSON ATTORNEYS
For Respondent:
Adv Mpya
Instructed by:
KMG &
ASSOCIATES INCORPORATED
Date of the
hearing:
31 January 2023
Date of judgment:
31 March 2023
[1]
Law
Society of the Cape of Good Hope vs C
1986 (1) SA 616 (A).
[2]
As set out in
Kaplan
v Incorporated Law Society, Transvaal
1981 4 All SA 15
(T) 28.
[3]
CaseLines
006-7.
[4]
CaseLines
006-10.
[5]
CaseLines
006-11.
[6]
CaseLines
006-12.
[7]
CaseLines
006-18.
[8]
CaseLines
006-19.
[9]
CaseLines
006-21.
[10]
CaseLines
006-22.
[11]
CaseLines
006-21.
[12]
CaseLines
006-23.
[13]
CaseLines
006-28.
[14]
CaseLines
006-28.
[15]
CaseLines
006-30.
[16]
CaseLines
006-30.
[17]
CaseLines
006-30.
[18]
CaseLines 045-11.
[19]
53
of 1979.
[20]
28
od 2014.
[21]
Cape
Law Society v Gihwala
[2019] 2 All SA 84
par 110;
Law
Society of the Northern Provinces v Morobadi
[2018] ZASCA 185
par 32;
The
Legal Practice Council v Motlhabani
[2020] ZSNWHC 76 par 34.
[22]
Attorneys
Act 53 of 1979
[23]
Legal
Practice Act
28
of 2014
.
[24]
Legal
Practice Act
28
of 2014
.
[25]
Cape
Law Society v Gihwala
[2019] 2 All SA 84
par 110.
[26]
[2018] ZASCA 185
par 32.
[27]
Sections
41(1) and (2) of the Attorneys Act.
[28]
Rule
35.23.
[29]
Rules
40.10 and 49.13.
[30]
Rule
2.20.
[31]
Rule
35.12.
[32]
Rules
47.1, 47.2 and 47.3.
[33]
Rule
35.11.
[34]
Section
78(1) of the Attorneys Act.
[35]
Rule
35.13.9.
[36]
Rule
35.9.
[37]
Rule
35.13.14.
[38]
Rule
35.8.
[39]
Rule
35.10.
[40]
Rule
35.13.10.
[41]
Section 78(4) of the Attorneys Act.
[42]
Solomon
v Law Society of the Cape of Good Hope
1934 AD 401
at 408-409;
Hepple
v Law Society of the Northern Provinces
[2014]
ZASCA 75.
[43]
CaseLines
008-9.
[44]
Malan v
Law Society of the Northern Provinces
[2008] ZASCA 90.
[45]
Malan v
Law Society of the Northern Provinces
[2008] ZASCA 90
para 8.
[46]
[2008] ZASCA 90.
[47]
Law
Society Transvaal v Matthews
1989 (4) SA 389
(T);
Malan
v Law Society of the Northern Provinces
[2008]
ZASCA 90.
[48]
See paragraph 3.1 and 3.3 of the Code of Conduct.
[49]
Paragraph 3.14.
[50]
Law
Society v Du Toit
1938
OPD 103.
sino noindex
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